pertinence - meaning and definition. What is pertinence
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What (who) is pertinence - definition

USEFULNESS OF CERTAIN INFORMATION IN THE CONTEXT OF A GIVEN TOPIC
Irrelevant; Relevancy; Pertinent; Pertinence; Pertinency; Irrelevance; Unrelevant
  • Graphic of relevance in [[digital ecosystem]]s

Pertinence         
·noun ·Alt. of Pertinency.
pertinence         
n.; (also pertinency)
Fitness, appropriateness, relevancy, appositeness, suitableness, applicability, propriety, patness.
relevance         
Something's relevance to a situation or person is its importance or significance in that situation or to that person.
Politicians' private lives have no relevance to their public roles...
N-UNCOUNT: with supp, oft N to n

Wikipedia

Relevance

Relevance is the concept of one topic being connected to another topic in a way that makes it useful to consider the second topic when considering the first. The concept of relevance is studied in many different fields, including cognitive sciences, logic, and library and information science. Most fundamentally, however, it is studied in epistemology (the theory of knowledge). Different theories of knowledge have different implications for what is considered relevant and these fundamental views have implications for all other fields as well.

Examples of use of pertinence
1. It is that whenever the nation is at war, the other two branches of government have a radically diminished pertinence to governance, and the president determines what that pertinence shall be.
2. My initial response was to discuss it further and to post more photos but I started to feel uneasy about giving it too much pertinence.
3. "The new offer by Mittal Steel demonstrates the pertinence of the positions taken by the board since Jan. 2'," he said.
4. "The new offer by Mittal Steel demonstrates the pertinence of the positions taken by the board since January 2'," he said.
5. McDonough is evidently a student of the Nick Tosches school of meta–biography, frequently interrupting his subject‘s story to address the reader with personal asides and ranting soliloquies of doubtful pertinence.