Betekenis van:
fragility
fragility
Zelfstandig naamwoord
- kwetsbaarheid, breekbaarheid, fragiliteit
- quality of being easily damaged or destroyed
Synoniemen
Hyperoniemen
Voorbeeldzinnen
- addressing food insecurity in exceptional situations of transition and State fragility, playing a central role in linking relief, rehabilitation and development.
- These revealed the company's extreme fragility, the weakness of its customer base and the manifest impossibility of obtaining a return on the investment’.
- In particular, climate change may lead to cultural heritage assets being irreversibly damaged or lost because of their fragility and age.
- the financial fragility of SNIACE, which was an undertaking in crisis as a result of repeated losses incurred over many years, negative equity capital and its substantial debt as shown in the table contained in recital (59), was well-known.
- The European Consensus on Development, adopted by the Council and the Representatives of the Governments of the Member States meeting within the Council, the European Parliament and the Commission on 22 November 2005 and welcomed by the European Council on 15 and 16 December 2005, states that the Community, within the respective competences of its institutions, will develop a comprehensive prevention approach to State fragility, conflict, natural disasters and other types of crises, to which goal this Regulation should contribute.
- In August 2000, the German licences reached EUR 8,4 billion, and still France Télécom did not think of withdrawing despite having invested two months earlier EUR 43 billion in the acquisition of Orange (emphasis added) ... It was not until the summer of 2002 that two auditing exercises were launched to look into the German operator's prospects. These revealed the company's extreme fragility, the weakness of its customer base and the manifest impossibility of obtaining a return on the investment’.