English » Slovenian

re·sili·ent [rɪˈzɪliənt] ADJ

1. resilient (able to keep shape):

resilient material
resilient material

2. resilient fig (able to survive setbacks):

resilient
resilient
resilient health

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Moreover, high resilient widows showed the likelihood of controlling their positive emotional experiences to recover and bounce back from daily stress.
en.wikipedia.org
Modern plastic coated bowling pins are very resilient, and can absorb many rounds before becoming too splintered or unbalanced to function as targets.
en.wikipedia.org
Addressing this need, recent and have been developed provide the perspectives and relevant examples to overview the issues and provide opportunity to create resilient solutions.
en.wikipedia.org
Laparoscopic repair has been demonstrated to be safe and a more resilient repair than open incisional hernia repair.
en.wikipedia.org
In contrast to skip lists and other tree data structures, they are very resilient and can tolerate a large fraction of node fails.
en.wikipedia.org
The wood is hard, thick, heavy, and resilient, allowing it to be used in the construction of rural houses.
en.wikipedia.org
But both men were willing to take risks, and both were very resilient.
en.wikipedia.org
The streets are paved with resilient asphalt to prevent aching of feet.
en.wikipedia.org
The core of the augen is a porphyroblast or porphyroclast of a hard, resilient mineral such as garnet.
en.wikipedia.org
It is a resilient plant and can tolerate neglect.
en.wikipedia.org

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

Submit a new entry.

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