A situation in which nothing can be accomplished can be called:
Stalemate: A situation in which neither side can make progress or achieve a resolution.
"Accomplished" or "achieved."
Nothing! The words convey no intelligible English meaning, the word "Situation" seems particularly out of place with the rest of the phrase!
adept or expert or competent or accomplished
The root word for "situation" is "situs," which comes from the Latin word meaning "position" or "place."
'Nada grande' is a phrase from the Portuguese and Spanish languages. The word-by-word translation of the phrase is nothing, which is the meaning of 'nada'; and big, or great, which is the meaning of 'grande'. There are interpretations other than the literal. But they depend upon the situation.
The meaning of the word none is- negative, nothing, 0, zero, having nothing in quantity. This is a difficult word to define because it means absence in numbers.
Latin -- nihil, meaning "nothing" ; a from the Latin " ad " -- meaning to Thus, you get " reduction to nothing ".
imbroglio
nothing because it's not a word
Zero
for nothing.
it means nothing