الواصلة
prag·ma·ticالتركية النطق
prägmätîkالمترادفات
down-to-earth,
functional,
practical,
utilitarian,
realistic,
businesslike,
commonsensical,
efficient,
hard,
hard-boiled,
hardheaded,
logical,
matter-of-fact,
sober,
unidealisticالنطق
/pragˈmatək/ /præɡˈmætɪk/
علم أصول الكلمات
() From French pragmatique Late Latin pragmaticus (“relating to civil affair; in Latin, as a noun, a person versed in the law who furnished arguments and points to advocates and orators, a kind of attorney”) Ancient Greek πραγματικός (pragmatikós, “active, versed in affairs”) πρᾶγμα (pragma, “a thing done, a fact”), in plural πράγματα (prágmata, “affairs, state affairs, public business, etc.”) πράσσειν (prassein, “to do”) (from whence English practical).