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101 acumular atrasos
(v.) = build up + backlogsEx. This article describles the steps taken to deal with the backlogs which had built up when it became clear that ratification would not be achieved.* * *(v.) = build up + backlogsEx: This article describles the steps taken to deal with the backlogs which had built up when it became clear that ratification would not be achieved.
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102 además de
prep.in addition to, besides, plus, aside from.Le di mantequilla además de pan I gave him butter in addition to bread.* * *as well as, in addition to■ además de gordo es feo as well as being fat, he's ugly* * *besides, as well as* * *= along with, apart from, as well as, besides, coupled with, in addition (to), over and above, plus, quite apart from, aside from, on top of, other than, complete with, not least, beyond, together with, not to mentionEx. A crisp, even impression became the norm, along with the use of respectable paper and ink.Ex. Apart from the names of subjects, the names of corporate bodies, persons, chemicals, trade products, and trade names are some other possibilities.Ex. All means of conveying affinitive relationships list a number of terms which may be used as well as, or instead of, the original entry term.Ex. In a catalogue using main and added entries, all other entries besides the one main entry are added entries.Ex. And coupled with it, the simple answer, yes, I think made for a rather historic exchange, and it surely was worth the price of admission.Ex. In addition to the full edition, there exist abridged and medium editions of the scheme.Ex. Such posts were regarded as a welcome bonus over and above the traditional base market.Ex. All of these (except PREVIOUS and NEXT), plus some additional commands are also available from the Command Menu.Ex. Quite apart from a completely new vocabulary, the whole mystique of computers is still a source of bewilderment.Ex. The author maintains that, aside from increasing computational speed, and thus real-time control, musically no advances have been made.Ex. Librarians will have to acquire additional skills on top of the old ones.Ex. The advantages, other than the savings in costs, are that they allow the student to progress at an individual pace = Las ventajas, además del ahorro en los costes, son que permiten al estudiante avanzar a su propio ritmo.Ex. Such moulds were called double-faced to distinguish them from the ordinary single-faced moulds which continued to be used for making laid paper, complete with bar shadows, for the rest of the eighteenth century.Ex. Extra money for books is raised in a variety of ways, not least through the efforts of active parent/teachers' associations.Ex. Once it is available, duplicates in large quantities could probably be turned out for a cent apiece beyond the cost of materials.Ex. Most such bulletins list titles or abstracts, together with citations of relevant new documents in the subject area.Ex. UNIMARC could make a significant contribution to UBC but, if it is to succeed, it requires the co-operation and effort, not to mention the financial outlay, of all national MARC users.* * *= along with, apart from, as well as, besides, coupled with, in addition (to), over and above, plus, quite apart from, aside from, on top of, other than, complete with, not least, beyond, together with, not to mentionEx: A crisp, even impression became the norm, along with the use of respectable paper and ink.
Ex: Apart from the names of subjects, the names of corporate bodies, persons, chemicals, trade products, and trade names are some other possibilities.Ex: All means of conveying affinitive relationships list a number of terms which may be used as well as, or instead of, the original entry term.Ex: In a catalogue using main and added entries, all other entries besides the one main entry are added entries.Ex: And coupled with it, the simple answer, yes, I think made for a rather historic exchange, and it surely was worth the price of admission.Ex: In addition to the full edition, there exist abridged and medium editions of the scheme.Ex: Such posts were regarded as a welcome bonus over and above the traditional base market.Ex: All of these (except PREVIOUS and NEXT), plus some additional commands are also available from the Command Menu.Ex: Quite apart from a completely new vocabulary, the whole mystique of computers is still a source of bewilderment.Ex: The author maintains that, aside from increasing computational speed, and thus real-time control, musically no advances have been made.Ex: Librarians will have to acquire additional skills on top of the old ones.Ex: The advantages, other than the savings in costs, are that they allow the student to progress at an individual pace = Las ventajas, además del ahorro en los costes, son que permiten al estudiante avanzar a su propio ritmo.Ex: Such moulds were called double-faced to distinguish them from the ordinary single-faced moulds which continued to be used for making laid paper, complete with bar shadows, for the rest of the eighteenth century.Ex: Extra money for books is raised in a variety of ways, not least through the efforts of active parent/teachers' associations.Ex: Once it is available, duplicates in large quantities could probably be turned out for a cent apiece beyond the cost of materials.Ex: Most such bulletins list titles or abstracts, together with citations of relevant new documents in the subject area.Ex: UNIMARC could make a significant contribution to UBC but, if it is to succeed, it requires the co-operation and effort, not to mention the financial outlay, of all national MARC users. -
103 afianzarse
pron.v.to steady oneself; to become strong, become established.* * *1 (estabilizarse) to steady oneself2 (convencerse) to become surer, become more convinced* * *VPR (=sostenerse) to steady o.s.; (fig) (=establecerse) to become strong, become established* * *(v.) = gain + a foothold, establish + strong positions, find + Posesivo + feet, find + Posesivo + footingEx. Desktop publishing technology is now a serious trend which has gained a firm foothold in the USA.Ex. Industry observers felt that Microsoft was losing ground to companies that had established strong positions, such as Netscape Communications Corp.Ex. Although it may have taken a little while to find its feet, this collection is now a most significant resource in its own right, due in no small measure by the stimulation provided by Victorian historians.Ex. The call still remains for true advocacy librarianship which has still not found its footing as a general principle in library schools.* * *(v.) = gain + a foothold, establish + strong positions, find + Posesivo + feet, find + Posesivo + footingEx: Desktop publishing technology is now a serious trend which has gained a firm foothold in the USA.
Ex: Industry observers felt that Microsoft was losing ground to companies that had established strong positions, such as Netscape Communications Corp.Ex: Although it may have taken a little while to find its feet, this collection is now a most significant resource in its own right, due in no small measure by the stimulation provided by Victorian historians.Ex: The call still remains for true advocacy librarianship which has still not found its footing as a general principle in library schools.* * *
■afianzarse vr (persona) to become established
(una situación) to be consolidated
' afianzarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
despegar
- afianzar
English:
foothold
* * *vpr1. [en lugar] to steady oneself;afianzarse en una posición [en organización] to establish oneself in a position;el puerto se ha afianzado como centro comercial de la zona the port has established itself as the trading centre of the area2. [idea, creencia] to take root;[relación] to become stronger o closer;se afianzó en su opinión he became more convinced of his opinion* * *v/r become stronger* * *vrestablecerse: to establish oneself -
104 afiliar
v.1 to adopt; to affiliate; to connect with a central body or society.2 to affiliate, to enroll, to adhere.La escuela ingresó a María The school affiliated Mary.* * *1 to affiliate1 (uso reflexivo) to join (a, to), become affiliated (a, to)* * *1.verbo transitivo2.afiliarse v pronafiliarse a algo — persona <a partido/sindicato> to become a member of something, to join something; < a sistema> to join something
* * *= affiliate.Ex. In 1924 the library became affiliated to the Dresden Municipal Library (founded 1881) as a depository library.* * *1.verbo transitivo2.afiliarse v pronafiliarse a algo — persona <a partido/sindicato> to become a member of something, to join something; < a sistema> to join something
* * *= affiliate.Ex: In 1924 the library became affiliated to the Dresden Municipal Library (founded 1881) as a depository library.
* * *afiliar [A1 ]vtafiliar a algn A algo to make sb a member of sth, enroll* sb as a member of sthafiliarse A algo ‹a un partido/un sindicato› to become a member OF sth, to join sth; ‹a un seguro médico/un sistema de pensiones› to join sthlos trabajadores afiliados al sindicato workers who are members of o who belong to the unionel club no está afiliado a la asociación nacional the club isn't affiliated to o with the national association* * *♦ vtquieren afiliar el club a la federación they want to affiliate the club to the federation;me afilió al sindicato he signed me up to the union;el museo está afiliado a una red nacional the museum belongs to o is a member of a national network* * *v/t enroll (a in) -
105 agresión
f.1 aggression.2 attack, assault, battery, offensive.* * *1 aggression, attack* * *noun f.1) aggression2) assault, attack* * *SF (=acometida) aggression; [contra persona] attack, assault* * *femenino aggressionse lo acusa de agresión — (Der) he's charged with assault
* * *= attack, aggression, assault, act of aggression, battery, aggressive incident.Ex. The incentive to make library services more relevant to the community became increasingly urgent from the mid-seventies as the attacks on local government finance gathered momentum.Ex. This article describes the contents of a help pack, produced by Bradford Public Library to help library staff when dealing with violence and aggression at work.Ex. Crimes against the person include homicide, rape, assault and robbery.Ex. The study was designed to determine if players felt remorse if an opposing player was injured as a result of their act of aggression.Ex. The increasing frequency of notorious cases of conflicts between police officers & members of the general public (which in New York City has led to incidents of death, battery, & sexual assault) is cause for alarm.Ex. Data on 9318 aggressive incidents were collected from official game reports.----* agresión a mano armada = armed assault.* agresión brutal = vicious attack, brutal attack.* agresión con ensañamiento = vicious attack.* agresión con lesiones = assault and battery.* agresión física = physical assault, physical aggression.* agresión sexual = sexual assault, molestation.* agresión verbal = verbal aggression, verbal assault, verbal abuse.* * *femenino aggressionse lo acusa de agresión — (Der) he's charged with assault
* * *= attack, aggression, assault, act of aggression, battery, aggressive incident.Ex: The incentive to make library services more relevant to the community became increasingly urgent from the mid-seventies as the attacks on local government finance gathered momentum.
Ex: This article describes the contents of a help pack, produced by Bradford Public Library to help library staff when dealing with violence and aggression at work.Ex: Crimes against the person include homicide, rape, assault and robbery.Ex: The study was designed to determine if players felt remorse if an opposing player was injured as a result of their act of aggression.Ex: The increasing frequency of notorious cases of conflicts between police officers & members of the general public (which in New York City has led to incidents of death, battery, & sexual assault) is cause for alarm.Ex: Data on 9318 aggressive incidents were collected from official game reports.* agresión a mano armada = armed assault.* agresión brutal = vicious attack, brutal attack.* agresión con ensañamiento = vicious attack.* agresión con lesiones = assault and battery.* agresión física = physical assault, physical aggression.* agresión sexual = sexual assault, molestation.* agresión verbal = verbal aggression, verbal assault, verbal abuse.* * *aggressionel ejército responderá a toda agresión por parte extranjera the army will respond to any foreign aggressionfue víctima de una agresión brutal he was the victim of a brutal attack o assaultCompuesto:sex attack, sexual assault* * *
agresión sustantivo femenino
aggression;
agresión sustantivo femenino aggression
' agresión' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
herida
- pacto
- valor
- defender
- herido
- repeler
English:
aggression
- assault
- cheek
- sexual assault
- aggressive
- road
* * *agresión nf[ataque] act of aggression, attack;sufrir una agresión to be the victim of an attackagresión sexual sex attack* * *f aggression;una agresión an assault, an attack* * *1) : aggression2) ataque: attack* * *agresión n aggression -
106 aislacionismo
m.isolationism (politics).* * *1 isolationism* * *SM isolationism* * *masculino isolationism* * *= isolationism.Ex. Beginning in the 1990s, however, attempts to overcome such isolationism became more and more visible.* * *masculino isolationism* * *= isolationism.Ex: Beginning in the 1990s, however, attempts to overcome such isolationism became more and more visible.
* * *isolationism* * *
aislacionismo sustantivo masculino isolationism
* * *Pol isolationism* * *m POL isolationism* * *: isolationism -
107 algo impostergable
Ex. By 1983 it became a matter of urgency to direct the selection of new titles towards the needs of students.* * *Ex: By 1983 it became a matter of urgency to direct the selection of new titles towards the needs of students.
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108 algo inaplazable
Ex. By 1983 it became a matter of urgency to direct the selection of new titles towards the needs of students.* * *Ex: By 1983 it became a matter of urgency to direct the selection of new titles towards the needs of students.
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109 algo urgente
= rush on, a matter of urgencyEx. In the nineteenth-century compulsory overtime to 10 p.m. or midnight was a very common occurrence in news offices, with all-night working when there was a rush on.Ex. By 1983 it became a matter of urgency to direct the selection of new titles towards the needs of students.* * *= rush on, a matter of urgencyEx: In the nineteenth-century compulsory overtime to 10 p.m. or midnight was a very common occurrence in news offices, with all-night working when there was a rush on.
Ex: By 1983 it became a matter of urgency to direct the selection of new titles towards the needs of students. -
110 allá
► adverbio1 (lugar) there, over there2 (tiempo) back\allá se las componga that's his problemallá tú/vosotros that's your problemno muy allá not very good* * *adv.there, over there- más allá* * *ADV1) [indicando posición] there, over there; [dirección] (over) thereallá en Sevilla — down in Seville, over in Seville
allá lejos — way off in the distance, away over there
•
más allá — further away, further overno sabe contar más allá de diez — she can't count above ten, she can't count beyond ten
•
por allá — thereabouts•
vamos allá — let's go there¡allá voy! — I'm coming!
no está muy allá — [de salud] he isn't very well
2)allá tú — that's up to you, that's your problem
¡allá él! — that's his lookout! *, that's his problem!
3) [indicando tiempo]allá en 1600 — back in 1600, way back in 1600, as long ago as 1600
* * *1)a) ( en el espacio)allá voy! — here I come/go!
b) (en locs)más allá de — ( más lejos que) beyond; ( aparte de) over and above
allá tú/él — that's your/his lookout o problem (colloq)
no estar muy allá — (Esp fam)
no está muy allá — it's nothing to write home about (colloq)
2) ( en el tiempo)* * *= thither, there.Ex. 'Hither, thither, and yon: process in putting courses on the Web' is an article included in an issue devoted to the theme: Technical communication, distance learning, and the World Wide Web.Ex. There he became involved in cataloging problems and participated in their public discussion.----* ¡allá voy! = here I come!.* aparecer aquí y allá en = intersperse.* aquí y allá = here and there, odd.* correr de acá para allá = rush around.* correr de aquí para allá = rush around, run + here and there.* de acá para allá = back and forth, to and fro.* de aquí para allá = back and forth.* de esto, de lo otro y de lo de más allá = about this and that and everything else.* el más allá = hereafter.* en el más allá = dead and gone.* ir de aquí a allá = go out and about.* ir de aquí para allá = jump, live out of + a suitcase, run + here and there.* ir de aquí para allá sin rumbo fijo = freewheel.* ir más allá = go + one stage further.* ir más allá de = go beyond, go + deeper than, transcend, get beyond, go far beyond, move + beyond, take + Nombre + a/one step further/farther, go + past.* ir poco más allá de + Infinitivo = go little further than + Gerundio.* más allá = further than, farther, yonder, beyond that.* más allá de = beyond, beyond all, past, beyond the range of.* más allá de eso = beyond that.* más allá de ninguna duda = beyond doubt, beyond doubt, beyond any doubt.* más allá de toda duda = beyond doubt, beyond any doubt, without a shadow of a doubt, beyond a shadow of a doubt.* más allá, el = afterlife [after-life], land of the dead, the.* moverse de aquí para allá = move about.* que toca aquí y allá = wandering.* y más allá = and beyond.* * *1)a) ( en el espacio)allá voy! — here I come/go!
b) (en locs)más allá de — ( más lejos que) beyond; ( aparte de) over and above
allá tú/él — that's your/his lookout o problem (colloq)
no estar muy allá — (Esp fam)
no está muy allá — it's nothing to write home about (colloq)
2) ( en el tiempo)* * *= thither, there.Ex: 'Hither, thither, and yon: process in putting courses on the Web' is an article included in an issue devoted to the theme: Technical communication, distance learning, and the World Wide Web.
Ex: There he became involved in cataloging problems and participated in their public discussion.* ¡allá voy! = here I come!.* aparecer aquí y allá en = intersperse.* aquí y allá = here and there, odd.* correr de acá para allá = rush around.* correr de aquí para allá = rush around, run + here and there.* de acá para allá = back and forth, to and fro.* de aquí para allá = back and forth.* de esto, de lo otro y de lo de más allá = about this and that and everything else.* el más allá = hereafter.* en el más allá = dead and gone.* ir de aquí a allá = go out and about.* ir de aquí para allá = jump, live out of + a suitcase, run + here and there.* ir de aquí para allá sin rumbo fijo = freewheel.* ir más allá = go + one stage further.* ir más allá de = go beyond, go + deeper than, transcend, get beyond, go far beyond, move + beyond, take + Nombre + a/one step further/farther, go + past.* ir poco más allá de + Infinitivo = go little further than + Gerundio.* más allá = further than, farther, yonder, beyond that.* más allá de = beyond, beyond all, past, beyond the range of.* más allá de eso = beyond that.* más allá de ninguna duda = beyond doubt, beyond doubt, beyond any doubt.* más allá de toda duda = beyond doubt, beyond any doubt, without a shadow of a doubt, beyond a shadow of a doubt.* más allá, el = afterlife [after-life], land of the dead, the.* moverse de aquí para allá = move about.* que toca aquí y allá = wandering.* y más allá = and beyond.* * *A1(en el espacio): ya vamos para allá we're on our way (over)allá en América over in Americaestán muy allá they're a long way off o awaylo pusiste tan allá que no alcanzo you've put it so far away I can't reach itallá va tu hermana there goes o there's your sister¡allá voy! here I come/go!2 ( en locs):más allá further awayponte más allá move further over that way o further awaymás allá de nuestras fronteras beyond our frontierssu importancia va más allá de las consideraciones de orden económico its significance goes beyond economic considerationsmás allá del peligro que encierra over and above the danger which it entailssiguió protestando, que si esto, que si lo otro, que si el más allá he went on and on, complaining about one thing and anotherallá se las componga ella con sus problemas she can sort out her own problemsmuy allá ( fam): no está muy allá it isn't up to much ( colloq), it's nothing to write home about ( colloq)no está muy allá con su familia she isn't getting on too well with her familyB(en el tiempo): allá por los años 40 back in the fortiessucedió allá por el año 1395 it happened back in the year 1395allá para enero quizás podamos mudarnos we might be able to move around January* * *
allá adverbio
1a) ( en el espacio):
allá en América over in America;
lo pusiste muy allá you've put it too far away;
¡allá voy! here I come/go!b) ( en locs)
más allá de ( más lejos que) beyond;
( aparte de) over and above;◊ allá tú/él that's your/his lookout o problem (colloq)
2 ( en el tiempo):
allá para enero sometime in January
allá adverbio
1 (lugar alejado) there, over there
allá abajo, down there
allá arriba, up there
¡allá va!, there he goes!
más allá, further on
más allá de, beyond
el más allá, afterlife
2 (tiempo remoto o indefinido) allá por los años cuarenta, back in the forties
♦ Locuciones: allá él, that's his problem
' allá' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
aquí
- correrse
- danzar
- dogmatismo
- fuera
- mal
- paja
- permisible
- acá
- aquello
- coincidencia
- desde
- echar
- hacia
- interior
- ir
- más
- tras
- trascender
English:
about
- back
- beyond
- everyplace
- fleck
- funeral
- hereafter
- normal
- past
- roll about
- roll around
- rush around
- there
- to
- up
- way
- above
- bustle
- down
- here
- on
- rush
- transcend
- yonder
* * *allá adv1. [indica espacio] over there;aquí no hay espacio para esos libros, ponlos allá there's no room for these books here, put them over there;no te pongas tan allá, que no te oigo don't stand so far away, I can't hear you;allá abajo/arriba down/up there;allá donde sea posible wherever possible;allá lejos right back there;allá en tu pueblo se come muy bien they eat well back in your home town;hacerse allá to move over o along;hacia allá that way, in that direction;más allá further on;no dejes el vaso tan cerca del borde, ponlo más allá don't leave the glass so near the edge, move it in a bit;los trenes son un desastre, sin ir más allá, ayer estuve esperando dos horas trains are hopeless, you don't need to look far to find an example, only yesterday I had to wait for two hours;más allá de beyond;no vayas más allá de la verja don't go beyond the gate;no se veía más allá de unos pocos metros visibility was down to a few metres;voy para allá mañana I'm going there tomorrow;échate para allá move over;por allá over there, thereaboutsallá para el mes de agosto around August some time3. [en frases]allá él/ella that's his/her problem;allá tú, allá te las compongas that's your problem;allá se las arreglen ellos that's their problem, that's for them to worry about;allá cada cual each person will have to decide for themselves;allá tú con lo que haces it's up to you what you do;los negocios no andan muy allá business is rather slow at the moment;no ser muy allá to be nothing special;hoy no estoy muy allá I'm not quite myself today;¡allá voy! here I go o come!;¿estamos todos listos? ¡vamos allá! is everybody ready? then let's begin!;¡vamos allá, tú puedes! go for it o go on, you can do it!* * *adv1 de lugar (over) there;allá abajo down there;allá arriba up there;más allá further on;más allá de beyond;muy allá a long way off;el más allá the hereafter;¡allá voy! here I come!2 de tiempo:allá por los años veinte back in the twenties3 fam:allá él/ella that’s up to him/her;allá se las arregle that’s his problem* * *allá adv1) : there, over there2)más allá : farther away3)más allá de : beyond4)allá tú : that's up to you* * *allá adv1. (lugar) there / over there2. (tiempo) back -
111 allí
adv.there, yonder, yon, over there.* * *► adverbio1 (lugar) there, over there■ allí abajo/arriba down/up there■ por allí over there, round there2 (tiempo) then, at that moment* * *adv.there, over there* * *ADV1) [indicando posición] therepor allí — over there, round there
hasta allí — as far as that, up to that point
está tirado por allí — * he's hanging around somewhere
2) [indicando tiempo]3) [expresiones]de allí — (=por lo tanto) and so, and thus frm o liter
de allí que... — (=por eso) that is why..., hence... frm
hasta allí no más — LAm that's the limit
* * *1) ( en el espacio) thereallí arriba/dentro — up/in there
allí donde estés/vayas — wherever you are/go
2) ( en el tiempo)* * *= there.Ex. There he became involved in cataloging problems and participated in their public discussion.----* allí donde = as and when, where, wherever.* allí donde se necesita = at the point-of-need, at the point of use, point of use.* allí mismo = on the spot, there and then.* desde allí = thence.* leer de aquí y allí = dip into.* por allí = nearby [near-by].* por aquí y por allí = hanging about.* * *1) ( en el espacio) thereallí arriba/dentro — up/in there
allí donde estés/vayas — wherever you are/go
2) ( en el tiempo)* * *= there.Ex: There he became involved in cataloging problems and participated in their public discussion.
* allí donde = as and when, where, wherever.* allí donde se necesita = at the point-of-need, at the point of use, point of use.* allí mismo = on the spot, there and then.* desde allí = thence.* leer de aquí y allí = dip into.* por allí = nearby [near-by].* por aquí y por allí = hanging about.* * *A (en el espacio) theresiéntate allí sit thereallí arriba/abajo/fuera/dentro up/down/out/in thereno, allí no, allá no, not there, over thereaquí había un plato sucio, allí un calcetín … there was a dirty plate here, a sock there …allí donde estés/vayas wherever you are/goB(en el tiempo): allí es cuando empezaron los problemas that's when the problems started* * *
allí adverbio
there;◊ allí arriba/dentro up/in there;
allí donde estés/vayas wherever you are/go
allí adverbio there, over there
allí abajo/arriba, down/up there
allí mismo, right there
por allí, (en aquella dirección) that way
(en aquel lugar) over there
' allí' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
abajo
- ánimo
- arrancar
- constante
- desde
- disparada
- disparado
- enterarse
- esclarecimiento
- gachí
- hacia
- holgar
- misma
- mismo
- misteriosamente
- permanecer
- pintar
- plantarse
- precisamente
- realidad
- ver
- acordar
- agradar
- ancho
- asustar
- atrás
- caer
- claustrofobia
- dizque
- dominar
- gente
- harto
- indicar
- morir
- mucho
- uno
- urgir
English:
board
- check
- cling
- evaluation
- go
- hopefully
- imagine
- in
- over
- ruggedness
- spot
- tell
- there
- unless
- up
- vacant
- already
- by
- certainly
- down
- few
- for
- frozen
- get
- good
- local
- making
- on
- right
- since
- stand
- state
- strength
- think
- way
- where
* * *allí adv1. [en el espacio] there;allí abajo/arriba down/up there;allí mismo right there;está por allí it's around there somewhere;se va por allí you go that way;está allí dentro it's in there;allí donde vayas… wherever you go…2. [en el tiempo] then;hasta allí todo iba bien everything had been going well until then o up to that point* * *adv there;¡allí está! there it is! allí mismo right there;de allí from there;hasta allí that far* * *allí adv: there, over thereallí mismo: right therehasta allí: up to that point* * *allí adv1. (lugar) there2. (tiempo) then -
112 altura del tipo movible
(n.) = height-to-paper, type heightEx. Standardization never became quite complete, especially as regards height-to-paper; the Clarendon Press sturdily retains the so-called Dutch height of 23-851 mm. to this day, and various aberrant heights may still be found in Europe.Ex. The thickness of the blocks intended for use in printed books was usually a little under type height, the difference being made up with underlays of paper.* * *(n.) = height-to-paper, type heightEx: Standardization never became quite complete, especially as regards height-to-paper; the Clarendon Press sturdily retains the so-called Dutch height of 23-851 mm. to this day, and various aberrant heights may still be found in Europe.
Ex: The thickness of the blocks intended for use in printed books was usually a little under type height, the difference being made up with underlays of paper. -
113 amalgama
f.amalgam (also figurative).pres.indicat.3rd person singular (él/ella/ello) present indicative of spanish verb: amalgamar.imperat.2nd person singular (tú) Imperative of Spanish verb: amalgamar.* * *1 amalgam* * *SF amalgam* * *femenino amalgam* * *= amalgam, amalgamation, blurring, interweaving, conflation, ensemble.Ex. Nevertheless, modern cataloguing practices often represent some amalgam of the collocative and the direct approaches.Ex. The examples cited to date have used right hand truncation, which results in the amalgamation of words with different suffixes.Ex. This paper illustrates the possible future interweaving of information retrieval and entertainment.Ex. It found differences in the abbreviations used and other stylistic matters (mainly due to language differences) but was able to propose a conflation of the descriptions that formed the basis of what became the SBD and later the ISBD.Ex. DIANE is the name that has been given to the ensemble of available information services.* * *femenino amalgam* * *= amalgam, amalgamation, blurring, interweaving, conflation, ensemble.Ex: Nevertheless, modern cataloguing practices often represent some amalgam of the collocative and the direct approaches.
Ex: The examples cited to date have used right hand truncation, which results in the amalgamation of words with different suffixes.Ex: This paper illustrates the possible future interweaving of information retrieval and entertainment.Ex: It found differences in the abbreviations used and other stylistic matters (mainly due to language differences) but was able to propose a conflation of the descriptions that formed the basis of what became the SBD and later the ISBD.Ex: DIANE is the name that has been given to the ensemble of available information services.* * *1 (de influencias, ideas) amalgam, mixture* * *
Del verbo amalgamar: ( conjugate amalgamar)
amalgama es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativo
Multiple Entries:
amalgama
amalgamar
amalgama sustantivo femenino amalgam
amalgamar verbo transitivo to amalgamate
' amalgama' also found in these entries:
English:
amalgam
* * *amalgama nf1. Quím amalgam2. [mezcla] mixture, amalgam;esa novela es una amalgama de estilos that novel is written in a mixture o an amalgam of styles* * *f amalgam, mixture* * *amalgama nf: amalgam -
114 amargado
adj.embittered, bitter, sour, filled with resentment.f. & m.bitter person, sourpuss, embittered person.past part.past participle of spanish verb: amargar.* * *1→ link=amargar amargar► adjetivo1 embittered, resentful■ estar amargado,-a to feel very bitter► nombre masculino,nombre femenino1 bitter person* * *(f. - amargada)adj.bitter, embittered* * *ADJ bitter, embittered* * *I- da adjetivo bitter, embitteredII- da masculino, femenino bitter o embittered person* * *= bitter, embittered, sourpuss, misery guts, sour puss.Ex. A number of respondents to the study expressed themselves in bitter terms at the lack of readiness to support programmes which are attempting to encourage the transfer of technological innovation to information applications.Ex. The play 'A Song at twilight' tells the story of an embittered, closeted, world-famous writer who is faced with his murky past in the shape of his early mistress.Ex. He started life as a twerp, then fairly quickly became a jerk and ended up an old sourpuss.Ex. At the other end of the scale are misery guts, who are neither happy with their job role nor their employer.Ex. It is no fun being around you when you are being such a sour puss.* * *I- da adjetivo bitter, embitteredII- da masculino, femenino bitter o embittered person* * *= bitter, embittered, sourpuss, misery guts, sour puss.Ex: A number of respondents to the study expressed themselves in bitter terms at the lack of readiness to support programmes which are attempting to encourage the transfer of technological innovation to information applications.
Ex: The play 'A Song at twilight' tells the story of an embittered, closeted, world-famous writer who is faced with his murky past in the shape of his early mistress.Ex: He started life as a twerp, then fairly quickly became a jerk and ended up an old sourpuss.Ex: At the other end of the scale are misery guts, who are neither happy with their job role nor their employer.Ex: It is no fun being around you when you are being such a sour puss.* * *bitter, embitteredmasculine, femininebitter o embittered person* * *
Del verbo amargar: ( conjugate amargar)
amargado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
amargado
amargar
amargado◊ -da adjetivo
bitter, embittered
■ sustantivo masculino, femenino
bitter o embittered person
amargar ( conjugate amargar) verbo transitivo ‹ocasión/día› to spoil;
‹ persona› to make … bitter
amargarse verbo pronominal
to become bitter;
amargado,-a
I adjetivo
1 (resentido) embittered, bitter
2 fam (aburrido, harto) fed up, annoyed: tanto papeleo me tiene amargada, I'm fed up with all this red tape
II sustantivo masculino y femenino bitter person: no le hagas caso; es un amargado, don't take any notice, he's embittered
amargar verbo transitivo
1 to make bitter
2 figurado to embitter, sour
' amargado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
amargada
English:
bitter
- embittered
- jaundiced
- sour
* * *amargado, -a♦ adj[resentido] bitter;estar amargado de la vida to be bitter and twisted♦ nm,fbitter person;ser un amargado to be bitter o embittered* * *adj figbitter, embittered* * *amargado, -da adj: embittered, bitter -
115 amenazador
adj.threatening, menacing, ominous.* * *► adjetivo1 threatening, menacing* * *(f. - amenazadora)adj.menacing, threatening* * *- dora adjetivo, amenazante adjetivo threatening, menacing* * *= ominous, threatening, frowning, forbidding, looming, scary [scarier -comp., scariest -sup.], menacing, nasty looking, portentous.Ex. At first blush, nothing seemed particularly ominous about the formation of the ad hoc committee.Ex. It is easy to become carried away by the sheer size of the so-called 'information explosion' and to regard the growth of literature as a phenomenon as threatening to civilization as a virulent epidemic or the 'population explosion' in the third world.Ex. The impulse to learn is a ruling passion in very few people; in most of us it is so weak that a frowning aspect can discourage it.Ex. All those shelves full of books are forbidding, daunting.Ex. The automated catalogue became a spectre of looming change because the same electronic advances that made the online catalogue a reality promised even greater transformations = El catálogo automatizado se convirtió en un espectro del inminente cambio ya que los mismos avances electrónicos que hicieron realidad el catálogo en línea prometían transformaciones aún mayores.Ex. The very term 'outsourcing' is seen by many cataloguing departments as a scary word.Ex. This is a collection of articles on the theme: Books for children with murderous, shocking, menacing endings.Ex. The large and nasty-looking African Buffalo is highly dangerous to humans due to its unpredictable nature.Ex. Before me stretched the portentous menacing road of a new decade.----* avecinarse de un modo amenazador = loom + large on the horizon.* conducta amenazadora = threatening behaviour.* * *- dora adjetivo, amenazante adjetivo threatening, menacing* * *= ominous, threatening, frowning, forbidding, looming, scary [scarier -comp., scariest -sup.], menacing, nasty looking, portentous.Ex: At first blush, nothing seemed particularly ominous about the formation of the ad hoc committee.
Ex: It is easy to become carried away by the sheer size of the so-called 'information explosion' and to regard the growth of literature as a phenomenon as threatening to civilization as a virulent epidemic or the 'population explosion' in the third world.Ex: The impulse to learn is a ruling passion in very few people; in most of us it is so weak that a frowning aspect can discourage it.Ex: All those shelves full of books are forbidding, daunting.Ex: The automated catalogue became a spectre of looming change because the same electronic advances that made the online catalogue a reality promised even greater transformations = El catálogo automatizado se convirtió en un espectro del inminente cambio ya que los mismos avances electrónicos que hicieron realidad el catálogo en línea prometían transformaciones aún mayores.Ex: The very term 'outsourcing' is seen by many cataloguing departments as a scary word.Ex: This is a collection of articles on the theme: Books for children with murderous, shocking, menacing endings.Ex: The large and nasty-looking African Buffalo is highly dangerous to humans due to its unpredictable nature.Ex: Before me stretched the portentous menacing road of a new decade.* avecinarse de un modo amenazador = loom + large on the horizon.* conducta amenazadora = threatening behaviour.* * *adj,amenazante adjective threatening, menacing* * *
amenazador◊ - dora, amenazante adjetivo
threatening, menacing
amenazador,-ora, amenazante adjetivo threatening, menacing
' amenazador' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
amenazadora
- amenazante
English:
forbidding
- menace
- menacing
- threatening
- threateningly
* * *amenazador, -ora adjthreatening, menacing* * *adj threatening* * *amenazador, - dora adj: threatening, menacing -
116 anormal para la época del año
Ex. While the rain poured down, the course never became unplayable because of unseasonably dry weather over the winter in San Diego.* * *Ex: While the rain poured down, the course never became unplayable because of unseasonably dry weather over the winter in San Diego.
-
117 anómalo
adj.anomalous, abnormal, deviant, unusual.* * *► adjetivo1 anomalous* * *ADJ anomalous* * *- la adjetivo anomalous* * *= anomalous, aberrant, freakish.Ex. Similarly anomalous paper may also be found when a whole sheet has been cancelled and reprinted.Ex. Standardization never became quite complete, especially as regards height-to-paper; the Clarendon Press sturdily retains the so-called Dutch height of 23-851 mm. to this day, and various aberrant heights may still be found in Europe.Ex. 1816 was one of several years during the 1810s in which numerous crops failed during freakish summer cold snaps after volcanic eruptions that reduced incoming sunlight.* * *- la adjetivo anomalous* * *= anomalous, aberrant, freakish.Ex: Similarly anomalous paper may also be found when a whole sheet has been cancelled and reprinted.
Ex: Standardization never became quite complete, especially as regards height-to-paper; the Clarendon Press sturdily retains the so-called Dutch height of 23-851 mm. to this day, and various aberrant heights may still be found in Europe.Ex: 1816 was one of several years during the 1810s in which numerous crops failed during freakish summer cold snaps after volcanic eruptions that reduced incoming sunlight.* * *anómalo -laanomalous* * *
anómalo,-a adjetivo anomalous
' anómalo' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
anómala
English:
abnormal
* * *anómalo, -a adjunusual, anomalous* * *adj anomalous* * *anómalo, -la adj: anomalous -
118 aplastar
v.1 to squash, to crush (por el peso).El auto aplastó al sapito The car squashed the little toad.La pena aplastó a Ricardo Grief crushed Richard.2 to quash, to crush, to suffocate.El general aplastó el motín The general quashed the mutiny.* * *1 (gen) to flatten, squash, crush2 figurado (destruir) to crush, destroy1 to be flattened, be squashed, be crushed* * *verb1) to crush, squash2) overwhelm* * *1. VT1) [+ insecto etc] to squash, crush2) (fig) (=vencer) to crush, overwhelm; [con argumentos] to floor2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1) <sombrero/caja> to squash, crush2)a) < rebelión> to crush, quashb) < rival> to crush, overwhelm; ( moralmente) to devastate2.aplastarse v pron (Col, Méx, Per fam) ( arrellanarse) to sprawl* * *= devastate, squash, crush, steamroller.Ex. The article 'Sorting a mountain of books' relates how when the law library was devastated by fire what had been a library became a jumble of 100,000 books and periodicals.Ex. The article has the title 'Reorganizing organizations and information: how knowledge technologies squash heirarchy and alter the role of information'.Ex. The article is entitled 'Dinosaurs to crush flies: computer catalogues, classification and other barriers to library use'.Ex. When push comes to shove, it seems that short-term economic interests steamroller scientific arguments.----* aplastar de un manotazo = swat.* morir aplastado = crush to + death.* * *1.verbo transitivo1) <sombrero/caja> to squash, crush2)a) < rebelión> to crush, quashb) < rival> to crush, overwhelm; ( moralmente) to devastate2.aplastarse v pron (Col, Méx, Per fam) ( arrellanarse) to sprawl* * *= devastate, squash, crush, steamroller.Ex: The article 'Sorting a mountain of books' relates how when the law library was devastated by fire what had been a library became a jumble of 100,000 books and periodicals.
Ex: The article has the title 'Reorganizing organizations and information: how knowledge technologies squash heirarchy and alter the role of information'.Ex: The article is entitled 'Dinosaurs to crush flies: computer catalogues, classification and other barriers to library use'.Ex: When push comes to shove, it seems that short-term economic interests steamroller scientific arguments.* aplastar de un manotazo = swat.* morir aplastado = crush to + death.* * *aplastar [A1 ]vtA ‹sombrero/caja/paquete› to squash, crushlo aplastó del todo he crushed it completely, he flattened itaplastar los plátanos con un tenedor mash the bananas with a forkB1 ‹rebelión› to crush, quash; ‹rival› to crush, overwhelmlo aplastó con sus argumentos she overwhelmed him with her arguments2 (moralmente) to devastatequedó aplastado cuando se enteró he was devastated when he heardse dejó aplastar por la depresión he let his depression get the better of him o get on top of him2 (Arg, Bol fam) to tire oneself out* * *
aplastar ( conjugate aplastar) verbo transitivo
1
( algo duro) to crush
2
( moralmente) to devastate
aplastar verbo transitivo
1 to flatten, squash
2 fig (vencer) to crush
' aplastar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
achuchar
- pasapurés
English:
crush
- flatten
- mash
- overwhelm
- quash
- squash
- stifle
- suppress
- swat
- beat
- crunch
- devastate
- smash
- stamp
* * *♦ vt1. [por peso] to squash, to crush2. [equipo, revuelta] to crush* * *v/t tb figcrush* * *aplastar vt: to crush, to squash* * *aplastar vb1. (chafar) to squash / to flatten2. (derrotar) to crush -
119 apodar
v.to nickname.* * *1 to call, nickname1 to be nicknamed* * *verbto dub, nickname* * *VT to nickname, dub* * *verbo transitivo to nickname, call* * *= nickname, dub.Ex. The physical dimensions of novels then tended to increase, and during the 1820s a standard form of three substantial volumes -- the three-decker as it was later nicknamed -- became established, and dominated the production of English fiction in book form from the 1830s to the 1880s.Ex. Carlyle Systems Inc has recently issued version 2.1 of their cataloguing input/edit module, dubbed CATIE.* * *verbo transitivo to nickname, call* * *= nickname, dub.Ex: The physical dimensions of novels then tended to increase, and during the 1820s a standard form of three substantial volumes -- the three-decker as it was later nicknamed -- became established, and dominated the production of English fiction in book form from the 1830s to the 1880s.
Ex: Carlyle Systems Inc has recently issued version 2.1 of their cataloguing input/edit module, dubbed CATIE.* * *apodar [A1 ]vtto calllo apodan El Puma they call him The Puma¿cómo es que lo apodan? what do they call him?, what's his nickname?* * *
apodar ( conjugate apodar) verbo transitivo
to nickname, call
apodar verbo transitivo to nickname
' apodar' also found in these entries:
English:
dub
- nickname
* * *♦ vtto nickname* * *v/t nickname, call* * *apodar vt: to nickname, to call -
120 apuñalar
v.to stab, to stab with a knife, to dirk, to knife.* * *1 to stab* * *verb* * *VT to stab, knifeapuñalar a algn por la espalda — (lit, fig) to stab sb in the back
* * *verbo transitivo to stab* * *= stab, knife.Ex. He listened to me and then said 'ˆre you finished?' and just walked away -- The woman sat up, as if stabbed.Ex. They became so angry that they knifed him in the head.----* apuñalar por la espalda = stab + Alguien + in the back, backstab.* * *verbo transitivo to stab* * *= stab, knife.Ex: He listened to me and then said 're you finished?' and just walked away -- The woman sat up, as if stabbed.
Ex: They became so angry that they knifed him in the head.* apuñalar por la espalda = stab + Alguien + in the back, backstab.* * *apuñalar [A1 ]vtto stabme apuñalaba con la mirada she was looking daggers at me ( colloq)* * *
apuñalar ( conjugate apuñalar) verbo transitivo
to stab
apuñalar verbo transitivo to stab
' apuñalar' also found in these entries:
English:
knife
- stab
* * *apuñalar vtto stab* * *v/t stab* * *apuñalar vt: to stab* * *
См. также в других словарях:
Became — Be*came , imp. of {Become}. [1913 Webster] || … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
became — p.t. of BECOME (Cf. become) (q.v.) … Etymology dictionary
became — [bē kām′, bikām′] vi., vt. pt. of BECOME … English World dictionary
Became — Become Be*come , v. i. [imp. {Became}; p. p. {Become}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Becoming}.] [OE. bicumen, becumen, AS. becuman to come to, to happen; akin to D. bekomen, OHG.a piqu[ e]man, Goth. biquiman to come upon, G. bekommen to get, suit. See {Be } … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
became — [[t]bɪke͟ɪm[/t]] Became is the past tense of become … English dictionary
became indifferent — became apathetic, became disinterested, became impassive … English contemporary dictionary
became a nuisance — became a bother, became annoying … English contemporary dictionary
became a star — became a celebrity, became famous … English contemporary dictionary
became a vegetable — became brain dead, went into a coma; became inactive … English contemporary dictionary
became depressed — became sad, became unhappy … English contemporary dictionary
became famous — became a celebrity, became well known … English contemporary dictionary