English to Tamil Dictionary instrumentality

instrumentality

கருவியாகும்
definition
noun
a corporate body can act only through the instrumentality of human beings
the fact or quality of serving as an instrument or means to an end; agency.
example
The only question is whether probable cause exists that somewhere on the property some evidence of the crime, contraband, 'instrumentality' , or a fruit of the crime will be discovered.
Yet this insecure dictator remains the world's most critical, indeed, ‘indispensable’, 'instrumentality' in the war against terror, and for the stabilisation of the wider region around South Asia!
a corporate body can act only through the 'instrumentality' of human beings
In this view, the value of pursuing knowledge and learning rests in their anticipated 'instrumentality' and usefulness in obtaining other goods.
The most important secondary consequence was the spread of 'instrumentality' beyond the hand and the body.
That vision of a European ideal, despite its many faults, sought to construct a project based on assumptions of progress and 'instrumentality' .
As the federal government says, ‘It should be noted that the business to be obtained or retained does not need to be with a foreign government or foreign government 'instrumentality' .’
Hence, the Spirit appropriates the ‘old, old story of Jesus and his love’ as the divinely chosen 'instrumentality' in calling people into the family of God and in leading them to view all of life from the perspective of that story.
Uniform, along with the cogneries of military discipline procedures, should not be seen only in terms of docility and repression, or ideological 'instrumentality' .
Because we emphasise 'instrumentality' rather than ‘that which God does’, it might well be that the Almighty has already left us alone to discover our helplessness.
The particular 'instrumentality' for this cultural upheaval was the computer, in all its manifestations, and the various networks to which the computer could be linked, prime among them the Internet.
The cabbies are an exploited immigrant labor pool, perpetually in motion as they fulfill their 'instrumentality' as a means of transporting white subjects from work to home, and from home to work and play.
To return to public broadcasting, which Flint lets off with a slap on the wrist: many of us perceive a tragic decline in that 'instrumentality' .
That groundedness is why art and design programs are becoming a model for liberal arts education, which has historically tried to remove itself from any 'instrumentality' .
Social research continues to emphasize the 'instrumentality' of capitalism in producing these conditions.
The focus on 'instrumentality' enables existential warriors to defeat stronger instrumental Western armies such as those of Vietnam and Afghanistan.
And the 'instrumentality' , Larry, is going to be very important.
The only 'instrumentality' to be used is the Word of God, bringing the soul into contact with it by reading, preaching, singing, the sacraments, and the exercise of discipline.
For the government of each such country, the President is to seek to determine the precise agency or 'instrumentality' and the specific officials that are responsible for the particularly severe violations.
I first became aware of the political 'instrumentality' of religion when manoeuvred into Anglican Confirmation by paternal pressure.
In contrast, a federal research facility is ‘each department, agency, or 'instrumentality' of the United States which uses live animals for research or experimentation.’
Certainly Heidegger critiques technology's 'instrumentality' as marking the commencement of modernity as calculable, defined, measurable, ordered.
a corporate body can act only through the 'instrumentality' of human beings
For example, in the United States banks have been found liable on various bases, including the so-called instrumentality theory - they have controlled and dominated a borrower and it has become their mere 'instrumentality' .
The concepts of both realism and 'instrumentality' are tricky ones when it comes to moving from sixteenth-century Germany to late-twentieth-century North America.
These differences, however, remain interesting findings in that they can help explain possible current conflicts between the young and old with regard to permissiveness or 'instrumentality' .
Literalizing the form's political 'instrumentality' , Chesnutt stages the first of the novel's two cakewalks as light entertainment for a group of northern investors.
Rather, a masculinist workplace culture that rewards long hours and values competitiveness, individualism and 'instrumentality' excludes those people that want a life outside work, whatever their gender.
There seems to be two standard ways of realising the hidden 'instrumentality' of a building and both seem to involve or at least portend its destruction: there is a natural and a supernatural way of going about it.
At the heart of all of them, I would argue, is the idea of 'instrumentality' : a thing, unlike a person, is an instrument or means to the ends of persons; it is not an end in itself.
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