0 a state of not being able to decide what to do about a situation in which you are involved:
1 a state of not being able to decide what to do about a situation in which you are involved:
These results will not affect studies of large parties, but do create a quandary for research where there are small voting blocs.
Averroes' way out of the quandary was to posit a "divine force", owing to which the heat is generated by reflected light.
Here we find ourselves in an analytical quandary.
The first thing a professional linguist will say, at this point, is that this quandary has been well-known since at least the 1950s.
However, the anthropologist is still left with an ethnographic quandary: not all displacements and mass movements are diasporic.
As trainees strive to become "team players" their interactions with colleagues are frequent sources of ethical conflicts and quandaries.
Moral quandaries were also framed in terms of their social ramifications.
The introduction and application of new technologies in clinical practice is sometimes associated with explicit moral quandaries.