expedient - Meaning in Hindi

Meaning of expedient in Hindi

Noun

  • उपाय
  • ढंग
  • प्रणाली
  • तिकड़म

Adjective

  • फ़ायदेमंद
  • लाभकारक
  • उचित
  • वांछनीय
  • युक्ति
  • इष्टकर

expedient Definition

Noun

  • a means of attaining an end, especially one that is convenient but considered improper or immoral.

Adjective

  • (of an action) convenient and practical although possibly improper or immoral.

expedient Example

  • the current policy is a political expedient ( वर्तमान नीति एक राजनीतिक समीचीन है )
  • either side could break the agreement if it were expedient to do so ( यदि ऐसा करना समीचीन होता तो कोई भी पक्ष समझौते को तोड़ सकता था )
  • Before considering observational data, it is expedient to mention various sources of uncertainty. ( अवलोकन संबंधी आंकड़ों पर विचार करने से पहले, अनिश्चितता के विभिन्न स्रोतों का उल्लेख करना समीचीन है। ) 
  • But soon another and cheaper expedient presented itself. ( लेकिन जल्द ही एक और सस्ता उपाय पेश किया गया। )

More Sentence

  • All puddles and collections of water should be filled in or drained; as a temporary expedient they may be treated with petroleum, which prevents the development of the larvae.
  • But neither the one nor the other expedient availed him.
  • Nothing could be more false than the common opinion that as a financier his sole expedient was to multiply the emissions of assignats.
  • Critics accuse him of policy U-turns and expedient dealmaking.
  • Hearing of this, Clive suggested an expedient to the Committee.
  • In this case, a number of expedients can be used.
  • One then rings the bell and recites the Expedient Means chapter.
  • It's difficult to see expedient in a sentence .
  • The landowners, however, had other expedients for gaining control.
  • Its not a fair or unbiased ruling its an expedient one.
  • They represent expedients, rather than principles . . ..
  • Isn't it a relatively expedient and painless way to die?
  • It may also have been an expedient thing to do.
  • A third Italian army would, if expedient, pass into Germany, to operate against either France or Russia.
  • Temminck, whose father's aid to Le Vaillant has already been noticed, brought out at Paris a Histoire naturelle des pigeons illustrated by Madame Knip, who had drawn the plates for Desmarest's volume.3 Since we have begun by considering these large illustrated works in which the text is made subservient to the coloured plates, it may be convenient to continue our notice of such others of similar character as it may be expedient to mention here, though thereby we shall be led somewhat far afield.
  • Brand refused to allow the Free State to be committed to a suicidal treaty, or dragged into any wild policy which the Transvaal might deem it expedient to adopt.
  • Cromwell had exhausted every expedient for arriving at an arrangement with the king by which the royal authority might be preserved, and the repeated perfidy and inexhaustible shiftiness of Charles had proved the hopelessness of such attempts.
  • holding a public inquiry into the scheme was not expedient