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1 Implementation Force (Nato-led peacekeeping operation in Bosnia-Herzegovina), succeeded by SFOR.
Abbreviation: IFORУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Implementation Force (Nato-led peacekeeping operation in Bosnia-Herzegovina), succeeded by SFOR.
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2 Им удалось, У них получилось (They've succeeded)
General subject: They've made itУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Им удалось, У них получилось (They've succeeded)
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3 Implementation Force , succeeded by SFOR.
Abbreviation: (Nato-led peacekeeping operation in Bosnia-Herzegovina) IFORУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Implementation Force , succeeded by SFOR.
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4 צלח בידו
succeeded -
5 uspěl
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6 nasljeđuje
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7 עשה חיל
succeeded, had great success; made a fortune; acquired a reputation -
8 посчастливиться
succeeded; be luckyкак знать, вдруг да и посчастливится — you never know your luck
Синонимический ряд:повезти (глаг.) повезти; подвезти; подфартить; пофартить; счастье улыбнется; счастье улыбнулось; удача улыбнется; удача улыбнулась; фортуна улыбнется; фортуна улыбнулась -
9 suceder
v.1 to succeed.La empresa sucedió The company succeeded.2 to happen.suceda lo que suceda whatever happensAlgo sucedió Something happened.3 to happen to.Nos sucedió algo cómico ayer Something funny happened to us yesterday.* * *1 (Used only in the 3rd person; it does not take a subject) (acontecer) to happen, occur■ ¿qué sucede? what's the matter?2 (seguir) to follow (a, -), succeed (a, -)3 (heredar) to succeed1 to follow one another\por lo que pueda suceder just in casesuceda lo que suceda whatever happens, come what maylo sucedido what happened* * *verb1) to happen, occur2) succeed, follow, come after* * *1. VI1) (=ocurrir) to happensuceda lo que suceda — come what may, whatever happens
¿qué sucede? — what's going on?
lo que sucede es que... — the fact o the trouble is that...
lo más que puede suceder es que... — the worst that can happen is that...
2) (=seguir)a este cuarto sucede otro mayor — a larger room leads off this one, a larger room lies beyond this one
2.VT [+ persona] to succeedsi muere, ¿quién la sucederá? — if she dies, who will succeed?
3.See:* * *1.verbo intransitivo1) ( ocurrir) to happen¿qué sucede? — what's happening?, what's going on?
¿le ha sucedido algo? — has something happened to him?
lo peor or (fam) lo más que puede suceder es que... — the worst that can happen is that...
no te abandonaré, suceda lo que suceda — I'll never leave you, come what may
suceda lo que suceda no te muevas de aquí — whatever happens o no matter what happens don't move from here
2) ( en el tiempo) hecho/época2.suceder vt (en trono, cargo) to succeed3.sucederse v pron to followlos acontecimientos se sucedían de manera vertiginosa — events followed o succeeded each other at a dizzy pace
* * *= happen, occur, take + place, come about, go on, transpire, come to + pass, succeed.Ex. Everything that happens in the couple's tiny, shrunken, enclosed world is addictive, unglamorous, and boringly awful.Ex. In DOBIS/LIBIS, this occurs only when entering multiple surnames.Ex. This substitution takes place only in the online public access catalog.Ex. In the next chapter we look at how this development came about and the directions it has taken.Ex. How she ached to be a poet and by some wizardry of pen capture the mysteries going on out there.Ex. The 2nd is the fact that most information seeking transpires with little help from librarians, who have consistently failed to establish themselves as primary information professionals.Ex. The most devasting consequences predicted in 1980, such as the loss of small presses, have not come to pass.Ex. In 1964 he was promoted to Associate Director of the Processing Department where he succeeded John Cronin as Director four years later.----* aclarar lo que sucedió = get + Posesivo + story straight, get + Posesivo + story right.* aclarar lo sucedido = get + Posesivo + story straight, get + Posesivo + story right.* cambio + suceder = change + take place.* ¿qué sucede si... ? = what if... ?.* que sucede sólo una vez = one-off.* si es que sucede alguna vez = if ever.* suceder de acuerdo con lo previsto = come off + on schedule.* suceder un cambio = occur + change.* tener que suceder = be bound to happen.* * *1.verbo intransitivo1) ( ocurrir) to happen¿qué sucede? — what's happening?, what's going on?
¿le ha sucedido algo? — has something happened to him?
lo peor or (fam) lo más que puede suceder es que... — the worst that can happen is that...
no te abandonaré, suceda lo que suceda — I'll never leave you, come what may
suceda lo que suceda no te muevas de aquí — whatever happens o no matter what happens don't move from here
2) ( en el tiempo) hecho/época2.suceder vt (en trono, cargo) to succeed3.sucederse v pron to followlos acontecimientos se sucedían de manera vertiginosa — events followed o succeeded each other at a dizzy pace
* * *= happen, occur, take + place, come about, go on, transpire, come to + pass, succeed.Ex: Everything that happens in the couple's tiny, shrunken, enclosed world is addictive, unglamorous, and boringly awful.
Ex: In DOBIS/LIBIS, this occurs only when entering multiple surnames.Ex: This substitution takes place only in the online public access catalog.Ex: In the next chapter we look at how this development came about and the directions it has taken.Ex: How she ached to be a poet and by some wizardry of pen capture the mysteries going on out there.Ex: The 2nd is the fact that most information seeking transpires with little help from librarians, who have consistently failed to establish themselves as primary information professionals.Ex: The most devasting consequences predicted in 1980, such as the loss of small presses, have not come to pass.Ex: In 1964 he was promoted to Associate Director of the Processing Department where he succeeded John Cronin as Director four years later.* aclarar lo que sucedió = get + Posesivo + story straight, get + Posesivo + story right.* aclarar lo sucedido = get + Posesivo + story straight, get + Posesivo + story right.* cambio + suceder = change + take place.* ¿qué sucede si... ? = what if... ?.* que sucede sólo una vez = one-off.* si es que sucede alguna vez = if ever.* suceder de acuerdo con lo previsto = come off + on schedule.* suceder un cambio = occur + change.* tener que suceder = be bound to happen.* * *suceder [E1 ]viA (ocurrir) to happen¿qué sucede? what's happening?, what's going on?¿le ha sucedido algo? has something happened to him?lo peor or ( fam) lo más que puede suceder es que … the worst that can happen is that …le expliqué lo sucedido I explained to him what had happenedno te abandonaré, suceda lo que suceda I'll never leave you, come what maysuceda lo que suceda no debes moverte de aquí whatever happens o no matter what happens you mustn't move from herelleva comida por lo que pueda suceder take some food just in caselo que sucede es que el coche no arranca the thing is that the car won't startB (en el tiempo) «hecho/época»: suceder A algo; to follow stha este hecho sucedió otro no menos sorprendente this was followed by another equally surprising eventC ( Der) to inherit suceder EN algo to inherit sthsucederán en la mitad de los bienes they will inherit half of the estate■ sucedervt(en el trono, un cargo) to succeed¿quién lo sucedió al frente de la empresa? who succeeded him as head of the company?«hechos/acontecimientos» to followlos acontecimientos se sucedían de manera vertiginosa events followed o succeeded each other at a dizzy pacedesde entonces se han sucedido distintas actividades dedicadas a recordar esta efemérides since then there have been a series of different activities to commemorate this date* * *
suceder ( conjugate suceder) verbo intransitivo
1 ( ocurrir) to happen;◊ ¿le ha sucedido algo? has something happened to him?;
le expliqué lo sucedido I explained to him what had happened;
por lo que pueda suceder just in case
2 ( en el tiempo) [hecho/época] suceder A algo to follow sth
verbo transitivo (en trono, cargo) to succeed
suceder
I verbo intransitivo
1 (acontecer, pasar) to happen: nadie me explicó lo que sucedía, no one explained to me what was going on: ¿qué sucede?, what's the matter?
suceda lo que suceda..., whatever happens...
2 (seguir, ir después) to follow
el tres sucede al dos, three comes after two
II vtr (en un cargo) to succeed
el príncipe sucederá al rey, the prince will succeed the king
♦ Locuciones: por lo que pueda suceder, just in case
' suceder' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
desarrollarse
- ser
- haber
- pasar
- resultar
- retrasarse
- sobrevenir
- terciarse
- venir
- jamás
- tratar
English:
come about
- go on
- happen
- occur
- succeed
- bound
- recur
- see
- transpire
* * *♦ v impersonal[ocurrir] to happen;sucedió el año pasado it happened last year;nunca nos había sucedido nada igual we'd never had anything like it happen to us before;suceda lo que suceda whatever happens;sucedió que me olvidé de poner el despertador what happened was that I forgot to set the alarm clock;lo peor que nos podía suceder es que… the worst that could happen to us is that…;sucedió que estábamos un día en el campo cuando… it so happens that we were in the country one day when…;llevaré provisiones para varios días por lo que pueda suceder I'll take enough provisions for a few days just in case anything happens;¿qué te sucede? what's the matter (with you)?♦ vt[sustituir] to succeed (en in);al presidente socialista le sucedió un conservador the socialist president was succeeded by a conservative;sucedió a su padre en el trono he succeeded his father to the throne♦ vi[venir después]suceder a to come after, to follow;la primavera sucede al invierno spring follows winter;a la guerra sucedieron años muy tristes the war was followed by years of misery* * *v/i1 happen, occur;¿qué sucede? what’s going on?2:suceder a follow;suceder en el trono succeed to the throne* * *suceder vi1) ocurrir: to happen, to occur¿qué sucede?: what's going on?suceda lo que suceda: come what may2)suceder a : to follow, to succeedsuceder al trono: to succeed to the thronea la primavera sucede el verano: summer follows spring* * *suceder vb1. (ocurrir) to happen2. (sustituir) to succeed -
10 riuscire
succeed( essere capace) managenon riesco a capire I can't understandriuscire bene/male be a success/a failuredi foto come out well/badlyriuscire in qualcosa be successful in something* * *riuscire v. intr.1 to succeed (in doing); to manage; ( essere capace) to be able: non riuscii a saperlo, I did not manage to find it out; non riuscii a vederlo, I was not able to see him; non riesco a capire perché, I can't understand why; non sono mai riuscito a farlo venire, I have never been able (o I have never managed) to get him to come; riuscii a dominare la mia collera, I managed to master my anger; riuscì a finire il lavoro, he succeeded in finishing his work2 ( avere buon esito) to succeed (in sthg., in doing), to be successful (in sthg., in doing); to manage (sthg.); to turn out well: come avvocato non riuscì, he wasn't successful (o he did not succeed) as a lawyer; tutti i miei piani riuscirono, all my plans succeeded; i nostri piani non riuscirono, our plans failed (o were unsuccessful); il pranzo, l'esperimento riuscì bene, the dinner, the experiment was a success; penso di riuscirci, I think I can manage it; ho tentato di telefonarti tutto ieri senza riuscirci, I tried to phone you all day yesterday without succeeding; non le riesce proprio di stare zitta, she can't keep quiet; questo dolce è riuscito molto bene, this cake has turned out very well; riuscire negli affari, to succeed in business // ( non) riuscire bene in fotografia, (not) to come out very well in photographs3 (avere attitudine, capacità) to be good at (sthg., doing); to be clever at (sthg., doing): riesce bene in matematica, in disegno, he is good (o clever) at mathematics, at drawing; riuscire negli studi, to do well at school4 ( apparire, risultare) to be; ( dimostrarsi) to prove: ciò mi riesce nuovo, this is new to me; riesce simpatico a tutti, everybody likes him; riuscì un completo fallimento, it was a complete failure; messo alla prova, egli riuscì il più bravo, when put to the test he proved to be the cleverest; il lavoro non mi riusciva gradito, I didn't like my work very much; tutto gli riusciva intollerabile, everything was unbearable to him; mi riesce difficile crederti, it's difficult for me to believe you; ti riuscirà più facile dopo una settimana, you'll find it easier after a week5 ( giungere) to come* (to a place), to arrive (at, in a place); ( sboccare) to lead* (to a place): per quella strada si riesce sulla piazza, if you go down that street you come to the square; il sentiero riesce sulla strada, the path leads to the main road6 ( uscire di nuovo) to go* out again: tornò a casa, ma riuscì subito, he came home but went out again at once.* * *[riuʃ'ʃire]1) to succeed, to manage, to be* ablenon riuscirono a mettersi d'accordo — they couldn't o failed to agree
2) [operazione chirurgica, tentativo, serata] to be* successful; [progetto, scherzo] to come* offriuscire bene — [ torta] to turn out well; [ foto] to come out well
3) (rivelare un'attitudine) to do* well (in in), to be* good (in at)riuscire nella vita, negli affari — to do well o succeed in life, business
4) (risultare, apparire)riuscire difficile, facile — to prove difficult, easy
••riuscire naturale a qcn. — to come naturally to sb
Note:Tra le molte possibili traduzioni inglesi di riuscire, si notino to manage e to succeed, che reggono una diversa costruzione: sono riuscito a finirlo per le sei = I managed to finish it by 6 o'clock / I succeeded in finishing it by 6 o'clock. - Quando il verbo riuscire è usato in frase negativa, si può rendere con to fail to, to be unable to, not to be able to o can't: non sono riuscito a finirlo per le sei = I failed to / was unable to / wasn't able to / couldn't finish it by six o'clock* * *riuscire/riu∫'∫ire/ [106]Tra le molte possibili traduzioni inglesi di riuscire, si notino to manage e to succeed, che reggono una diversa costruzione: sono riuscito a finirlo per le sei = I managed to finish it by 6 o'clock / I succeeded in finishing it by 6 o'clock. - Quando il verbo riuscire è usato in frase negativa, si può rendere con to fail to, to be unable to, not to be able to o can't: non sono riuscito a finirlo per le sei = I failed to / was unable to / wasn't able to / couldn't finish it by six o'clock.(aus. essere)1 to succeed, to manage, to be* able; riuscire a raggiungere i propri obiettivi to manage to achieve one's goals; non riesco a far funzionare lo stereo I can't get the stereo to work; non riesco a capire il perché I can't see why; non sono riuscito a dormire I couldn't sleep; non riuscirono a mettersi d'accordo they couldn't o failed to agree; non ci riesco I can't (do it); è riuscito dove lei aveva fallito he succeeded where she had failed2 [operazione chirurgica, tentativo, serata] to be* successful; [progetto, scherzo] to come* off; riuscire bene [ torta] to turn out well; [ foto] to come out well3 (rivelare un'attitudine) to do* well (in in), to be* good (in at); riuscire in latino to do well in Latin; riuscire nella vita, negli affari to do well o succeed in life, business4 (risultare, apparire) riesce simpatico a tutti everybody likes him; quel viso non mi riesce nuovo that face looks familiar; riuscire difficile, facile to prove difficult, easy; riuscire utile to come in handy; riuscire naturale a qcn. to come naturally to sb. -
11 succeed
[səkˈsiːd] verb1) to manage to do what one is trying to do; to achieve one's aim or purpose:She tried three times to pass her driving-test, and at last succeeded
يَنْجَحOur new teaching methods seem to be succeeding.
2) to follow next in order, and take the place of someone or something else:He succeeded his father as manager of the firm / as king
يَخْلُف، يَتْلو، يَتْبَعIf the duke has no children, who will succeed to (= inherit) his property?
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12 gelingen
v/i; gelingt, gelang, ist gelungen; Plan, Versuch: succeed, be successful; ( gut) gelingen Feier, Kuchen etc.: be a success, turn out well; unpers.: es gelang ihm he managed (it), he succeeded; es gelang ihm zu (+ Inf.) he managed to (+ Inf.), he succeeded in (+ Ger.) es gelang ihm nicht auch he failed (zu + Inf. to + Inf.); es gelingt mir einfach nicht zu (+ Inf.) I just don’t seem to be able to (+ Inf.) meine Fotos / Aufsätze / Pläne gelingen nie my photos never come out right / my essays never turn out well / my plans never work out; das Badezimmer etc. ist dir gut gelungen you’ve made a good job of ( oder done a good job on) the bathroom etc.; der Kuchen ist mir nicht ganz gelungen the cake hasn’t quite turned out as I’d hoped ( oder intended); die Überraschung ist dir gelungen auch iro. well that really was a surprise! gelungen* * *das Gelingensuccess* * *Ge|lịn|gen [gə'lɪŋən]nt -s, no pl (geh)(= Glück) success; (= erfolgreiches Ergebnis) successful outcomeauf gutes Gelingen! — to success!
* * *Ge·lin·gen<-s>[gəˈlɪŋən]auf gutes \Gelingen! to success!* * *das; Gelingens successgutes Gelingen! — the best of luck!
* * *es gelang ihm he managed (it), he succeeded;es gelang ihm nicht auch he failed (zu +inf to +inf);meine Fotos/Aufsätze/Pläne gelingen nie my photos never come out right/my essays never turn out well/my plans never work out;das Badezimmer etcder Kuchen ist mir nicht ganz gelungen the cake hasn’t quite turned out as I’d hoped ( oder intended);* * *das; Gelingens success* * *v.to be successful expr.to succeed v. -
13 Erfolg haben
to succeed; to thrive; to meet with success* * *1) (to do as well as necessary: That new apprentice will never make the grade as a trained mechanic.) make the grade2) (to manage to do what one is trying to do; to achieve one's aim or purpose: He succeeded in persuading her to do it; He's happy to have succeeded in his chosen career; She tried three times to pass her driving-test, and at last succeeded; Our new teaching methods seem to be succeeding.) succeed* * *ausdr.to meet with success expr.to succeed v. -
14 acceder
v.1 to agree ( (consent).acceder a una petición to grant a request2 to consent, to accede, to assent, to comply.Ella accedió a su petición She consented to his request.3 to come over.A feeling of fear came over her Una sensación de miedo la accedió.* * *1 (consentir) to consent (a, to), agree (a, to)2 (tener entrada) to enter3 (alcanzar) to accede (a, to)■ acceder al poder to come to power, take office■ acceder a la universidad be admitted to university, enter university* * *verb1) to agree2) access, gain access to* * *VI1) (=aceptar) to agree•
acceder a algo — to agree to sthel director ha accedido a nuestra petición — the director agreed o acceded frm to our request
2)•
acceder a (=entrar) —a) [+ lugar] to gain access to; [+ grupo social, organización] to be admitted tono pueden acceder al mercado laboral por no tener estudios — they have no access to the labour market because they have no qualifications
este examen os permitirá acceder a la universidad — this exam will enable you to gain admittance to the university
si ganan este partido, acceden a la final — if they win this match they go through to the final
b) (Inform) [+ fichero, Internet] to access3) (=conseguir)•
acceder a — [+ información] to gain access to, accesslas personas que no pueden acceder a una vivienda digna — people who have no access to decent housing
los jóvenes tienen dificultades para acceder a un puesto de trabajo — young people have problems finding a job
para acceder a estas becas es necesario ser europeo — only European citizens are eligible for these grants
accedió a una graduación superior — he attained a higher rank, he was promoted to a higher rank
•
acceder a la propiedad de algo — to become the owner of sth* * *verbo intransitivo1)acceder a algo — a lugar to gain access to something; a premio to be eligible for something; a cargo to accede to something (frml)
accedió al trono — he came o succeeded to the throne
2) ( ceder)accedió a regañadientes — he agreed with great reluctance, he reluctantly gave in
acceder a algo — to agree to something, to accede to something (frml)
acceder a + inf — to agree to + inf
* * *= access, contact, gain + access, get into, accede, gain + admittance.Ex. Teletext services are broadcast information services which may be accessed in a non-interactive mode.Ex. Hosts in Europe can also be contacted through the European part of the IPSS network.Ex. Libraries gain access to their own files by means of terminals connected to the central computer.Ex. To get into these national and international networks which are suitable for long-distance communication, a telephone link must be used to access the closest node.Ex. Once Modjeski heard him express sympathy, she knew she could wheedle him into acceding.Ex. In the early 1800s libraries were used by only the small portion of the population that could gain admittance.----* acceder a = approach, fall in with, get at, agree to.* acceder haciendo clic = click.* acceder ilegalmente = hack.* * *verbo intransitivo1)acceder a algo — a lugar to gain access to something; a premio to be eligible for something; a cargo to accede to something (frml)
accedió al trono — he came o succeeded to the throne
2) ( ceder)accedió a regañadientes — he agreed with great reluctance, he reluctantly gave in
acceder a algo — to agree to something, to accede to something (frml)
acceder a + inf — to agree to + inf
* * *= access, contact, gain + access, get into, accede, gain + admittance.Ex: Teletext services are broadcast information services which may be accessed in a non-interactive mode.
Ex: Hosts in Europe can also be contacted through the European part of the IPSS network.Ex: Libraries gain access to their own files by means of terminals connected to the central computer.Ex: To get into these national and international networks which are suitable for long-distance communication, a telephone link must be used to access the closest node.Ex: Once Modjeski heard him express sympathy, she knew she could wheedle him into acceding.Ex: In the early 1800s libraries were used by only the small portion of the population that could gain admittance.* acceder a = approach, fall in with, get at, agree to.* acceder haciendo clic = click.* acceder ilegalmente = hack.* * *acceder [E1 ]viA1 (entrar, llegar) acceder A algo to gain access TO sthun jardín al cual se accede por dos entradas a garden with access from o which you can enter from two pointspara acceder a la base de datos to access the database, to gain access to the databasepretendían acceder a los secretos del Pentágono they were trying to gain access to Pentagon secretssólo pueden acceder al premio los menores de 15 años only under-15s are eligible for the prizecon esta victoria accede a las semifinales with this win she goes through to the semifinalsno pudo acceder a la presidencia he was unable to accede to o to assume the presidencyaccedió al trono he came o succeeded to the throneB (consentir) to agreeaccedió a regañadientes he agreed with great reluctance, he reluctantly gave inacceder A algo to agree TO sth, to accede TO sth ( frml)accedió a sus deseos she bowed o agreed o acceded to his wishesaccedieron al pago de la deuda they agreed to pay what was owedacceder A + INF to agree TO + INFaccedió a contestar preguntas del público she agreed to answer questions from the audience* * *
acceder ( conjugate acceder) verbo intransitivo
1 ( consentir) to agree;
acceder a algo to agree to sth
2 ( entrar) acceder a algo gain access to sth;
(Inf) to access sth.
acceder verbo intransitivo
1 (conceder, transigir) to accede, consent [a, to]
2 (entrar, ser admitido) to gain admittance [a, to]: accedió al cargo en 1973, he ocuppied the post in 1973
3 Inform to access
' acceder' also found in these entries:
English:
accede
- access
- allow
- comply
- consent
- qualified
- assent
* * *acceder vi1. [consentir] to agree;acceder a una petición to grant a request;accedió a venir she agreed to come;accedieron a las demandas de los secuestradores they agreed to o acceded to the kidnappers' demandsInformátacceder a una base de datos to access a database;se puede acceder directamente a la sala por la puerta trasera there is direct access to the hall by the rear entrance;por esa puerta se accede a la cripta that door leads to the crypt;desde la biblioteca se puede acceder a Internet you can log on to the Internet at the library;las sillas de ruedas accederán por una rampa there is wheelchair access via a rampacceder al poder to come to power;accedió al cargo de presidente he became president;este título permite acceder a los estudios de posgrado this qualification enables you to go on to do postgraduate studies* * *v/iaccede (a to);acceder a un ruego agree to a request;acceder a los deseos de alguien bow to s.o.’s wishes2:* * *acceder vi acceder a1) : to accede to, to agree to2) : to assume (a position)3) : to gain access to* * *acceder vb1. (aceptar) to agree2. (entrar) to enter -
15 expensas
f.pl.expenses, charges, costs.Estar a expensas de otro to live by favor, at the cost of another, or to depend upon him* * *1 expenses, charges, costs\a expensas de at the expense of* * *SFPL* * *femenino plural1) (Der) costs (pl), expenses (pl)2)a expensas de: triunfó a expensas de sus ideales she succeeded at the expense of her ideals; vive a expensas de su familia — he lives off his family
* * *----* a expensas de = at + Nombre's + expense.* a expensas de otro = at someone else's expense.* a expensas de otros = at other people's expense.* a + Posesivo + expensas = at + Posesivo + expense.* * *femenino plural1) (Der) costs (pl), expenses (pl)2)a expensas de: triunfó a expensas de sus ideales she succeeded at the expense of her ideals; vive a expensas de su familia — he lives off his family
* * ** a expensas de = at + Nombre's + expense.* a expensas de otro = at someone else's expense.* a expensas de otros = at other people's expense.* a + Posesivo + expensas = at + Posesivo + expense.* * *Compuesto:( Arg) service chargeBa expensas de: triunfó a expensas de sus ideales she succeeded at the expense of her idealsvive a expensas de su familia his family supports him, he's economically dependent on his family* * *
expensas:
vive a expensas de su familia he lives off his family
expensas
♦ Locuciones: a expensas de, at the expense of
' expensas' also found in these entries:
English:
expense
* * *♦ nfpl♦ a expensas de loc prepat the expense of;vive a expensas de sus abuelos his grandparents support him financially;no le gusta vivir a expensas de nadie he doesn't want to live at anybody else's expense* * *fpl:a expensas de at the expense of* * *expensas nfpl1) : expenses, costs2)a expensas de : at the expense of -
16 situar
v.to place, to put.situó la acción de la novela en la Edad Media he set the novel in the Middle Agesme suena pero no lo sitúo he sounds familiar, but I can't place him* * *1 to place, locate, situate, put1 (colocarse) to be placed, be located, be situated2 (lograr una posición) to get on, do well, be successful* * *verbto situate, locate, place* * *1. VT1) (=colocar) to place, put; (Mil) to postesto la sitúa entre los mejores — this places o puts her among the best
van a situar la estación en el centro de la ciudad — the station is going to be located o sited in the city centre
2) (=señalar) to find, locateno supo situar Grecia en el mapa — he couldn't find o locate Greece on the map
3) † [+ dinero] (=invertir) to place, invest; (=depositar en banco) to bank2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) (colocar, ubicar) <fábrica/aeropuerto> to site, to locate (frml)esta novela la sitúa entre los grandes de la literatura — this novel places her among the greatest writers
b) (Lit) <obra/acción> to setc) < soldados> to post, station2) (Fin) to invest, place2.situarse v pron1)a) (colocarse, ubicarse)ha logrado situarse entre los cinco mejores — she has succeeded in establishing a position for herself among the top five
b) ( socialmente)2) (frml) ( cifrarse)la tasa de desempleo se sitúa en un 22% — unemployment stands at 22%
* * *= place, sit, site, situate, locate, station, posit, post.Ex. In each class the most significant facet is placed first, the next most significant next, and so on.Ex. It would be highly desirable to have a phone sitting on top of the library catalogue (if your are still in the dark ages with a card catalogue that is).Ex. The library's data bases are available at a number of locations via appropriately sited terminals.Ex. NACs ideally prefer to be situated in ground-floor shop-front premises in a shopping area and on a route that people follow in the normal course of their lives.Ex. One of the greatest appeals to travelers to Santiago, located in the central coastal region of Chile, is its Mediterranean climate.Ex. Acquisition of material is through an office of the Library of Congress stationed in Jakarta as well as direct purchasing from vendors.Ex. We can choose to turn our backs on these principles with fatuous arguments which posit their anachronism and the nonexistent intelligence of computing machinery.Ex. The agents then posted themselves strategically around the restaurant.----* situar en contexto = place + in context.* situar en un contexto = bring into + context.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) (colocar, ubicar) <fábrica/aeropuerto> to site, to locate (frml)esta novela la sitúa entre los grandes de la literatura — this novel places her among the greatest writers
b) (Lit) <obra/acción> to setc) < soldados> to post, station2) (Fin) to invest, place2.situarse v pron1)a) (colocarse, ubicarse)ha logrado situarse entre los cinco mejores — she has succeeded in establishing a position for herself among the top five
b) ( socialmente)2) (frml) ( cifrarse)la tasa de desempleo se sitúa en un 22% — unemployment stands at 22%
* * *= place, sit, site, situate, locate, station, posit, post.Ex: In each class the most significant facet is placed first, the next most significant next, and so on.
Ex: It would be highly desirable to have a phone sitting on top of the library catalogue (if your are still in the dark ages with a card catalogue that is).Ex: The library's data bases are available at a number of locations via appropriately sited terminals.Ex: NACs ideally prefer to be situated in ground-floor shop-front premises in a shopping area and on a route that people follow in the normal course of their lives.Ex: One of the greatest appeals to travelers to Santiago, located in the central coastal region of Chile, is its Mediterranean climate.Ex: Acquisition of material is through an office of the Library of Congress stationed in Jakarta as well as direct purchasing from vendors.Ex: We can choose to turn our backs on these principles with fatuous arguments which posit their anachronism and the nonexistent intelligence of computing machinery.Ex: The agents then posted themselves strategically around the restaurant.* situar en contexto = place + in context.* situar en un contexto = bring into + context.* * *vtAesta novela la sitúa entre los grandes de la literatura this novel places her among the greatest writers2 ( Lit) ‹obra/acción› to set3 ‹soldados› to post, stationB ( Fin) to invest, place■ situarseA1(colocarse, ubicarse): con esta victoria Chicago se sitúa en primer lugar with this victory Chicago moves into first place, this victory puts Chicago in first placeha logrado situarse entre los cinco mejores del mundo she has succeeded in establishing a position for herself among the world's top five2(socialmente): se ha situado muy bien he has done very well for himselfB ( frml)(cifrarse): la tasa de desempleo se sitúa en un 22% unemployment stands at 22%el precio podría llegar a situarse en 20 dólares the price could reach 20 dollars* * *
situar ( conjugate situar) verbo transitivo
situarse verbo pronominala) (colocarse, ubicarse):
se situó entre los cinco mejores she got a place among the top fiveb) ( socialmente):
situar verbo transitivo to locate
' situar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
apostar
- ubicar
English:
locate
- site
- situate
- scene
* * *♦ vt1. [colocar] to place, to put;[edificio, ciudad] to site, to locate;los arqueólogos sitúan el antiguo teatro en el centro de la ciudad archaeologists place the ancient theatre in the centre of the town;situó la acción de la novela en la Edad Media he set the novel in the Middle Ages;me suena pero no lo sitúo he sounds familiar, but I can't place him2. [en clasificación]su victoria les sitúa en el primer puesto their win moves them up to first place;la nueva obra lo sitúa entre los artistas más importantes de su generación his latest work places him among the most important artists of his generation* * *v/t place, put* * *situar {3} vtubicar: to situate, to place, to locate* * *situar vb -
17 tener éxito
v.to have success, to be successful, to succeed, to be a hit.Ricardo acertó en su empresa Richard succeeded in his undertaking.* * *to be successful* * ** * *(v.) = achieve + success, be successful, get + anywhere, meet + success, prove + successful, succeed, attain + appeal, be a success, find + success, come up + trumps, prove + trumps, take off, meet with + success, hit + the big time, be popular, go + strongEx. Some success was achieved in 1851 by boiling straw in caustic soda and mixing it with rag stock, but the resulting paper was still of poor quality and was little used by printers.Ex. For a scheme to be successful in the long term it is vital that there should be an organisational structure to support the scheme.Ex. The storyteller has in fact to be something of a showman, a performer, before he gets anywhere.Ex. Although the fifteenth edition met with some success, it was not generally popular.Ex. Had this venture succeeded, the complete face of bibliographical control today would have been different.Ex. The good novelist is therefore an author with a wide appeal but this wide appeal is not attained, or even sought, through a dilution of quality; it is simply that this type of writer has a different sort of skill.Ex. The idea of having several indexes has not proved to be a success and has been dropped.Ex. During the 1980s, due to technology like cable and pay per view, wrestling increased its visibility and found some mainstream success.Ex. The article 'Clumps come up trumps' reviews four clump projects now at the end of their funding period = El artículo "Los catálogos colectivos virtuales triunfan' analiza cuatro proyectos sobre catálogos colectivos virtuales que se encuentran al final de su período de financiación.Ex. This new software will prove trumps for Microsoft = Este nuevo software será un éxito para Microsoft.Ex. But at some stage they are going to take off and public librarians will need to be ready to stake their claim to be the most appropriate people to collect and organize local community information.Ex. Consumers appear to complain largely when they believe their efforts were likely to meet with success.Ex. The word 'humongous' first darted onto the linguistic stage only about 1968 but hit the big time almost immediately and has been with us ever since.Ex. At that time OCLC was already going strong, and we tried to find some backing from the State of New York and possibly from the federal government to marry those two systems.* * *(v.) = achieve + success, be successful, get + anywhere, meet + success, prove + successful, succeed, attain + appeal, be a success, find + success, come up + trumps, prove + trumps, take off, meet with + success, hit + the big time, be popular, go + strongEx: Some success was achieved in 1851 by boiling straw in caustic soda and mixing it with rag stock, but the resulting paper was still of poor quality and was little used by printers.
Ex: For a scheme to be successful in the long term it is vital that there should be an organisational structure to support the scheme.Ex: The storyteller has in fact to be something of a showman, a performer, before he gets anywhere.Ex: Although the fifteenth edition met with some success, it was not generally popular.Ex: In Germany, Hitler's propaganda machine was proving alarmingly successful.Ex: Had this venture succeeded, the complete face of bibliographical control today would have been different.Ex: The good novelist is therefore an author with a wide appeal but this wide appeal is not attained, or even sought, through a dilution of quality; it is simply that this type of writer has a different sort of skill.Ex: The idea of having several indexes has not proved to be a success and has been dropped.Ex: During the 1980s, due to technology like cable and pay per view, wrestling increased its visibility and found some mainstream success.Ex: The article 'Clumps come up trumps' reviews four clump projects now at the end of their funding period = El artículo "Los catálogos colectivos virtuales triunfan' analiza cuatro proyectos sobre catálogos colectivos virtuales que se encuentran al final de su período de financiación.Ex: This new software will prove trumps for Microsoft = Este nuevo software será un éxito para Microsoft.Ex: But at some stage they are going to take off and public librarians will need to be ready to stake their claim to be the most appropriate people to collect and organize local community information.Ex: Consumers appear to complain largely when they believe their efforts were likely to meet with success.Ex: The word 'humongous' first darted onto the linguistic stage only about 1968 but hit the big time almost immediately and has been with us ever since.Ex: At that time OCLC was already going strong, and we tried to find some backing from the State of New York and possibly from the federal government to marry those two systems. -
18 أفلح
أَفْلَحَ \ manage: to be successful or be able in spite of difficulties (the following verb or object may be left out, to avoid repetition): It was a heavy load to move but we managed to move it (or we managed it or we managed) in the end. prosper: to do well in business, or grow rich: His farm prospered. succeed: to do what one has planned to do: My efforts succeeded. I succeeded in my attempt. She succeeded in writing her book. \ See Also نَجَحَ \ أَفْلَحَ في رؤية الشيء... \ catch sight of: to have a sudden short view of: He caught sight of his friends in the crowd for one moment. -
19 فاز
فَازَ \ get (or have) the best of sth: to be most successful in (a struggle, etc.): When we quarrel, she always gets the best of it.. succeed: to do what one has planned to do: My efforts succeeded. I succeeded in my attempt. She succeeded in writing her book. \ فَازَ \ win: won to be successful (in a fight, game or competition). capture: to catch or seize: make a prisoner of: The police have captured the thief. \ See Also ظَفَرَ بِـ، أَلْقَى القَبْض عَلى \ فَازَ بنصيب الأسد \ get (or have) the best of sth: to be most successful in (a struggle, etc.): When we quarrel, she always gets the best of it. -
20 نجامة
نِجامَة \ astrology: the study of the stars in relation to human fate. \ نَجَحَ \ come off: to succeed; have the desired result: My plan didn’t come off. do: to make progress: Peter is doing well at school. Palms do well in sandy soil. pass: to be successful (in); satisfy; be satisfied with: I took the examination and passed (it) easily. get on, get along: to make progress: He’s getting on well at school, to continue: Get on with your work. get, (got, gotten): (with to) to succeed in; have the chance to: How did you get to hear about this?. manage: to be successful or be able in spite of difficulties (the following verb or object may be left out, to avoid repetition): It was a heavy load to move but we managed to move it (or we managed it or we managed) in the end. pass: to be successful (in): I took the examination and passed (it) easily. prosper: to do well in business, or grow rich: His farm prospered. succeed: to do what one has planned to do: My efforts succeeded. I succeeded in my attempt. She succeeded in writing her book. triumph: to be successful.
См. также в других словарях:
Succeeded — Succeed Suc*ceed , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Succeeded}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Succeeding}.] [L. succedere, successum; sub under + cedere to go, to go along, approach, follow, succeed: cf. F. succ[ e]der. See {Cede}, and cf. {Success}.] 1. To follow in… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
succeeded — suc·ceed || sÉ™k sɪËd v. prosper; achieve, attain; come after, follow; take the place of; inherit … English contemporary dictionary
SUCCEEDED — … Useful english dictionary
did it — succeeded … English contemporary dictionary
managed to — succeeded in … English contemporary dictionary
Jehoiachin — Succeeded his father Jehoiakin (B.C. 599) when only eight years of age, and reigned for one hundred days (2 Chr. 36:9). He is also called Jeconiah (Jer. 24:1; 27:20, etc.), and Coniah (22:24; 37:1). He was succeeded by his uncle, Mattaniah =… … Easton's Bible Dictionary
Takeda Katsuyori — succeeded to his mother s Suwa clan and gained Takatō Castle as the seat of his domain. After his elder brother Takeda Yoshinobu died, Katsuyori s son Nobukatsu became heir to the Takeda clan, making Katsuyori de facto ruler of the Takeda clan.… … Wikipedia
Richard N. Haass — succeeded him as special envoy.From 1989 to 1993, Haass was Special Assistant to United States President George H. W. Bush and National Security Council Senior Director for Near East and South Asian Affairs. In 1991, Haass received the… … Wikipedia
CECIL, ROBERT, EARL OF SALISBURY — succeeded his father, Lord Burleigh, as first Minister under Elizabeth, and continued in office under James I., whose friendship he sedulously cultivated before his accession, and who created him earl (1565 1612). See BURLEIGH, WILLIAM… … The Nuttall Encyclopaedia
EDMUND IRONSIDE — succeeded to the throne of England on the death of his father Ethelred the Unready in 1016, but reigned only seven months; he struggled bravely, and at first successfully, against Canute the Dane, but being defeated, the kingdom ultimately was … The Nuttall Encyclopaedia
did well — succeeded, went fine for him … English contemporary dictionary