0 taking action by causing change and not only reacting to change when it happens:
Companies are going to have to be more proactive about environmental management.
1 intending or intended to produce a good result or avoid a problem, rather than waiting until there is a problem:
2 taking action to make changes yourself rather than reacting to things that happen:
Making senior executives more accountable will also make them more proactive.
proactive in doing sth The insurance industry should be more proactive in dealing with the increasing problem of insurance fraud.
proactive about sth "Employees need to be proactive about their workplace rights," said one union official.
Making the decision : instances of a relatively proactive and planned approach to deciding that placement was needed.
Their preventive, proactive potential is perhaps the most important advantage of both unit- and team-based ethics.
That is, the role of constructive, proactive parenting in decreasing children's disruptive antisocial behavior patterns was strongest for children who initially had many problems.
In the latter study, maternal proactive parenting practices with aggressive, disruptive 2-year-olds predicted fewer problems by kindergarten.
However, they can only serve as metaphors for interaction that are complicated by a proactive artificial improviser.
Because many are serving long sentences, and many younger inmates will grow old behind bars, proactive measures need to be developed today.
High objective and subjective efficacy contributes partly to a lower level of depressive symptomatology via the promotion of a proactive style of behaviour.
Other efforts towards ethnic language preservation include proactive research by a wide variety of authors.
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主動的,積極的…
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主动的,积极的…
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proactivo, proactivo/va [masculine-feminine, singular]…
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proativo…
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aktywny…
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zamanından önce değişiklik yaparak önlem alınan, önceden davranılan…
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dynamique…
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proaktiv…
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