inchoate

नुकताच सुरू झाला आहे असा
definition
adjective
a still inchoate democracy
just begun and so not fully formed or developed; rudimentary.
translation of 'inchoate'
आरंभ करणे,
अप्रगल्भ,
अपरिपक्व,
नुकताच सुरू झाला आहे असा
example
Those who purge Darwin from America's schools must yell in order to drown out their own misgivings, the 'inchoate' realization that they are barking at the moon.
Between 1984 and 1987 he personified our 'inchoate' desire to shake free of the Muldoon years and remake ourselves in a bolder, prouder way.
Prosecutors now target some of the same conduct with other statutes, such as conspiracy statutes and 'inchoate' crimes, in order to accomplish the same goal of preventing extremist groups from acting on their ideologies.
Musicals answered my need to give that 'inchoate' adolescent passion form, to embrace experience and then see a pattern in its marks on me.
I loved the way she could draw you into an 'inchoate' world where half-expressed motivations were always shifting and uneasy - everything was undercurrent, it was all subtext and no text.
Furthermore, the Reformed objection to natural theology, unformed and 'inchoate' as it is, may best be seen as a rejection of classical foundationalism.
Buried somewhere in this 'inchoate' play is a potentially interesting idea about the way we all use theatrical games as a protection against life.
Moreover, new power structures and established institutions invariably come to replace the old ones, and any initial glow of 'inchoate' democracy can easily be undermined by the rising centers of symbolic power.
A native title ‘claim’ is not technically made for recompense for past loss, but for the recognition of current but 'inchoate' rights.
The ‘information society’ is only explicable in terms of the future, of its ultimate limits rather than its incipient, 'inchoate' beginnings.
I can't tell you what 'inchoate' rage fills my breast as I quote you this statistic.
The essence of conspiracy is 'inchoate' and the criminality is not to be judged merely by reference to those objectives which are actually achieved.
Why can a conspirator be charged with both the 'inchoate' offense of conspiracy and the robbery?
As the pace of industrialization quickened in the 1890s, in tandem with a mounting agrarian slump assailing gentry and peasants alike, new social groups emerged and focused an 'inchoate' but widespread discontent.
All four had the 'inchoate' desire to work in journalism when they applied to graduate school but felt clueless about how to get a serious job in journalism.
This is essentially the key question in deciding on the appropriate basis for the criminal responsibility required for commission of the 'inchoate' offences of incitement, conspiracy and attempt.
The 'inchoate' character of memory makes it difficult to know what is important about the past or, for that matter, what role the past plays in the present.
They are thus left to float free in the sea of popular culture, without cultural or moral bearings and prey to the 'inchoate' but deep resentments that this popular culture so successfully inculcates.
We saw all the early 'inchoate' gestures of the alternative comedy movement when it was still alternative, and before it had swamped the festival with its commercial machine.
Not that I was a musical illiterate: I did enjoy the light-classical pieces, some of which inspired me to an 'inchoate' creativity.
My responses were probably stupid and certainly 'inchoate' .
Conspiracy is one of the three 'inchoate' offences in English criminal law, to be discussed in Chapter 11 below, but conspiracy may also be charged when the acts agreed upon have actually been committed.
Classic poetry and rhetoric give kids a language, at once subtle and copious, in which to articulate their own thoughts, perceptions, and 'inchoate' feelings.
In Him there are no parts or passions, nothing 'inchoate' or incomplete, nothing by communication, nothing of quality, nothing which admits of increase, nothing common to others.
This applies to clearly defined areas such as foreign affairs and education policy, as well as to more 'inchoate' issues such as where tolerance of diversity begins and ends.
‘Each person is on Earth to make sense of themselves and for themselves and to bring the 'inchoateness' of this self into an expressible state,’ he reflects.
We saw that the one student had beautifully articulated a longing that many students 'inchoately' shared.
Rather, the current strain is wrought of a convergence of forces, complicating manifestations of history, ideology, experience, and ambition that have always swirled around the German-American relationship, however 'inchoately' .
Some day a great (but probably unappreciated) historian will tell the dramatic, even tragic, story of American Conservatism: its rise from 'inchoateness' out of the ruins of Liberalism's grand illusions; its struggles for coherence; its triumphs and failures; and finally its corruption by power.
The most effective poets, it seems to me, understand that their art depends on their access to their original narratives, those life studies that, involuntarily, 'inchoately' , dream their way back to us.
Credits: Google Translate