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the innate

  • 1 innate

    Adj
    1. जन्मजात
    Ram had the innate qualities of being calm all the time.

    English-Hindi dictionary > innate

  • 2 dyed-in-the-wool

    1. a выкрашенный в пряже
    2. a закоренелый; стопроцентный
    3. a стойкий, выносливый
    Синонимический ряд:
    inveterate (adj.) entrenched; inborn; inbred; indelible; ingrained; inherent; innate; intrinsic; inveterate

    English-Russian base dictionary > dyed-in-the-wool

  • 3 innato

    adj.
    innate, born, from birth, inborn.
    * * *
    1 innate, inborn
    * * *
    (f. - innata)
    adj.
    * * *
    ADJ innate, inborn
    * * *
    - ta adjetivo innate, inborn
    * * *
    = innate, inborn, built-in.
    Ex. No matter how simple the formula may seem to be, few men have the innate ability for this writing.
    Ex. Most cerebral aneurysms are congenital, resulting from an inborn abnormality in an artery wall.
    Ex. However, large systems with many users have an element of built-in inertia, and are likely to be more stable.
    ----
    * de forma innata = innately.
    * * *
    - ta adjetivo innate, inborn
    * * *
    = innate, inborn, built-in.

    Ex: No matter how simple the formula may seem to be, few men have the innate ability for this writing.

    Ex: Most cerebral aneurysms are congenital, resulting from an inborn abnormality in an artery wall.
    Ex: However, large systems with many users have an element of built-in inertia, and are likely to be more stable.
    * de forma innata = innately.

    * * *
    innato -ta
    innate, inborn
    * * *

    innato
    ◊ -ta adjetivo

    innate, inborn
    innato,-a adjetivo innate, inborn

    ' innato' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    innata
    English:
    inborn
    - inbred
    - inbuilt
    - innate
    - native
    - natural
    * * *
    innato, -a adj
    innate;
    tiene una simpatía innata she's friendly by nature;
    es innato en él it comes naturally to him
    * * *
    adj innate, inborn
    * * *
    innato, -ta adj
    : innate, inborn

    Spanish-English dictionary > innato

  • 4 aparato digestivo

    m.
    digestive system.
    * * *
    ANATOMÍA digestive system
    * * *
    (n.) = gastrointestinal tract, digestive tract
    Ex. Swallowing hydrochloric acid can cause immediate pain and burns of the mouth, throat, esophagus and gastrointestinal tract.
    Ex. The innate immune system in breast milk is complex and provides protection for the developing digestive tract of newborns.
    * * *
    (n.) = gastrointestinal tract, digestive tract

    Ex: Swallowing hydrochloric acid can cause immediate pain and burns of the mouth, throat, esophagus and gastrointestinal tract.

    Ex: The innate immune system in breast milk is complex and provides protection for the developing digestive tract of newborns.

    * * *
    digestive system

    Spanish-English dictionary > aparato digestivo

  • 5 leche materna

    f.
    breast milk.
    * * *
    mother's milk
    * * *
    (n.) = breast milk
    Ex. The innate immune system in breast milk is complex and provides protection for the developing digestive tract of newborns.
    * * *

    Ex: The innate immune system in breast milk is complex and provides protection for the developing digestive tract of newborns.

    Spanish-English dictionary > leche materna

  • 6 sistema inmunológico

    m.
    immune system.
    * * *
    Ex. The innate immune system in breast milk is complex and provides protection for the developing digestive tract of newborns.
    * * *

    Ex: The innate immune system in breast milk is complex and provides protection for the developing digestive tract of newborns.

    * * *
    ANAT immune system

    Spanish-English dictionary > sistema inmunológico

  • 7 tracto intestinal

    m.
    intestinal tract.
    * * *
    Ex. The innate immune system in breast milk is complex and provides protection for the developing digestive tract of newborns.
    * * *

    Ex: The innate immune system in breast milk is complex and provides protection for the developing digestive tract of newborns.

    Spanish-English dictionary > tracto intestinal

  • 8 مفطور على

    مَفْطُورٌ على: مَجْبُولٌ على، مَطْبُوعٌ على
    naturally disposed for, having a natural propensity for, having the innate property or innate characteristic of

    Arabic-English new dictionary > مفطور على

  • 9 Mind

       It becomes, therefore, no inconsiderable part of science... to know the different operations of the mind, to separate them from each other, to class them under their proper heads, and to correct all that seeming disorder in which they lie involved when made the object of reflection and inquiry.... It cannot be doubted that the mind is endowed with several powers and faculties, that these powers are distinct from one another, and that what is really distinct to the immediate perception may be distinguished by reflection and, consequently, that there is a truth and falsehood which lie not beyond the compass of human understanding. (Hume, 1955, p. 22)
       Let us then suppose the mind to be, as we say, white Paper, void of all Characters, without any Ideas: How comes it to be furnished? Whence comes it by that vast store, which the busy and boundless Fancy of Man has painted on it, with an almost endless variety? Whence has it all the materials of Reason and Knowledge? To this I answer, in one word, from Experience. (Locke, quoted in Herrnstein & Boring, 1965, p. 584)
       The kind of logic in mythical thought is as rigorous as that of modern science, and... the difference lies, not in the quality of the intellectual process, but in the nature of things to which it is applied.... Man has always been thinking equally well; the improvement lies, not in an alleged progress of man's mind, but in the discovery of new areas to which it may apply its unchanged and unchanging powers. (Leґvi-Strauss, 1963, p. 230)
       MIND. A mysterious form of matter secreted by the brain. Its chief activity consists in the endeavor to ascertain its own nature, the futility of the attempt being due to the fact that it has nothing but itself to know itself with. (Bierce, quoted in Minsky, 1986, p. 55)
       [Philosophy] understands the foundations of knowledge and it finds these foundations in a study of man-as-knower, of the "mental processes" or the "activity of representation" which make knowledge possible. To know is to represent accurately what is outside the mind, so to understand the possibility and nature of knowledge is to understand the way in which the mind is able to construct such representation.... We owe the notion of a "theory of knowledge" based on an understanding of "mental processes" to the seventeenth century, and especially to Locke. We owe the notion of "the mind" as a separate entity in which "processes" occur to the same period, and especially to Descartes. We owe the notion of philosophy as a tribunal of pure reason, upholding or denying the claims of the rest of culture, to the eighteenth century and especially to Kant, but this Kantian notion presupposed general assent to Lockean notions of mental processes and Cartesian notions of mental substance. (Rorty, 1979, pp. 3-4)
       Under pressure from the computer, the question of mind in relation to machine is becoming a central cultural preoccupation. It is becoming for us what sex was to Victorians-threat, obsession, taboo, and fascination. (Turkle, 1984, p. 313)
       7) Understanding the Mind Remains as Resistant to Neurological as to Cognitive Analyses
       Recent years have been exciting for researchers in the brain and cognitive sciences. Both fields have flourished, each spurred on by methodological and conceptual developments, and although understanding the mechanisms of mind is an objective shared by many workers in these areas, their theories and approaches to the problem are vastly different....
       Early experimental psychologists, such as Wundt and James, were as interested in and knowledgeable about the anatomy and physiology of the nervous system as about the young science of the mind. However, the experimental study of mental processes was short-lived, being eclipsed by the rise of behaviorism early in this century. It was not until the late 1950s that the signs of a new mentalism first appeared in scattered writings of linguists, philosophers, computer enthusiasts, and psychologists.
       In this new incarnation, the science of mind had a specific mission: to challenge and replace behaviorism. In the meantime, brain science had in many ways become allied with a behaviorist approach.... While behaviorism sought to reduce the mind to statements about bodily action, brain science seeks to explain the mind in terms of physiochemical events occurring in the nervous system. These approaches contrast with contemporary cognitive science, which tries to understand the mind as it is, without any reduction, a view sometimes described as functionalism.
       The cognitive revolution is now in place. Cognition is the subject of contemporary psychology. This was achieved with little or no talk of neurons, action potentials, and neurotransmitters. Similarly, neuroscience has risen to an esteemed position among the biological sciences without much talk of cognitive processes. Do the fields need each other?... [Y]es because the problem of understanding the mind, unlike the wouldbe problem solvers, respects no disciplinary boundaries. It remains as resistant to neurological as to cognitive analyses. (LeDoux & Hirst, 1986, pp. 1-2)
       Since the Second World War scientists from different disciplines have turned to the study of the human mind. Computer scientists have tried to emulate its capacity for visual perception. Linguists have struggled with the puzzle of how children acquire language. Ethologists have sought the innate roots of social behaviour. Neurophysiologists have begun to relate the function of nerve cells to complex perceptual and motor processes. Neurologists and neuropsychologists have used the pattern of competence and incompetence of their brain-damaged patients to elucidate the normal workings of the brain. Anthropologists have examined the conceptual structure of cultural practices to advance hypotheses about the basic principles of the mind. These days one meets engineers who work on speech perception, biologists who investigate the mental representation of spatial relations, and physicists who want to understand consciousness. And, of course, psychologists continue to study perception, memory, thought and action.
    ... [W]orkers in many disciplines have converged on a number of central problems and explanatory ideas. They have realized that no single approach is likely to unravel the workings of the mind: it will not give up its secrets to psychology alone; nor is any other isolated discipline-artificial intelligence, linguistics, anthropology, neurophysiology, philosophy-going to have any greater success. (Johnson-Laird, 1988, p. 7)

    Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Mind

  • 10 vena

    vēna, ae, f. [perh. root veh-, to carry, etc.; prop. a pipe, channel; Gr. ochetos], a blood-vessel, vein.
    I.
    Lit.
    1.
    In gen.:

    venae et arteriae a corde tractae et profectae in corpus omne ducuntur,

    Cic. N. D. 2, 55, 139:

    venam incidere,

    id. Pis. 34, 83; Cels. 2, 10:

    bracchiorum venas interscindere,

    Tac. A. 15, 35:

    abrumpere,

    id. ib. 15, 59:

    abscindere,

    id. ib. 15, 69:

    exsolvere,

    id. ib. 16, 17;

    16, 19: pertundere,

    Juv. 6, 46:

    secare, Suet. Vit. Luc.: ferire,

    Verg. G. 3, 460:

    solvere,

    Col. 6, 14, 3.—
    2.
    In partic., an artery:

    si cui venae sic moventur, is habet febrem,

    Cic. Fat. 8, 15; Cels. 3, 6:

    tentare,

    to feel the pulse, Suet. Tib. 72 fin.;

    for which, tangere,

    Pers. 3, 107; Sid. Ep. 22: si protinus venae conciderunt, i. e. the pulse has sunk or fallen, Cels. 3, 5; cf.:

    venis fugientibus,

    Ov. P. 3, 1, 69.—
    B.
    Transf., of things that resemble veins.
    1.
    A water-course, Hirt. B. G. 8, 43;

    Auct. B. Alex. 8, 1: fecundae vena aquae,

    Ov. Tr. 3, 7, 16; Mart. 10, 30, 10.—
    2.
    A vein of metals, Cic. N. D. 2, 60, 151; Juv. 9, 31.—
    3.
    The urinary passage, Cels. 4, 1.—
    4.
    A vein or streak of wood, Plin. 16, 38, 73, § 184; 13, 15, 30, § 97. —Of stone, Plin. 37, 6, 24, § 91; Stat. S. 1, 3, 36.—
    5.
    A row of trees in a garden, Plin. 17, 11, 15, § 76.—
    6.
    = membrum virile, Mart. 4, 66, 12; 6, 49, 2; 11, 16, 5; Pers. 6, 72.—
    II.
    Trop.
    A.
    The strength:

    vino fulcire venas cadentes,

    Sen. Ep. 95, 22; id. Ben. 3, 9, 22; cf. Hor. S. 2, 3, 153.—
    B.
    The interior, the innate or natural quality or nature of a thing:

    periculum residebit et erit inclusum penitus in venis et visceribus rei publicae,

    Cic. Cat. 1, 13, 31:

    (orator) teneat oportet venas cujusque generis, aetatis, ordinis,

    the innermost feelings, the spring, pulse, id. de Or. 1, 52, 223: si ulla vena paternae disciplinae in nobis viveret, Sev. ap. Spart. Pesc. 3.—
    C.
    For a person's natural bent, genius, disposition, vein (the fig. taken from veins of metal):

    ego nec studium sine divite venā, Nec rude quid possit video ingenium,

    Hor. A. P. 409:

    tenuis et angusta ingenii,

    Quint. 6, 2, 3:

    benigna ingenii,

    Hor. C. 2, 18, 10:

    publica (vatis),

    Juv. 7, 53.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > vena

  • 11 anticipatio

    antĭcĭpātĭo, ōnis, f. [anticipo].
    I.
    A preconception, the innate notion of a thing formed before receiving instruction concerning it, Gr. prolêpsis (only in Cic.):

    deorum,

    Cic. N. D. 1, 16, 43:

    sive anticipatio sive praenotio deorum,

    id. ib. 1, 17, 43.—
    II. III.
    In rhet., a figure of speech, anticipation = occupatio and prolêpsis, Jul. Ruf. p. 30 Pith.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > anticipatio

  • 12 slimy

    ['slaɪmɪ]
    прил.
    1) вязкий, липкий
    2) слизистый, скользкий
    Syn:
    3) илистый, покрытый илом
    Syn:
    4) гнусный, мерзкий, отвратительный
    Syn:
    5) подлизывающийся, неискренний

    He was a typical slimy politician, going on about "the innate good sense of the voters". — Он типичный лицемерный политикан, долдонящий о "врождённом здравом уме избирателя".

    Англо-русский современный словарь > slimy

  • 13 ཆོས་ཅན་དང་ཆོས་

    [chos can dang chos]
    nyid: conditioned and the innate

    Tibetan-English dictionary > ཆོས་ཅན་དང་ཆོས་

  • 14 གནས་པ་གཞིའི་སྒྲོན་

    [gnas pa gzhi'i sgron]
    ma: lamp of the innate ground

    Tibetan-English dictionary > གནས་པ་གཞིའི་སྒྲོན་

  • 15 མཚང་བཙལ་བ་

    [mtshang btsal ba]
    searching the innate mode

    Tibetan-English dictionary > མཚང་བཙལ་བ་

  • 16 གཤིས་ཐོག་ཏུ་ཤོར་

    [gshis thog tu shor]
    ba: straying into the innate

    Tibetan-English dictionary > གཤིས་ཐོག་ཏུ་ཤོར་

  • 17 སེམས་ཀྱི་མཚང་བཙལ་

    [sems kyi mtshang btsal]
    ba: searching for the innate mode of mind

    Tibetan-English dictionary > སེམས་ཀྱི་མཚང་བཙལ་

  • 18 مجبول على

    مَجْبُولٌ على: مَطْبُوعٌ على
    naturally disposed for, having a natural propensity for, having the innate property or characteristic of.

    Arabic-English new dictionary > مجبول على

  • 19 مطبوع على

    مَطْبُوعٌ على: مَجْبُولٌ على
    naturally disposed for, having a natural propensity (tendency, inclination) for, having the innate property or inborn characteristic of

    Arabic-English new dictionary > مطبوع على

  • 20 ψυχροκοίλιος

    A having a cold stomach, (Saturn makes) -ίους, i. e. he diminishes the innate digestive heat, Ptol. Tetr. 151.

    Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ψυχροκοίλιος

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