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lethalness

/lee-thal-i-tee/US // liˈθæl ɪ ti //

致命性,致死性,致死率,杀伤力

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the capacity to cause great harm, destruction, or death:Many pathogens are self-limited by their own lethality—the host dies before it has a chance to spread the pathogen.
    • : the likelihood of causing great harm, destruction, or death:Mutations can increase or decrease lethality, but most viruses mutate to less lethal forms.
    • : death:Prion diseases, such as so-called “mad cow,” are characterized by neurodegeneration and lethality.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • About an hour after the high court’s action, Hall was put to death by lethal injection in the Bureau of Prison’s facility in Terre Haute, Ind.

  • That trio would represent the best top-end talent in the Eastern Conference and offer a lethal combination of scoring, playmaking and shooting to Steve Nash, the Nets’ new coach.

  • The Justice Department has carried out more lethal injections in the past four months than the total number the federal government executed over the previous three decades.

  • However, research has found that after farmers target wolves with lethal management, the canids increasingly prey on their neighbors' livestock.

  • Patient advocates counter that too much went wrong once the virus was inside, lethal containment lapses that should have been cited by inspectors.

  • Zyklon B, a gas used by the Nazis in the death camps, is a haunting example of the rapid lethality of one form, hydrogen cyanide.

  • But the Boston bombings are still somewhat unusual for their lethality and success in America.

  • But the volatility of the Syria situation and the lethality of the weapons involved justify such an initiative.

  • True, the study strongly demonstrates the lethality of obesity.

  • There is a lot that could be done to reduce the frequency and lethality of such crimes.