- international
- diplomatic intercourseobsolete term
nouns which may take the genitive case particle 'no'; noun (common) (futsuumeishi)
noun (common) (futsuumeishi)
Generated definitions (experimental)
Wiktionary definitions (experimental)
Example sentences
74 results
At this rate, the risk is high that our country's competitive position will drop even further.
It is the drop in the rice pricing (blamed on consumers' loss of interest in rice and the freeing up of the international market) that is the cause.
A population policy should be considered on the international viewpoint so as to balance the interests of both sides.
The Japanese are often criticized for being inward looking and insufficiently international in their outlook.
Especially over the last 20 years, the purported link between progressive welfare policies and economic failure in the Northern European countries seems to point to the difficulty of sustaining both full social welfare and international competitivity.
First we have International English, which will probably become simpler than "standard."
In modern times we have gone through two world wars as the end result of international disputes.
As for me, instead of trying to be a cool, international man, I would like to be an open-minded earth person.
Today young people find themselves, through no fault of their own, living in a world torn by international bitterness and the threat of nuclear destruction.