inefficiently adv.
无效率地
inefficiently[ adv ]
in an inefficient manner
<adv.all>
he dealt inefficiently with the crisis
Inefficiently \In`ef*fi"cient*ly\, adv.
In an inefficient manner.
- Too many Domestic Relations offices are run inefficiently, with too much red tape and machinery that is more often broken down than in operation.
- Should it ever be closed or even function inefficiently the alternative would be the long voyage around Cape Horn.
- Social Security transfers, for example, increase the relative standard of living of older Americans at the same time that they inefficiently induce earlier retirements that have the opposite effect.
- Accompanied by Cliff (Chris Denton), an inefficiently suicidal nerd, they set off across the American heartland with the wronged and wrongful husband in pursuit.
- But state officials say the fault lies not with the government but with the hospitals, which operate inefficiently and haven't kept pace with a changing society.
- If this led to a reduced credit rating, their funding costs would rise. Moody's suspects these companies will be tempted to allocate capital inefficiently and expand sales, at the expense of profits, to be able to continue paying surplus employees.
- A union poll of 408 drafted men showed 56 percent thought they worked inefficiently.