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1 result
1. noun1) (anything which is due to something already done: His deafness is the result of a car accident; He went deaf as a result of an accident; He tried a new method, with excellent results; He tried again, but without result.) resultado2) (the answer to a sum etc: Add all these figures and tell me the result.) resultado3) (the final score: What was the result of Saturday's match?) resultado4) ((often in plural) the list of people who have been successful in a competition, of subjects a person has passed or failed in an examination etc: He had very good exam results; The results will be published next week.) resultado
2. verb1) ((often with from) to be caused (by something): We will pay for any damage which results (from our experiments).) resultar, surgir2) ((with in) to cause or have as a result: The match resulted in a draw.) acabar enresult n resultadowhat was the result of the match? ¿cuál fue el resultado del partido?tr[rɪ'zʌlt]1 resultado2 (consequence) consecuencia1 resultar deresult [ri'zʌlt] vi: resultarto result in: resultar en, tener por resultadoresult n: resultado m, consecuencia fas a result of: como consecuencia den.• fruta s.f.• fruto s.m.• hijo s.m.• resulta s.f.• resultado s.m.• secuela s.f.• suceso s.m.• trascendencia s.f.v.• resultar v.• salir v.(§pres: salgo, sales...) fut/c: saldr-•)
I rɪ'zʌlt1) c ua) ( consequence) resultado mthe company collapsed, with the result that... — la compañía quebró, y como consecuencia...
b) (of calculation, exam, contest) resultado mc) results pl ( favorable consequences)to get results — obtener* resultados
2)a)as a result — (as linker) por consiguiente, por ende (frml)
b)as a result of — (as prep) a raíz de
II
[rɪ'zʌlt]to result IN/FROM something: it could result in his dismissal podría ocasionar or acarrear su despido; what could result from this decision? — ¿qué resultado podría tener esta decisión?
1. N1) (=outcome) resultado mhe followed his own advice, with disastrous results — hizo lo que le pareció, con consecuencias desastrosas or resultados desastrosos
as a result of — como or a consecuencia de
he died as a result of his injuries — murió como or a consecuencia de las heridas
to achieve/produce the desired result — lograr/producir los resultados deseados
with the result that... — con la consecuencia de que...
- get a resultend2) [of election, race, match] resultado m3) (Math) resultado f4) resultsa) (=favourable outcome) resultados mplto get results: if they don't get results, heads will begin to roll — como no obtengan resultados, empezarán a cortar cabezas
if a child sees that crying gets results he will take advantage of that — si un niño ve que llorar le da resultado se aprovechará de ello
b) (St Ex) resultados mplhalf-year results — resultados mpl semestrales
2.VI resultarto result in sth: it resulted in his death — le acarreó la muerte, tuvo como resultado su muerte
* * *
I [rɪ'zʌlt]1) c ua) ( consequence) resultado mthe company collapsed, with the result that... — la compañía quebró, y como consecuencia...
b) (of calculation, exam, contest) resultado mc) results pl ( favorable consequences)to get results — obtener* resultados
2)a)as a result — (as linker) por consiguiente, por ende (frml)
b)as a result of — (as prep) a raíz de
II
to result IN/FROM something: it could result in his dismissal podría ocasionar or acarrear su despido; what could result from this decision? — ¿qué resultado podría tener esta decisión?
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2 rechazo
m.1 rejection.mostró su rechazo he made his disapproval clearrechazo a hacer algo refusal to do something2 denial.3 rejection (medicine) (de órgano).4 rejected product, cull, rejected material.5 back stroke.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: rechazar.* * *1 rejection, refusal2 MEDICINA rejection3 (negativa) denial, rejection\* * *noun m.rejection, refusal* * *SM1) (=negativa) refusalrechazo frontal — [de propuesta] outright rejection; [de oferta] flat refusal
2) (Med) rejection3) (=rebote) bounce, rebound4) (=desaire) rebuff5) [de fusil] recoil* * *masculino (de invitación, individuo, órgano) rejection; (de moción, enmienda) defeat* * *= rejection, dismissal, condemnation, denial, disapproval, renunciation, revulsion, defeat, disavowal, move away from, repudiation, block, thumbs down, deprecation, denouncement, denunciation, push factor, pushback.Ex. Informative abstracts both aid in the assessment of document relevance and selection or rejection.Ex. One possible result may be the dismissal of reference books, perhaps even libraries, as legitimate sources of information.Ex. This article critically examines Blaise Cronin's condemnation of social responsibility in librarianship.Ex. The obvious alternative would be denial of access to scholarly literature.Ex. A reference librarian must maintain a pleasant expression (rather than a scowl that is easily read as disapproval of present company).Ex. This approach is characterised by the renunciation of attempts to generate the wording of index entries algorithmically.Ex. As part of the worldwide revulsion against the fierce crackdown of peaceful dissidents now occurring in Cuba, the U.S. Congress has voted 414-0 to condemn the Cuban government for raiding 22 libraries.Ex. Indeed, in larger libraries, there are those who regard a referral as tantamount to an admission of defeat.Ex. Nevertheless, it is suggested that Marx's disavowal of religion as a force for instituting a universal class was premature.Ex. This is a radical move away from the accepted principle of using the actual item as the primary source of cataloguing data.Ex. These elite books are distinguished by their visible repudiation of mass culture and commercialism.Ex. Emotional blocks to reading can be formed by an unsatisfactory relationship with a teacher.Ex. The article 'Apple Macintosh: thumbs up? thumbs down?' considers whether online searchers should use Apple Macintosh machines.Ex. It uses humor rather than witticisms, and self-deprecation rather than deprecation of the professional field.Ex. The second document is a denouncement of slavery by Greenwich, who mobilizes the best tradition of scriptural exegesis to make his case.Ex. These denunciations make libraries look both sanctimonious and hypocritical for trying to save the world when they have failed to put ther own house in order.Ex. Unsurprisingly such misuse is triggered by push factors, such as fear of failure, and also pull factors, such as ease of use and the ubiquitous cut and paste.Ex. The public pushback about the new policy is astounding due to the fact folks were previously so apathetic about the old policy.----* Algo que produce rechazo = turn-off.* comportamiento de rechazo = avoidance behaviour.* factor de rechazo = push factor.* rechazo a la lectura = aliteracy.* rechazo total = bold statement against.* * *masculino (de invitación, individuo, órgano) rejection; (de moción, enmienda) defeat* * *= rejection, dismissal, condemnation, denial, disapproval, renunciation, revulsion, defeat, disavowal, move away from, repudiation, block, thumbs down, deprecation, denouncement, denunciation, push factor, pushback.Ex: Informative abstracts both aid in the assessment of document relevance and selection or rejection.
Ex: One possible result may be the dismissal of reference books, perhaps even libraries, as legitimate sources of information.Ex: This article critically examines Blaise Cronin's condemnation of social responsibility in librarianship.Ex: The obvious alternative would be denial of access to scholarly literature.Ex: A reference librarian must maintain a pleasant expression (rather than a scowl that is easily read as disapproval of present company).Ex: This approach is characterised by the renunciation of attempts to generate the wording of index entries algorithmically.Ex: As part of the worldwide revulsion against the fierce crackdown of peaceful dissidents now occurring in Cuba, the U.S. Congress has voted 414-0 to condemn the Cuban government for raiding 22 libraries.Ex: Indeed, in larger libraries, there are those who regard a referral as tantamount to an admission of defeat.Ex: Nevertheless, it is suggested that Marx's disavowal of religion as a force for instituting a universal class was premature.Ex: This is a radical move away from the accepted principle of using the actual item as the primary source of cataloguing data.Ex: These elite books are distinguished by their visible repudiation of mass culture and commercialism.Ex: Emotional blocks to reading can be formed by an unsatisfactory relationship with a teacher.Ex: The article 'Apple Macintosh: thumbs up? thumbs down?' considers whether online searchers should use Apple Macintosh machines.Ex: It uses humor rather than witticisms, and self-deprecation rather than deprecation of the professional field.Ex: The second document is a denouncement of slavery by Greenwich, who mobilizes the best tradition of scriptural exegesis to make his case.Ex: These denunciations make libraries look both sanctimonious and hypocritical for trying to save the world when they have failed to put ther own house in order.Ex: Unsurprisingly such misuse is triggered by push factors, such as fear of failure, and also pull factors, such as ease of use and the ubiquitous cut and paste.Ex: The public pushback about the new policy is astounding due to the fact folks were previously so apathetic about the old policy.* Algo que produce rechazo = turn-off.* comportamiento de rechazo = avoidance behaviour.* factor de rechazo = push factor.* rechazo a la lectura = aliteracy.* rechazo total = bold statement against.* * *1 (de una oferta, propuesta) rejection; (de una moción, enmienda) defeat2 ( Med) (de un órgano) rejection* * *
Del verbo rechazar: ( conjugate rechazar)
rechazo es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
rechazó es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo
Multiple Entries:
rechazar
rechazo
rechazar ( conjugate rechazar) verbo transitivo
‹moción/enmienda› to defeat;
‹oferta/trabajo› to turn down
rechazo sustantivo masculino (de invitación, individuo, órgano) rejection;
(de moción, enmienda) defeat
rechazar verbo transitivo
1 (una idea, un plan, a una persona) to reject
(oferta, contrato) to turn down
2 Med (un órgano) to reject
3 Mil to repel
rechazo sustantivo masculino
1 (de una idea, petición, un plan) rejection
2 (desprecio) contempt: mostraron su rechazo al racismo, they showed their contempt for racism
' rechazo' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
anda
- constancia
- marginación
- para
- reaccionar
- silbar
- andar
- enérgico
- ni
- repulsa
English:
averse
- defeat
- deny
- dismissal
- refusal
- rejection
- repudiation
- snub
- straight
- strenuous
- vigorous
- will
- denial
- renunciation
* * *rechazo nm1. [no aceptación] rejection;[hacia una ley, un político] disapproval;mostró su rechazo he made his disapproval clear;los ciudadanos mostraron su rechazo al racismo the people made plain their rejection of racism;rechazo a hacer algo refusal to do sth;provocar el rechazo de alguien to meet with sb's disapprovalrechazo social social rejection2. [negación] denial3. Dep clearance* * *m rejection* * *rechazo nm: rejection, refusal* * *rechazo n rejection
См. также в других словарях:
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