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Перевод: denominator
[существительное] знаменатель ; делитель
Тезаурус:
- I suppose that the common denominator in on-the-road campaigning is the commitment it requires, especially from the volunteer workers in the constituencies who make the biggest sacrifice.
- I know there's a recession, but being commercial, seeking the lowest common denominator, is no answer."
- One man who, seemingly, likes to stare a prospective flop in the face, is suave comedian Mark Lamarr, the common denominator and inadvertent saviour of quick-witted spontaneity.
- Attempts to make this cost reflection more sophisticated at a later date were, however, jeopardised by internal BEA politics, which reduced initiatives to the lowest common denominator acceptable to the Area Boards.
- Their one common denominator is tap, and as the lessons go by we are drawn into their lives, finally sharing with them the triumph of their first public performance!
- Each had their separate sources of funding and, as a result, would not necessarily have to chase the largest audience nor produce lowest common denominator programmes so as to please as many as possible.
- For the sake of standardization the London Companies always worked to the lowest common denominator!)
- Jesus Christ is the common denominator between all Christians.
- This sub-atomic medium has been defined as an energy-rich substrate, the common denominator in all particle reactions in nuclear physics.
- Thus, we have: Average labour cost = Dividing the numerator and denominator by the number of people employed, we can write: Average labour cost = But the numerator now represents "average wage earnings" and the denominator the "average productivity of labour".
- A common denominator of many of the new churches will be the regular use of these spiritual gifts, but how can we encourage the worshippers to grow in maturity in their use?
- It's the mediocre that drags us all down to a common denominator; that deprives us of judgement; that particularly deprives us of a sense of humour.
- Between 1860 and 1930, some 5 per cent (often characterized by the common denominator of illiteracy) of the city's population appeared annually in court, almost entirely in relation to minor street incidents - from "suspected persons" to the moral iniquity of riding a pedal cycle without lights.
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