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Перевод: inoperable
[прилагательное] неоперабельный; недействующий; неприменимый
Тезаурус:
- Having survived peritonitis and a brain haemorrhage on top of an inoperable cancer, who was to speculate?
- It is perfectly possible to catch rabbits while ferreting with snow lying on the ground, but I do think that snow makes long-netting impossible as the net becomes clogged, wet and inoperable.
- Many analyses of the unions in the 1970s suggested that such political power as they possessed rested on their ability to defy incomes policies over time and veto (as In Place of Strife ) or render inoperable the policies or legislation which they did not like.
- Opponents of the NBA say that with no interstate trading restrictions the agreement is now inoperable.
- At present, the treaty would require that production acitivities be halted immediately and the chemical plants rendered "inoperable" within three months.
- In fact, the need to liberalize the law was mainly because it was inoperable: thousands of people were already using contraceptives.
- The constitution of the Vth Republic was intended to overcome the chronic factionalism, irresponsibility and opportunism which characterised the behaviour of deputs under those republics, and which rendered the government inoperable.
- "You have an inoperable cancer of the right lung," said the great man, and he pointed to a large X-ray photograph blown up on a screen in front of us.
- Port Stanley airfield was bombed and made inoperable, said the Ministry of Defence through what the press called "The "I speak your weight"" spokesperson.
- Half of all aircraft are said to be inoperable and two thirds of all vessels are in port at any given time.
- The tests showed that she had inoperable lung cancer.
- Moreover, she goes on, these problems are accentuated by the complexities of modern surgery and the large number of high-risk patients being admitted for hitherto inoperable conditions, particularly the very young, the elderly debilitated patient, diabetic, cancer and transplant patients, the severely injured, the burned and those undergoing surgery.
- At about the time when Becquerel was working on the radiation from uranium, G. T. Beatson, a surgeon in Glasgow, observed that the inoperable breast cancers of three patients underwent regression after he had removed their ovaries.
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