deficiency 的定义
plural de·fi·cien·cies.
- the state of being deficient; lack; incompleteness; insufficiency.
- the amount lacked; a deficit.
deficiency 近义词
imperfection, inadequacy
更多deficiency例句
- The digital deficiencies threatened Winford’s ability to fully tend to her patients’ emotional and physical well-being, she said, creating additional headaches during a public-health crisis.
- To address the council’s deficiencies and ensure it lives up to its mandate, the United States must be at the table using the full weight of our diplomatic leadership.
- The researchers also found clean eating to be associated with nutritional deficiencies, since restrictive behavior can go undetected and unchecked for so long.
- One is about the difference between correcting a deficiency and boosting performance.
- On a related note, the global pandemic has exposed deficiencies in health systems everywhere and has highlighted the importance of advancing with more patient-centric solutions.
- At 11, back in his home town of Rosario, Argentina, Messi was diagnosed with growth hormone deficiency.
- Dominant models of depression tend to treat the condition as a defect or deficiency.
- He had no sign of a spreading infection, a tumor, or auto-immune deficiency.
- The underlying statute that keeps government from fully operating during a shutdown is an 1870 law, the Anti-Deficiency Act.
- GRID, gay-related immune deficiency, became AIDS, acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.
- In fact, some memories are much oftener weak from deficiency in reviving power than from feebleness of first impressions.
- Deficiency of rennin has the same significance as deficiency of pepsin, and is more easily recognized.
- Lastly the pawner is liable for any deficiency after the sale of the thing pawned, unless released by statute.
- If the losses exceed the premiums thus paid in advance, then an assessment is made on each member to cover the deficiency.
- A second is the deficiency in educational influences, which have had so much to do with human progress.