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121 extasiante
adj.spellbinding, enchanting, enrapturing.* * *= face-melting, mind-blowing.Ex. You can think of Homer as a badass literary ninja who wailed out a lyre solo so face-melting that it was remembered for the rest of history, and then dropped a smoke bomb and back-flipped out of sight forever.Ex. The implications of this are mind-blowing, since oil provides 40 per cent of all energy.* * *= face-melting, mind-blowing.Ex: You can think of Homer as a badass literary ninja who wailed out a lyre solo so face-melting that it was remembered for the rest of history, and then dropped a smoke bomb and back-flipped out of sight forever.
Ex: The implications of this are mind-blowing, since oil provides 40 per cent of all energy. -
122 falsa sensación de seguridad
(n.) = false sense of securityEx. The problem can be compounded because people also usually overvalue their houses, often by as much as 20 per cent, giving them a false sense of security.* * *(n.) = false sense of securityEx: The problem can be compounded because people also usually overvalue their houses, often by as much as 20 per cent, giving them a false sense of security.
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123 fascinante
adj.fascinating.* * *► adjetivo1 fascinating* * *adj.* * *adjetivo fascinating* * *= fascinating, intriguing, enthralling, piquant, entrancing, arresting, face-melting, mind-blowing.Ex. Further, classification and the network of relationships between subjects can be a fascinating study in itself, even devoid of any applications.Ex. Graphic displays are an intriguing step towards a multi-dimensional pictorial map of the subject areas covered by a thesaurus.Ex. This novel is still as fresh and vivid and fascinating and enthralling as it was when I was fifteen years old.Ex. The causes of this interest differ from one man to another; it may be the beautiful, the terrible, the awe-inspiring, the exhilarating, the pathetic, the comic, or the merely piquant.Ex. The play was an entrancing production that was textured with ideas, witty, and cunningly crafted.Ex. It is when speakers have no feeling for pause that their speech seems to burble on without any arresting quality; the club bore is a burbler: he has not learnt the eloquence of silence.Ex. You can think of Homer as a badass literary ninja who wailed out a lyre solo so face-melting that it was remembered for the rest of history, and then dropped a smoke bomb and back-flipped out of sight forever.Ex. The implications of this are mind-blowing, since oil provides 40 per cent of all energy.----* misterio fascinante = intriguing mystery.* * *adjetivo fascinating* * *= fascinating, intriguing, enthralling, piquant, entrancing, arresting, face-melting, mind-blowing.Ex: Further, classification and the network of relationships between subjects can be a fascinating study in itself, even devoid of any applications.
Ex: Graphic displays are an intriguing step towards a multi-dimensional pictorial map of the subject areas covered by a thesaurus.Ex: This novel is still as fresh and vivid and fascinating and enthralling as it was when I was fifteen years old.Ex: The causes of this interest differ from one man to another; it may be the beautiful, the terrible, the awe-inspiring, the exhilarating, the pathetic, the comic, or the merely piquant.Ex: The play was an entrancing production that was textured with ideas, witty, and cunningly crafted.Ex: It is when speakers have no feeling for pause that their speech seems to burble on without any arresting quality; the club bore is a burbler: he has not learnt the eloquence of silence.Ex: You can think of Homer as a badass literary ninja who wailed out a lyre solo so face-melting that it was remembered for the rest of history, and then dropped a smoke bomb and back-flipped out of sight forever.Ex: The implications of this are mind-blowing, since oil provides 40 per cent of all energy.* misterio fascinante = intriguing mystery.* * *fascinating* * *
fascinante adjetivo
fascinating
fascinador,-ora, fascinante adjetivo fascinating: es un hombre fascinante, he's a fascinating man
fue una experiencia fascinadora, it was a fascinating experience
' fascinante' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
fascinador
- fascinadora
- mágica
- mágico
English:
absorbing
- enthralling
- fascinating
- intriguing
- quite
- riveting
- spell
* * *fascinante adjfascinating* * *adj fascinating* * *fascinante adj: fascinating* * *fascinante adj fascinating -
124 fondo para gastos de funcionamiento
(n.) = operating fundsEx. Some 4 million dollars of that increase is dedicated to operating funds, representing an increase of 30 per cent over previous levels.* * *(n.) = operating fundsEx: Some 4 million dollars of that increase is dedicated to operating funds, representing an increase of 30 per cent over previous levels.
Spanish-English dictionary > fondo para gastos de funcionamiento
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125 fondos de material audiovisual
(n.) = AV holdingsEx. This represented a 9.9 per cent reduction in the library's book and AV holdings.* * *(n.) = AV holdingsEx: This represented a 9.9 per cent reduction in the library's book and AV holdings.
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126 fracción
f.1 fraction.2 fraction, part.3 paragraph.* * *1 (gen) fraction2 PLÍTICA faction* * *noun f.* * *SF1) (Mat) fraction2) (=parte) part, fragment3) (Pol etc) faction, splinter group4) (=repartición) division, breaking-up (en into)* * *1) fractionuna fracción de segundo — a fraction of a second, a split second
2) ( de organización) faction* * *= fraction, segment, fraction, denomination, moiety.Ex. The ALA Rules provide guidance on how to file fractions and superscript and subscript numerals.Ex. No such constraints exist where online display is anticipated, since only one segment at a time is displayed.Ex. Nowadays, the quantity of new information being generated is such that no individual can hope to keep pace with even a small fraction of it.Ex. Electric money will come in cent or less denominations to make high-volume, small-value transactions on the Internet practical.Ex. Based on the above considerations, medicinal ingredients containing the same active moiety are classified into identical or non-identical.----* fracción decimal = decimal fraction.* fracción de moneda = penny, coin denomination, coin denomination.* fracción de segundo = split second.* * *1) fractionuna fracción de segundo — a fraction of a second, a split second
2) ( de organización) faction* * *= fraction, segment, fraction, denomination, moiety.Ex: The ALA Rules provide guidance on how to file fractions and superscript and subscript numerals.
Ex: No such constraints exist where online display is anticipated, since only one segment at a time is displayed.Ex: Nowadays, the quantity of new information being generated is such that no individual can hope to keep pace with even a small fraction of it.Ex: Electric money will come in cent or less denominations to make high-volume, small-value transactions on the Internet practical.Ex: Based on the above considerations, medicinal ingredients containing the same active moiety are classified into identical or non-identical.* fracción decimal = decimal fraction.* fracción de moneda = penny, coin denomination, coin denomination.* fracción de segundo = split second.* * *A1 (elemento, parte) part, fraction, fragmenttodo pasó en una fracción de segundo it all happened in a fraction of a second o in a split second2 ( Mat) [ Vocabulary notes (Spanish) ] fractionB (de una organización) faction1 (en fútbol) half2 (en básquetbol) period* * *
fracción sustantivo femenino
fraction
fracción sustantivo femenino fraction
' fracción' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
décima
- décimo
- sexta
- sexto
- parte
English:
eighteenth
- eighth
- eleventh
- fifteenth
- fifth
- fourteenth
- fourth
- fraction
- ninth
- seventieth
- sixtieth
- split
- tenth
- third
- thousandth
- twelfth
- twentieth
* * *fracción nf1. [parte] fraction;todos recibieron su fracción de la herencia everyone received their part o share of the legacy;fracción de segundo split second2. [quebrado] fractionfracción decimal decimal fraction;fracción impropia improper fraction;fracción mixta compound fraction;fracción propia proper fraction3. Pol faction* * *f fraction; POL faction* * *fracción nf, pl fracciones1) : fraction2) : part, fragment3) : faction, splinter group* * *fracción n fraction -
127 fundir
v.1 to melt (derretir) (mantequilla, hielo).El calor del auto fundió el queso The heat of the car melted the cheese.2 to blow ( electricity and electronics) (fusible, bombilla).3 to merge (commerce).4 to fade (Cine).5 to blow (informal) (gastar). (peninsular Spanish)6 to bankrupt, to ruin. ( Latin American Spanish)7 to cast, to mold.El orfebre fundió el oro The goldsmith cast the gold.* * *1 (derretir) to melt2 (separar mena y metal) to smelt3 (dar forma) to cast4 (bombilla, plomos) to blow5 (unir) to unite, join6 familiar (despilfarrar) to waste, blow1 (derretirse) to melt2 (bombilla, plomos) to fuse, go, blow, burn out3 (unirse) to merge* * *1. VT1) (=derretir)a) [para hacer líquido] [+ metal, cera, nieve] to melt; [+ monedas, lingotes, joyas] to melt downb) (Min) [para extraer el metal] to smeltc) [en molde] [+ estatuas, cañones] to cast2) [+ bombilla, fusible] to blow3) (=fusionar) [+ organizaciones, empresas] to merge, amalgamate; [+ culturas, movimientos] to fuseintentaba fundir los elementos andaluces con los hindúes — she aimed to fuse Andalusian and Indian elements
4) (Cine) [+ imágenes] to fade5) * [+ dinero] to blow *7) Chile * [+ niño] to spoil2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1) <metal/hierro> to melt; < mineral> to smelt2) <estatua/campana> to cast3)a) (Elec) to blowb) (AmL) < motor> ( de gasolina) to seize... up; ( eléctrico) to burn... out4) (fam) <dinero/herencia> to blow (colloq)5)a) ( fusionar) to mergeb) (Cin) <imágenes/tomas> to fade, merge2.fundirse v pron1) metal to melt; nieve/hielo to melt, thaw2)a) (Elec)b) (AmL) motor ( de gasolina) to seize up; ( eléctrico) to burn out3) (enf) (fam) ( gastarse) to blow (colloq)4)a) ( fusionarse) to mergeb) (Cin, Mús) to fade5) (Per, RPl fam) ( arruinarse) persona to lose everything; empresa to go bust* * *= amalgamate, bring into, cast, confound, weld into/together, fuse, melt, mingle (with), melt down.Ex. In 1971 its functions were divided, part amalgamated with the Ministry of Defence, and part amalgamated with the Board of Trade to form the Department of Trade and Industry.Ex. Whether or not these specific proposals will be brought into some kind of overall approach and ideology remains to me a very questionable point.Ex. Printing types were cast in an alloy of lead, antimony, and tin called type-metal.Ex. The confounding of opposites is also common though, again, care has to be taken to see that we do not confound two subjects on which extensive literature exists.Ex. The Department of Trade and Industry has undergone many changes over the years; it has been split into two separate departments and welded together again.Ex. The experiment is financed externally and aims to fuse the functions of the 2 library types.Ex. The heat melts the wax on those areas which correspond with the image areas of the original, and the melted wax is absorbed into the tissue sheet.Ex. Not so long ago, the far off lands existed, to most people, in their imagination where they mingled with fairy tales and imaginary stories.Ex. In 1588 Thomas Thomas, Cambridge University printer, had one press and 1,400 kg. of type, but 40 per cent of the type was old metal waiting to be melted down.----* caja de fundir estereotipos = casting-box [casting box].* fundir en = meld (in/into).* fundirse = become + fused, run together.* fundirse con = blend into, become + one with, blend in with.* fundir tipos = cut + punches, cast + type.* plomo + fundirse = blow + a fuse.* * *1.verbo transitivo1) <metal/hierro> to melt; < mineral> to smelt2) <estatua/campana> to cast3)a) (Elec) to blowb) (AmL) < motor> ( de gasolina) to seize... up; ( eléctrico) to burn... out4) (fam) <dinero/herencia> to blow (colloq)5)a) ( fusionar) to mergeb) (Cin) <imágenes/tomas> to fade, merge2.fundirse v pron1) metal to melt; nieve/hielo to melt, thaw2)a) (Elec)b) (AmL) motor ( de gasolina) to seize up; ( eléctrico) to burn out3) (enf) (fam) ( gastarse) to blow (colloq)4)a) ( fusionarse) to mergeb) (Cin, Mús) to fade5) (Per, RPl fam) ( arruinarse) persona to lose everything; empresa to go bust* * *= amalgamate, bring into, cast, confound, weld into/together, fuse, melt, mingle (with), melt down.Ex: In 1971 its functions were divided, part amalgamated with the Ministry of Defence, and part amalgamated with the Board of Trade to form the Department of Trade and Industry.
Ex: Whether or not these specific proposals will be brought into some kind of overall approach and ideology remains to me a very questionable point.Ex: Printing types were cast in an alloy of lead, antimony, and tin called type-metal.Ex: The confounding of opposites is also common though, again, care has to be taken to see that we do not confound two subjects on which extensive literature exists.Ex: The Department of Trade and Industry has undergone many changes over the years; it has been split into two separate departments and welded together again.Ex: The experiment is financed externally and aims to fuse the functions of the 2 library types.Ex: The heat melts the wax on those areas which correspond with the image areas of the original, and the melted wax is absorbed into the tissue sheet.Ex: Not so long ago, the far off lands existed, to most people, in their imagination where they mingled with fairy tales and imaginary stories.Ex: In 1588 Thomas Thomas, Cambridge University printer, had one press and 1,400 kg. of type, but 40 per cent of the type was old metal waiting to be melted down.* caja de fundir estereotipos = casting-box [casting box].* fundir en = meld (in/into).* fundirse = become + fused, run together.* fundirse con = blend into, become + one with, blend in with.* fundir tipos = cut + punches, cast + type.* plomo + fundirse = blow + a fuse.* * *fundir [I1 ]vtA ‹metal› to melt; ‹mineral› to smelt; ‹hielo› to meltB ‹estatua/campana› to castC1 ( Elec) to blowE1 (unir, fusionar) to merge fundir algo EN algo to merge sth INTO sth2 ( Cin) ‹imágenes/tomas› to fade, mergeG ( Chi) ‹niño› to spoil■ fundirvi■ fundirseA «metal» to melt; «nieve/hielo» to melt, thawB1 ( Elec):se ha fundido la bombilla the bulb has gone o fused ( colloq)se fundieron los fusibles the fuses blewD1(unirse, fusionarse): las dos empresas han decidido fundirse the two companies have decided to mergefundirse EN algo:se fundieron en un apretado abrazo they clasped each other in a close embrace ( liter), they hugged each other tightlylos distintos colores se funden en un tono cobrizo the different colors merge into a coppery hueuna imagen se funde sobre la siguiente toma one image fades o dissolves into the nextEla empresa se fundió the company went bust ( colloq)se fundió con las ganancias comunes he pocketed all the profits* * *
fundir ( conjugate fundir) verbo transitivo
1
‹ mineral› to smelt
2 (Elec) to blow
3 ( fusionar) to merge
fundirse verbo pronominal
1 [ metal] to melt;
[nieve/hielo] to melt, thaw
2 (Elec):◊ se ha fundido la bombilla the bulb has gone (colloq);
se fundieron los fusibles the fuses blew
3 ( fusionarse) [empresas/partidos] to merge;
fundirse en algo to merge sth into sth
fundir verbo transitivo
1 (derretir) to melt
2 (fusionar, unir) to unite, join
3 (una bombilla, un plomo) to blow
' fundir' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
horno
English:
blow
- fade in
- fade out
- found
- melt
- melt down
- fuse
- smelt
* * *♦ vt1. [derretir] [mantequilla, hielo] to melt;[roca, hierro, plomo] to smelt2. [estatua] to cast;[oro] to melt down;fundir oro en lingotes to melt down gold into ingots3. Com to merge4. Cine to fade;fundir un plano con otro to fade one scene into another5. [fusible, bombilla] to blow8. Am [arruinar] to bankrupt, to ruin♦ viPerú Fam [molestar] to be a pest;los vecinos están siempre fundiendo our neighbours are a real pest* * *v/t1 hielo melt2 metal smelt3 COM merge* * *fundir vt1) : to melt down, to smelt2) : to fuse, to merge3) : to burn out (a lightbulb)* * *fundir vb (derretir) to melt -
128 gastos de funcionamiento
(n.) = operating costs, operating expenditure, operational costs, operating expenses, recurrent expenditureEx. Unfortunately, continuing the assignment of Library of Congress subject headings -a sine qua non, according to the views of the American librarian community- would have meant an increase in operating costs of approximately $1,000,000 per annum.Ex. The data that will be collected include holdings, staff, operating expenditures, population, age distribution, and income.Ex. A number of unstructured telephone and face-to-face interviews with record producers and users were carried out, revealing a reluctance to talk about the operational costs of record creation.Ex. OCLC reported fiscal 2001 as another successful year with gross revenues increasing 8 per cent to 165.3 million dollars and with net revenues reaching 159.8 million dollars with operating expenses 156.9 million dollars.Ex. Findings revealed the current almost total dependence on donor assistance for both capital and recurrent expenditure.* * *(n.) = operating costs, operating expenditure, operational costs, operating expenses, recurrent expenditureEx: Unfortunately, continuing the assignment of Library of Congress subject headings -a sine qua non, according to the views of the American librarian community- would have meant an increase in operating costs of approximately $1,000,000 per annum.
Ex: The data that will be collected include holdings, staff, operating expenditures, population, age distribution, and income.Ex: A number of unstructured telephone and face-to-face interviews with record producers and users were carried out, revealing a reluctance to talk about the operational costs of record creation.Ex: OCLC reported fiscal 2001 as another successful year with gross revenues increasing 8 per cent to 165.3 million dollars and with net revenues reaching 159.8 million dollars with operating expenses 156.9 million dollars.Ex: Findings revealed the current almost total dependence on donor assistance for both capital and recurrent expenditure.
См. также в других словарях:
cent — CENT. adj. numéral des 2 g. Nombre contenant dix fois dix. Cent ans. Cent hommes. Cent francs. Cent écus. Cent livres pesant, cent livres comptant. Deux cents hommes. Dans cent un ans. À cent deux ans d ici. Cent un, cent deux, cent trois,… … Dictionnaire de l'Académie Française 1798
cent — CENT. adj. numeral de tout genre, Nombre contenant dix fois dix. Cent ans. cent hommes. cent maisons. deux cens hommes. dans cent & un an. cent & une Province. à cent deux ans d icy. cent un, cent deux, cent trois. &c On se sert souvent de ce… … Dictionnaire de l'Académie française
Cent — [sɛnt], der; s, s: Untereinheit der Währungseinheiten verschiedener Länder und des Euros: die Zeitung kostet 80 Cent; ich möchte Cents in Scheine umtauschen. Zus.: Eurocent. * * * Cẹnt 〈m.; od. s, s od. (bei Zahlenangaben) ; Abk.: c od. ct; Pl … Universal-Lexikon
Cent — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Comparación entre los intervalos (relación entre dos frecuencias) musicales temperados y pitagóricos, mostrando la relación entre las frecuencias y los intervalos en cents. Los intervalos mostrados son (de izquierda… … Wikipedia Español
cent — CENT, cenţi, s.m. 1. Monedă divizionară în Statele Unite ale Americii şi în Canada. egală cu o sutime de dolar. ♦ Monedă în Ţările de Jos, valorând o sutime de florin. 2. (muz.) Subdiviziune pentru măsurarea intervalelor muzicale, egală cu o… … Dicționar Român
cent — Cent, Centum. Cent cinq juges qui estoient anciennement à Rome pour cognoistre des matieres civiles de grande importance, comme d heritages, tuteles, testamens, et autres, Centumuiri. Causes qui se traitoient par devant les cent cinq juges,… … Thresor de la langue françoyse
Cent — oder Zent (u. a. v. lat. centum ‚hundert‘) steht für: Cent (Währung), Name des hundertsten Teils des Euros und anderer Währungen Cent (Musik), in der Musik und Akustik ein Hundertstel eines Halbtones oder Zwölfhundertstel einer Oktave Cent… … Deutsch Wikipedia
Cent — Cent, kleinere Rechen oder geprägte Münze. Ein niederländischer Cent = 1/100 Gulden = 1,69 .; in den Vereinigten Staaten 1 Cent (früher in Kupfer, jetzt in Bronze geprägt) = 1/100 Dollar = 4,2 … Lexikon der gesamten Technik
Cent — Cênt, ein aus dem Latein. Centum, hundert, im Handel und Wandel übliches unabänderliches Hauptwort, das Verhältniß des Gewinstes gegen das Capital, oder den Verlag auszudrucken. Fünf pro Cent, ein halb pro Cent, fünf von hundert, ein Halbes von… … Grammatisch-kritisches Wörterbuch der Hochdeutschen Mundart
cent — cènt m. cent. De cent parts dètz : dix pour cent. Lo tant dau cent : le pourcentage … Diccionari Personau e Evolutiu
Cent — Cent, n. [F. cent hundred, L. centum. See {Hundred}.] 1. A hundred; as, ten per cent, the proportion of ten parts in a hundred. [1913 Webster] 2. A United States coin, the hundredth part of a dollar, formerly made of copper, now of copper, tin,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English