US /ɪnˈhɪrənt/
・UK /ɪnˈhɪərənt/
What's problematic about these concepts, he says, is that you can't pull their descriptive meaning away from their inherent negativity.
What's problematic about these concepts, he says, is that you can't pull their descriptive meaning away from their inherent negativity.
as an inherent human being,
There's no point to any of this if you don't believe that you have inherent dignity.
And if you don't treat yourself like you have inherent dignity from the get-go, there's nothing you can do to earn that.
There's a distinct inherent advantage that the car has when you cannot access that many jobs within a reasonable period of time by mass transit.
This draws on the idea of economies of scale, which is that there are cost savings inherent to large production operations where the costs of equipment and labor are used to produce so many items that the overall cost of production becomes really low.
This draws on the idea of economies of scale which is that there are cost savings inherent
When you have 15 radically different republics under one flag with different ethnicities, cultures, and languages, there are bound to be inherent tensions.
Men are lonely, not through any specific deficiency on their part, but because of an inherent conflict.
There is inherent risks and everything we do. And so we have to find ways to make sure that we understand what the risks are and mitigate them, but then actually go fly.
The inherent competitiveness that can sometimes happen.
The shear strength of a soil, basically its ability to avoid collapse, is not an inherent property.