Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
So far we have looked at the defectiveness of the product.
The cause of the Party's defectiveness must be found.
"We now clearly see the defectiveness of the monopoly in world finance and the policy of economic selfishness.
In the meantime, in view of your youth and ah, apparent mental defectiveness, I shall hold the treason charge.
These include a change of one's mind, defectiveness of the merchandise, personal dissatisfaction, or a mistaken purchase of the wrong product.
The implicit insinuation is that Watts has been given a "pass" on that defectiveness because of the color of his skin.
The queen, giving great allowance for my defectiveness in speaking, was, however, surprised at so much wit and good sense in so diminutive an animal.
The Origin and Control of Mental Defectiveness, Pop.
Though he had no intention of ever learning Sanskrit, reacting to the defectiveness of the available translations, he became motivated to do so.
'My remarks on her apparent defectiveness are still valid,' Monsorlit pointed out.
"The usual attitude is to hide in a bunker and to think that every mention of their product in the context of defectiveness is wrong," he said.
Where the finished product is exempt from the Act, then the manufacturer is not liable where the defectiveness arises solely from the component part (s. 1(3)).
It is disillusioning to confront the defectiveness of Mr. Shaffer's construction without a star of transcendent artistry - or is it alchemy?
Defectiveness is a cline: The Semitic abjads do not indicate (all) vowels, but there are also alphabets which mark vowels but not tone.
I use it all the time" and George Bernard Shaw told TE Lawrence that not using semicolons was "a symptom of mental defectiveness, probably induced by camp life".
He sees the so-called Defectiveness Schema as a core schema of NPD, along with the Emotional Deprivation and Entitlement Schemas.
Swahili is currently written in a slightly defective alphabet using the Latin script; the defectiveness comes in not distinguishing aspirated consonants, though those are not distinguished in all dialects.
He said it took three days of often angry debate to resolve another crucial element in the state's law on mental defectiveness: whether the defendants knew or should have known the young woman lacked the ability to refuse.
Whose defectiveness does not amount to idiocy, but is so pronounced that they are incapable of manging themselves or their affairs, or, in the case of children, of being taught to do so.
In a petition, she wrote that mentally defective children were "a menace to society and an enormous cost to the state...science is proving that mental defectiveness is a transmittable hereditary condition."
Even if English orthography were regularized, the English alphabet would still be incapable of unambiguously conveying intonation, though since this is not expected of scripts, it is not normally counted as defectiveness.
Fominskiy L.P., Muller A.S., Levchuk M.B. Defectiveness of the crystal structure of the electro-powders.
In the 1910s, Rockefeller created the Bureau for Social Hygiene, which conducted experiments on female prisoners, with the state's consent and financial support, to determine the roots of their criminality and "mental defectiveness."
They can be distinguished from other verbs by their defectiveness (they do not have participle or infinitive forms) and by the fact that they do not take the ending -(e)s in the third-person singular.
R. 157, the Court of Appeal held person with a low IQ, short of mental impairment or mental defectiveness, was not necessarily less courageous or less able to withstand threats and pressure than an ordinary person.