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101 cabe
Del verbo caber: ( conjugate caber) \ \
cabe es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativoMultiple Entries: cabe caber
caber ( conjugate caber) verbo intransitivo 1 no cabemos los cuatro there isn't room for all four of us; en esta botella caben diez litros this bottle holds ten liters; no cabe en sí de alegría to be beside oneself with joy cabe por algo to go through sth 2 (en 3a pers) (frml) ( ser posible): no cabe duda de que … there is no doubt that …; cabría decir que … it could be said that …; es, si cabe, aún mejor it is even better, if such a thing is possible; dentro de lo que cabe all things considered 3 (Mat):
cabe preposición antic beside, alongside: reposaba exhausto cabe el hogar, she lay down exhausted by the fireside
caber verbo intransitivo
1 (poder entrar) to fit: no cabe por la ventana, it won't go through the window
no sé si cabrán los tres, I don't known if there is room for all three of them
2 (en un recipiente) to hold: en esta botellla caben dos litros, this bottle holds two litres (vestimenta) estos zapatos ya no me caben, these shoes don't fit me anymore
3 (en 3.ª persona) (ser posible, existir) cabe que vayamos el viernes, it's possible that we'll go on Friday
no nos cabe duda alguna, we have no doubts Locuciones: no me cabe en la cabeza, I can't understand it
no está mal, dentro de lo que cabe, it isn't bad, under the circumstances
Andy no cabía en sí de gozo, Andy was beside himself with joy ' cabe' also found in these entries: Spanish: caber - dentro - inclinación - duda - sí English: anything - cat - chance - definitely - doubt - fit in - fit into - go - neatly - outside - beside - over - settle -
102 No
1. adjective1) (not any) keinshe is no beauty — sie ist keine Schönheit od. nicht gerade eine Schönheit
you are no friend — du bist kein [wahrer] Freund
3) (hardly any)2. adverbit's no distance from our house to the shopping centre — von unserem Haus ist es nicht weit bis zum Einkaufszentrum
1) (by no amount) nichtno less [than] — nicht weniger [als]
it is no different from before — es hat sich nichts geändert
2) (equivalent to negative sentence) neinsay/answer ‘no’ — nein sagen/mit Nein antworten
3. nounI won't take ‘no’ for an answer — ein Nein lasse ich nicht gelten
* * *[nəu] 1. adjective2) (not allowed: No smoking.) verboten2. adverb(not (any): He is no better at golf than swimming; He went as far as the shop and no further.) nicht3. interjection(a word used for denying, disagreeing, refusing etc: `Do you like travelling?' `No, (I don't).'; No, I don't agree; `Will you help me?' `No, I won't.') nein4. noun plural( noes)1) (a refusal: She answered with a definite no.) das Nein2) (a vote against something: The noes have won.) Gegenstimme•- academic.ru/50085/nobody">nobody5. noun(a very unimportant person: She's just a nobody.) der Niemand- no-one- there's no saying
- knowing* * *no[nəʊ, nə, AM noʊ, nə]I. adj1. (not any) kein(e)there's \no butter left es ist keine Butter mehr dathere's \no doubt that he is the person we're looking for es besteht kein Zweifel, dass er die Person ist, die wir suchen\no one keinerin \no time im Nu, in null Komma nichts famto be of \no interest/use unwichtig/zwecklos sein2. (in signs)‘\no parking’ ‚Parken verboten‘3. (not a) keinI'm \no expert ich bin kein Fachmannthere's \no denying es lässt sich nicht leugnenthere's \no knowing/telling [or saying] man kann nicht wissen/sagenII. advthe exam is \no more difficult than... das Examen ist nicht schwieriger als...\no less nicht weniger\no less than sb/sth nicht weniger als jd/etw2. (alternative)or \no ( form) oder nichtwhether you like it or \no ob du es magst oder nicht3. (negation) neinwere there any survivors? — \no gab es Überlebende? — neinand you're not even a little bit jealous? — \no, not at all und du bist noch nicht mal ein kleines bisschen eifersüchtig? — nein, überhaupt nicht\no, I suppose not nein, ich denke [wohl] nicht4. (doubt) nein, wirklich nichtI've never done anything like this before — \no? replied the policeman suspiciously ich habe so etwas noch nie zuvor getan — ach ja? erwiderte der Polizist misstrauisch5. (not) nichtto be \no more nicht mehr sein [o existierenIII. nto not take \no for an answer ein Nein nicht [o kein Nein] akzeptierenthe \noes have it die Mehrheit ist dagegenIV. interj1. (refusal) nein, auf keinen Fall2. (comprehension) natürlich nichtwe shouldn't worry about it — \no wir sollten uns darüber keine Sorgen machen — nein, natürlich nicht3. (correcting oneself) [ach] nein4. (surprise) nein, nicht möglichher husband ran off with the au pair — \no! ihr Mann ist mit dem Au-pair-Mädchen durchgebrannt — nein! fam5. (distress)oh \no! oh nein!* * *I [nəʊ]1. adv1) (negative) neinto answer no (to question) — mit Nein antworten, verneinen; (to request)
she can't say no — sie kann nicht Nein or nein sagen
the answer is no — da muss ich Nein or nein sagen; (as emphatic reply also) nein (und noch mal nein)
2) (= not) nichtwhether he comes or no —
he returned to England in an aircraft carrier no less — er kehrte auf nichts Geringerem als einem Flugzeugträger nach England zurück
no later than Monday —
no longer ago than last week — erst letzte Woche
2. adj1) (= not any also with numerals and "other") keinit's of no interest/importance — das ist belanglos/unwichtig
2)no parking/smoking — Parken/Rauchen verboten3)there's no pleasing him — ihm kann man es auch nie recht machen
4) (emph)he's no genius —
I'm no expert, but... — ich bin ja kein Fachmann, aber...
in no time — im Nu
there is no such thing — so etwas gibt es nicht
it was/we did no such thing — bestimmt nicht, nichts dergleichen
I'll do no such thing — ich werde mich hüten
3. n pl - esNeinnt; (= no vote) NeinstimmefIII won't take no for an answer — ich bestehe darauf, ich lasse nicht locker
1) abbr of north N2) abbr of number Nr.* * *No [nəʊ] pl No s No n (ein altjapanisches Drama)* * *1. adjective1) (not any) kein2) (not a) kein; (quite other than) alles andere alsshe is no beauty — sie ist keine Schönheit od. nicht gerade eine Schönheit
you are no friend — du bist kein [wahrer] Freund
3) (hardly any)2. adverbit's no distance from our house to the shopping centre — von unserem Haus ist es nicht weit bis zum Einkaufszentrum
1) (by no amount) nichtno less [than] — nicht weniger [als]
2) (equivalent to negative sentence) neinsay/answer ‘no’ — nein sagen/mit Nein antworten
3. nounI won't take ‘no’ for an answer — ein Nein lasse ich nicht gelten
* * *expr.Nein ausdr. -
103 no
1. adjective1) (not any) keinshe is no beauty — sie ist keine Schönheit od. nicht gerade eine Schönheit
you are no friend — du bist kein [wahrer] Freund
3) (hardly any)2. adverbit's no distance from our house to the shopping centre — von unserem Haus ist es nicht weit bis zum Einkaufszentrum
1) (by no amount) nichtno less [than] — nicht weniger [als]
it is no different from before — es hat sich nichts geändert
2) (equivalent to negative sentence) neinsay/answer ‘no’ — nein sagen/mit Nein antworten
3. nounI won't take ‘no’ for an answer — ein Nein lasse ich nicht gelten
* * *[nəu] 1. adjective2) (not allowed: No smoking.) verboten2. adverb(not (any): He is no better at golf than swimming; He went as far as the shop and no further.) nicht3. interjection(a word used for denying, disagreeing, refusing etc: `Do you like travelling?' `No, (I don't).'; No, I don't agree; `Will you help me?' `No, I won't.') nein4. noun plural( noes)1) (a refusal: She answered with a definite no.) das Nein2) (a vote against something: The noes have won.) Gegenstimme•- academic.ru/50085/nobody">nobody5. noun(a very unimportant person: She's just a nobody.) der Niemand- no-one- there's no saying
- knowing* * *no[nəʊ, nə, AM noʊ, nə]I. adj1. (not any) kein(e)there's \no butter left es ist keine Butter mehr dathere's \no doubt that he is the person we're looking for es besteht kein Zweifel, dass er die Person ist, die wir suchen\no one keinerin \no time im Nu, in null Komma nichts famto be of \no interest/use unwichtig/zwecklos sein2. (in signs)‘\no parking’ ‚Parken verboten‘3. (not a) keinI'm \no expert ich bin kein Fachmannthere's \no denying es lässt sich nicht leugnenthere's \no knowing/telling [or saying] man kann nicht wissen/sagenII. advthe exam is \no more difficult than... das Examen ist nicht schwieriger als...\no less nicht weniger\no less than sb/sth nicht weniger als jd/etw2. (alternative)or \no ( form) oder nichtwhether you like it or \no ob du es magst oder nicht3. (negation) neinwere there any survivors? — \no gab es Überlebende? — neinand you're not even a little bit jealous? — \no, not at all und du bist noch nicht mal ein kleines bisschen eifersüchtig? — nein, überhaupt nicht\no, I suppose not nein, ich denke [wohl] nicht4. (doubt) nein, wirklich nichtI've never done anything like this before — \no? replied the policeman suspiciously ich habe so etwas noch nie zuvor getan — ach ja? erwiderte der Polizist misstrauisch5. (not) nichtto be \no more nicht mehr sein [o existierenIII. nto not take \no for an answer ein Nein nicht [o kein Nein] akzeptierenthe \noes have it die Mehrheit ist dagegenIV. interj1. (refusal) nein, auf keinen Fall2. (comprehension) natürlich nichtwe shouldn't worry about it — \no wir sollten uns darüber keine Sorgen machen — nein, natürlich nicht3. (correcting oneself) [ach] nein4. (surprise) nein, nicht möglichher husband ran off with the au pair — \no! ihr Mann ist mit dem Au-pair-Mädchen durchgebrannt — nein! fam5. (distress)oh \no! oh nein!* * *I [nəʊ]1. adv1) (negative) neinto answer no (to question) — mit Nein antworten, verneinen; (to request)
she can't say no — sie kann nicht Nein or nein sagen
the answer is no — da muss ich Nein or nein sagen; (as emphatic reply also) nein (und noch mal nein)
2) (= not) nichtwhether he comes or no —
he returned to England in an aircraft carrier no less — er kehrte auf nichts Geringerem als einem Flugzeugträger nach England zurück
no later than Monday —
no longer ago than last week — erst letzte Woche
2. adj1) (= not any also with numerals and "other") keinit's of no interest/importance — das ist belanglos/unwichtig
2)no parking/smoking — Parken/Rauchen verboten3)there's no pleasing him — ihm kann man es auch nie recht machen
4) (emph)he's no genius —
I'm no expert, but... — ich bin ja kein Fachmann, aber...
in no time — im Nu
there is no such thing — so etwas gibt es nicht
it was/we did no such thing — bestimmt nicht, nichts dergleichen
I'll do no such thing — ich werde mich hüten
3. n pl - esNeinnt; (= no vote) NeinstimmefIII won't take no for an answer — ich bestehe darauf, ich lasse nicht locker
1) abbr of north N2) abbr of number Nr.* * *no [nəʊ]A adv1. auch int nein:no! (zu einem Kleinkind od einem Hund) pfui!;answer no Nein sagen;say no to Nein sagen zu;I won’t take no for an answer ein Nein lasse ich nicht geltenwhether or no ob od nicht;permitted or no erlaubt od nicht3. (beim komp) um nichts, nicht:no better a writer kein besserer Schriftsteller;no longer (ago) than yesterday erst gesternB pl noes s1. Nein n, verneinende Antwort, Absage f, Weigerung f:a clear no to ein klares Nein auf (akk) oder zu2. PARL Nein-, Gegenstimme f:the ayes and noes die Stimmen für und wider;the noes have it die Mehrheit ist dagegen, der Antrag ist abgelehntC adj1. kein(e):no success kein Erfolg;no hope keine Hoffnung;no one keiner, niemand;at no time nie;2. kein(e), alles andere als ein(e):he is no Englishman er ist kein (typischer) Engländer3. vor ger:* * *1. adjective1) (not any) kein2) (not a) kein; (quite other than) alles andere alsshe is no beauty — sie ist keine Schönheit od. nicht gerade eine Schönheit
you are no friend — du bist kein [wahrer] Freund
3) (hardly any)2. adverbit's no distance from our house to the shopping centre — von unserem Haus ist es nicht weit bis zum Einkaufszentrum
1) (by no amount) nichtno less [than] — nicht weniger [als]
2) (equivalent to negative sentence) neinsay/answer ‘no’ — nein sagen/mit Nein antworten
3. nounI won't take ‘no’ for an answer — ein Nein lasse ich nicht gelten
* * *expr.Nein ausdr. -
104 Logic
My initial step... was to attempt to reduce the concept of ordering in a sequence to that of logical consequence, so as to proceed from there to the concept of number. To prevent anything intuitive from penetrating here unnoticed, I had to bend every effort to keep the chain of inference free of gaps. In attempting to comply with this requirement in the strictest possible way, I found the inadequacy of language to be an obstacle. (Frege, 1972, p. 104)I believe I can make the relation of my 'conceptual notation' to ordinary language clearest if I compare it to the relation of the microscope to the eye. The latter, because of the range of its applicability and because of the ease with which it can adapt itself to the most varied circumstances, has a great superiority over the microscope. Of course, viewed as an optical instrument it reveals many imperfections, which usually remain unnoticed only because of its intimate connection with mental life. But as soon as scientific purposes place strong requirements upon sharpness of resolution, the eye proves to be inadequate.... Similarly, this 'conceptual notation' is devised for particular scientific purposes; and therefore one may not condemn it because it is useless for other purposes. (Frege, 1972, pp. 104-105)To sum up briefly, it is the business of the logician to conduct an unceasing struggle against psychology and those parts of language and grammar which fail to give untrammeled expression to what is logical. He does not have to answer the question: How does thinking normally take place in human beings? What course does it naturally follow in the human mind? What is natural to one person may well be unnatural to another. (Frege, 1979, pp. 6-7)We are very dependent on external aids in our thinking, and there is no doubt that the language of everyday life-so far, at least, as a certain area of discourse is concerned-had first to be replaced by a more sophisticated instrument, before certain distinctions could be noticed. But so far the academic world has, for the most part, disdained to master this instrument. (Frege, 1979, pp. 6-7)There is no reproach the logician need fear less than the reproach that his way of formulating things is unnatural.... If we were to heed those who object that logic is unnatural, we would run the risk of becoming embroiled in interminable disputes about what is natural, disputes which are quite incapable of being resolved within the province of logic. (Frege, 1979, p. 128)[L]inguists will be forced, internally as it were, to come to grips with the results of modern logic. Indeed, this is apparently already happening to some extent. By "logic" is not meant here recursive function-theory, California model-theory, constructive proof-theory, or even axiomatic settheory. Such areas may or may not be useful for linguistics. Rather under "logic" are included our good old friends, the homely locutions "and," "or," "if-then," "if and only if," "not," "for all x," "for some x," and "is identical with," plus the calculus of individuals, event-logic, syntax, denotational semantics, and... various parts of pragmatics.... It is to these that the linguist can most profitably turn for help. These are his tools. And they are "clean tools," to borrow a phrase of the late J. L. Austin in another context, in fact, the only really clean ones we have, so that we might as well use them as much as we can. But they constitute only what may be called "baby logic." Baby logic is to the linguist what "baby mathematics" (in the phrase of Murray Gell-Mann) is to the theoretical physicist-very elementary but indispensable domains of theory in both cases. (Martin, 1969, pp. 261-262)There appears to be no branch of deductive inference that requires us to assume the existence of a mental logic in order to do justice to the psychological phenomena. To be logical, an individual requires, not formal rules of inference, but a tacit knowledge of the fundamental semantic principle governing any inference; a deduction is valid provided that there is no way of interpreting the premises correctly that is inconsistent with the conclusion. Logic provides a systematic method for searching for such counter-examples. The empirical evidence suggests that ordinary individuals possess no such methods. (Johnson-Laird, quoted in Mehler, Walker & Garrett, 1982, p. 130)The fundamental paradox of logic [that "there is no class (as a totality) of those classes which, each taken as a totality, do not belong to themselves" (Russell to Frege, 16 June 1902, in van Heijenoort, 1967, p. 125)] is with us still, bequeathed by Russell-by way of philosophy, mathematics, and even computer science-to the whole of twentieth-century thought. Twentieth-century philosophy would begin not with a foundation for logic, as Russell had hoped in 1900, but with the discovery in 1901 that no such foundation can be laid. (Everdell, 1997, p. 184)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Logic
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105 fecundo
adj.1 fertile, rich, productive, fruitful.2 fertile.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: fecundar.* * *► adjetivo1 fertile, fecund* * *ADJ1) [persona, tierra] fertile, fecund frm2) [pintor, escritor] prolific3) (=fructífero) fruitful, productiveuna década fecunda de los grandes economistas — a fruitful o productive period for great economists
fecundo de palabras — fluent, eloquent
fecundo en algo: una época muy fecunda en buenos poetas — a period which produced an abundance o a plethora of good poets
un libro fecundo en ideas — a book full of o rich in ideas
* * *- da adjetivoa) (Biol) < mujer> fertile* * *= fertile, productive.Ex. There is no doubt that these reforms have produced a fertile climate for the development of better information for patients.Ex. The clicker paid each man according to what he had set, keeping for himself a share equal to that of the most productive hand.* * *- da adjetivoa) (Biol) < mujer> fertile* * *= fertile, productive.Ex: There is no doubt that these reforms have produced a fertile climate for the development of better information for patients.
Ex: The clicker paid each man according to what he had set, keeping for himself a share equal to that of the most productive hand.* * *fecundo -da2 ‹región› fertile; ‹tierra› rich, fertile, fecund ( frml)3 ‹labor› fruitful; ‹autor› prolific* * *
Del verbo fecundar: ( conjugate fecundar)
fecundo es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
fecundó es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo
Multiple Entries:
fecundar
fecundo
fecundar ( conjugate fecundar) verbo transitivo ‹ óvulo› to fertilize;
‹ animal› to inseminate
fecundo◊ -da adjetivo
‹ labor› fruitful
fecundar verbo transitivo to fertilize
fecundo,-a adjetivo
1 (muy productivo) prolific
2 fertile
' fecundo' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
fecunda
English:
prolific
* * *fecundo, -a adj1. [mujer] fertile2. [tierra] fertile3. [artista] prolific* * *adj fertile, fecund fml* * *fecundo, -da adjfértil: fertile, fecund -
106 fértil
adj.1 fertile, fruitful, productive, prolific.2 fertile.* * *► adjetivo1 fertile, rich* * *adj.1) fertile2) productive* * *ADJ1) [tierra, campo] fertile, rich2) [persona, animal] fertile3) (=productivo) [idioma] rich, expressive; [discusión] fertile, fruitful; [imaginación] fertile* * *adjetivo fertile* * *= fertile, productive.Ex. There is no doubt that these reforms have produced a fertile climate for the development of better information for patients.Ex. The clicker paid each man according to what he had set, keeping for himself a share equal to that of the most productive hand.----* imaginación fértil = vivid imagination.* tierra fértil = loam.* * *adjetivo fertile* * *= fertile, productive.Ex: There is no doubt that these reforms have produced a fertile climate for the development of better information for patients.
Ex: The clicker paid each man according to what he had set, keeping for himself a share equal to that of the most productive hand.* imaginación fértil = vivid imagination.* tierra fértil = loam.* * *1 ‹tierra/región› fertile, rich2 ‹mujer/hembra› fertile3 ‹imaginación› fertile* * *
fértil adjetivo
fertile
fértil adjetivo fertile
' fértil' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
interfluvio
- pródiga
- pródigo
- suelo
- terreno
English:
fertile
- rich
- vivid
* * *fértil adj1. [mujer] fertile2. [tierra] fertile3. [imaginación] fertile* * *adj fertile;en edad fértil of child-bearing age* * *fértil adjfecundo: fertile, fruitful* * *fértil adj fertile -
107 ofrecer posibilidades
(v.) = have + potential, offer + options, offer + possibilities, hold + potential, present + possibilities, open (up) + avenuesEx. The somewhat late arrival of the ROOT thesaurus in the indexing world means that its penetration will be slow, although it has great potential as a tool for standardizing indexing languages.Ex. Retrieval from a computer data base offers more options than retrieval from a printed index.Ex. There seems little doubt that electronic mail offers many possibilities for the exchange of many kinds of information.Ex. Document image management, or imaging, presents possibilities for dealing with the paper problem.Ex. The digitization of valued information resources opens up new avenues of access, use, and research and is an important aspect.* * *(v.) = have + potential, offer + options, offer + possibilities, hold + potential, present + possibilities, open (up) + avenuesEx: The somewhat late arrival of the ROOT thesaurus in the indexing world means that its penetration will be slow, although it has great potential as a tool for standardizing indexing languages.
Ex: Retrieval from a computer data base offers more options than retrieval from a printed index.Ex: There seems little doubt that electronic mail offers many possibilities for the exchange of many kinds of information.Ex: Document image management, or imaging, presents possibilities for dealing with the paper problem. -
108 constar
v.1 to appear.su nombre no consta en esta lista his name is not on o does not appear on this listhacer constar algo to put something on recordme consta que… I am quite sure that…que conste que… let it be clearly understood that…, let there be no doubt that…yo no he sido, que conste let's get one thing clear, it wasn't me2 to be evident, to be recorded, to be on record.3 to be certain about, to be sure about, to can vouch for, to vouch for.Me consta su honestidad I can vouch for his honesty.4 to be evident to.Me consta su inocencia His innocence is evident to me.* * *1 (consistir en) to consist (de, of), be made up (de, of), comprise (de, -)2 (figurar) to figure, be included, appear3 (ser cierto) to be a fact■ me consta que ha llegado I am certain that she has arrived, I know for a fact that she has arrived4 (quedar claro) to be clear, be known■ que conste que... and let it be clearly understood that...\para que así conste formal for the record* * *verb* * *VI1) (=ser evidente)consta que... — it is a fact that...
me consta que... — I have evidence that...
2) (=aparecer, figurar)constar (en) — to appear (in), be given (in o on)
en el carnet no consta su edad — his age is not stated on the licence o (EEUU) license
y para que así conste... — and for the record...
3)que conste: que conste que no estoy de acuerdo — for the record, I disagree
que conste que lo hice por ti — believe me, I did it for your own good
4) (=componerse)constar de — to consist of, be composed of
5) (Literat) to scan* * *verbo intransitivo1)a) ( figurar)constar en algo — en acta/documento to be stated o recorded in something; en archivo/catálogo to be listed in something; en libro/texto to appear in something
y para que así conste... — and for the record...
b) ( quedar claro)(que) conste que yo se lo advertí — I did warn her, you know
yo nunca dije eso, que conste — just to set the record straight, I never actually said that; (+ me/te/le etc)
me consta que... — I am sure that...
c)hacer constar algo — ( manifestar) to state something; ( por escrito) to register something, to put something on record
2) ( estar compuesto de)* * *= figure, be on record as.Ex. It is important not to let the early sections figure disproportionately in the final abstract merely because they are encountered first.Ex. Magro was on record as subscribing to the view that the public library as a democratically based public institution had no business using a disproportionate amount of its resources to support an elitist program for a tiny minority of the community.----* constar de = be composed of, comprise (of), consist of, include.* hacer constar = state.* para que conste oficialmente = for the record.* * *verbo intransitivo1)a) ( figurar)constar en algo — en acta/documento to be stated o recorded in something; en archivo/catálogo to be listed in something; en libro/texto to appear in something
y para que así conste... — and for the record...
b) ( quedar claro)(que) conste que yo se lo advertí — I did warn her, you know
yo nunca dije eso, que conste — just to set the record straight, I never actually said that; (+ me/te/le etc)
me consta que... — I am sure that...
c)hacer constar algo — ( manifestar) to state something; ( por escrito) to register something, to put something on record
2) ( estar compuesto de)* * *= figure, be on record as.Ex: It is important not to let the early sections figure disproportionately in the final abstract merely because they are encountered first.
Ex: Magro was on record as subscribing to the view that the public library as a democratically based public institution had no business using a disproportionate amount of its resources to support an elitist program for a tiny minority of the community.* constar de = be composed of, comprise (of), consist of, include.* hacer constar = state.* para que conste oficialmente = for the record.* * *constar [A1 ]viA1(figurar): como consta en el acta/informe as stated o recorded in the minutes/reporty para que así conste … ( frml); phrase used at end of official certificates (literally: so that this may be officially recorded)hizo constar su disconformidad she stated her disagreement, she made her disagreement knownhizo constar en acta su oposición he asked for his opposition to be noted o recorded in the minutes2(quedar claro): alguien se lo dio y (que) conste que no fui yo someone gave it to him and it certainly wasn't me o it wasn't me, I can tell youlo perdió todo — (que) conste que yo se lo advertí she lost everything — I did warn her, you know o well, I did warn heryo nunca dije eso, que conste just to set the record straight, I never actually said thathabla muy bien inglés, y conste que hace sólo un año que lo estudia she speaks very good English, and she's only been studying it for a year, you know(+ me/te/le etc): me consta que no tuvo nada que ver con este asunto I know for a fact that she had nothing to do with this matterB (estar compuesto de) constar DE algo to consist OF sthconsta de una serie de lecciones, respaldadas con películas it consists of a series of lessons backed up by filmsel juego de mesa consta de 48 piezas it's a 48-piece dinner service, the dinner service is made up of o comprises 48 piecesla obra consta de tres volúmenes the work is in three volumes* * *
constar ( conjugate constar) verbo intransitivo
‹en archivo/catálogo› to be listed in sth;
‹en libro/texto› to appear in sthb) ( quedar claro):
yo nunca dije eso, que conste just to set the record straight, I never actually said that;
eso me consta I am sure of thatc)
( por escrito) to register sth, to put sth on recordd) ( estar compuesto de) constar de algo to consist of sth
constar verbo intransitivo
1 (figurar) to figure in, be included (in): consta en acta, it is on record
2 (tener certidumbre) me consta que..., I am absolutely certain that...
3 (estar compuesto) to be made up [de, of], consist [de, of]
' constar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
consignar
- contar
English:
comprise
- consist
- record
* * *constar vi1. [una información] to appear, to figure (en in);su nombre no consta en esta lista his name is not on o does not appear on this list;hacer constar algo to put sth on record;yo no he sido, que conste let's get one thing clear, it wasn't me;que conste que ya le había avisado you can't say I didn't warn you;llegó el primero, y que conste que casi no se había entrenado he came first, and with practically no training at that;que conste en acta la protesta [en juicio] let the objection go on record;que no conste en acta [en juicio] strike it from the record;y para que así conste, expido este certificado = official formula which effectively means “I formally issue this certificate”2. [saber con certeza]me consta que se lo pasaron muy bien I know for a fact they had a very good time;me consta que está casado I know for a fact that he's marriedla serie consta de cuatro episodios the series consists of four episodes;cada partido consta de cuatro tiempos each game consists of four quarters* * *v/i1 be recorded;hacer constar put on record;para que conste for the record2:constar de consist of3:me consta que I know for a fact that* * *constar vi1) : to be evident, to be on recordque conste: believe me, have no doubt2)constar de : to consist of* * *constar vb2. (registrar) to appear3. (estar compuesto) to consist -
109 rareza
f.1 rarity.2 infrequency.3 idiosyncrasy, eccentricity (extravagancia).4 oddity, quirk, singularity, peculiarity.5 rare thing.6 uncommonness, infrequency.* * *1 (poco común) rarity, rareness2 (escasez) scarcity3 (peculiaridad) oddity4 (extravagancia) eccentricity* * *SF1) (=calidad) rarity2) (=objeto) rarity3) (=rasgo singular) oddity, peculiaritytiene sus rarezas — he has his peculiarities, he has his little ways
* * *a) ( peculiaridad) peculiaritytodos tenemos nuestras rarezas — we all have our little quirks o idiosyncrasies
b) ( cosa poco común) rarityc) ( cualidad) rareness* * *= oddity, rarity, strangeness, quirk, weirdness, uncanniness, eeriness, exoticism, rareness, geekiness, eccentricity.Ex. A brief description of the catalogue and some of its oddities and idiosyncrasies is given.Ex. This article provides a description of rare books and some criteria for their identification: rarity, monetary value, age, limited editions and association.Ex. There is no doubt that the 'strangeness' of some of the headings compared with natural language has militated against their widespread acceptance.Ex. Biographers will find many, hitherto undiscovered, traits of character or quirks of career of the famous or notorious emerging out of apparently insignificant or unremarked ephemera.Ex. As examples of this weirdness he points to such instances as the bombings in Nevada and the militias in Arizona.Ex. The author shares with her readers her awareness of the dilemmas raised by the uncanniness of her subjects.Ex. The eeriness of the novel is increased by the everyday look of its characters.Ex. The article is entitled 'Diplomatics for photographic images: academic exoticism?'.Ex. Their supposed rareness seems to be due to a bias of sampling.Ex. We will evaluate proposals on criteria of usefulness, newness, geekiness, and diversity of topics.Ex. In spite of his growing eccentricity, fruitful ideas continued to spring from his imagination.* * *a) ( peculiaridad) peculiaritytodos tenemos nuestras rarezas — we all have our little quirks o idiosyncrasies
b) ( cosa poco común) rarityc) ( cualidad) rareness* * *= oddity, rarity, strangeness, quirk, weirdness, uncanniness, eeriness, exoticism, rareness, geekiness, eccentricity.Ex: A brief description of the catalogue and some of its oddities and idiosyncrasies is given.
Ex: This article provides a description of rare books and some criteria for their identification: rarity, monetary value, age, limited editions and association.Ex: There is no doubt that the 'strangeness' of some of the headings compared with natural language has militated against their widespread acceptance.Ex: Biographers will find many, hitherto undiscovered, traits of character or quirks of career of the famous or notorious emerging out of apparently insignificant or unremarked ephemera.Ex: As examples of this weirdness he points to such instances as the bombings in Nevada and the militias in Arizona.Ex: The author shares with her readers her awareness of the dilemmas raised by the uncanniness of her subjects.Ex: The eeriness of the novel is increased by the everyday look of its characters.Ex: The article is entitled 'Diplomatics for photographic images: academic exoticism?'.Ex: Their supposed rareness seems to be due to a bias of sampling.Ex: We will evaluate proposals on criteria of usefulness, newness, geekiness, and diversity of topics.Ex: In spite of his growing eccentricity, fruitful ideas continued to spring from his imagination.* * *1 (peculiaridad) peculiaritytodos tenemos nuestras rarezas we all have our peculiarities o our little quirks2 (cosa poco común) rarityel libro es considerado una rareza the book is considered a rarity3 (cualidad) rareness, rarity* * *
rareza sustantivo femenino
rareza sustantivo femenino
1 (objeto) rarity
2 (cualidad) rareness
3 (manía) peculiarity: no soporto sus rarezas, I can't stand his irritating mannerisms
' rareza' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
singularidad
English:
oddity
- peculiarity
- quaintness
- quirk
- rarity
* * *rareza nf1. [cualidad de raro] rareness, rarity2. [objeto raro] rarity3. [infrecuencia] infrequency4. [extravagancia] idiosyncrasy, eccentricity* * *f rarity* * *rareza nf1) : rarity2) : peculiarity, oddity -
110 no hay duda
• I'll warrant• there is going to be trouble• there is little doubt that• there is no chance• there is no doubt about it• there is no way out• there is nothing -
111 no
1) ( not any) kein(e);there's \no butter left es ist keine Butter mehr da;there's \no doubt that he is the person we're looking for es besteht kein Zweifel, dass er die Person ist, die wir suchen;\no one keiner;in \no time im Nu, in null Komma nichts ( fam)to be of \no interest/ use unwichtig/zwecklos sein2) ( in signs)‘\no parking’ „Parken verboten“3) ( not a) kein;I'm \no expert ich bin kein Fachmannthere's \no denying es lässt sich nicht leugnen;the exam is \no more difficult than... das Examen ist nicht schwieriger als...;\no less nicht weniger;\no less than sb/ sth nicht weniger als jd/etw2) ( alternative)or \no ( form) oder nicht;whether you like it or \no ob du es magst oder nicht3) ( negation) nein;were there any survivors? - \no gab es Überlebende? - nein;and you're not even a little bit jealous? - \no, not at all und du bist noch nicht mal ein kleines bisschen eifersüchtig? - nein, überhaupt nicht;\no, I suppose not nein, ich denke [wohl] nicht4) ( doubt) nein, wirklich nicht;I've never done anything like this before - ‘\no?’ replied the policeman suspiciously ich habe so etwas noch nie zuvor getan - „ach ja?“ erwiderte der Polizist misstrauisch5) ( not) nicht;to not take \no for an answer ein Nein nicht [o kein Nein] akzeptierenthe \noes have it die Mehrheit ist dagegen interj1) ( refusal) nein, auf keinen Fall2) ( comprehension) natürlich nicht;we shouldn't worry about it - \no wir sollten uns darüber keine Sorgen machen - nein, natürlich nicht3) ( correcting oneself) [ach] nein4) ( surprise) nein, nicht möglich;her husband ran off with the au pair - \no! ihr Mann ist mit dem Aupairmädchen durchgebrannt - nein! ( fam)5) ( distress)oh \no! oh nein! -
112 destrezas relacionadas con el uso de la información
(n.) = information skillsEx. There is no doubt that IT has transformed attitudes and heightened the awareness of academics towards the significance of inculcating information skills = No hay duda de que la TI ha transformado las actitudes y ha hecho que los académicos sean más consciente de la importancia de inculcar las destrezas relacionadas con la información.* * *(n.) = information skillsEx: There is no doubt that IT has transformed attitudes and heightened the awareness of academics towards the significance of inculcating information skills = No hay duda de que la TI ha transformado las actitudes y ha hecho que los académicos sean más consciente de la importancia de inculcar las destrezas relacionadas con la información.
Spanish-English dictionary > destrezas relacionadas con el uso de la información
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113 destrezas relacionadas con la información
Ex. There is no doubt that IT has transformed attitudes and heightened the awareness of academics towards the significance of inculcating information skills = No hay duda de que la TI ha transformado las actitudes y ha hecho que los académicos sean más consciente de la importancia de inculcar las destrezas relacionadas con la información.* * *Ex: There is no doubt that IT has transformed attitudes and heightened the awareness of academics towards the significance of inculcating information skills = No hay duda de que la TI ha transformado las actitudes y ha hecho que los académicos sean más consciente de la importancia de inculcar las destrezas relacionadas con la información.
Spanish-English dictionary > destrezas relacionadas con la información
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114 durante los próximos años
= for the next few years, over the next few years, during the next few yearsEx. There is no doubt that this scheme deserves to succeed, but we live in a harsh world, where success tends to go to the successful rather than to the deserving, and one can only reserve judgement for the next few years.Ex. However, as the proportion of elderly people in the population rises sharply over next few years advertising and retail executives will need to rethink their sales strategies.Ex. Of all the factors influencing the on-line information services industry during the next few years, telephone deregulation could well be the most important.* * *= for the next few years, over the next few years, during the next few yearsEx: There is no doubt that this scheme deserves to succeed, but we live in a harsh world, where success tends to go to the successful rather than to the deserving, and one can only reserve judgement for the next few years.
Ex: However, as the proportion of elderly people in the population rises sharply over next few years advertising and retail executives will need to rethink their sales strategies.Ex: Of all the factors influencing the on-line information services industry during the next few years, telephone deregulation could well be the most important. -
115 ganar popularidad
(v.) = gain in + popularity, gain + popularity, increase in + popularityEx. There is no doubt that since DCD and BNB healed the breach the LC scheme has gained in popularity.Ex. This technique is sure to gain popularity as more libraries become involved in the long-range planning process.Ex. CD drives are now cheap enough for CD-ROMs to increase in popularity.* * *(v.) = gain in + popularity, gain + popularity, increase in + popularityEx: There is no doubt that since DCD and BNB healed the breach the LC scheme has gained in popularity.
Ex: This technique is sure to gain popularity as more libraries become involved in the long-range planning process.Ex: CD drives are now cheap enough for CD-ROMs to increase in popularity. -
116 hacer más consciente de Algo
(v.) = heighten + awarenessEx. There is no doubt that IT has transformed attitudes and heightened the awareness of academics towards the significance of inculcating information skills = No hay duda de que la TI ha transformado las actitudes y ha hecho que los académicos sean más consciente de la importancia de inculcar las destrezas relacionadas con la información.* * *(v.) = heighten + awarenessEx: There is no doubt that IT has transformed attitudes and heightened the awareness of academics towards the significance of inculcating information skills = No hay duda de que la TI ha transformado las actitudes y ha hecho que los académicos sean más consciente de la importancia de inculcar las destrezas relacionadas con la información.
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117 reconciliación entre
Ex. There is no doubt that the healing of the breach between the DCD and BNB has been directly due to his influence.* * *Ex: There is no doubt that the healing of the breach between the DCD and BNB has been directly due to his influence.
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118 reservarse la opinión
(v.) = reserve + judgementEx. There is no doubt that this scheme deserves to succeed, but we live in a harsh world, where success tends to go to the successful rather than to the deserving, and one can only reserve judgement for the next few years.* * *(v.) = reserve + judgementEx: There is no doubt that this scheme deserves to succeed, but we live in a harsh world, where success tends to go to the successful rather than to the deserving, and one can only reserve judgement for the next few years.
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119 ser un avance
(v.) = be a step forwardEx. There is no doubt that the ideas put forward by Coates and their implementation in BTI have been a solid step forward in the theory of alphabetical subject headings.* * *(v.) = be a step forwardEx: There is no doubt that the ideas put forward by Coates and their implementation in BTI have been a solid step forward in the theory of alphabetical subject headings.
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120 suponer un avance
(v.) = be a step forwardEx. There is no doubt that the ideas put forward by Coates and their implementation in BTI have been a solid step forward in the theory of alphabetical subject headings.* * *(v.) = be a step forwardEx: There is no doubt that the ideas put forward by Coates and their implementation in BTI have been a solid step forward in the theory of alphabetical subject headings.
См. также в других словарях:
there is no doubt that — it is absolutely clear that, it is certain that, it is a fact that … English contemporary dictionary
doubt if, doubt whether, doubt that — Both doubt and doubtful are often followed by clauses introduced by if, whether, and that. A choice among the three depends upon the kind of sentence involved. That is used when a negative or interrogative idea is involved: There is little doubt… … Dictionary of problem words and expressions
there is no doubt — there is no uncertainty, I am certain that … English contemporary dictionary
there's no doubt — there s no uncertainty, I am certain that … English contemporary dictionary
doubt — doubt1 W1S1 [daut] n 1.) [U and C] a feeling of being not sure whether something is true or right ▪ Ally was confident that we would be ready on time, but I had my doubts . doubt about ▪ Elizabeth had no doubts at all about his ability to do the… … Dictionary of contemporary English
doubt — doubtable, adj. doubtably, adv. doubter, n. doubtingly, adv. doubtingness, n. /dowt/, v.t. 1. to be uncertain about; consider questionable or unlikely; hesitate to believe. 2. to distrust. 3. Archaic. to fear; be apprehensive about. v.i. 4 … Universalium
doubt — I n. 1) to raise (a) doubt (her proposal raised serious doubts in my mind) 2) to cast doubt on 3) to feel doubt; to entertain, harbor doubts about 4) to express, voice (a) doubt 5) to dispel, resolve a doubt 6) a deep, serious, strong; gnawing;… … Combinatory dictionary
doubt — doubt1 [ daut ] noun count *** a feeling of not being certain about something: doubt about/as to: There seems to be some doubt as to whether this is legal. have no/little doubt that: I have no doubt that he will succeed. there is little/no doubt… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
doubt — I UK [daʊt] / US noun [countable/uncountable] Word forms doubt : singular doubt plural doubts *** a feeling of not being certain about something doubt about/as to: There seems to be some doubt as to whether this is legal. have no/little doubt… … English dictionary
doubt — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ considerable, grave, real, serious, severe ▪ slight ▪ Without the slightest doubt this is a remarkable exhibition … Collocations dictionary
doubt if, that, whether — Idiom demands some selectivity in the choice of conjunction to introduce a clause after doubt and doubtful. The rule is simple: Doubt that should be reserved for negative contexts ( There is no doubt that.. . ; It was never doubtful that.. . )… … Bryson’s dictionary for writers and editors