B2 to consider a person , subject , or situation to be important or dangerous and worth your attention or respect :. The police have to take any terrorist threat seriously. You don't take anything seriously, do you? It's all one big joke to you. She's sick of being seen as a sex symbol and wants to be taken seriously as an actress.
These young actors take them selves so seriously! You don't take me seriously any more! We have to take complaints like this very seriously. We take this sort of thing very seriously indeed. Doctors will always take this symptom seriously. I was joking - don't take me so seriously!
Very important or urgent. They do some seriously good desserts there. That boy is seriously stupid. Exemplos de seriously. I really cannot take all this stuff seriously. De Cambridge English Corpus. If people are to take voting seriously , they should see that their vote counts. I found myself asking on reading this, but the question is not seriously addressed.
At another level, the omission of fundamental components of the historical narrative can seriously mislead readers. There are all sorts of possible situations which none of us takes seriously as real likelihoods. The inquiry report, produced by Brazilian lawmakers, alleges Mr Bolsonaro pursued a policy of herd immunity - the scientific term for the point at which a population is protected by enough people having been vaccinated or developed antibodies by catching the disease.
It is alleged the Brazilian government let the virus rip through the country with the aim of achieving widespread immunity - which the report says led to unnecessary infections and deaths.
It describes the president as "the main person responsible for the errors committed by the federal government during the pandemic". He is also accused of spreading misinformation about the virus. Mr Bolsonaro has said his government "did the right thing from the first moment" of the pandemic. It closed its land borders to neighbouring countries in March to stem the outbreak but has never imposed a nationwide lockdown.
If it is up to him, Mr Bolsonaro says, "Brazil will never have a lockdown" because such restrictions only make the poor poorer. Throughout the pandemic, he has blocked local leaders' efforts to impose restrictions and called state governors and mayors who imposed lockdowns "tyrants".
He has also resisted other common public-health measures such as masks, saying they are ineffective at stopping the spread of coronavirus - although he has sometimes worn one himself after being ordered to do so by a judge in Brazil.
Mr Bolsonaro hasn't officially backed herd immunity - but his critics say the lack of public-health measures and messaging from the national government show this policy was pursued. The report also accuses Mr Bolsonaro of spreading misinformation surrounding coronavirus.
He has been sceptical about vaccines, downplayed the severity of the virus, and promoted unproven treatments. Social-media platforms have removed several of Mr Bolsonaro's posts spreading misinformation throughout the pandemic - including a recent video in which the president falsely claimed a link between Covid vaccines and Aids.
Brazil has had a strong record in conducting vaccination campaigns and compared with many other countries in Latin America, it has a well established healthcare infrastructure. But its coronavirus vaccination efforts initially lagged behind many others in the region - with critics blaming Mr Bolsonaro for being too slow to purchase doses. It now has enough doses to vaccinate its entire population and has administered doses per people.
Please upgrade your browser to see the full interactive. This information is regularly updated but may not reflect the latest totals for each country. Total vaccinations refers to the number of doses given, not the number of people vaccinated. Pop Jessie J. Bipolar Sunshine. Quero ser PRO. Legendas Desativadas Velocidade Normal Velocidade 0.
0コメント