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1 con mucha cohesión
(adj.) = tightly knit, closely knit, tight-knitEx. He recorded with great vividness the literary life of London at that time, describing the wit, anxieties and insights of a tightly knit and highly gifted group of writers.Ex. A sample of statistics measuring circulation, reference and in-library use was collected from 76 libraries and tested for redundancy, correlation and variation in a closely knit pattern.Ex. A well-organised rural parish council can provide a far more tight-knit forum for debate and 'getting things done' than urban residents' associations.* * *(adj.) = tightly knit, closely knit, tight-knitEx: He recorded with great vividness the literary life of London at that time, describing the wit, anxieties and insights of a tightly knit and highly gifted group of writers.
Ex: A sample of statistics measuring circulation, reference and in-library use was collected from 76 libraries and tested for redundancy, correlation and variation in a closely knit pattern.Ex: A well-organised rural parish council can provide a far more tight-knit forum for debate and 'getting things done' than urban residents' associations. -
2 inmersión
f.1 immersion, submergence, submersion, dipping.2 immersion, entrance of a heavenly body into an eclipse, ingress.* * *1 (gen) immersion; (de un buceador, submarino) dive* * *SF1) (=sumergimiento) [gen] immersion; [de buzo] dive; [en pesca submarina] skin-diving, underwater fishing2) (Téc, Fot)3) [en tema, idioma] immersion* * *a) (de submarino, objeto) immersionb) (en asunto, actividad) immersion, absorption* * *= dabbing, immersion, dive, submergence, submersion.Ex. Sometime in the later eighteenth century an ingenious version of stereotyping called dabbing was developed, whereby a pattern of wood or metal was dabbed into the surface of a quantity of type-metal that was half way between its solid and its molten state; the dabbed metal was then used as a matrix for striking a copy of the original in similarly half-molten metal.Ex. This is another reason for recognising that only total immersion in society will suffice.Ex. Each dive is characterised by 52 parameters selected for future computer correlation studies.Ex. America's present need is not heroics, but healing; not nostrums, but normalcy; not experiment, but equipoise; not submergence in internationality, but sustainment in triumphant nationality.Ex. This submersion into the Hindustani tradition was a new leaf for them.----* campana de inmersión = pressure vessel.* * *a) (de submarino, objeto) immersionb) (en asunto, actividad) immersion, absorption* * *= dabbing, immersion, dive, submergence, submersion.Ex: Sometime in the later eighteenth century an ingenious version of stereotyping called dabbing was developed, whereby a pattern of wood or metal was dabbed into the surface of a quantity of type-metal that was half way between its solid and its molten state; the dabbed metal was then used as a matrix for striking a copy of the original in similarly half-molten metal.
Ex: This is another reason for recognising that only total immersion in society will suffice.Ex: Each dive is characterised by 52 parameters selected for future computer correlation studies.Ex: America's present need is not heroics, but healing; not nostrums, but normalcy; not experiment, but equipoise; not submergence in internationality, but sustainment in triumphant nationality.Ex: This submersion into the Hindustani tradition was a new leaf for them.* campana de inmersión = pressure vessel.* * *1 (de un submarino) immersion, dive; (de un objeto) immersionmuerte por inmersión ( frml); drowning, death by drowning2 (en un asunto, una actividad) immersion, absorption* * *
inmersión sustantivo femenino immersion
Náut (de un buzo) dive
' inmersión' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
ahogada
- ahogado
- sumersión
English:
dive
- immersion
- plunge
* * *inmersión nf1. [de submarino, submarinista] dive2. [en situación, cultura] immersion;su total inmersión en la cultura árabe his total immersion in Arab cultureinmersión lingüística immersion;un curso de inmersión lingüística an immersion course* * *f immersion; de submarino dive* * * -
3 muy unido
adj.close-knit, tight-knit.* * *(adj.) = close-knit, tight-knit, closely knit, well-connected, tightly knitEx. In Britain, this meant the dislocation and scattering of what were close-knit communities either to sprawling suburban council estates, often grossly lacking in amenities, or to blocks of high-rise flats.Ex. A well-organised rural parish council can provide a far more tight-knit forum for debate and 'getting things done' than urban residents' associations.Ex. A sample of statistics measuring circulation, reference and in-library use was collected from 76 libraries and tested for redundancy, correlation and variation in a closely knit pattern.Ex. The article is entitled 'Still special: but now a well-connected community'.Ex. He recorded with great vividness the literary life of London at that time, describing the wit, anxieties and insights of a tightly knit and highly gifted group of writers.* * *(adj.) = close-knit, tight-knit, closely knit, well-connected, tightly knitEx: In Britain, this meant the dislocation and scattering of what were close-knit communities either to sprawling suburban council estates, often grossly lacking in amenities, or to blocks of high-rise flats.
Ex: A well-organised rural parish council can provide a far more tight-knit forum for debate and 'getting things done' than urban residents' associations.Ex: A sample of statistics measuring circulation, reference and in-library use was collected from 76 libraries and tested for redundancy, correlation and variation in a closely knit pattern.Ex: The article is entitled 'Still special: but now a well-connected community'.Ex: He recorded with great vividness the literary life of London at that time, describing the wit, anxieties and insights of a tightly knit and highly gifted group of writers.
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