Sagaz in english
Sagacious
pronunciation: səgeɪʃəs part of speech: adjective
pronunciation: səgeɪʃəs part of speech: adjective
In gestures
sagaz = canny ; politic ; vivacious ; wily ; sly ; perceptive ; keen-witted ; shrewd ; astute ; cunning ; foxy ; sagacious.
Example: The principles behind successful commercial Web sites (clear mission, valuable content, clean design and canny publicity) can be applied by academics in establishing non-profit Web sites.Example: Libraries are often confronted with finding a way of dealing with gift books which is both efficient and politic.Example: This petite, agile, graceful and vivacious artiste was a picture of self-confidence on the stage.Example: But he was wiry and wily, too, and he could often out-run, track, back-track, double-back, and finally dodge unseen in the subway.Example: You must be a bit sly sometimes to succeed in the world.Example: In their profound and perceptive essay on professionalism, Mary Lee Bundy and Paul Wasserman write at some length on this extraordinary phenomenon, 'the essential timidity of responsibility for solving informational problems and providing unequivocal answers'.Example: She is famous for her series featuring homicide detective Peter Decker and his keen-witted, beautiful wife.Example: Payment is very important and can be a problem so the businessman needs to be streetwise and shrewd with a good business acumen.Example: It requires an extraordinarily astute librarian to uncover this shortcoming at the interview stage.Example: The article 'Collection development policies: a cunning plan' looks at the value of collection development policy statements and what they can and cannot do.Example: This is an interesting way of rigging the system and such foxy tactics can be played in many other places.Example: These sagacious and monied few are able then to pocket their political harvest at the expense of the industrious and uninformed mass of the people.