Similar words: problem, nobleman, mathematical, mathematics, mathematician, schematic, systematic, systematically. Meaning: [‚prɑblə'mætɪk(l) /‚prɒ-] adj. 1. open to doubt or debate 2. making great mental demands; hard to comprehend or solve or believe.
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121. Aid for the poor, particularly poor women and children, has been problematic since colonial times.
122. Partly because of this fact, dependent conditionals have been taken as problematic.
123. Seizing on one cause and inflating its opposite within a problematic framework of assumptions is not the answer.
124. Clearly researching these areas is highly problematic, especially if details about the amount of food eaten are required.
125. But life has become increasingly problematic as the years have progressed, because of the widespread use of microchips in everyday items.
126. We need therefore to devise a screening procedure which singles out the problematic investigations.
127. More problematic than issues relating to the calculation of these statistics are the assumptions upon which they are based.
128. Yet for many old people the meeting of basic needs in residential care is problematic.
129. Publishers and booksellers will have to pick their way through a landscape made strange and problematic by change.
130. We want to say quite explicitly that the language with which the problems of contemporary urban life are addressed is necessarily problematic.
131. This healthy, realistic fear helps the organization resist the temptation to take the easy way out of a problematic situation.
132. But dialogue, however problematic, is preferable to the old songs of hate.
133. How far judicial discretion on sentencing should be directed by Government policy is problematic.
134. But even if political authorities were clear about what they expected from public enterprises, political control would remain problematic.
135. Relationships between men and women have never been more problematic.
136. Third, we are, inpart at least, talking about an activity which appears to be defined as problematic by users themselves.
137. The processes through which we can see texts functioning within a social and cultural context are problematic.
138. Both the cases of Scaevola and Papinian, it is fair to assume, were problematic.
139. Federman's own novels thus revolve around the problematic nature of their own survival.
140. It is important to understand the problematic nature of historical evidence.
141. As we saw in Chapter 1 and as every sensible student of crime knows by now, criminal statistics are highly problematic data.
142. The most problematic of these, in view of their diversity, were the first and the last.
143. Discussion of family support often seems to assume geographical propinquity, which is increasingly problematic.
144. Since women's clay-to-day experience of irritating and offensive usage is unrelenting[sentence dictionary], this is obviously problematic.
145. In order to comply with the court ruling the authority was faced with a number of equally problematic options.
146. It is apparent that obtaining enough water is problematic.
147. It is a problematic area.
148. The serialization case is a bit more problematic.
149. We get the problematic thrill.
150. Disabler: This driver disables some problematic stock drivers.
More similar words: problem, nobleman, mathematical, mathematics, mathematician, schematic, systematic, systematically, systematic desensitization, stalemate, ennoblement, probable, improbable, cremation, probation, acrobatic, probable cause, approbation, probationary, disapprobation, dramatic, aromatic, dogmatic, traumatic, rheumatic, automatic, pragmatic, enigmatic, idiomatic, chromatic.