A disposition to remain inactive or inert.
1 Any candidate representing inertia would simply not survive politically here, he said.
2 In this case we say that the moment of inertia is larger.
3 The problem with them, as I indicated at the beginning, was inertia .
4 What auto-enrolment does is get our natural inertia working in our favour.
5 Surely circumstance consists largely in the inertia , the impenetrability of the destroyers.
6 It must overcome its current complacency, political complexity, and inertia to act.
7 I have no trouble going through the motions; inertia makes it easy.
8 Official defensiveness and political cowardice, along with deep-seated inertia , have obstructed innovation.
9 Loading significantly increased regenerate bone volume and average polar moment of inertia .
10 It had given me something to go on besides inertia and fear.
11 A welcome counterpoint to the inertia that's seized the country of late.
12 That's fair enough, provided caution does not become an excuse for inertia .
13 His names for such forces in human activity were laziness and inertia .
14 Things like a bias for action rather than inertia , seems very obvious.
15 For decades, political reformers have been thwarted by the inertia of Westminster.
16 The first is common to all projects of reform-theforce of inertia .
Другие примеры для термина "inertia"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
Inertia в диалектах
Соединенные Штаты Америки