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decide+on...

  • 121 eminentemente

    adv.
    eminently, conspicuously.
    * * *
    1 eminently
    * * *
    ADV eminently, especially
    * * *
    = intensively, primarily, mainly.
    Ex. I would suggest another intensively practical reason for author main entries over strict title entries.
    Ex. The scheme is primarily used by LC itself, and by other large research collections such as large academic libraries.
    Ex. The problem is to decide who to select as being mainly responsible.
    * * *
    = intensively, primarily, mainly.

    Ex: I would suggest another intensively practical reason for author main entries over strict title entries.

    Ex: The scheme is primarily used by LC itself, and by other large research collections such as large academic libraries.
    Ex: The problem is to decide who to select as being mainly responsible.

    * * *
    essentially, basically
    * * *
    [principalmente] predominantly, mainly;
    una obra eminentemente divertida a largely enjoyable play
    * * *
    : basically, essentially

    Spanish-English dictionary > eminentemente

  • 122 empollar

    v.
    1 to incubate (huevo).
    2 to bone up on(informal) (study). (peninsular Spanish)
    3 to swot (informal). (peninsular Spanish)
    4 to brood on, to brood, to hatch.
    * * *
    1 (huevos) to hatch
    2 familiar (estudiar) to swot, swot up, US bone up on
    * * *
    verb
    * * *
    1. VT
    1) (Zool) to incubate, sit on
    2) * [+ asignatura] to swot up *
    2. VI
    1) [gallina] to sit, brood
    2) [abejas] to breed
    3) * [estudiante] to swot *, grind away (EEUU), cram
    * * *
    1.
    verbo intransitivo
    1) gallina to brood
    2) (Esp fam) estudiante to cram (colloq), to swot (BrE colloq)
    2.
    1) < huevos> to hatch, sit on
    2) (Esp fam) estudiante to cram (colloq), to swot up (on) (BrE colloq)
    * * *
    = cram for, hatch, swot.
    Ex. This article divides readers into 3 categories: 'bulimic' readers who read voraciously for no utilitarian purpose, 'swotters' who read to cram for examinations, and 'information foragers' who read only occasionally to seek specific data, mainly in their field of work.
    Ex. The article 'TEAL being hatched on Teeside' discusses Teeside Polytechnic Library's change of plan from its original intention to use a UNIVAC computer to its present system involving a PRIME computer.
    Ex. Around the country schoolchildren and university students are swotting and sweating as they prepare to sit papers that could decide their future.
    ----
    * libro para empollar = crammer.
    * * *
    1.
    verbo intransitivo
    1) gallina to brood
    2) (Esp fam) estudiante to cram (colloq), to swot (BrE colloq)
    2.
    1) < huevos> to hatch, sit on
    2) (Esp fam) estudiante to cram (colloq), to swot up (on) (BrE colloq)
    * * *
    = cram for, hatch, swot.

    Ex: This article divides readers into 3 categories: 'bulimic' readers who read voraciously for no utilitarian purpose, 'swotters' who read to cram for examinations, and 'information foragers' who read only occasionally to seek specific data, mainly in their field of work.

    Ex: The article 'TEAL being hatched on Teeside' discusses Teeside Polytechnic Library's change of plan from its original intention to use a UNIVAC computer to its present system involving a PRIME computer.
    Ex: Around the country schoolchildren and university students are swotting and sweating as they prepare to sit papers that could decide their future.
    * libro para empollar = crammer.

    * * *
    empollar [A1 ]
    vi
    A «gallina» to brood
    B ( Esp fam) «estudiante» to cram ( colloq), to swot ( BrE colloq)
    ■ empollar
    vt
    A ‹huevos› to hatch, sit on
    B ( Esp fam) «estudiante» to cram ( colloq), to swot up (on) ( BrE colloq)
    * * *

    empollar ( conjugate empollar) verbo intransitivo
    1 [ gallina] to brood
    2 (Esp fam) [ estudiante] to cram (colloq), to swot (BrE colloq)
    verbo transitivo
    1 huevos to hatch, sit on
    2 (Esp fam) ‹ lección to cram (colloq), to swot up (on) (BrE colloq)
    empollar verbo transitivo
    1 (la gallina: huevos) to sit on
    2 fam (estudiar mucho) to swot (up), US bone up on
    ' empollar' also found in these entries:
    English:
    bone up on
    - brood
    - cram
    - hatch
    - learn up
    - swot
    - swot up
    - incubate
    * * *
    vt
    1. [huevo] to incubate
    2. Esp Fam [estudiar] to bone up on, Br to swot up (on)
    vi
    Fam Br to swot, US to grind
    * * *
    I v/i fam
    cram fam, Br
    swot fam
    II v/t
    1 ZO sit on, incubate
    2 fam ( estudiar) cram fam, Br
    swot up on fam
    * * *
    : to brood eggs
    : to incubate
    * * *
    1. (estudiar mucho) to swot [pt. & pp. swotted]
    en junio, se pasa los días empollando in June, she spends all the time swotting
    2. (aves) to sit on [pt. & pp. sat]

    Spanish-English dictionary > empollar

  • 123 en privado

    in private
    * * *
    = privately, a word in + Posesivo + ear, in private, behind closed doors
    Ex. Pressmen sometimes employed boys privately by the week to take printed sheets off the tympan, and thus speed up their rate of work = Los impresores algunas veces empleaban por su cuenta y por semanas a chicos aprendices para retirar del tímpano los pliegos impresos y así acelerar su ritmo de trabajo.
    Ex. The article ' Word in your ear: a techno assisted revival of an ancient art' discusses the substantial market for talking or audiobooks in the UK and the USA.
    Ex. This need can be influenced by only offering criticism in private but by giving praise in public.
    Ex. Committee meetings are normally held behind closed doors but, occasionally, a committee will decide to hold a public hearing on a given topic.
    * * *
    = privately, a word in + Posesivo + ear, in private, behind closed doors

    Ex: Pressmen sometimes employed boys privately by the week to take printed sheets off the tympan, and thus speed up their rate of work = Los impresores algunas veces empleaban por su cuenta y por semanas a chicos aprendices para retirar del tímpano los pliegos impresos y así acelerar su ritmo de trabajo.

    Ex: The article ' Word in your ear: a techno assisted revival of an ancient art' discusses the substantial market for talking or audiobooks in the UK and the USA.
    Ex: This need can be influenced by only offering criticism in private but by giving praise in public.
    Ex: Committee meetings are normally held behind closed doors but, occasionally, a committee will decide to hold a public hearing on a given topic.

    Spanish-English dictionary > en privado

  • 124 en qué momento

    Ex. Libraries are having to decide at what point a service should become chargeable without creating a disadvantage to those who cannot pay = Las bibliotecas tienen que decidir cuándo se debería cobrar por un servicio sin crear un problema para los que no pueden pagar.
    * * *

    Ex: Libraries are having to decide at what point a service should become chargeable without creating a disadvantage to those who cannot pay = Las bibliotecas tienen que decidir cuándo se debería cobrar por un servicio sin crear un problema para los que no pueden pagar.

    Spanish-English dictionary > en qué momento

  • 125 en qué punto

    Ex. Libraries are having to decide at what point a service should become chargeable without creating a disadvantage to those who cannot pay = Las bibliotecas tienen que decidir cuándo se debería cobrar por un servicio sin crear un problema para los que no pueden pagar.
    * * *

    Ex: Libraries are having to decide at what point a service should become chargeable without creating a disadvantage to those who cannot pay = Las bibliotecas tienen que decidir cuándo se debería cobrar por un servicio sin crear un problema para los que no pueden pagar.

    Spanish-English dictionary > en qué punto

  • 126 en seco

    (acción) suddenly
    * * *
    = in blind, blind, cold turkey
    Ex. For gold tooling, impressions of the tools were first made in blind and then an adhesive glair of egg white was next brushed into the blind impression, allowed to dry, and greased.
    Ex. Various skins were used for leather bindings -- calf, goat, and sheep were the commonest -- and the surface was often decorated with heated brass tools, either using gold leaf (gilt) or plain ( blind).
    Ex. When heavy or frequent drinkers suddenly decide to quit ' cold turkey' they will experience some physical withdrawal symptoms.
    * * *
    = in blind, blind, cold turkey

    Ex: For gold tooling, impressions of the tools were first made in blind and then an adhesive glair of egg white was next brushed into the blind impression, allowed to dry, and greased.

    Ex: Various skins were used for leather bindings -- calf, goat, and sheep were the commonest -- and the surface was often decorated with heated brass tools, either using gold leaf (gilt) or plain ( blind).
    Ex: When heavy or frequent drinkers suddenly decide to quit ' cold turkey' they will experience some physical withdrawal symptoms.

    Spanish-English dictionary > en seco

  • 127 ensuciarse

    1 (mancharse) to get dirty
    2 familiar (evacuar) to mess oneself, soil oneself
    * * *
    VPR
    1) (=mancharse) to get dirty
    2) [bebé] to dirty o soil one's nappy
    * * *
    (v.) = get + grubby
    Ex. Naturally people will handle books before they decide to buy them, which means that no more than a couple of copies of each title should be put out so that reserve stock is prevented from getting grubby.
    * * *
    (v.) = get + grubby

    Ex: Naturally people will handle books before they decide to buy them, which means that no more than a couple of copies of each title should be put out so that reserve stock is prevented from getting grubby.

    * * *

    ■ensuciarse verbo reflexivo to get dirty [con/de, with]
    ' ensuciarse' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    batir
    - ensuciar
    - pringar
    - untar
    English:
    dirty
    * * *
    vpr
    1. [mancharse] [persona, objeto, superficie] to get dirty;
    procura no ensuciarte el vestido try not to get your dress dirty;
    se me ensuciaron los pantalones my trousers got dirty;
    la alfombra se ha ensuciado de pintura the carpet has got paint on it;
    se ensució las manos de o [m5] con grasa he got his hands covered in grease
    2. Euf [evacuar] to soil o dirty oneself
    * * *
    v/r get dirty; fig
    get one’s hands dirty
    * * *
    vr
    * * *
    ensuciarse vb to get dirty

    Spanish-English dictionary > ensuciarse

  • 128 entrar en

    v.
    1 to enter, to come into, to enter in, to enter into.
    Elsa entró en el edificio Elsa entered the building.
    2 to get into, to enter into, to go into.
    Vamos a entrar en materia We are going to go into the subject matter
    3 to arrive at, to enter into, to draw into.
    Entramos en el aeropuerto a las cinco We arrived at the airport at five.
    4 to be included in.
    El postre no entra en la cuenta Dessert is not included in the bill.
    * * *
    (v.) = fall within/into, get into, walk into, move into, slip into, turn into, come into, set + foot (inside/in/on)
    Ex. The user then receives, on a regular basis, notifications of new documents or information which fall within the topic specified in his profile.
    Ex. To get into these national and international networks which are suitable for long-distance communication, a telephone link must be used to access the closest node.
    Ex. Plainer to see is the effect of this library lottery on enquirers: in the words of Roger Horn, `no one knows what to expect when he walks into a library'.
    Ex. As we move into the 21st century there is a growing realization that information holds the key to health.
    Ex. If the economy slips into recession then the government may decide to stimulate the economy with massive spending.
    Ex. Thereupon he rallied, and with an air of accepting the inevitable turned into the library parking lot and went to his office.
    Ex. Female guinea pigs come into oestrus (commonly called being 'on heat') and are receptive to males every 15-17 days.
    Ex. Extensive use of made of the prominently painted yellow van by the public, including individuals who had never set foot inside a library.
    * * *
    (v.) = fall within/into, get into, walk into, move into, slip into, turn into, come into, set + foot (inside/in/on)

    Ex: The user then receives, on a regular basis, notifications of new documents or information which fall within the topic specified in his profile.

    Ex: To get into these national and international networks which are suitable for long-distance communication, a telephone link must be used to access the closest node.
    Ex: Plainer to see is the effect of this library lottery on enquirers: in the words of Roger Horn, `no one knows what to expect when he walks into a library'.
    Ex: As we move into the 21st century there is a growing realization that information holds the key to health.
    Ex: If the economy slips into recession then the government may decide to stimulate the economy with massive spending.
    Ex: Thereupon he rallied, and with an air of accepting the inevitable turned into the library parking lot and went to his office.
    Ex: Female guinea pigs come into oestrus (commonly called being 'on heat') and are receptive to males every 15-17 days.
    Ex: Extensive use of made of the prominently painted yellow van by the public, including individuals who had never set foot inside a library.

    Spanish-English dictionary > entrar en

См. также в других словарях:

  • décidé — décidé, ée [ deside ] adj. • 1725; de décider 1 ♦ Qui n hésite pas pour prendre un parti, pour décider; qui a de la décision. ⇒ décider (IV); déterminé, 1. ferme, hardi, résolu, volontaire. Un homme décidé. Par ext. Un air décidé. ⇒ 2. crâne. Une …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • DECIDE — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda «DECIDE» Sencillo de HΛL del álbum Violation of the rules Publicación 25 de octubre de 2000 Formato Maxi single …   Wikipedia Español

  • decide — de·cide vb de·cid·ed, de·cid·ing vt: to determine (as a case or issue) by making a decision (as a final judgment): adjudicate (1, 2) compare find, hold vi: to make a decision …   Law dictionary

  • decide — DECÍDE, decíd, vb. III. 1. intranz. şi refl. A lua o hotărâre; a alege (între mai multe alternative), a se fixa (între mai multe posibilităţi). ♦ tranz. A hotărî, a soluţiona în mod definitiv. 2. tranz. A determina, a convinge, a îndupleca pe… …   Dicționar Român

  • décidé — décidé, ée (dé si dé, dée) part. passé. 1°   Dont la solution est donnée. Cette question va être décidée. 2°   Qui n a rien de vague, d incertain. Le ministère louvoie, il n a pas de marche décidée. Cette musique n a point un caractère décidé.… …   Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré

  • Decide! — (Decidere!) was an Italian libertarian political association led by Daniele Capezzone. The group was sometimes also referred to as Decidere.net, in reference to its official website. It was one of the founding members of Silvio Berlusconi s The… …   Wikipedia

  • decide — [dē sīd′, disīd′] vt. decided, deciding [ME deciden < L decidere, to cut off, decide < de , off, from + caedere, to cut: see CIDE] 1. to end (a contest, dispute, etc.) by giving one side the victory or by passing judgment 2. to make up one… …   English World dictionary

  • decide — decide, determine, settle, rule, resolve mean to come or to cause to come to a conclusion. Decide presupposes previous consideration of a matter causing doubt, wavering, debate, or controversy and implies the arriving at a more or less logical… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • Decide — De*cide , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Decided}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Deciding}.] [L. dec[=i]dere; de + caedere to cut, cut off; prob. akin to E. shed, v.: cf. F. d[ e]cider. Cf. {Decision}.] 1. To cut off; to separate. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] Our seat denies… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Decide — De*cide , v. i. To determine; to form a definite opinion; to come to a conclusion; to give decision; as, the court decided in favor of the defendant. [1913 Webster] Who shall decide, when doctors disagree? Pope. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • decide — late 14c., to settle a dispute, from O.Fr. decider, from L. decidere to decide, determine, lit. to cut off, from de off (see DE (Cf. de )) + caedere to cut (see CEMENT (Cf. cement)). For L. vowel change, see ACQUISITION …   Etymology dictionary

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