English to Spanish Dictionary disposable

disposable

desechable
definition
noun
don't buy disposables, such as razors, cups, and plates
an article designed to be thrown away after use.
adjective
disposable diapers
(of an article) intended to be used once, or until no longer useful, and then thrown away.
he made a mental inventory of his disposable assets
(chiefly of financial assets) readily available for the owner's use as required.
translation of 'disposable'
adjective
desechable,
disponible
example
Instead, I'd gambled all my sweetness only to find out I was 'disposable' .
What they don't say is that schools and hospitals don't really count as 'disposable' assets in the sense that they can't be sold off.
Lists of required equipment and 'disposable' items are available through the company.
But with the new fashion for 'disposable' leaders, perhaps it doesn't matter much.
As a business owner, you can't afford to view employees as 'disposable' assets.
Dublin's combination of a young population with a high 'disposable' spend is helping to push retail rents higher as international chains seek a high street presence in the market.
More recently, 'disposable' baths are available from several manufacturers as prepackaged single-use units.
And one of the council's strategies will be to work with parents to try to discourage them from using 'disposable' nappies in favour of reusables.
Articles such as 'disposable' diapers, bibs, clothing, etc. are disclosed.
In any case they create an abundance of 'disposable' money for which its owners try to find the most profitable investment.
Investment will therefore be a function of the financial viability of the hospital and its possession of 'disposable' assets rather than its ranking in terms of national and regional need.
As if all that were not enough, new scientific research is beginning to throw up other potential hazards with 'disposable' nappies.
By the end of 2002, Irish investors will have invested more of their annual 'disposable' capital than ever before into property.
A Judge at York Crown Court ordered him to pay back £17,365, after hearing that the sum would take away all his 'disposable' assets.
We are really looking at young, mobile 18- to 24-year-olds with a sizeable 'disposable' spend, but our company will obviously appeal to people outside that bracket," she said.
He was 'disposable' , now that he'd backed out of the deal.
There was a time when employees were 'disposable' .
A person with 'disposable' assets may want to keep it all for himself or herself, may not want to let go of any of it, and may actually be anxious about what will happen if too much gets away.
'disposable' nappies
Once 'disposable' nappies were for convenience.
As Marx put it in his great work Capital, from the point of view of the system, ‘if a worker consumes his 'disposable' time for himself, he robs the capitalist.’
It got depressing after a while, with the realisation that you're completely 'disposable' and not being hired for any skills.
As an example of some of the vast differences, French law allows for property to be divided into a 'disposable' and reserved portion on the death of the owner.
Further investigation showed they also contained hospital waste, including 'disposable' syringes and surgical gloves.
he had quite a lot of 'disposable' income
He was introduced as a 'disposable' character to push the story along for a couple of episodes at most.
During the purge I came across a still-functional 'disposable' razor and since I was in a whimsical mood, I proceeded to convert my full beard into a goatee.
In the age of 'disposable' parents, it turns out you can't blame psychological disorders for what happens in the absence of rules.
The oft-heard stereotype of deadbeat poor people masks the growing reality of dead-end jobs and 'disposable' workers.
Especially if they're 'disposable' - getting rid of the evidence as quickly as you can is crucial to both your nostrils and your sanity.
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