imperative

હિતાવહ
definition
noun
free movement of labor was an economic imperative
an essential or urgent thing.
Noteworthy in this meditation is the use of imperatives and action verbs, which are meant to activate the believer.
a verb or phrase in the imperative mood.
adjective
immediate action was imperative
of vital importance; crucial.
the bell pealed again, a final imperative call
giving an authoritative command; peremptory.
translation of 'imperative'
આદેશાત્મક,
અચૂક કરવાપાત્ર,
અનુલ્લંઘનીય,
અચૂક અમલપાત્ર
example
So they're an 'imperative' part of our community fabric.
Now qumi could be a feminine singular 'imperative' meaning ‘arise’ in either Hebrew or Aramaic.
What the brand management system should have brought, but indeed has not yet delivered, is the 'imperative' to be more competitive.
Law enforcement officers come ‘under pressure to perform quickly… the 'imperative' is simply to be seen to be tough on crime.’
The passive voice gives a sense of detached and objective authority that, in contrast to the 'imperative' mode, is expressive of neutrality.
The human desire for novelty is twinned with an equally 'imperative' desire for continuity.
It is 'imperative' this person or persons are brought to justice as quickly as possible.
In any case, this tension between the indicative and the 'imperative' may lead us to a fruitful discussion on the main theme of our deliberations during this conference.
On that view, since basic self-knowledge is more certain than perceptual knowledge, it is more 'imperative' that one be master of all its enabling conditions.
But they also know that the settlement was meant as ‘hush money’, and therefore it is 'imperative' the truth be asserted more clearly than ever.
In order to implement gender reform, it is 'imperative' that gender bias in the legal framework of the country is removed.
As you can see, we haven't got very far in meeting our moral obligations under this 'imperative' .
Such an 'imperative' seems particularly urgent because of the vacuum at the top.
- It's absolutely 'imperative' to trust your financial adviser.
Jon's utterance is an 'imperative' , but it is not a command.
But then there will be an 'imperative' demand for the local authorities to invest in skilled manpower.
This establishes a competition between the state and the tribe, which the tribe, with its greater moral 'imperative' , eventually wins.
The 'imperative' now is to draw up a treaty to prevent such disasters ever happening again.
What's needed in this political setting, say forum participants, is a moral 'imperative' that trumps sheer economic concerns.
It is 'imperative' that couples should communicate in order to know the root of the conflict.
The second, related, threat is the 'imperative' of poverty.
Job stress is caused by the lack of adequate staffing, and by the 'imperative' for laboratory work to be error-free.
The authors concluded that it was 'imperative' that current road safety programmes, including random breath testing, be fully implemented.
But that only makes the task of doing so all the more 'imperative' .
But it is one of the noblest things this country has ever attempted abroad and it is a moral and strategic 'imperative' that we give it our best shot.
With a slogan in the 'imperative' for every page, each designed to stimulate or simulate happiness, the calendar is a study in conventional contentment.
So their brand name is nothing less than an 'imperative' exhortation to those struggling with their conscience to simply give in to it: go ahead!
This pernicious tendency is promoted mainly by the 'imperative' in university curricula to label things for treatment in semester-sized chunks, and the habits of writers for academic journals.
It's an 'imperative' and ornate exhortation to lay open your nerves and unabashedly, unapologetically feel.
Their relation sometimes shows that the 'imperative' is no longer the consequence of the indicative, but an inseparable part of the kerygmatic indicative.
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