BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine: Shall we go for a walk? A cross-sectional study comparing the 6 min walk test and cardiopulmonary exercise test for assessing cardiorespiratory fitness in de novo kidney ...
Shall we go for a walk? A cross-sectional study comparing the 6 min walk test and cardiopulmonary exercise test for assessing cardiorespiratory fitness in de novo kidney ...
BMJ: #WhatWouldYouDo? A cross-sectional study of sports medicine physicians assessing their competency in managing harassment and abuse in sports
#WhatWouldYouDo? A cross-sectional study of sports medicine physicians assessing their competency in managing harassment and abuse in sports
BMJ: Strength, power and aerobic capacity of transgender athletes: a cross-sectional study
Limitations imposed by its subject matter make the book a dull read. Despite his limitations as a manager, he always brings projects to completion on time. acknowledge/recognize sth's limitations The UN must acknowledge its limitations, and avoid getting dragged into conflicts it cannot resolve.
If you talk about the limitations of someone or something, you mean that they can only do some things and not others, or cannot do something very well. The theory is a useful tool, but it has limitations.
lim i ta tion (ˌlɪm ɪˈteɪ ʃən) n. 1. a limiting condition; restrictive weakness; lack of capacity: to know one's limitations. 2. something that limits; a limit or bound; restriction. 3. the act of limiting. 4. the state of being limited.
lim i ta tion /ˌlɪmɪˈteɪʃən/ n. shortcoming:[countable] He's aware of his own limitations. the state of being limited. Law a period of time, defined by law, during which legal action may be taken:[countable] statute of limitations. See -lim-. lim i ta tion (lim′i tā′ shən), n. inability or handicap: He knows his limitations as a writer.