expedience in the PONS Dictionary

expedience Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

dismissed as a matter of expedience

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
It can be caricatured as expedience, the substitution of arbitrary or subjective preferences for commonly understood principles.
news.nationalpost.com
This is a man for whom political expedience is second to no principle.
news.nationalpost.com
It does underscore that governing is a balancing act involving the demands of ideology and special interests and those of administrative expedience.
www.latimes.com
Unbridled corruption betrayed the spirit of people power with its politics of expedience, popularity and deceit.
opinion.inquirer.net
But too many have only expedience to offer, cheap labor for prosperous times.
prospect.org
The siblings -- she's clever and headstrong; he's thoughtful and protective -- fret over the possibility of forced marriages for the sake of peace-keeping expedience.
www.npr.org
All other issues must be looked at within two phases of occurring, in the interest of expedience.
www.rugby.com.au
There are several key aspects underlying the concept of organizational expedience.
en.wikipedia.org
The first is to specify the formal conditions that make a moral statement (e.g., that is prescriptive, that it is universalizable, such as expedience).
en.wikipedia.org
Such wording would be found in reference to the expected closing date for a real estate contract, typically compensating a seller for a buyer's lack of expedience (citation required).
en.wikipedia.org

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