-
121 qualify
1) (to cause to be or to become able or suitable for: A degree in English does not qualify you to teach English; She is too young to qualify for a place in the team.) capacitar, reunir las condiciones2) ((with as) to show that one is suitable for a profession or job etc, especially by passing a test or examination: I hope to qualify as a doctor.) obtener el título de3) ((with for) to allow, or be allowed, to take part in a competition etc, usually by reaching a satisfactory standard in an earlier test or competition: She failed to qualify for the long jump.) clasificarse4) ((of an adjective) to describe, or add to the meaning of: In `red books', the adjective `red' qualifies the noun `books'.) calificar•- qualified
- qualifying
qualify vb1. obtener el título2. tener derechostaff qualify for a 10% discount los empleados tienen derecho a un descuento del 10%3. clasificarsetr['kwɒlɪfaɪ]1 (entitle, make eligible) capacitar, dar derecho, habilitar2 (modify) modificar, matizar, puntualizar3 SMALLLINGUISTICS/SMALL calificar1 reunir las condiciones necesarias■ I'm afraid you don't qualify for a pension me temo que usted no reúne las condiciones necesarias para percibir una pensión2 (obtain degree) obtener el título (as, de)3 SMALLSPORT/SMALL clasificarse1) : matizarto qualify a statement: matizar una declaración2) modify: calificar (en gramática)3) : habilitarthe certificate qualified her to teach: el certificado la habilitó para enseñarqualify vi1) : obtener el título, recibirseto qualify as an engineer: recibirse de ingeniero2) : clasificarse (en deportes)v.• calificar v.• capacitar v.• capacitarse v.• habilitar v.• habilitarse v.• llenar los requisitos v.• modificar v.'kwɑːləfaɪ, 'kwɒlɪfaɪ
1.
-fies, -fying, -fied transitive verb1) (equip, entitle)to qualify somebody FOR something/to + INF: his experience should qualify him for a better post su experiencia debería permitirle acceder a un puesto mejor; this degree qualifies you to practice anywhere in Europe este título te habilita or te faculta para ejercer en cualquier parte de Europa; their low income qualifies them for some benefits — sus bajos ingresos les dan derecho a recibir ciertas prestaciones
2)a) ( limit)I'd like to qualify the statement I made earlier — quisiera matizar lo que expresé anteriormente haciendo algunas salvedades (or puntualizaciones etc)
b) ( Ling) calificar*
2.
via) ( gain professional qualification) titularse, recibirse (AmL)to qualify AS something — sacar* el título de algo, recibirse de algo (AmL)
b) ( Sport)to qualify (FOR something) — clasificarse* (para algo)
c) ( be entitled)['kwɒlɪfaɪ]to qualify (FOR something) — tener* derecho (a algo)
1. VI1) (=gain qualification) (degree) terminar la carrera, sacar el título, recibirse (LAm); (professional exams) obtener la licencia para ejercer (como profesional)•
to qualify as an engineer — sacar el título de ingeniero2) (=meet criteria)a)• to qualify as sth, it may qualify as a medical expense — puede que cuente como gastos médicos
to qualify as disabled, he must... — para ser declarado minusválido, tiene que...
b)• to qualify for sth — (=be eligible) tener derecho a (recibir) algo
she doesn't qualify for a grant — no tiene derecho a una beca, no puede optar a una beca
3) (Sport) clasificarse ( for para)2. VT1) (=give qualifications, knowledge to)the basic course does not qualify you to practise as a therapist — el curso básico no le capacita para ejercer de terapeuta
2) (=make eligible)your age may qualify you for a special discount — puede que tu edad te dé derecho a un descuento especial
3) (=modify) [+ statement] matizar; (=limit) [+ support, conclusion] condicionar4) (=describe)a) (gen) calificar (as de)some of her statements could be qualified as racist — algunos de sus comentarios se podrían calificar de racistas
b) (Gram) calificar a* * *['kwɑːləfaɪ, 'kwɒlɪfaɪ]
1.
-fies, -fying, -fied transitive verb1) (equip, entitle)to qualify somebody FOR something/to + INF: his experience should qualify him for a better post su experiencia debería permitirle acceder a un puesto mejor; this degree qualifies you to practice anywhere in Europe este título te habilita or te faculta para ejercer en cualquier parte de Europa; their low income qualifies them for some benefits — sus bajos ingresos les dan derecho a recibir ciertas prestaciones
2)a) ( limit)I'd like to qualify the statement I made earlier — quisiera matizar lo que expresé anteriormente haciendo algunas salvedades (or puntualizaciones etc)
b) ( Ling) calificar*
2.
via) ( gain professional qualification) titularse, recibirse (AmL)to qualify AS something — sacar* el título de algo, recibirse de algo (AmL)
b) ( Sport)to qualify (FOR something) — clasificarse* (para algo)
c) ( be entitled)to qualify (FOR something) — tener* derecho (a algo)
-
122 quicken
verb (to make or become quicker: He quickened his pace.) acelerar, aligerartr['kwɪkən]1 (speed up) acelerar1 (speed up) acelerarsequicken ['kwɪkən] vt1) revive: resucitar2) arouse: estimular, despertar3) hasten: acelerarshe quickened her pace: aceleró el pasov.• acelerar v.• acelerarse v.• arrear v.• avivar v.• vivificar v.'kwɪkən
1.
transitive verb \<\<rate/pulse\>\> acelerarhe quickened his pace — apretó or aceleró el paso
2.
vi \<\<rate/pulse\>\> acelerarse['kwɪkǝn]1.VT (=speed up) acelerar, apresurarto quicken one's pace — apretar or acelerar el paso
2.VI [breathing, pulse] acelerarse; [interest] acrecentarse, avivarse; [embryo] empezar a moversemen's hearts quickened whenever she appeared — cuando aparecía ella se les aceleraba el pulso a los hombres
* * *['kwɪkən]
1.
transitive verb \<\<rate/pulse\>\> acelerarhe quickened his pace — apretó or aceleró el paso
2.
vi \<\<rate/pulse\>\> acelerarse -
123 quieten
1) ((often with down) to make or become quiet: I expect you to quieten down when I come into the classroom.) calmar(se)2) (to remove or lessen (a person's fears, doubts etc).) calmar, apaciguartr['kwaɪətən]2 (calm down) tranquilizar'kwaɪətṇtransitive verb (esp BrE) quiet IIIPhrasal Verbs:['kwaɪǝtn]1.2.VI (also: quieten down) (=calm down) calmarse, tranquilizarse; (=fall silent) callarse; (fig) (after unruly youth etc) calmarse, sentar cabeza; (after rage) tranquilizarse* * *['kwaɪətṇ]transitive verb (esp BrE) quiet IIIPhrasal Verbs: -
124 readjust
((with to) to get used again to (something one has not experienced for a time): Some soldiers find it hard to readjust to civilian life when they leave the army.) reajustar, readaptar(se)tr[riːə'ʤʌst]1 (modify) reajustar1 (readapt) readaptarsereadjust [.ri:ə'ʤʌst] vt: reajustarreadjust vi: volverse a adaptarv.• reajustar v.• recorrer v.'riːə'dʒʌst
1.
transitive verb reajustar
2.
vi \<\<person\>\>['riːǝ'dʒʌst]to readjust (TO something) — readaptarse or volver* a adaptarse (a algo)
1.VT reajustar2.VI reajustarse* * *['riːə'dʒʌst]
1.
transitive verb reajustar
2.
vi \<\<person\>\>to readjust (TO something) — readaptarse or volver* a adaptarse (a algo)
-
125 rearm
(to give or get weapons again, especially weapons of a new type.) rearmartr[riː'ɑːm]1 rearmar1 rearmarsev.• rearmar v.• rearmarse v.'riː'ɑːrm, ˌriː'ɑːm
1.
transitive verb rearmar
2.
vi rearmarse['riː'ɑːm]1.VT rearmar2.VI rearmarse* * *['riː'ɑːrm, ˌriː'ɑːm]
1.
transitive verb rearmar
2.
vi rearmarse -
126 recover
1) (to become well again; to return to good health etc: He is recovering from a serious illness; The country is recovering from an economic crisis.) recuperarse2) (to get back: The police have recovered the stolen jewels; He will recover the cost of the repairs through the insurance.) recuperar3) (to get control of (one's actions, emotions etc) again: The actor almost fell over but quickly recovered (his balance).) recuperar(se)•- recoveryrecover vb recuperarse / reponersetr[rɪ'kʌvəSMALLr/SMALL]1 (gen) recuperar; (dead body) rescatar1 recuperarse, reponerse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto recover consciousness recobrar el conocimientorecover [ri'kʌvər] vtregain: recobrarrecover virecuperate: recuperarsev.• curarse v.v.• alentar v.• cobrar v.• ganar un pleito v.• mejorarse v.• recaudar v.• recobrar v.• recuperar v.• reintegrar v.• reponer v.(§pres: -pongo, -pones...) pret: -pus-pp: -puestofut/c: -pondr-•)• reponerse v.• rescatar v.• restablecer v.• retradeshacer v.(§pres: -hago, -haces...) pret: -hic-pp: -hechofut/c: -har-•)• sanar v.rɪ'kʌvər, rɪ'kʌvə(r)
1.
a) ( regain) \<\<consciousness/strength\>\> recuperar, recobrar; \<\<investment/position/lead\>\> recuperarhe was on the point of losing his temper, but recovered himself — estuvo a punto de perder los estribos, pero se contuvo
b) ( retrieve) rescatarc) ( reclaim) \<\<metal/glass/paper\>\> recuperard) ( Law)to recover damages — obtener* indemnización por daños y perjuicios
2.
via) \<\<person\>\>to recover (FROM something) — reponerse* or restablecerse* or recuperarse (de algo)
b) \<\<economy/industry\>\> recuperarse, repuntar, reactivarse[rɪ'kʌvǝ(r)]1. VT1) (=regain) [+ faculty] recuperar, recobrar frmhe fought to recover his balance — luchó por recuperar or frm recobrar el equilibrio
composurerecovering himself with a masterly effort he resumed his narrative — reponiéndose or sobreponiéndose con un esfuerzo sobrehumano, terminó su narración
2) (=retrieve) [+ bodies, wreck] rescatar; [+ debt] cobrar; [+ stolen property, costs, losses, investment] recuperar; (Jur) [+ money] recuperar; [+ property] reivindicar, recuperar; (Comput) [+ data] recobrar, recuperar3) (=reclaim) [+ materials] recuperar2. VI1) (after accident, illness) reponerse, recuperarse, restablecerse ( from de); (after shock, blow) sobreponerse, reponerse ( from de)he recovered from being 4-2 down to reach the semi-finals — se recuperó tras ir perdiendo 4-2 y llegó a las semifinales
2) (Econ) [currency] recuperarse, restablecerse; [shares, stock market] volver a subir; [economy] reactivarse* * *[rɪ'kʌvər, rɪ'kʌvə(r)]
1.
a) ( regain) \<\<consciousness/strength\>\> recuperar, recobrar; \<\<investment/position/lead\>\> recuperarhe was on the point of losing his temper, but recovered himself — estuvo a punto de perder los estribos, pero se contuvo
b) ( retrieve) rescatarc) ( reclaim) \<\<metal/glass/paper\>\> recuperard) ( Law)to recover damages — obtener* indemnización por daños y perjuicios
2.
via) \<\<person\>\>to recover (FROM something) — reponerse* or restablecerse* or recuperarse (de algo)
b) \<\<economy/industry\>\> recuperarse, repuntar, reactivarse -
127 revise
1) (to correct faults and make improvements in (a book etc): This dictionary has been completely revised.) revisar2) (to study one's previous work, notes etc in preparation for an examination etc: You'd better start revising (your Latin) for your exam.) revisar3) (to change (one's opinion etc).) modificar, cambiar•- revisionrevise vb1. repasar / hacer repaso2. revisartr[rɪ'vaɪz]1 revisar2 (correct) corregir3 (change) modificar4 (examination topic) repasar1 (for exam) repasarto revise a dictionary: corregir un diccionarion.• revisión s.f.v.• corregir v.• enmendar v.• reformar v.• refundir v.• repasar v.• revisar v.rɪ'vaɪz
1.
1)a) ( alter) modificar*b) ( Publ) corregir*, revisar2) ( for exam) (BrE) repasar
2.
vi (BrE) repasar[rɪ'vaɪz]1. VT1) (=alter) [+ estimate, figures] corregir; [+ offer] reconsiderar; [+ schedule] ajustarto revise sth upward(s) — ajustar or revisar algo al alza
2) (=amend, update) [+ text, dictionary] revisar; [+ proofs] corregir3) (Brit) (Scol) [+ subject, notes] repasar2.VI (Brit) (for exams) repasar* * *[rɪ'vaɪz]
1.
1)a) ( alter) modificar*b) ( Publ) corregir*, revisar2) ( for exam) (BrE) repasar
2.
vi (BrE) repasar -
128 revive
1) (to come, or bring, back to consciousness, strength, health etc: They attempted to revive the woman who had fainted; She soon revived; The flowers revived in water; to revive someone's hopes.) reanimar2) (to come or bring back to use etc: This old custom has recently (been) revived.) resurgir, volver•- revivalrevive vb reanimar / reanimarsetr[rɪ'vaɪv]1 reanimar, reavivar, despertar2 (economy) reactivar3 (play) reestrenar4 SMALLMEDICINE/SMALL reanimar, hacer volver en sí1 SMALLMEDICINE/SMALL volver en sí1) reawaken: reavivar, reanimar, reactivar (la economía), resucitar (a un paciente)2) reestablish: restablecerrevive vi1) : renacer, reanimarse, reactivarse2) come to: recobrar el sentido, volver en sív.• animar v.• avigorar v.• avivar v.• despertar v.• reanimar v.• reavivar v.• renacer v.• reponer v.(§pres: -pongo, -pones...) pret: -pus-pp: -puestofut/c: -pondr-•)• restablecer v.• resucitar v.• resurgir v.• reverdecer v.• volver en sí v.rɪ'vaɪv
1.
a) ( Med) reanimar, resucitarb) ( revitalize) \<\<economy\>\> reactivar, estimular; \<\<hope/interest/friendship\>\> hacer* renacer, reavivar; \<\<conversation\>\> reanimarc) (reintroduce, restore) \<\<custom/practice\>\> restablecer*d) ( Theat) \<\<play\>\> reestrenar, reponer*
2.
vi \<\<industryade\>\> reactivarse, repuntar; \<\<hope/interest/spirits\>\> renacer*, resurgir*; \<\<patient\>\> reanimarse; ( come to) recobrar el sentido, volver* en sí; \<\<flowers/plant\>\> revivir[rɪ'vaɪv]1. VT1) [+ person] (to life, spirits) reanimar2) [+ fire] avivar; [+ old customs] restablecer, recuperar; [+ hopes, suspicions] despertar; [+ accusation] volver a, volver a hacer3) (Theat) [+ play] reponer2. VI1) [person] (from faint) reanimarse, volver en sí; (from tiredness, shock etc) reponerse, recuperarse; (from apparent death) revivir2) [hope, emotions] renacer; [business, trade] reactivarse* * *[rɪ'vaɪv]
1.
a) ( Med) reanimar, resucitarb) ( revitalize) \<\<economy\>\> reactivar, estimular; \<\<hope/interest/friendship\>\> hacer* renacer, reavivar; \<\<conversation\>\> reanimarc) (reintroduce, restore) \<\<custom/practice\>\> restablecer*d) ( Theat) \<\<play\>\> reestrenar, reponer*
2.
vi \<\<industry/trade\>\> reactivarse, repuntar; \<\<hope/interest/spirits\>\> renacer*, resurgir*; \<\<patient\>\> reanimarse; ( come to) recobrar el sentido, volver* en sí; \<\<flowers/plant\>\> revivir
См. также в других словарях:
Transitive verb — In syntax, a transitive verb is a verb that requires both a subject and one or more objects. Some examples of sentences with transitive verbs:* Harry sees Adam. (Adam is the direct object of sees ) * You lifted the bag. (bag is the direct object… … Wikipedia
transitive verb — noun a verb (or verb construction) that requires an object in order to be grammatical • Syn: ↑transitive verb form, ↑transitive • Hypernyms: ↑verb • Hyponyms: ↑doubly transitive verb, ↑doubly transitive verb form … Useful english dictionary
transitive verb — verb which describes an action performed on an object by using the … English contemporary dictionary
transitive verb form — noun a verb (or verb construction) that requires an object in order to be grammatical • Syn: ↑transitive verb, ↑transitive • Hypernyms: ↑verb • Hyponyms: ↑doubly transitive verb, ↑doubly transitive verb form … Useful english dictionary
transitive verb — noun A verb that is accompanied (either clearly or implicitly) by a direct object in the active voice. It links the action taken by the subject with the object upon which that action is taken. Consequently, transitive verbs can also be used in… … Wiktionary
transitive verb — /trænzətɪv ˈvɜb/ (say tranzuhtiv verb) noun 1. a verb which can only be used with a direct object. 2. a verb used with a direct object, as drink in the sentence she drinks water where water is the direct object. Compare intransitive verb …
transitive verb — Gram. a verb accompanied by a direct object and from which a passive can be formed, as deny, rectify, elect. [1580 90] * * * … Universalium
transitive verb — In grammar, a verb that requires a direct object … Bryson’s dictionary for writers and editors
transitive-verb — adjective noun … Wiktionary
doubly transitive verb — noun a transitive verb that takes both a direct and an indirect object • Syn: ↑doubly transitive verb form • Hypernyms: ↑transitive verb, ↑transitive verb form, ↑transitive … Useful english dictionary
doubly transitive verb form — noun a transitive verb that takes both a direct and an indirect object • Syn: ↑doubly transitive verb • Hypernyms: ↑transitive verb, ↑transitive verb form, ↑transitive … Useful english dictionary