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1 delegar sobre
• devolve upon -
2 delegar
v.to delegate, to entrust, to depute, to deputise.* * *1 to delegate* * *verb* * *VT to delegate* * *1.verbo transitivoa) <autoridad/poderes> to delegate2.delegar a alguien para que + subj — to delegate somebody to + inf
delegar vi to delegate* * *= delegate.Ex. Alternatively, subcategorization can be delegated to another individual experienced in the subject field.----* delegar a = devolve to.* delegar Algo a Alguien = entrust [instrust].* delegar autoridad = delegate + authority.* delegar en = deputise [deputize, -USA].* delegar potestad = delegate + power.* delegar recursos = delegate + resources.* delegar responsabilidad = delegate + responsibility, empower.* delegar una decisión = delegate + decision.* delegar un asunto = delegate + matter.* delegar una tarea = delegate + operation.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) <autoridad/poderes> to delegate2.delegar a alguien para que + subj — to delegate somebody to + inf
delegar vi to delegate* * *= delegate.Ex: Alternatively, subcategorization can be delegated to another individual experienced in the subject field.
* delegar a = devolve to.* delegar Algo a Alguien = entrust [instrust].* delegar autoridad = delegate + authority.* delegar en = deputise [deputize, -USA].* delegar potestad = delegate + power.* delegar recursos = delegate + resources.* delegar responsabilidad = delegate + responsibility, empower.* delegar una decisión = delegate + decision.* delegar un asunto = delegate + matter.* delegar una tarea = delegate + operation.* * *delegar [A3 ]vt1 ‹autoridad/poderes› to delegate delegar algo EN algn to delegate sth TO sbno puedes delegar todas tus responsabilidades en mí you can't pass all your responsibilities on to me2 ‹persona› to delegate; ‹comisión› to appoint delegar a algn PARA QUE + SUBJ to delegate sb to + INF■ delegarvito delegate* * *
delegar ( conjugate delegar) verbo transitivo
to delegate;
delegar algo en algn to delegate sth to sb
verbo intransitivo
to delegate
delegar verbo transitivo to delegate [en, to]
' delegar' also found in these entries:
English:
delegate
- detail
- devolve
* * *♦ vt1. [funciones] to delegate;el gobierno central se resiste a delegar ciertos poderes central government is reluctant to delegate certain powers;delegar algo en alguien to delegate sth to sb2. [representante] to delegate;♦ vito delegate;hay que saber delegar you have to know how to delegate;delegar en alguien para hacer algo to delegate sth to sb* * *v/t delegate* * *delegar {52} vt: to delegate -
3 delegar a
v.to delegate to, to devolve upon.Delego la comisión a Teo I delegate the commission to Teo.* * *(v.) = devolve toEx. In Belgium this is the result of the traditional language division, while in the USA and West Germany responsibility for supervision is devolved to each country's individual states.* * *(v.) = devolve toEx: In Belgium this is the result of the traditional language division, while in the USA and West Germany responsibility for supervision is devolved to each country's individual states.
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4 recaer
v.1 to have a relapse (enfermo).2 to relapse, to fall back.3 to fall back on.Me recayó la ofensa The offense fell back on me.* * *1 (volver a caer) to fall again2 (enfermedad) to relapse, have a relapse3 (vicios etc) to relapse, backslide4 (corresponder) to fall ( sobre, on)* * *VI1) (Med) to suffer a relapse, relapse2) [criminal etc] to fall back, relapse (en into)3)recaer en o sobre — [elección] to fall on, fall to; [premio] to go to; [legado] to pass to; [deber] to devolve upon
4) (Arquit)recaer a — to look out on, look over
* * *verbo intransitivo1) enfermo to have o suffer a relapse2)a) sospechas/responsabilidadb) premio/nombramiento* * *= slip back into, relapse (into).Ex. 'He's slipping back into a churlish mood', the director said averting his eyes.Ex. In these circumstances it is easy to relapse into 'scientism' and mistake means for ends = En estas circunstancias es fácil recaer en el "cientifismo" y confundir los medios por los fines.----* hacer recaer la responsabilidad sobre = put + the onus on, put + the burden on.* maldición + recaer = curse + descend upon.* recaer en = devolve on/upon, slide back to.* responsabilidad + recaer en = responsibility + rest with.* responsabilidad + recaer sobre + espaldas = responsibility + rest on + shoulders.* * *verbo intransitivo1) enfermo to have o suffer a relapse2)a) sospechas/responsabilidadb) premio/nombramiento* * *= slip back into, relapse (into).Ex: 'He's slipping back into a churlish mood', the director said averting his eyes.
Ex: In these circumstances it is easy to relapse into 'scientism' and mistake means for ends = En estas circunstancias es fácil recaer en el "cientifismo" y confundir los medios por los fines.* hacer recaer la responsabilidad sobre = put + the onus on, put + the burden on.* maldición + recaer = curse + descend upon.* recaer en = devolve on/upon, slide back to.* responsabilidad + recaer en = responsibility + rest with.* responsabilidad + recaer sobre + espaldas = responsibility + rest on + shoulders.* * *viA «enfermo» to have o suffer a relapseB1 «sospechas/responsabilidad»: recaer SOBRE algn; to fall ON sbsobre él recae todo el peso de la empresa the entire burden of responsibility for the company falls on his shoulders2 «premio/nombramiento»: recaer EN algn; to go TO sb* * *
recaer ( conjugate recaer) verbo intransitivo
1 [ enfermo] to have o suffer a relapse
2a) [sospechas/responsabilidad] recaer SOBRE algn to fall on sbb) [premio/nombramiento] recaer EN algn to go to sb
recaer verbo intransitivo
1 Med to relapse
2 (en un vicio, hábito) to relapse
3 (culpa, sospechas, responsabilidad) to fall [sobre, on]
4 (premio) to go to
5 (conversación, discusión, etc) to be about
' recaer' also found in these entries:
English:
fall
- lapse
- relapse
- rest
* * *recaer vi1. [enfermo] to (have a) relapseha vuelto a recaer en la bebida he's started drinking again3. [ir a parar] [sospechas] to fall (en o sobre on);la responsabilidad recayó en su hermano mayor the responsibility fell to his older brother;el premio recayó en un escritor uruguayo the prize went to a Uruguayan writer5. [acento] to fall;el acento recae en la última sílaba the accent falls o is on the last syllable* * *v/i2 MED have osuffer a relapse3 JUR reoffend* * *recaer {13} vi1) : to relapse2)recaer en orrecaer sobre : to fall on, to fall to -
5 transferir
v.1 to transfer.La empresa transfiere a su personal The company transfers its staff.Ricardo transfirió el auto Richard transferred the car.2 to transfer, to set over.La empresa transfiere a su personal The company transfers its staff.* * *1 (cambiar de lugar) to transfer2 (diferir) to postpone3 FINANZAS to transfer, convey* * *verb1) to transfer2) convey* * *VT to transfer* * *verbo transitivo to transfer* * *= transfer, translate, travel, hand over, carry forward, port, pass down, pass on.Ex. Scope notes, on the order hand, may be present in a thesaurus but are unlikely to be transferred to an index.Ex. The structure outlined in the guidelines is not intended to translate directly into a structure for machine-readable authority records.Ex. This, incidentally, is one area where North American software does not travel well: UK post-codes will not fit into fields designed for US zip codes.Ex. Eventually, teachers should be able to ' hand the chalk over to the students' and take a back seat.Ex. Unused appropriations may be carried forward to the following year and appropriations not used in one part of the budget may be transferred to another part.Ex. Increasingly, traditional online services are being ported onto the Web.Ex. The knowledge that has been passed down from generation to generation by sentient beings on this planet for aeons and aeons is quite impossible to fully comprehend.Ex. If ignored, the problems are only passed on to all the users of the catalog: the public, the reference department, the acquisitions department, and naturally the cataloging department.----* transferir a = devolve to.* transferir dinero = transfer + money.* transferir los resultados = transfer + results.* * *verbo transitivo to transfer* * *= transfer, translate, travel, hand over, carry forward, port, pass down, pass on.Ex: Scope notes, on the order hand, may be present in a thesaurus but are unlikely to be transferred to an index.
Ex: The structure outlined in the guidelines is not intended to translate directly into a structure for machine-readable authority records.Ex: This, incidentally, is one area where North American software does not travel well: UK post-codes will not fit into fields designed for US zip codes.Ex: Eventually, teachers should be able to ' hand the chalk over to the students' and take a back seat.Ex: Unused appropriations may be carried forward to the following year and appropriations not used in one part of the budget may be transferred to another part.Ex: Increasingly, traditional online services are being ported onto the Web.Ex: The knowledge that has been passed down from generation to generation by sentient beings on this planet for aeons and aeons is quite impossible to fully comprehend.Ex: If ignored, the problems are only passed on to all the users of the catalog: the public, the reference department, the acquisitions department, and naturally the cataloging department.* transferir a = devolve to.* transferir dinero = transfer + money.* transferir los resultados = transfer + results.* * *transferir [ I11 ]vtto transfer* * *
transferir ( conjugate transferir) verbo transitivo
to transfer
transferir verbo transitivo to transfer
' transferir' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
trasferir
English:
download
- hand over
- transfer
- devolve
- hand
* * *transferir, trasferir vt1. [datos, recursos, poderes] to transfer2. Informát to download* * *v/t transfer* * *transferir {76} vttrasladar: to transfer♦ transferible adj -
6 traspasar
v.1 to go through, to pierce.traspasar la puerta to go through the doorwaytraspasar una valla saltando to jump over a fencela tinta traspasó el papel the ink soaked through the paperLa bala traspasó el pulmón The bullet pierced the lung.2 to transfer (transferir) (jugador).3 to move.Traspasemos este sofá a la sala Let's move this sofa to the living room.4 to go beyond.Ellos traspasaron el límite They went beyond the limit.5 to transfer the ownership of, to alienate, to cede, to make over.El viejito traspasó la casa The old man turned over the house.6 to stab.El pillo traspasó a Ricardo The rascal stabbed Richard.7 to devolve.Ella traspasó responsabilidades She devolved responsibilities.* * *1 (atravesar) to go through, cross2 (cambiar de lugar) to move3 (perforar) to go through, pierce4 (dar, pasar) to transfer; (vender) to sell6 figurado (dolor físico, moral) to penetrate, transfix1 to exceed oneself\'Se traspasa' "For sale"* * *verb1) to pierce2) cross3) go too far4) convey* * *1. VT1) (=penetrar) to pierce, go through, penetrate; [líquido] to go/come through, soak through2) [dolor] to pierce, go right through3) [+ calle] to cross over4) [+ límites] to go beyond, overstep5) [+ ley, norma] to break, infringe6) [+ propiedad] (=transferir) to transfer; (=vender) to sell, make over; (Jur) to convey"se traspasa negocio" — "business for sale"
7) (Dep) [+ jugador] to transfer8) (Pol) [+ poderes, competencias] to devolve2.See:* * *verbo transitivo1)a) bala/espada to pierce, go through; líquido to go through, soak throughsu rostro afligido le traspasó el corazón — her grief-stricken expression pierced him to the heart (liter)
b) ( sobrepasar) to go beyond2)se traspasa local — to let o for rent
b) < negocio> to transfer3) <poderes/fondos> to transfer4) (Dep) < jugador> to transfer, trade (AmE)* * *= give over, swap in and out of, stab, cross.Ex. The old building is now given over to children and young people.Ex. At a greater level of sophistication, the operating system will be able to swap programs in and out of memory in mid-operation in order to let another have a go.Ex. He listened to me and then said 'ˆre you finished?' and just walked away -- The woman sat up, as if stabbed.Ex. Some of the cases presented in this book are concerned with broad policy issues, while others are less encompassing and present some of the narrower problems that cross the library manager's desk.----* traspasar a = spill over into.* traspasar con una lanza = spear.* * *verbo transitivo1)a) bala/espada to pierce, go through; líquido to go through, soak throughsu rostro afligido le traspasó el corazón — her grief-stricken expression pierced him to the heart (liter)
b) ( sobrepasar) to go beyond2)se traspasa local — to let o for rent
b) < negocio> to transfer3) <poderes/fondos> to transfer4) (Dep) < jugador> to transfer, trade (AmE)* * *= give over, swap in and out of, stab, cross.Ex: The old building is now given over to children and young people.
Ex: At a greater level of sophistication, the operating system will be able to swap programs in and out of memory in mid-operation in order to let another have a go.Ex: He listened to me and then said 're you finished?' and just walked away -- The woman sat up, as if stabbed.Ex: Some of the cases presented in this book are concerned with broad policy issues, while others are less encompassing and present some of the narrower problems that cross the library manager's desk.* traspasar a = spill over into.* traspasar con una lanza = spear.* * *traspasar [A1 ]vtA1 «bala/espada» to pierce, go through; «líquido» to go through, soak throughla bala le traspasó el pulmón the bullet pierced his lunglo traspasó con la espada he ran him through (with his sword)la salsa traspasó el mantel the sauce soaked through the tableclothunos pitidos que traspasan el oído ear-piercing whistlesla pena le traspasó el corazón his heart was pierced with sorrow ( liter), he was utterly grief-stricken2 (sobrepasar) to go beyondsu fama ha traspasado las fronteras de nuestro país his fame has spread beyond our bordersesto traspasa los límites de lo verosímil this goes beyond the bounds of credibilityB1 ‹bar/farmacia› (vender) to sell; (arrendar) to let, lease, rent[ S ] se traspasa local to let o for rent2 ‹negocio› to transferle traspasó el negocio a su hijo he transferred the business to his son, he made the business over to his sonC1 ‹poderes/competencias› to transfer2 ‹fondos› to transfer* * *
traspasar ( conjugate traspasar) verbo transitivo
1
[ líquido] to go through, soak through
2 ‹bar/farmacia› ( vender) to sell;
( arrendar) to let, lease
3 ‹poderes/fondos/negocio› to transfer
4 (Dep) ‹ jugador› to transfer, trade (AmE)
traspasar verbo transitivo
1 (un muro, una madera, etc) to go through: la flecha le traspasó el corazón, the arrow went right through his heart
2 (una frontera, un río) to cross (over)
3 (una barrera, un límite) to go beyond: traspasó la barrera del sonido, it broke the sound barrier
4 Com to transfer, sell
' traspasar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
franquear
English:
dispose of
- transfer
* * *traspasar vt1. [atravesar] [sujeto: puñal, bala] to go through, to pierce;[sujeto: líquido] to soak through;la bala le traspasó el muslo the bullet went through his thigh;la tinta traspasó el papel the ink soaked through the paper;el sudor le traspasaba la ropa the sweat was soaking through his clothestraspasar una valla saltando to jump over a fence;no consiguió traspasar el muro de silencio que le rodeaba she was unable to break through the wall of silence that surrounded her;traspasar el umbral de los ochenta años to enter one's ninth decade, to reach one's eighties3. [exceder] [fronteras, límites] to go beyond;llegó a traspasar la barrera del millón de votos she broke through the one-million-vote barrier4. [transferir] [jugador, objeto] to transfer;[negocio] to sell [as a going concern]; [competencias] to devolve;se traspasa (negocio) [en cartel] (business) for sale5. [cambiar de sitio] to move6. [afectar mucho] to devastate* * *v/t1 ( atravesar) go through2 COM transfer3 ( exceder) go beyond* * *traspasar vt1) perforar: to pierce, to go through2) : to go beyondtraspasar los límites: to overstep the limits3) atravesar: to cross, to go across4) : to sell, to transfer* * *traspasar vb -
7 recaer en
v.to fall into.* * *(v.) = devolve on/upon, slide back toEx. The day-to-day running of these branches usually devolves on to non-professional staff who may lack training and confidence in the handling of information enquiries.Ex. So the Marxists will have to pull up their socks if they are to prevent the state from sliding back to the lawlessness one had seen prior to 1977.* * *(v.) = devolve on/upon, slide back toEx: The day-to-day running of these branches usually devolves on to non-professional staff who may lack training and confidence in the handling of information enquiries.
Ex: So the Marxists will have to pull up their socks if they are to prevent the state from sliding back to the lawlessness one had seen prior to 1977. -
8 transferir a
(v.) = devolve toEx. In Belgium this is the result of the traditional language division, while in the USA and West Germany responsibility for supervision is devolved to each country's individual states.* * *(v.) = devolve toEx: In Belgium this is the result of the traditional language division, while in the USA and West Germany responsibility for supervision is devolved to each country's individual states.
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9 delegar sobre
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10 conceder
v.1 to grant.me concedió un deseo he granted me a wishle concedí el beneficio de la duda I gave him the benefit of the doubtno concede entrevistas she doesn't give interviews¿me concede cinco minutos? could you give o spare me five minutes?2 to admit, to concede.3 to give.4 to allow to.* * *2 (atribuir) to give, attach3 (oportunidad, tiempo) to give4 (admitir) to concede, admit* * *verb1) to award, grant2) concede, admit* * *VT1) (=dar) [+ beca, premio] to award, grant; [+ crédito, permiso, deseo, entrevista] to grantsu mujer no quería concederle el divorcio — his wife didn't want to grant o give him a divorce
le concedieron el honor de presidir el congreso — they conferred on him the honour of presiding over the conference
¿me concede el honor de este baile? — may I have the pleasure of this dance?
2) frm (=admitir) to concede, admitconcedo que el error fue mío — I concede o admit it was my mistake
* * *verbo transitivo1)a) <premio/beca> to give, award; <descuento/préstamo> to give, grant (frml); <privilegio/favor/permiso> to grantel honor que me concedieron — the honor they conferred o bestowed on me
¿me podría conceder unos minutos? — could you spare me a few minutes?
b) <importancia/valor> to give2) (admitir, reconocer) to admit, acknowledge, concede* * *= award, confer (on/upon), grant, vest, cede, bestow, dispense.Ex. In recognition of his impact on cataloging, in 1974 he was awarded the Margaret Mann Citation and, in 1978, the Melvil Dewey Medal.Ex. Lastly, he was the 1971 recipient of the Melvil Dewey Medal, which was conferred upon him for creative professional achievement of a high order.Ex. In the majority of cases, the indexer is granted considerable freedom of choice as to the citation order he adopts in the construction of compound class numbers.Ex. This responsibility is vested in the Central Classification Committees of the member countries.Ex. We see this most clearly in the United Kingdom right now, as the Westminster government cedes authority both to the European Union and to a new parliament in Scotland.Ex. God offers penitents redemption but also bestows His 'common grace' on all.Ex. This paper describes the role of the federal government in dispensing aid to public libraries as part of the combat against the Great Depression of the 1930s.----* conceder aumento salarial = award + salary increase.* conceder beca = grant + scholarship.* conceder cierta autoridad sobre = give + Nombre + a say in.* conceder comisión de servicios = second.* conceder diploma = grant + diploma.* conceder el derecho al voto = enfranchise.* conceder el honor = accord + honour.* conceder en franquicia = franchise.* conceder facultades = endow with + powers.* conceder importancia = accord + significance level, attach + importance, place + importance.* conceder licencia = grant + license.* conceder licencia de comercialización = license [licence, -USA].* conceder mucha importancia a = lay + great store on.* conceder permiso = give + permission, grant + permission, grant + Alguien + leave.* conceder poderes = give + powers.* conceder potestad = confer + mandate.* conceder una licencia = issue + licence.* conceder una oportunidad = grant + opportunity.* conceder una petición = grant + request.* conceder un contrato = award + contract.* conceder un favor = bestow + favour.* conceder un premio = give + an award, grant + an award.* conceder un préstamo = grant + loan.* conceder un título = bestow + title.* privilegio concedido por el dinero = moneyed privilege.* que concede becas = grant-making.* que concede subsidios = grant-making.* que se concede en función de las necesidades económicas = means-tested.* * *verbo transitivo1)a) <premio/beca> to give, award; <descuento/préstamo> to give, grant (frml); <privilegio/favor/permiso> to grantel honor que me concedieron — the honor they conferred o bestowed on me
¿me podría conceder unos minutos? — could you spare me a few minutes?
b) <importancia/valor> to give2) (admitir, reconocer) to admit, acknowledge, concede* * *= award, confer (on/upon), grant, vest, cede, bestow, dispense.Ex: In recognition of his impact on cataloging, in 1974 he was awarded the Margaret Mann Citation and, in 1978, the Melvil Dewey Medal.
Ex: Lastly, he was the 1971 recipient of the Melvil Dewey Medal, which was conferred upon him for creative professional achievement of a high order.Ex: In the majority of cases, the indexer is granted considerable freedom of choice as to the citation order he adopts in the construction of compound class numbers.Ex: This responsibility is vested in the Central Classification Committees of the member countries.Ex: We see this most clearly in the United Kingdom right now, as the Westminster government cedes authority both to the European Union and to a new parliament in Scotland.Ex: God offers penitents redemption but also bestows His 'common grace' on all.Ex: This paper describes the role of the federal government in dispensing aid to public libraries as part of the combat against the Great Depression of the 1930s.* conceder aumento salarial = award + salary increase.* conceder beca = grant + scholarship.* conceder cierta autoridad sobre = give + Nombre + a say in.* conceder comisión de servicios = second.* conceder diploma = grant + diploma.* conceder el derecho al voto = enfranchise.* conceder el honor = accord + honour.* conceder en franquicia = franchise.* conceder facultades = endow with + powers.* conceder importancia = accord + significance level, attach + importance, place + importance.* conceder licencia = grant + license.* conceder licencia de comercialización = license [licence, -USA].* conceder mucha importancia a = lay + great store on.* conceder permiso = give + permission, grant + permission, grant + Alguien + leave.* conceder poderes = give + powers.* conceder potestad = confer + mandate.* conceder una licencia = issue + licence.* conceder una oportunidad = grant + opportunity.* conceder una petición = grant + request.* conceder un contrato = award + contract.* conceder un favor = bestow + favour.* conceder un premio = give + an award, grant + an award.* conceder un préstamo = grant + loan.* conceder un título = bestow + title.* privilegio concedido por el dinero = moneyed privilege.* que concede becas = grant-making.* que concede subsidios = grant-making.* que se concede en función de las necesidades económicas = means-tested.* * *conceder [E1 ]vtA1 ‹premio/beca› to give, award; ‹descuento/préstamo› to give, grant ( frml); ‹privilegio/favor› to grantlos jueces concedieron el triunfo al irlandés the judges awarded victory to the Irishman, the judges pronounced the Irishman the winnerabuchearon al árbitro por no conceder el penalty the referee was booed for not giving o awarding the penaltysin conceder un solo tanto without conceding a single pointme concedieron permiso they gave me permissionel honor que me concedieron the honor they conferred o bestowed on menos concedió una entrevista she agreed to give us an interview o to being interviewed by usterminó por concederle la razón a su contrincante he ended up admitting o conceding that his opponent was right¿me podría conceder unos minutos de su tiempo? could you spare me a few minutes of your time?2 ‹importancia/valor› to giveno le concedió demasiada importancia she did not give it too much importance o attach too much importance to itB (admitir, reconocer) to admit, acknowledge, concedetuvo que conceder que se había equivocado he had to admit o concede o acknowledge that he was wrong* * *
conceder ( conjugate conceder) verbo transitivo
1
‹descuento/préstamo› to give;
‹privilegio/favor/permiso› to grant;
¿me podría conceder unos minutos? could you spare me a few minutes?
2 (admitir, reconocer) to admit, acknowledge
conceder verbo transitivo
1 (admitir) to admit, concede
2 (un deseo, préstamo) to grant
(un premio, una beca) to award
3 frml (tiempo, atención) si me concede un minuto, if you can spare me a moment
4 (importancia) to give
conceder valor a algo, to attach value to something
' conceder' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
acceder
- dar
- dotar
- merced
- negar
- premio
English:
accord
- award
- begrudge
- bestow
- concede
- grant
- confer
- devolve
- dispense
- give
- knight
- shut
- straight
* * *conceder vt1. [dar] to grant;[premio] to award; [beca] to give, to award; [préstamo, subvención] to give, to grant; [asilo, indulto, extradición] to grant;le concedí el beneficio de la duda I gave him the benefit of the doubt;me concedió un deseo he granted me a wish;no concede entrevistas she doesn't give interviews;¿me concede cinco minutos? could you give o spare me five minutes?;le han concedido un permiso para acudir al congreso he's been given o granted permission to attend the conference2. [asentir] to admit, to concede;concedo que están en lo cierto I admit that you're right3. [atribuir] [importancia] to give, to attach;no concede ningún valor al dinero money doesn't matter to her at all* * ** * *conceder vt1) : to grant, to bestow2) : to concede, to admit* * *conceder vb2. (beca, premio) to award -
11 delegar autoridad
-
12 delegar
• depute• deputise• deputize• devolve• entrust• vest -
13 delegar a
• delegate to• devolve upon -
14 delegar autoridad
• delegate authority• devolve authority -
15 traspasar
• alienate• cede• cross over• devolve• exceed• go better• go beyond one's capacity• make over• perforate• pierce• set over• take a step beyond• transfer tax on securities• transfer the ownership of• transfer the property to• transfinite cardinal• transfixed• turn over the ownership of -
16 recaer sobre
v.to fall upon, to devolve upon, to fall on, to lie in.
См. также в других словарях:
devolve — de‧volve [dɪˈvɒlv ǁ dɪˈvɑːlv] verb 1. [transitive] to give work, responsibility, or power to someone at a lower or more local level: • The goal of the welfare bill is to devolve power and responsibility to the states. 2. [intransitive] LAW if… … Financial and business terms
devolve — de·volve /di vȯlv, välv/ vi de·volved, de·volv·ing [Medieval Latin devolvi, passive of devolvere to roll down, from Latin, from de down, away + volvere to roll] 1: to pass by transfer or succession the estate devolved to a distant cousin 2: to… … Law dictionary
Devolve (EP) — Devolve EP by Shihad Released 1990 (Vinyl) 1991 (CD) The Devolve EP is now infamous in Shihad fan culture as something of a holy grail. Ori … Wikipedia
devolve — ► VERB 1) transfer (power) to a lower level, especially from central government to local or regional administration. 2) (devolve on/to) (of duties or responsibility) pass to (a deputy or successor). 3) (devolve on/to) Law (of property) pass from… … English terms dictionary
devolve — is a verb of reviving fortunes in the age of political devolution. Its three principal uses are as follows: (1) you devolve powers, authority, etc., on or upon someone, (2) power, authority, etc., devolves on or upon someone, and (3) a right,… … Modern English usage
Devolve — De*volve , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Devolved}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Devolving}.] [L. devolvere, devolutum, to roll down; de + volvere to roll down; de + volvere to roll. See {Voluble}.] 1. To roll onward or downward; to pass on. [1913 Webster] Every… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Devolve — De*volve , v. i. To pass by transmission or succession; to be handed over or down; generally with on or upon, sometimes with to or into; as, after the general fell, the command devolved upon (or on) the next officer in rank. [1913 Webster] His… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
devolve on — index delegate Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
devolve — early 15c., to roll down, from L. devolvere to roll down, from de (see DE (Cf. de )) + volvere to roll (see VULVA (Cf. vulva)). Figurative sense of to cause to pass down is from 1520s. Related: Devolved; devolving. Also in same sense was devolute … Etymology dictionary
devolve — [di välv′, divôlv′] vt. devolved, devolving [ME devolven < L devolvere, to roll down < de , down + volvere, to roll: see WALK] to transfer or pass on (duties, responsibilities, etc.) to another or others vi. 1. to pass or be transferred to… … English World dictionary
devolve — de|volve [dıˈvɔlv US dıˈva:lv] v formal [Date: 1400 1500; : Latin; Origin: devolvere, from volvere to roll ] 1.) [I and T] if you devolve responsibility, power etc to a person or group at a lower level, or if it devolves on them, it is given to… … Dictionary of contemporary English