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1 dependent
1) (relying on (someone etc) for (financial) support: He is totally dependent on his parents.) dependiente2) ((of a future happening etc) to be decided by: Whether we go or not is dependent on whether we have enough money.) dependientedependent adjtr[dɪ'pendənt]1 dependiente\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be dependent on somebody/something depender de alguien/algoto be dependent on drugs ser drogodependientedependent [di'pɛndənt] adj: dependiente: persona f a cargo de alguienadj.• anexo, -a adj.• dependiente adj.• subordinado, -a adj.n.• dependiente s.m.,f.• familiar s.m.
I dɪ'pendənta) ( reliant) (pred)to be dependent ON something/somebody — depender de algo/alguien
b) ( Soc Adm) (before n)dependent relative — carga f familiar, familiar mf a su (or mi etc) cargo
d) ( Ling) subordinadoe) ( conditional) (pred)
II
[dɪ'pendǝnt]1. ADJ1) (=reliant)he has no dependent relatives — no tiene cargas familiares, no tiene familiares a su cargo
to be dependent on or upon sth/sb — depender de algo/algn
to become dependent on or upon sth/sb — llegar a depender de algo/algn
2) (Ling) [clause] subordinado3) (=conditional)to be dependent on or upon sth — depender de algo
2.N(esp US) = dependant* * *
I [dɪ'pendənt]a) ( reliant) (pred)to be dependent ON something/somebody — depender de algo/alguien
b) ( Soc Adm) (before n)dependent relative — carga f familiar, familiar mf a su (or mi etc) cargo
d) ( Ling) subordinadoe) ( conditional) (pred)
II
См. также в других словарях:
dependent relative revocation — n: a doctrine holding that if the destruction, cancellation, or revocation of a will is dependent on the making of a new will which is not made or is found to be invalid then the original will is still in effect Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of… … Law dictionary
dependent relative revocation — The doctrine which regards as mutually dependent the acts of one destroying a will and thereupon substituting another instrument for distribution of estate, when both acts are result of one plan, so that, if second act, through incompleteness or… … Black's law dictionary
dependent relative revocation — The doctrine which regards as mutually dependent the acts of one destroying a will and thereupon substituting another instrument for distribution of estate, when both acts are result of one plan, so that, if second act, through incompleteness or… … Black's law dictionary
dependent relative revocation — The doctrine that if a testator revoke a will with a present intention to make a new will as a substitute for the old, and the new will is not made, or if made fails of effect for some reason, it will be presumed that the testator preferred the… … Ballentine's law dictionary
Relative permittivity — Relative static permittivities of some materials at room temperature under 1 kHz[1] Material εr Vacuum 1 (by definition) Air 1.00058986 ± 0.00000050 (at STP, for 0.9 MH … Wikipedia
relative — rel·a·tive adj 1: not absolute 2 in the civil law of Louisiana: having or allowing some legal effect a relative impediment a relative simulation see also relative nullity at nullity … Law dictionary
Relative static permittivity — The relative static permittivity (or static relative permittivity) of a material under given conditions is a measure of the extent to which it concentrates electrostatic lines of flux. It is the ratio of the amount of stored electrical energy… … Wikipedia
relative revocation — See dependent relative revocation … Ballentine's law dictionary
dependent — adj 1 Dependent, contingent, conditional, relative mean having its existence or nature determined by something else. Something is dependent which cannot exist or come into existence by itself quite without aid or support {we are all dependent on… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
dependent — de·pen·dent 1 adj 1: determined or conditioned by another: contingent 2 a: relying on another for esp. financial support b: lacking the necessary means of support or protection and in need of aid from others (as a public agency) have the child… … Law dictionary
relative — [rel′ə tiv] adj. [< MFr or L: MFr relatif < L relativus < L relatus: see RELATE] 1. related each to the other; dependent upon or referring to each other [to stay in the same relative positions] 2. having to do with; pertinent; relevant… … English World dictionary