-
1 decrease
1. di'kri:s verb(to make or become less: Their numbers had decreased over the previous year.) disminuir, reducir
2. 'di:kri:s noun(a growing less: a decrease of fifty per cent; a gradual decrease in unemployment.) disminucióndecrease1 n disminución / reduccióndecrease2 vb disminuirtr[dɪ'kriːs]1 disminución nombre femenino, descenso1 disminuir, reducir1 (amount, numbers, power, etc) disminuir, decrecer; (quality) disminuir, bajar; (interest) disminuir, decaer; (prices) bajar; (in knitting) menguar■ the speed at which he was travelling decreased suddenly la velocidad a la que iba disminuyó de repente: decrecer, disminuir, bajardecrease vt: reducir, disminuirdecrease ['di:.kri:s] n: disminución f, descenso m, bajada fn.• disminución s.f.• mengua s.f.• merma s.f.v.• decrecer v.• desmedrar v.• disminuir v.• minorar v.• reducir v.
I
1. dɪ'kriːs, 'diːkriːsa) ( in quantity) \<\<amount/numbers\>\> disminuir*, decrecer*; \<\<prices\>\> bajar; \<\<speed\>\> disminuir*b) ( in intensity) \<\<quality\>\> disminuir*, bajar; \<\<power/effectiveness\>\> disminuir*, decrecer*; \<\<interest\>\> disminuir*, decaer*
2.
vt disminuir*, reducir*
II 'diːkriːs, dɪ'kriːscount & mass noun disminución f, descenso m1.N ['diːkriːs](gen) disminución f, reducción f ; (in wages) descenso m, bajada f ; (in prices) bajada f, disminución fa decrease in speed/strength — una reducción de velocidad/fuerza
a decrease of 50% — una reducción del 50%
2.VT [diː'kriːs][+ quantity, pressure, dose, speed] disminuir, reducir; [+ wages] bajar, reducir3. VI[diː'kriːs]1) [power, strength, popularity, temperature, pressure] disminuir; [enthusiasm, interest] disminuir, decaerto decrease by 10% — bajar or disminuir un 10%
2) (Knitting) menguar* * *
I
1. [dɪ'kriːs, 'diːkriːs]a) ( in quantity) \<\<amount/numbers\>\> disminuir*, decrecer*; \<\<prices\>\> bajar; \<\<speed\>\> disminuir*b) ( in intensity) \<\<quality\>\> disminuir*, bajar; \<\<power/effectiveness\>\> disminuir*, decrecer*; \<\<interest\>\> disminuir*, decaer*
2.
vt disminuir*, reducir*
II ['diːkriːs, dɪ'kriːs]count & mass noun disminución f, descenso m -
2 go down
1) ((with well/badly) to be approved or disapproved of: The story went down well (with them).) ser bien/mal acogido, ser bien/mal recibido2) ((of a ship) to sink: They were lost at sea when the ship went down.) hundirse3) ((of the sun or moon) to go below the horizon.) ponerse, esconderse4) (to be remembered: Your bravery will go down in history.) pasar (a la historia), quedar (para la posteridad), ser recordado5) ((of places) to become less desirable: This part of town has gone down in the last twenty years.) volverse menos solicitado; decaergo down vb bajarv.• bajar v.• descender v.• ladear v.v + adv1)a) ( descend) \<\<person\>\> bajar; \<\<sun\>\> ponerse*; \<\<curtain\>\> ( Theat) caer*, bajarto go down on one's knees/hands and knees — ponerse* de rodillas/a gatas
b) ( fall) \<\<boxer/horse\>\> caerse*; \<\<plane\>\> caer*, estrellarsec) ( sink) \<\<ship\>\> hundirsed) \<\<computer\>\> dejar de funcionar, descomponerse* (AmL)e) ( be defeated) ( Sport) perder*to go down (to somebody): Italy went down 2-1 to Uruguay Italia perdió 2 a 1 frente a Uruguay; to go down fighting — caer* luchando, morir* con las botas puestas
2)a) ( decrease) \<\<temperature/exchange rate\>\> bajar; \<\<population/unemployment\>\> disminuir*to go down in value — perder* valor
b) ( decline) \<\<standard/quality\>\> empeorarshe's gone down in my estimation — ha perdido or bajado mucho en mi estima
c) (abate, subside) \<\<wind/storm\>\> amainar; \<\<floods/swelling\>\> bajard) ( deflate) \<\<tire\>\> perder* aire, desinflarse3) ( extend)to go down to something: this road goes down to the beach este camino baja a or hasta la playa; the skirt goes down to her ankles — la falda le llega a los tobillos
4)a) ( toward the south) ir* ( hacia el sur)b) ( to another place) (BrE) ir*5)a) ( be swallowed)it just won't go down — no me pasa, no lo puedo tragar
b) \<\<present/proposal/remarks\>\>how did the announcement go down? — ¿qué tipo de acogida tuvo el anuncio?, ¿cómo recibieron el anuncio?
6) (be recorded, written)to go down in history as somebody/something — pasar a la historia como alguien/algo
1.VI + PREP bajar, descender2. VI + ADV1) (=descend) [sun] ponerse; [person] (=go downstairs) bajar2) (=fall) [person, horse] caerse3) (=crash) [plane] estrellarse, caer4) (=sink) [ship, person] hundirse5) (=decrease, decline) [price, temperature] bajar, descender; [tide, flood, water level] bajarthe house has gone down in value — la casa ha perdido valor or se ha devaluado
this neighbourhood has really gone down — este barrio ha perdido mucho, este barrio ya no es lo que era
she's really gone down since I last saw her — [sick person] ha dado un buen bajón * or ha empeorado mucho desde la última vez que la vi; [elderly person] ha perdido muchas facultades desde la última vez que la vi
6) (=deflate) [balloon, airbed] desinflarse, deshincharse (Sp)7) (=be defeated) perder8) (Comput) (=break down) bloquearse, dejar de funcionar9) (=be remembered)go down as•
to go down in history/to posterity — pasar a la historia/a la posteridad10) (Brit) (Univ) (at end of term) marcharse; (at end of degree) terminar la carrera, dejar la universidad11) (=be swallowed)•
it went down the wrong way — se me atragantó12) (=be accepted, approved)•
to go down well/ badly — ser bien/mal recibido•
I wonder how that will go down with her parents — me pregunto cómo les sentará eso a sus padres13) (Theat) [curtain] bajar; [lights] apagarse* * *v + adv1)a) ( descend) \<\<person\>\> bajar; \<\<sun\>\> ponerse*; \<\<curtain\>\> ( Theat) caer*, bajarto go down on one's knees/hands and knees — ponerse* de rodillas/a gatas
b) ( fall) \<\<boxer/horse\>\> caerse*; \<\<plane\>\> caer*, estrellarsec) ( sink) \<\<ship\>\> hundirsed) \<\<computer\>\> dejar de funcionar, descomponerse* (AmL)e) ( be defeated) ( Sport) perder*to go down (to somebody): Italy went down 2-1 to Uruguay Italia perdió 2 a 1 frente a Uruguay; to go down fighting — caer* luchando, morir* con las botas puestas
2)a) ( decrease) \<\<temperature/exchange rate\>\> bajar; \<\<population/unemployment\>\> disminuir*to go down in value — perder* valor
b) ( decline) \<\<standard/quality\>\> empeorarshe's gone down in my estimation — ha perdido or bajado mucho en mi estima
c) (abate, subside) \<\<wind/storm\>\> amainar; \<\<floods/swelling\>\> bajard) ( deflate) \<\<tire\>\> perder* aire, desinflarse3) ( extend)to go down to something: this road goes down to the beach este camino baja a or hasta la playa; the skirt goes down to her ankles — la falda le llega a los tobillos
4)a) ( toward the south) ir* ( hacia el sur)b) ( to another place) (BrE) ir*5)a) ( be swallowed)it just won't go down — no me pasa, no lo puedo tragar
b) \<\<present/proposal/remarks\>\>how did the announcement go down? — ¿qué tipo de acogida tuvo el anuncio?, ¿cómo recibieron el anuncio?
6) (be recorded, written)to go down in history as somebody/something — pasar a la historia como alguien/algo
-
3 spiral
1. adjective1) (coiled round like a spring, with each coil the same size as the one below: a spiral staircase.) espiral2) (winding round and round, usually tapering to a point: a spiral shell.) en espiral
2. noun1) (an increase or decrease, or rise or fall, becoming more and more rapid (eg in prices).) espiral2) (a spiral line or object: A spiral of smoke rose from the chimney.) espiral
3. verb(to go or move in a spiral, especially to increase more and more rapidly: Prices have spiralled in the last six months.) moverse en espiral- spirallyspiral n espiraltr['spaɪərəl]1 espiral nombre femenino1 espiral, en espiral1 (move in a spiral) moverse en espiral2 (increase rapidly) dispararse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLinflationary spiral espiral nombre femenino inflacionistaspiral staircase escalera de caracolspiral adj: espiral, en espirala spiral staircase: una escalera de caracolspiral n: espiral fadj.• espiral (Matemática) adj.• helicoidal adj.n.• espiral s.m.• hélice s.f.• rosca s.f.v.• dar vueltas en espiral v.
I 'spaɪrəl, 'spaɪərəla) (shape, movement) espiral fb) ( of smoke) voluta f, espiral f
II
spiral staircase — escalera f de caracol
III
intransitive verb, BrE - ll-a) ( increase) \<\<unemployment\>\> escalar; \<\<prices\>\> dispararseb) ( move) (+ adv compl)['spaɪǝrǝl]to spiral up/down — subir/bajar en espiral
1.ADJ espiral, en espiral2.N espiral f, hélice f3.VIto spiral up/down — subir/bajar en espiral
the smoke spiralled up, the smoke went spiralling up — el humo subió formando una espiral
* * *
I ['spaɪrəl, 'spaɪərəl]a) (shape, movement) espiral fb) ( of smoke) voluta f, espiral f
II
spiral staircase — escalera f de caracol
III
intransitive verb, BrE - ll-a) ( increase) \<\<unemployment\>\> escalar; \<\<prices\>\> dispararseb) ( move) (+ adv compl)to spiral up/down — subir/bajar en espiral
-
4 drop
s.1 gota (de líquido)2 caída, descenso (fall, decrease) ( in de)3 suministro aéreo.4 pastilla, gragea.5 pedacito.6 telón de boca.7 segregación, derivación.vt.1 dejar caer (allow to fall) (accidentally); tirar, dejar caer (deliberately), botar (Am. salvo R.Plata); lanzar, tirar2 bajar (lower) (prices, one's eyes, voice)3 dejar (abandon) (subject, idea, plan)4 saltarse, omitir (omit) (letter, syllable); no pronunciar (not pronounce)5 perder (lose) (points)6 caerse.7 descender, bajar, caer.8 descartar, desechar.9 echar, echar fuera.10 gotear.11 mermar, bajar, decrecer.vi.1 caer, caerse (object); caer (ground)2 caer, bajar (prices, temperature, demand, unemployment); bajar (voice); amainar (wind); disminuir (speed) (pt & pp dropped)
См. также в других словарях:
decrease in unemployment — reduction in the rate of people not employed in work, increase in amount of people working … English contemporary dictionary
Unemployment — World unemployment rates[1] as of January 2009[update] Unemployment (or … Wikipedia
unemployment — un|em|ploy|ment W2S2 [ˌʌnımˈplɔımənt] n [U] 1.) the number of people in a particular country or area who cannot get a job ▪ The level of unemployment is rising. ▪ areas of high unemployment (=where many people do not have a job) ▪ The… … Dictionary of contemporary English
Unemployment Claim — A request made by an individual to the state government to receive temporary payments after having been laid off from a job. The United States Department of Labor keeps track of the number of weekly unemployment claims. It provides both… … Investment dictionary
Types of unemployment — Economists distinguish between four major types of unemployment, i.e., cyclical, frictional, structural and classical. (Another distinction, not discussed here, is between voluntary and involuntary unemployment.) Real world unemployment may… … Wikipedia
Late-2000s recession — This article is about economic recession during the early twenty first century. For background financial market events dating from 2007, see Late 2000s financial crisis. Late 2000s recession around the world Africa Americas South America United… … Wikipedia
Macroeconomics — Circulation in macroeconomics Macroeconomics (from Greek prefix makros meaning large + economics ) is a branch of economics dealing with the performance, structure, behavior, and decision making of the whole economy. This includes a national,… … Wikipedia
Manych Ship Canal — The Manych Ship Canal is a projected water transport connection between the basins of the Sea of Azov/Black Sea and the Caspian Sea. The most probable technical parameters of Manych Ship Canal are 6.5 m in depth, 80 m in width and more than 75… … Wikipedia
Costa Rica — Costa Rican. /kos teuh ree keuh, kaw steuh, koh /; Sp. /kaws tah rddee kah/ a republic in Central America, between Panama and Nicaragua. 3,534,174; 19,238 sq. mi. (49,825 sq. km). Cap.: San José. * * * Costa Rica Introduction Costa Rica… … Universalium
Economy of Hungary — Infobox Economy country = Hungary currency = Hungarian Forint (HUF) year = Calendar Year organs = WTO, OECD, EU rank = 50th gdp = $194 bn growth = 1.4% (2007) per capita = $19,799 (2008 IMF est.) sectors = agriculture (3%), industry (32%),… … Wikipedia
Michel Rocard — Prime Minister of France In office 10 May 1988 – 15 May 1991 President François Mitterrand Precede … Wikipedia