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Перевод: disabled
[прилагательное] искалеченный; нетрудоспособный; неработоспособный; приведенный в негодность; [существительное] калека
Тезаурус:
- The college also has a course for physically or mentally handicapped students which is free to those registered disabled, Ribber Courses for double bed machines and another on panelled skirts and shadow pleats.
- Because of the preponderance of older people among the disabled and the cost implications of recognising this fact within the social security system, policy makers have consistently tried to deny the existence of disability among this group, arguing that it is a "normal" part of the ageing process.
- However, this was a different point to that made by Minister for the Disabled, Nicholas Scott, who commented that it was unwise to view all older people in the survey as disabled because " many consider the relatively minor limitations of hearing vision or movement recorded by the survey as in fact normal for their age."
- Ron wants to raise money for disabled children, whom he has worked with for many years.
- Yet, in this context, Professor Heinz Woolf of Brunel University has frequently discussed the use of what he would prefer to call "tools for living" rather than "aids for the handicapped", on the basis that customers should be able to purchase these items without having a disabled label attached to themselves.
- And many disabled people require large quantities of water, so it is expected that social legislation will provide grants to cover some of these categories.
- HELP FOR DISABLED PEOPLE
- With planning consent now received for an improved access for the physically handicapped and an extension to provide a parish office and toilet for the disabled, tenders will shortly be invited for the building works.
- Over half the severely disabled elderly are living only with the spouse and exactly half the spouses caring for an elderly disabled partner are men.
- And each week she goes snorkelling with a disabled club.
- When you look after someone who is even only partly disabled, there is always a risk that you become so engrossed in his problems and needs that you forget to look after yourself.
- The neglect of the needs of those disabled after retirement age is excused by reference to the growth in pensioners' incomes in recent years which, of course, overlooks the acute poverty among older people with disabilities and the fact that the growth in incomes has been concentrated among better-off pensioners.
- If equipment or projects must be subsidised from individual pockets, if there are no resources for creche facilities or disabled access it's difficult to envisage genuinely equal opportunities.
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