व्यावहारिकज्ञान Meaning in English
व्यावहारिकज्ञान शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : practical knowledge
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
व्यावहारिक गणितप्रैक्टिकल नर्स
व्यावहारिक नर्स
व्यावहारिक राजनीति
व्यावहारिक कक्ष
प्रैक्टिकलिस्ट
व्यवहारिकता
व्यावहारिकता
व्यावहारिक ढंग से
व्यवहार कुशलता से
व्यवहारतः
व्यवहारपूर्वक
व्यवहारिक रूप से
व्यावहारिक तरीके से
व्यावहारिक दृष्टि से
व्यावहारिकज्ञान इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
Eager to explore and gain practical knowledge for his own garden designs, in April 1786, Jefferson set out for a tour of English gardens in the company of his close friend and future second President of the US, John Adams.
The National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence (ASE) Entry-Level certification tests are designed to indicate a satisfactory level of practical knowledge-based readiness for the workforce in candidates seeking a career in the automotive service industry.
However, they often lacked grounding in the science and engineering principles underlying this practical knowledge.
The curriculum also contains a thorough practical knowledge and practice of performing standard clinical procedures.
This gives him or her the basic clinical and practical knowledge about all the disciplines of medicine and makes the medical graduate fit to work in the community as a General Physician.
Combe also emphasizes that theoretical and practical knowledge should be combined through the integration of scientific and religious teachings.
Pramathesh Barua wanted to go to Europe and get a practical knowledge of the art and craft of film-making.
The book also illustrates manners in which literature can form connections or create boundaries between educational intelligence and practical knowledge.
|Johnson was a mathematician and priest with little practical knowledge of astronomy.
It is indigenous peoples who have the relevant practical knowledge, since they have been successfully making a living in them for hundreds of generations.
The Latin phrase moralis certitudo was first used by the French philosopher Jean Gerson about 1400, to provide a basis for moral action that could (if necessary) be less exact than Aristotelian practical knowledge, thus avoiding the dangers of philosophical scepticism and opening the way for a benevolent casuistry.