Examples of using Practically non-existent in English and their translations into Italian
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Official
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Colloquial
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Medicine
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Financial
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
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Programming
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Official/political
that was practically non-existent in the early years of the Church,
The find is considered"extremely rare" because early Christian images of Christ are practically non-existent in Israel.
your privacy is practically non-existent.
fall are practically non-existent.
We must remember the extreme importance that the Sumerians gave to the hardwood trees(practically non-existent in Sumer), which are necessary to forge the hoes for cultivation.
The sources of information are insufficient in the national field(see television news and newspapers), and practically non-existent in the local ambit.
or worse, practically non-existent.
the United States; nowadays in the industrialized countries the phenomenon is practically non-existent.
if not practically non-existent.
inflation remains practically non-existent.
The problem of orphaned children is practically non-existent in Western Europe,
In an interview he describes how the free-bass accordion was still practically non-existent in his childhood(born 1935),
at a time when non-invasive medical diagnostic equipment was practically non-existent in Italy, which eventually led to the corporate group becoming one of the world's largest for the sector.
This time, the queue is practically non-existent, so we get straight on board
insertion of a single spermatozoa into each oocyte means that the risk of viral infection is practically non-existent.
Industry is practically non-existent and agricultural activities are constantly threatened by droughts, which reflects on
cafes have brought to the expansion of the pedestrian areas- a true rarity in a car-friendly city where the public transportation system is practically non-existent and the streetcar has only been around for a few months.
without an outlet to the sea and with a practically non-existent transport network connecting it to northern Sudan,
Relations between the EEC and Japan, which were practically non-existent until the beginning of the 1970s,
which meant that competition was practically non-existent.