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shrewdness
[ shrood-nis ]
noun
- the quality of being astute or sharp in practical matters; the ability to find and pursue the most advantageous course of action, sometimes at the cost of moral compromise:
He had the gift of storytelling, but not the ordinary shrewdness to convert the talent into a bankable asset.
Michnik says that the marketplace frequently “chooses banality over excellence, shrewdness over nobility, empty promise over true competence.â€
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ³Ü²Ô·²õ³ó°ù±ð·É»å·²Ô±ð²õ²õ noun
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of shrewdness1
Example Sentences
When the stakes are high, he demonstrates a shrewdness in managing his image.
While the practicality of Harris’s proposal may be debatable, its political shrewdness is undeniable.
"I saw that spark in him, that political shrewdness in him. I saw a horse going to win big races."
Napoleon ascends through shrewdness and dumb luck, taking advantage of anti-royalist sentiment one minute and crowning himself emperor the next.
Brighton is known for its shrewdness in the transfer market, buying players cheaply and selling them for high prices.
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