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61 near zero risk
околонулсвой риск; пренебрежимо малый рискEnglish-Russian dictionary on nuclear energy > near zero risk
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62 non-residential population risk
English-Russian dictionary on nuclear energy > non-residential population risk
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63 nuclear plant staff risk
English-Russian dictionary on nuclear energy > nuclear plant staff risk
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64 occupational risk
English-Russian dictionary on nuclear energy > occupational risk
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65 particular risk
конкретный риск; данный рискEnglish-Russian dictionary on nuclear energy > particular risk
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66 peak seasonal population risk
English-Russian dictionary on nuclear energy > peak seasonal population risk
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67 perceived risk
English-Russian dictionary on nuclear energy > perceived risk
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68 public risk
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69 quantifiable risk
English-Russian dictionary on nuclear energy > quantifiable risk
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70 quantified risk
English-Russian dictionary on nuclear energy > quantified risk
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71 social risk
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72 specific risk
English-Russian dictionary on nuclear energy > specific risk
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73 speculative risk
English-Russian dictionary on nuclear energy > speculative risk
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74 technological risk
English-Russian dictionary on nuclear energy > technological risk
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75 technology-associated risk
English-Russian dictionary on nuclear energy > technology-associated risk
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76 tolerability of risk
English-Russian dictionary on nuclear energy > tolerability of risk
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77 tolerable risk
English-Russian dictionary on nuclear energy > tolerable risk
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78 unacceptable risk
English-Russian dictionary on nuclear energy > unacceptable risk
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79 undue risk
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80 unjustifiable risk
English-Russian dictionary on nuclear energy > unjustifiable risk
См. также в других словарях:
risk-prone — Willing to pay money to assume risk from others. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary … Financial and business terms
assume — as·sume vt as·sumed, as·sum·ing 1: to voluntarily take upon oneself assume a risk 2: to take over (the debts or obligations of another) as one s own assume a mortgage Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster … Law dictionary
Risk — takers redirects here. For the Canadian television program, see Risk Takers. For other uses, see Risk (disambiguation). Risk is the potential that a chosen action or activity (including the choice of inaction) will lead to a loss (an undesirable… … Wikipedia
risk — n 1 a: possibility of loss or injury b: liability for loss or injury if it occurs the risk of loss passes to the buyer when the goods are duly delivered to the carrier Uniform Commercial Code the risk of personal injury and property damage should … Law dictionary
assume — UK US /əˈsjuːm/ verb [T] ► to begin to take control of something: assume control/office/a role »Europe has assumed a leadership role in the prevention of future global crises. assume responsibility for sth »The FSA said mortgages would not be… … Financial and business terms
assume a risk — index speculate (chance), underwrite Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
risk — I n. 1) to assume, incur, run, take; face; spread a risk (to run the risk of being outvoted) 2) to outweigh a risk (the advantages outweigh the risks) 3) a calculated; grave, great, high; low; security risk (to take a calculated risk; he is a… … Combinatory dictionary
Risk dominance — Infobox equilibrium name = Risk dominance Payoff dominance subsetof = Nash equilibrium supersetof = discoverer = John Harsanyi, Reinhard Selten usedfor = Non cooperative games example = Stag huntRisk dominance and payoff dominance are two related … Wikipedia
risk — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ big, considerable, enormous, grave, great, high, huge, major, serious, significant … Collocations dictionary
assume — verb ADVERB ▪ automatically, naturally ▪ I automatically assumed that you knew about this. ▪ reasonably, safely ▪ I think we can safely assume that this situation will continue … Collocations dictionary
risk-seeking — Readiness to assume high rates of *risk in order to achieve opportunities for high *returns. Risk seeking investors are deemed to have high *risk appetites. In contrast to a *risk averse individual, for example, a risk seeker would tend to reject … Auditor's dictionary