-
1 coexistencia
• coexistence -
2 contemporaneidad
• coexistence• contemporaneity• simultaneity -
3 convivencia
• coexistence• cohabitation• get to work• get tongue-tied• living together• parturient• party against whom appeal is taken -
4 coexistencia
f.coexistence.coexistencia pacífica peaceful coexistence* * *1 coexistence\coexistencia pacífica peaceful coexistence* * *SF coexistence* * *femenino coexistence* * *= coexistence [co-existence].Ex. A text represent the result of coexistence of many codes.----* coexistencia pacífica = peaceful coexistence.* ser posible la coexistencia entre... = there + be + room for both....* * *femenino coexistence* * *= coexistence [co-existence].Ex: A text represent the result of coexistence of many codes.
* coexistencia pacífica = peaceful coexistence.* ser posible la coexistencia entre... = there + be + room for both....* * *coexistence* * *
coexistencia sustantivo femenino coexistence
' coexistencia' also found in these entries:
English:
coexistence
* * *coexistencia nfcoexistencecoexistencia pacífica peaceful coexistence* * *f coexistence -
5 convivencia
f.1 living together.2 get-together, party.* * *1 living together2 figurado coexistence* * *SF1) [de personas] cohabitation, living together2) (fig) (Pol) coexistence3) (Rel)* * *1) (vida en común - de etnias, sectas) coexistence; (- de individuos)2) convivencias femenino plural ( encuentro - religioso) retreat; (- de jóvenes) residential weekend (o week etc)* * *= cohabitation.Ex. The necessity of organisational cohabitation does not obliterate the distinctiveness of each from the other.* * *1) (vida en común - de etnias, sectas) coexistence; (- de individuos)2) convivencias femenino plural ( encuentro - religioso) retreat; (- de jóvenes) residential weekend (o week etc)* * *= cohabitation.Ex: The necessity of organisational cohabitation does not obliterate the distinctiveness of each from the other.
* * *A (vida en común — de etnias, sectas) coexistencela convivencia pacífica de las naciones the peaceful coexistence of nations(— de individuos): la convivencia pone el amor a prueba living together o cohabitation puts love to the testB convivencias fpl (encuentro — religioso) retreat; (— de jóvenes) residential weekend ( o week etc)* * *
convivencia sustantivo femenino (de etnias, sectas) coexistence;
( de individuos):
convivencia sustantivo masculino
1 (vida en común) life together
2 (de culturas, situaciones) coexistence
' convivencia' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
destrozar
- comuna
- educación
- educar
* * *convivencia nf1. [de grupos sociales, culturas, lenguas] coexistence;tras veinte años de convivencia se separaron they separated after twenty years of living together;la convivencia dentro del equipo es muy buena the members of the team get on very well together2.convivencias [de estudiantes] = period of a few days with no lectures when students take part in activities to get to know each other and learn how to get on* * *f living together* * *convivencia nf1) : coexistence2) : cohabitation -
6 convivir
v.1 to live together.Perros y gatos conviven amigablemente Dogs and cats live together amiably.convivir con to live with2 to live side by side.Ellos conviven con los animales They live side by side with the animals.* * *1 to live together2 figurado to coexist\saber convivir to give and take* * *VI1) (=vivir juntos) to live together2) (=coexistir) [personas] to live together, live together in harmony; [ideologías, razas] to coexist* * ** * *= coexistence [co-existence], coexist [co-exist], live with.Ex. A text represent the result of coexistence of many codes.Ex. In outlining the supposed 'stages of development' in reading, I emphasized that these were never steadily passed through, that in fact they can coexist.Ex. Culture may mean an acquaintance with the ways in which a particular people construct buildings, manufacture artifacts, worship deities, make war and love, raise children, and live with one another.* * ** * *= coexistence [co-existence], coexist [co-exist], live with.Ex: A text represent the result of coexistence of many codes.
Ex: In outlining the supposed 'stages of development' in reading, I emphasized that these were never steadily passed through, that in fact they can coexist.Ex: Culture may mean an acquaintance with the ways in which a particular people construct buildings, manufacture artifacts, worship deities, make war and love, raise children, and live with one another.* * *convivir [I1 ]vi«personas» to live together; «ideologías/etnias» to coexist, exist side by sideaprender a convivir to learn to live (in harmony) with othersconvivir CON algn to live WITH sb convivir CON algo to coexist WITH sth, exist side by side WITH sthun país donde el catolicismo convive con el marxismo a country where Catholicism and Marxism coexist o exist side by side* * *
convivir ( conjugate convivir) verbo intransitivo [ personas] to live together;
[ideologías/etnias] to coexist;
convivir con algn to live with sb
convivir verbo intransitivo
1 (en la misma casa) to live together
2 figurado to coexist [con, with]
' convivir' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
vivir
English:
coexist
- live
* * *convivir vi[personas] to live together; [grupos sociales] to coexist, to live side by side;convivir con to live with;aquí conviven dos sistemas informáticos distintos we have two different computer systems running side by side here* * *v/i live together* * *convivir vi1) : to coexist2) : to live together* * * -
7 coexistencia pacífica
peaceful coexistence* * *(n.) = peaceful coexistenceEx. The article is entitled 'The library assistant and the librarian: can the two live in peaceful co-existence?'.* * *(n.) = peaceful coexistenceEx: The article is entitled 'The library assistant and the librarian: can the two live in peaceful co-existence?'.
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8 reconquista
f.reconquest, recapture.la reconquista (history) = the Reconquest of Spain, when the Christian Kings retook the country from the Muslimspres.indicat.3rd person singular (él/ella/ello) present indicative of spanish verb: reconquistar.* * *1 reconquest2 la Reconquista the Reconquest (of Spain, from the Moors)* * *SF reconquest, recaptureRECONQUISTA The term Reconquista refers to the eight centuries during which the Christian kings of the Spanish kingdoms gradually reclaimed their country from the Moors, who had invaded the Iberian Peninsula in 711. It is generally accepted that the reconquest began in 718 with the Christian victory at Covadonga in Asturias, and ended in 1492, when Ferdinand and Isabella, the Reyes Católicos, retook Granada, the last Muslim stronghold. In the intervening centuries there had been a great deal of contact and overlap between the two cultures. Christians living under Arab rule were called mozárabes, while mudéjares were practising Muslims living under Christian rule. In contrast with the pluralistic society that had existed under the Arabs, the final years of the Reconquista were a time of great intolerance, with Arabs and Jews being forcibly converted to Christianity, after which they were known as conversos. Those refusing to be converted were expelled in 1492.* * *a) ( de territorio) reconquestb) la Reconquista the Reconquest•• Cultural note:The period in Spain's history during which the Christian kingdoms slowly recovered the territories occupied by the Moslem Moors of North Africa. The Moorish invasion of the Iberian peninsula began in 711 AD and was halted at the Battle of Covadonga in Asturias, in 718. The expulsion of the last Moorish ruler of the kingdom of Granada in 1492 completed the Reconquest. The intervening 781 years saw periods of conflict and coexistence between Moors and Christians. Alliances of Moorish and Christian kingdoms against mutual enemies were not unknown* * *a) ( de territorio) reconquestb) la Reconquista the Reconquest•• Cultural note:The period in Spain's history during which the Christian kingdoms slowly recovered the territories occupied by the Moslem Moors of North Africa. The Moorish invasion of the Iberian peninsula began in 711 AD and was halted at the Battle of Covadonga in Asturias, in 718. The expulsion of the last Moorish ruler of the kingdom of Granada in 1492 completed the Reconquest. The intervening 781 years saw periods of conflict and coexistence between Moors and Christians. Alliances of Moorish and Christian kingdoms against mutual enemies were not unknown* * *The period in Spain's history during which the Christian kingdoms slowly recovered the territories occupied by the Moslem Moors of North Africa. The Moorish invasion of the Iberian peninsula began in 711 AD and was halted at the Battle of Covadonga in Asturias, in 718. The expulsion of the last Moorish ruler of the kingdom of Granada in 1492 completed the Reconquest. The intervening 781 years saw periods of conflict and coexistence between Moors and Christians. Alliances of Moorish and Christian kingdoms against Christian rivals were not unknown.* * *
Del verbo reconquistar: ( conjugate reconquistar)
reconquista es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativo
Multiple Entries:
Reconquista
reconquista
reconquistar
reconquista sustantivo femenino
reconquest;
reconquistar ( conjugate reconquistar) verbo transitivo ‹ territorio› to reconquer, regain;
‹cariño/afecto› to win back
reconquista sustantivo femenino
1 recapture, reconquest
2 Hist the Reconquest
* * *reconquista nf1. [de territorio, ciudad] reconquest, recapture2. Histla Reconquista = the Reconquest of Spain, when the Christian Kings retook the country from the Muslims* * *f reconquest -
9 carta interminable
(n.) = epistleEx. The crisis revealed in the epistles focuses on this coexistence and on the particular theological concepts of the Jewish and Greek members of the community.* * *(n.) = epistleEx: The crisis revealed in the epistles focuses on this coexistence and on the particular theological concepts of the Jewish and Greek members of the community.
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10 cohabitación
f.cohabitation, concubinage.* * *1 cohabitation* * *SF (=vida en común) cohabitation frm; (Pol) coexistence* * *femenino (frml) cohabitation (frml)* * *= cohabitation.Ex. The necessity of organisational cohabitation does not obliterate the distinctiveness of each from the other.* * *femenino (frml) cohabitation (frml)* * *= cohabitation.Ex: The necessity of organisational cohabitation does not obliterate the distinctiveness of each from the other.
* * *( frml)cohabitation ( frml)* * *
cohabitación sustantivo femenino
1 living together
2 Pol cohabitation
3 euf sexual union
* * *cohabitación nf1. [convivencia] cohabitation2. Pol coexistence* * *f cohabitation, living together -
11 elevado
adj.1 elevated, upland, high, towering.2 lofty, elevated, rarified, rarefied.3 dignified.4 high.5 elevated, high, steep.past part.past participle of spanish verb: elevar.* * *1→ link=elevar elevar► adjetivo1 (gen) high2 figurado lofty, noble\elevado,-a a MATEMÁTICAS raised to* * *(f. - elevada)adj.1) high2) elevated* * *1. ADJ1) [en nivel] [precio, temperatura, cantidad] high; [velocidad] high, great; [ritmo] great2) [en altura] [edificio] tall; [montaña, terreno] highpaso II, 1., 2)3) (=sublime) [estilo] elevated, lofty; [pensamientos] noble, lofty4) [puesto, rango] high, important2.SM Cuba (Ferro) overhead railway; (Aut) flyover, overpass (EEUU)* * *- da adjetivo1) <terreno/montaña> high; < edificio> tall, high2) < cantidad> large; <precio/impuestos/índice> high; < pérdidas> heavy, substantial3) <categoría/calidad> high; <puesto/posición> high4) <ideas/pensamientos> noble, elevated; < estilo> lofty, elevated* * *= sharply rising, steep [steeper -comp., steepest -sup.], heightened, raised, lofty [loftier -comp., loftiest -sup.], elevated, soaring, hefty [heftier -comp., heftiest -sup.].Ex. The end of the eighteenth century saw a sharply rising demand for cheap print, associated with increases in population and in literacy which occurred all over Europe.Ex. The graph of the growth of the subject shows an initial flat, a steep climb, a small flat, and a rapid decline.Ex. The heightened level of community awareness has led some local authorities to take the initiative and to become information disseminators in their own right.Ex. The cords themselves could be placed either outside the backs of the folded sheets, where they would show as raised bands across the spine of the book, or in slots sawn into the folds to give the book a flat back.Ex. Librarians across the world should set themselves the lofty task of striving to create a global society in which people enjoy peaceful coexistence.Ex. Public investment in rebuilding the church and the gifts of individual donors were important indications of its elevated social standing.Ex. Detailed images of soaring aisles, delicate carvings, and stained-glass windows from the 12th and 13th centuries are captured on this new Web site.Ex. Research publication had to adopt the same economic model as trade publication, and research libraries the world over paid the hefty price = Las publicaciones científicas tuvieron que adoptar el mismo modelo económico que las publicaciones comerciales y las bibliotecas universitarias de todo el mundo pagaron un precio elevado.----* aljibe elevado = water tower.* camino elevado = causeway.* carretera elevada = causeway.* cisterna elevada = water tower.* depósito de agua elevado = water tower.* excepcionalmente elevado = exceptionally high.* ferrocarril elevado = elevated railroad.* lo bastante elevado = high enough.* Número + elevado a la potencia de + Número = Número + to the power of + Número.* paso elevado = overpass.* paso elevado de peatones = pedestrian overpass.* paso elevado para peatones = pedestrian overpass.* posición elevada = high ground.* ser elevado = be steep.* temperatura elevada = elevated temperature.* terreno elevado = high ground.* * *- da adjetivo1) <terreno/montaña> high; < edificio> tall, high2) < cantidad> large; <precio/impuestos/índice> high; < pérdidas> heavy, substantial3) <categoría/calidad> high; <puesto/posición> high4) <ideas/pensamientos> noble, elevated; < estilo> lofty, elevated* * *= sharply rising, steep [steeper -comp., steepest -sup.], heightened, raised, lofty [loftier -comp., loftiest -sup.], elevated, soaring, hefty [heftier -comp., heftiest -sup.].Ex: The end of the eighteenth century saw a sharply rising demand for cheap print, associated with increases in population and in literacy which occurred all over Europe.
Ex: The graph of the growth of the subject shows an initial flat, a steep climb, a small flat, and a rapid decline.Ex: The heightened level of community awareness has led some local authorities to take the initiative and to become information disseminators in their own right.Ex: The cords themselves could be placed either outside the backs of the folded sheets, where they would show as raised bands across the spine of the book, or in slots sawn into the folds to give the book a flat back.Ex: Librarians across the world should set themselves the lofty task of striving to create a global society in which people enjoy peaceful coexistence.Ex: Public investment in rebuilding the church and the gifts of individual donors were important indications of its elevated social standing.Ex: Detailed images of soaring aisles, delicate carvings, and stained-glass windows from the 12th and 13th centuries are captured on this new Web site.Ex: Research publication had to adopt the same economic model as trade publication, and research libraries the world over paid the hefty price = Las publicaciones científicas tuvieron que adoptar el mismo modelo económico que las publicaciones comerciales y las bibliotecas universitarias de todo el mundo pagaron un precio elevado.* aljibe elevado = water tower.* camino elevado = causeway.* carretera elevada = causeway.* cisterna elevada = water tower.* depósito de agua elevado = water tower.* excepcionalmente elevado = exceptionally high.* ferrocarril elevado = elevated railroad.* lo bastante elevado = high enough.* Número + elevado a la potencia de + Número = Número + to the power of + Número.* paso elevado = overpass.* paso elevado de peatones = pedestrian overpass.* paso elevado para peatones = pedestrian overpass.* posición elevada = high ground.* ser elevado = be steep.* temperatura elevada = elevated temperature.* terreno elevado = high ground.* * *A ‹terreno/montaña› high; ‹edificio› tall, highB ‹cantidad› large; ‹precio/impuestos› highun número elevado de casos a large number of caseslas pérdidas han sido elevadas there have been heavy o substantial lossesun elevado índice de abstención a high rate of abstentionC ‹categoría/calidad› hightiene un puesto muy elevado he has a very high o important positionD ‹ideas/pensamientos› noble, elevated; ‹estilo› lofty, elevatedla conversación adquirió un tono elevado the tone of the conversation became rather highbrow o elevatedfly* * *
Del verbo elevar: ( conjugate elevar)
elevado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
elevado
elevar
elevado◊ -da adjetivo
1 ‹terreno/montaña› high;
‹ edificio› tall, high
2
‹precio/impuestos› high;
‹ pérdidas› heavy, substantial
‹ estilo› lofty, elevated
elevar ( conjugate elevar) verbo transitivo
1 (frml)
2 (frml)
‹ nivel de vida› to raise
elevarse verbo pronominal
1 ( tomar altura) [avión/cometa] to climb, gain height;
[ globo] to rise, gain height
2 (frml) ( aumentar) [ temperatura] to rise;
[precios/impuestos] to rise, increase;
[tono/voz] to rise
3 (frml) ( ascender):◊ la cifra se elevaba ya al 13% the figure had already reached 13%
elevado,-a adjetivo
1 (temperatura) high
(torre, construcción) tall
2 (altruista, espiritual) noble
elevar verbo transitivo
1 to raise
2 Mat to raise (to the power of)
elevar al cuadrado, to square
elevar al cubo, to cube
elevado a la cuarta, etc, potencia, to raise to the power of four, etc
' elevado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
alta
- alto
- elevar
- elevada
- carestía
- cuadrado
- grande
- paso
English:
elevate
- flyover
- high
- overhead
- overpass
- causeway
- elevated
- fly
- grand
- lofty
- over
- upper
* * *elevado, -a adj1. [alto] [monte, terreno, precio, inflación] high;un elevado edificio a tall building;era de elevada estatura he was tall in stature;una persona de elevada estatura a person tall in stature;un elevado número de accidentes a large o high number of accidents;consiguieron elevados beneficios they made a large profit;ocupa un elevado cargo en la empresa she has a high-ranking position in the company2. [noble] lofty, noble;elevados ideales lofty o noble ideals3. [estilo, tono, lenguaje] elevated, sophisticated;emplea un vocabulario muy elevado she uses very sophisticated vocabulary* * *adj high; figelevated* * *elevado, -da adj1) : elevated, lofty2) : high* * *elevado adj high -
12 epístola
f.1 epistle, missive, letter.2 Epistle, apostolic letter of the New Testament.* * *1 formal epistle, letter* * *SF epistle, letter* * *femenino (frml o hum) epistle (frml or hum)* * *= epistle.Ex. The crisis revealed in the epistles focuses on this coexistence and on the particular theological concepts of the Jewish and Greek members of the community.* * *femenino (frml o hum) epistle (frml or hum)* * *= epistle.Ex: The crisis revealed in the epistles focuses on this coexistence and on the particular theological concepts of the Jewish and Greek members of the community.
* * *epistle, letter* * *
Multiple Entries:
Epístola
epístola
epístola sustantivo femenino (frml o hum) epistle (frml or hum)
epístola sustantivo femenino epistle
' epístola' also found in these entries:
English:
epistle
* * *epístola nf2. Rel Epistle* * *f epistle* * *epístola nf: epistle -
13 fijarse una tarea
(v.) = set + Reflexivo + taskEx. Librarians across the world should set themselves the lofty task of striving to create a global society in which people enjoy peaceful coexistence.* * *(v.) = set + Reflexivo + taskEx: Librarians across the world should set themselves the lofty task of striving to create a global society in which people enjoy peaceful coexistence.
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14 noble
adj.noble.los nobles the nobilitym.1 nobleman, man of nobility, noble.2 noblewoman, woman of nobility.* * *► adjetivo1 the nobility sing* * *1. noun mf.nobleman / noblewoman2. adj.* * *1. ADJ1) (=aristocrático) noble2) (=honrado) noble3) [madera] fine2.SMF nobleman/noblewomanlos nobles — the nobility sing, the nobles
* * *Ia) <familia/ascendencia> nobleun caballero de noble linaje — (liter) a knight of noble lineage (liter)
b) ( bondadoso) noblec) < animal> nobled) < madera> fineII(m) nobleman; (f) noblewomanlos noble — the nobles, the nobility
* * *= noble [nobler -comp., noblest -sup.], lofty [loftier -comp., loftiest -sup.], gallant, high-minded, patrician, noble, nobleman [noblemen, -pl.], noblewoman [noblewomen, -pl.].Ex. The bookseller is concerned with a more noble form of merchandise than any other and he is thus an aristocrat among traders.Ex. Librarians across the world should set themselves the lofty task of striving to create a global society in which people enjoy peaceful coexistence.Ex. This was an untenable state of affairs and he made a gallant effort to secure librarians and library boards from the possibility of such suits.Ex. The conference produced a high-minded, challenging agenda for the library community in the coming year = El congreso elaboró un programa lleno de retos y de principios muy elevados para la comunidad bibliotecaria en el año entrante.Ex. The patrician and merchant Hans Heinrich Herwart (1520-83) was one of the foremost collectors of musical sources in the 16th century.Ex. The nobles had always claimed a preference for advancement in the army, the navy, the church, and the parliaments.Ex. He was assassinated by noblemen who feared that his licentious manner and ignorance would undermine the monarchy.Ex. It is no coincidence that what literary and artistic works by women have survived are by noblewomen.----* gas noble = noble gas.* * *Ia) <familia/ascendencia> nobleun caballero de noble linaje — (liter) a knight of noble lineage (liter)
b) ( bondadoso) noblec) < animal> nobled) < madera> fineII(m) nobleman; (f) noblewomanlos noble — the nobles, the nobility
* * *= noble [nobler -comp., noblest -sup.], lofty [loftier -comp., loftiest -sup.], gallant, high-minded, patrician, noble, nobleman [noblemen, -pl.], noblewoman [noblewomen, -pl.].Ex: The bookseller is concerned with a more noble form of merchandise than any other and he is thus an aristocrat among traders.
Ex: Librarians across the world should set themselves the lofty task of striving to create a global society in which people enjoy peaceful coexistence.Ex: This was an untenable state of affairs and he made a gallant effort to secure librarians and library boards from the possibility of such suits.Ex: The conference produced a high-minded, challenging agenda for the library community in the coming year = El congreso elaboró un programa lleno de retos y de principios muy elevados para la comunidad bibliotecaria en el año entrante.Ex: The patrician and merchant Hans Heinrich Herwart (1520-83) was one of the foremost collectors of musical sources in the 16th century.Ex: The nobles had always claimed a preference for advancement in the army, the navy, the church, and the parliaments.Ex: He was assassinated by noblemen who feared that his licentious manner and ignorance would undermine the monarchy.Ex: It is no coincidence that what literary and artistic works by women have survived are by noblewomen.* gas noble = noble gas.* * *1 ‹familia/ascendencia› noble2 (magnánimo) nobleun gesto muy noble a very noble gesture3 ‹animal› noble4 ‹madera› fineCompuesto:el noble bruto the horsepalmeó al noble bruto he patted his noble steed ( liter)masculine, feminineA ( masculine) noblemanlos noble the nobles, the nobilityB ( feminine) noblewoman* * *
noble adjetivo
◊ un caballero de noble linaje (liter) a knight of noble lineage (liter)
■ sustantivo masculino y femenino (m) nobleman;
(f) noblewoman;
noble
I adjetivo
1 (aristocrático) noble
2 (sincero, honrado) honest, noble
II mf (hombre) nobleman
(mujer) noblewoman
' noble' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
elevada
- elevado
- par
- proceder
- señorial
- solar
- solariega
- solariego
- altivo
- hermoso
- metal
- sangre
- sublime
English:
baron
- count
- countess
- lofty
- noble
- nobleman
- noblewoman
- dowager
- lord
- title
* * *♦ adj1. [de la nobleza] noble2. [sentimiento, causa] noble;fue un gesto muy noble it was a very noble gesture3. [animal] noble4. [metal] noble;[madera] fine5. [gas] noble♦ nmfnoble;los nobles the nobility* * *m/f & adj noble* * *noble adj: noble♦ noblemente advnoble nmf: nobleman m, noblewoman f* * *noble adj n noble -
15 ponerse una tarea
(v.) = set + Reflexivo + taskEx. Librarians across the world should set themselves the lofty task of striving to create a global society in which people enjoy peaceful coexistence.* * *(v.) = set + Reflexivo + taskEx: Librarians across the world should set themselves the lofty task of striving to create a global society in which people enjoy peaceful coexistence.
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16 sublime
adj.sublime.pres.subj.1st person singular (yo) Present Subjunctive of Spanish verb: sublimar.* * *► adjetivo1 sublime2 (noble) noble, lofty1 the sublime* * *ADJ1) (=excelso) sublime2) liter (=alto) high, lofty* * *adjetivo <acción/sacrificio> noble; <cuadro/música> sublime* * *= grand [grander -comp., grandes -sup.], sublime, lofty [loftier -comp., loftiest -sup.], heavenly.Ex. As Carlyle saw it, 'the grand use of any catalog is to tell you, in any intelligible way, that such and such books are in the library'.Ex. Discoveries and developments, as well as purely literary work, are constituted in such a way as to make it difficult any longer to sustain the inherited notions of the sublime inventor, the lone genius, the poet as solitary = Los descubrimientos y los avances, además de las obras puramente literarias, son de tal forma que es difícil seguir manteniendo la idea que hemos heredado sobre el inventor sublime, el genio solitario, el poeta en solitario.Ex. Librarians across the world should set themselves the lofty task of striving to create a global society in which people enjoy peaceful coexistence.Ex. It is a matter of basic safety for everyone on board, before casting off in the morning for that next heavenly anchorage, to see that everything be properly stowed and secured.----* de forma sublime = subliminally.* de lo ridículo a lo sublime = from the ridiculous to the sublime.* de lo sublime a lo ridículo = from the sublime to the ridiculous.* hacer sublime = sublimate.* sublime, lo = sublime, the.* * *adjetivo <acción/sacrificio> noble; <cuadro/música> sublime* * *= grand [grander -comp., grandes -sup.], sublime, lofty [loftier -comp., loftiest -sup.], heavenly.Ex: As Carlyle saw it, 'the grand use of any catalog is to tell you, in any intelligible way, that such and such books are in the library'.
Ex: Discoveries and developments, as well as purely literary work, are constituted in such a way as to make it difficult any longer to sustain the inherited notions of the sublime inventor, the lone genius, the poet as solitary = Los descubrimientos y los avances, además de las obras puramente literarias, son de tal forma que es difícil seguir manteniendo la idea que hemos heredado sobre el inventor sublime, el genio solitario, el poeta en solitario.Ex: Librarians across the world should set themselves the lofty task of striving to create a global society in which people enjoy peaceful coexistence.Ex: It is a matter of basic safety for everyone on board, before casting off in the morning for that next heavenly anchorage, to see that everything be properly stowed and secured.* de forma sublime = subliminally.* de lo ridículo a lo sublime = from the ridiculous to the sublime.* de lo sublime a lo ridículo = from the sublime to the ridiculous.* hacer sublime = sublimate.* sublime, lo = sublime, the.* * *1 ‹acción/sacrificio› sublime, noble, lofty2 ‹cuadro/música› sublime* * *
Del verbo sublimar: ( conjugate sublimar)
sublimé es:
1ª persona singular (yo) pretérito indicativo
sublime es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) imperativo
Multiple Entries:
sublimar
sublime
sublime adjetivo ‹acción/sacrificio› noble;
‹cuadro/música› sublime
sublimar verbo transitivo
1 to sublimate
2 Quím to sublimate
sublime adjetivo sublime
' sublime' also found in these entries:
English:
lofty
- sublime
* * *sublime adjsublime* * *adj sublime* * *sublime adj: sublime -
17 civilizar
v.to civilize.La convivencia desbastó al chico Coexistence civilized the boy.* * *1 to civilize1 to become civilized* * *1.VT to civilize2.See:* * *1. 2.* * *= civilise [civilize, -USA].Ex. The author argues that the capacity of books to change lives and to civilize readers cannot be overstated = El autor sostiene la opinión de que no se puede dejar de recalcar la capacidad de los libros para cambiar la vida de las personas y civilizar a los lectores.* * *1. 2.* * *= civilise [civilize, -USA].Ex: The author argues that the capacity of books to change lives and to civilize readers cannot be overstated = El autor sostiene la opinión de que no se puede dejar de recalcar la capacidad de los libros para cambiar la vida de las personas y civilizar a los lectores.
* * *civilizar [A4 ]vt1 ‹país/pueblo› to civilize2 ‹persona›a ver si te civilizan un poco en el colegio I hope they teach you some manners at schoolcostó trabajo civilizarlos it took a while to get o teach them to behave properly1 «pueblo» to become civilized2 «persona» to learn to behave properly* * *
civilizar ( conjugate civilizar) verbo transitivo ‹país/pueblo› to civilize;
‹ persona› to teach … to behave properly
civilizarse verbo pronominal [ pueblo] to become civilized;
[ persona] to learn to behave properly
civilizar verbo transitivo to civilize
' civilizar' also found in these entries:
English:
civilize
* * *♦ vt1. [pueblo] to civilize2. [persona]ese muchacho necesita que alguien lo civilice that boy needs someone to teach him how to behave* * *v/t civilize* * *civilizar {21} vt: to civilize* * *civilizar vb to civilize -
18 desbastar
v.1 to plane, to smooth the surface of boards.2 to trim, to polish.3 to waste, to consume, to weaken.4 to purify one's morals and manners.5 to acquire some polish. (Figurative)6 to rough down, to rough-hew, to grind, to roughhew.El carpintero desbasta las tablas The carpenter roughs down the boards.7 to civilize.La convivencia desbastó al chico Coexistence civilized the boy.* * *2 figurado to refine, polish* * *1. VT1) (Téc) [+ madera] to plane down; [+ piedra] to smooth down2) [+ recluta, aprendiz] to knock the corners off, lick into shape2.See:* * *verbo transitivo1) ( dar forma aproximada a) < metal> to rough down; <madera/piedra> to rough-hew2) ( cepillar) to plane (down), smooth down* * *verbo transitivo1) ( dar forma aproximada a) < metal> to rough down; <madera/piedra> to rough-hew2) ( cepillar) to plane (down), smooth down* * *desbastar [A1 ]vt1 ‹metal› to rough down2 ‹madera/piedra› to rough-hewB (cepillar) to plane (down), smooth downto become more polished* * *desbastar vt[en carpintería] to plane* * *v/t smooth down -
19 contemporaneidad
f.1 contemporariness.2 contemporaneity, coexistence, simultaneity.* * *1 contemporaneousness, contemporaneity* * *contemporaneity, contemporaneousness
См. также в других словарях:
coexistence — [ kɔɛgzistɑ̃s ] n. f. • 1554; de co et existence 1 ♦ Existence simultanée (de plusieurs unités là où on n en attend qu une). La coexistence de l ancien et du nouveau décret. ⇒ cumul. « La coexistence en un même esprit d un poète, d un philosophe … Encyclopédie Universelle
Coexistence — pacifique La coexistence pacifique est une doctrine de politique extérieure soviétique. Formulée dès 1952 par Staline, reprise par Malenkov en 1953 puis reprise dans le discours de Nikita Khrouchtchev en 1956, premier secrétaire du Parti, au XXe… … Wikipédia en Français
Coexistence — Co ex*ist ence, n. Existence at the same time with another; contemporary existence. [1913 Webster] Without the help, or so much as the coexistence, of any condition. Jer. Taylor. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
coexistence — index compatibility, integration (amalgamation), integration (assimilation), peace, synchronism Burton s Legal Thesaurus … Law dictionary
coexistence — COEXISTENCE. s. fém. Terme de Philosophie. Simultanéité. État de plusieurs choses qui existent dans le même temps … Dictionnaire de l'Académie Française 1798
coexistence — mid 15c., joint existence; see CO (Cf. co ) + EXISTENCE (Cf. existence). As peaceful relations between states of different ideologies, 1954, a Cold War term … Etymology dictionary
coexistence — [n] happening or being at same time, place accord, coetaneousness, coevality, coincidence, concurrence, conformity, conjunction, contemporaneousness, harmony, order, peace, simultaneousness, synchronicity; concept 407 … New thesaurus
coexistence — n. 1) peaceful coexistence 2) coexistence with * * * [ˌkəʊɪg zɪst(ə)ns] peacefulcoexistence coexistence with … Combinatory dictionary
coexistence — co|ex|ist|ence [ˌkəuıgˈzıstəns US ˌkou ] n [U] when two different things or groups of people exist together at the same time or in the same place coexistence of ▪ the coexistence of two systems of measurement ▪ over fifty years of peaceful… … Dictionary of contemporary English
coexistence — noun (U) formal 1 the state of existing together at the same time or in the same place: the coexistence of the traditional novel with experimental writing 2 peaceful coexistence if two or more countries or people have a peaceful coexistence, they … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
coexistence — (ko è gzi stan s ) s. f. Existence simultanée. Les Ariens niaient la coexistence éternelle du Verbe divin avec son Père. • Il fait nier aux pères la coexistence des trois personnes divines, BOSSUET Avert. 6. • Science des lois qui président… … Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré