Find the word definition

Crossword clues for diplomatic

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
diplomatic
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
diplomatic bag
diplomatic corps
diplomatic immunity
diplomatic posting
▪ a diplomatic posting
diplomatic pressure (=pressure from other countries' governments)
▪ The announcement of a ceasefire came after intense diplomatic pressure from the US.
diplomatic protocol
▪ a breach of diplomatic protocol
diplomatic relations (also international/foreign relations) (= official relations between two countries)
▪ By then, Canada and Britain had established diplomatic relations with North Korea.
▪ This visit was the President’s most important breakthrough in international relations.
Diplomatic Service
diplomatic ties
▪ the establishment of diplomatic ties between the two countries
diplomatic triumph
▪ a tremendous diplomatic triumph for France
international/diplomatic/political isolation
▪ the country’s continuing political isolation
rescue/diplomatic/fact-finding etc mission
▪ a group of US congressmen on a fact-finding mission to Northern Ireland
restore (diplomatic) relations with sb
▪ Vietnam restored diplomatic relations with South Korea on December 22.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
more
▪ I was pleased that he was more diplomatic afterwards instead of being as over the top as ever.
▪ A more diplomatic approach can pay off.
■ NOUN
activity
▪ Prior to Gorbachev's visit there had been intense diplomatic activity between the two countries.
▪ The Tokyo meeting was preceded by a great deal of diplomatic activity during May.
▪ Whether diplomatic activity should be shielded from the public gaze is a matter for debate.
▪ The potential for the fighting to spill over into a wider regional conflict has triggered a flurry of diplomatic activity.
▪ Yesterday Arab leaders were engaged in a flurry of diplomatic activity to coordinate their positions in advance of Mr Christopher's visit.
▪ The Paris meeting had been anticipated by heightened diplomatic activity.
▪ In early 1991 there was an unprecedented degree of diplomatic activity between the two countries.
bag
▪ Without ciphers and diplomatic bags, espionage and counter-espionage actions were likely to be circumscribed.
▪ The Foreign Office had a contract with the prison to launder diplomatic bags.
▪ It arrived via the diplomatic bag on Saturday morning.
channel
▪ The diplomatic channel was generally used, and few bilateral treaties dealt with the subject.
contact
▪ Hurd flew to the Gulf on Aug. 31 to pursue diplomatic contacts.
▪ Moreover, this growth of diplomatic contacts was a two-way process.
▪ The best hope that Kampuchea can be spared more agony is the gathering weight of diplomatic contact.
corps
▪ For all of its own bureaucratic strictures, the diplomatic corps had the sympathetic ears that Liang was looking for.
▪ In Chongqing, Joe sought out contacts who could introduce him to the upper levels of the government and diplomatic corps.
effort
▪ Devoting maximum diplomatic effort to dilution and delay.
▪ But there were no outward signs that diplomatic efforts would soon defuse the fighting.
▪ Considerable diplomatic efforts were by now under way to end the fighting, though only one intervention now bore fruit.
▪ Every diplomatic effort was made to get him and his army to retire back over the frontier, but without success.
▪ Instead, officials intend to try turning up the pressure through sanctions and continued diplomatic efforts.
▪ Against that background, diplomatic efforts to find a solution to the impasse intensified.
▪ The coming months will see considerable diplomatic efforts channelled in that direction.
immunity
▪ Socially, we benefited from a sort of diplomatic immunity.
▪ A principle as old as ancient tribes and almost as remotely understood, diplomatic immunity is taking a beating this week.
▪ Embassy officials have said that Makharadze, an economics minister, had diplomatic immunity.
▪ It was an outrageous action, the worst violation of the basic principle of diplomatic immunity in modern history.
▪ State Department officials said Monday that no country has agreed to waive diplomatic immunity in such a serious case.
▪ Both are protected by diplomatic immunity.
incident
▪ Then, in Hong Kong, Chris Patten and family were reunited with their beloved terrier whose disappearance caused a diplomatic incident.
▪ The looming enforced removal of Mr Ozberk, 30, has the makings of a diplomatic incident.
initiative
▪ By October 1989, therefore, the time was right for a concerted diplomatic initiative against drift-net fishing.
▪ Prospects for diplomatic initiatives - US-Soviet statement Amid renewed calls for an immediate ceasefire there were reports of continued diplomatic initiatives.
isolation
▪ Economic sanctions, the cultural and sporting boycotts, and diplomatic isolation must be maintained and intensified.
▪ Kim Il Sung also found the dialogue with the South to be beneficial, especially in breaking out of his diplomatic isolation.
language
▪ The letter's painstakingly constructed diplomatic language continued to cause translation problems, even after both sides had agreed it.
▪ This is diplomatic language for joint hegemony and a proposed sellout of the Peloponnesian League.
links
▪ Nevertheless the political and diplomatic links which bound her to the rest of the continent were slowly multiplying and becoming stronger.
mission
▪ Only VIPs and foreign diplomatic missions are given permission to utilise such dishes.
▪ Cobham might adorn a diplomatic mission but would surely mismanage a key political post such as that of Canterbury's archbishopric.
▪ They are considered attaches to the diplomatic mission there and are not armed.
▪ The success of a diplomatic mission depends as much as anything on the quality of the information.
▪ A token number of official diplomatic missions is desirable but not essential.
▪ Crucial to the success of diplomatic missions were first the quality of the ambassadors and secondly the political intelligence.
▪ It has nine permanent diplomatic missions abroad.
post
▪ If the profession had declined into almost insignificance it is doubtful whether there would have been such a burgeoning of diplomatic posts.
▪ It was often difficult to persuade able men to accept diplomatic posts in distant capitals.
pressure
▪ Mahdi denies that his movement wants weapons or financing from Washington, saying moral support and diplomatic pressure are enough.
protest
▪ New Zealand regularly sent diplomatic protests at the start of each series of tests.
recognition
▪ He had hoped for concessions in return, including diplomatic recognition.
representative
▪ The use of soldiers as diplomatic representatives was far from unknown before the nineteenth century.
▪ Madame Bihi was a longstanding diplomatic representative who had been appointed by the government of President Barre.
▪ Franklin Roosevelt had maintained a diplomatic representative in Vichy from the outset.
service
▪ Gradually it became more institutionalised as something resembling organised diplomatic services emerged.
▪ He retired in 1809 after twenty-six years in the diplomatic service.
▪ They were even more alarmed by hostility to the papal diplomatic service.
▪ There is a shortage of suitable recruits in the diplomatic service, which offers varied experience abroad and a good career structure.
▪ Two years later a new commercial diplomatic service was created.
▪ Usually diplomatic services and foreign offices in this respect merely reflected the societies they served.
▪ The mechanism could still be operated satisfactorily by diplomatic services which were small and content to remain so.
▪ The establishment of permanent ambassadors marked the beginnings of a diplomatic service.
skill
▪ Britain should therefore not hesitate to use whatever powers and diplomatic skills she possesses to ensure that it does not come about.
▪ Intense prayer, along with astute technical and diplomatic skill, was dedicated to this problem.
▪ A top flight soldier with diplomatic skills would fit the bill.
solution
▪ There were those who argued that such action would alienate world opinion and sabotage the chances of a diplomatic solution.
▪ Leclerc preferred a diplomatic solution to a larger conflict.
▪ A cooler customer, it is suggested, would somehow have sought and found a diplomatic solution.
source
▪ According to diplomatic sources up to 300 people were killed in the violence.
▪ Journalists and diplomatic sources, however, cast doubt on the government's version.
▪ As recently as September Western diplomatic sources maintained that civil flights would infringe the zones.
▪ The Independent of Feb. 27 cited diplomatic sources as stating that 44 elected representatives had been imprisoned since the previous May.
▪ According to diplomatic sources, Baker warned that failure to address the charges could derail the peace process.
▪ According to diplomatic sources, Mbonimpa had been opposed to the moves by President Buyoya to include Hutus in the government.
status
▪ Nevertheless the steep decline which her diplomatic status had suffered since the Crimean War was arrested.
▪ Baya was questioned that day and, because of his diplomatic status, released.
▪ Both groups would have diplomatic status.
tie
▪ It was hoped to open the border and renew diplomatic ties by the end of 1991.
▪ Fifthly, non-diplomatic personnel are increasingly either having diplomatic influence or being involved in activity affecting diplomatic ties.
traffic
▪ So the Council had control both of outgoing and of incoming diplomatic traffic.
▪ Together, on a daily odd-even basis, they were responsible for diplomatic traffic.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
charm/diplomatic offensive
▪ But then Sunderland came up with a new offer and Liverpool launched a fresh diplomatic offensive.
the Diplomatic Service
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ A good secretary needs to be efficient, and above all diplomatic.
▪ He joined the diplomatic service and was posted to Ankara.
▪ Jen tried to be diplomatic as she explained the problem.
▪ Most members of the European diplomatic community have already left the country as war now seems inevitable.
▪ Robert's next diplomatic assignment was at the Paris embassy.
▪ Robson was trying to be as diplomatic as possible - he didn't want to risk losing a promotion.
▪ The governments of Britain and Syria are anxious to re-establish diplomatic relations.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ In Chongqing, Joe sought out contacts who could introduce him to the upper levels of the government and diplomatic corps.
▪ Moreover, this growth of diplomatic contacts was a two-way process.
▪ The car was unmarked, there were no military or diplomatic plates, no official driver, no bodyguard.
▪ The guarding of military and diplomatic secrets at the expense of informed representative government provides no real security for our Republic.
▪ The mechanism could still be operated satisfactorily by diplomatic services which were small and content to remain so.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Diplomatic

Diplomatic \Dip`lo*mat"ic\, Diplomatical \Dip`lo*mat"ic*al\, a.

  1. Pertaining to diplomacy; relating to the foreign ministers at a court, who are called the diplomatic body.

  2. Characterized by tact and shrewdness; dexterous; artful; as, diplomatic management.

  3. Pertaining to diplomatics; paleographic.
    --Astle.

Diplomatic

Diplomatic \Dip`lo*mat"ic\, n. A minister, official agent, or envoy to a foreign court; a diplomatist.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
diplomatic

1711, "pertaining to documents, texts, charters," from Medieval Latin diplomaticus, from diplomat-, stem of diploma (see diploma).\n

\nMeaning "pertaining to international relations" is recorded from 1787, apparently a sense evolved in 18c. from the use of diplomaticus in Modern Latin titles of collections of international treaties, etc., in which the word referred to the "texts" but came to be felt as meaning "pertaining to international relations." In the general sense of "tactful and adroit," it dates from 1826. Related: Diplomatically.

Wiktionary
diplomatic

a. 1 Concerning the relationships between the governments of countries. 2 Exhibiting diplomacy; exercising tact or courtesy; using discussion to avoid hard feelings, fights or arguments. 3 describing a publication of a text which follows a single basic manuscript, but with variants in other manuscripts noted in the critical apparatus 4 Relating to diplomatics, or the study of old texts; paleographic. n. The science of diplomas, or the art of deciphering ancient writings and determining their age, authenticity, etc.; paleography.

WordNet
diplomatic
  1. adj. relating to or characteristic of diplomacy; "diplomatic immunity"

  2. skilled in dealing with sensitive matters or people [syn: diplomatical] [ant: undiplomatic]

  3. able to take a broad view of negotiations between states [syn: wise]

Wikipedia

Usage examples of "diplomatic".

The new liberal constitution of Venezuela having gone into effect with the universal acquiescence of the people, the government under it has been recognized and diplomatic intercourse with it has opened in a cordial and friendly spirit.

I have for many months been using my influence at Washington to get this diplomatic see expanded into an ambassadorship, with the idea, of course th--But never mind.

Nevertheless Sir Robert Vansittart, chief diplomatic adviser to the Foreign Secretary and one of the leading opponents in London of the appeasement of Hitler, saw Kleist on the afternoon of his arrival, and Winston Churchill, still in the political wilderness in Britain, received him the next day.

Captain Kirk was therefore directed to extend to Commander ha Bem all courtesies normally extended to an attached observer, with special regard for the precarious diplomatic situation, keeping in mind the need to .

A diplomatic treaty was arranged between the famous Chevet and the perfumer.

Yardley had written disclosing his 1920 solution of Japanese diplomatic codes, asked the cable chief, Kazuji Kameyama, whether their current diplomatic communications were secure.

Woodward, 39, who had had some experience with Japanese diplomatic codes at the Shanghai station from 1938 to 1940.

And French solution of Italian and German diplomatic codes, which allowed her to read critical German messages on.

Lourdusamy -- then a young, minor functionary in the Vatican diplomatic machine -- with guiding the anguished and pain-ridden ex-Hyperion pilgrim, Father Lenar Hoyt, to finding the secret that tamed the cruciform to an instrument of resurrection.

His success cemented his attachment to cryptanalysis, and he followed this demonstration of the low estate of high-level cryptography with a 100-page memorandum on the solution of American diplomatic codes.

The other principle was to try to make certain that I did not give cryptology sole and total credit for winning a battle or making possible a diplomatic coup or whatever happened if, as was usual, other factors played a role.

Seventh child of Leo the Drungar, who conducted military and administrative affairs for the Byzantine court in Thessalonica, Constantine held a number of official and diplomatic posts and was raised amid the stark icon-free churches of the iconoclasts who were then in power in Constantinople.

A new resolution would change the nature of the endeavor completely, eliminating virtually all diplomatic problems.

You will add that we have already revoked the exequatur of a Russian consul who had enlisted in the military service of the insurgents, and we shall dismiss or demand the recall of every foreign agent, consular or diplomatic, who shall either disobey the Federal laws or disown the Federal authority.

Alessi, with a numerical lock and little purple LCDs that glowed through black glass: Fooler loops were built into its sides and the handle housed a semi-AI whose sole job was to inform airport scanners that the contents were covered by diplomatic protocol.