In the popular framework, enduring, practical, “made-to-last” love built on compatibility and effort..
In the popular framework, enduring, practical, “made-to-last” love built on compatibility and effort. In actual Ancient Greek, pragma means “deed, act, matter, affair, business.”
A real Greek word, but its ordinary classical meaning is “deed/affair,” not “practical love.” The romantic sense is a modern repurposing.
πρᾶγμα (prâgma), from πράττω “to do” (cf. πρᾶξις “action,” and English “pragmatic”).
Ancient Greek πρᾶγμα “deed, affair, business” (root πράττω). The same root gives English “pragmatic.”
Its use as a “kind of love” derives from John Alan Lee's typology (Pragma as a secondary love-style), built on the word's businesslike connotation — not from ancient usage.
DISPUTED FRAMING: Pragma is a genuine Ancient Greek word, but its classical meaning is “deed/affair,” not “practical love.” The love sense is a modern (1970s) repurposing via John Alan Lee's love-styles typology.