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compromising

intermediateB1

/ˈkɒmprəmaɪzɪŋ/ · com-pro-mi-sing

Involving an agreement between parties where concessions are made.

Meanings

adjectiveformal

Involving an agreement between parties where concessions are made.

ایک ایسا معاہدہ جس میں فریقین آپس میں سمجھوتہ کرتے ہیں۔

مصالحہ کرنے والا

muslihah karne wala

Synonyms

negotiatingsettlingmediatingمصالحتمفاہمتسفارش

Antonyms

stubbornunyieldinginflexibleڈٹ جانے والاانکار کرنے والاسخت مزاج

Common Collocations

  • compromising situation
  • compromising position
  • compromising agreement

Example Sentences

We reached a compromising position after hours of negotiation.

ہم نے بات چیت کے گھنٹوں بعد ایک سمجھوتہ کرنے والی حالت پر پہنچے۔

Hum ne baat cheet ke ghanton baad ek samjhota karne wali halaat par pohanche.

In diplomacy, it is often necessary to take a compromising stance.

سفارتکاری میں اکثر سمجھوتہ کرنے والا رویہ اختیار کرنا ضروری ہوتا ہے۔

Sifaratkari mein aksar samjhouta karne wala rawaya ikhtiyar karna zaroori hota hai.

He found himself in a compromising situation after sharing confidential information.

وہ خفیہ معلومات شیئر کرنے کے بعد ایک سمجھوتہ کرنے والی صورت حال میں پھنس گیا۔

Woh khufiya maloomat share karne ke baad ek samjhota karne wali surat haal mein phans gaya.

Easily Confused With

compromise:Compromising refers to the act of making concessions, while compromise is the agreement itself.

Word Family

compromise
nounسمجھوتہ
compromise
verbسمجھوتہ کرنا

See Also

💡 Memory Tip

Think of 'compromise' as 'com-promise', where both sides make promises.

Imagine two people shaking hands after a negotiation.

✍️ Urdu Poetry

ہم نے سمجھوتہ کیا ، جب بات ہوئی کسی بھی سمت میں۔

Hum ne samjhota kiya, jab baat hui kisi bhi simt mein.

We compromised when the matter went in any direction.

Unknown, Unverified

* Poetry attribution is AI-generated and may require verification.

🗣️ Urdu Proverb

سمجھوتہ ہمیشہ طاقتور کا کام ہوتا ہے۔

Samjhota hamesha taqatwar ka kaam hota hai.

Compromise is always the work of the powerful.

📖 Etymology

Origin: Latin "compromissum" — a mutual promise

First known use: 15th century

The term 'compromise' originates from Latin 'compromissum', which referred to an agreement made mutually.