Quandary in a sentence as a noun

Seem like the Dropbox app will have this quandary but on an even larger scale.

Existential quandary here, but I loathe how we are now hitting the 20 year mark on the modern PC gaming era.

The last bundle posed an interesting moral quandary for me. I didn't want to spend much money, but I also didn't want to pay below what I thought it was worth.

This is now more of a economic quandary, nothing serious stops you building the card and exposing higher level APIs that way.

So we're forced into that decision quandary of buy for less now with not what we really want, or pay through the nose up front, grumble a bit, then go on our merry way.

To me, that is the quandary of immigration: how do they manage to embrace the host culture so much that they no longer identify with their native one.

I realize that there is no ideal solution to that quandary, but as a result we must prosecutorial discretion to a very high standard.

> Brines believes the quandary many couples find themselves in comes down to this: “The less gender differentiation, the less sexual desire.”The 21st century catches up with common sense.

But, that leaves me in a bit of a quandary: if discrimination is not the word to use here, than what is?Right now I'm leaning towards compound terms like "accidental discrimination.

You might be tempted to use static methods for plain-old namespaced functions, but there's a second quandary: it is really difficult to manipulate anything but instances in Java.

That's the main quandary that the politicians/economists appreciate but the general public doesn't, I think: either way Germany is stuck bailing out this debt, because in large part it's not really bailing out Greece, but bailing out German banks.

Emergency providers are in a bit of a quandary as they must choose between the possibility of missing a subdural hematoma on a patient refusing care and facing a wrongful death lawsuit, and facing a lawsuit for unlawful imprisonment and assault.

Quandary definitions

noun

a situation from which extrication is difficult especially an unpleasant or trying one; "finds himself in a most awkward predicament"; "the woeful plight of homeless people"

See also: predicament plight

noun

state of uncertainty or perplexity especially as requiring a choice between equally unfavorable options

See also: dilemma