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Перевод: safeguard
[существительное] гарантия ; охрана ; предосторожность ; конвой ; охранное свидетельство; предохранительное устройство; предохранитель [тех.] ; [глагол] гарантировать; охранять; уберечь; уберегать
Тезаурус:
- Alternatively, in the present economic climate, the power relationships between the different agencies may result in professionals vying to serve the needs of prospective clients since they have vested interests in defining the needs of their clients and expanding the numbers they serve in order to safeguard their own jobs.
- As long ago as 1975 a Home Office White Paper "Computers and Privacy" said, unambiguously, that "the time has come when those who use computers to handle personal information, however responsible they are, can no longer remain the sole judges of whether their own systems adequately safeguard privacy", and it set out clearly the special features of computerised information systems which had implications for privacy.
- Suppliers of free-standing, underfloor and wall safes to safeguard your valuables.
- Moreover, because of yet another Treasury safeguard to make sure that EC money does not sneak past its scrutiny of public spending, local authorities are not allowed to make up their own 50% by getting contributions from businesses or charities.
- Spermicides such as nonoxinol 9 have chemical activity against viruses (including HIV) and are an additional safeguard when used with a condom in vaginal sex.
- This trade unionism came eventually to believe in the need for parliamentary representation to safeguard its interests, and from the start determined the course of political intervention.
- He admitted that with prevailing high interest rates he was not particularly keen to mount a management bid, but would do so if it was the only way to safeguard shareholder value.
- JAGUAR and General Motors were last night locked in crucial talks over a deal which would safeguard the luxury car maker from being taken over by the rival US motor giant Ford.
- The parents had to be able to present a full defence, he said, and if the whole case had been heard in Inverness, it would have been almost impossible to fully safeguard their interests and get everybody in the right place at the right time.
- For Europe, Marshall Aid was an important element in its recovery: for Britain it was first a safeguard and then a prop to the sterling area cf.
- John Bader of Guernsey, who made a profit out of selling roses to Labour and then sought to safeguard it by voting Tory.
- Some degree of shared morality is essential to this minimum of cohesion, and any weakening of moral belief may reduce it below this minimum; hence we cannot bind ourselves not to use the law to safeguard existing moral beliefs, no matter how peripheral they may appear to be.
- Although the Geneva-based International Electrotechnical Commission is making progress on standards to safeguard against RFI, not everyone agrees that international bodies (or individual governments) should act to stamp out RFI.
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