English to Punjabi Dictionary vulnerable

vulnerable

ਕਮਜ਼ੋਰ
definition
adjective
we were in a vulnerable position
susceptible to physical or emotional attack or harm.
example
The time it takes to climb a rope or scale a ladder leaves soldiers highly 'vulnerable' to attack.
A side which has already won one game towards the current rubber is said to be 'vulnerable' .
Normandy was his homeland and far more 'vulnerable' to sudden attack than was his island kingdom.
Children are especially 'vulnerable' to disease and malnutrition and need urgent care and supplies to help them survive.
People with severe mental illness are the most 'vulnerable' in a society.
Children are particularly 'vulnerable' to teasing, which can cause great distress.
Older people can be some of our most 'vulnerable' citizens and far too often can find it hard to speak out.
But if your ego is 'vulnerable' to start off with, it will bruise harder and for longer.
Cash is also the most 'vulnerable' to theft, and most travel policies only cover a few hundred pounds.
There is an issue as to the extent to which he remains 'vulnerable' to drug abuse and self harm.
Its ice masses have been particularly 'vulnerable' to the advance of global warming.
The economy is 'vulnerable' to a rise in the euro exchange rate or in interest rates.
Analysts will want to hear if the business could be 'vulnerable' to the economic slowdown.
In some ways we're even more 'vulnerable' to a flu pandemic than we were back then.
These are among the most 'vulnerable' , fragile and threatened habitats in Britain.
Rio Ferdinand is a big player for United and with him suspended United seemed 'vulnerable' at the back.
Young children are particularly 'vulnerable' to the health impact of passive smoking.
These are testing times for America and for an economy 'vulnerable' to a sudden fall in confidence.
It may have failed in its bid for NatWest, but Bank of Scotland is far from 'vulnerable' to a takeover.
The inmates say the new prisons leave them isolated and 'vulnerable' to abuse by guards.
The price is also 'vulnerable' to any deterioration in the security situation in the Middle East.
For example, Edward Herrmann portrays Hearst so subtly and 'vulnerably' that it took me 3/4 of the film to realize that he was a man of great power and that people feared him.
The nuts, on the leading screw pair in the feeder have a long service life because they are made of tin bronze to avoid 'vulnerableness' .
This meant flying 'vulnerably' low to obtain accuracy, but from January 1944 radar enabled Allied aircraft to lay them accurately from altitudes of up to 4,600m.
Don't produce a street map in public or you will advertise your 'vulnerability' to potential thieves.
Something about his voice, the 'vulnerableness' of it, just drew me in.
Someone who isn't afraid to express her true feelings and communicate openly at the risk of exposing her 'vulnerableness' .
I felt she had the right degree of 'vulnerability' and really conveyed that torture of being in forbidden love.
He said he had worked in the field of mental health recovery and was keenly aware of a patient's 'vulnerability' .
Every cultural message appears to emphasise human 'vulnerability' rather than resilience.
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