expediency

expediency
noun (plural -cies) Date: 1597 1. the quality or state of being suited to the end in view ; suitability, fitness 2. obsolete a. haste, dispatch b. an enterprise requiring haste or caution 3. adherence to expedient means and methods <
put more emphasis on expediency than on principle — W. H. Jones
>
4. a means of achieving a particular end ; expedientexpediential adjective

New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.

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  • expediency — [[t]ɪkspi͟ːdiənsi[/t]] N UNCOUNT Expediency means doing what is convenient rather than what is morally right. [FORMAL] It seems political expediency, rather than absolute economic need, will determine who gains from the conflict... This was a… …   English dictionary

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  • expediency — UK [ɪkˈspiːdɪənsɪ] / US [ɪkˈspɪdɪənsɪ] noun [countable/uncountable] Word forms expediency : singular expediency plural expediencies formal the use of methods that produce an immediate result or solution to a problem, but may not be fair or honest …   English dictionary

  • expediency — ex|pe|di|en|cy [ıkˈspi:diənsi] n also ex|pe|di|ence [ diəns]plural expediencies [U and C] action that is quickest or most effective in a particular situation, even if it is morally wrong ▪ These are not politics of honest principle; they are… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • expediency — also ex.pe.di.ence noun (C, U) what it is useful or necessary to do in a particular situation, even if it is morally wrong: Not burying the dead soldiers was unfortunately a matter of expediency …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

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