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1 downsized
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2 downsized
прил.уменьшенныйавто с уменьшенными габаритами и массойThis four-cylinder EcoBoost powertrain represents a completely new generation of downsized, high-efficiency, low-CO2 petrol engines from Ford. — Данная силовая цепь EcoBoost с четырьмя цилиндрами представляет собой полностью новое поколение бензиновых двигателей от Ford — с уменьшенными габаритами и массой, высокоэффективных и с низким уровнем CO2.
Англо-русский универсальный дополнительный практический переводческий словарь И. Мостицкого > downsized
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3 downsized version
Техника: усечённый вариант -
4 Downsized Ground Control Station
Military: DGCSУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Downsized Ground Control Station
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5 Downsized Ground Control Terminal
Military: DGCTУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Downsized Ground Control Terminal
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6 Downsized Ground Data Terminal
Military: DGDTУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Downsized Ground Data Terminal
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7 Downsized Into Business Startup
Business: DIBSУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Downsized Into Business Startup
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8 Downsized Remote Video Terminal
Military: DRVTУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Downsized Remote Video Terminal
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9 Downsized Tester
Abbreviation: DST -
10 de plantilla reducida
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11 verringert
verringert adj 1. MGT, PERS downsized, cut (Personalbestand); 2. WIWI reduced* * *adj 1. <Mgmnt, Person> Personalbestand downsized, cut; 2. <Vw> reduced -
12 Rumpfmannschaft
f team reduced in strength, downsized team* * * -
13 aburrido
adj.1 boring, dull, humdrum, uninteresting.2 bored, tired.f. & m.bore, boring person, tiresome person.past part.past participle of spanish verb: aburrir.* * *1→ link=aburrir aburrir► adjetivo1 (ser aburrido) boring, tedious; (monótono) dull, dreary* * *(f. - aburrida)adj.1) boring, tedious2) bored, fed up* * *ADJ (=que aburre) boring, tedious; (=que siente aburrimiento) boredABURRIDO ¿"Bored" o "boring"? ► Usamos bored para referirnos al hecho de {estar} aburrido, es decir, de sentir aburrimiento: Si estás aburrida podrías ayudarme con este trabajo If you're bored you could help me with this work ► Usamos boring con personas, actividades y cosas para indicar que alguien o algo {es} aburrido, es decir, que produce aburrimiento: ¡Qué novela más aburrida! What a boring novel! No me gusta salir con él; es muy aburrido I don't like going out with him; he's very boring¡estoy aburrido de decírtelo! — I'm tired of telling you!
* * *I- da adjetivo1) < persona>a) [estar] ( sin entretenimiento) boredb) [estar] ( harto) fed upaburrido de algo — tired of something, fed up with something
aburrido de + inf — tired of -ing
2) [ser] <película/persona> boring; < trabajo> boring, tediousII- da masculino, femenino bore* * *= tedious, deadly [deadlier -comp., deadliest -sup.], drab, stodgy, unexciting, uninteresting, wearisome, weary [wearier -comp., weariest -sup.], bored, boring, wearying, dreary [drearier -comp., dreariest -sup.], uninspiring, unmoving, dull, cut and dried [cut and dry].Ex. In other places too many references could make for a very tedious search.Ex. Some authors, of course, object to their work being subjected to compulsory dissection for exams in the traditional deadly manner and like Bernard Shaw, they swear to haunt anyone who so mistreats them (Shaw's ghost must be busy these days).Ex. Have reading foisted on you as a duty, a task to be put up with, from which you expect no delight, and it can appear a drab business gladly to be given up.Ex. One could easily prefer the convenience of the stodgy single-volume work.Ex. The author argues that the advantages for higher education are unclear, and rather unexciting.Ex. There is no such thing on earth as an uninteresting subject; the only thing that can exist is an uninterested person.Ex. The earliest binding machines replaced the wearisome hand-beating of the sheets in order to fold them.Ex. Humanity is returning to the downsized, reengineered, total quality management weary business world.Ex. One should answer the telephone clearly and pleasantly -- not in a bored voice or in slurred haste.Ex. This article shows how the dowdy and boring image of the stereotypical librarian as presented in fiction, taints the portrayal of all who work in libraries.Ex. A new wave of books dealing frankly with such concerns as sex, alcoholism and broken homes was seen as a breakthrough, but plots and styles have begun to show a wearying sameness.Ex. The city was considered to be seedy (decayed, littered, grimy, and dreary), crowded, busy, and strongly idiosyncratic (quaint, historic, colorful, and full of 'atmosphere').Ex. Though the novel begins like a house ablaze, it later thickens slightly into an acceptable if uninspiring finale.Ex. The outcome is strangely unmoving.Ex. These librarians are given Haykin upon the day of their arrival and are expected to read the entire dull document and use it as a guideline in establishing subject headings.Ex. I don't like to hear cut-and-dried sermons -- when I hear a man preach, I like to see him act as if he were fighting bees.----* de un modo aburrido y pesado = tediously, ponderously, boringly.* día aburrido = dull day.* estar aburrido como una ostra = be bored stiff.* * *I- da adjetivo1) < persona>a) [estar] ( sin entretenimiento) boredb) [estar] ( harto) fed upaburrido de algo — tired of something, fed up with something
aburrido de + inf — tired of -ing
2) [ser] <película/persona> boring; < trabajo> boring, tediousII- da masculino, femenino bore* * *= tedious, deadly [deadlier -comp., deadliest -sup.], drab, stodgy, unexciting, uninteresting, wearisome, weary [wearier -comp., weariest -sup.], bored, boring, wearying, dreary [drearier -comp., dreariest -sup.], uninspiring, unmoving, dull, cut and dried [cut and dry].Ex: In other places too many references could make for a very tedious search.
Ex: Some authors, of course, object to their work being subjected to compulsory dissection for exams in the traditional deadly manner and like Bernard Shaw, they swear to haunt anyone who so mistreats them (Shaw's ghost must be busy these days).Ex: Have reading foisted on you as a duty, a task to be put up with, from which you expect no delight, and it can appear a drab business gladly to be given up.Ex: One could easily prefer the convenience of the stodgy single-volume work.Ex: The author argues that the advantages for higher education are unclear, and rather unexciting.Ex: There is no such thing on earth as an uninteresting subject; the only thing that can exist is an uninterested person.Ex: The earliest binding machines replaced the wearisome hand-beating of the sheets in order to fold them.Ex: Humanity is returning to the downsized, reengineered, total quality management weary business world.Ex: One should answer the telephone clearly and pleasantly -- not in a bored voice or in slurred haste.Ex: This article shows how the dowdy and boring image of the stereotypical librarian as presented in fiction, taints the portrayal of all who work in libraries.Ex: A new wave of books dealing frankly with such concerns as sex, alcoholism and broken homes was seen as a breakthrough, but plots and styles have begun to show a wearying sameness.Ex: The city was considered to be seedy (decayed, littered, grimy, and dreary), crowded, busy, and strongly idiosyncratic (quaint, historic, colorful, and full of 'atmosphere').Ex: Though the novel begins like a house ablaze, it later thickens slightly into an acceptable if uninspiring finale.Ex: The outcome is strangely unmoving.Ex: These librarians are given Haykin upon the day of their arrival and are expected to read the entire dull document and use it as a guideline in establishing subject headings.Ex: I don't like to hear cut-and-dried sermons -- when I hear a man preach, I like to see him act as if he were fighting bees.* de un modo aburrido y pesado = tediously, ponderously, boringly.* día aburrido = dull day.* estar aburrido como una ostra = be bored stiff.* * *A ‹persona›1 [ ESTAR] (sin entretenimiento) boredestoy muy aburrido I'm bored stiff2 [ ESTAR] (harto) fed upme tienes aburrido con tus quejas I'm fed up with your complaintsaburrido DE algo tired OF sth, fed up WITH sthestoy aburrido de sus bromas I'm tired of o fed up with her jokesaburrido DE + INF tired of -INGestoy aburrido de pedírselo I'm tired of asking him for itB [ SER] ‹película/persona› boringes un trabajo muy aburrido it's a really boring o tedious jobla conferencia fue aburridísima the lecture was really boringmasculine, femininebore* * *
Del verbo aburrir: ( conjugate aburrir)
aburrido es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
aburrido
aburrir
aburrido◊ -da adjetivo
1 [estar] ‹ persona›
aburrido de algo tired of sth, fed up with sth;
aburrido de hacer algo tired of doing sth
2 [ser] ‹película/persona› boring;
‹ trabajo› boring, tedious
■ sustantivo masculino, femenino
bore
aburrir ( conjugate aburrir) verbo transitivo
to bore
aburrirse verbo pronominal
aburridose de hacer algo to get tired of doing sth
aburrido,-a adjetivo
1 (cargante, tedioso) tu hermano es aburrido, your brother's boring
2 (que no se divierte) tu hermano está aburrido, your brother's bored
(cansado, hastiado) estoy aburrido de tus quejas, I'm tired of your complaints
aburrir verbo transitivo to bore
♦ Locuciones: aburrir a las ovejas, to be incredibly boring
' aburrido' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
aburrida
- acto
- amargada
- amargado
- harta
- harto
- insípida
- insípido
- ladrillo
- pesada
- pesado
- petardo
- plomo
- sopa
- tostón
- aburridor
- aguado
- bastante
- cansado
- de
- enojoso
- latoso
- mamado
- podrido
English:
bored
- boring
- dreary
- dull
- grind
- plough through
- quiet
- shade
- stiff
- tedious
- tediously
- uninspiring
- especially
- staid
- wade
* * *aburrido, -a♦ adj1. [harto, fastidiado] bored;estar aburrido de hacer algo to be fed up with doing sth;estoy aburrido de esperar I'm fed up with o tired of waiting;me tiene muy aburrido con sus constantes protestas I'm fed up with her constant complaining;Famestar aburrido como una ostra to be bored stiff2. [que aburre] boring;este libro es muy aburrido this book is very boring;la fiesta está muy aburrida it's a very boring party♦ nm,fbore;¡eres un aburrido! you're so boring!* * *aburrido de algo bored o fed up fam with sth* * *aburrido, -da adj1) : bored, tired, fed up2) tedioso: boring, tedious* * *aburrido1 adj1. (sin entretenimiento) bored2. (tedioso, pesado) boring¡qué programa más aburrido! what a boring programme! -
14 asustadizo
adj.easily frightened, fearful, jumpy, easily scared.* * *► adjetivo1 easily frightened, easily scared* * *ADJ1) [persona] (=que se asusta mucho) easily frightened; (=nervioso) nervy, jumpy2) [animal] shy, skittish* * ** * *= gun-shy, jumpy [jumpier -comp., jumpiest -sup.], timorous.Ex. The article is entitled 'Outsourced, downsized and gun-shy'.Ex. This film adaptation is scrappily made and jumpy, and there is nothing here that evokes either the joy of the moment or the death of the soul.Ex. Even on his pet subject of mathematics, Wilson is a timorous exegete.* * ** * *= gun-shy, jumpy [jumpier -comp., jumpiest -sup.], timorous.Ex: The article is entitled 'Outsourced, downsized and gun-shy'.
Ex: This film adaptation is scrappily made and jumpy, and there is nothing here that evokes either the joy of the moment or the death of the soul.Ex: Even on his pet subject of mathematics, Wilson is a timorous exegete.* * *asustadizo -za‹persona› nervous, jumpy, easily frightened; ‹animal› skittish, easily frightened, nervous* * *asustadizo, -a adjeasily frightened* * *adj easily frightened* * *asustadizo, -za adj: nervous, jumpy, skittish -
15 cansado
adj.1 tired, all-in, worn-out, bleary.2 tiresome.past part.past participle of spanish verb: cansar.* * *1→ link=cansar cansar► adjetivo1 (gen) tired, weary2 (que fatiga) tiring3 (pesado) boring, tiresome4 (harto) tired (de, of), fed up (de, with)\tener la vista cansada to have eyestrain* * *(f. - cansada)adj.1) tired, weary2) tiring* * *ADJ1) (=fatigado) [persona] tired (de from)[aspecto, apariencia] weary, tired; [ojos] tired, strainedvista 1., 1)es que nació cansada — iró she was born lazy
2) (=harto)•
estar cansado de algo — to be tired of sthestoy cansado de que me hagan siempre la misma pregunta — I'm tired of always being asked the same question
¡ya estoy cansado de vuestras tonterías! — I've had enough of this nonsense of yours!
•
estar cansado de hacer algo — to be tired of doing sthsus amigos, cansados de esperarlo, se habían ido — tired of waiting, his friends had left
3) (=pesado) tiringdebe de ser cansado corregir tantos exámenes — it must be tiring marking o to mark so many exams, marking so many exams must be tiring
4)CANSADO ¿"Tired" o "tiring"? Hay que tener en cuenta la diferencia entre tired y tiring a la hora de traducir cansado. ► Lo traducimos por tired cuando queremos indicar que {estamos} o que nos sentimos cansados: Se sintió cansado y se marchó He felt tired and left Estoy cansado de trabajar I'm tired of working Estábamos cansados del viaje We were tired after the journey ► Lo traducimos por tiring cuando queremos indicar que algo {es} cansado, es decir, que nos produce cansancio: Conducir 140 kms. todos los días es muy cansado Driving 140 kms every day is very tiring Para otros usos y ejemplos ver la entrada* * *- da adjetivo1)a) [estar] ( fatigado) tiredb) [estar] (aburrido, harto)cansado de algo/+ inf — tired of something/-ing
a las cansadas — (RPl) at long last
2) [ser] <viaje/trabajo> tiring* * *= fatigued, tired, wearisome, weary [wearier -comp., weariest -sup.], wearying, wearied, washed-out.Ex. In the event of any incorrect citations, one can then return to the 'scene of the crime' and discover whether the error was in the source or in one's fatigued perception of it.Ex. In this reading mood we feel anxious, tired, lazy, worried -- whatever causes us to reject demanding and 'new' literature and forces us to take up again books that are comfortably -- and comfortingly -- known and easily enjoyed.Ex. The earliest binding machines replaced the wearisome hand-beating of the sheets in order to fold them.Ex. Humanity is returning to the downsized, reengineered, total quality management weary business world.Ex. A new wave of books dealing frankly with such concerns as sex, alcoholism and broken homes was seen as a breakthrough, but plots and styles have begun to show a wearying sameness.Ex. 'I better go in,' Leforte muttered, a wearied, disillusioned expression coming over her pallid features.Ex. He calls himself a writer but he never produces anything because he says he's always too washed-out to write.----* con cara de cansado = bleary-eyed.* de un modo cansado = wearily.* sentirse cansado = feel + tired.* tener la vista cansada = need + reading glasses.* vista cansada = presbyopia.* * *- da adjetivo1)a) [estar] ( fatigado) tiredb) [estar] (aburrido, harto)cansado de algo/+ inf — tired of something/-ing
a las cansadas — (RPl) at long last
2) [ser] <viaje/trabajo> tiring* * *= fatigued, tired, wearisome, weary [wearier -comp., weariest -sup.], wearying, wearied, washed-out.Ex: In the event of any incorrect citations, one can then return to the 'scene of the crime' and discover whether the error was in the source or in one's fatigued perception of it.
Ex: In this reading mood we feel anxious, tired, lazy, worried -- whatever causes us to reject demanding and 'new' literature and forces us to take up again books that are comfortably -- and comfortingly -- known and easily enjoyed.Ex: The earliest binding machines replaced the wearisome hand-beating of the sheets in order to fold them.Ex: Humanity is returning to the downsized, reengineered, total quality management weary business world.Ex: A new wave of books dealing frankly with such concerns as sex, alcoholism and broken homes was seen as a breakthrough, but plots and styles have begun to show a wearying sameness.Ex: 'I better go in,' Leforte muttered, a wearied, disillusioned expression coming over her pallid features.Ex: He calls himself a writer but he never produces anything because he says he's always too washed-out to write.* con cara de cansado = bleary-eyed.* de un modo cansado = wearily.* sentirse cansado = feel + tired.* tener la vista cansada = need + reading glasses.* vista cansada = presbyopia.* * *cansado -daA1 [ ESTAR] (fatigado) tiredtienes cara de cansado you look tiredcreo que nació cansado ( hum); I reckon he was born lazyen un tono cansado in a weary tone of voicetengo los pies cansados my feet are tired2 [ ESTAR] (aburrido, harto) cansado DE algo/+ INF tired OF sth/ -INGestoy cansado de decirle que me deje en paz I'm tired of telling him to leave me alonea las cansadas ( RPl); at long lastB [ SER] ‹viaje/trabajo› tiring* * *
Del verbo cansar: ( conjugate cansar)
cansado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
cansado
cansar
cansado◊ -da adjetivo
1 [estar]
tienes cara de cansado you look tired;
en un tono cansado in a weary tone of voiceb) ( aburrido) cansado de algo/hacer algo tired of sth/doing sth
2 [ser] ‹viaje/trabajo› tiring
cansar ( conjugate cansar) verbo transitivo
b) ( aburrir):◊ ¿no te cansa oír la misma música? don't you get tired of listening to the same music?
verbo intransitivo
cansarse verbo pronominal
cansadose de algo/algn to get tired of sth/sb, get bored with sth/sb, cansadose de hacer algo to get tired of doing sth
cansado,-a adjetivo
1 (fatigado) tired, weary
(harto, hastiado) estoy cansado de oírte, I'm tired of hearing you 2 ser cansado (que produce cansancio) to be tiring
(que produce aburrimiento) to be boring
cansar
I verbo transitivo
1 to tire
2 (hartar, aburrir) to get tired: tus quejas me cansan, I'm getting tired of your complaints
II verbo intransitivo
1 (agotar las fuerzas) to be tiring
2 (hartar, aburrir) to get tiresome
' cansado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
aburrida
- aburrido
- algo
- cansada
- dejar
- deshecha
- deshecho
- destrozada
- destrozado
- fatigada
- fatigado
- muerta
- muerto
- notar
- polvo
- tanta
- tanto
- trabajada
- trabajado
- veras
- cara
- fresco
- harto
- mamado
- muy
- palmado
- poder
English:
deadbeat
- done
- fatigued
- gaunt
- out
- start
- strained
- tired
- tiring
- war-weary
- weary
- zonked
- little
- run
- wearily
- wonder
* * *cansado, -a adj1. [fatigado] tired;tener cara de cansado to look tired;estar cansado de algo/de hacer algo to be tired of sth/of doing sth2. [harto] tired, sick;estoy cansado de decirte que apagues la luz al salir I'm tired o sick of telling you to turn off the light when you go out3. [pesado, cargante] tiring;es muy cansado viajar cada día en tren it's very tiring travelling on the train every day* * *adj tired;vista cansada farsightedness, Br longsightedness* * *cansado, -da adj1) : tiredestar cansado: to be tired2) : tiresome, wearyingser cansado: to be tiring* * *cansado adj1. (persona fatigado) tired2. (persona harto) tired of3. (trabajo, viaje) tiring -
16 cauto
adj.cautious, careful, prudent, cagey.* * *► adjetivo1 cautious, wary* * *(f. - cauta)adj.* * *ADJ cautious, wary, careful* * *- ta adjetivo careful, cautious* * *= cautious, wary [warier -comp., wariest -sup.], canny, gun-shy, circumspect, guarded.Ex. The result of knowledge gleaned from libraries is to make men not violent revolutionists, but cautious evolutionists; not destroyers, but careful improvers.Ex. The girls were wary, nervously self-conscious, quite unable to behave in a natural and relaxed way.Ex. The article is entitled 'Wresting money from the canny Scotsman: Melvil Dewey's designs on Carnegie's millions, 1902-1906'.Ex. The article is entitled 'Outsourced, downsized and gun-shy'.Ex. It must be the least uplifting, most circumspect film ever made about sainthood.Ex. Britain has given a guarded response to Myanmar's announcement that a referendum will be held on a new constitution in May.* * *- ta adjetivo careful, cautious* * *= cautious, wary [warier -comp., wariest -sup.], canny, gun-shy, circumspect, guarded.Ex: The result of knowledge gleaned from libraries is to make men not violent revolutionists, but cautious evolutionists; not destroyers, but careful improvers.
Ex: The girls were wary, nervously self-conscious, quite unable to behave in a natural and relaxed way.Ex: The article is entitled 'Wresting money from the canny Scotsman: Melvil Dewey's designs on Carnegie's millions, 1902-1906'.Ex: The article is entitled 'Outsourced, downsized and gun-shy'.Ex: It must be the least uplifting, most circumspect film ever made about sainthood.Ex: Britain has given a guarded response to Myanmar's announcement that a referendum will be held on a new constitution in May.* * *cauto -tacareful, cautious* * *
cauto◊ -ta adjetivo
careful, cautious
cauto,-a adjetivo cautious, wary
' cauto' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
cauta
- diplomática
- diplomático
- incauta
- incauto
- prudente
English:
cautious
- guarded
* * *cauto, -a adjcautious, careful* * *adj cautious* * *cauto, -ta adj: cautious, careful -
17 de acuerdo con la tendencia hacia
Ex. The library is located in a city with a very large state mental hospital that has been sharply downsized in the trend towards de-institutionalisation.* * *Ex: The library is located in a city with a very large state mental hospital that has been sharply downsized in the trend towards de-institutionalisation.
Spanish-English dictionary > de acuerdo con la tendencia hacia
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18 desconfiado
adj.distrustful, doubtful, doubting, mistrustful.past part.past participle of spanish verb: desconfiar.* * *1→ link=desconfiar desconfiar► adjetivo1 distrustful, suspicious, wary► nombre masculino,nombre femenino1 distrustful person, suspicious person, wary person* * *(f. - desconfiada)adj.suspicious, distrustful* * *ADJ distrustful, suspicious (de of)* * ** * *= distrustful, suspicious, gun-shy, mistrustful.Ex. Their mood may be characterized as distrustful, incredulous, or doubtful.Ex. This can make them reluctant to accept or suspicious of outside help.Ex. The article is entitled 'Outsourced, downsized and gun-shy'.Ex. Scientometric indicators published are mostly incomparable impeding the development of the field and making the users of scientometric results mistrustful.* * ** * *= distrustful, suspicious, gun-shy, mistrustful.Ex: Their mood may be characterized as distrustful, incredulous, or doubtful.
Ex: This can make them reluctant to accept or suspicious of outside help.Ex: The article is entitled 'Outsourced, downsized and gun-shy'.Ex: Scientometric indicators published are mostly incomparable impeding the development of the field and making the users of scientometric results mistrustful.* * *(receloso) distrustful; (suspicaz) suspiciousno seas desconfiado, no te voy a hacer daño don't be so distrustful, I'm not going to hurt youlos habitantes del pueblo eran muy desconfiados the villagers were very suspicious o wary of usmasculine, femininees un desconfiado he's very suspicious o mistrustful* * *
Del verbo desconfiar: ( conjugate desconfiar)
desconfiado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
desconfiado
desconfiar
desconfiado◊ -da adjetivo ( receloso) distrustful;
( suspicaz) suspicious
desconfiar ( conjugate desconfiar) verbo intransitivo desconfiado de algn to mistrust sb, to distrust sb;
desconfiado de algo ‹ de motivos› to mistrust sth;
‹ de honestidad› to doubt sth
desconfiado,-a adjetivo distrustful, wary
desconfiar verbo intransitivo to distrust [de, -]: desconfiaba de él, I didn't trust him
' desconfiado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
desconfiada
- resabiada
- resabiado
- mosqueado
English:
distrustful
- mistrustful
- suspicious
* * *desconfiado, -a♦ adjdistrustful;no seas tan desconfiado don't be so distrustful;un pueblo de gente huraña y desconfiada a town with unsociable and distrustful inhabitants♦ nm,fdistrustful person;es un desconfiado he's very distrustful* * *adj mistrustful, suspicious* * *desconfiado, -da adj: distrustful, suspicious* * *desconfiado adj suspicious -
19 desinstitucionalización
f.deinstitutionalization.* * *= deinstitutionalisation [deinstitutionalization, -USA].Ex. The library is located in a city with a very large state mental hospital that has been sharply downsized in the trend towards de-institutionalisation.* * *= deinstitutionalisation [deinstitutionalization, -USA].Ex: The library is located in a city with a very large state mental hospital that has been sharply downsized in the trend towards de-institutionalisation.
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20 hastiado
adj.weary, bored, blasé, tired.past part.past participle of spanish verb: hastiar.* * *1→ link=hastiar hastiar► adjetivo1 disgusted (de, with), sick (de, of)* * *= sated, fed up, jaded, weary [wearier -comp., weariest -sup.].Ex. This article portrays archivists on the one hand as conscientious and orderly preservers of history, on the other as sated pragmatists who have lost their idealism.Ex. The article is entitled 'Tough luck: To be a professional sport climber in America probably means you're broke, fed up and still no match for the foreign competition'.Ex. He is notorious for poking fun at those who advance jaded, esoteric ideas about the importance of studying classical languages.Ex. Humanity is returning to the downsized, reengineered, total quality management weary business world.----* hastiado de la recesión económica = recession-weary.* * *= sated, fed up, jaded, weary [wearier -comp., weariest -sup.].Ex: This article portrays archivists on the one hand as conscientious and orderly preservers of history, on the other as sated pragmatists who have lost their idealism.
Ex: The article is entitled 'Tough luck: To be a professional sport climber in America probably means you're broke, fed up and still no match for the foreign competition'.Ex: He is notorious for poking fun at those who advance jaded, esoteric ideas about the importance of studying classical languages.Ex: Humanity is returning to the downsized, reengineered, total quality management weary business world.* hastiado de la recesión económica = recession-weary.* * *
Del verbo hastiar: ( conjugate hastiar)
hastiado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
hastiado
hastiar
hastiado,-a adjetivo sick, tired [de, of]
hastiar verbo transitivo to bore, sicken, disgust
' hastiado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
aburrida
- aburrido
- ahíta
- ahíto
- cansada
- cansado
- harta
- harto
- hastiada
- hastiarse
English:
jaded
См. также в других словарях:
downsized — adjective. dismissed from work; laid off; displaced: »help for the downsized middle class industrial worker;...state of the art security systems being operated by downsized sheriff s deputies (Joan Didion) … Useful english dictionary
downsized — downsize down‧size [ˈdaʊnsaɪz] verb 1. [intransitive, transitive] HUMAN RESOURCES if a company downsizes, it reduces the number of employees and levels of management that it has: • If your company downsizes and you are over 50, your working life… … Financial and business terms
downsized — v. reduce the size of, make smaller; manufacture smaller amounts adj. of a smaller version or size … English contemporary dictionary
DGCS — Downsized Ground Control Station (Governmental » Military) … Abbreviations dictionary
DGDT — Downsized Ground Data Terminal (Governmental » Military) … Abbreviations dictionary
DIBS — Downsized Into Business Startup (Business » General) To have claim on, possession...I got dibs on the front row seats (Miscellaneous » Casual Expressions) … Abbreviations dictionary
DRVT — Downsized Remote Video Terminal (Governmental » Military) … Abbreviations dictionary
Buick Riviera — Infobox Automobile name=Buick Riviera manufacturer=General Motors production=1963–1999 class=Personal luxury carThe Buick Riviera was an automobile produced by Buick in the United States from the 1963 to 1999 model years, with 1,127,261… … Wikipedia
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List of Army Groups of the National Revolutionary Army — Flag of the National Revolutionary Army The Army Group (集團軍) (sometimes also referred to as Group Army) was the largest conventional mobile formation in the organization of the … Wikipedia
Chevrolet Caprice — 1976 Chevrolet Caprice Classic Landau Coupe Manufacturer Chevrolet (1964 1996) Holden (2011 present) Production … Wikipedia