stabilised

IPA: stˈeɪbʌɫaɪzd

adjective

  • made stable or firm
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Examples of "stabilised" in Sentences

  • Pakistan needs to be stabilised.
  • By 1790 the situation had stabilised.
  • Clinic in Port Elizabeth on Friday, had "stabilised".
  • [3] At the "stabilised" rate of exchange a crore, or ten million rupees = one million gold pounds sterling.
  • A snapshot of HIV diagnoses in 25 US states showed that the infection rate had "stabilised" at roughly 16,600 annually between
  • One of the biggest fears of "stabilised" communities was that the debt burden of their partners would be shifted onto the total community.
  • If you’ve only had storebought buttercream, make this one and you’ll wonder how they can get away with calling their stabilised sugar mixture “buttercream”.
  • The difference between the two rates represents, it is calculated, a loss to the Indian tax-payer of thirty-five crores of rupees, or £35,000,000 at the "stabilised" rate ordained by Government.
  • "We believe it is essential to put all the cards on the table so that we deal with the reality and not perceptions of a 'stabilised' system," Democratic Alliance education spokeswoman Helen Zille said.
  • Typically this would involve the maintenance of cement - or lime-containing materials such as stabilised soil blocks under moist conditions, so that the setting reactions of the cement may proceed or reactions may continue between lime and clay particles.
  • The next day, a Sunday, having "stabilised" the situation by running back-ups and making police statements, this young man went home and played computer games for 8 hours non-stop, and I am certain that that was for him a highly efficient way of "integrating" shock and fright.

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synonyms for stabilised
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