-
121 expurgo
= relegation, scrapping, withdrawal, expurgation, weeding, discarding, deaccession, deacquisition [de-acquisition], jettisoning, deselection, purge.Ex. The number of withdrawn books from academic libraries has fallen to about one third of the quantity in the 'pre Atkinson' period, whereas public library relegations have increased.Ex. The last 3 years while grants were available saw a rise in loans, readers and outreach services, a controversial stock revision and scrapping were carried out and a PC was taken in use.Ex. Also it is difficult to correct any errors in punching, and to make any modifications to the index, corresponding, for instance, to withdrawals.Ex. We might connect stream, current, flux, flow and evolution as being manifestations of motion; expurgation, disinfection, refining, bowdlerization and whitewashing as being manifestations of cleaning.Ex. Weeding is the process of removing materials which are no longer useful from a library collection.Ex. The discarding of literature can only offer limited help in relieving the space shortage for seating.Ex. These rules are concerned with access, deaccession, appraisals, preservation, and theft of books.Ex. Most deacquisitions research is carried out in college and university libraries, since serious space problems exist in such libraries.Ex. Part 1 deals with library processes, including selection, checking and claiming, cataloguing and jettisoning.Ex. No, it is not the deselection of contentious literature about, say, politics or sex, that is at issue.Ex. The first mass removal of material was instigated by the trade unions and although admitted in 1932 to have been a mistake, the purges proved difficult to stop.----* expurgo de documentos = records disposition.* expurgo de fondos bibliográficos = collection weeding, stock weeding.* expurgo de publicaciones periódicas = periodical collection weeding.* expurgo por censura = bowdlerization.* expurgos = withdrawn material, withdrawn books.* fecha de expurgo = purge date.* plan de expurgo = weeding policy, weeding project.* política de expurgo = weeding policy.* * *= relegation, scrapping, withdrawal, expurgation, weeding, discarding, deaccession, deacquisition [de-acquisition], jettisoning, deselection, purge.Ex: The number of withdrawn books from academic libraries has fallen to about one third of the quantity in the 'pre Atkinson' period, whereas public library relegations have increased.
Ex: The last 3 years while grants were available saw a rise in loans, readers and outreach services, a controversial stock revision and scrapping were carried out and a PC was taken in use.Ex: Also it is difficult to correct any errors in punching, and to make any modifications to the index, corresponding, for instance, to withdrawals.Ex: We might connect stream, current, flux, flow and evolution as being manifestations of motion; expurgation, disinfection, refining, bowdlerization and whitewashing as being manifestations of cleaning.Ex: Weeding is the process of removing materials which are no longer useful from a library collection.Ex: The discarding of literature can only offer limited help in relieving the space shortage for seating.Ex: These rules are concerned with access, deaccession, appraisals, preservation, and theft of books.Ex: Most deacquisitions research is carried out in college and university libraries, since serious space problems exist in such libraries.Ex: Part 1 deals with library processes, including selection, checking and claiming, cataloguing and jettisoning.Ex: No, it is not the deselection of contentious literature about, say, politics or sex, that is at issue.Ex: The first mass removal of material was instigated by the trade unions and although admitted in 1932 to have been a mistake, the purges proved difficult to stop.* expurgo de documentos = records disposition.* expurgo de fondos bibliográficos = collection weeding, stock weeding.* expurgo de publicaciones periódicas = periodical collection weeding.* expurgo por censura = bowdlerization.* expurgos = withdrawn material, withdrawn books.* fecha de expurgo = purge date.* plan de expurgo = weeding policy, weeding project.* política de expurgo = weeding policy.* * *expurgation -
122 fortuito
adj.fortuitous, casual, chance, incidental.* * *► adjetivo1 chance, fortuitous* * *(f. - fortuita)adj.* * *ADJ [gen] fortuitous frm; [encuentro] accidental, chance antes de s* * *- ta adjetivo <encuentro/suceso> chance (before n), fortuitous* * *= haphazard, random, stochastic, unintended, fortuitous, pot luck, hit (and/or) miss, accidental, serendipitous.Ex. However, much of the detail in the fourteenth edition was a product of haphazard revision.Ex. Where the subcategory is small the subsequent arrangement is random.Ex. Indeed, the direction we seem to be embarked on may result in the negation of a century of well-established principles in favor of a machine-negotiated, stochastic access to individual items in the collection.Ex. However, membership of the European Community means that UK bussinesses are increasingly vulverable to NTBs, deliberate or unintended, which are determined on a Community basis.Ex. A stickler for details, sometimes to the point of compulsion, Edmonds was deemed a fortuitous choice to head the monumental reorganization process.Ex. In addition to the 'pot luck' method which some indexers seem to favour, we now have the use of PRECIS to serve as the indexing method in BNB.Ex. Funds are low, so libraries could benefit from interlibrary loan schemes, although without a national union catalogue, efforts to serve readers are hit and miss = Los fondos son escasos, por lo que las bibliotecas se podrían beneficiar del préstamo interbibliotecario, aunque, sin un catálogo colectivo nacional, los esfuerzos para atender a los usuarios son una lotería.Ex. The user is liable for any accidental or unintentional transmission.Ex. The help given by libraries to children can be formal, informal or serendipitous.----* carácter fortuito = randomness.* de un modo fortuito = haphazardly.* hallazgo fortuito = serendipity.* observación fortuita = chance observation.* * *- ta adjetivo <encuentro/suceso> chance (before n), fortuitous* * *= haphazard, random, stochastic, unintended, fortuitous, pot luck, hit (and/or) miss, accidental, serendipitous.Ex: However, much of the detail in the fourteenth edition was a product of haphazard revision.
Ex: Where the subcategory is small the subsequent arrangement is random.Ex: Indeed, the direction we seem to be embarked on may result in the negation of a century of well-established principles in favor of a machine-negotiated, stochastic access to individual items in the collection.Ex: However, membership of the European Community means that UK bussinesses are increasingly vulverable to NTBs, deliberate or unintended, which are determined on a Community basis.Ex: A stickler for details, sometimes to the point of compulsion, Edmonds was deemed a fortuitous choice to head the monumental reorganization process.Ex: In addition to the 'pot luck' method which some indexers seem to favour, we now have the use of PRECIS to serve as the indexing method in BNB.Ex: Funds are low, so libraries could benefit from interlibrary loan schemes, although without a national union catalogue, efforts to serve readers are hit and miss = Los fondos son escasos, por lo que las bibliotecas se podrían beneficiar del préstamo interbibliotecario, aunque, sin un catálogo colectivo nacional, los esfuerzos para atender a los usuarios son una lotería.Ex: The user is liable for any accidental or unintentional transmission.Ex: The help given by libraries to children can be formal, informal or serendipitous.* carácter fortuito = randomness.* de un modo fortuito = haphazardly.* hallazgo fortuito = serendipity.* observación fortuita = chance observation.* * *fortuito -ta‹encuentro/suceso› chance ( before n), fortuitousno es fortuito que haya venido hoy it's no accident that he happened to turn up today* * *
fortuito
fortuito,-a adjetivo fortuitous, chance
' fortuito' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
accidental
- aleatoria
- aleatorio
- fortuita
- accidente
English:
accidental
- casual
- chance
- coincidental
- find
- fortuitous
- incidental
* * *fortuito, -a adjchance;encuentro fortuito chance encounter* * *adj chance atr, accidental* * *fortuito, -ta adj: fortuitous* * *fortuito adj chance / accidental -
123 grupo de trabajo
* * *(n.) = study group, study team, task force, working party, task group, research group, working group, project teamEx. This paper describes the activities of the Associazione Italiana Biblioteche study group formed by librarians working in government ministries in order to address the need for training and professional development felt in this sector.Ex. Code revision is occurring as a series of proposals which arise out of study teams.Ex. She was chairperson of the task force that in 1972 wrote a monumental report about discrimination against women in the library profession.Ex. Recently the Government have accepted the recommendation of a working party that in future libraries should be self renewing and finite.Ex. One hopes, however, that a reference head will not overlook the benefits to be gained by selecting for service on a task group a librarian with 'potential' but little experience.Ex. A number of research groups have investigated the use of knowledge-based systems as a means of avoiding this bottleneck.Ex. The working group also felt that the new service ought to have a distinctive name and came up with the idea of AID (advice and information desk) later changed to Aid in order to avoid misinterpretation as Artificial Insemination by Donor!.Ex. The ' project team' may only consist of the librarian and one other member of staff, but a methodical approach will still offer many benefits.* * ** * *(n.) = study group, study team, task force, working party, task group, research group, working group, project teamEx: This paper describes the activities of the Associazione Italiana Biblioteche study group formed by librarians working in government ministries in order to address the need for training and professional development felt in this sector.
Ex: Code revision is occurring as a series of proposals which arise out of study teams.Ex: She was chairperson of the task force that in 1972 wrote a monumental report about discrimination against women in the library profession.Ex: Recently the Government have accepted the recommendation of a working party that in future libraries should be self renewing and finite.Ex: One hopes, however, that a reference head will not overlook the benefits to be gained by selecting for service on a task group a librarian with 'potential' but little experience.Ex: A number of research groups have investigated the use of knowledge-based systems as a means of avoiding this bottleneck.Ex: The working group also felt that the new service ought to have a distinctive name and came up with the idea of AID (advice and information desk) later changed to Aid in order to avoid misinterpretation as Artificial Insemination by Donor!.Ex: The ' project team' may only consist of the librarian and one other member of staff, but a methodical approach will still offer many benefits. -
124 importuno
adj.importunate, importune, annoying, bothersome.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: importunar.* * *► adjetivo1 importunate* * *ADJ1) (=fastidioso) annoying2) (=inoportuno) inopportune, inappropriate* * *- na adjetivo inopportune* * *= obtrusive, inopportune, importunate, untimely, bothersome, ill-timed.Ex. But the present revision, incorporating ISBD, will literally clutter the entries with obtrusive redundancies and esoterics that will only obscure the content of the entries and obstruct the use of the catalog.Ex. These books have appeared at an inopportune time for radical or even liberal thought.Ex. She concludes that this problem probes the importunate boundaries separating man from beast and the natural from the monstrous.Ex. Each attacks the other's work as untimely, as out of step with today.Ex. He shows a masterly command of imagery throughout, but his style has always left little margin for error, and the errors here are bothersome.Ex. His statement is not just ill-timed; it's devoid of common sense and of some significant humanity.* * *- na adjetivo inopportune* * *= obtrusive, inopportune, importunate, untimely, bothersome, ill-timed.Ex: But the present revision, incorporating ISBD, will literally clutter the entries with obtrusive redundancies and esoterics that will only obscure the content of the entries and obstruct the use of the catalog.
Ex: These books have appeared at an inopportune time for radical or even liberal thought.Ex: She concludes that this problem probes the importunate boundaries separating man from beast and the natural from the monstrous.Ex: Each attacks the other's work as untimely, as out of step with today.Ex: He shows a masterly command of imagery throughout, but his style has always left little margin for error, and the errors here are bothersome.Ex: His statement is not just ill-timed; it's devoid of common sense and of some significant humanity.* * *importuno -nainopportune* * *
Del verbo importunar: ( conjugate importunar)
importuno es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
importunó es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo
Multiple Entries:
importunar
importuno
importunar ( conjugate importunar) verbo transitivo (frml) to inconvenience, disturb
verbo intransitivo:
importuno -na adjetivo
inopportune
importunar verbo transitivo to importune, pester
* * *importuno, -a adj1. [en mal momento] inopportune, untimely2. [molesto] inconvenient3. [inadecuado] inappropriate* * *adj inopportune* * *importuno, -na adj1) : inopportune, inconvenient2) : bothersome, annoying -
125 limitar
v.1 to limit, to restrict.han limitado la velocidad máxima a cuarenta por hora they've restricted the speed limit to forty kilometers an houreste sueldo tan bajo me limita mucho I can't do very much on such a low salaryRicardo limitó las reglas Richard limited the rules.El médico limitó al paciente The doctor limited the patient.2 to mark out (terreno).3 to set out, to define (atribuciones, derechos).4 to border.* * *1 (gen) to limit1 to border with\■ una persona inteligente no se limita a ver la televisión an intelligent person does not restrict himself to watching television* * *verbto restrict, limit* * *1.VT (=restringir) to limit, restrictnos han limitado el número de visitas — they have limited o restricted the number of visits we can have
hay que limitar el consumo de alcohol entre los adolescentes — alcohol consumption among young people should be restricted
2.VI3.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo <funciones/derechos> to limit, restrict2.limitar vi3.limitarse v pronlimitarse a algo: el problema no se limita únicamente a las ciudades the problem is not just confined o limited to cities; me limité a repetir lo que tú habías dicho I just repeated what you'd said; limítate a hacerlo — just do it
* * *= bound, confine, constrain, limit, reduce, restrict, tie down, restrain, circumscribe, disable, box in, narrow down, border, fetter, hem + Nombre + in.Ex. Word is a character string bounded by spaces or other chosen characters.Ex. Until the mid nineteenth century the concept of authorship was confined to personal authors.Ex. Model II sees the process in terms of the system forcing or constraining the user to deviate from the 'real' problem.Ex. This limits the need for libraries to reclassify, but also restricts the revision of the Dewey Decimal Classification Scheme.Ex. The disadvantage of inversion of words is that inversion or indirect word order reduces predictability of form of headings.Ex. This is an example of a classification which is restricted to a specific physical form, as it is used to classify maps and atlases.Ex. There are many able people still tied down with the routine 'running' of their libraries.Ex. Use of the legal data bases is partly restrained by cost considerations, partly by the fact that their coverage is not exhaustive and partly by the reserved attitude of the legal profession and the judiciary.Ex. Traditional theories of management circumscribe the extent of employee participation in decision making.Ex. There are socializing factors which further disable those children who lack such basic support.Ex. What is important is that agencies face few barriers to disseminating information on the Web quickly rather than being boxed in by standardization requirements = Lo que es importante es que las agencias se encuentran pocas trabas para diseminar información en la web de una forma rápida más que verse restringidas por cuestiones de normalización.Ex. By specifying the fields to be searched, the user can narrow down the search in a very convenient way.Ex. The Pacific Rim encompasses an enormous geographical area composed of all of the nations bordering the Pacific Ocean, east and west, from the Bering Straits to Antarctica.Ex. Faculty tenure is designed to allow the scholar to proceed with his investigation without being fettered with concerns arising from loss of job and salary.Ex. The world of work is no longer constrained by the four physical dimensions of space and time that have hemmed us in for most of recorded history.----* limitar búsqueda = limit + search.* limitar con = border on.* limitar el debate a = keep + discussion + grounded on.* * *1.verbo transitivo <funciones/derechos> to limit, restrict2.limitar vi3.limitarse v pronlimitarse a algo: el problema no se limita únicamente a las ciudades the problem is not just confined o limited to cities; me limité a repetir lo que tú habías dicho I just repeated what you'd said; limítate a hacerlo — just do it
* * *= bound, confine, constrain, limit, reduce, restrict, tie down, restrain, circumscribe, disable, box in, narrow down, border, fetter, hem + Nombre + in.Ex: Word is a character string bounded by spaces or other chosen characters.
Ex: Until the mid nineteenth century the concept of authorship was confined to personal authors.Ex: Model II sees the process in terms of the system forcing or constraining the user to deviate from the 'real' problem.Ex: This limits the need for libraries to reclassify, but also restricts the revision of the Dewey Decimal Classification Scheme.Ex: The disadvantage of inversion of words is that inversion or indirect word order reduces predictability of form of headings.Ex: This is an example of a classification which is restricted to a specific physical form, as it is used to classify maps and atlases.Ex: There are many able people still tied down with the routine 'running' of their libraries.Ex: Use of the legal data bases is partly restrained by cost considerations, partly by the fact that their coverage is not exhaustive and partly by the reserved attitude of the legal profession and the judiciary.Ex: Traditional theories of management circumscribe the extent of employee participation in decision making.Ex: There are socializing factors which further disable those children who lack such basic support.Ex: What is important is that agencies face few barriers to disseminating information on the Web quickly rather than being boxed in by standardization requirements = Lo que es importante es que las agencias se encuentran pocas trabas para diseminar información en la web de una forma rápida más que verse restringidas por cuestiones de normalización.Ex: By specifying the fields to be searched, the user can narrow down the search in a very convenient way.Ex: The Pacific Rim encompasses an enormous geographical area composed of all of the nations bordering the Pacific Ocean, east and west, from the Bering Straits to Antarctica.Ex: Faculty tenure is designed to allow the scholar to proceed with his investigation without being fettered with concerns arising from loss of job and salary.Ex: The world of work is no longer constrained by the four physical dimensions of space and time that have hemmed us in for most of recorded history.* limitar búsqueda = limit + search.* limitar con = border on.* limitar el debate a = keep + discussion + grounded on.* * *limitar [A1 ]vt‹funciones/derechos/influencia› to limit, restrictlas disposiciones que limitan la tenencia de armas de fuego the regulations which restrict o limit the possession of firearmses necesario limitar su campo de acción restrictions o limits must be placed on his freedom of actionhabrá que limitar el número de intervenciones it will be necessary to limit o restrict the number of speakersle han limitado las salidas a dos días por semana he's restricted to going out twice a week■ limitarvilimitar CON algo to border ON sthEspaña limita al oeste con Portugal Spain borders on o is bounded by Portugal to the west, Spain shares a border with Portugal in the westlimitarse A algo:yo me limité a repetir lo que tú me habías dicho I just repeated o all I did was repeat what you'd said to meno hizo ningún comentario, se limitó a observar he didn't say anything, he merely o just stood watchinglimítate a hacer lo que te ordenan just confine yourself to o keep to what you've been told to doel problema no se limita únicamente a las grandes ciudades the problem is not just confined o limited to big citiestiene que limitarse a su sueldo she has to live within her means* * *
limitar ( conjugate limitar) verbo transitivo ‹funciones/derechos› to limit, restrict
verbo intransitivo limitar con algo [país/finca] to border on sth
limitarse verbo pronominal:◊ el problema no se limita a las ciudades the problem is not confined o limited to cities;
me limité a repetir lo dicho I just repeated what was said
limitar
I verbo transitivo to limit, restrict: tengo que limitar mis gastos, I have to limit my spending
II verbo intransitivo to border: limita al norte con Francia, at North it borders on France
' limitar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
constreñir
- tapiar
- lindar
English:
border on
- confine
- limit
- narrow down
- restrict
- border
* * *♦ vt1. [restringir] to limit, to restrict;quieren limitar el poder del presidente they want to limit o restrict the president's power;han limitado la velocidad máxima a cuarenta por hora they've restricted the speed limit to forty kilometres an hour;este sueldo tan bajo me limita mucho I can't do very much on such a low salary2. [terreno] to mark out;limitaron el terreno con una cerca they fenced off the land♦ vi* * *I v/t limit; ( restringir) limit, restrictII v/i:limitar con border on* * *limitar vtrestringir: to limit, to restrictlimitar vilimitar con : to border on* * *limitar vb1. (restringir) to limit2. (tener frontera) to borderEspaña limita con Francia Spain borders on France / Spain has a border with France -
126 polémico
adj.1 polemical, argumentative, controversial, polemic.2 polemic, controversial, divisive, debatable.* * *► adjetivo1 controversial* * *(f. - polémica)adj.polemical, controversial* * *ADJ controversial, polemical frm* * *- ca adjetivo controversial, polemic (frml)* * *= controversial, polemic, polemical, divisive, argumentative, contentious, fractious, vexed, disputed.Ex. The last 3 years while grants were available saw a rise in loans, readers and outreach services, a controversial stock revision and scrapping were carried out and a PC was taken in use.Ex. The paper discusses some remaining 'grey areas' in faceted classification and the value for expository purposes of a mildly polemic approach to issues in classification.Ex. I am afraid I shall disappoint again, for this book is not a polemical document, nor is it even a personal view of community information.Ex. It is increasingly obvious that we are as a nation one and indivisible, that divisive tendencies are a thing of the past, but there are still too many inheritors of the old indifference, and who flinch at co-operation as at an evil.Ex. 'I don't know about that one,' Bogardus said, politely argumentative.Ex. One of the most contentious issues dividing publishers and librarians centres on the interpretation of fair use in the context of digital technologies.Ex. Thus was Christianity codified into a Bible that still today is the central element in the faith of the two billion adherents of the largest, if most fractious, of the world's religions.Ex. A vexed area on which the present rules give no guidance is the publication produced as a result of a special programme or project.Ex. Disputed and even fraudulent works of history can make their way onto library shelves.----* cuestión polémica = vexing question.* evitar polémicas = eschew + issues.* extremadamente polémico = highly controversial.* incitar polémica = rattle + Posesivo + cage.* levantar la polémica = spark + controversy.* muy polémico = highly controversial.* no polémico = non-controversial [noncontroversial].* polémica + abundar = controversy + rage.* polémica + continuar = controversy + rage, argument + rage.* polémica + girar en torno a = controversy + revolve around.* polémica + perdurar = argument + rage.* suscitar la polémica = spark + controversy.* tema polémico = vexing issue.* * *- ca adjetivo controversial, polemic (frml)* * *= controversial, polemic, polemical, divisive, argumentative, contentious, fractious, vexed, disputed.Ex: The last 3 years while grants were available saw a rise in loans, readers and outreach services, a controversial stock revision and scrapping were carried out and a PC was taken in use.
Ex: The paper discusses some remaining 'grey areas' in faceted classification and the value for expository purposes of a mildly polemic approach to issues in classification.Ex: I am afraid I shall disappoint again, for this book is not a polemical document, nor is it even a personal view of community information.Ex: It is increasingly obvious that we are as a nation one and indivisible, that divisive tendencies are a thing of the past, but there are still too many inheritors of the old indifference, and who flinch at co-operation as at an evil.Ex: 'I don't know about that one,' Bogardus said, politely argumentative.Ex: One of the most contentious issues dividing publishers and librarians centres on the interpretation of fair use in the context of digital technologies.Ex: Thus was Christianity codified into a Bible that still today is the central element in the faith of the two billion adherents of the largest, if most fractious, of the world's religions.Ex: A vexed area on which the present rules give no guidance is the publication produced as a result of a special programme or project.Ex: Disputed and even fraudulent works of history can make their way onto library shelves.* cuestión polémica = vexing question.* evitar polémicas = eschew + issues.* extremadamente polémico = highly controversial.* incitar polémica = rattle + Posesivo + cage.* levantar la polémica = spark + controversy.* muy polémico = highly controversial.* no polémico = non-controversial [noncontroversial].* polémica + abundar = controversy + rage.* polémica + continuar = controversy + rage, argument + rage.* polémica + girar en torno a = controversy + revolve around.* polémica + perdurar = argument + rage.* suscitar la polémica = spark + controversy.* tema polémico = vexing issue.* * *polémico -cacontroversial, polemical, polemic* * *
polémico◊ -ca adjetivo
controversial, polemic (frml)
polémico,-a adjetivo controversial: es un hombre muy polémico, he's a controversial man
' polémico' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
candente
- conflictiva
- conflictivo
- polémica
English:
controversial
- euthanasia
- contentious
- dispute
- polemical
* * *polémico, -a adjcontroversial* * *adj controversial* * *polémico, -ca adjcontrovertido: controversial, polemical* * *polémico adj controversial -
127 producción
f.1 production, output, net quantity of produce yielded, produce.Ricardo le metió un gol a Tito Richard scored a goal against Tito.2 production.3 production, cultivation.* * *1 production\producción en cadena mass production* * *noun f.production, output* * *SF1) (Com) (=acción) production; (=cantidad) output2) (Literat, Mús) output3) (Cine, Teat) productionproducción propia — (TV) in-house production
* * *1)a) (Com, Econ) (proceso, acción) production; ( cantidad) output, productionb) ( conjunto de obras) output2) (Cin, Teatr, TV) production* * *= making, production, yield, throughput, vintage, release, output, writing, crafting.Ex. A producer is the person with final responsibility for the making of a motion picture, including business aspects, management of the production, and the commercial success of the film.Ex. Early work led to the production of over twenty special schemes in various areas of knowledge.Ex. Priority is awarded to projects with the following aims: oil and gas recovery, drilling, optimum use of natural gas, and maximising the yield by the use of enhanced recovery techniques.Ex. This revision to the Decimal Classification was adopted immediately by BNB, which would otherwise have found great difficulty in classifying much of its throughput.Ex. Bibliometric analyses confirmed that review articles on topics that are generating high levels of research activity tend to have relatively voluminous bibliographies made up of a disproportionate number of citations to source materials of very recent vintage.Ex. But first we must create the conditions for single-mindedness and hence the release of our energies (one senses much pent-up energy mixed up with our professional frustrations).Ex. A slight decline -- about 1% -- in the book title output of US publishers took place in 1988, compared with 1987, largely attributable to a falling-off of mass market paperback output, especially in fiction.Ex. His library, a rare survival of the Graeco-Roman period, comprised his own writings and philosophical readings.Ex. This volume tellingly reveals the many negotiations, improvisations, sleights-of-hand, and slipknots that were a part of the crafting of Hitchcock's films.----* aumento de la producción = increased production.* cadena de producción = production chain, production line.* cadena de producción y distribución, la = supply chain, the.* campo petrolífero de producción regular = marginal field.* capacidad de producción = throughput.* coproducción = coproduction [co-production].* costes de producción = production costs.* costos de producción = production costs.* cuota de producción = production quota.* equipo de producción = production team, production equipment.* incremento de la producción = increased production.* indicador de producción = output indicator.* índice de producción = output indicator.* industria dedicada a la producción de carne de vaca, la = beef industry, the.* medios de producción = means of production.* producción agrícola = agricultural production.* producción alimenticia = food production.* producción asistida por ordenador (CAM) = CAM (computer-aided manufacturing).* producción bibliográfica = literature, bibliographic output.* producción bibliográfica sobre biblioteconomía = library literature.* producción cárnica = meat production.* producción científica = publication output, scientific output, research writings, scholarly literature, scholarly output.* producción científica de investigación = research literature.* producción cinematográfica = film making [filmmaking].* producción conjunta = joint production.* producción de alimentos = food production.* producción de artículos = article productivity.* producción de carne de vaca = beef production.* producción de documentos = document production.* producción de huevos = egg production.* producción de libros = book production, book publishing.* producción de vino = winemaking.* producción editorial = book production, book publishing, publishing output.* producción lechera = milk yield, milk production.* producción literaria = literature.* producción multimedia = media production.* producción teatral = theatre production.* relacionado con la producción = production-related.* tasa de producción = production rate.* vaca dedicada a la producción de leche = milk-producing cow.* zona de producción de trigo = wheatbelt.* * *1)a) (Com, Econ) (proceso, acción) production; ( cantidad) output, productionb) ( conjunto de obras) output2) (Cin, Teatr, TV) production* * *= making, production, yield, throughput, vintage, release, output, writing, crafting.Ex: A producer is the person with final responsibility for the making of a motion picture, including business aspects, management of the production, and the commercial success of the film.
Ex: Early work led to the production of over twenty special schemes in various areas of knowledge.Ex: Priority is awarded to projects with the following aims: oil and gas recovery, drilling, optimum use of natural gas, and maximising the yield by the use of enhanced recovery techniques.Ex: This revision to the Decimal Classification was adopted immediately by BNB, which would otherwise have found great difficulty in classifying much of its throughput.Ex: Bibliometric analyses confirmed that review articles on topics that are generating high levels of research activity tend to have relatively voluminous bibliographies made up of a disproportionate number of citations to source materials of very recent vintage.Ex: But first we must create the conditions for single-mindedness and hence the release of our energies (one senses much pent-up energy mixed up with our professional frustrations).Ex: A slight decline -- about 1% -- in the book title output of US publishers took place in 1988, compared with 1987, largely attributable to a falling-off of mass market paperback output, especially in fiction.Ex: His library, a rare survival of the Graeco-Roman period, comprised his own writings and philosophical readings.Ex: This volume tellingly reveals the many negotiations, improvisations, sleights-of-hand, and slipknots that were a part of the crafting of Hitchcock's films.* aumento de la producción = increased production.* cadena de producción = production chain, production line.* cadena de producción y distribución, la = supply chain, the.* campo petrolífero de producción regular = marginal field.* capacidad de producción = throughput.* coproducción = coproduction [co-production].* costes de producción = production costs.* costos de producción = production costs.* cuota de producción = production quota.* equipo de producción = production team, production equipment.* incremento de la producción = increased production.* indicador de producción = output indicator.* índice de producción = output indicator.* industria dedicada a la producción de carne de vaca, la = beef industry, the.* medios de producción = means of production.* producción agrícola = agricultural production.* producción alimenticia = food production.* producción asistida por ordenador (CAM) = CAM (computer-aided manufacturing).* producción bibliográfica = literature, bibliographic output.* producción bibliográfica sobre biblioteconomía = library literature.* producción cárnica = meat production.* producción científica = publication output, scientific output, research writings, scholarly literature, scholarly output.* producción científica de investigación = research literature.* producción cinematográfica = film making [filmmaking].* producción conjunta = joint production.* producción de alimentos = food production.* producción de artículos = article productivity.* producción de carne de vaca = beef production.* producción de documentos = document production.* producción de huevos = egg production.* producción de libros = book production, book publishing.* producción de vino = winemaking.* producción editorial = book production, book publishing, publishing output.* producción lechera = milk yield, milk production.* producción literaria = literature.* producción multimedia = media production.* producción teatral = theatre production.* relacionado con la producción = production-related.* tasa de producción = production rate.* vaca dedicada a la producción de leche = milk-producing cow.* zona de producción de trigo = wheatbelt.* * *A[ S ] uvas Lacalle; producción argentina Lacalle grapes; produce of Argentina2 (conjunto de obras) outputsu producción dramática es escasa his dramatic output is small, he has not written many playsla producción pictórica de Picasso the works of Picasso, Picasso's paintingsCompuestos:● producción en cadena or seriemass productionsustained yieldvarios países participaron en la producción del programa various countries took part in producing the program o in the production of the programla etapa de producción the production stageuna producción de la BBC a BBC production* * *
producción sustantivo femenino
1 (Com, Econ) (proceso, acción) production;
( cantidad) output, production;
producción en cadena or serie mass production
2 (Cin, Teatr, TV) production
producción sustantivo femenino
1 (proceso) production
producción en serie, mass production
2 (resultado) output, products
la producción aumentó un diez por ciento, production increased by ten percent
producción lechera, dairy produce
3 (de una película, disco, etc) production
' producción' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
elaboración
- error
- excedente
- pantalla
- remanente
- saquería
- sedería
- activar
- arrocero
- aumentar
- cadena
- cuota
- déficit
- disminuir
- diversificar
- impulsar
- lechero
- montar
- paralizar
- reducir
- retrasar
- variar
- vinícola
English:
cut back
- domestic
- foreman
- making
- manufacturing capacity
- mass production
- output
- production
- scale down
- step up
- wind down
- work
- out
* * *producción nf1. [acción] production;[producto] product;se ha incrementado la producción de acero steel production has increased;un autor con una extensa producción poética an author with an extensive poetic outputInd producción en cadena mass production; Ind producción en serie mass production2. Cine & TV production;una producción de TVE a TVE production* * *f production* * *producción nf, pl - ciones1) : production2)producción en serie : mass production* * *1. (elaboración) production¿quién se encarga de la producción? who's in charge of production?2. (productos industriales) output3. (productos agrícolas) produce -
128 einlegen
v/t (trennb., hat -ge-)1. etw. (in etw. [Akk]) einlegen put s.th. in (s.th.), insert s.th. (in s.th.); in einen Brief: enclose s.th. (with s.th.)2. MOT.: den zweiten etc. Gang einlegen engage ( oder go into) second etc. gear; leg mal einen schnelleren Gang ein! umg., fig. get a move on3. fig. (Ruhetag, Sonderschicht) put in; (Pause, Rast) have, take; Überstunden einlegen put in ( oder do) some overtime; eine Gedenkminute einlegen observe a minute’s silence; einen Spurt einlegen put on a spurt6. jemandem / sich die Haare einlegen set s.o.’s / one’s hair7. (Berufung, Beschwerde, Revision etc.) lodge ( gegen against); (Rechtsmittel) file; ein Veto gegen etw. einlegen veto s.th.; der Verein legte Protest gegen die Wertung des Spiels ein the club protested that the match should be replayed; Ehre, Wort9. schw. (abgeben) hand in; eingelegt* * *(einmachen) to pickle;(hineinlegen) to put in;(marinieren) to marinade* * *ein|le|genvt sep1) (in Holz etc) to inlayeingelegte Arbeit — inlay work
2) (= hineintun) to insert (in +acc in), to put in ( in +acc -to); Film to load ( in +acc into); (in Brief) to enclose ( in +acc in)einen Pfeil (in den Bogen) éínlegen — to fit an arrow (into the bow)
3) (= einfügen) Sonderschicht, Spurt, Sonderzug to put on; Lied, Kunststück, Pause to have; (AUT ) Gang to engage; (HIST ) Lanze to couch4) (FIN = einzahlen) to pay in, to deposit5) (fig = geltend machen) Protest to registersein Veto éínlegen — to exercise or use one's veto
See:6) (COOK) Heringe, Gurken etc to pickle7) Haare to set, to put in rollers* * *(to preserve in vinegar, salt water etc: I think I will pickle these cucumbers.) pickle* * *ein|le·genvt1. (hineintun)eine Kassette/eine CD \einlegen to put on a cassette/a CDeinen Film in die Kamera \einlegen to put [or load] a film into the camera, to load the camera [with a film]den zweiten Gang \einlegen to engage second gear, to change [or put it] into second [gear]3. KOCHKeingelegte Heringe/Gurken pickled herrings/gherkins4. (zwischendurch machen)eine Pause \einlegen to have [or take] a break [or fam breather]eine Mittagspause \einlegen to have [or take] a lunch breakein Schläfchen \einlegen to have forty winks5. (einreichen)ein Veto \einlegen to exercise [or use] a vetoeinen Protest [bei jdm] \einlegen to lodge [or make] a protest [with sb]einen Vorbehalt \einlegen to add a proviso; JUR to file sthetw bei einem Gericht \einlegen to file sth at a courtBerufung \einlegen to [lodge an] appeal▪ eingelegt filed▪ etw \einlegen to inlay sth▪ eingelegt inlaid* * *transitives Verb1) put inetwas in etwas (Akk.) einlegen — put something in something
den ersten Gang einlegen — engage first gear
2)jemandem/sich das Haar einlegen — set somebody's/one's hair
3) (Kunsthandwerk) inlayeingelegte Muster — inlaid patterns
4) (Kochk.) pickle5) (fig.): (einschieben)eine Rast einlegen — stop for a rest
eine Pause einlegen — take a break
6) (geltend machen) lodge <protest, appeal>Widerspruch einlegen — protest; s. auch Ehre 1); Veto; Wort 2)
* * *einlegen v/t (trennb, hat -ge-)1.etwas (in etwas [akk])einlegen put sth in (sth), insert sth (in sth); in einen Brief: enclose sth (with sth)2. AUTO:den zweiten etcleg mal einen schnelleren Gang ein! umg, fig get a move onÜberstunden einlegen put in ( oder do) some overtime;eine Gedenkminute einlegen observe a minute’s silence;einen Spurt einlegen put on a spurt5.mit Elfenbein etceinlegen inlay with ivory etc6.jemandem/sich die Haare einlegen set sb’s/one’s hair7. (Berufung, Beschwerde, Revision etc) lodge (gegen against); (Rechtsmittel) file;ein Veto gegen etwas einlegen veto sth;der Verein legte Protest gegen die Wertung des Spiels ein the club protested that the match should be replayed; → Ehre, Wort* * *transitives Verb1) put inetwas in etwas (Akk.) einlegen — put something in something
2)jemandem/sich das Haar einlegen — set somebody's/one's hair
3) (Kunsthandwerk) inlay4) (Kochk.) pickle5) (fig.): (einschieben)6) (geltend machen) lodge <protest, appeal>Widerspruch einlegen — protest; s. auch Ehre 1); Veto; Wort 2)
* * *v.to inlay v.(§ p.,p.p.: inlaid)
См. также в других словарях:
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