complaisant
அன்பான
definition
adjective
when unharnessed, Northern dogs are peaceful and complaisant
willing to please others; obliging; agreeable.
translation of 'complaisant'
அன்பான மன்னிக்கும் தன்மை உடைய
example
In fact, if he means to keep it up, newspapers may want to send a mixed party of philosophers and wranglers, instead of 'complaisant' hacks, to his next party conference.
But nothing seems to shift a 'complaisant' populace.
Noah's eyes were slightly jealous, but he was so 'complaisant' that I figured he'd get over it in a day.
These ideas were encouraged by 'complaisant' Western ‘development economists’ and by a dubious semantic innovation.
Ruthless spin doctors and 'complaisant' media can be a tragic mix
His friends, who have known him for more than 25 years, say he has never in his life used one single cuss word, has never been unfriendly and has always been very 'complaisant' .
And a 'complaisant' public is also, of course, invaluable to the transaction.
The 'complaisant' attitudes came from some surprising quarters.
Strangely though, this doesn't come over as frosty or nihilistic, but harmless and 'complaisant' .
Although the subsidiary was 'complaisant' to do the parent's will, it did function in giving effect to the parent's wishes and the parent did not usurp the control of the subsidiary.
The Director of Human Resources points out 'complaisantly' that factory life is not without its small pleasures.
But the rise in labor standards may also stem from the sensitivity or 'complaisance' of a richer consuming public that decides that it can afford to do better by workers.
And this has caused a mass unjustified 'complaisance' .
If it became possible for shareholders to sue firms where those firms might reasonably have protected them from insider trading, corporate Australia's 'complaisance' towards insider trading could take a healthy hit.
And she notices that the shirt he so 'complaisantly' hung from the shower rail is all wonky so that, if left, it would end up looking like one of Quasimodo's.
When people say that they like their pork chops, veal, or foie gras just too much ever to give them up, reason hears in that the voice of gluttony, willfulness, or at best moral 'complaisance' .
Francis Fukayama, if rather more 'complaisantly' and idealistically, has responded to the same perception.
A rebellion of public opinion against such 'complaisance' is possible but not certain.
Credits: Google Translate