-
1 arise, (arose, arisen)
بَرَزَ \ arise, (arose, arisen): to come up and be noticed (of storm, trouble, etc.): A serious difficulty has arisen. come on the scene: to make an effective appearance: Britain was losing the war until Churchill came on the scene. come out: to appear: Our roses are coming out. emerge: to come out from a place where one could not be seen; appear: He emerged from his hiding place. The moon emerged from behind the clouds. figure: to appear (in a story or report): Well-known sportsmen often figure in the newspaper. jutt: (always with out) to stand out: An overflow pipe jutted out from the wall of the house. project: to stick out: That branch projects over the wall. protrude: stick out: The letter-box was full, and one letter protruded from the opening. stand out: to be easily seen; to be especially noticeable: Bright colours stand out against a dark surface behind them. \ See Also ظَهَرَ (جَلِيًّا) (لَعِبَ دورًا)، نشأ (نَشَأَ) -
2 arise (arose, arisen)
ظَهَرَ \ appear: to come into sight: A figure appeared in the distance, to present oneself; be seen publicly I have to appear in court today. arise (arose, arisen): to come up and be noticed (of storm, trouble, etc.) A serious difficulty has arisen. come on the scene: to make an effective appearance: Britain was losing the war until Churchill came on the scene. come out: to appear: Our roses are coming out. Most newspapers come out every day. Your photograph came out well. emerge: to come out from a place where one could not be seen; appear: He emerged from his hiding place. The moon emerged from behind the clouds. figure: to appear (in a story or report): Well-known sportsmen often figure in the newspaper. seem: to appear to be: He seems (to be) honest. It seems (clear) to me that I ought to go. show: to be seen: Dirt shows more on white clothes than on dark ones. turn up: (of sth. that was missing) to appear: The stolen goods turned up in the market. \ See Also بان (بَانَ)، لاح (لاَحَ)، برز (بَرَزَ)، طلع (طَلَعَ) -
3 come out
بَرَزَ \ arise, (arose, arisen): to come up and be noticed (of storm, trouble, etc.): A serious difficulty has arisen. come on the scene: to make an effective appearance: Britain was losing the war until Churchill came on the scene. come out: to appear: Our roses are coming out. emerge: to come out from a place where one could not be seen; appear: He emerged from his hiding place. The moon emerged from behind the clouds. figure: to appear (in a story or report): Well-known sportsmen often figure in the newspaper. jutt: (always with out) to stand out: An overflow pipe jutted out from the wall of the house. project: to stick out: That branch projects over the wall. protrude: stick out: The letter-box was full, and one letter protruded from the opening. stand out: to be easily seen; to be especially noticeable: Bright colours stand out against a dark surface behind them. \ See Also ظَهَرَ (جَلِيًّا) (لَعِبَ دورًا)، نشأ (نَشَأَ) -
4 stand out
بَرَزَ \ arise, (arose, arisen): to come up and be noticed (of storm, trouble, etc.): A serious difficulty has arisen. come on the scene: to make an effective appearance: Britain was losing the war until Churchill came on the scene. come out: to appear: Our roses are coming out. emerge: to come out from a place where one could not be seen; appear: He emerged from his hiding place. The moon emerged from behind the clouds. figure: to appear (in a story or report): Well-known sportsmen often figure in the newspaper. jutt: (always with out) to stand out: An overflow pipe jutted out from the wall of the house. project: to stick out: That branch projects over the wall. protrude: stick out: The letter-box was full, and one letter protruded from the opening. stand out: to be easily seen; to be especially noticeable: Bright colours stand out against a dark surface behind them. \ See Also ظَهَرَ (جَلِيًّا) (لَعِبَ دورًا)، نشأ (نَشَأَ) -
5 come out
ظَهَرَ \ appear: to come into sight: A figure appeared in the distance, to present oneself; be seen publicly I have to appear in court today. arise (arose, arisen): to come up and be noticed (of storm, trouble, etc.) A serious difficulty has arisen. come on the scene: to make an effective appearance: Britain was losing the war until Churchill came on the scene. come out: to appear: Our roses are coming out. Most newspapers come out every day. Your photograph came out well. emerge: to come out from a place where one could not be seen; appear: He emerged from his hiding place. The moon emerged from behind the clouds. figure: to appear (in a story or report): Well-known sportsmen often figure in the newspaper. seem: to appear to be: He seems (to be) honest. It seems (clear) to me that I ought to go. show: to be seen: Dirt shows more on white clothes than on dark ones. turn up: (of sth. that was missing) to appear: The stolen goods turned up in the market. \ See Also بان (بَانَ)، لاح (لاَحَ)، برز (بَرَزَ)، طلع (طَلَعَ) -
6 surgir como resultado de
• arise out of• come as a result ofDiccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > surgir como resultado de
-
7 surgir
v.1 to happen, to turn up, to come up, to occur.Algo surgió ayer Something happened yesterday.2 to rise, to stand out, to advance, to excel.Surgimos después de la quiebra We rose after the bankruptcy.3 to appear, to emerge, to arise, to bob up.Surgió un animal en la oscuridad An animal appeared in the darkness.4 to happen unexpectedly to, to happen to.Nos surgió algo bueno ayer Something good happened to us yesterday.5 to spurt, to spout, to spring up, to issue forth.El agua surge del manantial The water spurts from the spring.* * *1 (agua) to spring forth, spurt up3 MARÍTIMO to anchor* * *verbto arise, emerge* * *VI1) (=aparecer) [gen] to arise, emerge, appear; [líquido] to spout, spout out, spurt; [barco] [en la niebla] to loom up; [persona] to appear unexpectedly2) [dificultad] to arise, come up, crop uphan surgido varios problemas — several problems have come up o cropped up
3) (Náut) to anchor* * *verbo intransitivoa) manantial to riseb) (aparecer, salir) problema/dificultad to arise, come up, emerge; interés/sentimiento to develop, emerge; idea to emerge, come up; tema to come up, crop up; movimiento/partido to come into being, arisesurgir DE algo: una silueta surgió de entre las sombras — a shape rose up from o loomed up out of the shadows
* * *= arise, become + available, come into + being, crop up, emerge, rise, pop up, come into + existence, burgeon, surface, grow up, dawn, spring, come through, come up, come with, break out, burst forth, source, pop, set in.Ex. The place of publication may also warn of biases in approach or differences in terminology that arise in the text.Ex. Mini and micro computers will become cheaper and information retrieval software will become available in more financially attractive, user friendly and tried and tested packages.Ex. I think it would be useful to take just a few minutes to talk about how our institutions come into being.Ex. Although same problems with software applications, hardware and user training programmes had cropped up periodically, on balance, users are reasonably pleased with their acquisitions.Ex. In 1961 an International Conference on Cataloguing Principles was held in Paris, and a statement of principles emerged, which became known as the Paris Principles.Ex. The public library has two choices: to follow the dodo or to rise again like the phoenix.Ex. It can pop up in one form one week and in another form another week.Ex. Some university libraries have been built up over the centuries; others have come into existence over the last 40 years.Ex. The other principal omission from UNESCO's 1950 listing was report literature -- a field of published record which has burgeoned in the last thirty years = La otra omisión principal de la lista de 1950 de la UNESCO fueron los informes, un área que se ha desarrollado en los últimos treinta años.Ex. Power struggles are surfacing at major academic institutions across the USA.Ex. In the 1920s and 30s factory libraries grew up in all types of industries, particularly textile industries, but their size and quality varied.Ex. However, because of the long duration of feudal society, modern civilization, including modern libraries, dawned in China later than in the industrialized Western countries.Ex. My point is that all literature, every example we can think of, depends for its existence on the tradition out of which it springs -- even the most avant of the avant-garde.Ex. More sophisticated accreditation systems are coming through, but these are currently relatively little used in these areas, and are more common in ecommerce applications.Ex. She outlined the tasks she had been assigned and mentioned that if any emergencies came up she was the person to bring them to.Ex. The problem comes with ideographic languages.Ex. Loud, unscripted quarrels between unshaven peasants break out in odd corners of the auditorium and add to the liveliness.Ex. It seems the passions of the people were only sleeping and burst forth with a terrible fury.Ex. What this has meant is that in the 20th century, ideas are being sourced from all over the globe; and at the speed oflight, so to speak.Ex. The azaleas are popping, the redbuds are in their finest attire, and the dogwoods are lacy jewels at the edge of the wood.Ex. Open or compound fractures were usually fatal prior to the advent of antiseptics in the 1860s because infection would set in.----* cuando le surja la necesidad = at + Posesivo + time of need.* cuestión + surgir = issue + surface.* dificultad + surgir = difficulty + arise.* emergencia + surgir = emergency + arise.* idea + surgir = idea + come up.* oportunidad + surgir = opportunity + arise.* peligro + surgir = danger + arise.* prejuicio + surgir = prejudice + arise.* problema + surgir = problem + arise, problem + surface, problem + come with.* según surja la ocasión = as the occasion arises.* situación + surgir = situation + arise.* surgiendo de nuevas = on the rebound.* surgir amenazadoramente = rear + its head.* surgir de = arise out of, be rooted in, develop out of, emanate from, grow out of, stem from, spin off, come out of, spring off from, be born of.* surgir de nuevo = re-arise.* surgir de un modo confuso = grow + like Topsy.* surgir la circunstancia = circumstance + arise.* surgir malentendidos = arise + misunderstandings.* surgir sospechas = arise + suspicion.* surgir una complicación = arise + complication.* surgir una cuestión = issue + arise, arise + question.* surgir una dificultad = arise + difficulty.* surgir una necesidad = need + arise.* surgir una ocasión = occasion + arise.* surgir un defecto = arise + fault.* surgir un problema de credibilidad = credibility gap + arise.* * *verbo intransitivoa) manantial to riseb) (aparecer, salir) problema/dificultad to arise, come up, emerge; interés/sentimiento to develop, emerge; idea to emerge, come up; tema to come up, crop up; movimiento/partido to come into being, arisesurgir DE algo: una silueta surgió de entre las sombras — a shape rose up from o loomed up out of the shadows
* * *= arise, become + available, come into + being, crop up, emerge, rise, pop up, come into + existence, burgeon, surface, grow up, dawn, spring, come through, come up, come with, break out, burst forth, source, pop, set in.Ex: The place of publication may also warn of biases in approach or differences in terminology that arise in the text.
Ex: Mini and micro computers will become cheaper and information retrieval software will become available in more financially attractive, user friendly and tried and tested packages.Ex: I think it would be useful to take just a few minutes to talk about how our institutions come into being.Ex: Although same problems with software applications, hardware and user training programmes had cropped up periodically, on balance, users are reasonably pleased with their acquisitions.Ex: In 1961 an International Conference on Cataloguing Principles was held in Paris, and a statement of principles emerged, which became known as the Paris Principles.Ex: The public library has two choices: to follow the dodo or to rise again like the phoenix.Ex: It can pop up in one form one week and in another form another week.Ex: Some university libraries have been built up over the centuries; others have come into existence over the last 40 years.Ex: The other principal omission from UNESCO's 1950 listing was report literature -- a field of published record which has burgeoned in the last thirty years = La otra omisión principal de la lista de 1950 de la UNESCO fueron los informes, un área que se ha desarrollado en los últimos treinta años.Ex: Power struggles are surfacing at major academic institutions across the USA.Ex: In the 1920s and 30s factory libraries grew up in all types of industries, particularly textile industries, but their size and quality varied.Ex: However, because of the long duration of feudal society, modern civilization, including modern libraries, dawned in China later than in the industrialized Western countries.Ex: My point is that all literature, every example we can think of, depends for its existence on the tradition out of which it springs -- even the most avant of the avant-garde.Ex: More sophisticated accreditation systems are coming through, but these are currently relatively little used in these areas, and are more common in ecommerce applications.Ex: She outlined the tasks she had been assigned and mentioned that if any emergencies came up she was the person to bring them to.Ex: The problem comes with ideographic languages.Ex: Loud, unscripted quarrels between unshaven peasants break out in odd corners of the auditorium and add to the liveliness.Ex: It seems the passions of the people were only sleeping and burst forth with a terrible fury.Ex: What this has meant is that in the 20th century, ideas are being sourced from all over the globe; and at the speed oflight, so to speak.Ex: The azaleas are popping, the redbuds are in their finest attire, and the dogwoods are lacy jewels at the edge of the wood.Ex: Open or compound fractures were usually fatal prior to the advent of antiseptics in the 1860s because infection would set in.* cuando le surja la necesidad = at + Posesivo + time of need.* cuestión + surgir = issue + surface.* dificultad + surgir = difficulty + arise.* emergencia + surgir = emergency + arise.* idea + surgir = idea + come up.* oportunidad + surgir = opportunity + arise.* peligro + surgir = danger + arise.* prejuicio + surgir = prejudice + arise.* problema + surgir = problem + arise, problem + surface, problem + come with.* según surja la ocasión = as the occasion arises.* situación + surgir = situation + arise.* surgiendo de nuevas = on the rebound.* surgir amenazadoramente = rear + its head.* surgir de = arise out of, be rooted in, develop out of, emanate from, grow out of, stem from, spin off, come out of, spring off from, be born of.* surgir de nuevo = re-arise.* surgir de un modo confuso = grow + like Topsy.* surgir la circunstancia = circumstance + arise.* surgir malentendidos = arise + misunderstandings.* surgir sospechas = arise + suspicion.* surgir una complicación = arise + complication.* surgir una cuestión = issue + arise, arise + question.* surgir una dificultad = arise + difficulty.* surgir una necesidad = need + arise.* surgir una ocasión = occasion + arise.* surgir un defecto = arise + fault.* surgir un problema de credibilidad = credibility gap + arise.* * *surgir [I7 ]vi1 «manantial» to riseun chorro surgía de entre las rocas water gushed from o spouted out from between the rocks2 (aparecer, salir) «problema/dificultad» to arise, come up, emerge; «interés/sentimiento» to develop, emerge; «idea» to emerge, come uphan surgido impedimentos de última hora some last-minute problems have come up o arisen¿y cómo surgió ese tema? and how did that subject come up o crop up?el amor que surgió entre ellos the love that sprang up between themsurgir DE algo:una silueta surgió de entre las sombras a shape rose up from o loomed up out of the shadowsde la familia han surgido muchos músicos the family has produced many musicianshan surgido muchas empresas de este tipo a lot of companies of this kind have sprung up o emergedel movimiento surgió como respuesta a esta injusticia the movement came into being as a response to o arose in response to this injustice3 (desprenderse, deducirse) surgir DE algo:del informe surge que … the report shows that …¿qué surge de todo esto? what can be deduced from all this?* * *
surgir ( conjugate surgir) verbo intransitivo [ manantial] to rise;
[problema/dificultad] to arise, come up, emerge;
[interés/sentimiento] to develop, emerge;
[ idea] to emerge, come up;
[ tema] to come up, crop up;
[movimiento/partido] to come into being, arise
surgir verbo intransitivo
1 (sobrevenir, aparecer) to arise, come up: surgió un imprevisto, something cropped up o came up
una extraña figura surgió de la oscuridad, a strange shape loomed up out of the darkness
2 (manar) to rise, spout out, spring forth
' surgir' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
brotar
- plantearse
- salir
- venir
- nacer
English:
arise
- come up
- crop up
- emerge
- spring up
- come
- crop
- develop
- grow
- spring
* * *surgir vi1. [brotar] to emerge, to spring;un manantial surgía entre las rocas a spring emerged among the rocks, water sprang from among the rocks2. [aparecer] to appear;surgió de detrás de las cortinas he emerged from behind the curtains;el rascacielos surgía entre los edificios del centro the skyscraper rose o towered above the buildings Br in the city centre o US downtown3. [producirse] to arise;se lo preguntaré si surge la ocasión I'll ask her if the opportunity arises;la idea surgió cuando… the idea occurred to him/her/ etc when…;nos surgieron varios problemas we ran into a number of problems;me han surgido varias dudas I have a number of queries;nos ha surgido una dificultad de última hora a last-minute difficulty has arisen o come up;están surgiendo nuevos destinos turísticos new tourist destinations are emerging o appearing;un banco surgido como resultado de la fusión de otros dos a bank that came into being o emerged as a result of the merger of two other banks;un movimiento surgido tras la guerra a movement which emerged after the war* * *v/i1 figemerge; de problema tb come up2 de agua spout* * *surgir {35} vi: to rise, to arise, to emerge* * * -
8 naître
naître° [nεtʀ]➭ TABLE 59━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━intransitive verba. to be born• quand l'enfant doit-il naître ? when is the baby due?• je l'ai vu naître ! I've known him since he was a baby!• faire naître [+ soupçons, désir] to arouse• de cette rencontre est né le mouvement qui... from this meeting sprang the movement which...* * *nɛtʀverbe intransitif1) [personne, animal] to be bornl'enfant à naître — the unborn baby ou child
2) ( commencer d'exister) [mouvement, projet] to be born; [entreprise] to come into existence; [amour, amitié] to spring up; [jour] to break; [soupçon] to arisenaître de — to arise out of [désir]
faire naître — to give rise to [espoir, conflit]
voir naître — to see the birth of [journal]
3) liternaître à — to awaken to [art, religion]
* * *nɛtʀ vi1) [personne] to be bornJe suis né en 1960. — I was born in 1960.
Il est né en 1982. — He was born in 1982.
Il naît plus de filles que de garçons. — More girls than boys are born.
2)naître de [conflit, complications] — to arise from, to be born out of
3) (découverte)naître à [amour, poésie] — to awaken to
* * *naître verb table: naître vi1 ( venir au monde) [personne, animal] to be born; elle est née le 5 juin 92 she was born on 5 June 92; le bébé doit naître à la fin du mois the baby is due at the end of the month; elle vient de naître she's only just been born; les bébés qui viennent de naître newborn babies; l'enfant à naître the unborn baby ou child; voir qn naître lit to see sb being born; je l'ai vu naître fig I have known him since he was born; être né sourd/cardiaque to be born deaf/with a heart condition; être né paresseux/fatigué to be born lazy/tired; tous les hommes naissent libres all men are born free; être né de père italien/inconnu to be born of an Italian/unknown father; être né dans une famille de cinq enfants to be born into a family of five children; être né pour faire to be born to do; il est né pour enseigner/gouverner he was born to teach/govern; être né sous le signe du Lion to be born under the sign of Leo; Madame Masson née Roux Mrs Masson née Roux; il naît environ six enfants par nuit about six children are born every night; il n'est pas encore né celui qui me fera changer d'avis hum there isn't a person living who could make me change my mind;2 ( commencer d'exister) [mouvement, projet] to be born; [entreprise] to come into existence; [amour, amitié] to spring up; [jour] to break; [soupçon, doute] to arise; naître de to arise out of [fusion, désir]; faire naître to give rise to [espoir, jalousie, conflit, sourire]; voir naître to see the birth of [conflit, désenchantement, journal];[nɛtr] verbe intransitif (aux être)je ne suis pas né d'hier ou de la dernière couvée ou de la dernière pluie I wasn't born yesterdayil est né coiffé ou sous une bonne étoile he was born under a lucky star2. [être destiné à]être né pour to be born ou destined ou meant to3. (littéraire)naître à [s'ouvrir à] to awaken to4. [apparaître - sentiment, doute, espoir] to arise, to be born (soutenu) ; [ - problème] to crop ou to come up ; [ - projet] to be conceived ; [ - communauté, entreprise] to spring up ; [ - mouvement] to spring up, to arisefaire naître des soupçons/la sympathie to arouse suspicion/sympathyson intervention a fait naître une polémique au sein du gouvernement his intervention gave rise to ou caused much controversy in the government5. (littéraire) [fleur] to spring ou to come up -
9 surgir de
v.to come from, to be born from.* * *(v.) = arise out of, be rooted in, develop out of, emanate from, grow out of, stem from, spin off, come out of, spring off from, be born ofEx. Code revision is occurring as a series of proposals which arise out of study teams.Ex. There is a definite problem in that the cataloging rules we've had have been firmly rooted in a bygone era.Ex. The session on library and information services to people with disabilities addressed on agenda developed out of the feedback from various regional groups.Ex. Works with unknown or uncertain personal authorship, or works emanating from a body that lacks a name are to be entered under title.Ex. This article describes a new idea for national resource sharing which has grown out of current discussions on sector-orientated library and information services.Ex. Both these general criticisms stemmed from more specific problems with the code.Ex. A computerized search facility has been spun off from the basic work.Ex. Perhaps the most outstanding model to come out of the NIC project was that of Detroit's community information service, which was given the name 'The Information Place', TIP.Ex. Such writing can spring off from things that happen in the local community such as robberies, things that happen in the local community: robberies, street accidents, big sports events, a strike and the like.Ex. According to Tolstoy, one's sadness is born of despair (sadness over the apparent meaninglessness of life or of life as one has lived it).* * *(v.) = arise out of, be rooted in, develop out of, emanate from, grow out of, stem from, spin off, come out of, spring off from, be born ofEx: Code revision is occurring as a series of proposals which arise out of study teams.
Ex: There is a definite problem in that the cataloging rules we've had have been firmly rooted in a bygone era.Ex: The session on library and information services to people with disabilities addressed on agenda developed out of the feedback from various regional groups.Ex: Works with unknown or uncertain personal authorship, or works emanating from a body that lacks a name are to be entered under title.Ex: This article describes a new idea for national resource sharing which has grown out of current discussions on sector-orientated library and information services.Ex: Both these general criticisms stemmed from more specific problems with the code.Ex: A computerized search facility has been spun off from the basic work.Ex: Perhaps the most outstanding model to come out of the NIC project was that of Detroit's community information service, which was given the name 'The Information Place', TIP.Ex: Such writing can spring off from things that happen in the local community such as robberies, things that happen in the local community: robberies, street accidents, big sports events, a strike and the like.Ex: According to Tolstoy, one's sadness is born of despair (sadness over the apparent meaninglessness of life or of life as one has lived it). -
10 возникать из
1. grow out of2. arise from3. arise out of -
11 erwachsen
erwachsen
to result, to grow out, (Kosten) to arise, (Zinsen) to accrue;
• aus dem Arbeitsverhältnis erwachsen to arise out of the employment;
• aus handelspolitischen Erwägungen erwachsen to grow out of commercial considerations. -
12 equipo de trabajo
(n.) = study team, project team, work teamEx. Code revision is occurring as a series of proposals which arise out of study teams.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.Ex. Self-directed work teams were created and continued to function without any assessment until 1999.* * *(n.) = study team, project team, work teamEx: Code revision is occurring as a series of proposals which arise out of study teams.
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.Ex: Self-directed work teams were created and continued to function without any assessment until 1999. -
13 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. -
14 indio americano
m.North American Indian, Ami.* * *(adj.) = American IndianEx. This article examines some of the interests, needs, and concerns of rural American Indians which arise out of their socio-economic and cultural position in the USA.* * *(adj.) = American IndianEx: This article examines some of the interests, needs, and concerns of rural American Indians which arise out of their socio-economic and cultural position in the USA.
-
15 indio nativo americano
(n.) = American Indian, Native AmericanEx. This article examines some of the interests, needs, and concerns of rural American Indians which arise out of their socio-economic and cultural position in the USA.Ex. However, in retrospect, the U.S. government's goal of eradicating Native American cultures failed miserably.* * *(n.) = American Indian, Native AmericanEx: This article examines some of the interests, needs, and concerns of rural American Indians which arise out of their socio-economic and cultural position in the USA.
Ex: However, in retrospect, the U.S. government's goal of eradicating Native American cultures failed miserably. -
16 ἐξίστημι
A causal in [tense] pres., [tense] impf., [tense] fut., [tense] aor. 1:— displace: hence, change, alter utterly,τὰν φύσιν Ti.Locr.100c
, Arist.EN 1119a23, cf. Plot.6.2.7;τὴν πολιτείαν Plu.Cic.10
;ἐ. τῆς ποιότητος τὸν οἶνον Id.2.702a
.2 metaph., ἐξιστάναι τινὰ φρενῶν drive one out of his senses, E.Ba. 850;νοῦ οἶνος ἐξέστησέ με E.Fr. 265
;τοῦ φρονεῖν X.Mem.1.3.12
;ταῦτα κινεῖ, ταῦτα ἐξίστησιν ἀνθρώπους αὑτῶν D. 21.72
; simply ἐ. τινά drive one out of his senses, confound, amaze, Hp.Coac. 429;ἐξιστάντα καὶ φοβοῦντα τοὺς ἀνθρώπους Muson.Fr.8p.35H.
; diverts the attention,Arist.
Rh. 1408b23; excite, ib. 36, Ev.Luc.24.22; τὸν λογισμόν, τὴν διάνοιαν, Plu.Sol.21, Crass.23; alsoἐ. τινὰ τῶν λογισμῶν Id.Fab.5
;εἰς ἀπάθειαν ἐ. τὴν ψυχήν Id.Publ. 6
.3 get rid of, dispose of the claims of a person, Sammelb.5246.14(i B.C.), etc.4 ἐξεστᾰκότα ( ἐξεστηκότα cod.): εἰς δίκην κεκληκότα, Hsch.B intr. in [voice] Pass. and [voice] Med., with [tense] aor. 2, [tense] pf., and [tense] plpf. [voice] Act.:1 of Place, arise out of, become separated,ἐξ.. ἵστατο Νεῖκος Emp.36
, cf. 35.10; stand aside from, ἐκστάντες τῆς ὁδοῦ out of the way, Hdt.3.76;ἐκ τοῦ μέσου X.An.1.5.14
; θάκων καὶ ὁδῶν ἐ. [τινί] stand out of the way forhim, make way for him, Id.Smp.4.31;ἐκστῆναί τινι S.Ph. 1053
, Aj. 672, Ar.Ra. 354, etc.: abs., in same sense, E.IT 1229 (troch.), Ar. Ach. 617, etc.: metaph., is displaced, disordered,E.
Ba. 928;οὐδὲ μένει νοῦς.. ἀλλ' ἐξίσταται S.Ant. 564
.2 c. acc., shrink from, shun,νιν οὐκ ἂν ἐξέστην ὄκνῳ Id.Aj.82
;οὐδέν' ἐξίσταμαι D.18.319
;οὐδένα πώποτε κίνδυνον ἐξέστησαν Id.20.10
.3 go out of joint,ἐ. ἰσχίον Hp.Aph.6.59
, cf. Fract.14,6.II c. gen. rei, retire from, give up possession of,τῆς ἀρχῆς Th.2.63
, 4.28; ἐκστῆναι τῆς οὐσίας, ἁπάντων τῶν ὄντων, become bankrupt, Antipho 2.2.9, D.36.50;τῶν ὑπαρχόντων BGU473.11
(ii A. D.).2 cease from, abandon, τῆς φιλίας, τῶν μαθημάτων, Lys.8.18, X.Cyr.3.3.54; τῶνσπουδασμάτων Pl.Phdr. 249c
, etc.;οἱ τῶν πολιτικῶν ἐξεστηκότες Isoc. 4.171
;τῆς ὑποθέσεως D.10.46
; τῶν πεπραγμένων, i.e. disown them, Id.19.72;ἐ. τινὸς εἴς τι Pl.Lg. 907d
; also ἐ. ἄθλου τινί, στρατηγίας τινί, abandon it in his favour, Nic.Dam.73J., Plu.Nic.7;τῆς Σικελίας τινι Id.Pomp.10
.3 ἐκστῆναι πατρός lose one's father, give him up, Ar.V. 477; καρδίας ἐξίσταμαι τὸ δρᾶν I depart from my heart's purpose, S.Ant. 1105; esp. φρενῶν ἐκστῆναι lose one's senses. E.Or. 1021, etc.;διὰ τὸ γῆρας τοῦ φρονεῖν Isoc.5.18
;ἐμαυτοῦ Aeschin.2.4
, Men.Sam. 276;ψυχὴ ἐξεστηκυῖα τῶν λογισμῶν Plb.32.15.8
: abs., to be out of one's wits, be distraught,ἐ. μελαγχολικῶς Hp.Prorrh.1.18
, cf. Men.Sam.64, etc.;ἐξέστην ἰδών Philippid.27
;ἐ. ὑπὸ γήρως Com.Adesp.860
; ταῖς διανοίαις Vett. Val.70.25; ; of anger,εὐθέως ἐξστησόμενος Phld. Ir.p.78
W.; to be astonished, amazed, Ev.Matt.12.23, Ev.Marc.2.12, etc.; lose consciousness, of Sisera, LXXJd.4.21.4 ἐξίστασθαι τῆς αὑτοῦ ἰδέας depart from, degenerate from one's own nature, Pl.R. 380d;ἐκ τῆς αὑτοῦ φύσεως Arist.HA 488b19
; [δημοκρατία] ἐξεστηκυῖα τῆς βελτίστης τάξεως Id.Pol. 1309b32
; αἱ δημοκρατίαι ἐ. εἰς τὰς ἐναντίας πολιτείας degenerate into.., ib. 1306b18, cf. Rh. 1390b28: abs.,ἐ. μὴ μεταφυτευόμενον Thphr.HP6.7.6
, etc., cf. Plu.2.649e; changing its properties, turning,Hp.
VM24; οἶνος ἐξεστηκώς or ἐξιστάμενος changed, sour wine, D.35.32, Thphr.CP6.7.5; πρόσωπα ἐξεστηκότα disfigured faces, X.Cyr.5.2.34.5 abs., change one's position, one's opinion, : opp. ἐμμένειν τῇ δόξῃ, Arist.EN 1151b4.6 of language, to be removed from common usage, Id.Rh. 1404b13.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἐξίστημι
-
17 provenir
provenir [pʀɔv(ə)niʀ]➭ TABLE 22 indirect transitive verb* * *pʀɔvniʀverbe intransitif1) ( venir) to come (de from)2) [situation, déséquilibre] to stem (de from)* * *pʀɔv(ə)niʀ vi1) (= être originaire de) to come fromCes tomates proviennent d'Espagne. — These tomatoes come from Spain.
2) (= résulter de) to be due to, to be the result ofCela provient d'un manque d'organisation. — This is due to a lack of organization., This is the result of a lack of organization.
* * *provenir verb table: venir vi1 [marchandise, importation, capitaux, profit] to come (de from); les tableaux proviennent de collections privées the paintings come from private collections; la viande provenant de France meat from France;2 [situation, déséquilibre] to stem (de from).[prɔvnir]provenir de verbe plus préposition1. [lieu] to come from (inseparable) -
18 originarse de
v.1 to come from, to arise from, to arise out of, to branch from.María se origina de Polonia Mary comes from Poland.La reacción se origina de la mezcla The reaction comes from the combination2 to come from.María se origina de Polonia Mary comes from Poland. -
19 Beschäftigungsverhältnis
Beschäftigungsverhältnis n PERS employment relationship* * *n < Person> employment relationship* * *Beschäftigungsverhältnis
employ[ment];
• außerhalb des Beschäftigungsverhältnisses outside the scope of employment;
• gemeinsames Beschäftigungsverhältnis common employment;
• nicht pflichtversichertes Beschäftigungsverhältnis contracted-out employment;
• rentenversicherungsfreies Beschäftigungsverhältnis non-pensionable employment;
• sozialversicherungspflichtiges Beschäftigungsverhältnis insurable employment (Br.);
• nicht sozialversicherungspflichtiges Beschäftigungsverhältnis contracted-out employment, excepted employment (Br.);
• ständiges Beschäftigungsverhältnis continuous employment;
• unselbstständiges Beschäftigungsverhältnis wage-earning employment;
• unsicheres Beschäftigungsverhältnis insecure employment relationship;
• versicherungspflichtiges Beschäftigungsverhältnis insurable employment (Br.);
• Beschäftigungsverhältnis der Ehefrau wife’s employment;
• Beschäftigungsverhältnis beendigen to terminate employment;
• Beschäftigungsverhältnis eingehen to take employment;
• aus dem Beschäftigungsverhältnis herrühren (Beschädigung) to arise out and in the course of employment;
• Beschäftigungsverhältnis ruhen lassen to suspend employment;
• in einem ständigen Beschäftigungsverhältnis stehen to be continuously employed;
• erstmals ein Beschäftigungsverhältnis suchen to enter the labo(u)r market.
lösen, Beschäftigungsverhältnis
to terminate employment;
• sich von seinen Beteiligungsgeschäften lösen to unwind one’s joint ventures;
• Fahrkarte lösen to take (buy) a ticket;
• Fahrkarte nach A lösen to book for A;
• Fahrkarte im Voraus (Vorverkauf) lösen to book a ticket in advance;
• Karte im Vorverkauf lösen to book a seat;
• Pfund vom Dollarkurs lösen to unhook the pound from the dollar;
• Positionen lösen to lighten commitments;
• Verbindung lösen to discontinue a connection;
• Vertrag lösen to terminate (rescind) a contract;
• Wirtschaftsverbindungen lösen to sever economic ties.Business german-english dictionary > Beschäftigungsverhältnis
-
20 Стороны будут стараться решать дружески все споры и разногласия, которы
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Стороны будут стараться решать дружески все споры и разногласия, которы
См. также в других словарях:
arise out of — phr verb Arise out of is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑anxiety, ↑expenditure, ↑expense, ↑incident, ↑injury … Collocations dictionary
arise — [[t]ərɪ̱zən[/t]] ♦♦♦ arises, arising, arose, arisen 1) VERB If a situation or problem arises, it begins to exist or people start to become aware of it. ...if a problem arises later in the pregnancy... The birds also attack crops when the… … English dictionary
arise — I (appear) verb become manifest, become noticeable, become visible, come forth, come in sight, come in view, come to light, come to notice, emerge, make an appearance, manifest itself, present itself, reveal itself, show itself associated… … Law dictionary
Arise Virtual Solutions — Inc., based in Miramar, Florida, is a founding provider of the homeshoring concept, a type of outsourcing in which customer service inquiries are routed to individual people working out of their homes.Founded in 1997 as WillowCSN, Arise currently … Wikipedia
ARISE Detroit! — is a coalition of community groups in Detroit, banding together in the hopes of making a bigger impact than they each can accomplish separately. ARISE is an acronym for Activating Resources and Inspiring Service and Empowerment.The coalition is a … Wikipedia
arise — [v1] come into being; proceed appear, begin, come to light, commence, crop up, derive, emanate, emerge, ensue, flow, follow, happen, head, issue, occur, originate, result, rise, set in, spring, start, stem; concept 105 arise [v2] get, stand, or… … New thesaurus
Arise — A*rise ([.a]*r[imac]z ), v. i. [imp. {Arose} ( r[=o]z ); p. pr. & vb. n. {Arising}; p. p. {Arisen} ( r[i^]z n).]. [AS. [=a]r[=i]san; [=a] (equiv. to Goth. us , ur , G. er , orig. meaning out) + r[=i]san to rise; cf. Goth. urreisan to arise. See… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
arise — Note that arise and rise are intransitive verbs (i.e. they cannot take an object and cannot be used in the passive), whereas arouse and rouse are generally transitive and require a grammatical object. The meaning of arise ‘to get out of bed’ has… … Modern English usage
arise — ► VERB (past arose; past part. arisen) 1) originate or become apparent. 2) (arise from/out of) occur as a result of. 3) formal or literary get or stand up. ORIGIN Old English, related to RISE(Cf. ↑ … English terms dictionary
Arise the Republic — ( Debout la République , DLR) is a faction within the Union for a Popular Movement (UMP). The faction claims itself to be a traditional Gaullist and souverainiste group.It is led by Nicolas Dupont Aignan and has two seats in the French National… … Wikipedia
arise — [ə rīz′] vi. arose [ərōz′] arisen [əriz′ən] arising [ME arisen < OE arisan < a , out (see A 2) + risan, to RISE] 1. to get up, as from sleeping or sitting; rise 2. to move upward; ascend … English World dictionary