From Webster Dictionary
Di·lem·ma
Pronunciation: \də-ˈle-mə also dī-\
1 : an argument presenting two or more equally conclusive alternatives against an opponent.
2 a : a usually undesirable or unpleasant choice <faces this dilemma: raise interest rates and slow the economy or lower them and risk serious inflation> b : a situation involving such a choice <here am I brought to a very pretty dilemma; I must commit murder or commit matrimony — George Farquhar>; broadly : predicament <lords and bailiffs were in a terrible dilemma — G. M. Trevelyan>
3 a : a problem involving a difficult choice <the dilemma of “liberty versus order” — J. M. Burns> b : a difficult or persistent problem
<unemployment…the great central dilemma of our advancing technology — August Heckscher>
Di·lem·ma
Pronunciation: \də-ˈle-mə also dī-\
1 : an argument presenting two or more equally conclusive alternatives against an opponent.
2 a : a usually undesirable or unpleasant choice <faces this dilemma: raise interest rates and slow the economy or lower them and risk serious inflation> b : a situation involving such a choice <here am I brought to a very pretty dilemma; I must commit murder or commit matrimony — George Farquhar>; broadly : predicament <lords and bailiffs were in a terrible dilemma — G. M. Trevelyan>
3 a : a problem involving a difficult choice <the dilemma of “liberty versus order” — J. M. Burns> b : a difficult or persistent problem
<unemployment…the great central dilemma of our advancing technology — August Heckscher>