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Mezzopiano Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

Interpret this sentence

Hi, I have trouble understanding what this sentence means. I know each word's meaning but when they go together, I can't understand. I guess the word that confused me the most is "justifiable".

Can you please explain or rephrase the sentence? Thank you.

If a goal is worthy, then any means taken to attain it is justifiable.

  

Top answer

This seems to be a reworded version of the well-known saying that The end justifies the means. The end means the goal / the result. The idea is that it's OK to do bad things if you know the result will be good.

  • This seems to be a reworded version of the well-known saying that The end justifies the means.
  • The end means the goal / the result.
  • The idea is that it's OK to do bad things if you know the result will be good.
  • Clive
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2 Answers
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This seems to be a reworded version of the well-known saying that The end justifies the means.

The end means the goal / the result.

The idea is that it's OK to do bad things if you know the result will be good.

Clive

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The meaning is: "If a goal is worthy, then using any means - even unscrupulous ones - to attain it is justifiable."

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