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1 highly
1) (very; very much: highly delighted; highly paid; I value the book highly.) muy; enormemente2) (with approval: He thinks/speaks very highly of you.) muy bienhighly adv muy / altamentetr['haɪlɪ]1 (very) muy; (favourably) muy bienhighly ['haɪli] adv1) very: muy, sumamente2) favorably: muy biento speak highly of: hablar muy bien deto think highly of: tener en mucho aadv.• altamente adv.• mucho adv.• muy adv.• sumamente adv.'haɪlia) ( to a high degree)highly probable/unlikely — muy/muy poco probable
highly intelligent — inteligentísimo, sumamente inteligente
highly trained/skilled — altamente capacitado/calificado
b) ( favorably)his boss speaks/thinks very highly of him — su jefe habla muy bien/tiene muy buena opinión de él
c) ( at a high rate)a highly paid job — un trabajo muy bien pagado or remunerado
['haɪlɪ]ADV1) (with adj, pp used as adj) [effective, sensitive, controversial] muy, sumamente; [qualified, developed, sophisticated] sumamente, altamente; [significant] sumamente, tremendamente•
highly intelligent — sumamente inteligente, inteligentísimo•
it is highly likely that he will win the competition — es muy or sumamente probable que gane la competición•
a highly placed official — un funcionario importante, un alto cargo•
highly polished — [shoes, furniture, tiles] muy brillantes; [book, film, description] muy bueno, muy pulido•
highly qualified — muy preparado, muy cualificado•
a highly regarded writer — un escritor de mucha reputación•
highly sexed — muy sensual, con mucho apetito sexual•
highly spiced — con muchas especias, muy condimentado•
highly strung — muy nervioso, muy excitable•
a highly successful businessman — un hombre de negocios de muchísimo éxito•
highly trained soldiers — soldados sumamente adiestrados•
it is highly unlikely that she will see you — es muy poco probable que te reciba2) (with verb)•
to praise sb highly — alabar or elogiar mucho a algn•
I don't rate him very highly — no tengo muy buena opinión de élhis chances of survival are not rated very highly — no se cree que tenga muchas posibilidades de sobrevivir
•
he is highly regarded by all his staff — está muy bien considerado por todo su personal•
these children score very highly in intelligence tests — estos niños consiguen unas puntuaciones muy altas en los tests de inteligencia•
to speak highly of sb/sth — hablar muy bien de algn/algo•
to think highly of sb/sth — tener muy buena opinión de algn/algo•
to value sth highly — apreciar mucho algo* * *['haɪli]a) ( to a high degree)highly probable/unlikely — muy/muy poco probable
highly intelligent — inteligentísimo, sumamente inteligente
highly trained/skilled — altamente capacitado/calificado
b) ( favorably)his boss speaks/thinks very highly of him — su jefe habla muy bien/tiene muy buena opinión de él
c) ( at a high rate)a highly paid job — un trabajo muy bien pagado or remunerado
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2 highly
لِلْغايَة \ enormously: very greatly: I enjoyed myself enormously. exceedingly: very: He’s exceedingly clever. extremely: very: You’re extremely kind. frightfully: very: He’s frightfully clever. highly: greatly; very ; very well; very much: I was highly delighted at his success. This substance is highly poisonous. She is a highly experienced teacher. I value your advice highly. so: (stressed) very: I’m so glad that you won!. stone: (with a few special adj.) completely: Stone cold; stone dead. very: (giving special force to an adv. or adj., or to the nouns many, much, few, little): very soon; very hot; very little to eat. \ لِلْغايَة \ enormously: very greatly: I enjoyed myself enormously. exceedingly: very: He’s exceedingly clever. extremely: very: You’re extremely kind. frightfully: very: He’s frightfully clever. highly: greatly; very ; very well; very much: I was highly delighted at his success. This substance is highly poisonous. She is a highly experienced teacher. I value your advice highly. so: (stressed) very: I’m so glad that you won!. stone: (with a few special adj.) completely: Stone cold; stone dead. very: (giving special force to an adv. or adj., or to the nouns many, much, few, little): very soon; very hot; very little to eat. -
3 highly
უაღრესად, ძალიანit is highly desirable that… ძალზე სასურველია, რომ…●●his account was highly spiced მისი მონაყოლი პიკანტური დეტალებით იყო შეზავებული -
4 it is strongly recommended that
Математика: настоятельно рекомендуется (If you don't mind this extra storage, iterated improvement is highly recommended.;...)Универсальный англо-русский словарь > it is strongly recommended that
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5 Aztec religion (Highly elaborated religious system that heavily emphasized sacrifice and ascetic behaviour as the necessary preconditions for approaching the supernatural)
Религия: религия древних ацтековУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > Aztec religion (Highly elaborated religious system that heavily emphasized sacrifice and ascetic behaviour as the necessary preconditions for approaching the supernatural)
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6 Council of Trent (1545-63, 19th ecumenical council of the Roman Catholic church, highly important for its sweeping decrees on self-reform and for its dogmatic definitions that clarified virtually every doctrine contested by the Protestants)
Общая лексика: ТридентсУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > Council of Trent (1545-63, 19th ecumenical council of the Roman Catholic church, highly important for its sweeping decrees on self-reform and for its dogmatic definitions that clarified virtually every doctrine contested by the Protestants)
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7 it cannot be too highly stressed that
Математика: необходимо особенно подчеркнуть, что (...) (...)Универсальный англо-русский словарь > it cannot be too highly stressed that
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8 it is highly important that
Разговорное выражение: очень важноУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > it is highly important that
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9 it is highly plausible that
Математика: весьма возможно, чтоУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > it is highly plausible that
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10 a highly connotative word that often serves as a substitute for serious thought and well-reasoned argument.
Linguistics: purr-word (snarl-word)Универсальный русско-английский словарь > a highly connotative word that often serves as a substitute for serious thought and well-reasoned argument.
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11 it is highly unlikely that this will be implemented in the nearest future ...
• маловероятно, что это осуществится в ближайшем будущем...English-Russian dictionary of phrases and cliches for a specialist researcher > it is highly unlikely that this will be implemented in the nearest future ...
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12 estimar
v.1 to think highly of, to respect (apreciar) (person).estima mucho a sus amigos he values his friends highly2 to value.estimar el valor de algo to estimate the value of somethinghan estimado que las pérdidas superan los cien millones the losses are estimated to be over a hundred millionEl gerente estima a su secretaria The manager holds his secretary in regard3 to consider, to deem.no estimó necesario realizar declaraciones she didn't consider o deem it necessary to make any statement4 to estimate, to calculate, to deem, to figure.El gerente estima los gastos The manager estimates the expenses.* * *1 (apreciar) to esteem, respect, hold in esteem, admire2 (valorar) to value3 (juzgar, creer) to consider, think, reckon4 (calcular) to estimate5 DERECHO (una demanda) to admit* * *verb1) to esteem2) estimate3) consider, regard* * *1. VT1) (Com) (=evaluar) to estimate; (=valorar) to value, appraise (EEUU) (en at)¡se estima! — thanks very much!, I appreciate it!
2) (=respetar) to respectestimar a algn en mucho — to have a high opinion o regard of sb
estimar a algn en poco — to have a low opinion o regard of sb
3) (=juzgar) to consider, deemlo que usted estime conveniente — whatever you consider o deem appropriate
2.See:* * *verbo transitivo1) ( apreciar)a) < persona> to respect, hold... in high o great esteem (frml)lo estimo mucho, pero sólo como amigo — I'm very fond of him, but only as a friend
b) < objeto> to value2) (frml) ( considerar) (+ compl) to consider, deem (frml)3) ( calcular) <valor/costo/pérdidas> to estimate* * *= appraise, deem, estimate, reckon, gauge, esteem, hold in + esteem, prize [prise, -USA], hold + Nombre + dear.Ex. If one walks round a large general booskshop and carefully appraises the stock on display it becomes clear quite quickly that there are many types of books which seem to bear a strong similarity to each other.Ex. If a corporate body is deemed to have some intellectual responsibility for the content of a work, then the name of that body will usually feature as a heading on either a main or added entry.Ex. For example, without scanning the entire index it is impossible to estimate the total number of relevant documents in the system, a figure that is required in the calculation of recall.Ex. Book form is easy to use, readable, and reckoned to be an acceptable format for many users.Ex. The 2nd 'Think Tank' held in Dallas, June 89, focused on gauging what breakthrough issues are occurring in the field that directly concern libraries and merit consideration.Ex. But women value social progress and consciousness of success less than men and esteem freedom and love.Ex. She was so poor that she had nothing but one single hen, which she prized as the apple of her eye.Ex. Cuts in Government agriculture spending are an attack on everything we hold dear in this country.----* estimar a grosso modo = guesstimate.* estimar la demanda de Algo = gauge + the demand for.* estimar los costes = cost out.* subestimar = understatement.* * *verbo transitivo1) ( apreciar)a) < persona> to respect, hold... in high o great esteem (frml)lo estimo mucho, pero sólo como amigo — I'm very fond of him, but only as a friend
b) < objeto> to value2) (frml) ( considerar) (+ compl) to consider, deem (frml)3) ( calcular) <valor/costo/pérdidas> to estimate* * *= appraise, deem, estimate, reckon, gauge, esteem, hold in + esteem, prize [prise, -USA], hold + Nombre + dear.Ex: If one walks round a large general booskshop and carefully appraises the stock on display it becomes clear quite quickly that there are many types of books which seem to bear a strong similarity to each other.
Ex: If a corporate body is deemed to have some intellectual responsibility for the content of a work, then the name of that body will usually feature as a heading on either a main or added entry.Ex: For example, without scanning the entire index it is impossible to estimate the total number of relevant documents in the system, a figure that is required in the calculation of recall.Ex: Book form is easy to use, readable, and reckoned to be an acceptable format for many users.Ex: The 2nd 'Think Tank' held in Dallas, June 89, focused on gauging what breakthrough issues are occurring in the field that directly concern libraries and merit consideration.Ex: But women value social progress and consciousness of success less than men and esteem freedom and love.Ex: She was so poor that she had nothing but one single hen, which she prized as the apple of her eye.Ex: Cuts in Government agriculture spending are an attack on everything we hold dear in this country.* estimar a grosso modo = guesstimate.* estimar la demanda de Algo = gauge + the demand for.* estimar los costes = cost out.* subestimar = understatement.* * *estimar [A1 ]vt1 ‹persona› to respect, hold … in high o great esteem ( frml)era muy estimado por todo el pueblo madrileño he was held in very high o great esteem by the people of Madrid, the people of Madrid thought very highly of himlo estimo mucho, pero sólo como amigo I'm very fond of him, but only as a friend2 ‹objeto› to valueestima mucho esos pendientes porque eran de su abuela she's very fond of those earrings o she values those earrings highly because they belonged to her grandmothersu piel es muy estimada its skin is highly prizedno estimo necesario que se tomen esas medidas I do not consider it necessary to take those measures, I do not think those measures are necessaryestimé conveniente que otra persona lo sustituyese I considered it advisable for someone else to replace himC (calcular) ‹valor/costo/pérdidas› to estimate estimar algo EN algo to estimate sth AT sthel incendio causó pérdidas estimadas en varios millones the fire caused losses estimated at several million* * *
estimar ( conjugate estimar) verbo transitivo
1
( tener cariño) to be fond of
2 (frml) ( considerar) (+ compl) to consider, deem (frml)
estimar verbo transitivo
1 frml (sentir cariño) to esteem, respect
2 (juzgar, considerar) to consider, think: no lo estimo necesario, I don't think it is necessary
3 (valorar) to appreciate, think highly of: estimo tu ayuda, I appreciate your help
4 (calcular) to estimate
' estimar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
calcular
English:
deem
- esteem
- estimate
- gauge
- prize
- rate
- see
* * *♦ vt1. [apreciar] [persona] to think highly of, to respect;[cosa] to value;estima mucho a sus amigos he values his friends highly;te estimo mucho, pero esto no te lo puedo permitir I have great respect for you, but I can't allow you to do this;estimamos enormemente su colaboración we value her help enormously, her help means a great deal to us;estima su vida en bien poco he has little regard for his own life;un fruto muy estimado en la cocina oriental a fruit that is highly prized in oriental cooking2. [evaluar] to value;estimar el valor de algo to estimate the value of sth;han estimado que las pérdidas superan los cien millones the losses are estimated to be over a hundred millionno estimó necesario realizar declaraciones she didn't consider o deem it necessary to make any statement4. [aceptar] [solicitud] to accept;[querella, demanda] to uphold* * *v/t1 respect, hold in high regard;estimar (en) poco not think much of2 ( considerar):estimo conveniente que I consider it advisable to3 ( calcular):estimar en estimate at; objeto value at* * *estimar vt1) apreciar: to esteem, to respect2) evaluar: to estimate, to appraise3) opinar: to consider, to deem -
13 muy estimado
adj.dear, dearest, highly-regarded.* * *(adj.) = highly regarded, highly esteemed, highly reputedEx. The result is a digital library that has been in operation since 1997, that continues to expand in size, that is heavily used and that is highly regarded by its users.Ex. The novel, once regarded as a `low' and improper' form of creative literature, is now highly esteemed.Ex. This position has been obtained largely by public sector initiatives and without erosion of the highly reputed Scandinavian model for a welfare ociety.* * *(adj.) = highly regarded, highly esteemed, highly reputedEx: The result is a digital library that has been in operation since 1997, that continues to expand in size, that is heavily used and that is highly regarded by its users.
Ex: The novel, once regarded as a `low' and improper' form of creative literature, is now highly esteemed.Ex: This position has been obtained largely by public sector initiatives and without erosion of the highly reputed Scandinavian model for a welfare ociety. -
14 muy reconocido
adj.well-acknowledged.* * *(adj.) = highly regarded, highly esteemed, highly reputedEx. The result is a digital library that has been in operation since 1997, that continues to expand in size, that is heavily used and that is highly regarded by its users.Ex. The novel, once regarded as a `low' and improper' form of creative literature, is now highly esteemed.Ex. This position has been obtained largely by public sector initiatives and without erosion of the highly reputed Scandinavian model for a welfare ociety.* * *(adj.) = highly regarded, highly esteemed, highly reputedEx: The result is a digital library that has been in operation since 1997, that continues to expand in size, that is heavily used and that is highly regarded by its users.
Ex: The novel, once regarded as a `low' and improper' form of creative literature, is now highly esteemed.Ex: This position has been obtained largely by public sector initiatives and without erosion of the highly reputed Scandinavian model for a welfare ociety. -
15 muy respetado
adj.much-respected.* * *= highly regarded, highly esteemed, highly reputed, widely-respectedEx. The result is a digital library that has been in operation since 1997, that continues to expand in size, that is heavily used and that is highly regarded by its users.Ex. The novel, once regarded as a `low' and improper' form of creative literature, is now highly esteemed.Ex. This position has been obtained largely by public sector initiatives and without erosion of the highly reputed Scandinavian model for a welfare ociety.Ex. Softly-spoken, but a strict disciplinarian, Madugalle is widely-respected.* * *= highly regarded, highly esteemed, highly reputed, widely-respectedEx: The result is a digital library that has been in operation since 1997, that continues to expand in size, that is heavily used and that is highly regarded by its users.
Ex: The novel, once regarded as a `low' and improper' form of creative literature, is now highly esteemed.Ex: This position has been obtained largely by public sector initiatives and without erosion of the highly reputed Scandinavian model for a welfare ociety.Ex: Softly-spoken, but a strict disciplinarian, Madugalle is widely-respected. -
16 sterk
4 [omvangrijk, veelvuldig; talrijk] strong5 [bekwaam] strong6 [kras] thick, Aexaggerated7 [met betrekking tot reuk/smaak/geluiden] strong8 [met vaste waarde] strong♦voorbeelden:een sterke motor/zender • a high-powered engine/transmittersterke thee • strong teaiets sterks drinken • drink something strongsterker worden • gain strengthsterk zijn in zijn armen • have strong arms〈 spreekwoord〉 wie niet sterk is, moet slim zijn • if the lion's skin cannot, the fox's shallsterke lijm • strong glueik vind het geen sterk verhaal • I don't think much of the storyeen sterke wind • a strong wind4 het leger is 30.000 man sterk • the army is 30,000 strongeen sterke speler • a strong playersterk in aardrijkskunde • good at geographydat lijkt me sterk • I doubt itsterker nog • indeed, more than thatII 〈 bijwoord〉2 [op goede wijze] well♦voorbeelden:een sterk vergrote foto • a much enlarged photographzich sterk tot iemand aangetrokken voelen • feel a strong attraction towards someoneer sterk over denken om te gaan verhuizen • seriously consider movingsterk gekleurd • highly colouredsterk gekruid • highly seasonediets sterk overdrijven • greatly exaggerate somethingsterk ruiken • smell stronglysterk toenemen • increase sharplysterk twijfelen aan • doubt something very muchsterk uiteenlopen/verschillen • diverge/differ greatlysterk verbeterd • much improvediets sterk verbeteren • make great improvement in somethingsterk redeneren • reason wellik zal het je nog sterker vertellen • I'll tell you one to top that -
17 muy usado
adj.1 well-thumbed, dog-eared, much-utilised, much-used.2 very used, well-used, used a whole lot, used a lot.* * *(adj.) = shabby [shabbier -comp., shabbiest -sup.], high-use, well-used [well used], well-worn, well-worn, heavily used, much-usedEx. Seventeenth-century English printing was abysmally poor, and there are few books that were not set in ill-cast, battered type, clumsily arranged and carelessly printed in brown ink on shabby paper.Ex. Compact shelving can be used successfully to store a high-use book or periodical collection in an undergraduate library.Ex. Small, brightly coloured, modern libraries in well-used public areas attract the public and create more demand for library services.Ex. He was described as 'a self-important, self-righteous blowhard, puffing his filthy pipe, patches on the elbows of his well-worn tweed jacket, decked out in the cliche costume of the shabby liberal icon'.Ex. To use a well-worn example, the string (2) physiotherapy (6) nurses $h for (6) bibliographies obviously represents a different sense from the similar string (2) physiotherapy (6) bibliographies (6) nurses $h for.Ex. The result is a digital library that has been in operation since 1997, that continues to expand in size, that is heavily used and that is highly regarded by its users.Ex. In just a few years, comprehensive directories of businesses have become a significant source of local information and a much-used feature of the Internet.* * *(adj.) = shabby [shabbier -comp., shabbiest -sup.], high-use, well-used [well used], well-worn, well-worn, heavily used, much-usedEx: Seventeenth-century English printing was abysmally poor, and there are few books that were not set in ill-cast, battered type, clumsily arranged and carelessly printed in brown ink on shabby paper.
Ex: Compact shelving can be used successfully to store a high-use book or periodical collection in an undergraduate library.Ex: Small, brightly coloured, modern libraries in well-used public areas attract the public and create more demand for library services.Ex: He was described as 'a self-important, self-righteous blowhard, puffing his filthy pipe, patches on the elbows of his well-worn tweed jacket, decked out in the cliche costume of the shabby liberal icon'.Ex: To use a well-worn example, the string (2) physiotherapy (6) nurses $h for (6) bibliographies obviously represents a different sense from the similar string (2) physiotherapy (6) bibliographies (6) nurses $h for.Ex: The result is a digital library that has been in operation since 1997, that continues to expand in size, that is heavily used and that is highly regarded by its users.Ex: In just a few years, comprehensive directories of businesses have become a significant source of local information and a much-used feature of the Internet. -
18 muy frecuentado
adj.much frequented, popular.* * *(adj.) = heavily usedEx. The result is a digital library that has been in operation since 1997, that continues to expand in size, that is heavily used and that is highly regarded by its users.* * *(adj.) = heavily usedEx: The result is a digital library that has been in operation since 1997, that continues to expand in size, that is heavily used and that is highly regarded by its users.
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19 unlikely
(not likely or probable: an unlikely explanation for his absence; She's unlikely to arrive before 7.00 p.m.; It is unlikely that she will come.) improbableunlikely adj poco probable / improbabletr[ʌn'laɪklɪ]1 (improbable) improbable, poco probable; (unexpected, unusual) inverosímil1) improbable: improbable, poco probable2) unpromising: poco prometedoradj.• improbable adj.• inverosímil adj.• remoto, -a adj.'ʌn'laɪkliadjective -lier, liesta) ( improbable) <outcome/victory> improbable, poco probablethat is highly o most unlikely — eso es muy poco probable
b) ( far-fetched) <story/explanation> inverosímil, increíblec) (odd, unexpected) insólitoan unlikely couple — una extraña pareja, una pareja dispareja (AmL)
[ʌn'laɪklɪ]ADJ (compar unlikelier) (superl unlikeliest)1) (=improbable) poco probable, improbableit is unlikely that he will come, he is unlikely to come — es poco probable que venga, no es probable que venga
he's unlikely to survive — tiene pocas posibilidades de sobrevivir, es poco probable que sobreviva
in the unlikely event that we win — en el caso improbable de que ganáramos, en el caso de que ganáramos, lo cual es poco probable
2) (=implausible) [explanation, excuse] inverosímil, increíble3) (=odd) insólito, extrañohe and Paula made an unlikely couple or pair — él y Paula hacían una pareja insólita or extraña
* * *['ʌn'laɪkli]adjective -lier, liesta) ( improbable) <outcome/victory> improbable, poco probablethat is highly o most unlikely — eso es muy poco probable
b) ( far-fetched) <story/explanation> inverosímil, increíblec) (odd, unexpected) insólitoan unlikely couple — una extraña pareja, una pareja dispareja (AmL)
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20 dat is sterk overdreven
dat is sterk overdreven————————dat is sterk overdrevenVan Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > dat is sterk overdreven
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