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Перевод: deficient
[прилагательное] лишенный; несовершенный; недостаточный; неполный; недостающий
Тезаурус:
- A man would have to be totally deficient in imagination to fail to be struck with a kind of horror and awe.
- He complained in 1927 of living in an age "so deficient in devotion and so feeble in blasphemy".
- Many Nonconformist leaders were outspoken in their criticisms of public behaviour at religious meetings and services: the Rev. Alfred Rowland told Nonconformists in 1898 that they were "sadly deficient in reverence", while some services were marked by "downright vulgarity" and an abundance of chattering and unpunctuality which often indicated a "lack of inward reverence and true spirituality".
- When Soviet doctors carried out the autopsy on Hitler's partially burned body they could only find one testicle, lending credence to the popular wartime ditty that the German dictator was indeed deficient in this intimate area.
- Electron deficient boron and carbon clusters
- Second, it is a deficient view of sin which speaks lightly of it.
- Vitamin E is available from so many food sources that no normal diet could possibly be deficient in it.
- In the process, they participate in the global installation of a kind of universal grade of emotive competence, a standardization of the voice which is marginalizing deficient or regional voices.
- In one study, some of the patients also had chemical sensitivities, and when the results for these patients alone were considered, 90 per cent were found to be deficient in a particular enzyme system.
- But in the best English tradition he did not consider it his business to equip his deficient students with tools they had not got.
- A technique which is slightly deficient in those criteria necessary for a full point may nevertheless merit a full point if it is a kick to the head.
- The third main emphasis in his critique of the concept of the postmodern is to attempt to explain the hold exercised by a demonstrably deficient theory of culture and its dependence on a fundamentally irrationalist philosophy: which is to say he offers a politics of the postmodern.
- It had not been a response to an immediate military threat, but rather to something fundamentalist and almost intuitive - a feeling that Britain must possess so climacteric a weapon in order to deter an atomically armed enemy, a feeling that Britain as a great power must acquire all major new weapons, a feeling that atomic weapons were a manifestation of the scientific and technological superiority on which Britain's strength, so deficient in sheer numbers of men, must depend.
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