worked-out open cut (A mine where all the mineral that could be profitably exploited has been removed) |
atari zabaleko meatze agortu |
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working condition (All existing circumstances affecting labor in the workplace, including job hours, physical aspects, legal rights and responsibilities) |
lan-baldintza |
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working hours (The time devoted to gainful employment or job-related activities, usually calculated as hours per day or per week) |
lan-ordutegi |
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working population engaged in agriculture (The number of a particular region or nation's working population gainfully employed or otherwise occupied with the production of crops, livestock or poultry) |
nekazaritzako biztanleria aktibo |
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working the soil (Ploughing the soil for agricultural purposes) |
lurra lantze |
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working the soil (Ploughing the soil for agricultural purposes) |
lur-lantze |
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workplace (Any or all locations or environments where people are employed) |
lantoki |
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workplace (Any or all locations or environments where people are employed) |
lanleku |
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world (The Earth with all its inhabitants and all things upon it) |
mundu |
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world heritage site (Sites of great cultural significance and geographic areas of outstanding universal value. They include the Pyramids of Egypt, the Grand Canyon of United States, the Taj Mahal of India, the Great Wall of China, etc.) |
Munduko Ondarean sartutako leku |
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World Wide Web (A graphical, interactive, hypertext information system that is cross-platform and can be run locally or over the global Internet. The Web consists of Web servers offering pages of information to Web browsers who view and interact with the pages. Pages can contain formatted text, background colors, graphics, as well as audio and video clips. Simple links in a Web page can cause the browser to jump to a different part of the same page or to a page on a Web server halfway around the world. Web pages can be used to send mail, read news, and download files. A Web address is called a URL) |
World Wide Web |
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wreck (The hulk of a wrecked or stranded ship; a ship dashed against rocks or land and broken or otherwise rendered useless) |
itsasontzi-hondakin |
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wreck (The hulk of a wrecked or stranded ship; a ship dashed against rocks or land and broken or otherwise rendered useless) |
itsasontzi hondoratuen hondakin |
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write-off (Accounting procedure that is used when an asset is uncollectible and is therefore charged-off as a loss) |
kontraidazpen |
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wrongful act (An act contrary to the rules of natural or legal justice) |
ekintza ilegal |
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wrongful act (An act contrary to the rules of natural or legal justice) |
legez kontrako ekintza |
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wrongful government act (A deed performed by a government official or agent in exercise of police, constitutional, legislative, administrative or judicial powers that infringes upon the rights of another and causes damage, without protecting an equal or superior right) |
legez kontrako gobernu-ekintza |
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X ray (A penetrating electromagnetic radiation, usually generated by accelerating electrons to high velocity and suddenly stopping them by collision with a solid body, or by inner-shell transitions of atoms with atomic number greater than 10; their wavelength ranges from about 10(-5) angstrom to 10 angstroms, the average wavelength used in research being 1 angstrom) |
Roentgen izpiak |
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xenobiotic substance (A substance which would not normally be found in a given environment, and usually means a toxic chemical which is entirely artificial, such as a chlorinated aromatic compound or an organomercury compound) |
substantzia xenobiotiko |
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yeast (Many species of unicellular fungi, most of which belong to the Ascomycetes and reproduce by budding. The genus Saccharomyces is used in brewing and winemaking because in low oxygen concentration it produces zymase, an enzyme system that breaks down sugars to alcohol and carbon dioxide. Saccharomyces is also used in bread-making. Some yeasts are used as a source of protein and of vitamins of the B group) |
hartzigarri |
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