-
1 strategic
-
2 strategic
-'ti:-adjective estratégicotr[strə'tiːʤɪk]1 estratégico,-astrategic [strə'ti:ʤɪk] adj: estratégicoadj.• estratégico, -a adj.strə'tiːdʒɪkadjective estratégico[strǝ'tiːdʒɪk]1.ADJ estratégico2.CPDstrategic fit N — (Comm) adecuación f estratégica
* * *[strə'tiːdʒɪk]adjective estratégico -
3 strategic
adj.estratégico(a). -
4 strategic missile
nMILIT misil estratégico m -
5 strategic budgeting
s.presupuestación estratégica. -
6 strategic compliance
s.acatamiento estratégico. -
7 strategic diversion
s.estrategia de distracción, diversión estratégica. -
8 strategic group
s.grupo estratégico. -
9 strategic information
s.información estratégica. -
10 strategic planning
s.planeamiento estratégico, planificación estratégica, planeación estratégica. -
11 strategic posture
s.postura estratégica. -
12 strategic response
s.respuesta estratégica. -
13 strategic stockpile
s.acaparamiento con fines estratégicos. -
14 estratégico
estratégico
◊ -ca adjetivostrategic
estratégico,-a adjetivo strategic ' estratégico' also found in these entries: Spanish: estratégica English: strategic - diversion - think -
15 SALT
so:lt
1. noun1) ((also common salt) sodium chloride, a white substance frequently used for seasoning: The soup needs more salt.) sal2) (any other substance formed, like common salt, from a metal and an acid.) sal3) (a sailor, especially an experienced one: an old salt.) (viejo) lobo de mar
2. adjective(containing, tasting of, preserved in salt: salt water; salt pork.) salado
3. verb(to put salt on or in: Have you salted the potatoes?) salar, echar sal- salted- saltness
- salty
- saltiness
- bath salts
- the salt of the earth
- take something with a grain/pinch of salt
- take with a grain/pinch of salt
salt n saltr[sɔːlt]1 ( Strategic Arms Limitation Talks) conversaciones para la limitación de armas estratégicassalt ['sɔlt] vt: salar, echarle sal asalt adj: saladosalt n: sal fadj.• salado, -a adj.• salobre adj.n.• sal (Química) s.m.• salero s.m.v.• curar v.• marinar v.• salar v.• salpresar v.
I sɔːlta) u ( Culin) sal fto be the salt of the earth — ser* la sal de la tierra
(to be) worth one's salt: any teacher worth her salt toda maestra que se precie de tal, toda maestra digna de ese nombre; to rub salt into the wound(s) hurgar* en la herida; to take something with a pinch o grain of salt — no creerse* algo al pie de la letra, tomar algo con pinzas (CS)
b) c ( Chem) sal f
II
a) ( put salt on) \<\<vegetables/meat\>\> salar, ponerle* or echarle sal a; \<\<road\>\> echar sal enb) salted past p saladoPhrasal Verbs:
III
a) ( salted) (before n) <meat/cod> salado, en salazónb) ( saline) (before n) <pond/lake> salobre, de agua salada[sɔːlt]N ABBR = Strategic Arms Limitation Talks* * *
I [sɔːlt]a) u ( Culin) sal fto be the salt of the earth — ser* la sal de la tierra
(to be) worth one's salt: any teacher worth her salt toda maestra que se precie de tal, toda maestra digna de ese nombre; to rub salt into the wound(s) hurgar* en la herida; to take something with a pinch o grain of salt — no creerse* algo al pie de la letra, tomar algo con pinzas (CS)
b) c ( Chem) sal f
II
a) ( put salt on) \<\<vegetables/meat\>\> salar, ponerle* or echarle sal a; \<\<road\>\> echar sal enb) salted past p saladoPhrasal Verbs:
III
a) ( salted) (before n) <meat/cod> salado, en salazónb) ( saline) (before n) <pond/lake> salobre, de agua salada -
16 salt
so:lt
1. noun1) ((also common salt) sodium chloride, a white substance frequently used for seasoning: The soup needs more salt.) sal2) (any other substance formed, like common salt, from a metal and an acid.) sal3) (a sailor, especially an experienced one: an old salt.) (viejo) lobo de mar
2. adjective(containing, tasting of, preserved in salt: salt water; salt pork.) salado
3. verb(to put salt on or in: Have you salted the potatoes?) salar, echar sal- salted- saltness
- salty
- saltiness
- bath salts
- the salt of the earth
- take something with a grain/pinch of salt
- take with a grain/pinch of salt
salt n saltr[sɔːlt]1 ( Strategic Arms Limitation Talks) conversaciones para la limitación de armas estratégicassalt ['sɔlt] vt: salar, echarle sal asalt adj: saladosalt n: sal fadj.• salado, -a adj.• salobre adj.n.• sal (Química) s.m.• salero s.m.v.• curar v.• marinar v.• salar v.• salpresar v.
I sɔːlta) u ( Culin) sal fto be the salt of the earth — ser* la sal de la tierra
(to be) worth one's salt: any teacher worth her salt toda maestra que se precie de tal, toda maestra digna de ese nombre; to rub salt into the wound(s) hurgar* en la herida; to take something with a pinch o grain of salt — no creerse* algo al pie de la letra, tomar algo con pinzas (CS)
b) c ( Chem) sal f
II
a) ( put salt on) \<\<vegetables/meat\>\> salar, ponerle* or echarle sal a; \<\<road\>\> echar sal enb) salted past p saladoPhrasal Verbs:
III
a) ( salted) (before n) <meat/cod> salado, en salazónb) ( saline) (before n) <pond/lake> salobre, de agua salada[sɔːlt]1. N1) (Culin) sal f- take sth with a pinch or grain of salt- rub salt into the wound2) (Med)salts sales fpl2.VT (=flavour) salar; (=preserve) conservar en sal; [+ road] poner sal en, tratar con sal3.ADJ [meat, water, taste] salado4.CPDsalt flats NPL — salinas fpl
salt marsh N — saladar m, salina f
salt shaker N — salero m
salt spoon N — cucharita f de sal
saltwatersalt water N — agua f salada
* * *
I [sɔːlt]a) u ( Culin) sal fto be the salt of the earth — ser* la sal de la tierra
(to be) worth one's salt: any teacher worth her salt toda maestra que se precie de tal, toda maestra digna de ese nombre; to rub salt into the wound(s) hurgar* en la herida; to take something with a pinch o grain of salt — no creerse* algo al pie de la letra, tomar algo con pinzas (CS)
b) c ( Chem) sal f
II
a) ( put salt on) \<\<vegetables/meat\>\> salar, ponerle* or echarle sal a; \<\<road\>\> echar sal enb) salted past p saladoPhrasal Verbs:
III
a) ( salted) (before n) <meat/cod> salado, en salazónb) ( saline) (before n) <pond/lake> salobre, de agua salada -
17 SBU
N ABBR= strategic business unit -
18 SDI
N ABBR= Strategic Defense Initiative IDE f -
19 START
I
1.
verb1) (to leave or begin a journey: We shall have to start at 5.30 a.m. in order to get to the boat in time.)2) (to begin: He starts working at six o'clock every morning; She started to cry; She starts her new job next week; Haven't you started (on) your meal yet?; What time does the play start?)3) (to (cause an engine etc to) begin to work: I can't start the car; The car won't start; The clock stopped but I started it again.)4) (to cause something to begin or begin happening etc: One of the students decided to start a college magazine.)
2. noun1) (the beginning of an activity, journey, race etc: I told him at the start that his idea would not succeed; The runners lined up at the start; He stayed in the lead after a good start; I shall have to make a start on that work.)2) (in a race etc, the advantage of beginning before or further forward than others, or the amount of time, distance etc gained through this: The youngest child in the race got a start of five metres; The driver of the stolen car already had twenty minutes' start before the police began the pursuit.)•- starter- starting-point
- for a start
- get off to a good
- bad start
- start off
- start out
- start up
- to start with
II
1.
verb(to jump or jerk suddenly because of fright, surprise etc: The sudden noise made me start.)
2. noun1) (a sudden movement of the body: He gave a start of surprise.)2) (a shock: What a start the news gave me!)start1 n1. principio2. salidathere's a lot of work, let's make a start! hay mucho trabajo, ¡empecemos!start2 vb1. empezarwhat time does it start? ¿a qué hora empieza?2. arrancartr[stɑːt]1 (gen) principio, comienzo, inicio3 (fright, jump) susto, sobresalto■ what a start you gave me! ¡qué susto me has pegado!1 (begin - gen) empezar, comenzar, iniciar; (- conversation) entablar■ what time do you start work? ¿a qué hora empiezas a trabajar?■ she started to cry empezó a llorar, arrancó a llorar2 (cause to begin - fire, epidemic) provocar; (- argument, fight, war, etc) empezar, iniciar■ you've started me thinking me has hecho pensar, me has dado que pensar3 (set up - business) montar, poner; (- organization) fundar, establecer, crear4 (set in motion - machine) poner en marcha; (- vehicle) arrancar, poner en marcha1 (begin) empezar, comenzar■ what time does it start? ¿a qué hora comienza?■ don't start, honey no empieces, cariño■ starting from Tuesday a partir del martes, empezando el martes2 (be set up - business) ser fundado,-a, fundarse, crearse3 (begin to operate) ponerse en marcha, empezar a funcionar; (car) arrancar4 (begin journey) salir, partir, ponerse en camino5 (jump) asustarse, sobresaltarse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLfor a start para empezarto get off to a bad start empezar malto get off to a good start empezar biento get started empezarto make a fresh start volver a empezarto make a start on something empezar algoto start a family tener hijosstart ['stɑrt] vi1) jump: levantarse de un salto, sobresaltarse, dar un respingo2) begin: empezar, comenzar3) set out: salir (de viaje, etc.)4) : arrancar (dícese de un motor)start vt1) begin: empezar, comenzar, iniciar2) cause: provocar, causar3) establish: fundar, montar, establecerto start a business: montar un negocio4) : arrancar, poner en marcha, encenderto start the car: arrancar el motorstart n1) jump: sobresalto m, respingo m2) beginning: principio m, comienzo mto get an early start: salir tempranon.• arranque s.m.• comienzo s.m.• inicio s.m.• principio s.m.• respingo s.m.• salida (Deporte) s.f.• sobresalto s.m.• ventaja s.f. (a motor, etc.)v.• arrancar v.• poner en marcha v.v.• comenzar v.• despegar v.• empezar v.• entablar v.• fundar v.• iniciar v.• nacer v.• originar v.• principiar v.• romper v.stɑːrt, stɑːt
I
1)a) ( beginning) principio m, comienzo mat the start — al principio, al comienzo
from the start — desde el principio or comienzo
from start to finish — del principio al fin, desde el principio hasta el fin
to make a start (on something) — empezar* algo
to make an early start — empezar* temprano; ( on a journey) salir* temprano, ponerse* en camino a primera hora
to make a fresh o new start — empezar* or comenzar* de nuevo
to get (something) off to a good/bad start — empezar* (algo) bien or con el pie derecho/mal or con el pie izquierdo
b)2) ( Sport)a) ( of race) salida fb) (lead, advantage) ventaja f3) ( jump)to give a start — \<\<person/horse\>\> dar* un respingo
to give somebody a start — darle* or pegarle* un susto a alguien, asustar a alguien
II
1.
1) ( begin) \<\<conversation/journey/negotiations\>\> empezar*, comenzar*, iniciar; \<\<job/course\>\> empezar*, comenzar*I start work at eight — empiezo or entro a trabajar a las ocho
to start -ING, to start to + INF — empezar* a + inf
2) ( cause to begin) \<\<race\>\> dar* comienzo a, largar* (CS, Méx); \<\<fire/epidemic\>\> provocar*; \<\<argument/fight\>\> empezar*; \<\<war\>\> \<\<incident\>\> desencadenarto get somebody started — (colloq) darle* cuerda a alguien (fam)
3) ( establish) \<\<business\>\> abrir*, montar; \<\<organization\>\> fundar4) ( cause to operate) \<\<engine/dishwasher\>\> encender*, prender (AmL); \<\<car\>\> arrancar*, hacer* partir (Chi)
2.
1) vi2)a) ( begin) \<\<school/term/meeting\>\> empezar*, comenzar*, iniciarse (frml); \<\<noise/pain/journey/race\>\> empezar*, comenzar*prices start at $30 — cuestan a partir de 30 dólares
to get started — empezar*, comenzar*
to start again o (AmE also) over — volver* a empezar, empezar* or comenzar* de nuevo
to start BY -ING — empezar* por + inf
b)to start with — (as linker): primero or para empezar
3)a) ( originate) empezar*, originarseit all started from an idea I had as a student — todo surgió de una idea que tuve cuando era estudiante
b) ( be founded) ser* fundado4) ( set out) (+ adv compl)it's time we started (for) home — es hora de volver a casa, es hora de que nos pongamos en camino a casa
5) ( begin to operate) \<\<car\>\> arrancar*, partir (Chi); \<\<dishwasher\>\> empezar* a funcionar, ponerse* en marcha6) ( move suddenly) dar* un respingo; ( be frightened) asustarse, sobresaltarseshe started at the noise — el ruido la sobresaltó or la asustó
•Phrasal Verbs:- start on- start up[stɑːt]N ABBR = Strategic Arms Reduction Talks* * *[stɑːrt, stɑːt]
I
1)a) ( beginning) principio m, comienzo mat the start — al principio, al comienzo
from the start — desde el principio or comienzo
from start to finish — del principio al fin, desde el principio hasta el fin
to make a start (on something) — empezar* algo
to make an early start — empezar* temprano; ( on a journey) salir* temprano, ponerse* en camino a primera hora
to make a fresh o new start — empezar* or comenzar* de nuevo
to get (something) off to a good/bad start — empezar* (algo) bien or con el pie derecho/mal or con el pie izquierdo
b)2) ( Sport)a) ( of race) salida fb) (lead, advantage) ventaja f3) ( jump)to give a start — \<\<person/horse\>\> dar* un respingo
to give somebody a start — darle* or pegarle* un susto a alguien, asustar a alguien
II
1.
1) ( begin) \<\<conversation/journey/negotiations\>\> empezar*, comenzar*, iniciar; \<\<job/course\>\> empezar*, comenzar*I start work at eight — empiezo or entro a trabajar a las ocho
to start -ING, to start to + INF — empezar* a + inf
2) ( cause to begin) \<\<race\>\> dar* comienzo a, largar* (CS, Méx); \<\<fire/epidemic\>\> provocar*; \<\<argument/fight\>\> empezar*; \<\<war\>\> \<\<incident\>\> desencadenarto get somebody started — (colloq) darle* cuerda a alguien (fam)
3) ( establish) \<\<business\>\> abrir*, montar; \<\<organization\>\> fundar4) ( cause to operate) \<\<engine/dishwasher\>\> encender*, prender (AmL); \<\<car\>\> arrancar*, hacer* partir (Chi)
2.
1) vi2)a) ( begin) \<\<school/term/meeting\>\> empezar*, comenzar*, iniciarse (frml); \<\<noise/pain/journey/race\>\> empezar*, comenzar*prices start at $30 — cuestan a partir de 30 dólares
to get started — empezar*, comenzar*
to start again o (AmE also) over — volver* a empezar, empezar* or comenzar* de nuevo
to start BY -ING — empezar* por + inf
b)to start with — (as linker): primero or para empezar
3)a) ( originate) empezar*, originarseit all started from an idea I had as a student — todo surgió de una idea que tuve cuando era estudiante
b) ( be founded) ser* fundado4) ( set out) (+ adv compl)it's time we started (for) home — es hora de volver a casa, es hora de que nos pongamos en camino a casa
5) ( begin to operate) \<\<car\>\> arrancar*, partir (Chi); \<\<dishwasher\>\> empezar* a funcionar, ponerse* en marcha6) ( move suddenly) dar* un respingo; ( be frightened) asustarse, sobresaltarseshe started at the noise — el ruido la sobresaltó or la asustó
•Phrasal Verbs:- start on- start up -
20 strategical
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
strategic — stra‧te‧gic [strəˈtiːdʒɪk] adjective done as part of a plan to gain an advantage or achieve a particular purpose: • There may be strategic advantages in manufacturers remaining separate from retailers. • We need to define our strategic goals. •… … Financial and business terms
strategic — STRATÉGIC, Ă, strategici, ce, adj. Care ţine de strategie, privitor la strategie. ♢ Hartă strategică = hartă militară utilizată în conducerea războiului. ♦ (Despre locuri, drumuri, poziţii) Care are însemnătate pentru acţiunile militare de… … Dicționar Român
Strategic — Stra*te gic, Strategical Stra*te gic*al, a. [Gr. ? of or for a general: cf. F. strat[ e]gique.] Of or pertaining to strategy; effected by artifice. {Stra*te gic*al*ly}, adv. [1913 Webster] {Strategic line} (Mil.), a line joining strategic points … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
strategic — [strə tē′jik] adj. 1. of or having to do with strategy 2. characterized by sound strategy; favorable; advantageous 3. a) essential to effective military strategy ☆ b) operating or designed to operate directly against the military, industrial, etc … English World dictionary
strategic — [adj1] crucial cardinal, critical, decisive, imperative, important, key, necessary, vital; concepts 546,567 Ant. unimportant, unnecessary strategic [adj2] clever, calculated cunning, deliberate, diplomatic, dishonest, planned, politic, tricky;… … New thesaurus
strategic — I adjective calculated, clever, consequential, contrived, critical, crucial, decisive, designed, diplomatic, diplomatical, important, key, momentous, planned, politic, pregnant, significant, strategical, tactical, telling, tricky, turning, vital … Law dictionary
strategic — (adj.) pertaining to strategy, 1825; see STRATEGY (Cf. strategy) + IC (Cf. ic). Related: Strategical; strategically … Etymology dictionary
strategic — tactical, logistic (see under STRATEGY) … New Dictionary of Synonyms
strategic — ► ADJECTIVE 1) forming part of a long term plan or aim to achieve a specific purpose. 2) relating to the gaining of overall or long term military advantage. 3) (of bombing or weapons) done or for use against industrial areas and communication… … English terms dictionary
strategic — induced under pressure The soldiers and propagandists pretend they meant it. Thus a strategic withdrawal is a flight: We ve admitted a strategic withdrawal... the Jerries are coming hell for leather down the coast road. (Manning, 1965)… … How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms
strategic — strategically, adv. /streuh tee jik/, adj. 1. pertaining to, characterized by, or of the nature of strategy: strategic movements. 2. important in or essential to strategy. 3. (of an action, as a military operation or a move in a game) forming an… … Universalium