English » Slovenian

ward [wɔ:d] N

1. ward (in hospital):

2. ward Brit (political area):

okraj m

3. ward Am (in prison):

krilo n

4. ward LAW:

ward off VB trans

iso·ˈla·tion ward N

ˈla·bour ward N

ma·ˈter·nity ward N

re·ˈcov·ery ward N

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
The base hospital was constructed with five wards, with 151 beds.
en.wikipedia.org
The high priests that reside in several wards that form a stake are part of a quorum led by the stake president.
en.wikipedia.org
Almost all wards were locked and patients were reliant on staff to go in and out.
en.wikipedia.org
Development of virtual ward teams with the specialised skills to deal with these specialised cases is one area of second generation virtual wards.
en.wikipedia.org
One outcome of this synthesis created what is known as bimaristan, the first hospital that introduced a concept of segregating wards according to pathology.
en.wikipedia.org
There are five town councilors, one for each of the town's wards.
en.wikipedia.org
Or just the mere thought of an operating theatre with recovery wards and a pharmacy on water?
www.jamaicaobserver.com
Wards are named after neighbourhoods, thoroughfares, parishes, landmarks, geographical features and in some cases historical figures connected to the area, and numbered.
en.wikipedia.org
As the council is elected by thirds, one seat in each of the wards was up for election.
en.wikipedia.org
There were six wards for typhus, two each for scarlet fever and enteric patients.
en.wikipedia.org

Would you like to add some words, phrases or translations?

Submit a new entry.

Look up "wards" in other languages


Choose your language Deutsch | Ελληνικά | English | Español | Français | Italiano | Polski | Русский | Slovenščina