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1 espacio
Del verbo espaciar: ( conjugate espaciar) \ \
espacio es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
espació es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativoMultiple Entries: espaciar espacio
espacio sustantivo masculino 1◊ ocupan demasiado espacio they take up too much space o room( entre objetos) space, gap;◊ rellenar los espacios en blanco fill in the blank spaces o the blanks2 (Espac):◊ el espacio space;espacio aéreo airspace 3 ( de tiempo): por espacio de 24 horas for 24 hours o for a period of 24 hours 4
espaciar verbo transitivo to space out
espacio sustantivo masculino
1 space
espacio aéreo, air space
espacio sideral, outer space
espacio vital, living space
2 (periodo de tiempo) period
3 (sitio) room: ocupa poco espacio, it takes little room
4 Rad TV programme, US program ' espacio' also found in these entries: Spanish: acordonar - agobiante - ámbito - amplitud - antes - aprovechada - aprovechado - área - blanca - blanco - cámping - conquista - después - discurso - en seguida - enseguida - estrecha - estrecho - evaporarse - extenderse - hasta - holgada - holgado - holgura - hueca - hueco - interlineal - linterna - margen - noche - ocupar - orientación - periodo - período - plaza - primera - primero - radio - reducida - reducido - remota - remoto - rincón - robar - rompecabezas - separación - sitio - sobrar - tapiar - temporada English: accommodate - ahead - bay - beyond - blank - breathing space - by - clearance - come into - confined - cyber space - elbow room - expanse - extension - fill - fit in - forward - gap - gate - go - headroom - in - length - long - near - on - outer space - party political broadcast - room - roomy - single-space - slot - smoky - space - space-saving - spacing - span - spot - stretch out - take - take up - throughout - towards - turn away - wide open - workspace - elbow - leg - maneuver - outer
См. также в других словарях:
fill out — {v.} 1. To put in what is missing; complete; finish; {especially}, to complete (a printed application blank or other form) by writing the missing facts in the blank spaces; to write down facts which are asked for in (a report or application.) *… … Dictionary of American idioms
fill out — {v.} 1. To put in what is missing; complete; finish; {especially}, to complete (a printed application blank or other form) by writing the missing facts in the blank spaces; to write down facts which are asked for in (a report or application.) *… … Dictionary of American idioms
fill\ out — v 1. To put in what is missing; complete; finish; especially, to complete (a printed application blank or other form) by writing the missing facts in the blank spaces; to write down facts which are asked for in (a report or application.) After… … Словарь американских идиом
fill out — To complete a document by writing in the blank spaces left for that purpose. See filling blanks … Ballentine's law dictionary
fill — /fɪl / (say fil) verb (t) 1. to make full; put as much as can be held into. 2. to occupy to the full capacity: water filled the basin; the crowd filled the hall. 3. to supply to fullness or plentifully: to fill a house with furniture; to fill the …
blank — adj., n., & v. adj. 1 a (of paper) not written or printed on. b (of a document) with spaces left for a signature or details. 2 a not filled; empty (a blank space). b unrelieved; sheer (a blank wall). 3 a having or showing no interest or… … Useful english dictionary
fill in — verb 1. supply with information on a specific topic (Freq. 4) He filled me in on the latest developments • Hypernyms: ↑inform • Verb Frames: Somebody s somebody 2. represent the effect of shade or shadow on (Freq. 1) … Useful english dictionary
fill-in — noun someone who takes the place of another (as when things get dangerous or difficult) (Freq. 2) the star had a stand in for dangerous scenes we need extra employees for summer fill ins • Syn: ↑stand in, ↑substitute, ↑relief, ↑reliever, ↑ … Useful english dictionary
space — spacer, n. /spays/, n., v., spaced, spacing, adj. n. 1. the unlimited or incalculably great three dimensional realm or expanse in which all material objects are located and all events occur. 2. the portion or extent of this in a given instance;… … Universalium
Smith, William — born March 23, 1769, Churchill, Oxfordshire, Eng. died Aug. 28, 1839, Northampton, Northamptonshire English engineer and geologist, known as the founder of the science of stratigraphy. The son of a blacksmith, he was largely self educated. He… … Universalium
performing arts — arts or skills that require public performance, as acting, singing, or dancing. [1945 50] * * * ▪ 2009 Introduction Music Classical. The last vestiges of the Cold War seemed to thaw for a moment on Feb. 26, 2008, when the unfamiliar strains … Universalium