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121 cumplir una condición
(v.) = meet + condition, satisfy + condition, fill + requirementEx. DOBIS/LIBIS searches through the order file for orders meeting these conditions and reports its progress through the file with a screen like that shown in Figure 148 on page 138.Ex. This article outlines the advantages of logical programming or defining all relevant knowledge to satisfy logical conditions or IF-THEN rules, instead of a traditional algorithmic programming language.Ex. A sentence may fill every requirement of syntax and be meaningless: Austin cites Chomsky's example 'Colourless green ideas sleep furiously'.* * *(v.) = meet + condition, satisfy + condition, fill + requirementEx: DOBIS/LIBIS searches through the order file for orders meeting these conditions and reports its progress through the file with a screen like that shown in Figure 148 on page 138.
Ex: This article outlines the advantages of logical programming or defining all relevant knowledge to satisfy logical conditions or IF-THEN rules, instead of a traditional algorithmic programming language.Ex: A sentence may fill every requirement of syntax and be meaningless: Austin cites Chomsky's example 'Colourless green ideas sleep furiously'. -
122 furor
m.1 fury, rage (enfado).2 fever, urge.3 furor, furore, passion, craze.* * *1 fury, rage\hacer furor figurado to be all the rage* * *noun m.1) fury2) rage* * *SM1) (=ira) fury, rage; (=pasión) frenzy, passion2) (=afición) ragehacer furor — to be all the rage *, be a sensation
tener furor por — LAm to have a passion for
* * *a) ( rabia) fury, rageb) (de las olas, del viento, de una tempestad) furyc) ( entusiasmo) enormous enthusiasmcausar or hacer furor — to be all the rage (colloq)
sentir or tener furor para algo — (AmL) to have a passion for something, be crazy about something (colloq)
* * *= furor [furore, -USA], fury, rage.Ex. What precipitated that furor was that Panizzi's volume represented a uncompromising rejection of the comfortable ideology of the finding catalog.Ex. In a painfully detailed letter to the editor, Lespran allowed vent for her fury.Ex. The article 'The new age rage and schoolbook protest' explores the myths, legends and misunderstandings surrounding attempts to remove textbooks and library materials from US public schools.* * *a) ( rabia) fury, rageb) (de las olas, del viento, de una tempestad) furyc) ( entusiasmo) enormous enthusiasmcausar or hacer furor — to be all the rage (colloq)
sentir or tener furor para algo — (AmL) to have a passion for something, be crazy about something (colloq)
* * *= furor [furore, -USA], fury, rage.Ex: What precipitated that furor was that Panizzi's volume represented a uncompromising rejection of the comfortable ideology of the finding catalog.
Ex: In a painfully detailed letter to the editor, Lespran allowed vent for her fury.Ex: The article 'The new age rage and schoolbook protest' explores the myths, legends and misunderstandings surrounding attempts to remove textbooks and library materials from US public schools.* * *1 (rabia) fury, rage2 (de las olas, del viento) fury; (de una tempestad) fury, violence3 (entusiasmo) enormous enthusiasmcausar or hacer furor to be all the rage ( colloq)Compuesto:nymphomania* * *
furor sustantivo masculino
causar or hacer furor to be all the rage (colloq)
furor sustantivo masculino fury, rage
furor uterino, nymphomania
♦ Locuciones: hacer furor, to be all the rage
' furor' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
fiebre
- rabia
- rabiar
- sensación
English:
furor
- furore
- fury
- rage
- sensation
- sensational
* * *furor nm1. [enfado] fury, rage2. [violencia] fury, raging;el furor del viento the fury of the windsiente furor por la música country he has a passion for country music;furor uterino nymphomania* * *m:hacer furor fig be all the rage fam* * *furor nm1) : fury, rage2) : violence (of the elements)3) : passion, frenzy4) : enthusiasmhacer furor: to be all the rage* * *furor n fury / rage -
123 incoloro
adj.1 colorless, achromatic, faded, discolored.2 achromatous.* * *► adjetivo1 colourless* * *ADJ [líquido, luz] colourless, colorless (EEUU); [barniz] clear* * *- ra adjetivo colorless** * *= colourless [colorless, -USA].Ex. A sentence may fill every requirement of syntax and be meaningless: Austin cites Chomsky's example ' Colourless green ideas sleep furiously'.* * *- ra adjetivo colorless** * *= colourless [colorless, -USA].Ex: A sentence may fill every requirement of syntax and be meaningless: Austin cites Chomsky's example ' Colourless green ideas sleep furiously'.
* * *incoloro -racolorless** * *
incoloro◊ -ra adjetivo
colorless( conjugate colorless)
incoloro,-a adjetivo colourless
' incoloro' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
incolora
English:
colourless
- colorless
* * *incoloro, -a adj1. [líquido, mineral] colourless2. [persona] colourless* * *adj colorless, Brcolourless* * *incoloro, -ra adj: colorless* * *incoloro adj colourless -
124 torear
v.1 to fight.Ellos torean al miura They fight a Miura.2 to dodge () (eludir).3 to fight bulls.4 to fight with a bull.El chico toreó ayer The boy fought with a bull yesterday.5 to provoke.Ella torea a su hermano She provokes her brother.* * *1 (lidiar) to fight2 figurado (entretener) to put off4 figurado (asunto etc) to tackle skilfully, handle well1 (lidiar) to fight* * *1. VT1) [+ toro] to fight, play2) (=evitar) to dodge, avoid3) (=acosar) to plague; (=burlarse) to tease, draw on; (=confundir) to confuse4) (=mantener a raya) to keep at bay; (=dar largas a) to put off, keep guessing2. VI1) (Taur) to fight (bulls)2) * (=dar largas) to spin it out, procrastinate* * *1.verbo intransitivo to fight2.torear vt1) <toro/novillo> to fight2) (fam)a) < persona> ( para evitar algo) to dodgeb) (AmL) ( provocar) to torment, needle* * *= bullfight.Ex. He has camel trekked the Sahara Desert in Northern Africa, learned to bullfight in Spain and hang-glided from the cliffs of Rio de Janeiro.* * *1.verbo intransitivo to fight2.torear vt1) <toro/novillo> to fight2) (fam)a) < persona> ( para evitar algo) to dodgeb) (AmL) ( provocar) to torment, needle* * *= bullfight.Ex: He has camel trekked the Sahara Desert in Northern Africa, learned to bullfight in Spain and hang-glided from the cliffs of Rio de Janeiro.
* * *torear [A1 ]vito fighttorea desde los 18 años he has been a bullfighter since he was eighteen■ torearvtA ‹toro/novillo› to fightB ( fam)1 ‹persona› (para evitar algo) to dodgetoreó hábilmente al entrevistador she skillfully dodged o sidestepped the interviewer's questions3 ( AmL) (provocar) to torment, needle* * *
torear ( conjugate torear) verbo intransitivo
to fight;
verbo transitivo
1 ‹toro/novillo› to fight
2 (fam)
torear verbo transitivo & verbo intransitivo
1 to fight
2 fig (engañar a alguien o ser engañado) ya está harto de que le toreen con falsas promesas, he's fed up of being messed about with false promises
' torear' also found in these entries:
English:
wind
* * *♦ vt1. [toro] to fightsiempre está toreando el tráfico he's always dodging in and out of the traffic;lleva meses toreando a Hacienda he's been dodging the tax inspector for months¡ése a mí no me torea! I'm not going to let him mess me about o around!♦ vi[torero] to fight bulls;toreó con arte he gave a very skilful display of bullfighting* * *I v/i fight bullsII v/t fight; figdodge, sidestep* * *torear vt1) : to fight (bulls)2) : to dodge, to sidestep* * * -
125 saña
pres.indicat.3rd person singular (él/ella/ello) present indicative of spanish verb: sanar.imperat.2nd person singular (tú) Imperative of Spanish verb: sanar.* * *1 (enojo) rage, fury2 (crueldad) cruelty, viciousness\* * *f., (m. - sano)* * *SF1) (=furor) rage; (=crueldad) cruelty2) (=cartera) wallet, billfold (EEUU)* * *femenino viciousness, brutalitycon saña — brutally, viciously
* * *femenino viciousness, brutalitycon saña — brutally, viciously
* * *viciousness, brutalitylo golpearon con saña they beat him brutally o viciously* * *
Del verbo sanar: ( conjugate sanar)
sana es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativo
Multiple Entries:
sana
sanar
saña
sanar ( conjugate sanar) verbo intransitivo [ enfermo] to get well, recover;
[ herida] to heal;
saña de algo to recover from sth
saña sustantivo femenino
viciousness, brutality;
sano,-a adjetivo
1 (con buena salud) healthy
2 (beneficioso para la salud) healthy, wholesome: toma comida sana, she eats healthy foods
fumar no es sano, smoking is not good for your health
3 (costumbres, ideas) healthy: leer es una costumbre muy sana, reading is a very healthy habit
4 (indemne) undamaged: solo quedó una copa sana, only one glass was left intact
♦ Locuciones: cortar por lo sano, to take drastic measures
sano y salvo, safe and sound
sanar
I vtr (curar a un enfermo) to cure
II verbo intransitivo
1 (recobrar la salud) to recover [de, from], become healthy, get well
2 (una herida) to heal
saña sustantivo femenino
1 pey (crueldad) cruelty, brutality: nos pegaron con saña, we were brutally beaten
2 (coraje) rage, fury: defendió con saña sus teorías, he fought furiously for his ideas
' saña' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
sana
- sano
English:
bitterness
- live
- alive
- wholesome
* * *Sana, Sanaa nSanaa* * *f viciousness* * *saña nf1) : fury, rage2) : viciousnesscon saña: viciously -
126 διαλοιδορείσθαι
διαλοιδορέομαιrail furiously at: pres inf mp (attic epic)διαλοιδορέομαιrail furiously at: pres inf mp (attic epic) -
127 διαλοιδορεῖσθαι
διαλοιδορέομαιrail furiously at: pres inf mp (attic epic)διαλοιδορέομαιrail furiously at: pres inf mp (attic epic) -
128 διαλοιδορείται
διαλοιδορέομαιrail furiously at: pres ind mp 3rd sg (attic epic)διαλοιδορέομαιrail furiously at: pres ind mp 3rd sg (attic epic)
См. также в других словарях:
furiously — 1550s, from FURIOUS (Cf. furious) + LY (Cf. ly) (2) … Etymology dictionary
furiously — adverb 1. (of the elements) in a wild and stormy manner (Freq. 7) winds were blowing furiously • Derived from adjective: ↑furious 2. in a manner marked by extreme or violent energy (Freq. 2) the boys fought furiously she went peddling … Useful english dictionary
furiously — adverb a) in a furious manner; angrily. He glared furiously at the offender. b) quickly; frantically; with great effort or speed. He tried furiously to get it to work before the deadline … Wiktionary
furiously — adv. Furiously is used with these adjectives: ↑angry Furiously is used with these verbs: ↑argue, ↑bark, ↑beat, ↑blink, ↑blush, ↑boil, ↑bubble, ↑demand, ↑glare, ↑hiss, ↑ … Collocations dictionary
furiously — furious ► ADJECTIVE 1) extremely angry. 2) full of energy or intensity. DERIVATIVES furiously adverb. ORIGIN Latin furiosus, from furia fury … English terms dictionary
Furiously — Furious Fu ri*ous, a. [L. furiosus, fr. furia rage, fury: cf. F. furieux. See {Fury}.] 1. Transported with passion or fury; raging; violent; as, a furious animal. [1913 Webster] 2. Rushing with impetuosity; moving with violence; as, a furious… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
furiously — adverb see furious … New Collegiate Dictionary
furiously — See furious. * * * … Universalium
furiously — Synonyms and related words: a corps perdu, all to pieces, amain, angrily, apace, at once, by forced marches, carelessly, cursorily, deliriously, demonically, desperately, distractedly, expeditiously, fanatically, feverishly, fiercely, frantically … Moby Thesaurus
furiously — (Roget s Thesaurus II) adverb In a violent, strenuous way: fiercely, frantically, frenziedly, hard, strenuously. See STRONG … English dictionary for students
furiously — adv American extremely. A hyperbolic vogue term in use among the Vals of the 1990s and fea t ured in the 1994 US film Clueless … Contemporary slang