English to Spanish Dictionary incapable

incapable

incapaz
definition
adjective
Wilson blushed and was incapable of speech
unable to do or achieve (something).
the pilot may become incapable from the lack of oxygen
unable to behave rationally or manage one's affairs; incompetent.
translation of 'incapable'
adjective
incapaz,
que no puede,
incapacitado
example
Anyhow, after being just as rude to him, as he to me, he seems to be completely 'incapable' of speech.
A 14-year-old girl was arrested for being drunk and 'incapable' but later released.
Beth's weary loyalty towards her 'incapable' boyfriend is fun to watch.
Now 78, Eduardo is wheelchair bound, alert but 'incapable' of speech.
And Burge's proposal seems 'incapable' of explaining how they are possible.
She is rich, useless, and 'incapable' of contributing to society.
Consequently he was incompetent, cognitively 'incapable' of envisioning change and probably dangerous.
I was absolutely demolished, emotionally wrung dry, 'incapable' of coherent speech for a half-hour or so afterwards.
Being drunk and 'incapable' should no longer be an excuse for misbehaving on the streets, says the man taking over Swindon's new licensing body.
It only looks broken because we are now asking it to perform a function of which it is 'incapable' .
Paramedics are dealing with a growing number of drunk and 'incapable' youngsters on the streets, according to a senior member of North Yorkshire ambulance service.
There is an argument which holds that half a century after its birth, rock 'n' roll is now a geriatric form which, like jazz, has become 'incapable' of innovation or reinvention.
One of my companions was actually 'incapable' of speech for the next five minutes.
Slowly, she shook her head, finding herself quite 'incapable' of speech at the moment.
After several seconds of being 'incapable' of speech, Audrey finally got a grip on herself… sort of.
A possible explanation is that the human eye and brain are 'incapable' of processing all the necessary visual information to apply the rule
Being arrested drunk and 'incapable' at 11 pm in the centre of London is part of every young man's right of passage.
We are sure they do not want to be seen as some infirm, 'incapable' , old couple.
I am not saying for a moment that every woman who is left to bring up a child on her own is 'incapable' .
When the attorney has reason to believe that the donor is, or is becoming, mentally 'incapable' he must make an application to the Court of Protection for registration of the EPA.
Processes for evaluating the welfare of the child, even if they are comparatively vigorous, are 'incapable' of identifying inadequate parents.
What I wouldn't do was to serve it up to 18 people on a course who were hungry because my own 'incapable' staff couldn't do their job properly and supply any biscuits at break times.
She has never told her mother, who appears hopelessly 'incapable' of communicating constructively with her daughter about the issues which affect her most.
Britain's health, education and welfare systems, devised in the 1940s, are 'incapable' of meeting the challenges of the 21st century.
The person exempted from serious evaluation, after all, is someone considered 'incapable' of significant achievement.
He had been deformed by accident at birth, and was a hunched dwarf, unable to walk well, and so shy that the King's men thought him 'incapable' of proper speech.
Churches and pro-life organisations fear that the bill could result in 'incapable' adults being denied food and drink at the insistence of a relative empowered to act for them.
A few reactors in her brain decided to give up the ghost, and she simply stared, 'incapable' of speech or action.
But once opportunity offered she was 'incapable' of refusing…
Attempts by the United Nations to broker a deal have foundered, allowing the problem to fester and become a sore 'incapable' of being healed.
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