Englishfor English speakers
stable
Adjective
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If something is stable, it is unlikely to move or change.
That number has remained relatively stable over the years.
Ghana is often cited as one of the most stable democracies in West Africa.
Five of the six victims remained hospitalized Tuesday in stable condition.
Children need a stable environment at home.
Our bodies maintain a stable body temperature.
These young adults have relatively close and stable relationships with their parents.
The Middle East is less stable today than at any time in the past quarter century.
Each couple must on average have slightly more than two children if a population is to remain stable.
Iron-57 and iron-58 are fairly stable, but iron-59 decays to cobalt-59 in a month.
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If you are stable, you are calm and don't get upset easily.
I'm a lot more stable than I was as a teen.
Feeling happy, secure, and stable with the guy you're dating doesn't mean he's boring.
law
Noun
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Laws are the official rules of a government or organisation.
We have defined crime as behaviour which breaks the criminal law.
We believe that this law is wrong and we are not prepared to obey such a law.
The Kyoto treaty became law in 2005.
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The law is the police.
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A law is something that is always true.
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Law is the study of laws.