释义 |
able-bodiedˌable-ˈbodied adjective - Disabled students face different problems from their able-bodied friends.
- Every able-bodied man should have the opportunity to work.
- For example, one individual's aggressive behaviour was ascribed to his loss of able-bodied friends following impairment.
- In 1903 the Poplar Guardians leased for one year a new workhouse specifically for the use of able-bodied men.
- It should go without saying that your needs and expectations are the same as those of able-bodied students.
- The budget would soften a provision that limits able-bodied adults without children to three months of food stamps in any 36-month period.
- The smith was invoking the part of the Elizabethan Poor Law which required the parish to assist the able-bodied to work.
- They went from house to house and signed up all able-bodied adults for work assignments.
- This service has been a boon to all who use it, pensioners, disabled and able-bodied residents.
not disabled► able-bodied not disabled - use this when you are comparing disabled people with people who are not disabled: · Disabled students face different problems from their able-bodied friends. NOUN► adults· They went from house to house and signed up all able-bodied adults for work assignments.· The budget would soften a provision that limits able-bodied adults without children to three months of food stamps in any 36-month period.· Would allow each county to decide how to serve able-bodied adults who do not qualify for other programs.· It would require able-bodied adults to work after being on welfare two years. ► man· That means our discussion programmes, for example, should not simply consist of white able-bodied men.· In 1903 the Poplar Guardians leased for one year a new workhouse specifically for the use of able-bodied men.· The school ethos was mainly concerned with turning out well-educated, potential wives of professional able-bodied men.· Today every able-bodied man is liable to serve at the front - in a war in which casualties are sickeningly high.· Every able-bodied man employed by the new company was eager to lend a hand with the new buildings.· Daddy was the only able-bodied man on our farm. ► people· There are almost as many varieties of holidays available for the disabled as for able-bodied people.· But disabled people believe the biggest obstacles they face are mental ones-the prejudices and thoughtlessness of able-bodied people.· So, the history of the portrayal of disabled people is that disabled people are portrayed as flawed able-bodied people.· I can compete with able-bodied people.· Disabled people, in particular, often have a greater degree of self-sufficiency than many able-bodied people however. 1physically strong and healthy, especially when compared with someone who is disabled: Every able-bodied man had to fight for his country.2the able-bodied [plural] people who are able-bodied |