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1 entrevista detallada
(n.) = in-depth interviewEx. One hundred US art museums were surveyed and in-depth interviews were carried out with 20 museums.* * *(n.) = in-depth interviewEx: One hundred US art museums were surveyed and in-depth interviews were carried out with 20 museums.
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2 entrevista en profundidad
(n.) = in-depth interviewEx. One hundred US art museums were surveyed and in-depth interviews were carried out with 20 museums.* * *(n.) = in-depth interviewEx: One hundred US art museums were surveyed and in-depth interviews were carried out with 20 museums.
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3 entrevista minuciosa
(n.) = in-depth interviewEx. One hundred US art museums were surveyed and in-depth interviews were carried out with 20 museums.* * *(n.) = in-depth interviewEx: One hundred US art museums were surveyed and in-depth interviews were carried out with 20 museums.
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4 museo de arte
art museum* * *(n.) = art museumEx. I'm already planning a quick train ride to Edinburgh to see the art museums there an drop in on the Edinburgh Festival.* * *(n.) = art museumEx: I'm already planning a quick train ride to Edinburgh to see the art museums there an drop in on the Edinburgh Festival.
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5 ir a ver
(v.) = drop in on, check outEx. I'm already planning a quick train ride to Edinburgh to see the art museums there an drop in on the Edinburgh Festival.Ex. Where problems do arise it is sensible to check out the training programme before blaming the assistant for poor performance of duties.* * *(v.) = drop in on, check outEx: I'm already planning a quick train ride to Edinburgh to see the art museums there an drop in on the Edinburgh Festival.
Ex: Where problems do arise it is sensible to check out the training programme before blaming the assistant for poor performance of duties. -
6 trayecto en tren
(n.) = train rideEx. I'm already planning a quick train ride to Edinburgh to see the art museums there an drop in on the Edinburgh Festival.* * *(n.) = train rideEx: I'm already planning a quick train ride to Edinburgh to see the art museums there an drop in on the Edinburgh Festival.
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7 viaje en tren
train journey* * *(n.) = train rideEx. I'm already planning a quick train ride to Edinburgh to see the art museums there an drop in on the Edinburgh Festival.* * *(n.) = train rideEx: I'm already planning a quick train ride to Edinburgh to see the art museums there an drop in on the Edinburgh Festival.
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8 visitar
v.to visit.el médico visitó al paciente the doctor called on o visited the patientRicardo visita a María Richard visits Mary.Ricardo visita la casa de María Richard visits Ann's house.El turista visita la ciudad The tourist visits the city.* * *1 (ir a ver a alguien) to visit, pay a visit to, call on, go and see2 (lugar) to visit, see3 (inspeccionar) to inspect, visit, examine* * *verb* * *1.VT (gen) to visit; (brevemente) to call on5.000 personas han visitado ya la exposición — 5,000 people have already visited the exhibition
2.VI3.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) < persona> to visit, visit with (AmE)b) < lugar> to visit2.visitarse v pron (recípr) to visit each other* * *= pay + a visit, visit, drop in, pay + visit, drop in on, make + the rounds, tour, check out, take + a trip to.Ex. Interestingly enough, Green himself had paid a visit to the 'Manchester Reference Library' where he was shown round by the librarian, Andrea Crestadoro, now best remembered as the pioneer of permuted keyword indexes.Ex. Interested parties can book time to visit our stores, but this is often inconvenient for them and expensive in terms of staff time.Ex. The library needs to be developed as the focal point of the community, a place where the public can drop in for all kinds of activities, not necessarily book-related or 'cultural'.Ex. I'm already planning a quick train ride to Edinburgh to see the art museums there an drop in on the Edinburgh Festival.Ex. You may have seen the lines making the rounds of library e-mail: 'A Zen librarian searched for 'nothing' on the Internet and received 28 million hits'.Ex. A 5-day symposium was held at Champagne Public Library and an exhibition toured the public libraries of the state.Ex. Where problems do arise it is sensible to check out the training programme before blaming the assistant for poor performance of duties.Ex. I have always thought that it would be neat to take a trip to Israel -- as a Christian it would be so historically mind blowing.----* visitar a = drop by.* visitar a Alguien = look + Nombre + up.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) < persona> to visit, visit with (AmE)b) < lugar> to visit2.visitarse v pron (recípr) to visit each other* * *= pay + a visit, visit, drop in, pay + visit, drop in on, make + the rounds, tour, check out, take + a trip to.Ex: Interestingly enough, Green himself had paid a visit to the 'Manchester Reference Library' where he was shown round by the librarian, Andrea Crestadoro, now best remembered as the pioneer of permuted keyword indexes.
Ex: Interested parties can book time to visit our stores, but this is often inconvenient for them and expensive in terms of staff time.Ex: The library needs to be developed as the focal point of the community, a place where the public can drop in for all kinds of activities, not necessarily book-related or 'cultural'.Ex: I'm already planning a quick train ride to Edinburgh to see the art museums there an drop in on the Edinburgh Festival.Ex: You may have seen the lines making the rounds of library e-mail: 'A Zen librarian searched for 'nothing' on the Internet and received 28 million hits'.Ex: A 5-day symposium was held at Champagne Public Library and an exhibition toured the public libraries of the state.Ex: Where problems do arise it is sensible to check out the training programme before blaming the assistant for poor performance of duties.Ex: I have always thought that it would be neat to take a trip to Israel -- as a Christian it would be so historically mind blowing.* visitar a = drop by.* visitar a Alguien = look + Nombre + up.* * *visitar [A1 ]vt1 ‹amigo/familiar/enfermo› to visit, visit with ( AmE)el Rey visitó a los heridos the King visited o went to see the injured2 ‹país/museo/fábrica› to visitvisitaron todos los museos de Boston they visited o went to every museum in Boston3 ( Inf) ‹sitio web› to visit* * *
visitar ( conjugate visitar) verbo transitivo
visitarse verbo pronominal ( recípr) to visit each other
visitar verbo transitivo to visit
' visitar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
franquicia
- ver
- gustar
English:
call
- call back
- call in
- call on
- come over
- come round
- drop in
- drop round
- pop in
- pretence
- pretense
- pretext
- see
- stop by
- tour
- visit
- worth
- go
- sight
- take
* * *♦ vt1. [amigo, enfermo] to visit2. [ciudad, museo] to visit3. [sujeto: médico] to visit, to call on;el médico visitó al paciente the doctor called on o visited the patient* * *v/t1 visit2:el doctor no visita los lunes the doctor isn’t on duty Mondays* * *visitar vt: to visit* * *visitar vb1. (en general) to visit -
9 museo
m.museum.* * *1 museum\museo de arte art museummuseo de cera wax museum* * *noun m.* * *SM [gen] museum; [de pintura, escultura] museum, gallerymuseo de cera — wax museum, waxworks
* * *masculino (de pintura, escultura) museum, gallery; (arqueológico, de historia, etc) museum* * *= museum, gallery.Ex. In her previous vocation she served as Curator of History at the Rochester museum of Arts and Sciences and later as Assistant to the Director of Johns Hopkins University, Institute of History and Medicine.Ex. A gallery is a room or building devoted to the exhibition of works of art.----* Consejo Internacional de Museos (ICOM) = International Council of Museums (ICOM).* Consejo Internacional de Museos y Lugares de Interés (ICOMS) = International Council of Museums and Sites (ICOMOS).* de gestión del museo = curatorial.* director de museo = curator.* exposición de museo = museum exhibit.* informática aplicada a los museos = museum computing field.* museo arqueológico = archaeological museum.* museo de arte = art museum.* museo de ciencias naturales = natural science museum.* museo de historia natural = natural history museum.* museo de las ciencias = science museum.* museo naval = naval museum.* museo tradicional = folk museum, folklore museum.* museo viviente = living museum.* sobre museos = museum-based.* * *masculino (de pintura, escultura) museum, gallery; (arqueológico, de historia, etc) museum* * *= museum, gallery.Ex: In her previous vocation she served as Curator of History at the Rochester museum of Arts and Sciences and later as Assistant to the Director of Johns Hopkins University, Institute of History and Medicine.
Ex: A gallery is a room or building devoted to the exhibition of works of art.* Consejo Internacional de Museos (ICOM) = International Council of Museums (ICOM).* Consejo Internacional de Museos y Lugares de Interés (ICOMS) = International Council of Museums and Sites (ICOMOS).* de gestión del museo = curatorial.* director de museo = curator.* exposición de museo = museum exhibit.* informática aplicada a los museos = museum computing field.* museo arqueológico = archaeological museum.* museo de arte = art museum.* museo de ciencias naturales = natural science museum.* museo de historia natural = natural history museum.* museo de las ciencias = science museum.* museo naval = naval museum.* museo tradicional = folk museum, folklore museum.* museo viviente = living museum.* sobre museos = museum-based.* * *(de pintura, escultura) museum, gallery; (de ciencias naturales, historia, etc) museumsu casa parece un museo, con cuadros por todos lados her house looks like an art gallery, there are pictures everywhereCompuestos:museum of anthropologymuseum of contemporary artmuseum of modern artwax museum, waxworks (pl)natural science museum* * *
museo sustantivo masculino
museum;
museo de ciencias naturales natural science museum
museo sustantivo masculino museum
(de pintura, escultura) gallery
' museo' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
calcular
- como
- conservador
- conservadora
- donar
- exhibir
- guardarropa
- obnubilar
- patearse
- pública
- público
- recorrer
- abierto
- abrir
- cafetería
- celador
- cerrado
- exponer
- guarda
- locación
- meter
- pasar
- pieza
- propiedad
- riqueza
- robo
English:
admission
- armory
- armoury
- arrest
- attendant
- auspice
- become
- curator
- docent
- donation
- entrance fee
- exhibit
- gallery
- keeper
- museum
- picture gallery
- visitor
- visitor's book
- art
- repair
- round
- waxworks
* * *museo nm[de ciencias, historia] museum; [de arte] (art) gallery museo arqueológico museum of archaeology;museo de arte moderno museum o gallery of modern art;museo de cera waxworks, wax museum;museo de la ciencia science museum;museo de ciencias naturales natural science museum;el Museo del Prado the Prado, = Spain's most important art gallery, in Madrid* * ** * *museo nm: museum* * *museo n museum -
10 cultura viva
(n.) = living cultureEx. The exhibition reminds us of the need for museums to embrace art as living culture rather than to isolate it as merely a relic of the past.* * *(n.) = living cultureEx: The exhibition reminds us of the need for museums to embrace art as living culture rather than to isolate it as merely a relic of the past.
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11 despiadado
adj.merciless, cruel, inhuman, cold-hearted.* * *► adjetivo1 ruthless, merciless* * *(f. - despiadada)adj.* * *ADJ [persona] heartless; [ataque] merciless* * ** * *= hard-hearted, relentless, savage, ruthless, remorseless, implacable, inexorable, cold-blooded, ferocius, unsparing, merciless, soulless, ferocious, heartless, cutthroat, unforgiving.Ex. For her refusal, Isabella has received a great deal of blame from subsequent critics, who call her a hard-hearted prude.Ex. They need to be relentless in their fight for adequate funding so that the library service and the profession are not jeopardised.Ex. The most vulnerable nations are Burma, Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam, which have all experienced savage war and civil unrest in recent years.Ex. The ruling also coincided with a flood of mergers and acquisitions that transformed gentlemen publishers into ruthless entrepreneurs.Ex. The population explosion and the remorseless growth of knowledge are discussed.Ex. The implacable reduction in the dissemination of public documents constitutes a rebarbative policy that threatens the quality of reference services in libraries.Ex. The inexorable tide of automation seems to be threatening the existence of old-fashioned, handwritten copymarking.Ex. He was a cold-blooded killer, cardsharp, gambler and a consumptive who also ran several confidence scams.Ex. Fuller's novel make for a form of intellectual clarity, even if that clarity, paradoxically, is expressed in a ferocious hell-bent manner.Ex. The book is so ferociously unsparing in detailing the systematic torment as well as wanton cruelty that the reconstruction of the past is often unbearable.Ex. The author discusses art critic Harry Quilter, usually remembered today as 'Arry,' the butt of merciless lampooning by J.M. Whistler.Ex. Our deliberate and passionate ambition is to avoid the traps of soulless, dead villages turned into museums, slowly sinking into oblivion.Ex. One by one, he wiped the floor with opponents who had spoken in the debate -- with a ferocious blend of rant, rhetoric and rumbustious counterattack.Ex. However, I knew there was a problem when I actually cared more about the relationship between the secondary characters of Josh McCool, heartless flunky of Warren's, and Mia.Ex. As the saying goes, 'Be as innocent as a lamb, and as wily as a fox' -- shrewdness is a valuable attribute in this cutthroat world.Ex. Unlike other Swedish illustrators, he used the time consuming and unforgiving technique of wood engraving for his illustrations.----* actuar de un modo despiadado = play + hardball.* ser despiadado = play + hardball.* * ** * *= hard-hearted, relentless, savage, ruthless, remorseless, implacable, inexorable, cold-blooded, ferocius, unsparing, merciless, soulless, ferocious, heartless, cutthroat, unforgiving.Ex: For her refusal, Isabella has received a great deal of blame from subsequent critics, who call her a hard-hearted prude.
Ex: They need to be relentless in their fight for adequate funding so that the library service and the profession are not jeopardised.Ex: The most vulnerable nations are Burma, Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam, which have all experienced savage war and civil unrest in recent years.Ex: The ruling also coincided with a flood of mergers and acquisitions that transformed gentlemen publishers into ruthless entrepreneurs.Ex: The population explosion and the remorseless growth of knowledge are discussed.Ex: The implacable reduction in the dissemination of public documents constitutes a rebarbative policy that threatens the quality of reference services in libraries.Ex: The inexorable tide of automation seems to be threatening the existence of old-fashioned, handwritten copymarking.Ex: He was a cold-blooded killer, cardsharp, gambler and a consumptive who also ran several confidence scams.Ex: Fuller's novel make for a form of intellectual clarity, even if that clarity, paradoxically, is expressed in a ferocious hell-bent manner.Ex: The book is so ferociously unsparing in detailing the systematic torment as well as wanton cruelty that the reconstruction of the past is often unbearable.Ex: The author discusses art critic Harry Quilter, usually remembered today as 'Arry,' the butt of merciless lampooning by J.M. Whistler.Ex: Our deliberate and passionate ambition is to avoid the traps of soulless, dead villages turned into museums, slowly sinking into oblivion.Ex: One by one, he wiped the floor with opponents who had spoken in the debate -- with a ferocious blend of rant, rhetoric and rumbustious counterattack.Ex: However, I knew there was a problem when I actually cared more about the relationship between the secondary characters of Josh McCool, heartless flunky of Warren's, and Mia.Ex: As the saying goes, 'Be as innocent as a lamb, and as wily as a fox' -- shrewdness is a valuable attribute in this cutthroat world.Ex: Unlike other Swedish illustrators, he used the time consuming and unforgiving technique of wood engraving for his illustrations.* actuar de un modo despiadado = play + hardball.* ser despiadado = play + hardball.* * *despiadado -da‹persona› ruthless, heartless; ‹ataque/crítica› savage, merciless* * *
despiadado
‹ataque/crítica› savage, merciless
despiadado,-a adjetivo merciless, ruthless
' despiadado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
acerba
- acerbo
- bárbara
- bárbaro
- despiadada
English:
cold-blooded
- cold-hearted
- cutthroat
- merciless
- pitiless
- remorseless
- ruthless
- unmerciful
- vicious
- cold
* * *despiadado, -a adj[persona] merciless; [trato] inhuman, pitiless; [ataque] savage, merciless* * *adj ruthless* * *despiadado, -da adjcruel: cruel, merciless, pitiless♦ despiadadamente adv* * *despiadado adj hard-hearted / heartless / ruthless -
12 recibidor
adj.receiving.m.1 entrance hall.2 reception room, entrance hall, waiting room, lobby.3 receiver, receiving teller.4 receiving station.* * *1 (de casa) entrance hall* * *ISM [de casa] hallIIrecibidor, -aSM / F (=persona) recipient, receiver* * *masculino entrance hall* * *= entrance hall, hall, reception room, foyer, entrance foyer.Ex. Many infant and junior schools have books in the entrance hall and in the corridors as well as in the classrooms.Ex. The open-plan flexible library can be enonomical since overseeing is facilitated by the openness rather than be dividing the building into rooms or halls, thereby requiring less staff.Ex. This article describes the damage caused to the library by a fire in a reception room, including furniture and fittings and smoke damage to the 19th century collection of monographs.Ex. The new library covers 4,700 square metres and shares a foyer with the art gallery.Ex. Her photographs of of interiors include libraries, natural science museums, spas, entrance foyers, and zoos.* * *masculino entrance hall* * *= entrance hall, hall, reception room, foyer, entrance foyer.Ex: Many infant and junior schools have books in the entrance hall and in the corridors as well as in the classrooms.
Ex: The open-plan flexible library can be enonomical since overseeing is facilitated by the openness rather than be dividing the building into rooms or halls, thereby requiring less staff.Ex: This article describes the damage caused to the library by a fire in a reception room, including furniture and fittings and smoke damage to the 19th century collection of monographs.Ex: The new library covers 4,700 square metres and shares a foyer with the art gallery.Ex: Her photographs of of interiors include libraries, natural science museums, spas, entrance foyers, and zoos.* * *entrance hall* * *
recibidor sustantivo masculino
entrance hall
recibidor m (vestíbulo de una casa) (entrance) hall
' recibidor' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
bisel
English:
double
- foyer
- hallway
- sculpture
* * *recibidor nmentrance hall* * *m entrance hall* * *recibidor nm: vestibule, entrance hall* * *recibidor n hall -
13 reliquia del pasado
Ex. The exhibition reminds us of the need for museums to embrace art as living culture rather than to isolate it as merely a relic of the past.* * *Ex: The exhibition reminds us of the need for museums to embrace art as living culture rather than to isolate it as merely a relic of the past.
См. также в других словарях:
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art collections — ➡ art galleries and art museums * * * … Universalium
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Art museum — The Louvre in Paris, France, is one of the world s largest museums and it is the most visited art museum in the world. An art gallery or art museum is a building or space for the exhibition of art, usually visual art. Museums can be public or… … Wikipedia