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Перевод: elective
[прилагательное] выборный; избирательный; имеющий право выбирать; факультативный; необязательный
Тезаурус:
- The central issue in British politics has not been how to curb the elective dictatorship but how to capture it.
- The position of Phoenix King is elective.
- In support of the feasibility of contracting, instances are cited where Health Authorities, aiming to clear or reduce waiting lists, have contracted with another authority or the private sector to provide a number of treatments, usually elective surgery.
- According to Reagan himself, when he appeared on the factory floor In assessing Reagan's qualifications for the presidency his experience before he ran for elective office cannot be discounted.
- 96 men undergoing elective inguinal hernia repair under general anaesthesia.
- Waiting times for elective treatment in inner London teaching hospitals is higher than the average, although the report noted an improvement in the past year.
- Through all the vicissitudes of history, the crown came to embody Hungarian nationality and the Kingship remained elective, so that it was still possible for Hungarians in 1860 to deny Francis Joseph sovereignty because he had not been crowned with the crown of St Stephen.
- He's a medical student, doing an obstetrics and gynaecology elective at the District.
- In addition, there are opportunities to take elements from others, or to undertake elective units (such as further studies in Computing or a study of "Clear Thinking").
- Also, some GPs already undertake minor elective surgery.
- For certain types of elective operation, there is likely to be much more scope for choice in whether or not to let contracts.
- The Economist has called for a bill of rights as a bulwark against what Lord Hailsham once described as an "elective dictatorship".
- There is an elective affinity between this cultural vision and the religious vision of the Roman catholic church prior to the second Vatican Council, in its exclusivist attitude towards other Christian churches, an attitude which is far from overcome at the level of popular Roman catholicism.
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