0 used to describe money that someone has lost or lent and will never get back: --
1 used to describe information on a computer that has been lost and cannot be found: --
2 used to describe a mistake in a computer program that cannot be corrected: --
I remain concerned, however, about businesses that have suffered unrecoverable losses directly as a result of foot and mouth disease.
First, farmers whose cattle pass the age of 30 months suffer a sharp, unrecoverable loss of value.
In many cases this will be difficult or impossible, with the prospect of under-collected amounts being unrecoverable and over-collected amounts needing to be refunded.
When the final consonants, [n] of when and [t] of wet, and the whole cluster, [nt] of went, are deleted, the result is the unrecoverable form [w].
A basic analysis of complexity is essential: an error at that level is often unrecoverable, and it may manifest itself only when large parts of the system have been built.
One of those unrecoverable things is music.
The accretion of information and interpretations does not ultimately lead to a coherent whole, but that does not matter, because that's what the city is - an unrecoverable experience.
All staves which remain blank would have belonged to the companion composition, which only partially survives on staves 1 and 2 of the surviving fragment and is thereby unrecoverable.