-
1 biógrafo
m.biographer.* * *► nombre masculino,nombre femenino1 biographer* * *biógrafo, -a1.SM / F biographer2.SM LAm † (=cine) cinema, movie theater (EEUU)* * *- fa masculino, femenino biographer* * *= biographer.Ex. Certain biographers and historians have particular interests that make various dimensions of their work particularly strong.----* biógrafo de familias = family historian.* * *- fa masculino, femenino biographer* * *= biographer.Ex: Certain biographers and historians have particular interests that make various dimensions of their work particularly strong.
* biógrafo de familias = family historian.* * *biógrafo -famasculine, feminine1 (persona) biographer2biógrafo masculine ( AmL ant) (cinematógrafo) movie theater ( AmE), cinema ( BrE), picture palace ( BrE dated)* * *
biógrafo◊ -fa sustantivo masculino, femenino
biographer
biógrafo,-a sustantivo masculino y femenino biographer
' biógrafo' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
biógrafa
English:
biographer
* * *biógrafo, -a♦ nm,f[escritor] biographer♦ nmCSur Anticuado [cine] cinema, US movie theater* * *m, biógrafa f biographer* * *biógrafo, -fa n: biographer -
2 excentricidad
f.eccentricity.* * *1 eccentricity* * *SF eccentricity* * *femenino eccentricity* * *= oddity, quirk, geekiness, eccentricity, eccentricity.Ex. A brief description of the catalogue and some of its oddities and idiosyncrasies is given.Ex. Biographers will find many, hitherto undiscovered, traits of character or quirks of career of the famous or notorious emerging out of apparently insignificant or unremarked ephemera.Ex. We will evaluate proposals on criteria of usefulness, newness, geekiness, and diversity of topics.Ex. This animation shows elliptical orbits with different eccentricities.Ex. In spite of his growing eccentricity, fruitful ideas continued to spring from his imagination.* * *femenino eccentricity* * *= oddity, quirk, geekiness, eccentricity, eccentricity.Ex: A brief description of the catalogue and some of its oddities and idiosyncrasies is given.
Ex: Biographers will find many, hitherto undiscovered, traits of character or quirks of career of the famous or notorious emerging out of apparently insignificant or unremarked ephemera.Ex: We will evaluate proposals on criteria of usefulness, newness, geekiness, and diversity of topics.Ex: This animation shows elliptical orbits with different eccentricities.Ex: In spite of his growing eccentricity, fruitful ideas continued to spring from his imagination.* * *1 (extravagancia) eccentricity* * *
excentricidad sustantivo femenino eccentricity
' excentricidad' also found in these entries:
English:
eccentricity
- oddity
* * *1. [extravagancia] eccentricity2. Geom eccentricity* * *f eccentricity* * *: eccentricity -
3 extravagancia
f.1 eccentricity.2 extravagance, eccentricity, oddity, oddness.3 extravagant act, quirk, eccentricity, extravaganza.* * *1 extravagance, eccentricity* * *SF1) (=cualidad) [de persona, aspecto, ropa] extravagance, outlandishness2) (=capricho) whimtiene sus extravagancias — he has his oddities o peculiarities
* * *su extravagancia en el vestir — the outlandish o extravagant way he dresses
* * *= flamboyance, extravagance, quirk, outrageousness, exoticism, whimsy, waywardness, geekiness, eccentricity, whim, peculiarity.Ex. The flamboyance of the earliest modern face proved evanescent, and it was a restrained interpretation of the design, combining elements of both the English and the French modern faces, that prevailed.Ex. Sometimes even an added entry is considered an extravagance.Ex. Biographers will find many, hitherto undiscovered, traits of character or quirks of career of the famous or notorious emerging out of apparently insignificant or unremarked ephemera.Ex. However, it is ironic that the author's first venture into the world of children's books is a disappointment because it does not have the puerile outrageousness of her 'adult' work.Ex. The article is entitled 'Diplomatics for photographic images: academic exoticism?'.Ex. Science is not necessarily a subject but a means of controlling the waywardness and whimsy to which the mind is susceptible.Ex. Science is not necessarily a subject but a means of controlling the waywardness and whimsy to which the mind is susceptible.Ex. We will evaluate proposals on criteria of usefulness, newness, geekiness, and diversity of topics.Ex. In spite of his growing eccentricity, fruitful ideas continued to spring from his imagination.Ex. If terms are drawn from a controlled vocabulary, the selection of index headings no longer depends entirely upon the whim of the author in framing a title.Ex. For, as Panizzi saw it, 'A reader may know the work he requires; he cannot be expected to know all the peculiarities of different editions; and this information he has a right to expect from the catalogues'.----* extravagancia típica de los hippies = hippiedom.* * *su extravagancia en el vestir — the outlandish o extravagant way he dresses
* * *= flamboyance, extravagance, quirk, outrageousness, exoticism, whimsy, waywardness, geekiness, eccentricity, whim, peculiarity.Ex: The flamboyance of the earliest modern face proved evanescent, and it was a restrained interpretation of the design, combining elements of both the English and the French modern faces, that prevailed.
Ex: Sometimes even an added entry is considered an extravagance.Ex: Biographers will find many, hitherto undiscovered, traits of character or quirks of career of the famous or notorious emerging out of apparently insignificant or unremarked ephemera.Ex: However, it is ironic that the author's first venture into the world of children's books is a disappointment because it does not have the puerile outrageousness of her 'adult' work.Ex: The article is entitled 'Diplomatics for photographic images: academic exoticism?'.Ex: Science is not necessarily a subject but a means of controlling the waywardness and whimsy to which the mind is susceptible.Ex: Science is not necessarily a subject but a means of controlling the waywardness and whimsy to which the mind is susceptible.Ex: We will evaluate proposals on criteria of usefulness, newness, geekiness, and diversity of topics.Ex: In spite of his growing eccentricity, fruitful ideas continued to spring from his imagination.Ex: If terms are drawn from a controlled vocabulary, the selection of index headings no longer depends entirely upon the whim of the author in framing a title.Ex: For, as Panizzi saw it, 'A reader may know the work he requires; he cannot be expected to know all the peculiarities of different editions; and this information he has a right to expect from the catalogues'.* extravagancia típica de los hippies = hippiedom.* * *1 (acto) outrageous thing (to do)se puede esperar cualquier extravagancia de él he's capable of doing some outrageous o very strange things2 (cualidad) extravagancesu extravagancia en el vestir the outlandish o extravagant o outrageous way he dresses* * *
extravagancia sustantivo femenino ( acto) outrageous thing (to do);
( cualidad) extravagance
extravagancia sustantivo femenino extravagance
' extravagancia' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
chifladura
- decir
- humorada
English:
extravagance
* * *1. [excentricidad] eccentricity2. [rareza] outlandishness* * *f eccentric behavior o Brbehaviour;una de sus extravagancias one of his eccentricities* * *: extravagance, outlandishness, flamboyance -
4 peculiaridad
f.1 uniqueness.2 particular feature or characteristic (detalle).3 peculiarity, characteristic, attribute, feature.* * *1 peculiarity* * *SF peculiarity, special characteristic* * *femenino peculiarity* * *= character, peculiarity, distinctness, quirk, exceptionalism, distinctiveness, character trait.Ex. Close attention to the role of the computer specialist reveals more of the character of reference activities.Ex. For, as Panizzi saw it, 'A reader may know the work he requires; he cannot be expected to know all the peculiarities of different editions; and this information he has a right to expect from the catalogues'.Ex. The library director and the architect cooperated to preserve the distinctness of an aging building while providing the public with up-to-the-minute services.Ex. Biographers will find many, hitherto undiscovered, traits of character or quirks of career of the famous or notorious emerging out of apparently insignificant or unremarked ephemera.Ex. The strongest support for this notion of exceptionalism comes from the evanescence and mutability of electronic documents.Ex. The necessity of organisational cohabitation does not obliterate the distinctiveness of each from the other.Ex. Personality theory based on genetics is used to trace inherited character traits in European royalty.----* peculiaridades = vagaries.* peculiaridades culturales = cultural background.* peculiaridades económicas = economic background.* peculiaridades geográficas = geographical background.* peculiaridades políticas = political background.* * *femenino peculiarity* * *= character, peculiarity, distinctness, quirk, exceptionalism, distinctiveness, character trait.Ex: Close attention to the role of the computer specialist reveals more of the character of reference activities.
Ex: For, as Panizzi saw it, 'A reader may know the work he requires; he cannot be expected to know all the peculiarities of different editions; and this information he has a right to expect from the catalogues'.Ex: The library director and the architect cooperated to preserve the distinctness of an aging building while providing the public with up-to-the-minute services.Ex: Biographers will find many, hitherto undiscovered, traits of character or quirks of career of the famous or notorious emerging out of apparently insignificant or unremarked ephemera.Ex: The strongest support for this notion of exceptionalism comes from the evanescence and mutability of electronic documents.Ex: The necessity of organisational cohabitation does not obliterate the distinctiveness of each from the other.Ex: Personality theory based on genetics is used to trace inherited character traits in European royalty.* peculiaridades = vagaries.* peculiaridades culturales = cultural background.* peculiaridades económicas = economic background.* peculiaridades geográficas = geographical background.* peculiaridades políticas = political background.* * *peculiarityesta peculiaridad física los protege del frío this peculiar physical feature protects them from the coldlas peculiaridades del sistema the particular o special characteristics of the systemes una peculiaridad suya it is one of his little quirks* * *
peculiaridad sustantivo femenino
peculiarity
peculiaridad sustantivo femenino peculiarity
' peculiaridad' also found in these entries:
English:
mannerism
- peculiarity
- quirk
* * *peculiaridad nf1. [cualidad] uniqueness;cada uno tiene sus peculiaridades we all have our little ways o idiosyncracies2. [detalle] particular feature o characteristic;tiene la peculiaridad de que funciona con energía solar a particular feature of it is that it runs on solar energy* * *f ( característica) peculiarity* * *peculiaridad nf: peculiarity -
5 rareza
f.1 rarity.2 infrequency.3 idiosyncrasy, eccentricity (extravagancia).4 oddity, quirk, singularity, peculiarity.5 rare thing.6 uncommonness, infrequency.* * *1 (poco común) rarity, rareness2 (escasez) scarcity3 (peculiaridad) oddity4 (extravagancia) eccentricity* * *SF1) (=calidad) rarity2) (=objeto) rarity3) (=rasgo singular) oddity, peculiaritytiene sus rarezas — he has his peculiarities, he has his little ways
* * *a) ( peculiaridad) peculiaritytodos tenemos nuestras rarezas — we all have our little quirks o idiosyncrasies
b) ( cosa poco común) rarityc) ( cualidad) rareness* * *= oddity, rarity, strangeness, quirk, weirdness, uncanniness, eeriness, exoticism, rareness, geekiness, eccentricity.Ex. A brief description of the catalogue and some of its oddities and idiosyncrasies is given.Ex. This article provides a description of rare books and some criteria for their identification: rarity, monetary value, age, limited editions and association.Ex. There is no doubt that the 'strangeness' of some of the headings compared with natural language has militated against their widespread acceptance.Ex. Biographers will find many, hitherto undiscovered, traits of character or quirks of career of the famous or notorious emerging out of apparently insignificant or unremarked ephemera.Ex. As examples of this weirdness he points to such instances as the bombings in Nevada and the militias in Arizona.Ex. The author shares with her readers her awareness of the dilemmas raised by the uncanniness of her subjects.Ex. The eeriness of the novel is increased by the everyday look of its characters.Ex. The article is entitled 'Diplomatics for photographic images: academic exoticism?'.Ex. Their supposed rareness seems to be due to a bias of sampling.Ex. We will evaluate proposals on criteria of usefulness, newness, geekiness, and diversity of topics.Ex. In spite of his growing eccentricity, fruitful ideas continued to spring from his imagination.* * *a) ( peculiaridad) peculiaritytodos tenemos nuestras rarezas — we all have our little quirks o idiosyncrasies
b) ( cosa poco común) rarityc) ( cualidad) rareness* * *= oddity, rarity, strangeness, quirk, weirdness, uncanniness, eeriness, exoticism, rareness, geekiness, eccentricity.Ex: A brief description of the catalogue and some of its oddities and idiosyncrasies is given.
Ex: This article provides a description of rare books and some criteria for their identification: rarity, monetary value, age, limited editions and association.Ex: There is no doubt that the 'strangeness' of some of the headings compared with natural language has militated against their widespread acceptance.Ex: Biographers will find many, hitherto undiscovered, traits of character or quirks of career of the famous or notorious emerging out of apparently insignificant or unremarked ephemera.Ex: As examples of this weirdness he points to such instances as the bombings in Nevada and the militias in Arizona.Ex: The author shares with her readers her awareness of the dilemmas raised by the uncanniness of her subjects.Ex: The eeriness of the novel is increased by the everyday look of its characters.Ex: The article is entitled 'Diplomatics for photographic images: academic exoticism?'.Ex: Their supposed rareness seems to be due to a bias of sampling.Ex: We will evaluate proposals on criteria of usefulness, newness, geekiness, and diversity of topics.Ex: In spite of his growing eccentricity, fruitful ideas continued to spring from his imagination.* * *1 (peculiaridad) peculiaritytodos tenemos nuestras rarezas we all have our peculiarities o our little quirks2 (cosa poco común) rarityel libro es considerado una rareza the book is considered a rarity3 (cualidad) rareness, rarity* * *
rareza sustantivo femenino
rareza sustantivo femenino
1 (objeto) rarity
2 (cualidad) rareness
3 (manía) peculiarity: no soporto sus rarezas, I can't stand his irritating mannerisms
' rareza' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
singularidad
English:
oddity
- peculiarity
- quaintness
- quirk
- rarity
* * *rareza nf1. [cualidad de raro] rareness, rarity2. [objeto raro] rarity3. [infrecuencia] infrequency4. [extravagancia] idiosyncrasy, eccentricity* * *f rarity* * *rareza nf1) : rarity2) : peculiarity, oddity -
6 célebres, los
= notorious, theEx. Biographers will find many, hitherto undiscovered, traits of character or quirks of career of the famous or notorious emerging out of apparently insignificant or unremarked ephemera. -
7 desapercibido
adj.1 unnoticed, unobserved, un-noticed, unperceived.2 unprepared, not ready, unaware.* * *► adjetivo1 (inadvertido) unnoticed2 (desprevenido) unprepared, unready\pasar desapercibido,-a to go unnoticed* * *ADJ1) (=no visto) unnoticed2) (=desprevenido) unprepared* * *- da adjetivo* * *= unnoticed, unseen, unrecognised [unrecognized, -USA], unnoted, unobserved.Ex. By retrieving and bringing together these two literatures, that implicit unstated, and perhaps unnoticed hypothesis becomes apparent.Ex. But he was wiry and wily, too, and he could often out-run, track, back-track, double-back, and finally dodge unseen in the subway.Ex. It is undeniable that the ripest crop of unrecognised great inventors, long-lost heirs to dormant peerages, and assorted harmless drudges is to be gathered in the great general libraries of our major cities.Ex. This approach draws attention to hitherto unnoted relationships among concepts.Ex. Differentials long attributed to marital status may in part reflect previously unobserved effects of sexual orientation.----* como un observador que pasa desapercibido = fly-on-the-wall.* desapercibido (que pasa) = unremarked.* pasando desapercibido = unobtrusively, unnoticeably.* pasar desapercibido = be unnoticeable, go + unnoticed, lie + unnoticed, remain + unnoticed, slip by + unnoticed, become + unnoticeable, go + unrecognised, be an invisible fly on the wall, go + unnoted, lie + forgotten, sneak under + the radar.* que pasa desapercibido = inconspicuous, unobserved.* salir desapercibido = sneak out of.* tratar de pasar desapercibido = keep + a low profile, lie + low.* * *- da adjetivo* * *desapercibido (que pasa)(adj.) = unremarkedEx: Biographers will find many, hitherto undiscovered, traits of character or quirks of career of the famous or notorious emerging out of apparently insignificant or unremarked ephemera.
= unnoticed, unseen, unrecognised [unrecognized, -USA], unnoted, unobserved.Ex: By retrieving and bringing together these two literatures, that implicit unstated, and perhaps unnoticed hypothesis becomes apparent.
Ex: But he was wiry and wily, too, and he could often out-run, track, back-track, double-back, and finally dodge unseen in the subway.Ex: It is undeniable that the ripest crop of unrecognised great inventors, long-lost heirs to dormant peerages, and assorted harmless drudges is to be gathered in the great general libraries of our major cities.Ex: This approach draws attention to hitherto unnoted relationships among concepts.Ex: Differentials long attributed to marital status may in part reflect previously unobserved effects of sexual orientation.* como un observador que pasa desapercibido = fly-on-the-wall.* desapercibido (que pasa) = unremarked.* pasando desapercibido = unobtrusively, unnoticeably.* pasar desapercibido = be unnoticeable, go + unnoticed, lie + unnoticed, remain + unnoticed, slip by + unnoticed, become + unnoticeable, go + unrecognised, be an invisible fly on the wall, go + unnoted, lie + forgotten, sneak under + the radar.* que pasa desapercibido = inconspicuous, unobserved.* salir desapercibido = sneak out of.* tratar de pasar desapercibido = keep + a low profile, lie + low.* * *desapercibido -dapasar desapercibido to go unnoticedno pasó desapercibido su comentario his comment did not go unnoticed* * *
desapercibido◊ -da adjetivo: pasar desapercibido to go unnoticed
desapercibido,-a adj (sin ser notado) unnoticed: intentaba pasar desapercibido, he was trying to go unnoticed
' desapercibido' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
desapercibida
English:
jump out
- slip past
- unnoticed
- unobserved
- detection
- profile
- skulk
* * *desapercibido, -a adj1. [inadvertido] unnoticed;pasar desapercibido to go unnoticed;su original obra no pasó desapercibida a los expertos the originality of her work didn't go o pass unnoticed by the critics2. [desprevenido] unprepared, unready* * *adj unnoticed;pasar desapercibido go unnoticed;pillar desapercibido a alguien catch s.o. unawares* * *desapercibido, -da adj1) : unnoticed2) desprevenido: unprepared, off guard -
8 desapercibido (que pasa)
(adj.) = unremarkedEx. Biographers will find many, hitherto undiscovered, traits of character or quirks of career of the famous or notorious emerging out of apparently insignificant or unremarked ephemera. -
9 famosos, los
(n.) = famous, theEx. Biographers will find many, hitherto undiscovered, traits of character or quirks of career of the famous or notorious emerging out of apparently insignificant or unremarked ephemera. -
10 célebres
los célebres= notorious, theEx: Biographers will find many, hitherto undiscovered, traits of character or quirks of career of the famous or notorious emerging out of apparently insignificant or unremarked ephemera.
-
11 famosos
los famosos(n.) = famous, theEx: Biographers will find many, hitherto undiscovered, traits of character or quirks of career of the famous or notorious emerging out of apparently insignificant or unremarked ephemera.
См. также в других словарях:
biographers — bi·og·ra·pher || baɪ É’grÉ™fÉ™ n. one who writes biographies (written account of a person s life) … English contemporary dictionary
List of biographers — Biographers are authors who write an account of another person s life, while autobiographers are authors who write their own biography.ome notable authors of biographies* Alfred Ainger, (1837 1904) Charles Lamb * Ellis Amburn, (born 1933), United … Wikipedia
biography — /buy og reuh fee, bee /, n., pl. biographies. 1. a written account of another person s life: the biography of Byron by Marchand. 2. an account in biographical form of an organization, society, theater, animal, etc. 3. such writings collectively.… … Universalium
Guernes de Pont-Sainte-Maxence — Guernes de Pont Sainte Maxence, also known as Garnier, was a 12th century French scribe and one of the ten biographers [Knowles, David, The Episcopal Colleagues of Archbishop Thomas Becket, (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge: 1951)54] of… … Wikipedia
Eva Perón — María Eva Duarte de Perón First Lady of Argentina In office 4 June 1946 – 26 July 1952 President Juan Perón Preceded by … Wikipedia
Sadhu Sundar Singh — Infobox clergy name = Sadhu Sundar Singh image size = 200px caption = birth date = birth date|1889|09|03 birth place = Patiala, India death date = unknown death place = unknown church = other names = education = Anglican College, Lahore ordained … Wikipedia
St. Thomas Aquinas — St. Thomas Aquinas † Catholic Encyclopedia ► St. Thomas Aquinas Philosopher, theologian, doctor of the Church (Angelicus Doctor), patron of Catholic universities, colleges, and schools. Born at Rocca Secca in the Kingdom of Naples,… … Catholic encyclopedia
Nicolo Giraud — Nicolo or Nicolas Giraud (born c. 1795 – unknown) was a friend and possible lover of George Gordon Byron. Giraud probably met the poet in about 1810 while Byron was staying in Athens, where the pair spent a great deal of time together.… … Wikipedia
biography — The biography industry since 1960 has been remarkable in terms of its high quality, its continuity with past traditions, the distinctive nature of its topical variety and its sheer range of subjects. Standards and productivity have been high,… … Encyclopedia of contemporary British culture
Leopold Mozart — Johann Georg Leopold Mozart (November 14, 1719 ndash; May 28, 1787) was a composer, conductor, teacher, and violinist. He is best known today as the father and teacher of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, and for his violin textbook Versuch einer… … Wikipedia
Henry James — Infobox Writer name = Henry James Jr. caption = Henry James in 1890 pseudonym = birthdate = Birth date|1843|4|15 birthplace = New York City deathdate = Death date and age|1916|2|28|1843|4|15 deathplace = London occupation = Novelist genre = Novel … Wikipedia