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1 narrative
noun (a story: an exciting narrative.) narrativa, narración, relatotr['nærətɪv]1 narrativo,-a1 narración nombre femenino2 (genre) narrativanarrative ['nærət̬ɪv] adj: narrativo: narración f, narrativa f, relato madj.• narrativo, -a adj.n.• narrativa s.f.• narrativo s.m.
I 'nærətɪvadjective narrativo
II
a) c ( story) (frml) narración f, relato m['nærǝtɪv]1.ADJ narrativo2.N (=act) narración f ; (=story) narración f, relato m* * *
I ['nærətɪv]adjective narrativo
II
a) c ( story) (frml) narración f, relato m -
2 narrative
nCOMP&DP narrativa f -
3 narrative
adj.narrativo(a).s.1 narración (story)2 narrativa, técnica de la narración, narración de cuentos, técnica de la narrativa.3 anécdota, historieta, relato, historia. -
4 narrative poem
s.poema narrativo, romance. -
5 narrative prose
s.prosa narrativa, romance. -
6 narrative technique
s.técnica de la narración, técnica de la narrativa. -
7 brief historical narrative
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8 narrativa
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9 narrativo
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10 ballad
'bæləd(a simple, often sentimental, song: Older people prefer ballads to pop music.) baladatr['bæləd]1 baladaballad ['bæləd] n: romance m, balada fn.• balada s.f.• cantilena s.f.• canto s.m.• chanzoneta s.f.• copla s.f.• romance s.m.'bælədnoun (narrative poem, song) romance m; ( sentimental song) balada f['bælǝd]N balada f ; (Spanish) romance m, corrido m (Mex)* * *['bæləd]noun (narrative poem, song) romance m; ( sentimental song) balada f -
11 flow
fləu
1. verb1) (to move along in the way that water does: The river flowed into the sea.) fluir2) ((of the tide) to rise: The boat left the harbour when the tide began to flow.) subir
2. noun(the act of flowing: a flow of blood; the flow of traffic.) corriente, flujo, circulaciónflow vb fluir / circular / correr / discurrirtr[fləʊ]1 (gen) flujo2 (of river) corriente nombre femenino3 (of traffic) circulación nombre femenino4 (of words) torrente nombre masculino5 (of people, goods) afluencia6 (of capital) movimiento7 (of tide) flujo1 (move freely - liquid, river, blood) fluir, discurrir, correr2 (pour out - blood) manar; (- tears) correr3 (tide) subir4 (traffic) circular; (electricity) fluir5 (speech, writing, thoughts) fluir6 (hair, clothes) ondear7 (be available, abound) abundar ( with, -)\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be in full flow estar en pleno discursoflow ['flo:] vi1) course: fluir, manar, correr2) circulate: circular, corrertraffic is flowing smoothly: el tránsito está circulando con fluidezflow n1) flowing: flujo m, circulación f2) stream: corriente f, chorro mn.• caudal (Líquido) (•Física•) s.m.• chorro s.m.• corriente s.m.• curso s.m.• flujo s.m.• torrente s.m.v.• afluir v.• correr v.• derramarse v.• desaguar v.• descorrer v.• desembocar v.• dimanar v.• discurrir v.• fluir v.• manar v.• verter v.
I fləʊ1)a) \<\<liquid/electric current\>\> fluir*; \<\<tide\>\> subir, crecer*; \<\<blood\>\> correr; ( from wound) manar, salir*the Seine flows through Paris — el Sena pasa por or atraviesa París
the river flows into the sea — el río desemboca or desagua en el mar
b) (run smoothly, continuously) \<\<traffic\>\> circular con fluidez; \<\<music/words\>\> fluir*2) ( be plentiful) correr como aguaa land flowing with milk and honey — ( Bib) una tierra que mana (en) leche y miel
II
1) ua) (of liquid, current) flujo m, circulación fb) (of traffic, information) circulación f; (of capital, money) movimiento mto go with the flow — colloq) dejarse arrastrar or llevar por la corriente
2) c (stream - of water, lava) corriente f3) u ( of narrative) fluidez f[flǝʊ]1.N [of river, tide, Elec] corriente f, flujo m ; (=direction) curso m ; [of blood] (from wound) flujo; [of words etc] torrente mto maintain a steady flow — [of people, vehicles] mantener un movimiento constante
- go with the flow2.VI [river] fluir, discurrir; [tide] subir, crecer; [blood] (from wound) manar; (through body) circular; [tears] correr; [hair] caer suavemente or con soltura; [words] fluirthe river flows through the valley — el río fluye or discurre por el valle
ebbtraffic is now flowing normally — el tráfico ya circula or fluye or discurre con normalidad
3.CPDflow chart, flow diagram N — organigrama m
flow sheet N — (Comput) diagrama m de flujo, ordinograma m ; (Admin) organigrama m
* * *
I [fləʊ]1)a) \<\<liquid/electric current\>\> fluir*; \<\<tide\>\> subir, crecer*; \<\<blood\>\> correr; ( from wound) manar, salir*the Seine flows through Paris — el Sena pasa por or atraviesa París
the river flows into the sea — el río desemboca or desagua en el mar
b) (run smoothly, continuously) \<\<traffic\>\> circular con fluidez; \<\<music/words\>\> fluir*2) ( be plentiful) correr como aguaa land flowing with milk and honey — ( Bib) una tierra que mana (en) leche y miel
II
1) ua) (of liquid, current) flujo m, circulación fb) (of traffic, information) circulación f; (of capital, money) movimiento mto go with the flow — colloq) dejarse arrastrar or llevar por la corriente
2) c (stream - of water, lava) corriente f3) u ( of narrative) fluidez f -
12 story
I 'sto:ri plural - stories; noun1) (an account of an event, or series of events, real or imaginary: the story of the disaster; the story of his life; He went to the police with his story; What sort of stories do boys aged 10 like?; adventure/murder/love stories; a story-book; He's a good story-teller.) historia2) ((used especially to children) a lie: Don't tell stories!) historia, cuento•- a tall story
II see storeystory n historia / cuentotr['stɔːrɪ]4 (newspaper article) artículo; (newsworthy item) artículo de interés periodístico5 (story-line, narrative, plot) argumento, trama\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLbut that's another story pero eso es otro cantarit's a long story es largo de contarso the story goes según cuenta la historia, según dicenthat's the story of my life! ¡siempre me pasa lo mismo!to cut a long story short en resumidas cuentas, en pocas palabras————————tr['stɔːrɪ]1 SMALLAMERICAN ENGLISH/SMALL→ link=storey storey{1) narrative: cuento m, relato m2) account: historia f, relato m3) : piso m, planta f (de un edificio)first story: planta bajan.• anécdota s.f.• argumento s.m.• chiste s.m.• crónico s.m.• cuento s.m.• fábula s.f.• historia s.f.• historieta s.f.• novela s.f.• piso s.m.• planta s.f.• relato s.m.• trama s.f.'stɔːri2)it's the story of my life! — (set phrase) siempre me pasa lo mismo
according to his/your story — según él/tú
what's the story? — (AmE) bueno ¿qué pasa?
he gave me the story on the new models — (AmE) me dio información sobre los nuevos modelos
that's (quite) another o a different story — eso es otro cantar, eso es harina de otro costal
the story goes that... — cuenta la leyenda que...
3) ( plot) argumento m, trama f4) ( Journ) artículo m5) ( lie) (colloq) cuento m (fam), mentira fdon't tell stories — no me vengas con cuentos (fam), no digas mentiras
6) BrE storey ( of building) piso m, planta fon the first story — ( in US) en la planta baja; ( in UK) en el primer piso
I ['stɔːrɪ]1. N1) (=account) historia f ; (=tale) cuento m, relato m ; (=joke) chiste mhis story is that... — según él dice..., según lo que él cuenta...
•
but that's another story — pero eso es otro cantar•
a children's story — un cuento infantil•
the story goes that... — se dice or se cuenta que...that's the story of my life! * — ¡siempre me pasa lo mismo!
•
it's a long story — es/sería largo de contarto cut a long story short — en resumidas cuentas, en pocas palabras
•
it's the same old story — es la historia de siempre•
to tell a story — (fictional) contar un cuento; (=recount what happened) contar or narrar una historiathe marks tell their own story — las señales hablan por sí solas, las señales no necesitan interpretación
what a story this house could tell! — ¡cuántas cosas nos diría esta casa!
•
that's not the whole story — eso no es todo2) (=plot) argumento m, trama f3) (Press) artículo m, reportaje m•
a likely story! — ¡puro cuento!2.CPDstory writer N — narrador(a) m / f
II
['stɔːrɪ]N (US) = storey* * *['stɔːri]2)it's the story of my life! — (set phrase) siempre me pasa lo mismo
according to his/your story — según él/tú
what's the story? — (AmE) bueno ¿qué pasa?
he gave me the story on the new models — (AmE) me dio información sobre los nuevos modelos
that's (quite) another o a different story — eso es otro cantar, eso es harina de otro costal
the story goes that... — cuenta la leyenda que...
3) ( plot) argumento m, trama f4) ( Journ) artículo m5) ( lie) (colloq) cuento m (fam), mentira fdon't tell stories — no me vengas con cuentos (fam), no digas mentiras
6) BrE storey ( of building) piso m, planta fon the first story — ( in US) en la planta baja; ( in UK) en el primer piso
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13 alive
1) (living and not dead: Queen Victoria was still alive in 1900.) vivo2) (full of activity: The town was alive with policemen on the day of the march.) animado, activo•- alive toalive adj vivotr[ə'laɪv]1 (not dead) vivo,-a2 (lively) vivo,-a, vivaz\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLalive and kicking vivo,-a y coleandoalive to something consciente de algoalive with lleno,-a de, infestado,-a delook alive! ¡espabílate!, ¡despabílate!alive [ə'laɪv] adj1) living: vivo, viviente2) lively: animado, activo3) active: vigente, en uso4) aware: conscientealive to the danger: consciente del peligroadj.• activo, -a adj.• animado, -a adj.• viviente adj.• vivo, -a adj.ə'laɪvadjective (pred)a) ( living) vivois he still alive? — ¿todavía vive or está vivo?
to bury somebody alive — enterrar* vivo a alguien
alive and kicking — (colloq) vivito y coleando (fam)
they were relieved to learn that she was alive and well — se enteraron con alivio de que estaba sana y salva
b) ( animated)c) (active, in existence)to keep something alive — \<\<tradition/memory\>\> mantener* vivo algo
d) ( aware)to be alive to something — \<\<to problem/possibility\>\> ser* sensible a algo, ser* or (Chi, Méx) estar* consciente de algo
[ǝ'laɪv]ADJ1) vivoto be alive — estar vivo, vivir
it's good to be alive! — ¡qué bueno es vivir!
to be still alive — vivir todavía; [dying person] estar todavía con vida
•
she plays as well as any pianist alive — toca tan bien como cualquier pianista del mundo•
he's the best footballer alive — es el mejor futbolista del mundo•
to bring a story alive — dar vida a una historia, animar una historia•
to be buried alive — ser enterrado vivo•
to burn sb alive — quemar a algn vivo•
the scene came alive as she described it — la escena se animaba or vivificaba al describirla ella•
we were being eaten alive by mosquitoes — los mosquitos nos comían vivos•
to keep sb alive — conservar a algn con vidato keep a memory alive — guardar vivo or fresco un recuerdo, hacer perdurar una memoria
•
man alive! — † ¡hombre!•
no man alive could do better — no lo podría hacer mejor nadie•
he managed to stay alive on fruit — logró sobrevivir comiendo frutasdead 1., 1)•
the prisoner must be taken alive — hay que capturar vivo or con vida al prisionero2) (fig) (=lively) activo, enérgicolook alive! — † * (=hurry) ¡date prisa!, ¡apúrate! (LAm)
3)• alive with — [+ insects] lleno de, hormigueante en
4) frmalive to — (=aware of) consciente de
•
I am alive to the danger — estoy consciente del peligro, me doy cuenta del peligro•
I am fully alive to the fact that... — soy consciente de que..., no ignoro que...•
I am fully alive to the honour you do me — soy plenamente consciente del honor que se me hace* * *[ə'laɪv]adjective (pred)a) ( living) vivois he still alive? — ¿todavía vive or está vivo?
to bury somebody alive — enterrar* vivo a alguien
alive and kicking — (colloq) vivito y coleando (fam)
they were relieved to learn that she was alive and well — se enteraron con alivio de que estaba sana y salva
b) ( animated)c) (active, in existence)to keep something alive — \<\<tradition/memory\>\> mantener* vivo algo
d) ( aware)to be alive to something — \<\<to problem/possibility\>\> ser* sensible a algo, ser* or (Chi, Méx) estar* consciente de algo
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14 first-person
[ˌfɜːst'pɜːsǝn]CPD [account, narrative] en primera persona -
15 narrate
nə'reit(to tell (a story): He narrated the events of the afternoon.) narrar, contar- narrative
- narrator
tr[nə'reɪt]1 narrarv.• narrar v.• relatar v.'næreɪt, nə'reɪta) ( Lit frml) \<\<story/events\>\> narrar, relatarb) \<\<film/documentary\>\> hacer* el comentario de[nǝ'reɪt]VT [+ documentary] narrar, hacer los comentarios de; [+ story] narrar, relatar* * *['næreɪt, nə'reɪt]a) ( Lit frml) \<\<story/events\>\> narrar, relatarb) \<\<film/documentary\>\> hacer* el comentario de -
16 pick up
1) (to learn gradually, without formal teaching: I never studied Italian - I just picked it up when I was in Italy.) aprender2) (to let (someone) into a car, train etc in order to take him somewhere: I picked him up at the station and drove him home.) recoger, pasar a buscar3) (to get (something) by chance: I picked up a bargain at the shops today.) conseguir, encontrar4) (to right (oneself) after a fall etc; to stand up: He fell over and picked himself up again.) ponerse de pie, levantarse5) (to collect (something) from somewhere: I ordered some meat from the butcher - I'll pick it up on my way home tonight.) coger, recoger6) ((of radio, radar etc) to receive signals: We picked up a foreign broadcast last night.) captar, recibir, sintonizar7) (to find; to catch: We lost his trail but picked it up again later; The police picked up the criminal.) encontrar, cogerpick up vb1. ir a recoger2. recogerpick up vt1) lift: levantar2) tidy: arreglar, ordenarpick up viimprove: mejorarpick up (Radio station, etc.)v.• captar v.v.• alzar v.• levantar v.• recoger v.1) v + o + adv, v + adv + o(gather off floor, ground) recoger*; ( take) tomar, agarrar (esp AmL), coger* (esp Esp); ( lift up) levantarto pick oneself up — reponerse*; (lit: after falling) levantarse
to pick up the tab o (BrE also) bill — cargar* con la cuenta, cargar* con el muerto (fam)
she picked up the check — (AmE) pagó ella
2)a) ( learn) \<\<language\>\> aprender; \<\<habit\>\> adquirir, agarrar (esp AmL), coger* (esp Esp)it's not hard, you'll soon pick it up — no es difícil, ya verás cómo enseguida le agarras la onda or (Esp) le coges el tranquillo (fam)
b) ( acquire) \<\<bargain\>\> conseguir*, encontrar*3)a) (collect, fetch) recoger*, pasar a buscarcould you pick up some eggs for me? — ¿me traes unos huevos?
b) ( take on board) \<\<passenger\>\> recoger*c) ( rescue) rescatard) ( arrest) detener*e) (colloq) \<\<man/woman\>\> ligarse* (fam), levantar (AmS fam)4)a) ( receive) \<\<signal\>\> captar, recibirb) ( detect) detectar5) ( resume) \<\<conversation\>\> reanudar6) v + adv + oa) ( earn) (colloq) hacer* (fam), sacar* (fam)b) ( gain) \<\<speed\>\> agarrar, coger* (esp Esp)7) ( tidy) (AmE colloq) \<\<room/house\>\> ordenar8) v + o + adva) ( revive) reanimarb) ( correct) corregir*to pick somebody up on something: she picked him up on a few points of historical detail — le señaló algunos detalles históricos donde se había equivocado
9) v + adva) ( improve) \<\<prices/sales\>\> subir, repuntar; \<\<economy/business\>\> repuntar; \<\<invalid\>\> mejorar, recuperarse; \<\<weather\>\> mejorarb) ( resume) seguir*, continuar*10) ( notice) (colloq)to pick up on something — darse* cuenta de algo
1. VT + ADV1) (=lift) [+ box, suitcase, cat] levantar; [+ dropped object] recoger, coger; (=take hold of) tomar, coger, agarrar (LAm)that child is always wanting to be picked up — ese niño siempre quiere que lo cojan or (LAm) levanten
she bent to pick up her glove — se agachó para recoger or coger su guante
she picked up a pencil and fiddled with it — tomó or cogió or (LAm) agarró un lápiz y se puso a enredar con él
you can't pick up a newspaper these days without reading about her — últimamente no puedes coger or (LAm) agarrar un periódico que no hable de ella
piece 1., 1)•
to pick o.s. up — (lit) levantarse, ponerse de pie; (fig) recuperarse, reponerse2) (=collect) [+ person] recoger, ir a buscar (esp LAm); (=give lift to) [+ hitch-hiker, passenger] recoger, cogerdid you pick up my laundry? — ¿recogiste mi colada?
3) (=learn) [+ language, skill] aprender; [+ accent, habit] coger, agarrar (LAm), adquirir frm4) (=buy) comprar; (=find) [+ bargain] encontrar; (=catch) [+ disease] coger, agarrar (LAm), pillar *an old car he picked up for £250 — un coche viejo que compró por 250 libras
I may pick up some useful ideas for my book — puede que encuentre algunas ideas útiles para mi libro
5) * (=earn, gain) ganar, sacarseshe picks up £400 a week — gana or se saca 400 libras a la semana
•
to pick up speed — acelerar, coger velocidad, tomar velocidad (LAm)6) * (sexually) ligarse a *are you trying to pick me up? — ¿estás intentando ligar conmigo?
7) (Rad, TV) [+ station, channel] captar, coger; (Tech) [+ signal] captar, registrarwe can pick up Italian television — podemos captar or coger la televisión italiana
8) (=notice, detect)scent 1., 3)•
I had no difficulty picking up the signals he was sending me — (fig) no tuve problemas para captar las indirectas que me estaba mandando10) (=focus on)11) (=reprimand) reñir, reprendershe picked him up for using bad language — le riñó or le reprendió por decir palabrotas
12) (=correct)•
he picked me up on my grammar — me señaló diversas faltas de gramática13) (=rescue) recoger, rescatar14) (=arrest) detener15) (=revive) [+ person] reanimar16) (US) * (=tidy) [+ room, house] recoger2. VI + ADV1) (=improve) [conditions, weather, sales] mejorar; [market, economy] reponerse; [business, trade] ir mejor; [prices] volver a subir2) (=increase) [wind] levantarse3) (=continue)to pick up where one left off — [+ activity, conversation, relationship] continuar donde se había dejado
4) (=notice, react to)•
I was getting nervous and he picked up on that — me estaba poniendo nervioso y él lo captó or se dio cuenta5) * (=become involved with)•
to pick up with sb — juntarse con algn6) (=tidy up)•
to pick up after sb — ir recogiendo detrás de algn* * *1) v + o + adv, v + adv + o(gather off floor, ground) recoger*; ( take) tomar, agarrar (esp AmL), coger* (esp Esp); ( lift up) levantarto pick oneself up — reponerse*; (lit: after falling) levantarse
to pick up the tab o (BrE also) bill — cargar* con la cuenta, cargar* con el muerto (fam)
she picked up the check — (AmE) pagó ella
2)a) ( learn) \<\<language\>\> aprender; \<\<habit\>\> adquirir, agarrar (esp AmL), coger* (esp Esp)it's not hard, you'll soon pick it up — no es difícil, ya verás cómo enseguida le agarras la onda or (Esp) le coges el tranquillo (fam)
b) ( acquire) \<\<bargain\>\> conseguir*, encontrar*3)a) (collect, fetch) recoger*, pasar a buscarcould you pick up some eggs for me? — ¿me traes unos huevos?
b) ( take on board) \<\<passenger\>\> recoger*c) ( rescue) rescatard) ( arrest) detener*e) (colloq) \<\<man/woman\>\> ligarse* (fam), levantar (AmS fam)4)a) ( receive) \<\<signal\>\> captar, recibirb) ( detect) detectar5) ( resume) \<\<conversation\>\> reanudar6) v + adv + oa) ( earn) (colloq) hacer* (fam), sacar* (fam)b) ( gain) \<\<speed\>\> agarrar, coger* (esp Esp)7) ( tidy) (AmE colloq) \<\<room/house\>\> ordenar8) v + o + adva) ( revive) reanimarb) ( correct) corregir*to pick somebody up on something: she picked him up on a few points of historical detail — le señaló algunos detalles históricos donde se había equivocado
9) v + adva) ( improve) \<\<prices/sales\>\> subir, repuntar; \<\<economy/business\>\> repuntar; \<\<invalid\>\> mejorar, recuperarse; \<\<weather\>\> mejorarb) ( resume) seguir*, continuar*10) ( notice) (colloq)to pick up on something — darse* cuenta de algo
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17 poem
'pouim(a piece of writing arranged in lines which usually have a regular rhythm and often rhyme.) poemapoem n poematr['pəʊəm]1 poema nombre masculino, poesíapoem ['po:əm] n: poema m, poesía fn.• poema (LIT) s.m.• poesía s.f.'pəʊəm, 'pəʊɪmnoun poema m, poesía f['pǝʊɪm]N (short) poesía f ; (long, narrative) poema mLorca's poems — las poesías de Lorca, la obra poética de Lorca
* * *['pəʊəm, 'pəʊɪm]noun poema m, poesía f -
18 recover
1) (to become well again; to return to good health etc: He is recovering from a serious illness; The country is recovering from an economic crisis.) recuperarse2) (to get back: The police have recovered the stolen jewels; He will recover the cost of the repairs through the insurance.) recuperar3) (to get control of (one's actions, emotions etc) again: The actor almost fell over but quickly recovered (his balance).) recuperar(se)•- recoveryrecover vb recuperarse / reponersetr[rɪ'kʌvəSMALLr/SMALL]1 (gen) recuperar; (dead body) rescatar1 recuperarse, reponerse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto recover consciousness recobrar el conocimientorecover [ri'kʌvər] vtregain: recobrarrecover virecuperate: recuperarsev.• curarse v.v.• alentar v.• cobrar v.• ganar un pleito v.• mejorarse v.• recaudar v.• recobrar v.• recuperar v.• reintegrar v.• reponer v.(§pres: -pongo, -pones...) pret: -pus-pp: -puestofut/c: -pondr-•)• reponerse v.• rescatar v.• restablecer v.• retradeshacer v.(§pres: -hago, -haces...) pret: -hic-pp: -hechofut/c: -har-•)• sanar v.rɪ'kʌvər, rɪ'kʌvə(r)
1.
a) ( regain) \<\<consciousness/strength\>\> recuperar, recobrar; \<\<investment/position/lead\>\> recuperarhe was on the point of losing his temper, but recovered himself — estuvo a punto de perder los estribos, pero se contuvo
b) ( retrieve) rescatarc) ( reclaim) \<\<metal/glass/paper\>\> recuperard) ( Law)to recover damages — obtener* indemnización por daños y perjuicios
2.
via) \<\<person\>\>to recover (FROM something) — reponerse* or restablecerse* or recuperarse (de algo)
b) \<\<economy/industry\>\> recuperarse, repuntar, reactivarse[rɪ'kʌvǝ(r)]1. VT1) (=regain) [+ faculty] recuperar, recobrar frmhe fought to recover his balance — luchó por recuperar or frm recobrar el equilibrio
composurerecovering himself with a masterly effort he resumed his narrative — reponiéndose or sobreponiéndose con un esfuerzo sobrehumano, terminó su narración
2) (=retrieve) [+ bodies, wreck] rescatar; [+ debt] cobrar; [+ stolen property, costs, losses, investment] recuperar; (Jur) [+ money] recuperar; [+ property] reivindicar, recuperar; (Comput) [+ data] recobrar, recuperar3) (=reclaim) [+ materials] recuperar2. VI1) (after accident, illness) reponerse, recuperarse, restablecerse ( from de); (after shock, blow) sobreponerse, reponerse ( from de)he recovered from being 4-2 down to reach the semi-finals — se recuperó tras ir perdiendo 4-2 y llegó a las semifinales
2) (Econ) [currency] recuperarse, restablecerse; [shares, stock market] volver a subir; [economy] reactivarse* * *[rɪ'kʌvər, rɪ'kʌvə(r)]
1.
a) ( regain) \<\<consciousness/strength\>\> recuperar, recobrar; \<\<investment/position/lead\>\> recuperarhe was on the point of losing his temper, but recovered himself — estuvo a punto de perder los estribos, pero se contuvo
b) ( retrieve) rescatarc) ( reclaim) \<\<metal/glass/paper\>\> recuperard) ( Law)to recover damages — obtener* indemnización por daños y perjuicios
2.
via) \<\<person\>\>to recover (FROM something) — reponerse* or restablecerse* or recuperarse (de algo)
b) \<\<economy/industry\>\> recuperarse, repuntar, reactivarse -
19 to come alive
(meeting etc) animarse 2 (narrative) cobrar vida -
20 narración
narración sustantivo femenino ( relato) story; ( acción de contar) account
narración sustantivo femenino narration ' narración' also found in these entries: Spanish: encandilar - fluida - fluido - leyenda - parabólica - parabólico - cuento - narrativa - total English: blow - narration - narrative
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См. также в других словарях:
Narrative art — is art that tells a story, either as a moment in an ongoing story or as a sequence of events unfolding over time. Some of the earliest evidence of human art suggests that people told stories with pictures. However, without some knowledge of the… … Wikipedia
Narrative therapy — is a form of psychotherapy using narrative. It was initially developed during the 1970s and 1980s, largely by Australian Michael White and his friend and colleague, David Epston, of New Zealand. Their approach became prevalent in North America… … Wikipedia
Narrative inquiry — emerged as a discipline within the broader field of qualitative research. It is an approach to understanding/researching the way people make meaning of their lives as narratives, linked fields are narrative analysis, narratology and life writing … Wikipedia
Narrative theory — Narrative theory, or narratology, is the study of narrative or story, written or otherwise. The founder of narrative theory is often held to be Aristotle, whose study of plot in drama gave rise to the study of narrative as an art form, known as… … Wikipedia
Narrative communication — is defined as communication in which how individuals communicate to one another in the form of telling about events in a macro or micro way to explain some an opinion. Biologically our species is termed as Homo sapiens; however, sociologically we … Wikipedia
Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave — Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass … Wikipedia
Narrative criticism — focuses on the stories a speaker or a writer tells to understand how they help us make meaning out of our daily human experiences. Narrative theory is a means by which we can comprehend how we impose order on our experiences and actions by giving … Wikipedia
Narrative Exegese — ist eine neuere Methode der biblischen Exegese, die besonders im englischsprachigen Raum verbreitet ist und seit etwa zwanzig Jahren zunehmend auch in der deutschen Bibelwissenschaft aufgenommen wird. Die narrative Exegese gründet sich auf die… … Deutsch Wikipedia
Narrative structure — is generally described as the structural framework that underlies the order and manner in which a narrative is presented to a reader, listener, or viewer. The narrative text structures are the plot and the setting( also known as the shenter).… … Wikipedia
Narrative poetry — is poetry that has a plot. The poems that make up this genre may be short or long, and the story it relates to may be simple or complex. It is usually nondramatic, with objective regular scheme and meter.[1] Narrative poems include epics, ballads … Wikipedia
Narrative theology — began as a late 20th century theological development. It supported the idea that the Church s use of the Bible should focus on a narrative presentation of the faith as regulative for the development of a systematic theology. Also frequently… … Wikipedia