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121 inevitable
in'evitəbl(that cannot be avoided; certain to happen, be done, said, used etc: The Prime Minister said that war was inevitable.) inevitable- inevitably
inevitable adj inevitable
inevitable adjetivo ( ineludible) inevitable; ‹cambio/conflicto/controversia› unavoidable;
inevitable adjetivo inevitable, unavoidable ' inevitable' also found in these entries: Spanish: fatal - impepinable - servidumbre English: inevitable - unavoidabletr[ɪn'evɪtəbəl]1 (unavoidable) inevitable1 lo inevitable m singinevitable [ɪn'ɛvət̬əbəl] adj: inevitable♦ inevitably [-bli] advadj.• inapelable adj.• inevitable adj.
I ɪn'evətəbəla) (certain, unavoidable) inevitableb) ( predictable) consabido, indefectible
II
[ɪn'evɪtǝbl]1.ADJ inevitable2.N* * *
I [ɪn'evətəbəl]a) (certain, unavoidable) inevitableb) ( predictable) consabido, indefectible
II
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122 inhospitable
inhə'spitəbl(not welcoming guests; not friendly towards strangers: She could not refuse to invite them in without seeming inhospitable.) inhospitalariotr[ɪn'hɒspɪtəbəl]1 (people) inhospitalario,-a2 (place) inhóspito,-aadj.• inhospitalario, -a adj.• inhóspito, -a adj.ˌɪnhɑː'spɪtəbəl, ˌɪnhɒ'spɪtəbəl[ˌɪnhɒs'pɪtǝbl]ADJ [person] inhospitalario, poco hospitalario; [reception, behaviour] poco hospitalario; [place, country, terrain, climate] inhóspito* * *[ˌɪnhɑː'spɪtəbəl, ˌɪnhɒ'spɪtəbəl] -
123 invitation
1) (a (written) request to come or go somewhere: Have you received an invitation to their party?; We had to refuse the invitation to the wedding.) invitación2) (the act of inviting: He attended the committee meeting on the invitation of the chairman.) invitacióninvitation n invitacióntr[ɪnvɪ'teɪʃən]1 invitación nombre femenino■ leaving the door unlocked is an open invitation to thieves dejar la puerta sin cerrar es tentar a los ladrones\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLby invitation only entrada por invitacióninvitation [.ɪnvə'teɪʃən] n: invitación fn.• convite s.m.• envite s.m.• invitación s.f.• membrete s.m.'ɪnvə'teɪʃən, ˌɪnvɪ'teɪʃəna) c u ( act of inviting) invitación fto accept/decline an invitation — aceptar/no aceptar una invitación
at the invitation of — invitado por, por invitación de
b) c (letter, card) invitación f[ˌɪnvɪ'teɪʃǝn]1.N invitación fan invitation to dinner, a dinner invitation — una invitación para cenar
2.CPDinvitation card N — tarjeta f de invitación
* * *['ɪnvə'teɪʃən, ˌɪnvɪ'teɪʃən]a) c u ( act of inviting) invitación fto accept/decline an invitation — aceptar/no aceptar una invitación
at the invitation of — invitado por, por invitación de
b) c (letter, card) invitación f -
124 mutiny
'mju:tini
1. plural - mutinies; noun((a) refusal to obey one's senior officers in the navy or other armed services: There has been a mutiny on HMS Tigress; The sailors were found guilty of mutiny.) motín
2. verb((of sailors etc) to refuse to obey commands from those in authority: The sailors mutinied because they did not have enough food.) hacer un motín- mutineer- mutinous
tr['mjʊːtɪnɪ]1 amotinarsen.• amotinamiento s.m.• motín s.m.• sublevación s.f.v.• amotinar v.• amotinarse v.• sublevarse v.
I 'mjuːtṇi, 'mjuːtɪnia) c ( instance) motín m, amotinamiento mb) u ( offense) amotinamiento m
II
intransitive verb -nies, -nying, -nied amotinarse['mjuːtɪnɪ]1.N motín m2.VI amotinarse* * *
I ['mjuːtṇi, 'mjuːtɪni]a) c ( instance) motín m, amotinamiento mb) u ( offense) amotinamiento m
II
intransitive verb -nies, -nying, -nied amotinarse -
125 ostracize
(to refuse to accept (someone) in society or a group: His former friends ostracized him because of his rudeness.) aislar, excluirtr['ɒstrəsaɪz]1 (from society) condenar al ostracismo2 (from group) aislar, excluir, hacer el vacío aostracize (US/UK)v.• condenar al ostracismo v.• excluir de la sociedad v.'ɑːstrəsaɪz, 'ɒstrəsaɪztransitive verb hacerle* el vacío a, aislar*['ɒstrǝsaɪz]VT condenar al ostracismo* * *['ɑːstrəsaɪz, 'ɒstrəsaɪz]transitive verb hacerle* el vacío a, aislar* -
126 peremptorily
[pǝ'remptǝrɪlɪ]ADV [say, refuse] en tono perentorio, en tono imperioso -
127 positively
1) (in a positive way: He stated positively that he was innocent.) categóricamente; positivamente; afirmativamente2) (absolutely; completely: He is positively the nastiest person I know.) con certeza; definitivamentetr['pɒzɪtɪvlɪ]1 (with certainty) categóricamente; (definitely) de forma decisiva, sin duda3 familiar (absolutely) verdaderamente, realmente■ the weather was positively awful! ¡hizo un tiempo malísimo!positively ['pɑzət̬ɪvli] adv1) favorably: favorablemente2) optimistically: positivamente3) definitely: definitivamente, en forma concluyenteit's positively awful!: ¡es verdaderamente malo!adj.• absolutamente adj.• realmente adj.adv.• positivamente adv.'pɑːzətɪvli, 'pɒzətɪvli1) (favorably, constructively)we view teaching experience very positively — valoramos mucho or muy positivamente la experiencia docente
to think positively — no ser* negativo, ser* positivo
they reacted positively — tuvieron una reacción/respuesta positiva
2)a) ( definitely) < prove> de forma concluyente or fehacientethe body has not yet been positively identified — todavía no se ha hecho una identificación definitiva del cadáver
b) ( absolutely) <delighted/furious> verdaderamente['pɒzɪtɪvlɪ]ADV1) (=with certainty) [guarantee] con seguridad; (=categorically) [refuse] tajantemente2) (=affirmatively) [respond, act] de manera positivamost employees view the new system positively — la mayoría de los empleados ha reaccionado favorablemente al nuevo sistema, la mayoría de los empleados ve el nuevo sistema con buenos ojos
they are contributing positively to the development of their community — están participando activamente en el desarrollo de su comunidad
3) * (=really, absolutely) [amazed, delighted] realmente, verdaderamentethe food was positively disgusting! — ¡la comida daba auténtico or verdadero asco!, ¡la comida era realmente or verdaderamente asquerosa!
this is positively the last time I'm going to tell you — está sí que es la última vez que te lo digo
4) (Elec)* * *['pɑːzətɪvli, 'pɒzətɪvli]1) (favorably, constructively)we view teaching experience very positively — valoramos mucho or muy positivamente la experiencia docente
to think positively — no ser* negativo, ser* positivo
they reacted positively — tuvieron una reacción/respuesta positiva
2)a) ( definitely) < prove> de forma concluyente or fehacientethe body has not yet been positively identified — todavía no se ha hecho una identificación definitiva del cadáver
b) ( absolutely) <delighted/furious> verdaderamente -
128 prerogative
prə'roɡətiv(a special right or privilege belonging to a person because of his rank, position etc.) prerrogativatr[prɪ'rɒgətɪv]1 prerrogativa, privilegioprerogative [pri'rɑgət̬ɪv] n: prerrogativa fn.• prerrocativa s.f.• prerrogativa s.f.prɪ'rɑːgətɪv, prɪ'rɒgətɪva) ( right) prerrogativa fb) ( exclusive property) patrimonio m exclusivo[prɪ'rɒɡǝtɪv]N prerrogativa fhe can refuse if he wants to, that's his prerogative — puede negarse si quiere, está en su derecho
* * *[prɪ'rɑːgətɪv, prɪ'rɒgətɪv]a) ( right) prerrogativa fb) ( exclusive property) patrimonio m exclusivo
См. также в других словарях:
refuse — vb *decline, reject, repudiate, spurn Analogous words: *deny, gainsay: balk, baffle, *frustrate, thwart, foil: debar, *exclude, shut out refuse n Refuse, waste, rubbish, trash, debris, garbage, offal can all mean matter that is regarded as… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Refuse — Re*fuse (r?*f?z ), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Refused} ( f?zd ); p. pr. & vb. n. {Refusing}.] [F. refuser, either from (assumed) LL. refusare to refuse, v. freq. of L. refundere to pour back, give back, restore (see {Refund} to repay), or. fr. L.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
refuse — UK US /rɪˈfjuːz/ verb [I or T] ► to say that you will not do or accept something: refuse an offer/request/invitation »The government proposes to cut unemployment benefits to those who refuse job offers. refuse sb sth »The company was forced to… … Financial and business terms
refuse — Ⅰ. refuse [1] ► VERB 1) state that one is unwilling to do something. 2) state that one is unwilling to grant or accept (something offered or requested). 3) (of a horse) decline to jump (a fence or other obstacle). DERIVATIVES refusal noun refuser … English terms dictionary
Refuse — Re*fuse , v. i. To deny compliance; not to comply. [1913 Webster] Too proud to ask, too humble to refuse. Garth. [1913 Webster] If ye refuse . . . ye shall be devoured with the sword. Isa. i. 20. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
refuse — [n] garbage debris, dregs, dross, dump, dust, hogwash*, junk, leavings, litter, muck, offal, rejectamenta*, remains, residue, rubbish, scraps, scum*, sediment, slop*, sweepings, swill, trash, waste, waste matter; concept 260 Ant. assets,… … New thesaurus
Refuse — Ref use (r?f ?s;277), n. [F. refus refusal, also, that which is refused. See {Refuse} to deny.] That which is refused or rejected as useless; waste or worthless matter. [1913 Webster] Syn: Dregs; sediment; scum; recrement; dross. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Refuse — Ref use, a. Refused; rejected; hence; left as unworthy of acceptance; of no value; worthless. [1913 Webster] Everything that was vile and refuse, that they destroyed utterly. 1. Sam. xv. 9. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
refuse — I verb abjure, abnegate, abstain, balk, bar, be obstinate, be unwilling, beg to be excused, cast aside, debar, decline, demur, deny, disaccord with, disallow, disapprove, disavow, disclaim, discountenance, discredit, dismiss, disown, dispense… … Law dictionary
refusé — ● refusé, refusée nom Candidat non admis à un examen. ● refusé, refusée (synonymes) nom Candidat non admis à un examen. Synonymes : ajourné collé (familier) recalé (familier) Contraires … Encyclopédie Universelle
refuse — refuse1 [ri fyo͞oz′] vt. refused, refusing [ME refusen < OFr refuser < LL * refusare < L refusus, pp. of refundere: see REFUND1] 1. to decline to accept; reject 2. a) to decline to do, give, or grant … English World dictionary