English to Punjabi Dictionary corrective

corrective

ਨੂੰ ਸੁਧਾਰਨ
definition
noun
the move might be a corrective to some inefficient practices within hospitals
a thing intended to correct or counteract something else.
adjective
management was informed so that corrective action could be taken
designed to correct or counteract something harmful or undesirable.
example
Poorly designed policies can delay 'corrective' steps and create monopoly.
They still need to take 'corrective' action regarding the inaccurate navigation charts.
Why wasn't I hurrying to a phone to call and get 'corrective' instructions to the appropriate building?
For more serious violations covered by the penal code, housemates could be sent to 'corrective' labour colonies or camps.
Protective goggles are necessary in an industrial environment, and may be 'corrective' or non-corrective.
In other words, military service would equal 'corrective' discipline.
It is only when it is present in large numbers that there is a need to take 'corrective' action.
Wouldn't it be more irresponsible of them to not take 'corrective' action?
He said that had ‘exacerbated the losses by delaying and distracting the board from swift and 'corrective' action’.
About 100,000 people who are tired of wearing glasses or contact lenses undergo 'corrective' laser eye surgery in the UK every year.
This form of production is unique to Ireland and these farmers are facing a very uncertain future unless 'corrective' action is taken.
Thirdly, our work hints at 'corrective' techniques that might be used to counteract prognostic error.
If a plan of 'corrective' action is needed, the instructions and time frame are explained.
Project Managers make extra efforts in codifying the mistakes made and 'corrective' steps taken before any project is closed out.
In England he applied his theories to dance education and also to designing 'corrective' exercises for factory workers.
We have implemented 'corrective' action for all those possible causes.
It can then pass on operator instructions and 'corrective' actions to the ‘guilty’ machine.
Everyone knows baby boomers will strain future budgets, yet there's no clamor for 'corrective' policies.
By spending time on preventive maintenance now, you can save time on 'corrective' maintenance in the future.
Then representatives visit the site and make recommendations on 'corrective' measures to put things right.
Other twentieth-century writers and folklorists provided 'correctives' to these distorted images, however.
All of the 'correctives' that I have presented here have been discussed before, and all of them are in the pieces cited by the critics of evolutionary psychology.
Although, the autonomous status of regionalism became fully effected after the Amalgamation Pact of 1963 and was 'correctively' applied into the system.
Rather, it is an attempt to posit some 'correctives' to the discourse.
My goal, therefore, is to read these two theorists as potential 'correctives' to one another.
‘I believe there is a place for it only if it's applied 'correctively' to help influence good behaviour,’ he said.
This significant issue - the unauthorized disclosure of classified intelligence - has been extraordinarily resistant to 'correctives' .
His emphasis on material austerity directly challenges our modern addiction to comfort, one of the Celtic tradition's most important 'correctives' to our present mindset.
The victim is offered restitution tentatively, with little confidence that it will be accepted - and finally with little confidence that 'correctives' are possible.
What do you think would be the fundamental consequences of such a crisis, and what, in your opinion, are the 'correctives' that should be adopted?
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