-
1 de una forma deplorable
-
2 deplorablemente
adv.deplorably, mournfully, sorrowfully.* * *ADV deplorably, appallingly* * *= disgracefully, execrably, pitifully.Ex. The increasing efficiency of machine printing did reduce the average price of reprints and of popular works but new literature remained disgracefully expensive.Ex. Their work has been chronicled by Boyd Rayward in a readable (but execrably printed) work.Ex. To sell books is still more special than to sell groceries even though the profits may be pitifully low and to be a bookshop proprietor is a much more middle-class status than is that of grocer, haberdasher or vendor of garden implements.----* deplorablemente + Adjetivo = woefully + Adjetivo.* * *= disgracefully, execrably, pitifully.Ex: The increasing efficiency of machine printing did reduce the average price of reprints and of popular works but new literature remained disgracefully expensive.
Ex: Their work has been chronicled by Boyd Rayward in a readable (but execrably printed) work.Ex: To sell books is still more special than to sell groceries even though the profits may be pitifully low and to be a bookshop proprietor is a much more middle-class status than is that of grocer, haberdasher or vendor of garden implements.* deplorablemente + Adjetivo = woefully + Adjetivo.* * *deplorablemente advdeplorably -
3 describir
v.1 to describe.Elsa describió el paisaje Elsa described the landscape.María describió sus experiencias Mary described her experiences.2 to explain, to demonstrate.Ricardo describe sus conclusiones Richard explains his conclusions.* * *(pp descrito,-a)1 to describe2 (trazar) to trace, describe* * *verb* * *(pp descrito)VT to describe* * *verbo transitivo1) <paisaje/persona> to describe2) (frml) <línea/órbita> to trace, describe (frml)* * *= depict, describe, give + an account of, give + a portrait of, profile, render, portray, characterise [characterize, -USA], paint + a picture, chronicle, give + a picture, picture, detail, illustrate.Ex. Trial procedures aiming to increase service recognition and service usage, and the evaluation thereof, are then depicted.Ex. Informative abstracts are appropriate for texts describing experimental work, and document with a central theme.Ex. This article gives some background information on markup systems and gives a brief account of the Standard Generalised Markup Language (SGML).Ex. This article gives a portrait of Varde public library, due to take possession of a new main library in then central town square.Ex. He was profiled in April 1972 as the Wilson Library Bulletin front-liner.Ex. The eventuality is, admittedly, remote but it is also necessary to render the imprint statement in this amount of detail.Ex. Hardy had a tragic vision of life and that indeed is what the novels portray.Ex. As a consequence of the dualism of the research library and the public library different organisational schemes developed in the urban library system, which are characterised here in detail.Ex. The data paint a picture of a fragmented discipline.Ex. Their work has been chronicled by Boyd Rayward in a readable (but execrably printed) work.Ex. The 1981 census data was used as a rough guide to give a picture of the area and to compile graphs from these statistics.Ex. In most cases authors pictured incest as an assault against the innocent, but they often saw the abuser, especially the father, as a victim of himself and he is rarely punished with prison.Ex. In May 1973 a paper was sent to all universities detailing the norms for university library accommodation, whereby the accommodation entitlements were further reduced to about one in five.Ex. The presence of eggshells, faecal pellets, and silk threads in association with a mite-like animal illustrates a complex ecosystem.----* describir a grandes rasgos = paint + a broad picture.* describir con palabras = describe + in words.* describir de forma general = outline.* describir el ascenso a la fama de = chart + the rise of.* describir el desarrollo de = trace + the development of, trace + the evolution of.* describir en líneas generales = outline.* describir erróneamente = mislabel.* describir las características de = characterise [characterize, -USA].* describir una situación = depict + situation.* no haber palabras para describirlo = beggar + description.* * *verbo transitivo1) <paisaje/persona> to describe2) (frml) <línea/órbita> to trace, describe (frml)* * *= depict, describe, give + an account of, give + a portrait of, profile, render, portray, characterise [characterize, -USA], paint + a picture, chronicle, give + a picture, picture, detail, illustrate.Ex: Trial procedures aiming to increase service recognition and service usage, and the evaluation thereof, are then depicted.
Ex: Informative abstracts are appropriate for texts describing experimental work, and document with a central theme.Ex: This article gives some background information on markup systems and gives a brief account of the Standard Generalised Markup Language (SGML).Ex: This article gives a portrait of Varde public library, due to take possession of a new main library in then central town square.Ex: He was profiled in April 1972 as the Wilson Library Bulletin front-liner.Ex: The eventuality is, admittedly, remote but it is also necessary to render the imprint statement in this amount of detail.Ex: Hardy had a tragic vision of life and that indeed is what the novels portray.Ex: As a consequence of the dualism of the research library and the public library different organisational schemes developed in the urban library system, which are characterised here in detail.Ex: The data paint a picture of a fragmented discipline.Ex: Their work has been chronicled by Boyd Rayward in a readable (but execrably printed) work.Ex: The 1981 census data was used as a rough guide to give a picture of the area and to compile graphs from these statistics.Ex: In most cases authors pictured incest as an assault against the innocent, but they often saw the abuser, especially the father, as a victim of himself and he is rarely punished with prison.Ex: In May 1973 a paper was sent to all universities detailing the norms for university library accommodation, whereby the accommodation entitlements were further reduced to about one in five.Ex: The presence of eggshells, faecal pellets, and silk threads in association with a mite-like animal illustrates a complex ecosystem.* describir a grandes rasgos = paint + a broad picture.* describir con palabras = describe + in words.* describir de forma general = outline.* describir el ascenso a la fama de = chart + the rise of.* describir el desarrollo de = trace + the development of, trace + the evolution of.* describir en líneas generales = outline.* describir erróneamente = mislabel.* describir las características de = characterise [characterize, -USA].* describir una situación = depict + situation.* no haber palabras para describirlo = beggar + description.* * *vtA ‹paisaje/persona› to describe¿me podría describir al ladrón? could you describe the thief for o to me?* * *
describir ( conjugate describir) verbo transitivo
to describe
describir verbo transitivo to describe
' describir' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
ancha
- ancho
- baja
- bajo
- bien
- delgada
- delgado
- trazar
- calificar
- caracterizar
- descrito
- detalle
English:
curve
- describe
- notice
- paint
- portray
- vividly
- depict
* * *describir vt1. [con palabras] to describe;descríbanos al individuo que la atacó describe the man who attacked you2. [trazar] [trayectoria, curva, órbita] to describe* * *<part descrito> v/t describe* * *describir {33} vt: to describe* * *describir vb to describe -
4 malamente
adv.badly, wickedly, wrongly.Haces las cosas mal siempre! You always do things badly!* * *ADV1) * (=mal) badly2) (=difícilmente)tenemos gasolina malamente para... — we barely o hardly have enough petrol to...
* * ** * *= poorly, badly, execrably, dismally.Ex. A poorly structured scheme requires the exercise of a good deal of initiative on the part of the indexer in order to overcome or avoid the poor structure.Ex. School classrooms are sometimes extraordinarily badly designed with poor acoustics, ineffective blackout facilities, and notoriously eccentric electrical outlets.Ex. Their work has been chronicled by Boyd Rayward in a readable (but execrably printed) work.Ex. The results suggest that works of fiction were generally well represented but that classics in the other fields were dismally underrepresented.* * ** * *= poorly, badly, execrably, dismally.Ex: A poorly structured scheme requires the exercise of a good deal of initiative on the part of the indexer in order to overcome or avoid the poor structure.
Ex: School classrooms are sometimes extraordinarily badly designed with poor acoustics, ineffective blackout facilities, and notoriously eccentric electrical outlets.Ex: Their work has been chronicled by Boyd Rayward in a readable (but execrably printed) work.Ex: The results suggest that works of fiction were generally well represented but that classics in the other fields were dismally underrepresented.* * *el sueldo le llega malamente hasta fin de mes his salary hardly o barely o only just lasts him to the end of the monthse ha adaptado malamente a la situación she hasn't adapted well to the situation* * *malamente advFam1. [muy mal] badly;todo acabó malamente it all ended badly2. [difícilmente] hardly;malamente te pudo llamar sin saber tu número she could hardly have called o Br rung you if she didn't have your number -
5 narrar
v.to recount, to tell.* * ** * *verbto narrate, relate, tell* * *VT [+ historia] to tell; [+ suceso, aventuras, experiencia] to recount* * *verbo transitivo (frml)a) película/libro <hazañas/experiencias> to tell of (frml), to relate; < historia> to tell, relate* * *= narrate, chronicle.Ex. The inmates satisfied their need for reading by smuggling in Polish books, or else narrating stories from memory.Ex. Their work has been chronicled by Boyd Rayward in a readable (but execrably printed) work.----* narrar una historia = narrate + story.* * *verbo transitivo (frml)a) película/libro <hazañas/experiencias> to tell of (frml), to relate; < historia> to tell, relate* * *= narrate, chronicle.Ex: The inmates satisfied their need for reading by smuggling in Polish books, or else narrating stories from memory.
Ex: Their work has been chronicled by Boyd Rayward in a readable (but execrably printed) work.* narrar una historia = narrate + story.* * *narrar [A1 ]vt( frml)1 «película/libro» ‹hazañas/experiencias› to tell of ( frml), to tell the story of, to relate; ‹historia› to tell, relate2 «persona» ‹historia› to tell, relate, recount, narrate ( frml)* * *
narrar ( conjugate narrar) verbo transitivo (frml)
‹ historia› to tell, relate
narrar verbo transitivo to narrate, tell: la novela narra la historia de un niño emigrante, the novel is about an emigrant child
' narrar' also found in these entries:
English:
narrate
- recount
* * *narrar vt[contar] to recount, to tell;la película narra la caída del imperio romano the movie tells the story of the fall of the Roman empire* * *v/t:narrar algo tell the story of sth* * *narrar vt: to narrate, to tell* * * -
6 procatólico
= pro-Catholic.Ex. The rise of a pro-Catholic segment with the beginning of modernity in the 19th century, particularly among the intellectual elite, is chronicled.* * *= pro-Catholic.Ex: The rise of a pro-Catholic segment with the beginning of modernity in the 19th century, particularly among the intellectual elite, is chronicled.
-
7 registrar
v.1 to search (zona, piso, persona).a mí, que me registren (informal) it wasn't me, don't look at meEllos registraron la casa They searched the house.2 to register, to record (datos, hechos).la empresa ha registrado un aumento de las ventas the company has recorded an increase in sales, the company's sales have gone upEllos registraron el evento They registered the event.3 to record.4 to register (to certificate). ( Latin American Spanish)5 to book in, to book.6 to inspect.Ellos registraron el auto They inspected the car.7 to frisk, to search, to reconnoiter, to strip-search.Ellos registraron a Ricardo They frisked Richard.* * *1 (inspeccionar) to search, inspect, look through2 (cachear) to frisk3 (inscribir) to register, record, note; (matricular) to register4 (grabar) to record5 figurado (detectar) to notice1 (matricularse) to register, enrol (US enroll)2 (detectarse) to be recorded3 (ocurrir) to happen* * *verb1) to register2) record3) search•* * *1. VT1) [+ equipaje, lugar, persona] to search2) (=anotar) to register, record3) [+ temperatura, terremoto] to record, register; [+ terremoto, temblor] to registerel termómetro registró una mínima de diez grados — the thermometer recorded o registered a minimum temperature of ten degrees
4) (Mús) to record5) Méx [+ correo] to register6)registrar un libro — † to mark one's place in a book
2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) <nacimiento/defunción/patente> to registerb) < sonido> to recordc) ( marcar) < temperatura> to record; < temblor> to registerpaíses que registran una alta tasa de inflación — countries which have o register a high rate of inflation
2) <equipaje/lugar/persona> to searcha mí que me registren! — (fam) don't look at me! (colloq)
¿quién ha estado registrando mis cajones? — (fam) who's been going through my drawers?
3) (Méx) < carta> to register2.registrarse v pron1) ( apreciarse)2) ( haber)3) ( inscribirse) to register; ( en hotel) to register, check in* * *= profile, record, set down, log, frisk, lodge, chronicle, search, clock.Ex. He was profiled in April 1972 as the Wilson Library Bulletin front-liner.Ex. Editors and compilers of editions of works are recorded together with the edition statement in the edition area = En en área de edición se incluyen los editores y compiladores de las ediciones de trabajos junto con la mención de edición.Ex. Set the components down as an ordered string of symbols, according to the filing value of the role operator.Ex. In order to understand this programme, it will help to imagine a librarian at a university who diligently logs every slide that is taken from the library for lectures.Ex. I'm not sure you're on secure ground when you frisk people's briefcases this way.Ex. The actual report has been lodged at the British Library but has not been published.Ex. Their work has been chronicled by Boyd Rayward in a readable (but execrably printed) work.Ex. It's my understanding of the Fourth Amendment that people and their possessions can't be searched unless law-enforcement officials have information that they've committed a crime.Ex. The cameras clock your speed and if you are going faster than you are supposed to, you can get a speed ticket in the post.----* registrar como propiedad literaria = copyright.* registrar la devolución = discharge.* registrar los fascículos = check in + issue.* registrarse = sign on, register (with).* registrarse en el hotel = check in + at the hotel.* registrar un fascículo = check in + issue.* reloj que registra el tiempo de conexión = accounting clock.* sin registrar = unlisted.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) <nacimiento/defunción/patente> to registerb) < sonido> to recordc) ( marcar) < temperatura> to record; < temblor> to registerpaíses que registran una alta tasa de inflación — countries which have o register a high rate of inflation
2) <equipaje/lugar/persona> to searcha mí que me registren! — (fam) don't look at me! (colloq)
¿quién ha estado registrando mis cajones? — (fam) who's been going through my drawers?
3) (Méx) < carta> to register2.registrarse v pron1) ( apreciarse)2) ( haber)3) ( inscribirse) to register; ( en hotel) to register, check in* * *= profile, record, set down, log, frisk, lodge, chronicle, search, clock.Ex: He was profiled in April 1972 as the Wilson Library Bulletin front-liner.
Ex: Editors and compilers of editions of works are recorded together with the edition statement in the edition area = En en área de edición se incluyen los editores y compiladores de las ediciones de trabajos junto con la mención de edición.Ex: Set the components down as an ordered string of symbols, according to the filing value of the role operator.Ex: In order to understand this programme, it will help to imagine a librarian at a university who diligently logs every slide that is taken from the library for lectures.Ex: I'm not sure you're on secure ground when you frisk people's briefcases this way.Ex: The actual report has been lodged at the British Library but has not been published.Ex: Their work has been chronicled by Boyd Rayward in a readable (but execrably printed) work.Ex: It's my understanding of the Fourth Amendment that people and their possessions can't be searched unless law-enforcement officials have information that they've committed a crime.Ex: The cameras clock your speed and if you are going faster than you are supposed to, you can get a speed ticket in the post.* registrar como propiedad literaria = copyright.* registrar la devolución = discharge.* registrar los fascículos = check in + issue.* registrarse = sign on, register (with).* registrarse en el hotel = check in + at the hotel.* registrar un fascículo = check in + issue.* reloj que registra el tiempo de conexión = accounting clock.* sin registrar = unlisted.* * *registrar [A1 ]vtA1 (hacer constar) ‹nacimientos/defunciones› to registerel número de parados registrados the number of people registered as unemployedregistraron el hecho en primera plana they reported o carried the story on the front page2 ‹sonido› to record3 (marcar) ‹temperatura› to record; ‹temblor› to registerlos termómetros registraron un aumento de las temperaturas the thermometers recorded o registered a rise in the temperatureslos países que registran la más alta tasa de inflación the countries which show o have o register the highest rate of inflationB ‹equipaje/casa/zona› to search; ‹persona› to searchregistraron a los detenidos those who were arrested were searched¿quién ha cogido mis llaves? —¡a mí que me registren! ( fam); who's taken my keys? — well, I haven't touched them! ( colloq)¿quién ha estado registrando mis cajones? ( fam); who's been looking through o going through o rummaging in my drawers?C ( Méx) ‹carta› to registerA«temperatura/temblor»: se registraron temperaturas de hasta 40 grados temperatures of up to 40 degrees were recordedse ha registrado un ligero descenso en las temperaturas temperatures have dropped slightlydurante la manifestación no se registraron incidentes de importancia there were no serious incidents during the demonstrationen el accidente no se registraron víctimas mortales no one was killed in the accidentB (inscribirse) to register; (en un hotel) to register, check in* * *
registrar ( conjugate registrar) verbo transitivo
1
‹ temblor› to register
2 ‹equipaje/lugar/persona› to search;
3 (Méx) ‹ carta› to register
registrarse verbo pronominal ( inscribirse) to register;
( en hotel) to register, check in
registrar verbo transitivo
1 (la policía una casa, a una persona, etc) to search
2 (un nacimiento, una firma, marca) to register
3 (información, datos, etc) to include
4 (una imagen, un sonido) to record
5 (una acción, un fenómeno) to record, register
' registrar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
registrador
- registradora
- cachear
- catear
- requisar
English:
bust
- decree
- examine
- frisk
- log
- ransack
- record
- register
- registrar
- ring up
- scour
- search
- search through
- chart
- go
- strip
* * *♦ vt1. [zona, casa, persona] to search;registraban a todos los que entraban al estadio everybody entering the stadium was searched;Fama mí, que me registren don't look at me!2. [datos, hechos] to register, to record;la empresa ha registrado un aumento de las ventas the company has recorded an increase in sales, the company's sales have gone up;esta enciclopedia registra muchos términos técnicos this encyclopedia contains a lot of technical terms3. [grabar] to record4. Am [certificar] to register* * *v/t1 ( inscribir) register2 casa search;(a mí) que me registren fam search me! fam* * *registrar vt1) : to register, to record2) grabar: to record, to tape3) : to search, to examine* * *registrar vb1. (examinar) to search2. (inscribir, indicar) to register3. (grabar) to record -
8 relatar
v.1 to relate, to recount (suceso).2 to narrate, to relate, to tell, to recite.Ricardo le cuenta historias al grupo Richard tells the group stories.* * *1 (una historia) to narrate, tell2 (un suceso) to report, tell* * *verbto relate, report* * *VT to relate, tell* * *verbo transitivonos relató su viaje — he related o recounted the story of his journey (frml)
* * *= recount, relate, chronicle.Ex. We recount the parts of the book which absorbed us utterly, which made us feel that the alternative world was more vivid, more alive, more immediate than our life outside the book.Ex. This article relates what happened to the records of the German era after the colony became a mandate under the British administration and after the attainment of independence.Ex. Their work has been chronicled by Boyd Rayward in a readable (but execrably printed) work.----* relatar la historia de = trace + the history of.* relatar un incidente = relate + incident.* * *verbo transitivonos relató su viaje — he related o recounted the story of his journey (frml)
* * *= recount, relate, chronicle.Ex: We recount the parts of the book which absorbed us utterly, which made us feel that the alternative world was more vivid, more alive, more immediate than our life outside the book.
Ex: This article relates what happened to the records of the German era after the colony became a mandate under the British administration and after the attainment of independence.Ex: Their work has been chronicled by Boyd Rayward in a readable (but execrably printed) work.* relatar la historia de = trace + the history of.* relatar un incidente = relate + incident.* * *relatar [A1 ]vtnos relató su viaje por el desierto he told us all about his journey across the desert, he related o recounted the story of his journey across the desert ( frml)relató los hechos de manera escueta she told us/them the bare facts, she related the bare facts to us/them ( frml)* * *
relatar ( conjugate relatar) verbo transitivo ‹historia/aventura› to recount, relate
relatar verbo transitivo to relate, recount
' relatar' also found in these entries:
English:
relate
* * *relatar vt[suceso] to relate, to recount; [historia] to tell* * *v/t tell, relate* * *relatar vt: to relate, to tell* * *relatar vb to relate -
9 élite intelectual, la
(n.) = intellectual elite, theEx. The rise of a pro-Catholic segment with the beginning of modernity in the 19th century, particularly among the intellectual elite, is chronicled. -
10 élite intelectual
la élite intelectual(n.) = intellectual elite, theEx: The rise of a pro-Catholic segment with the beginning of modernity in the 19th century, particularly among the intellectual elite, is chronicled.
См. также в других словарях:
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