Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun The condition of being disabled; incapacity.
- noun The period of such a condition.
- noun A disadvantage or deficiency, especially a physical or mental impairment that interferes with or prevents normal achievement in a particular area.
- noun A program that provides financial support to people with such impairment.
- noun Law Lack of legal capacity to perform some act, such as to enter into a contract, because of infancy or lack of soundness of mind.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun Want of competent power, strength, or physical or mental ability: weakness; incapacity; impotence: as, disability arising from infirmity; a blind person labors under great disability.
- noun Specifically Want of competent means or instruments.
- noun Want of legal capacity or qualification; legal incapacity; incapacity to do an act with legal effect.
- noun Synonyms Disability. Inability, incompetence, incapacity, disqualification, unfitness. Disability implies deprivation or loss of power; inability indicates rather inherent want of power. One declines an office from
inability to discharge its duties, but is not elected to it because of some external disability disqualifying him for being chosen.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun State of being disabled; deprivation or want of ability; absence of competent physical, intellectual, or moral power, means, fitness, and the like.
- noun Want of legal qualification to do a thing; legal incapacity or incompetency.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun State of being disabled; deprivation or want of ability; absence of competent physical, intellectual, or moral power, means, fitness, and the like.
- noun Want of legal qualification to do a thing; legal incapacity or incompetency.
- noun uncountable, informal Regular payments received by a
disabled person, usually from the state
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun the condition of being unable to perform as a consequence of physical or mental unfitness
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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This rise in disability is likely to increase future nursing home populations by 10% to 25% over current projections, Lakdawalla says.
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Do you think your dislike of using the term disability, or the subject of disability itself as evidenced by the way you have consistently ignored the topic has to do with your fitness obsession, and the way you conflate a healthy, fit body with godliness?
Archive 2007-05-01 Kay Olson 2007
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I think we need to start using the term disability-phobic, to raise awareness about this, as in the descriptive and accurate term "homophobia"
May 1 -- BADD -- Fear, avoidance, and the people we never get to know Kay Olson 2007
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Do you think your dislike of using the term disability, or the subject of disability itself as evidenced by the way you have consistently ignored the topic has to do with your fitness obsession, and the way you conflate a healthy, fit body with godliness?
May 1 -- BADD -- Fear, avoidance, and the people we never get to know Kay Olson 2007
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The only other comment that I'll make is that the term disability or inability is not defined in the 25th Amendment, nor is it defined in the original Constitution, either ...
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Not everybody who has a disability is able to keep doing everything through it.
Barnstorming on an Invisible Segway timprov 2009
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In a way, I'm changing people's perceptions of what a disability is and can be.
Survivor's Kelly B: I Will Never Understand Why NaOnka Targeted Me 2010
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Erik Weihenmayer, the only blind person to have climbed Mount Everest, wrote the profile of Pistorius and said the runner challenges the notion that living with a disability is a disadvantage.
Pistorius makes Time's 2008 Influential People List BA Haller 2008
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Benefits payments and long term disability is another.
The Conservative Conference Is Irrelevant Newmania 2008
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But fighting for his disability is an additional aggravation, Dobler believes, he should not have to suffer.
Comments
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