0 impossible to repair or make right again: --
1 impossible to repair or make right again: --
irreparable damage
Just 5% of the investigated items were found to be irreparable due to ungrammaticality caused by the rules that turn the source clause into a stem.
But a "great soul" brought back to life will not only complain of an irreparable falling off; it will also play the role of an ideal.
The larval populations (c. 1-2 larvae per plant) during these periods, however, were sufficient to cause damage and irreparable loss of flowers (table 4) and squares (table 5).
Even if we can move off the global crop production plateau, can it be done without causing irreparable damage to the very resource base that sustains agriculture?
In other words, would a rational, informed, voluntary person risk grave, irreparable and certain harm only for something that was important to her life's enjoyment or ideals?
Usage of plastic flooring leads eventually to permanent damage: unlike wood, the plastic is irreparable.
I submit that in neither building could any part be removed without causing irreparable loss.
What happened, then, when the former suffered irreparable decline?