p pa pb pc pd pe pf pg ph pi pk pl pm pn po pp pr ps pt pu pv pw px py

Перевод: poorly speek poorly


[прилагательное]
нездоровый; малолюдный;
[наречие]
скудно; худо; плохо; жалко; неудачно


Тезаурус:

  1. If severe, this may result in the diabetic lipaemia that is particularly seen in poorly controlled or newly diagnosed diabetics (Bagdade et al, 1967).
  2. Meanwhile, Mr Paul Tsongas, the former Massachusetts senator who suspended his campaign for the Democratic nomination a month ago, hinted yesterday that he might re-enter the race if Mr Clinton did poorly in New York.
  3. By 1934, although we seemed happy enough at this still very poorly paid work and our recreation, the economic situation worsened.
  4. Most of our problems were due to weather and poorly functioning equipment: an extended-range Loran that never worked, an ADF that pointed in the wrong direction and a kaput old-fashioned venturi altitude indicator.
  5. Failure may motivate the bright and able child yet discourage and handicap the child who is already doing poorly.
  6. Hostel staff, poorly paid and untrained, were under pressure from the subcommittee, the school and the local community, so that they erred on the side of caution in everything, thus frustrating the pupils.
  7. Even more importantly, they obviously lead to bad, poorly planned projects perhaps with inadequate or inappropriate equipment.
  8. Yes, machines can process walnuts, along much the same lines as almonds, but they do so very poorly if what you arc after is whole halves.
  9. The soils are principally poorly drained noncalcareous or humic gleys, with some cultivated podzols on shedding sites.
  10. But they failed to stop the accident because staff were poorly trained.
  11. Nevertheless Poland was still encumbered by a poorly developed industrial sector, a primitive, almost feudal, agricultural system, an under-funded banking sector and a poorly integrated railway system, and was hampered by the fact that it paid out 40 per cent of Gross National Income (approximately 28 per cent of all government expenditure) to maintain an army that was second in size only to that of Russia.
  12. The 1980s have been a decade of poverty for the poorly paid, with almost two out of every five full-time workers in Britain - nearly six million in all - now earning wages below the decency threshold set by the Council of Europe, the Low Pay unit says (writes Larry Elliott).
  13. Teacher-training, all too often still embedded in traditional teaching techniques, does not offer teachers sufficient guidance for them to be able to adapt to the new requirements in the curriculum; and the result is that pupils are inadequately guided, and projects and assignments are poorly executed.

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