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101 caballerosamente
adv.1 generously, nobly, in a gentlemanlike manner.2 knightly.3 gentlemanly, knightly, chivalrously.* * *► adverbio1 chivalrously* * *ADV (=con cortesía) like a gentleman, in a gentlemanly fashion; (=con nobleza) chivalrously* * *= cavalierly.Ex. The author suggests a moratorium on publishing the UN's activities for so that there would then be no need for indexes that, failing to accomplish the impossible, are cavalierly declared inadequate.* * *= cavalierly.Ex: The author suggests a moratorium on publishing the UN's activities for so that there would then be no need for indexes that, failing to accomplish the impossible, are cavalierly declared inadequate.
* * *chivalrously, gallantlysiempre se condujo caballerosamente he always behaved like a gentleman* * *caballerosamente advlike a gentleman, chivalrously -
102 disidente político
(n.) = political dissidentEx. There is no proper mechanism for complaining about abuses, and there may be inadequate protection for political dissidents.* * *(n.) = political dissidentEx: There is no proper mechanism for complaining about abuses, and there may be inadequate protection for political dissidents.
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103 evidente
adj.1 evident, obvious.2 sincere, plain, obvious, frank.* * *► adjetivo1 evident, obvious* * *adj.evident, obvious* * *ADJ obvious, clear, evident¡evidente! — naturally!, obviously!
* * *adjetivo obvious, clear* * *= apparent, evident, notable, noticeable, plain [plainer -comp., plainest -sup.], perceptible, axiomatic, glaring, flagrant, visible, manifest, patent.Ex. Menu-based information retrieval system have found favour because of their apparent simplicity.Ex. Complete agreement had not been possible, but the numbers of rules where divergent practices were evident is limited.Ex. There are notable differences in practice between the United States and the United Kingdom.Ex. The most noticeable effect the advent of Islam had on Arab names was not so much on structure as on choice.Ex. To reiterate, there are two main categories of relationship: the syntactic relationships referred to in the last paragraph and plain, for example, in a topic such as 'sugar and health'.Ex. The library was found to have inadequate lighting for the partially sighted and a lack of a fire warning perceptible to the deaf.Ex. It is axiomatic that backup copies of software are made and stored safely, so that, should anything happen to the cassette or disk, the program is not lost.Ex. The lack of storage and display space, a glaring deficiency in seating capacity and physical limitations of the building all meant that the library was not adequately serving its patrons.Ex. In the past teachers and lecturers have been the most flagrant violators of the author's copyright.Ex. Since a software package is to be sold it must be visible on the marketplace.Ex. A close knowledge of the institution is also needed to distinguish between professed objectives, the official and manifest ones which appear in organizational preambles, and the practiced ones which are often latent in the operating program.Ex. It was patent that they could not compete on equal terms with the economic and social forces of a complex civilization.----* es evidente = clearly.* evidente en = in evidence in.* evidente por sí mismo = self-evident.* hacerse evidente = become + apparent, come through.* poco evidente = unnoted.* prueba evidente = living proof.* * *adjetivo obvious, clear* * *= apparent, evident, notable, noticeable, plain [plainer -comp., plainest -sup.], perceptible, axiomatic, glaring, flagrant, visible, manifest, patent.Ex: Menu-based information retrieval system have found favour because of their apparent simplicity.
Ex: Complete agreement had not been possible, but the numbers of rules where divergent practices were evident is limited.Ex: There are notable differences in practice between the United States and the United Kingdom.Ex: The most noticeable effect the advent of Islam had on Arab names was not so much on structure as on choice.Ex: To reiterate, there are two main categories of relationship: the syntactic relationships referred to in the last paragraph and plain, for example, in a topic such as 'sugar and health'.Ex: The library was found to have inadequate lighting for the partially sighted and a lack of a fire warning perceptible to the deaf.Ex: It is axiomatic that backup copies of software are made and stored safely, so that, should anything happen to the cassette or disk, the program is not lost.Ex: The lack of storage and display space, a glaring deficiency in seating capacity and physical limitations of the building all meant that the library was not adequately serving its patrons.Ex: In the past teachers and lecturers have been the most flagrant violators of the author's copyright.Ex: Since a software package is to be sold it must be visible on the marketplace.Ex: A close knowledge of the institution is also needed to distinguish between professed objectives, the official and manifest ones which appear in organizational preambles, and the practiced ones which are often latent in the operating program.Ex: It was patent that they could not compete on equal terms with the economic and social forces of a complex civilization.* es evidente = clearly.* evidente en = in evidence in.* evidente por sí mismo = self-evident.* hacerse evidente = become + apparent, come through.* poco evidente = unnoted.* prueba evidente = living proof.* * *obvious, clearresulta evidente que no tienen intención de aceptar la propuesta it is obvious o clear o ( frml) evident that they do not intend to accept the proposal, they clearly o obviously do not intend to accept the proposalsi es muy caro no lo compres — ¡evidente! if it's very expensive, don't buy it — no, of course I won't o no, obviously!* * *
evidente adjetivo
obvious, clear
evidente adjetivo obvious
' evidente' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
cantar
- clara
- claro
- demostrar
- meridiana
- meridiano
- notoria
- notorio
- patente
- sensible
- tres
- visible
- manifestar
- palpable
- visto
English:
apparent
- blatant
- conspicuous
- consternation
- crime
- definite
- dissatisfaction
- evident
- glaring
- obvious
- patent
- perfectly
- plain
- self-evident
- clear
- obviously
- self
- visible
* * *evidente adjevident, obvious;es evidente que no les caemos bien it's obvious they don't like us;su enfado era evidente she was clearly o visibly angry;¿te gustaría ganar más? – ¡evidente! would you like to earn more? – of course!* * *adj evident, clear* * *evidente adj: evident, obvious, clear♦ evidentemente adv* * *evidente adj obvious -
104 lograr lo imposible
(v.) = achieve + the impossible, accomplish + the impossibleEx. While SDI systems may not be able to achieve the impossible, they can function very effectively within a particular organization.Ex. The author suggests a moratorium on publishing the UN's activities for so that there would then be no need for indexes that, failing to accomplish the impossible, are cavalierly declared inadequate.* * *(v.) = achieve + the impossible, accomplish + the impossibleEx: While SDI systems may not be able to achieve the impossible, they can function very effectively within a particular organization.
Ex: The author suggests a moratorium on publishing the UN's activities for so that there would then be no need for indexes that, failing to accomplish the impossible, are cavalierly declared inadequate. -
105 remontarse a
v.to go back to, to date back to, to date back from.* * ** * *(v.) = date back to + Expresión Temporal, trace back to, be traced to, go back to/for + Tiempo, date from + Expresión Temporal, go + (as/so) far back as + Expresión Temporal, trace + Nombre + as far back as + Expresión Temporal, date + as far back as + Expresión Temporal, extend + as far back as + Expresión Temporal, be traceable to, hark(en) back to, stretch back toEx. The roots of these problems data back to the 60s' with a failure to establish an efficient centralised information system.Ex. The problem of inadequate citation of conference papers can usually be traced back to authors of papers or books who cite conference papers they have heard or read by somewhat laconic statements of the name of the author/presenter of the paper.Ex. The organizational structure of Spain's libraries can be traced to the 19th century and shows a strong French influence.Ex. The sound rule that the librarian must not dispense medical or legal advice goes back at least a hundred years, having been clearly prescribed in Samuel S Green's pioneer paper of 1876.Ex. Lithography as a printing process dates from the 19th century.Ex. This work is somewhat deceptively titled in that the only theses going as far back as 1716 are those few listed for Glasgow University.Ex. Modern abstracting can be traced at least as far back as the beginning of printing, and with a liberal definition of the term, much farther than that.Ex. Citation indexing originated with 'tables of cases cited', which date at least as far back as 1743.Ex. Interpretations of early Egyptian papyri, extending as far back as 1300 B.C., indicate that the bureaucratic states of antiquity recognized the importance of organization and administration.Ex. The tradition associating this rare medieval clerical undergarment with the English martyr is traceable to the late 14th or early 15th c.Ex. The third point is one that harks back to the chapter on peer influences.Ex. The story of disjointness stretches back to the dawn of communication complexity.* * *(v.) = date back to + Expresión Temporal, trace back to, be traced to, go back to/for + Tiempo, date from + Expresión Temporal, go + (as/so) far back as + Expresión Temporal, trace + Nombre + as far back as + Expresión Temporal, date + as far back as + Expresión Temporal, extend + as far back as + Expresión Temporal, be traceable to, hark(en) back to, stretch back toEx: The roots of these problems data back to the 60s' with a failure to establish an efficient centralised information system.
Ex: The problem of inadequate citation of conference papers can usually be traced back to authors of papers or books who cite conference papers they have heard or read by somewhat laconic statements of the name of the author/presenter of the paper.Ex: The organizational structure of Spain's libraries can be traced to the 19th century and shows a strong French influence.Ex: The sound rule that the librarian must not dispense medical or legal advice goes back at least a hundred years, having been clearly prescribed in Samuel S Green's pioneer paper of 1876.Ex: Lithography as a printing process dates from the 19th century.Ex: This work is somewhat deceptively titled in that the only theses going as far back as 1716 are those few listed for Glasgow University.Ex: Modern abstracting can be traced at least as far back as the beginning of printing, and with a liberal definition of the term, much farther than that.Ex: Citation indexing originated with 'tables of cases cited', which date at least as far back as 1743.Ex: Interpretations of early Egyptian papyri, extending as far back as 1300 B.C., indicate that the bureaucratic states of antiquity recognized the importance of organization and administration.Ex: The tradition associating this rare medieval clerical undergarment with the English martyr is traceable to the late 14th or early 15th c.Ex: The third point is one that harks back to the chapter on peer influences.Ex: The story of disjointness stretches back to the dawn of communication complexity. -
106 suffisant
suffisant, e [syfizɑ̃, ɑ̃t]adjectivea. ( = adéquat) sufficient ; [résultats scolaires] satisfactory• je n'ai pas la place/la somme suffisante I haven't got enough room/money• 500 €, c'est amplement or plus que suffisant 500 euros is more than enoughb. ( = prétentieux) [personne, ton] smug* * *suffisante syfizɑ̃, ɑ̃t adjectif1) ( adéquat) sufficientdeux heures, c'est suffisant pour faire le trajet — two hours is enough for the journey
2) ( vaniteux) [personne, ton, air] self-important* * *syfizɑ̃, ɑ̃t adj suffisant, -e1) (temps, ressources) enough, sufficient2) (résultats) satisfactory, (raison) sufficientÇa n'est pas une raison suffisante. — That's not sufficient reason.
3) (personne) smug, self-importantIl est un peu trop suffisant. — He's rather smug.
* * *suffisant, suffisante adj1 ( adéquat) sufficient; 100 euros, c'est suffisant 100 euros is enough ou sufficient; deux heures, c'est suffisant pour faire le trajet two hours is enough for the journey; l'éclairage n'est pas suffisant there is inadequate lighting; il y a à manger en quantité suffisante there's quite enough to eat; il y met de la bonne volonté mais ce n'est pas suffisant he's willing but that's not enough;2 ( vaniteux) [personne, ton, air] self-important; faire le suffisant to give oneself airs, to put on airs.( féminin suffisante) [syfizɑ̃, ɑ̃t] adjectif1. [en quantité] sufficientsa retraite est suffisante pour deux his pension's sufficient ou enough for twotrois bouteilles pour cinq, c'est bien ou amplement suffisant three bottles for five, that's plenty ou that's quite enoughvotre accord n'est pas suffisant, nous avons aussi besoin de celui de son père your consent isn't enough, we also need his father'sdes excuses ne seront pas suffisantes, il veut un démenti apologies won't be sufficient ou won't do, he wants a denialc'est une raison suffisante pour qu'il accepte it's a good enough reason ou it's reason enough to make him accept -
107 страдать
несов. - страда́ть, сов. - пострада́ть1) тк. несов. (от; тв.; мучиться; болеть) suffer (from)страда́ть от разлу́ки с кем-л — pine / long for smb, miss smb
страда́ть невралги́ей — suffer from neuralgia
2) (от; терпеть ущерб, урон) suffer (from)они́ пострада́ли от наводне́ния — they were victims of the flood
дом пострада́л от пожа́ра — the house was damaged by fire
райо́н, пострада́вший от за́сухи — drought-stricken area
3) (за вн.; претерпевать гонения) suffer (for)страда́ть за пра́вду — suffer for the truth
пострада́ть за де́ло / иде́и — suffer for a cause
у него́ страда́ет орфогра́фия — his spelling is inadequate [poor; not up to the mark]
де́ло страда́ет от заорганизо́ванности — the activity suffers from overogranization
ва́ше сочине́ние страда́ет многосло́вностью — your writing suffers from verbiage
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108 Muspratt, James
SUBJECT AREA: Chemical technology[br]b. 12 August 1793 Dublin, Irelandd. 4 May 1886 Seaforth Hall, near Liverpool, England[br]British industrial chemist.[br]Educated in Dublin, Muspratt was apprenticed at the age of 14 to a wholesale chemist and druggist, with whom he remained for three or four years. Muspratt then went in search of the Napoleonic War and found it first in Spain and finally as Second Officer on a naval vessel. Finding the life unpleasantly harsh, he left his ship off Swansea and returned to Dublin around 1814. Soon afterwards, he received an inheritance, much reduced and delayed by litigation in Chancery. He began manufacturing chemicals in a small way and from 1818 set up as a manufacturer of prussiate of potash. In 1823, Muspratt took advantage of the removal of the salt tax to establish the first plant in England for the largescale manufacture of soda by the Leblanc process. His first soda works was on the outskirts of Liverpool, but when this proved inadequate, he established a larger factory at St Helens, Lancashire, where the raw materials lay close at hand. This district has remained an important centre of the British chemical industry ever since. Although the plant was successful commercially, there were environmental problems. The equipment for condensing the hydrochloric acid gas produced were inadequate and this caused extensive damage to local vegetation, so that Muspratt had to contend with legal action lasting from 1832 to 1850. Eventually Muspratt moved his alkali manufacture to Widnes, which also became a great centre for the chemical industry.[br]Further ReadingObituary, 1886, Journal of the Society of Chemical Industry 5:314. J.F.Allen, 1890, Memoir of James Muspratt, London.LRD -
109 недостаточно
1. прил.;
кратк. форма от недостаточный
2. предик.;
безл. it is insufficient, it is not enough
3. нареч. insufficientlyнедостаточн|о -
1. нареч. insufficiently;
(слабо, не очень хорошо) not... well enough;
not fully, inadequately;
2. в знач. сказ. безл. there is not enough;
~ топлива there is not enough fuel;
~ость ж. insufficiency;
сердечная ~ость cardiac insufficiency;
~ый insufficient;
(слабый, малый) inadequate;
~ые запасы чего-л. inadequate supplies of smth. ;
~ые средства фин. insufficient funds;
~ый опыт insufficient experience, lack of experience;
~ые сведения inadequate information sg. ;
~ая причина для огорчения insufficient cause for dissapointment;
~ый глагол грам. defective verb.Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > недостаточно
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110 breve
adj.1 brief (corto).seré breve I shall be briefen breves instantes in a few moments2 short.f.breve (Music).* * *► adjetivo1 short, brief1 MÚSICA breve1 (en periódico) news-in-brief section sing\en breve soon, shortlyen breves momentos soon, shortly* * *adj.brief, short* * *1. ADJ1) (=corto) short, briefuna breve rueda de prensa — a short o brief press conference
continuaremos tras un breve descanso — we shall continue after a short break o a brief pause
enviaron una nota muy breve, solo dos líneas — they sent a very short note, just two lines long
en breves palabras, se negó a dimitir — in short, he refused to resign
en breve — (=pronto) shortly, before long
2) [vocal] short2. SM1) (Prensa) short news item"breves" — "news in brief"
2) (Rel) papal brief3.SF (Mús) breve* * *1)tras un breve almuerzo continuó la reunión — after a short break for lunch, the meeting continued
sea usted breve, por favor — please be brief
en breve — shortly, soon
b) <sonido/vocal> short2) (liter) < cintura> dainty, slender* * *= brief [briefer -comp., briefest -sup.], short [shorter -comp., shortest -sup.], succinct, laconic.Ex. Longer titles since each title can occupy only one line will be truncated and only brief source references are included.Ex. The 'in' analytic entry consist of two parts: the description of the part, and a short citation of the whole item in which the part is to be found.Ex. Notes should be made in the most succinct form possible without loss of clarity.Ex. The problem of inadequate citation of conference papers can usually be traced back to authors of papers or books who cite conference papers they have heard or read by somewhat laconic statements of the name of the author/presenter of the paper.----* breve período de tiempo = while.* breve reseña = thumbnail sketch.* de respuesta breve = short-answer.* en breve = shortly, the long and (the) short of, soon [sooner -comp., soonest -sup.].* pantalla de información breve = short information display, short information screen.* préstamo breve = short-term loan.* resumen breve = short abstract.* * *1)tras un breve almuerzo continuó la reunión — after a short break for lunch, the meeting continued
sea usted breve, por favor — please be brief
en breve — shortly, soon
b) <sonido/vocal> short2) (liter) < cintura> dainty, slender* * *= brief [briefer -comp., briefest -sup.], short [shorter -comp., shortest -sup.], succinct, laconic.Ex: Longer titles since each title can occupy only one line will be truncated and only brief source references are included.
Ex: The 'in' analytic entry consist of two parts: the description of the part, and a short citation of the whole item in which the part is to be found.Ex: Notes should be made in the most succinct form possible without loss of clarity.Ex: The problem of inadequate citation of conference papers can usually be traced back to authors of papers or books who cite conference papers they have heard or read by somewhat laconic statements of the name of the author/presenter of the paper.* breve período de tiempo = while.* breve reseña = thumbnail sketch.* de respuesta breve = short-answer.* en breve = shortly, the long and (the) short of, soon [sooner -comp., soonest -sup.].* pantalla de información breve = short information display, short information screen.* préstamo breve = short-term loan.* resumen breve = short abstract.* * *Atras un breve almuerzo continuó la reunión after a short break for lunch o ( frml) after a brief lunch, the meeting continueddentro de breves momentos in a few momentssea usted breve, por favor please be briefen breve shortly, soonen breve recibirán noticias nuestras you will be hearing from us shortly o soon2 ‹sonido/vocal› shortB ( liter); ‹cintura› dainty, slender1 ( Mús) breve* * *
breve adjetivo (frml) brief, short;
‹viaje/distancia› short;
sea usted breve, por favor please be brief;
en breve shortly, soon
breve adjetivo
1 brief
2 (noticias) breves, news in brief
♦ Locuciones: en breve, shortly, soon
' breve' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
alquilar
- exposición
- nota
- paréntesis
- receso
- reemprender
- reseña
- saluda
- semblanza
- soplo
- sumaria
- sumario
- telegráfica
- telegráfico
- trecho
- letra
- momentáneo
- momento
- rato
English:
brief
- fast
- intro
- lift off
- one-liner
- quick
- short
- time
- point
- ripple
- scanty
- tract
* * *♦ adj1. [corto] brief;en breve [pronto] shortly;[en pocas palabras] in short;seré breve I shall be brief;en breves instantes in a few moments;anuncios breves classified ads o adverts2. [sílaba, vocal] short3. [pie] dainty;[cintura] slender♦ nfMús breve♦ breves nmpl[anuncios] classified ads o adverts; [noticias] news in brief* * *adj brief, short;en breve shortly;ser breve be brief* * *breve adj1) corto: brief, short2)en breve : shortly, in short♦ brevemente adv* * *breve adj brief -
111 saneamiento
m.1 disinfection (limpieza).artículos de saneamiento bathroom furniture2 write-off, write-down (finance) (de bienes).3 sanitation.4 sanitization.5 disencumbrance, write-down.6 assanation.7 drainage.* * *1 (de terreno) drainage, draining2 (de edificio) cleaning, disinfection3 (de moneda) stabilization* * *SM1) (=limpieza) [de río, ciudad, alcantarillado] clean-up; [de terreno] drainage2) [de empresa] restructuringinvirtieron 100 millones en el saneamiento económico de la compañía — they invested 100 million in restructuring the company's finances
3) (Econ) [de deuda] write-off; [de activo] write-down4) (Jur) compensation, indemnification* * *1)a) ( de empresa) reorganization, rationalizationb) (de zona, río) cleaning upc) (Der) compensation2) (Esp) ( fontanería) plumbing* * *= sanitation, sewage facility.Nota: Normalmente usado en plural.Ex. The council as one of their austerity measures had issued a moratorium on all hiring except for 'absolutely essential services' which they described as police, fire, and sanitation.Ex. There are many urgent problems confronting the council of Junctionville: inadequate water and sewage facilities, limited public transportation, polluted air, excessive power costs, crime.----* sistema de saneamiento = sewerage system, sewerage.* * *1)a) ( de empresa) reorganization, rationalizationb) (de zona, río) cleaning upc) (Der) compensation2) (Esp) ( fontanería) plumbing* * *= sanitation, sewage facility.Nota: Normalmente usado en plural.Ex: The council as one of their austerity measures had issued a moratorium on all hiring except for 'absolutely essential services' which they described as police, fire, and sanitation.
Ex: There are many urgent problems confronting the council of Junctionville: inadequate water and sewage facilities, limited public transportation, polluted air, excessive power costs, crime.* sistema de saneamiento = sewerage system, sewerage.* * *A1 (de una empresa) reorganization, rationalization2 (de una zona, un río) cleaning up3 ( Der) compensationB ( Esp) (fontanería) plumbingartículos de saneamiento bathroom o sanitary fittings* * *
saneamiento sustantivo masculino
1 (limpieza) cleaning-up
2 fig (de una empresa, de la economía) reorganization
3 (instalación sanitaria) plumbing
(alcantarillado) drainage
* * *saneamiento nm1. [limpieza] [de tierras] drainage;[de edificio] disinfection2. [fontanería] plumbing;artículos de saneamiento bathroom furniture3. [de río] clean-up4. [de activos] [amortización total] write-off;[reconocimiento de minusvalías] write-down5. [de moneda] stabilization;[de economía] refloating; [de empresa] turnaround; [de cuenta] regularization;el saneamiento de las cuentas públicas the reform o restructuring of public finances* * *m2 COM restructuring, rationalization* * *saneamiento nm1) : cleaning up, sanitation2) : reorganizing, streamlining -
112 неуважение
ср.;
(к кому-л./чему-л.) disrespect( for), lack of respectнеуваж|ение - с. disrespect, lack of respect;
~ к закону disrespect for law;
~ительный
1. (недостаточно основательный) inadequate;
~ительная причина insufficient/inadequate excuse;
2. разг. (непочтительный) disrespectful;
~ительный тон disrespectful tone.Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > неуважение
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113 adequate
ˈædɪkwɪt прил.
1) адекватный, соответствующий adequate definition ≈ точное определение Acquisitions of man are not always adequate to the expectations. ≈ Приобретения человека не всегда соответствуют тому, чего он ожидает. A definition must be universal, or as some call it, adequate;
that is, it must agree to all the particular species or individuals that are included under the same idea. ≈ Определение должно быть универсальным, или, как некоторые говорят, адекватным;
т.е. оно должно быть применимым ко всем элементам, входящим в один и тот же класс. Syn: corresponding, respective
2) достаточный The food was adequate for all of us. ≈ Еды хватило на всех. It would be adequate to list just the basic objections. ≈ Будет достаточно упомянуть лишь основные возражения. Syn: ample, enough, satisfactory, sufficient Ant: deficient, inadequate, insufficient
3) компетентный;
отвечающий требованиям, пригодный (к какой-либо деятельности) She was adequate to the task. ≈ Она вполне подходила для этого. Ant: unqualified, unsuitable, inadequateдостаточный, отвечающий требованиям;
- the salary is not * to support a family этого жалованья не хватает на содержание семьи;
- * strength( техническое) необходимая прочность;
- * grounds (юридическое) достаточное основание соответствующий, адекватный;
- * compensation надлежащая компенсация;
- * definition соответствующее определение;
- is language * to describe it? можно ли это описать словами? компетентный;
- he is an * man for the job он подходящий человек для этой работы удовлетворительный;
приличный, недурной;
- the performance was * though hardly exciting исполнение было вполне приличным, но ничего особенного( редкое) быть или делать достаточнымadequate адекватный ~ достаточный ~ компетентный;
отвечающий требованиям ~ компетентный ~ отвечающий требованиям ~ соответствующий, адекватный;
adequate definition точное определение ~ соответствующий ~ удовлетворительный~ соответствующий, адекватный;
adequate definition точное определениеbe ~ соответствоватьБольшой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > adequate
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114 alarma contra incendios
(n.) = fire warning, fire alarmEx. The library was found to have inadequate lighting for the partially sighted and a lack of a fire warning perceptible to the deaf.Ex. Of greatest import are the siting of libraries, the building shell, fire alarms, intruder alarms, internal layout of the building, and methods combating damage and theft.* * *(n.) = fire warning, fire alarmEx: The library was found to have inadequate lighting for the partially sighted and a lack of a fire warning perceptible to the deaf.
Ex: Of greatest import are the siting of libraries, the building shell, fire alarms, intruder alarms, internal layout of the building, and methods combating damage and theft. -
115 alcantarillado
m.sewers, sewage system.past part.past participle of spanish verb: alcantarillar.* * *1 sewer system* * *SM sewer system, drains pl* * *masculino sewer system, drains (pl)* * *= sewage facility, drainage, sewerage system, sewerage.Ex. There are many urgent problems confronting the council of Junctionville: inadequate water and sewage facilities, limited public transportation, polluted air, excessive power costs, crime.Ex. The benefits to be gained from using fund assistance to help with local authority capital projects on roads, drainage, industrial sites, etc., were obvious.Ex. The spread of these diseases is mainly attributed to broken sewerage systems.Ex. Septic tanks and broken sewerage contaminates the groundwater supplies which are used for drinking water in many communities.----* alcantarillado y basura = sanitation.* red de alcantarillado = drainage system.* sistema de alcantarillado = sewerage system, sewerage.* * *masculino sewer system, drains (pl)* * *= sewage facility, drainage, sewerage system, sewerage.Ex: There are many urgent problems confronting the council of Junctionville: inadequate water and sewage facilities, limited public transportation, polluted air, excessive power costs, crime.
Ex: The benefits to be gained from using fund assistance to help with local authority capital projects on roads, drainage, industrial sites, etc., were obvious.Ex: The spread of these diseases is mainly attributed to broken sewerage systems.Ex: Septic tanks and broken sewerage contaminates the groundwater supplies which are used for drinking water in many communities.* alcantarillado y basura = sanitation.* red de alcantarillado = drainage system.* sistema de alcantarillado = sewerage system, sewerage.* * *sewer system, drains (pl)* * *
Del verbo alcantarillar: ( conjugate alcantarillar)
alcantarillado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
alcantarillado
alcantarillar
alcantarillado sustantivo masculino
sewer system, drains (pl)
alcantarillado sustantivo masculino sewer system
' alcantarillado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
saneamiento
English:
drain
- drainage
- sewerage
* * *sewerage system, sewers* * *m1 sewer system2 de sumideros drainage system* * *alcantarillado n sewage system -
116 apreciable
adj.1 appreciable, significant (perceptible).2 worthy (estimable).* * *► adjetivo1 (perceptible) appreciable, noticeable2 (estimable) valuable, precious* * *ADJ1) (=perceptible) appreciable, substantial; [cantidad] considerable2) [persona] (=digno de aprecio) worthy, esteemed* * *adjetivo <cambio/mejoría> appreciable, substantial; <suma/cantidad> considerable, substantial* * *= noticeable, perceptible, appreciable.Ex. The most noticeable effect the advent of Islam had on Arab names was not so much on structure as on choice.Ex. The library was found to have inadequate lighting for the partially sighted and a lack of a fire warning perceptible to the deaf.Ex. Cannabis often shows no appreciable effects the first time it is taken.----* de forma apreciable = markedly.* * *adjetivo <cambio/mejoría> appreciable, substantial; <suma/cantidad> considerable, substantial* * *= noticeable, perceptible, appreciable.Ex: The most noticeable effect the advent of Islam had on Arab names was not so much on structure as on choice.
Ex: The library was found to have inadequate lighting for the partially sighted and a lack of a fire warning perceptible to the deaf.Ex: Cannabis often shows no appreciable effects the first time it is taken.* de forma apreciable = markedly.* * *1 ‹cambio/mejoría› appreciable, substantial2 ‹suma/cantidad› considerable, substantial* * *
apreciable adjetivo ‹cambio/mejoría› appreciable, substantial;
‹suma/cantidad› considerable, substantial
apreciable adjetivo appreciable, noticeable
' apreciable' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
distinguirse
English:
appreciable
- measurable
- perceptible
- recognizable
* * *apreciable adj1. [perceptible] [diferencia, mejoría] appreciable, perceptible2. [considerable] [cantidad] appreciable, significant3. [estimable] worthy* * *adj1 ( visible) appreciable, noticeable2 ( considerable) considerable, substantial* * *apreciable adj: appreciable, substantial, considerable -
117 canal de comunicación
(n.) = line of communication, communication channel, communication pathwayEx. In the latter case particularly, there should be a clear line of communication between staff operating the system and those above them.Ex. More disciplining in the enunciation of objectives and more concern for communication channels is needed = Se necesita mayor rigurosidad en la enunciación de los objetivos y una mayor preocupación por los canales de comunicación.Ex. Traditional communication pathways between acquisitions and other departments are inadequate in the process of acquiring the electronic resources increasingly in demand by the community.* * *(n.) = line of communication, communication channel, communication pathwayEx: In the latter case particularly, there should be a clear line of communication between staff operating the system and those above them.
Ex: More disciplining in the enunciation of objectives and more concern for communication channels is needed = Se necesita mayor rigurosidad en la enunciación de los objetivos y una mayor preocupación por los canales de comunicación.Ex: Traditional communication pathways between acquisitions and other departments are inadequate in the process of acquiring the electronic resources increasingly in demand by the community. -
118 circunstancial
adj.1 chance.un hecho circunstancial a chance occurrenceuna decisión circunstancial an ad hoc decision2 circumstantial, incidental.* * *► adjetivo1 circumstantial* * *ADJ1) [gen] circumstantial; [caso] incidental2) (=temporal) [arreglo, acuerdo] makeshift, temporary* * *1) <factor/hecho> circumstantial, incidental2) (Ling) complemento 1)* * *= ad hoc, situational, circumstantial.Ex. Begun in 1973, CONSER was conceived by an ad hoc discussion group on Serials Data Bases of American and Canadian librarians.Ex. The search process variables are inadequate because they are situational and subject to constant change.Ex. Circumstantial reasons for such deviant behaviour were not significant in this study.----* pruebas circunstanciales = circumstantial evidence.* * *1) <factor/hecho> circumstantial, incidental2) (Ling) complemento 1)* * *= ad hoc, situational, circumstantial.Ex: Begun in 1973, CONSER was conceived by an ad hoc discussion group on Serials Data Bases of American and Canadian librarians.
Ex: The search process variables are inadequate because they are situational and subject to constant change.Ex: Circumstantial reasons for such deviant behaviour were not significant in this study.* pruebas circunstanciales = circumstantial evidence.* * *A ‹factor/hecho› circumstantial, incidentalfue testigo circunstancial de los hechos she was a chance witness to the eventslo que me dijo es absolutamente circunstancial y no influirá en mi decisión what he told me is completely incidental and will have no influence on my decisionB ( Ling):complemento circunstancial adverbial complement* * *
circunstancial adjetivo circumstancial
' circunstancial' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
ocasional
English:
circumstantial
* * *circunstancial adj1. [del momento] chance;un hecho circunstancial a chance occurrence;una decisión circunstancial an ad hoc decision* * *adj circumstantial* * *circunstancial adj: circumstantial, incidental -
119 como mínimo
adv.at the very least.* * *at least* * *= at least, conservatively, at a minimumEx. At least one reference or added entry is usually deemed to be necessary from each of the 'secondary' concepts in the preferred order.Ex. The audit report commented upon the inadequate storage facilities available to house the national collection, conservatively estimated at a value in excess of $200 million.Ex. At a minimum, programme budgets allow us the options of reviewing and revising priorities, and making room for 'new ideas'.* * *= at least, conservatively, at a minimumEx: At least one reference or added entry is usually deemed to be necessary from each of the 'secondary' concepts in the preferred order.
Ex: The audit report commented upon the inadequate storage facilities available to house the national collection, conservatively estimated at a value in excess of $200 million.Ex: At a minimum, programme budgets allow us the options of reviewing and revising priorities, and making room for 'new ideas'. -
120 demasiado corto
adj.all too short, very short, too short.* * *(adj.) = all too shortEx. For the typists, the change meant having to undergo a period of training (in some cases, all too short and inadequate training).* * *(adj.) = all too shortEx: For the typists, the change meant having to undergo a period of training (in some cases, all too short and inadequate training).
См. также в других словарях:
inadequate */*/ — UK [ɪnˈædɪkwət] / US [ɪnˈædəkwət] adjective 1) not enough, or not good enough for a particular purpose inadequate provision of health care We are trying to provide basic education with inadequate resources. inadequate for: rail tracks that are… … English dictionary
inadequate — adj. 1) inadequate for; to (the supply of water is inadequate for the trip; inadequate to the occasion) 2) inadequate to + inf. (the supply is inadequate to meet the demand) * * * [ɪn ædɪkwɪt] to (the supply of water is inadequate for the trip;… … Combinatory dictionary
inadequate — in|ad|e|quate [ınˈædıkwıt] adj 1.) not good enough, big enough, skilled enough etc for a particular purpose ≠ ↑adequate ▪ inadequate resources inadequate for ▪ The parking facilities are inadequate for a busy shopping centre.… … Dictionary of contemporary English
inadequate — in|ad|e|quate [ ın ædəkwət ] adjective ** 1. ) not enough or not good enough for a particular purpose: inadequate provision of health care We are trying to provide basic education with inadequate resources. inadequate for: rail tracks that are… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
inadequate — adj. 1 not good enough VERBS ▪ appear, be, look, prove, seem ▪ become ▪ remain ▪ … Collocations dictionary
inadequate — adjective 1 not good enough, big enough, skilled enough etc for a particular purpose: An inadequate supply of vitamin A can lead to blindness. (+ for): The parking facilities are inadequate for such a busy shopping centre. 2 someone who feels… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
inadequate*/ — [ɪnˈædɪkwət] adj not enough, or not good enough Some people feel inadequate when they are faced with new responsibilities.[/ex] The heating system is totally inadequate.[/ex] The machinery is inadequate for the job.[/ex] The roads are inadequate… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
inadequate — ► ADJECTIVE 1) insufficient for a purpose. 2) unable to deal with a situation or with life. DERIVATIVES inadequacy noun (pl. inadequacies) inadequately adverb … English terms dictionary
inadequate — in·ad·e·quate i kwət adj 1) not adequate: deficient <an inadequate dose> <inadequate perfusion> <inadequate diets> 2) lacking the capacity for psychological maturity or adequate social adjustment <an inadequate… … Medical dictionary
inadequate remedy at law — Within the meaning of the rule that equity will not entertain a suit if there is an adequate remedy at law, this does not mean that there must be a failure to collect money or damages at law, but the remedy is considered inadequate if it is, in… … Black's law dictionary
inadequate remedy at law — Within the meaning of the rule that equity will not entertain a suit if there is an adequate remedy at law, this does not mean that there must be a failure to collect money or damages at law, but the remedy is considered inadequate if it is, in… … Black's law dictionary