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1 распространять на
•The qualitative conclusions regarding... can be carried over (or extended) to liquids and solids.
•All attempts to extend the approach to atoms with more than one electron were unsuccessful.
•We can extend this model to a broad spectrum of covalent species.
•The summation should be extended over the possible combinations of arguments.
•This enables the results to be extended to cover (or include) the finite currents.
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > распространять на
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2 प्रस्तार
pra-stāram. (ifc. f. ā) strewing, spreading out, extension ( alsoᅠ fig. = abundance, high degree) MBh. Kāv. ;
a litter, bed of straw Hariv. ;
a layer Sulbas. ;
a flight of steps (leading down to water) MBh. ;
a flat surface, plain Hariv. (v.l. - stara);
a jungle orᅠ wood overgrown with grass L. ;
a process in preparing minerals Cat. ;
a representation orᅠ enumeration of all the possible combinations of certain given numbers orᅠ of short andᅠ long syllables in a metre Col.;
(in music) a kind of measure Saṃgīt. ;
N. of a prince (son of Udgītha) VP. (prob. w.r. for prastāva);
cintāmaṇi m. N. of wk.;
- paṅkti f. a kind of metre RPrāt. ;
- pattana n. N. of wk.
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3 मेरुप्रस्तार
meru-prastāram. a partic. representation of all the possible combinations of a metre in such a form as to present a fancied resemblance to mount Meru AgP.
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4 число возможных сочетаний бесконечно
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > число возможных сочетаний бесконечно
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5 возможный
possible, feasible, virtual, plausible, potential, practicable, conceivable; alternative• Кроме того, кажется возможным, что... - Alternatively, it seems possible that...• Будут упомянуты три возможных подхода. - Three possible approaches will be mentioned.• В общем случае не является возможным... - It is not generally possible to...• В последующих экспериментах стало возможным измерить... - In subsequent experiments, it was possible to measure...• Возможна также (и) более сложная ситуация. - A more complicated situation is also possible.• До сих пор не стало возможным... - It has not so far been found possible to...• Другой возможной альтернативой является... - Another possible alternative is to...• Другой проблемой является возможное загрязнение... - Another problem is the possible contamination of...• Имеются четыре возможных комбинации... - There are four possible combinations of...• Сразу, как только это отличие ясно понято, становится возможным... - Once this distinction is clearly understood, it becomes possible to...• Теперь стало возможным (доказать и т. п.)... - It became feasible to...• Теперь стало возможным осознать (= понять) значение... - It is now possible to see the significance of...• Только недавно стало возможным... - Only recently has it become feasible to...• Усовершенствованные экспериментальные методы сделали возможным... - Refined experimental methods have made it possible to...• Это сделало возможным построить... - This has made it possible to construct... -
6 Unconscious Thinking
[It is first] necessary to construct the very numerous possible combinations.... It cannot be avoided that this first operation take place, to a certain extent, at random, so that the role of chance is hardly doubtful in this first step of mental process. But we see that the intervention of chance occurs inside the unconscious: for most of these combinationsmore exactly, all of those which are useless-remain unknown to us. (Hadamard, 1945, p. 28)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Unconscious Thinking
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7 Thinking
But what then am I? A thing which thinks. What is a thing which thinks? It is a thing which doubts, understands, [conceives], affirms, denies, wills, refuses, which also imagines and feels. (Descartes, 1951, p. 153)I have been trying in all this to remove the temptation to think that there "must be" a mental process of thinking, hoping, wishing, believing, etc., independent of the process of expressing a thought, a hope, a wish, etc.... If we scrutinize the usages which we make of "thinking," "meaning," "wishing," etc., going through this process rids us of the temptation to look for a peculiar act of thinking, independent of the act of expressing our thoughts, and stowed away in some particular medium. (Wittgenstein, 1958, pp. 41-43)Analyse the proofs employed by the subject. If they do not go beyond observation of empirical correspondences, they can be fully explained in terms of concrete operations, and nothing would warrant our assuming that more complex thought mechanisms are operating. If, on the other hand, the subject interprets a given correspondence as the result of any one of several possible combinations, and this leads him to verify his hypotheses by observing their consequences, we know that propositional operations are involved. (Inhelder & Piaget, 1958, p. 279)In every age, philosophical thinking exploits some dominant concepts and makes its greatest headway in solving problems conceived in terms of them. The seventeenth- and eighteenth-century philosophers construed knowledge, knower, and known in terms of sense data and their association. Descartes' self-examination gave classical psychology the mind and its contents as a starting point. Locke set up sensory immediacy as the new criterion of the real... Hobbes provided the genetic method of building up complex ideas from simple ones... and, in another quarter, still true to the Hobbesian method, Pavlov built intellect out of conditioned reflexes and Loeb built life out of tropisms. (S. Langer, 1962, p. 54)Experiments on deductive reasoning show that subjects are influenced sufficiently by their experience for their reasoning to differ from that described by a purely deductive system, whilst experiments on inductive reasoning lead to the view that an understanding of the strategies used by adult subjects in attaining concepts involves reference to higher-order concepts of a logical and deductive nature. (Bolton, 1972, p. 154)There are now machines in the world that think, that learn and create. Moreover, their ability to do these things is going to increase rapidly until-in the visible future-the range of problems they can handle will be coextensive with the range to which the human mind has been applied. (Newell & Simon, quoted in Weizenbaum, 1976, p. 138)But how does it happen that thinking is sometimes accompanied by action and sometimes not, sometimes by motion, and sometimes not? It looks as if almost the same thing happens as in the case of reasoning and making inferences about unchanging objects. But in that case the end is a speculative proposition... whereas here the conclusion which results from the two premises is an action.... I need covering; a cloak is a covering. I need a cloak. What I need, I have to make; I need a cloak. I have to make a cloak. And the conclusion, the "I have to make a cloak," is an action. (Nussbaum, 1978, p. 40)It is well to remember that when philosophy emerged in Greece in the sixth century, B.C., it did not burst suddenly out of the Mediterranean blue. The development of societies of reasoning creatures-what we call civilization-had been a process to be measured not in thousands but in millions of years. Human beings became civilized as they became reasonable, and for an animal to begin to reason and to learn how to improve its reasoning is a long, slow process. So thinking had been going on for ages before Greece-slowly improving itself, uncovering the pitfalls to be avoided by forethought, endeavoring to weigh alternative sets of consequences intellectually. What happened in the sixth century, B.C., is that thinking turned round on itself; people began to think about thinking, and the momentous event, the culmination of the long process to that point, was in fact the birth of philosophy. (Lipman, Sharp & Oscanyan, 1980, p. xi)The way to look at thought is not to assume that there is a parallel thread of correlated affects or internal experiences that go with it in some regular way. It's not of course that people don't have internal experiences, of course they do; but that when you ask what is the state of mind of someone, say while he or she is performing a ritual, it's hard to believe that such experiences are the same for all people involved.... The thinking, and indeed the feeling in an odd sort of way, is really going on in public. They are really saying what they're saying, doing what they're doing, meaning what they're meaning. Thought is, in great part anyway, a public activity. (Geertz, quoted in J. Miller, 1983, pp. 202-203)Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler. (Einstein, quoted in Minsky, 1986, p. 17)What, in effect, are the conditions for the construction of formal thought? The child must not only apply operations to objects-in other words, mentally execute possible actions on them-he must also "reflect" those operations in the absence of the objects which are replaced by pure propositions. Thus, "reflection" is thought raised to the second power. Concrete thinking is the representation of a possible action, and formal thinking is the representation of a representation of possible action.... It is not surprising, therefore, that the system of concrete operations must be completed during the last years of childhood before it can be "reflected" by formal operations. In terms of their function, formal operations do not differ from concrete operations except that they are applied to hypotheses or propositions [whose logic is] an abstract translation of the system of "inference" that governs concrete operations. (Piaget, quoted in Minsky, 1986, p. 237)[E]ven a human being today (hence, a fortiori, a remote ancestor of contemporary human beings) cannot easily or ordinarily maintain uninterrupted attention on a single problem for more than a few tens of seconds. Yet we work on problems that require vastly more time. The way we do that (as we can observe by watching ourselves) requires periods of mulling to be followed by periods of recapitulation, describing to ourselves what seems to have gone on during the mulling, leading to whatever intermediate results we have reached. This has an obvious function: namely, by rehearsing these interim results... we commit them to memory, for the immediate contents of the stream of consciousness are very quickly lost unless rehearsed.... Given language, we can describe to ourselves what seemed to occur during the mulling that led to a judgment, produce a rehearsable version of the reaching-a-judgment process, and commit that to long-term memory by in fact rehearsing it. (Margolis, 1987, p. 60)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Thinking
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8 combinación
f.1 combination, combine, composite, mixture.2 mixing, conjugation, combination.3 petticoat, skirtlike feminine undergarment, underskirt, slip.4 combination, permutation.5 synthesis.6 ring.* * *1 combination2 (prenda) slip3 (cóctel) cocktail4 (lotería, quiniela) permutation, numbers plural5 figurado (artimaña) fiddle, wangle* * *noun f.* * *SF1) [de elementos, factores] combination2) [de números] combination3) (Quím) compound4) [de transportes] connection5) (=prenda) slip6) (Literat)combinación métrica — stanza form, rhyme scheme
* * *1)a) (de colores, sabores) combinationb) (Mat) permutationc) ( de caja fuerte) combination2) (Indum) slip3) (Transp) connection* * *1)a) (de colores, sabores) combinationb) (Mat) permutationc) ( de caja fuerte) combination2) (Indum) slip3) (Transp) connection* * *combinación11 = petticoat.Ex: But until these new pretty garments are ready, the boy will still have to put up with his girl cousins' left-off petticoats and pinnies.
combinación22 = bedfellow, blend, congeries, juxtaposition, mix, piecing together, concatenation, meshing, combination, interweaving, cocktail, ensemble, meld, coupling, conjoining.Ex: I would like to devote a couple of moments each to what may seem strange bedfellows at first: Sholom Aleichem, Melvil's Rib, the CIA, and La Jolla, California.
Ex: Thus in index or catalogue or data base design the indexer must choose an appropriate blend of recall and precision for each individual application.Ex: To be sure, it still has its congeries of mills and factories, its grimy huddle of frame dwellings and congested tenements, its stark, jagged skyline, but its old face is gradually changing.Ex: It achieves this aim principally through the juxtaposition of related subjects in a classified order.Ex: There are important employment opportunities available to people equipped with the right mix of skills and experience.Ex: Progress in research is dependent on the piecing together of items of information from many sources.Ex: Facilities are being developed to enable fast, effective communication over a concatenation of terrestrial and satellite networks.Ex: This paper describes the importance of team management to career development, as well as the meshing of organizational and individual needs, and views the career as a longitudinal concept.Ex: The software can search each field or a combination of fields.Ex: This paper illustrates the possible future interweaving of information retrieval and entertainment.Ex: He rightly characterizes his book as a ' cocktail of personal and public observations.Ex: DIANE is the name that has been given to the ensemble of available information services.Ex: The article is entitled 'Scholars and media: an unmixable mess of oil and water or a perfect meld of oil and vinegar?'.Ex: Will the coupling of libraries and museums mean unprecedented cooperation between these venerable institutions?.Ex: This sign is in effect a prototypical example of the conjoining of words and images.* combinación de colores = colour pattern, colour scheme.* combinación perfecta = perfect match.* en combinación con = in parallel to/with, in combination with.* orden de combinación de encabezamiento = citation order.* orden de combinación de encabezamientos = citation order.* realizar una combinación = perform + combination.* una combinación de = a mixture of, a mix of, a rollup of.combinación33 = code, combination.Ex: The user can page forward through the file by entering the forward code (f) and page backward by entering the backward code (b).
Ex: Combinations are to be given only to a minimum number of employees required to have access to the safe.* cerradura de combinación = combination lock.* combinación de la caja fuerte = safe code, safe combination.* * *A1 (de colores, sabores) combinationla película es una combinación de amor, intriga y suspense the movie is a combination o mixture of love, mystery and suspense2 ( Quím) compound3 ( Mat) permutation4 (de una caja fuerte) combinationB ( Indum) slipC ( Transp) connectionhay que hacer combinación en Diagonal ( Arg); you have to change at Diagonal* * *
combinación sustantivo femenino
c) (Mat) permutationd) (Indum) slipe) (Transp) connection
combinación sustantivo femenino
1 combination
2 (prenda interior femenina) slip
' combinación' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
acertante
- acierto
- mezcla
- síntesis
English:
brunch
- combination
- match
- petticoat
- scheme
- slip
- underskirt
- blend
- color
* * *combinación nf1. [unión, mezcla] combination;una combinación explosiva an explosive combination;la perfecta combinación entre juventud y experiencia the perfect combination o mix of youth and experience;no tomar en combinación con otros analgésicos [en etiqueta] not to be taken with other painkillers2. [de bebidas] cocktail3. [de caja fuerte] combination;la combinación ganadora fue… [en lotería] the winning numbers were…4. [prenda] slip5. [plan] scheme6. Mat permutation7. Quím compound8. [de medios de transporte] connections;no hay buena combinación para ir de aquí allí there's no easy way of getting there from here;hay muy buena combinación para llegar al aeropuerto there's a very good connection to the airportuna perfecta combinación entre los dos jugadores acabó en gol the two players combined perfectly to score a goal* * *f1 combination;combinación numérica combination of numbers2 prenda slip3:hacer combinación TRANSP change* * *combinación nf, pl - ciones1) : combination2) : connection (in travel)* * *1. (en general) combination3. (prenda) slip -
9 σχάζω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `to make an incision, to tear open, to open a vein, to let (the blood) flow, to let something take its course, to release, to drop, to abandon' (Hp., X., Arist. etc.).Other forms: Also σχάω (Hp., com., Arist. a.o.), mostly aor. σχάσαι (Pi., B., Hp., E., com., X., Arist., hell. a. late) with pass. σχασθ-ῆναι, fut. pass. - ήσομαι, act. σχάσω, perf. midd. ἔσχασμαι (in ἐσχασμένη as plantname; Strömberg 43).Derivatives: 1. σχάσις ( ἀπό-, κατά-) f. `the tearing, blood-letting, release' (medic., Ph. Bel.). 2. σχάσμα ( κατά-) n. `incision, release' (Hp., Dsc., Ph. Bel.). 3. κατα-σχασμός m. `draft' (medic.). 4. σχαστήρ = Lat. tendicula (gloss.); κατασ[χ]αστήρ meaning unknown (IG 11: 2, 165, 11 [Delos IIIa]). 5. σχαστηρ-ία f. `trigger, release in mechanisms etc.' (Arist., Ph. Bel., Hero, Plb. etc.; Scheller Oxytonierung 58 n. 4); - ιον n. `lancet' ( Hippiatr.).Etymology: As orig. meaning is above assumed as usual `make an incision, tear open', from where `open, let loose etc.'; the word would be esp. characteristic for the language of the physician. Also a basic meaning `let loose, free v. t.' sceems however possible, while the usual professional expression φλέβα σχάσαι in MLG āderlāten `let (flow) from the vein' would get a direct agreement. -- As the whole formal system is clearly built on the aor. σχάσαι, from which σχάζω, σχάω as well as all other verbal and nominal forms, the etymolog has to start from this. A certain non-Greek agreement has not been found. Since Fick 1, 143 a. 567 σχάω is generally compared (Bq, WP. 2, 541 f., Pok. 919f., W.-Hofmann s. sciō) a.o. with Skt. chyati ( anu-, ava-, vi- etc.), ptc. chā-ta-, chi-tá-, caus. chāy-áyati (IE * skeh₂-, *skh₂i̯-) `split, hurt, esp. of the skin' (on the meaning Hoffmann Münch. Stud. 19, 61 ff., on phonetics Hiersche Ten. asp. 103 f., 214f.). To this semant. certainly unobjectionable connection it should be remarked, that of the Skt. verb non-present finite forms, e.g. the full grade s-aorist a-chā-s-it, occur only in the grammarians. The further combinations (s. the lit. above), e.g. with Lat. sciō, are no less hypothetic. -- So σχάσαι Greek innovation (perh. through cross of σχίσαι and ἐάσαι, χαλάσαι v.t.)? Note that σχ- cannot be directly explained from the assumed IE form.Page in Frisk: 2,835-836Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > σχάζω
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10 У-41
В УДАРЕ PrepP Invar1. ( subj-compl with copula (subj: human) one is in an inspired state that makes what he is doing turn out well* X в ударе - X is in good (top, great, excellent etc) formX is at his bestNeg сегодня X не в ударе -this isn't X's day.Четырежды грек менял кости, но ничего не помогало, они ложились так, как хотел скотопромышленник. Он был в ударе и каждый раз из дюжины возможных комбинаций почти безошибочно выбирал наиболее надежную для продолжения партии (Искандер 3). Four times the Greek changed the dice, but nothing helped, they fell the way the cattle dealer wanted. He was in good form, and every time, from a dozen possible combinations, he almost unerringly chose the one that would keep his game going best (3a).2. obssubj-compl with быть» (subj: human used with the infin of another verb) one is inclined (to do sth.), is well disposed (toward doing sth.): X в ударе (делать Y) = X is in the mood (to do Y) X is of a mind (to do Y) X feels like (doing Y). -
11 в ударе
• В УДАРЕ[PrepP; Invar]=====1. [subj-compl with copula (subj: human)]⇒ one is in an inspired state that makes what he is doing turn out well X в ударе ≈ X is in good <top, great, excellent etc> form; X is at his best; || Neg сегодня X не в ударе ≈ this isn't X's day.♦ Четырежды грек менял кости, но ничего не помогало, они ложились так, как хотел скотопромышленник. Он был в ударе и каждый раз из дюжины возможных комбинаций почти безошибочно выбирал наиболее надежную для продолжения партии (Искандер 3). Four times the Greek changed the dice, but nothing helped; they fell the way the cattle dealer wanted. He was in good form, and every time, from a dozen possible combinations, he almost unerringly chose the one that would keep his game going best (3a).2. obs [subj-compl with быть (subj: human); used with the infin of another verb]⇒ one is inclined (to do sth.), is well disposed (toward doing sth.):- X feels like (doing Y).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > в ударе
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12 raíz del problema, la
(n.) = root of the problem, theEx. The root of the problem lies in the simple rule of the number of possible combinations in which a given set of concepts may be sought. -
13 raíz del problema
la raíz del problema(n.) = root of the problem, theEx: The root of the problem lies in the simple rule of the number of possible combinations in which a given set of concepts may be sought.
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14 exhaust
ɪɡˈzɔ:st
1. сущ.;
тех.
1) тех. а) выпуск, выхлоп (процесс выхода газа в окружающую среду) б) выхлопные газы
2) тех. выхлопная труба, вытяжка
3) вытягивание, высасывание Syn: exhaustion
2. гл.
1) а) исчерпывать, израсходовать, использовать полностью We exhausted our funds in a week. ≈ Все наши запасы кончились через неделю. to exhaust all possibilities ≈ исчерпать все возможности Syn: discharge, empty б) изнурять, утомлять( о живых существах) exhausted by overwork ≈ замученный большим количеством работы Syn: weaken в) истощать (напр., о почвах) to exhaust a soil of fertility ≈ истощить почву, лишить почву плодородности
2) тех. разрежать, выкачивать, высасывать, вытягивать (воздух) ;
выпускать (пар) (техническое) выпуск, выхлоп (техническое) выхлопные газы( двигателя) (техническое) отсос, откачка;
степень разрежения (в сосуде) истощать, исчерпывать - to * resources истощать ресурсы - to * a subject исчерпать тему - to * all possible combinations перепробовать все возможные комбинации - our stock is nearly *ed наши запасы на исходе - we *ed our funds in a week за неделю от наших средств ничего не осталось вычерпывать, опустошать - to * a well вычерпать колодец до дна изнурять, истощать;
выматывать( силы) - to * one's health подорвать свое здоровье - to * the soil истощать почву - the climb *ed us восхождение изнурило нас изнурять себя, чрезмерно напрягать силы, не жалеть себя, своих сил разрежать, выкачивать, высасывать, вытягивать (воздух) ;
выпускать (пар) отработать (рудник) ;
исчерпать (полезные ископаемые) exhaust тех. выхлопная труба;
выхлоп, выпуск ~ тех. attr. выхлопной, выпускной;
exhaust steam мятый, отработанный пар ~ истощать (человека, силы;
запасы и т. п.) ;
изнурять;
to exhaust all reserves истощить все резервы;
to exhaust oneself with work работать до (полного) изнеможения ~ истощать ~ исчерпывать;
to exhaust the subject исчерпать тему ~ исчерпывать ~ разрежать, выкачивать, высасывать, вытягивать (воздух) ;
выпускать (пар) ~ истощать (человека, силы;
запасы и т. п.) ;
изнурять;
to exhaust all reserves истощить все резервы;
to exhaust oneself with work работать до (полного) изнеможения ~ истощать (человека, силы;
запасы и т. п.) ;
изнурять;
to exhaust all reserves истощить все резервы;
to exhaust oneself with work работать до (полного) изнеможения ~ тех. attr. выхлопной, выпускной;
exhaust steam мятый, отработанный пар ~ исчерпывать;
to exhaust the subject исчерпать тему -
15 exhaust
1. [ıgʹzɔ:st] n тех.1. выпуск, выхлоп2. выхлопные газы ( двигателя)3. 1) отсос, откачка2) степень разрежения ( в сосуде)2. [ıgʹzɔ:st] v1. 1) истощать, исчерпыватьto exhaust resources [patience] - истощать ресурсы [терпение]
to exhaust all possible combinations - перепробовать все возможные комбинации
we exhausted our funds in a week - за неделю от наших средств ничего не осталось
2) вычерпывать, опустошать2. 1) изнурять, истощать; выматывать ( силы)2) refl изнурять себя, чрезмерно напрягать силы, не жалеть себя, своих сил4. отработать ( рудник); исчерпать ( полезные ископаемые) -
16 exhaust
1. n тех. выпуск, выхлоп2. n тех. выхлопные газы3. n тех. отсос, откачка4. n тех. степень разрежения5. v истощать, исчерпывать6. v вычерпывать, опустошать7. v изнурять, истощать; выматывать8. v изнурять себя, чрезмерно напрягать силы, не жалеть себя, своих сил9. v разрежать, выкачивать, высасывать, вытягивать; выпускать10. v отработать; исчерпатьСинонимический ряд:1. vapor (noun) effluvium; fumes; smoke; vapor; vapour2. debilitate (verb) cripple; debilitate; devitalize; enervate; fatigue; over tire; overtire; prostrate; sap; tire; tire out; wear out; weary3. drain (verb) drain; empty; void4. spend (verb) bankrupt; deplete; draw; draw down; expend; finish; go; impoverish; play out; run through; spend; wash up5. use up (verb) consume; devour; dissipate; eat; eat up; fritter away; squander; use; use up; wasteАнтонимический ряд:conserve; fill; innervate; invigorate; refresh; replenish; strengthen; use -
17 transmitir
v.1 to transmit, to flash, to relay, to broadcast.Eso transmite los pedidos That transmits the orders.El cable transmite la electricidad The wire conducts electricity.Ellos transmiten la noticia They transmit the news.2 to transmit, to convey, to relay, to transfer.Eso transmite los pedidos That transmits the orders.3 to transmit, to conduct.El cable transmite la electricidad The wire conducts electricity.4 to be transmitted to.Se me transmitió la enfermedad The disease was transmitted to me.5 to carry, to carry the disease of.Ese mosquito transmite la peste That mosquito carries the plague.* * *1 (gen) to transmit2 RADIO TELEVISIÓN to broadcast3 (enfermedad) to transmit, pass on4 DERECHO to transfer, hand down* * *verb1) to transmit, broadcast2) pass on* * *1. VT1) (Radio, TV) [+ señal, sonido] to transmit; [+ programa] to broadcast2) [+ bienes, saludos, recados] to pass on3) [+ enfermedad, gérmenes] to give, pass on4) (Jur) to transfer (a to)2.VI (Radio, TV) to broadcast3.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo2)a) <sonido/movimiento> to transmitb) <enfermedad/tara> to transmit, pass onc) (Der) to transferd) <lengua/costumbres> to transmit, pass on; < conocimientos> to pass one) <saludos/felicidades> to pass on2.transmitir vi (Rad, TV) to transmit* * *= carry with it, communicate, convey, pass on, relay, transmit, transport, transmit + onward(s), air, beam, propagate, pass down, pass along, hand down.Ex. On the other hand, adhering to one of the major schemes carries with it all of the disadvantages of that major scheme.Ex. The contributions are input to the data base, then referred and any suggestion made by the referee are communicated through the data base to the editor.Ex. Statistical and other numerical abstracts convey effectively certain types of economic, social and marketing data.Ex. If ignored, the problems are only passed on to all the users of the catalog: the public, the reference department, the acquisitions department, and naturally the cataloging department.Ex. Others used it as a backup for general notices that could not easily be relayed by telephone.Ex. The system permits the requester to specify up to five potential lending libraries, and the system transmits the requests to these libraries one at a time.Ex. And it takes little imagination to conceive of future combinations and developments to existing systems, not to speak of new and even more sophisticated means of storing, retrieving and transporting information.Ex. It should eventually also be possible for the user to automatically transmit his/her request onwards whenever necessary to other libraries and information centres, or even to publishers or booksellers.Ex. Because TV had very few channels the value of TV was very high so only things of very broad interest could be aired on those few channels.Ex. Now, instructors can beam what they write on their whiteboards directly to students' laptops, in effect turning each laptop screen into a portable, interactive slateboard.Ex. The update, once started, propagates through the database, respecting local integrity rules for each affected object.Ex. The knowledge that has been passed down from generation to generation by sentient beings on this planet for aeons and aeons is quite impossible to fully comprehend.Ex. If the head of reference services does not pass along the information to the staff the reference librarians, by being uninformed, will undoubtedly not make as good an impression on the important city managers.Ex. A hunting guide while still in his teens, he learned his woodcraft first hand, absorbing lore handed down to him from his father.----* facilidad de transmitir = communicability.* que transmite información = information-bearing.* transmitir Algo a Alguien = mediate + Nombre + to.* transmitir de generación en generación = pass down from + generation to generation.* transmitir información = convey + information.* transmitir ininterrumpidamente = stream.* transmitir por radio = radio.* transmitir una señal = transmit + signal.* transmitir un mensaje = convey + message.* transmitir un significado = convey + meaning.* * *1.verbo transitivo2)a) <sonido/movimiento> to transmitb) <enfermedad/tara> to transmit, pass onc) (Der) to transferd) <lengua/costumbres> to transmit, pass on; < conocimientos> to pass one) <saludos/felicidades> to pass on2.transmitir vi (Rad, TV) to transmit* * *= carry with it, communicate, convey, pass on, relay, transmit, transport, transmit + onward(s), air, beam, propagate, pass down, pass along, hand down.Ex: On the other hand, adhering to one of the major schemes carries with it all of the disadvantages of that major scheme.
Ex: The contributions are input to the data base, then referred and any suggestion made by the referee are communicated through the data base to the editor.Ex: Statistical and other numerical abstracts convey effectively certain types of economic, social and marketing data.Ex: If ignored, the problems are only passed on to all the users of the catalog: the public, the reference department, the acquisitions department, and naturally the cataloging department.Ex: Others used it as a backup for general notices that could not easily be relayed by telephone.Ex: The system permits the requester to specify up to five potential lending libraries, and the system transmits the requests to these libraries one at a time.Ex: And it takes little imagination to conceive of future combinations and developments to existing systems, not to speak of new and even more sophisticated means of storing, retrieving and transporting information.Ex: It should eventually also be possible for the user to automatically transmit his/her request onwards whenever necessary to other libraries and information centres, or even to publishers or booksellers.Ex: Because TV had very few channels the value of TV was very high so only things of very broad interest could be aired on those few channels.Ex: Now, instructors can beam what they write on their whiteboards directly to students' laptops, in effect turning each laptop screen into a portable, interactive slateboard.Ex: The update, once started, propagates through the database, respecting local integrity rules for each affected object.Ex: The knowledge that has been passed down from generation to generation by sentient beings on this planet for aeons and aeons is quite impossible to fully comprehend.Ex: If the head of reference services does not pass along the information to the staff the reference librarians, by being uninformed, will undoubtedly not make as good an impression on the important city managers.Ex: A hunting guide while still in his teens, he learned his woodcraft first hand, absorbing lore handed down to him from his father.* facilidad de transmitir = communicability.* que transmite información = information-bearing.* transmitir Algo a Alguien = mediate + Nombre + to.* transmitir de generación en generación = pass down from + generation to generation.* transmitir información = convey + information.* transmitir ininterrumpidamente = stream.* transmitir por radio = radio.* transmitir una señal = transmit + signal.* transmitir un mensaje = convey + message.* transmitir un significado = convey + meaning.* * *transmitir [I1 ]vtA ( Rad, TV) ‹señal› to transmit; ‹programa› to broadcastB1 ‹sonido/movimiento› to transmit2 ‹enfermedad/tara› to transmit, pass on3 ( Der) to transfer4 ‹lengua/costumbres› to transmit, pass on; ‹conocimientos› to pass on5 ‹saludos/felicidades› to pass on■ transmitirvi( Rad, TV) to transmittransmitimos en 909 kilohercios para todo el país we broadcast to the whole country on 909 kilohertz* * *
transmitir ( conjugate transmitir) verbo transitivo
1 (Rad, TV) ‹ señal› to transmit;
‹ programa› to broadcast
2
‹ conocimientos› to pass on
verbo intransitivo (Rad, TV) to transmit
transmitir verbo transitivo
1 to transmit, pass on: en el escenario no transmite nada, he doesn't communicate well on stage transmitir una orden, to give an order
2 (comunicar) me transmitieron la noticia por teléfono, I was informed of the news by phone
3 Rad TV to broadcast
4 (un virus, una enfermedad) to pass on: ese insecto transmite la fiebre amarilla, that insect trasmits yellow fever
5 Jur to transfer
' transmitir' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
apestar
- dar
- imprimir
- trasmitir
- comunicar
English:
beam
- broadcast
- convey
- hand down
- hand on
- impart
- pass down
- pass on
- propagate
- relay
- transmit
- air
- hand
- hook
- network
- pass
- put
- radio
- transfer
* * *transmitir, trasmitir♦ vt1. [sonido, onda, movimiento] to transmit;neuronas que transmiten mensajes sensoriales neurons that transmit sensory data2. [por radio, ordenador] [señal, datos] to transmit, to send3. [programa] to broadcast;transmitir un programa en directo to broadcast a programme live4. [mensaje, noticias, saludos] to pass on, to convey;ésas fueron las palabras que le transmitió su hermano those were the words her brother conveyed to her5. [enfermedad, bacteria, virus] to transmit;[optimismo, pesimismo, energía] to convey, to communicate6. [derechos, poderes] to transfer♦ See also the pronominal verb transmitirse, trasmitirse* * *v/t1 enfermedad spread, transmit; noticia spread;transmitir por herencia pass on in one’s genes2 RAD, TV broadcast; señal transmit* * *transmitir vt1) : to transmit, to broadcast2) : to pass on, to transfertransmitir vi: to transmit, to broadcast* * *transmitir vb -
18 subgrupo
m.subgroup.* * *1 subgroup* * *SM [gen] subgroup; (Pol) splinter group* * *= subset, subgroup [sub-group], subpack, subpopulation [subpopulation].Ex. In general, the elements included represent a subset of those comprising an ISBD (M).Ex. From 1974 to 1977 the project was developed by a subgroup of 7 experts from France, Germany, Italy and UK.Ex. The sequential sorting of the pack and subpacks permits searching to proceed on combinations of terms.Ex. This `rereading' of the JCR, which presents the JCR product differently, makes it possible to shed new light on the large subpopulation of journals not at the top of the rankings.* * *= subset, subgroup [sub-group], subpack, subpopulation [subpopulation].Ex: In general, the elements included represent a subset of those comprising an ISBD (M).
Ex: From 1974 to 1977 the project was developed by a subgroup of 7 experts from France, Germany, Italy and UK.Ex: The sequential sorting of the pack and subpacks permits searching to proceed on combinations of terms.Ex: This `rereading' of the JCR, which presents the JCR product differently, makes it possible to shed new light on the large subpopulation of journals not at the top of the rankings.* * *subgroup* * *subgrupo nmsubgroup* * *subgrupo nm: subgroup -
19 de todas formas
anyway, in any case* * *= anyway(s), at any rate, anyhowEx. The easy chairs are however often tucked into odd corners where you could not put a full table and chair anyway.Ex. At any rate, there are now some interesting combinations possible.Ex. This is a small service for the bold and resolute would find a way of escape anyhow: the faint-hearted and hesitant are those who need to be enticed into a wider world, and they are very numerous.* * *= anyway(s), at any rate, anyhowEx: The easy chairs are however often tucked into odd corners where you could not put a full table and chair anyway.
Ex: At any rate, there are now some interesting combinations possible.Ex: This is a small service for the bold and resolute would find a way of escape anyhow: the faint-hearted and hesitant are those who need to be enticed into a wider world, and they are very numerous. -
20 as
as [æz, əz]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. conjunction2. preposition3. adverb━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► For set combinations in which as is not the first word, eg such... as, the same... as, disguised as, look up the other word.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. conjunctiona. ( = while) alors que• as she was falling asleep she heard a noise elle entendit un bruit alors qu'elle commençait à s'endormirb. (with comparative) things will get more difficult as the year goes on ça va devenir de plus en plus difficile au fil de l'annéec. ( = just when) (juste) au moment oùd. ( = because) comme━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• as he hasn't phoned, we don't know where he is comme il n'a pas téléphoné, nous ne savons pas où il est• this is important as it reduces the effectiveness of the drug c'est important parce que cela diminue l'efficacité du médicamente. ( = though) long as it was, I didn't find the journey boring bien que le trajet ait été long, je ne me suis pas ennuyé• France, as you know, is... la France, comme vous le savez, est...• she is very gifted, as is her brother elle est très douée, comme son frère• don't tidy up, leave it as it is ne range rien, laisse ça comme ça• the village, situated as it is near a motorway,... le village étant situé non loin d'une autoroute,...2. prepositiona. ( = in the capacity of) commeb. ( = being) en tant que• as a mother of five children, she is well aware... en tant que mère de cinq enfants, elle sait très bien...c. ( = when) as a child, she was rather shy quand elle était enfant, elle était plutôt timide• as a young woman, she was interested in politics quand elle était jeune, elle s'intéressait à la politique3. adverba. ( = in the way) comme► as + as (in comparisons of equality) aussi... que• is it as far as that? c'est vraiment aussi loin que ça ?• you ate as much as me tu as mangé autant que moi► twice/half as...• as for that quant à cela► as from (referring to past) depuis ; (referring to present, future) à partir de• he was staggering as if or as though he'd been drinking il titubait comme s'il avait bu• it's not as if or as though he was nice-looking ce n'est pas comme s'il était beau garçon• as if to confirm his prediction there was a loud explosion comme pour confirmer ses prédictions on entendit une forte explosion• don't tell her, will you? -- as if! (inf) ne lui dis rien ! -- pour qui tu me prends !• did he finally own up? -- as if! (inf) est-ce qu'il a fini par avouer ? -- tu parles ! (inf)► as it is ( = in fact) dans l'état actuel des choses ; ( = already) comme ça• as it is, it doesn't make much difference dans l'état actuel des choses, ça ne fait pas grande différence• the balance of your account as of 16 June ( = on 16 June) le solde de votre compte au 16 juin• the work as such is boring but... le travail en soi est ennuyeux mais...• they are the best players in the world and, as such, are highly paid ce sont les meilleurs joueurs du monde et, à ce titre, ils sont très bien payés• he was still a novice and they treated him as such ce n'était qu'un débutant et ils le traitaient comme tel• he had no qualifications as such il n'avait pas de qualification à proprement parler► as to quant à* * *[æz, əz] 1.1) ( in the manner that) commeknowing you as I do, it didn't surprise me — je te connais tellement bien que ça ne m'a pas étonné
he lives abroad, as does his sister — il vit à l'étranger, tout comme sa sœur
as with so many people in the 1960s, she... — comme beaucoup de personnes dans les années 60, elle...
2) (while, when) comme, alors que; ( over more gradual period of time) au fur et à mesure queas a child, he... — (quand il était) enfant, il...
3) (because, since) comme, puisque4) ( although)comfortable as the house is, it's still very expensive — aussi confortable que soit la maison, elle reste quand même très chère
try as he might, he could not forget it — il avait beau essayer, il ne pouvait pas oublier
5)the same... as — le/la même... que
6) ( expressing purpose)2.so as to do — pour faire, afin de faire
1) ( in order to appear to be)2) (showing function, status) commespeaking as his closest friend, I... — en tant que son meilleur ami, je voudrais dire que je...
with Lauren Bacall as Vivien — Cinema, Theatre avec Lauren Bacall dans le rôle de Vivien
3)3.he was quoted as saying that... — il aurait dit que...
1) (expressing degree, extent)the population may increase by as much as 20% — l'augmentation de la population risque d'atteindre 20%
as many as 10,000 people attended the demonstration — il n'y avait pas moins de 10000 personnes à la manifestation
he has a house in Nice as well as an apartment in Paris — il a une maison à Nice ainsi qu'un appartement à Paris
2) ( expressing similarity) comme4.as against prepositional phrase contre, comparé à5.as and when conjunctional phrase6.as and when the need arises — quand il le faudra, quand le besoin s'en fera sentir
as for prepositional phrase quant à, pour ce qui est de7. 8.as if conjunctional phrase comme (si)he looked at me as if to say ‘I told you so’ — il m'a regardé avec l'air de dire ‘je te l'avais bien dit’
9.as if by accident/magic — comme par hasard/magie
as such prepositional phrase en tant que tel10.as to prepositional phrase sur, quant à
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