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21 certificado
adj.certified, registered.m.1 certificate, certifying document.2 testimonial.past part.past participle of spanish verb: certificar.* * *1 (documento) certificate————————1→ link=certificar certificar► adjetivo1 (envío) registered1 (documento) certificate\certificado médico medical certificate* * *1. (f. - certificada)adj.2. noun m.* * *1. ADJ1) (Correos) [carta, paquete] registered2) (=aprobado) certified2. SM1) (=documento) certificatecertificado de acciones — (Com) share o stock certificate
certificado de escolaridad — completion certificate for compulsory education
certificado escolar — = certificado de escolaridad
2) (Correos) registered item* * *I- da adjetivo <paquete/carta> registeredIImasculino certificate* * *= certificate, registered, certification, certificated, licensure.Ex. He received his certificate of librarianship from the University of California at Berkeley the following year, and then returned to UCLA where he obtained a position in the library.Ex. Amongst the present 2,700 or more registered readers, pupils and students predominate.Ex. It is remarkable how, in an economy with diminishing job opportunities, librarians compensate for their inability to demonstrate the value of their skills by seeking the protection of educational and certification requirements.Ex. In 1977 it was granted the status of a certificated trade union.Ex. Only through formal certification or licensure will librarians achieve the consistently high level of performance necessary to command the confidence and respect accorded a profession.----* carta certificada = registered letter.* certificado de aptitud = certification.* certificado de defunción = death certificate.* certificado de depósito = certificate of deposit.* certificado de fecha de registro = time stamp [timestamp].* certificado de nacimiento = birth certificate.* certificado de sanidad = health permit.* certificado de seguridad = security certificate.* certificado fitosanitario = phytosanitary certificate.* correo certificado = registered mail.* renovación de certificado de aptitud = recertification.* * *I- da adjetivo <paquete/carta> registeredIImasculino certificate* * *= certificate, registered, certification, certificated, licensure.Ex: He received his certificate of librarianship from the University of California at Berkeley the following year, and then returned to UCLA where he obtained a position in the library.
Ex: Amongst the present 2,700 or more registered readers, pupils and students predominate.Ex: It is remarkable how, in an economy with diminishing job opportunities, librarians compensate for their inability to demonstrate the value of their skills by seeking the protection of educational and certification requirements.Ex: In 1977 it was granted the status of a certificated trade union.Ex: Only through formal certification or licensure will librarians achieve the consistently high level of performance necessary to command the confidence and respect accorded a profession.* carta certificada = registered letter.* certificado de aptitud = certification.* certificado de defunción = death certificate.* certificado de depósito = certificate of deposit.* certificado de fecha de registro = time stamp [timestamp].* certificado de nacimiento = birth certificate.* certificado de sanidad = health permit.* certificado de seguridad = security certificate.* certificado fitosanitario = phytosanitary certificate.* correo certificado = registered mail.* renovación de certificado de aptitud = recertification.* * *‹paquete/carta› registeredmandé la carta certificada or por correo certificado I sent the letter by registered mail o ( BrE) registered postcertificateCompuestos:share certificatedeath certificateschool-leaving certificatemedical certificate* * *
Del verbo certificar: ( conjugate certificar)
certificado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
certificado
certificar
certificado 1◊ -da adjetivo ‹paquete/carta› registered;
mandé la carta certificada I sent the letter by registered mail
certificado 2 sustantivo masculino
certificate
certificar ( conjugate certificar) verbo transitivo
to certify
certificado,-a
I adjetivo
1 certified
2 (correo) registered
II sustantivo masculino
1 certificate
2 certificado de estudios, school-leaving certificate
certificado médico, medical certificate
certificar verbo transitivo
1 to certify
2 (una carta) to register
' certificado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
acta
- certificada
- correo
- extender
- acompañar
- baja
- partida
English:
certificate
- death certificate
- marriage certificate
- recorded
- registered
- registered post
- birth
- certify
- death
- marriage
- register
* * *certificado, -a♦ adj[documento] certified; [carta, paquete] registered;♦ nmcertificatecertificado de ahorro savings certificate;certificado de buena conducta certificate of good conduct;certificado de calidad quality guarantee;certificado de defunción death certificate;Fin certificado de depósito certificate of deposit;certificado de estudios academic record;certificado de garantía guarantee certificate;certificado de matrimonio marriage certificate;certificado médico medical certificate;Com certificado de origen certificate of origin;certificado de residencia = official document confirming one's residence in a country, city etc* * *I adj carta registeredII m certificate* * *certificado, -da adj1) : certified2) : registered (of mail)certificado nm1) : certificate2) : registered letter* * *certificado1 adj registeredcertificado2 n certificate -
22 ordenar
v.1 to arrange, to put in order (poner en orden) (alfabéticamente, numéricamente).2 to order.Le ordené ir I ordered him to goOrdené la habitación I straightened up the room.La maestra ordenó silencio The teacher ordered silence.3 to ordain (religion).4 to order. ( Latin American Spanish)5 to sort, to classify in a given order, to order.Ordené mis papeles I sorted my papers.6 to ordain as.Ricardo ordenó a Manolo sacerdote Richard ordained Manolo as priest.7 to be ordered to, to be told to, to receive orders to.Se me ordenó matar I was ordered to kill.* * *1 (arreglar) to put in order; (habitación) to tidy up2 (mandar) to order3 RELIGIÓN to ordain4 (encaminar) to direct\ordenar las ideas figurado to collect one's thoughts* * *verb1) to order2) arrange* * *1. VT1) (=poner en orden) [siguiendo un sistema] to arrange; [colocando en su sitio] to tidy; (Inform) to sorthay que ordenar los recibos por fechas — we have to put the receipts in order of date, we have to arrange the receipts by date
voy a ordenar mis libros — I'm going to sort out o organize my books
ordenó los relatos cronológicamente — he arranged the stories chronologically o in chronological order
2) (=mandar) to order3) (Rel) to ordain2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1) <habitación/armario> to straighten (up) (AmE), to tidy (up) (BrE)2)a) ( dar una orden) to orderb) (AmL) (en bar, restaurante) to order3) < sacerdote> to ordain2.ordenarse v pron to be ordained* * *= arrange, collate, instruct, order, rank, sort, sort out, grade, enjoin, finger-snapping, sort into + order, range, file, ordain, create + order, put in + order, clear out.Ex. A catalogue is a list of the materials or items in a library, with the entries representing the items arranged in some systematic order.Ex. Contents page bulletins which comprise copies of contents pages of periodicals collated and dispatched to users are also reliant upon titles.Ex. Some of the above limitations of title indexes can be overcome by exercising a measure of control over the index terminology, and by inputting and instructing the computer to print a number of pre-determined links or references between keywords.Ex. For example, search software offers the ability to rank the retrieved material according to its relative significance.Ex. During the construction of a thesaurus, the computer can be enlisted to sort, merge, edit and compare terms.Ex. Some schools favor subject arrangement, other group together everything by publisher, and others sort everything out according to a theme.Ex. This had the advantage that the relevance judgments had already been made, and were graded into three levels: High relevance, Low relevance, No relevance.Ex. Heightened interest in the nation's founding and in the intentions of the founders enjoins law librarians to provide reference service for research in the history of the constitutional period.Ex. The stereotype of the decision-maker as a person who does nothig but finger-snapping and button-pushing fades with systematic research and analysis.Ex. Sort packages are designed to sort a specified file of records into order according to a particular field or key.Ex. Serials can be ranged in the order of the access number, i.e. in the order of their arrival, without distinction as to their size or contents.Ex. Numbers expressed in digits file before alphabetic characters, so it may be necessary to look in two different places for, say, a date -- 1984 will not file in the same place as ninenteen eighty four.Ex. Born in Amite County, Mississippi in 1924, Will Campbell was ordained as a Baptist minister at the young age of seventeen.Ex. The information rich are similarly paralyzed because of their inability to create order from all the information washing over them.Ex. The archives of Magdalen College were put in order and abstracts prepared in the 15th century.Ex. Pockets of resistance still remain in Fallujah, but the vast majority of insurgents have been cleared out.----* estar ordenado en forma circular = be on a wheel.* ordenar alfabéticamente = arrange + in alphabetical order.* ordenar alfabéticamente palabra por palabra = arrange + alphabetically word by word.* ordenar los documentos recuperados en orden de pertinencia = rank + document output, rank + documents.* ordenar mal = misfile.* ordenar por = file + in order of.* ordenar por número curren = arrange by + accession number.* ordenar por orden de importancia = rank + in order.* ordenarse a uno mismo = self-ordained.* sin ordenar = unordered, unsorted.* volver a ordenar = resort.* * *1.verbo transitivo1) <habitación/armario> to straighten (up) (AmE), to tidy (up) (BrE)2)a) ( dar una orden) to orderb) (AmL) (en bar, restaurante) to order3) < sacerdote> to ordain2.ordenarse v pron to be ordained* * *= arrange, collate, instruct, order, rank, sort, sort out, grade, enjoin, finger-snapping, sort into + order, range, file, ordain, create + order, put in + order, clear out.Ex: A catalogue is a list of the materials or items in a library, with the entries representing the items arranged in some systematic order.
Ex: Contents page bulletins which comprise copies of contents pages of periodicals collated and dispatched to users are also reliant upon titles.Ex: Some of the above limitations of title indexes can be overcome by exercising a measure of control over the index terminology, and by inputting and instructing the computer to print a number of pre-determined links or references between keywords.Ex: For example, search software offers the ability to rank the retrieved material according to its relative significance.Ex: During the construction of a thesaurus, the computer can be enlisted to sort, merge, edit and compare terms.Ex: Some schools favor subject arrangement, other group together everything by publisher, and others sort everything out according to a theme.Ex: This had the advantage that the relevance judgments had already been made, and were graded into three levels: High relevance, Low relevance, No relevance.Ex: Heightened interest in the nation's founding and in the intentions of the founders enjoins law librarians to provide reference service for research in the history of the constitutional period.Ex: The stereotype of the decision-maker as a person who does nothig but finger-snapping and button-pushing fades with systematic research and analysis.Ex: Sort packages are designed to sort a specified file of records into order according to a particular field or key.Ex: Serials can be ranged in the order of the access number, i.e. in the order of their arrival, without distinction as to their size or contents.Ex: Numbers expressed in digits file before alphabetic characters, so it may be necessary to look in two different places for, say, a date -- 1984 will not file in the same place as ninenteen eighty four.Ex: Born in Amite County, Mississippi in 1924, Will Campbell was ordained as a Baptist minister at the young age of seventeen.Ex: The information rich are similarly paralyzed because of their inability to create order from all the information washing over them.Ex: The archives of Magdalen College were put in order and abstracts prepared in the 15th century.Ex: Pockets of resistance still remain in Fallujah, but the vast majority of insurgents have been cleared out.* estar ordenado en forma circular = be on a wheel.* ordenar alfabéticamente = arrange + in alphabetical order.* ordenar alfabéticamente palabra por palabra = arrange + alphabetically word by word.* ordenar los documentos recuperados en orden de pertinencia = rank + document output, rank + documents.* ordenar mal = misfile.* ordenar por = file + in order of.* ordenar por número curren = arrange by + accession number.* ordenar por orden de importancia = rank + in order.* ordenarse a uno mismo = self-ordained.* sin ordenar = unordered, unsorted.* volver a ordenar = resort.* * *ordenar [A1 ]vthay que ordenar los libros por materias the books have to be arranged according to subjectordena estas fichas sort out these cards, put these cards in orderB1 (dar una orden) to orderla policía ordenó el cierre del local the police ordered the closure of the establishment o ordered the establishment to be closedel médico le ordenó reposo absoluto the doctor ordered him to have complete restordenar + INF:le ordenó salir inmediatamente de la oficina she ordered him to leave the office immediatelyordenar QUE + SUBJ:me ordenó que guardara silencio he ordered me to keep quiet2 ( AmL) (en un bar, restaurante) to orderordenar un taxi to call a taxiC ‹sacerdote› to ordainto be ordainedse ordenó sacerdote he was ordained a priest* * *
Multiple Entries:
ordenar
ordeñar
ordenar ( conjugate ordenar) verbo transitivo
1 ‹habitación/armario/juguetes› to straighten (up) (esp AmE), to tidy (up) (BrE);
‹ fichas› to put in order;
2
3 ‹ sacerdote› to ordain
ordenarse verbo pronominal
to be ordained
ordeñar ( conjugate ordeñar) verbo transitivo
to milk
ordenar verbo transitivo
1 (un armario, los papeles, etc) to put in order, arrange: ordené los libros por autores, I arranged the books by author
(una habitación, la casa) to tidy up
2 (dar un mandato) to order: les ordenó que guardaran silencio, she ordered them to keep quiet
3 (a un sacerdote, caballero) to ordain
ordeñar verbo transitivo to milk
' ordeñar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
alfabetizar
- arreglar
- mico
- ordenar
- recoger
- disponer
- mandar
English:
arrange
- clear up
- command
- dispose
- instruct
- marshal
- milk
- neatly
- ordain
- rank
- straight
- straighten
- straighten up
- tidy
- tidy out
- tidy up
- clear
- direct
- grade
- order
- organize
- sort
* * *♦ vt1. [poner en orden] [alfabéticamente, numéricamente] to arrange, to put in order;[habitación, papeles] to tidy (up);ordenar alfabéticamente to put in alphabetical order;ordenar en montones to sort into piles;ordenar por temas to arrange by subject2. Informát to sort3. [mandar] to order;te ordeno que te vayas I order you to go;me ordenó callarme he ordered me to be quiet4. Rel to ordain5. Am [pedir] to order;acabamos de ordenar el desayuno we've just ordered breakfast♦ vi1. [mandar] to give orders;(yo) ordeno y mando: Ana es de las de (yo) ordeno y mando Ana's the sort of person who likes telling everybody what to do2. Am [pedir] to order;¿ya eligieron?, ¿quieren ordenar? are you ready to order?* * *v/t1 habitación tidy up2 alfabéticamente arrange; INFOR sort3 ( mandar) order4 L.Am. ( pedir) order* * *ordenar vt1) mandar: to order, to command2) arreglar: to put in order, to arrange3) : to ordain (a priest)* * *ordenar vb3. (mandar) to order -
23 ordeñar
v.1 to arrange, to put in order (poner en orden) (alfabéticamente, numéricamente).2 to order.Le ordené ir I ordered him to goOrdené la habitación I straightened up the room.La maestra ordenó silencio The teacher ordered silence.3 to ordain (religion).4 to order. ( Latin American Spanish)5 to sort, to classify in a given order, to order.Ordené mis papeles I sorted my papers.6 to ordain as.Ricardo ordenó a Manolo sacerdote Richard ordained Manolo as priest.7 to be ordered to, to be told to, to receive orders to.Se me ordenó matar I was ordered to kill.* * *1 (arreglar) to put in order; (habitación) to tidy up2 (mandar) to order3 RELIGIÓN to ordain4 (encaminar) to direct\ordenar las ideas figurado to collect one's thoughts* * *verb1) to order2) arrange* * *1. VT1) (=poner en orden) [siguiendo un sistema] to arrange; [colocando en su sitio] to tidy; (Inform) to sorthay que ordenar los recibos por fechas — we have to put the receipts in order of date, we have to arrange the receipts by date
voy a ordenar mis libros — I'm going to sort out o organize my books
ordenó los relatos cronológicamente — he arranged the stories chronologically o in chronological order
2) (=mandar) to order3) (Rel) to ordain2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1) <habitación/armario> to straighten (up) (AmE), to tidy (up) (BrE)2)a) ( dar una orden) to orderb) (AmL) (en bar, restaurante) to order3) < sacerdote> to ordain2.ordenarse v pron to be ordained* * *= milk.Ex. Results showed that the first colostrum of ewes milked one hour postpartum had significantly more protein than that of nanny-goats.----* no vendas la leche antes de ordeñar la vaca = don't count your chickens before they are hatched.* ordeñar una vaca = milk + a cow.* sala de ordeñar = milking parlour.* * *1.verbo transitivo1) <habitación/armario> to straighten (up) (AmE), to tidy (up) (BrE)2)a) ( dar una orden) to orderb) (AmL) (en bar, restaurante) to order3) < sacerdote> to ordain2.ordenarse v pron to be ordained* * *= arrange, collate, instruct, order, rank, sort, sort out, grade, enjoin, finger-snapping, sort into + order, range, file, ordain, create + order, put in + order, clear out.Ex: A catalogue is a list of the materials or items in a library, with the entries representing the items arranged in some systematic order.
Ex: Contents page bulletins which comprise copies of contents pages of periodicals collated and dispatched to users are also reliant upon titles.Ex: Some of the above limitations of title indexes can be overcome by exercising a measure of control over the index terminology, and by inputting and instructing the computer to print a number of pre-determined links or references between keywords.Ex: For example, search software offers the ability to rank the retrieved material according to its relative significance.Ex: During the construction of a thesaurus, the computer can be enlisted to sort, merge, edit and compare terms.Ex: Some schools favor subject arrangement, other group together everything by publisher, and others sort everything out according to a theme.Ex: This had the advantage that the relevance judgments had already been made, and were graded into three levels: High relevance, Low relevance, No relevance.Ex: Heightened interest in the nation's founding and in the intentions of the founders enjoins law librarians to provide reference service for research in the history of the constitutional period.Ex: The stereotype of the decision-maker as a person who does nothig but finger-snapping and button-pushing fades with systematic research and analysis.Ex: Sort packages are designed to sort a specified file of records into order according to a particular field or key.Ex: Serials can be ranged in the order of the access number, i.e. in the order of their arrival, without distinction as to their size or contents.Ex: Numbers expressed in digits file before alphabetic characters, so it may be necessary to look in two different places for, say, a date -- 1984 will not file in the same place as ninenteen eighty four.Ex: Born in Amite County, Mississippi in 1924, Will Campbell was ordained as a Baptist minister at the young age of seventeen.Ex: The information rich are similarly paralyzed because of their inability to create order from all the information washing over them.Ex: The archives of Magdalen College were put in order and abstracts prepared in the 15th century.Ex: Pockets of resistance still remain in Fallujah, but the vast majority of insurgents have been cleared out.* estar ordenado en forma circular = be on a wheel.* ordenar alfabéticamente = arrange + in alphabetical order.* ordenar alfabéticamente palabra por palabra = arrange + alphabetically word by word.* ordenar los documentos recuperados en orden de pertinencia = rank + document output, rank + documents.* ordenar mal = misfile.* ordenar por = file + in order of.* ordenar por número curren = arrange by + accession number.* ordenar por orden de importancia = rank + in order.* ordenarse a uno mismo = self-ordained.* sin ordenar = unordered, unsorted.* volver a ordenar = resort.* * *ordenar [A1 ]vthay que ordenar los libros por materias the books have to be arranged according to subjectordena estas fichas sort out these cards, put these cards in orderB1 (dar una orden) to orderla policía ordenó el cierre del local the police ordered the closure of the establishment o ordered the establishment to be closedel médico le ordenó reposo absoluto the doctor ordered him to have complete restordenar + INF:le ordenó salir inmediatamente de la oficina she ordered him to leave the office immediatelyordenar QUE + SUBJ:me ordenó que guardara silencio he ordered me to keep quiet2 ( AmL) (en un bar, restaurante) to orderordenar un taxi to call a taxiC ‹sacerdote› to ordainto be ordainedse ordenó sacerdote he was ordained a priest* * *
Multiple Entries:
ordenar
ordeñar
ordenar ( conjugate ordenar) verbo transitivo
1 ‹habitación/armario/juguetes› to straighten (up) (esp AmE), to tidy (up) (BrE);
‹ fichas› to put in order;
2
3 ‹ sacerdote› to ordain
ordenarse verbo pronominal
to be ordained
ordeñar ( conjugate ordeñar) verbo transitivo
to milk
ordenar verbo transitivo
1 (un armario, los papeles, etc) to put in order, arrange: ordené los libros por autores, I arranged the books by author
(una habitación, la casa) to tidy up
2 (dar un mandato) to order: les ordenó que guardaran silencio, she ordered them to keep quiet
3 (a un sacerdote, caballero) to ordain
ordeñar verbo transitivo to milk
' ordeñar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
alfabetizar
- arreglar
- mico
- ordenar
- recoger
- disponer
- mandar
English:
arrange
- clear up
- command
- dispose
- instruct
- marshal
- milk
- neatly
- ordain
- rank
- straight
- straighten
- straighten up
- tidy
- tidy out
- tidy up
- clear
- direct
- grade
- order
- organize
- sort
* * *♦ vt1. [poner en orden] [alfabéticamente, numéricamente] to arrange, to put in order;[habitación, papeles] to tidy (up);ordenar alfabéticamente to put in alphabetical order;ordenar en montones to sort into piles;ordenar por temas to arrange by subject2. Informát to sort3. [mandar] to order;te ordeno que te vayas I order you to go;me ordenó callarme he ordered me to be quiet4. Rel to ordain5. Am [pedir] to order;acabamos de ordenar el desayuno we've just ordered breakfast♦ vi1. [mandar] to give orders;(yo) ordeno y mando: Ana es de las de (yo) ordeno y mando Ana's the sort of person who likes telling everybody what to do2. Am [pedir] to order;¿ya eligieron?, ¿quieren ordenar? are you ready to order?* * *v/t1 habitación tidy up2 alfabéticamente arrange; INFOR sort3 ( mandar) order4 L.Am. ( pedir) order* * *ordenar vt1) mandar: to order, to command2) arreglar: to put in order, to arrange3) : to ordain (a priest)* * *ordenar vb3. (mandar) to order -
24 Bentham, Sir Samuel
SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping[br]b. 11 January 1757 Englandd. 31 May 1831 London, England[br]English naval architect and engineer.[br]He was the son of Jeremiah Bentham, a lawyer. His mother died when he was an infant and his early education was at Westminster. At the age of 14 he was apprenticed to a master shipwright at Woolwich and later at Chatham Dockyard, where he made some small improvements in the fittings of ships. In 1778 he completed his apprenticeship and sailed on the Bienfaisant on a summer cruise of the Channel Fleet where he suggested and supervised several improvements to the steering gear and gun fittings.Unable to find suitable employment at home, he sailed for Russia to study naval architecture and shipbuilding, arriving at St Petersburg in 1780, whence he travelled throughout Russia as far as the frontier of China, examining mines and methods of working metals. He settled in Kritchev in 1782 and there established a small shipyard with a motley work-force. In 1784 he was appointed to command a battalion. He set up a yard on the "Panopticon" principle, with all workshops radiating from his own central office. He increased the armament of his ships greatly by strengthening the hulls and fitting guns without recoil, which resulted in a great victory over the Turks at Liman in 1788. For this he was awarded the Cross of St George and promoted to Brigadier- General. Soon after, he was appointed to a command in Siberia, where he was responsible for opening up the resources of the country greatly by developing river navigation.In 1791 he returned to England, where he was at first involved in the development of the Panopticon for his brother as well as with several other patents. In 1795 he was asked to look into the mechanization of the naval dockyards, and for the next eighteen years he was involved in improving methods of naval construction and machinery. He was responsible for the invention of the steam dredger, the caisson method of enclosing the entrances to docks, and the development of non-recoil cannonades of large calibre.His intervention in the maladministration of the naval dockyards resulted in an enquiry that brought about the clearing-away of much corruption, making him very unpopular. As a result he was sent to St Petersburg to arrange for the building of a number of ships for the British navy, in which the Russians had no intention of co-operating. On his return to England after two years he was told that his office of Inspector-General of Navy Works had been abolished and he was appointed to the Navy Board; he had several disagreements with John Rennie and in 1812 was told that this office, too, had been abolished. He went to live in France, where he stayed for thirteen years, returning in 1827 to arrange for the publication of some of his papers.There is some doubt about his use of his title: there is no record of his having received a knighthood in England, but it was assumed that he was authorized to use the title, granted to him in Russia, after his presentation to the Tsar in 1809.[br]Further ReadingMary Sophia Bentham, Life of Brigadier-General Sir Samuel Bentham, K.S.G., Formerly Inspector of Naval Works (written by his wife, who died before completing it; completed by their daughter).IMcN -
25 requerir
v.1 to require.Ellos requieren un auto They require a car.Ella requiere amor She demands love.La necesidad demanda proceder Need requires proceeding.2 to demand.3 to order (law).4 to summon.El juez requirió al demandado The judge summoned the defendant.5 to require to, to need to.Ella requiere firmar She requires to sign.6 to take.Requiere tiempo It requires time to things correctly.7 to page, to call out for, to call.Ellos requieren a María They page Mary.8 to want.9 to call to.This situation calls to act rapidly Esta situación requiere actuar rápido.* * *1 (necesitar) to require, need2 (decir con autoridad) to demand, call for3 (solicitar) to request4 (persuadir) to persuade5 DERECHO to summon\requerir de amores literal to court, woo* * *1. VT1) (=necesitar) to need, require"se requiere dominio del inglés" — "fluent English required", "good command of English required"
2) (=solicitar) to request, askrequerir a algn que haga algo — to request o ask sb to do sth
3) (=llamar) to send for, summon frm2.VIrequerir de — esp LAm to need, require
* * *verbo transitivo1) ( necesitar) to requirerequiere paciencia — it requires o demands patience
* * *= have + calls for, call for, call on/upon, cry for, demand, involve, make + demand, require, elicit, requisition.Ex. For some while there have been calls for an abbreviated version of AACR, for small libraries and for non-cataloguers.Ex. The main rules call for entry of societies under name and institutions under place.Ex. The difference is only that an indexer is not usually called upon to appreciate the subtleties of the subject to the same extent as an abstractor.Ex. However, this work still cries for expansion, and it must also become more systematic.Ex. The other part of the picture reveals title indexes to be only crude subject indexes, which for effective use demand imagination and searching skills on the part of the user.Ex. Generating author indexes or catalogues involves creating headings from author's names, that is the names of persons or organisations.Ex. Also, informative abstracts make greater demands upon appreciation of subject content than indicative abstracts.Ex. The condition approach should require less enumeration of rules for different types of materials, and therefore should require fewer rules.Ex. This article looks at ways in which librarians in leadership roles can elicit the motivation, commitment, and personal investment of members of the organisation.Ex. More specialised titles are requisitioned through interlending.----* requerir atención = require + consideration, require + attention.* requerir más destreza = be more of an art.* * *verbo transitivo1) ( necesitar) to requirerequiere paciencia — it requires o demands patience
* * *= have + calls for, call for, call on/upon, cry for, demand, involve, make + demand, require, elicit, requisition.Ex: For some while there have been calls for an abbreviated version of AACR, for small libraries and for non-cataloguers.
Ex: The main rules call for entry of societies under name and institutions under place.Ex: The difference is only that an indexer is not usually called upon to appreciate the subtleties of the subject to the same extent as an abstractor.Ex: However, this work still cries for expansion, and it must also become more systematic.Ex: The other part of the picture reveals title indexes to be only crude subject indexes, which for effective use demand imagination and searching skills on the part of the user.Ex: Generating author indexes or catalogues involves creating headings from author's names, that is the names of persons or organisations.Ex: Also, informative abstracts make greater demands upon appreciation of subject content than indicative abstracts.Ex: The condition approach should require less enumeration of rules for different types of materials, and therefore should require fewer rules.Ex: This article looks at ways in which librarians in leadership roles can elicit the motivation, commitment, and personal investment of members of the organisation.Ex: More specialised titles are requisitioned through interlending.* requerir atención = require + consideration, require + attention.* requerir más destreza = be more of an art.* * *vtA (necesitar) to requireéstos son los precios de los productos que requieren these are the prices of the products you requirerequiere mucha paciencia it calls for o requires o demands o needs a great deal of patienceuna enfermedad que requirió su hospitalización an illness which necessitated o required her hospitalization[ S ] se requiere buena presencia good appearance essentialB ‹documento› to require; ‹persona› to summonel juez requirió su presencia como testigo the judge summoned him to appear as a witnessfue requerido de pago he was ordered to pay* * *
requerir ( conjugate requerir) verbo transitivo
‹ persona› to summon
requerir verbo transitivo
1 Jur (la presencia de alguien) to summon: el juez requirió la presencia del principal acusado, the judge required the primary defendant to appear in court
2 (necesitar) to require: esta planta requiere muchos cuidados, this plant needs a lot of care
3 (pedir) to request
4 (exigir) to demand
' requerir' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
pedir
- reclamar
- demandar
- exigir
- llevar
English:
demand
- need
- require
- call
* * *requerir vt1. [necesitar] to require;es un asunto que requiere mucha diplomacia it is a matter which requires a great deal of tact;se requieren conocimientos de francés a knowledge of French is essential3. Der to order;el juez requirió la extradición del terrorista the judge ordered the extradition of the terrorist* * *v/t1 ( necesitar) require2 JUR summons* * *requerir {76} vt1) : to require, to call for2) : to summon, to send for* * *requerir vb to require -
26 подавать
подать1. (вн. дт.; в разн. знач.) give* (d. to, d. i.)подавать знак — give* a sign (to)
подавать милостыню — give* alms (i.)
подавать совет — give* advice (i.)
подавать надежду — give* hope (i.)
не подавать признаков жизни — show* / give* no sign of life
подавать повод (к) — give* rise (to)
подавать команду воен. — give* a command
подавать кому-л. пальто — help smb. on with his coat
подавать руку — hold* out one's hand (to); (даме тж.) offer one's hand (to)
не подать руки — withhold* one's hand
подавать пример — set* an example (i.)
3. (вн.; подводить для посадки, погрузки) drive* up (d.)на какую платформу подадут поезд? — what platform is the train due at?; what platform will the train come in at?
4. (вн.) спорт. serve (d.)5. (вн.):подавать заявление — hand in an application
подавать петицию, прошенные — submit an application, forward a petition
подавать жалобу (дт. на вн.) — make* a complaint (to about); lodge a complaint (with about)
подавать в суд (на вн.) — bring* an action (against)
6. (вн.) тех. feed* (d.)♢
подавать телеграмму (дт.) — send* a telegram (i.), wire (d.)подавать в отставку — send* in one's resignation; воен. send* in one's papers
подавать голос — give* tongue; (за вн.; на выборах) vote (for)
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27 перегляд
ч1) ( наново) revision, revising; ( судової справи) retrial; ( рішення) reconsideration2) (ознайомлення, огляд) viewing, review; ( тексту) examination, looking through; ( з метою перевірки) scrutinyперегляд команд комп. — command scan
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28 подавати
= подати1) to give, to present (to)подавати дичину мисл. — ( про собаку) to retrieve
подавати допомогу — to give a helping hand, to lend a hand; to help, to assist
подавати знак — to give a sign (to)
подавати команду військ. — to give а command
подавати пальто — to help smb. on with his coat
подавати приклад — to set an example, to serve as an example (to smb.)
подавати руку — to hold out one's hand (to), to offer one's hand; ( дамі в танці) to offer one's hand (to)
2) ( ставити на стіл) to serveподавати на стіл — to serve the dishes; to serve the table
3) (підводити - про автомобіль, потяг тощо) to drive upна яку платформу подадуть потяг (поїзд)? — what platform is the train due at?, what platform is the train coming in at?
4) спорт. to serve5) ( на розгляд) to submit, to present, to forward, to hand inподавати заяву — to submit ( to hand in) an application
подавати скаргу на когось — to lodge ( to make) a complaint against smb.
подавати петицію (прохання) — to present ( to submit) a petition, to petition
подавати протест — to register/enter a protest
6) тех. to feed, to convey7)подавати телеграму — to send a telegram, to wire
подавати голос (за кого-небудь/що-небудь) — to vote ( for)
подавати у відставку — to tender one's resignation; to retire, to resign; військ. to send in one's resignation ( one's papers)
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29 con progreso constante
• hand out the papers• hand over• hand over hand• hand over the command -
30 con progreso rápido
• hand out the papers• hand over• hand over hand• hand over the command -
31 rápidamente
• apace• hand out the papers• hand over• hand over hand• hand over the command• hurriedly• like wild fire• quickly• rapidly• speedily• swiftly -
32 kontrol|ować
impf Ⅰ vt 1. (sprawdzać) to inspect, to check; (stale) to monitor- policjant kontrolował dokumenty kierowców the policeman was checking the drivers’ papers- księgowa kontrolowała rachunki firmy the accountant was checking the company’s books- kontrolować stan pacjenta to monitor a patient’s condition- kontrolować tętno/temperaturę/ciśnienie/poziom cukru we krwi to monitor sb’s pulse/blood pressure/blood sugar- kontrolować zużycie paliwa to monitor fuel consumption- kontrolować teren otaczający budynek to monitor the area around the building- kontrolować stan techniczny pojazdu/urządzenia to inspect (the technical condition of) a vehicle/device ⇒ skontrolować2. (kierować) to control- spółka kontrolowana przez państwo a state-controlled company- mafia kontroluje czarny rynek the mafia controls the black market- kontrolowana reakcja nuklearna a controlled nuclear reaction- poślizg kontrolowany a controlled slide a. skid3. (panować) to control- kontrolowała swoje reakcje/emocje she kept her reactions/emotions in a. under control- kontrolować 24% rynku to command a 24% market share- rząd kontroluje sytuację w państwie the government is in control of the situation in the country- kontrolować przyrost naturalny to keep population growth under controlⅡ kontrolować się 1. (opanować się) to control oneself; (uważać) to watch one’s step- kontrolował się, żeby nie popełnić gafy he watched his step so as not to make a gaffe2. (sprawdzać się wzajemnie) to check on one another- kontrolowali się w czasie pracy they checked on one another while they were workingThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > kontrol|ować
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33 подавать
несов. - подава́ть, сов. - пода́ть1) (вн. дт.; давать в руки) give (d to, d i)подава́ть кому́-л пальто́ — help smb on with his coat
2) (вн.; ставить на стол) serve (d)подава́ть на стол — serve up
обе́д по́дан — dinner is served
3) (дт.; давать милостыню) give (i) alms [ɑːmz]4) (вн.; подводить для посадки, погрузки) drive up (d)маши́ну по́дали к подъе́зду — the car was sent up to the door
по́езд по́дали на 1-ю платфо́рму — the train came in at platform one
на каку́ю платфо́рму подаду́т по́езд? — what platform is the train due at?; what platform will the train come in at?
подава́ть мяч — serve the ball
6) (вн.; представлять куда-л в письменном виде) submit (d)подава́ть заявле́ние — hand in an application
подава́ть апелля́цию — appeal
подава́ть пети́цию / проше́ние — submit / forward a petition
подава́ть жа́лобу (дт. на вн.) — make a complaint (to about); lodge a complaint (with about)
подава́ть зая́вку на пате́нт — apply for a patent, file a patent application
подава́ть зая́вку на уча́стие в ко́нкурсе / торга́х по присужде́нию контра́кта — tender / bid for a contract, put in a bid for a contract
7) тех. (вн.) feed (d)интерве́нция была́ по́дана пре́ссой как миротво́рческая а́кция — the press presented / depicted the intervention as a peacemaking operation
••подава́ть го́лос — 1) ( нарушать молчание) give tongue 2) ( голосовать) vote, cast a vote
подава́ть в отста́вку — send in one's resignation [-zɪ-]; воен. send in one's papers
подава́ть в суд (на вн.) — bring an action (against)
подава́ть знак кому́-л — give a sign (to)
подава́ть приме́р — set (i) an example
подава́ть ру́ку — см. рука
подава́ть наде́жду — give (i) hope
подава́ть по́вод — = дава́ть по́вод (см. повод)
подава́ть телегра́мму (дт.) — send (i) a telegram, wire (d)
не подава́ть ви́ду — см. вид
не подава́ть при́знаков жи́зни — show / give no sign of life
подава́ть кома́нду воен. — give a command
руко́й пода́ть — см. рука
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34 Wallis, Sir Barnes Neville
[br]b. 26 September 1887 Ripley, Derbyshire, Englandd. 30 October 1979 Leatherhead, Surrey, England[br]English aeronautical designer and inventor.[br]Wallis was apprenticed first at Thames Engineering Works, and then, in 1908, at John Samuel White's shipyard at Cowes. In 1913, the Government, spurred on by the accelerating development of the German Zeppelins (see Zeppelin, Ferdinand von), ordered an airship from Vickers; Wallis was invited to join the design team. Thus began his long association with aeronautical design and with Vickers. This airship, and the R80 that followed it, were successfully completed, but the military lost interest in them.In 1924 the Government initiated a programme for the construction of two airships to settle once and for all their viability for long-dis-tance air travel. The R101 was designed by a Government-sponsored team, but the R100 was designed by Wallis working for a subsidiary of Vickers. The R100 took off on 29 July 1930 for a successful round trip to Canada, but the R101 crashed on its first flight on 4 October, killing many of its distinguished passengers. The shock of this disaster brought airship development in Britain to an abrupt end and forced Wallis to direct his attention to aircraft.In aircraft design, Wallis is known for his use of geodesic construction, which combined lightness with strength. It was applied first to the single-engined "Wellesley" and then the twin-en-gined "Wellington" bomber, which first flew in 1936. With successive modifications, it became the workhorse of RAF Bomber Command during the Second World War until the autumn of 1943, when it was replaced by four-engined machines. In other areas, it remained in service until the end of the war and, in all, no fewer than 11,461 were built.Wallis is best known for his work on bomb design, first the bouncing bomb that was used to breach the Möhne and Eder dams in the Ruhr district of Germany in 1943, an exploit immortalized in the film Dambusters. Encouraged by this success, the authorities then allowed Wallis to realize an idea he had long urged, that of heavy, penetration bombs. In the closing stages of the war, Tallboy, of 12,000 lb (5,400 kg), and the 10-ton Grand Slam were used to devastating effect.After the Second World War, Wallis returned to aeronautical design and was given his own department at Vickers to promote his ideas, principally on variable-geometry or swing-wing aircraft. Over the next thirteen years he battled towards the prototype stage of this revolutionary concept. That never came, however; changing conditions and requirements and increasing costs led to the abandonment of the project. Bit-terly disappointed, Wallis continued his researches into high-speed aircraft until his retirement from Vickers (by then the British Aircraft Corporation), in 1971.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1968. FRS 1945.Further ReadingJ.Morpurgo, 1972, Barnes Wallis: A Biography, London: Longman (a readable account, rather biased in Wallis's favour).C.J.Heap, 1987, The Papers of Sir Barnes Wallis (1887–1979) in the Science Museum Library, London: Science Museum; with a biographical introd. by L.R.Day.LRDBiographical history of technology > Wallis, Sir Barnes Neville
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