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Polypragmatical
Polypragmatic Pol`y*prag*mat"ic, Polypragmatical
Pol`y*prag*mat"ic*al, a. [Poly- + pragmatic, -ical.]
Overbusy; officious. [R.] --Heywood.
PragmaticalPragmatic Prag*mat"ic, Pragmatical Prag*mat"ic*al, a. [L.
pragmaticus busy, active, skilled in business, especially in
law and state affairs, systematic, Gr. ?, fr. ? a thing done,
business, fr. ? to do: cf. F. pragmatique. See Practical.]
1. Of or pertaining to business or to affairs; of the nature
of business; practical; material; businesslike in habit or
manner.
The next day . . . I began to be very pragmatical.
--Evelyn.
We can not always be contemplative, diligent, or
pragmatical, abroad; but have need of some
delightful intermissions. --Milton.
Low, pragmatical, earthly views of the gospel.
--Hare.
2. Busy; specifically, busy in an objectionable way;
officious; fussy and positive; meddlesome. ``Pragmatical
officers of justice.' --Sir W. Scott.
The fellow grew so pragmatical that he took upon him
the government of my whole family. --Arbuthnot.
3. Philosophical; dealing with causes, reasons, and effects,
rather than with details and circumstances; -- said of
literature. ``Pragmatic history.' --Sir W. Hamilton.
``Pragmatic poetry.' --M. Arnold.
Pragmatic sanction, a solemn ordinance or decree issued by
the head or legislature of a state upon weighty matters;
-- a term derived from the Byzantine empire. In European
history, two decrees under this name are particularly
celebrated. One of these, issued by Charles VII. of
France, A. D. 1438, was the foundation of the liberties of
the Gallican church; the other, issued by Charles VI. of
Germany, A. D. 1724, settled his hereditary dominions on
his eldest daughter, the Archduchess Maria Theresa. Pragmatically
Pragmatically Prag*mat"ic*al*ly, adv.
In a pragmatical manner.
Pragmaticalness
Pragmaticalness Prag*mat"ic*al*ness, n.
The quality or state of being pragmatical.
Meaning of Pragmatica from wikipedia
- A
pragmatic sanction is a sovereign's
solemn decree on a
matter of
primary importance and has the
force of
fundamental law. In the late
history of the...
-
Craspedotis pragmatica is a moth in the
family Gelechiidae. It was
described by
Edward Meyrick in 1904. It is
found in Australia,
where it has been recorded...
- to
former Jews and Muslims. Most
historians believe that
Charles III's
pragmática failed for
three main reasons,
reasons which were
ultimately derived from...
-
Mestolobes pragmatica is a moth of the
family Crambidae described by
Edward Meyrick in 1899. It is
endemic to the
island of Hawaii.
Wikimedia Commons has...
- The
Pragmatic Sanction of 1713 (Latin:
Sanctio Pragmatica; German:
Pragmatische Sanktion) was an
edict issued by Holy
Roman Emperor Charles VI, on 19 April...
- Know
About the
Gregorian Calendar". HISTORY.
Retrieved 23 July 2021. ""
Pragmatica" on the Ten Days of the Year".
World Digital Library. 1584.: the first...
- : Una consideración
contextual del uso
despectivo y de apropiación".
Pragmática Sociocultural /
Sociocultural Pragmatics. 2 (2): 145–179. doi:10.1515/soprag-2014-0007...
- The
Pragmatic Sanction of 1830 (Spanish:
Pragmática Sanción),
issued on 29
March 1830 by King
Ferdinand VII of Spain,
ratified a
Decree of 1789 by Charles...
- 12. kötet - Ignác Acsády: The po****tion of
Hungary in the ages of the
Pragmatica Sanction,
Magyar statisztikai közlemények vol. 12. "A
Growing Po****tion...
-
University of Barcelona,
completing her thesis,
entitled “La dimensión
pragmática del lenguaje”, in 1975. She has been the vice-rector,
lecturer and full...