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1 gastable
• expendable -
2 acciones amortizables
• expendable shares• redeemable shares -
3 consumible
• expendable• usable -
4 dinero disponible
• expendable money• floating lien• floating money• floating on air• live assets• money on hand -
5 fondos consumibles
• expendable fund -
6 fungible
• expendable• fungible -
7 mercancía desechable
• expendable merchandise -
8 no renovable
• expendable• non repentant• non-removable disk• nonrefundable fee• nonrenewable natural resources -
9 personal excedente
• expendable personnel -
10 prescindible
adj.1 capable of being prescinded or abstracted.2 dispensable, unnecessary.3 expendable.* * *► adjetivo1 expendable, dispensable* * *ADJ dispensable* * *= expendable, dispensable, unneeded.Ex. Tradition-bound acquisitions librarians may soon find themselves expendable -- acceptance of new technologies is essential for the survival of the acquisitions librarian.Ex. However, slides are subject to fading because of their exposure to light and it must be realised that they are not permanent, but dispensable.Ex. The author concludes that science libraries buy many unneeded books.----* Algo que es prescindible = inessential.* * *= expendable, dispensable, unneeded.Ex: Tradition-bound acquisitions librarians may soon find themselves expendable -- acceptance of new technologies is essential for the survival of the acquisitions librarian.
Ex: However, slides are subject to fading because of their exposure to light and it must be realised that they are not permanent, but dispensable.Ex: The author concludes that science libraries buy many unneeded books.* Algo que es prescindible = inessential.* * *dispensable -
11 carne de cañón
figurado cannon fodder* * ** * *(n.) = cannon fodder, easy preyEx. The writer challenges that idea that the auxiliary infantryman of the Roman army was merely expendable ' cannon fodder'.Ex. However, the apical part of the leaves seems not to provide ovipositing females with enough protection against birds, making them easy preys.* * ** * *(n.) = cannon fodder, easy preyEx: The writer challenges that idea that the auxiliary infantryman of the Roman army was merely expendable ' cannon fodder'.
Ex: However, the apical part of the leaves seems not to provide ovipositing females with enough protection against birds, making them easy preys.* * *figcannon fodder -
12 molestarse
1 (tomarse la molestia) to bother■ no se moleste en venir, ya se lo mandaremos a casa don't bother coming, we'll send it round to you2 (ofenderse) to take offence* * *VPR1) (=tomarse la molestia) to bother o.s.no se moleste, prefiero estar de pie — don't trouble o bother yourself, I prefer to stand
-¿quiere que abra la ventana? -por mí no se moleste — "shall I open the window?" - "don't mind me"
no te molestes por él, sabe arreglárselas solo — don't put yourself out for him, he can manage on his own
se molestó en llevarnos al aeropuerto — she took the trouble to drive us to the airport, she went to the trouble of driving us to the airport
no te molestes en venir a por mí — don't bother to come and pick me up, you needn't take the trouble to come and pick me up
ni siquiera te has molestado en responder a mis cartas — you didn't even bother to answer my letters
2) (=disgustarse) [con enfado] to get annoyed, get upset; [con ofensa] to take offence, take offense (EEUU)no deberías molestarte, lo hizo sin mala intención — you shouldn't get annoyed o upset/take offence, he didn't mean any harm
molestarse con algn — to get annoyed o cross with sb
molestarse por algo — to get annoyed at sth, get upset about sth
se molesta por nada — he gets annoyed at o upset about the slightest thing
¿te has molestado por ese comentario? — did that comment upset o offend you?
* * *(v.) = stir + uneasily, get + Posesivo + knickers in a twist, get + Posesivo + panties in a bundle, begrudge, grudge, piqueEx. She did stir uneasily when one day he exhorted her to be careful whom she was seen with, and when he advised her to remember that in her new and different setting people who fail to observe unwritten rules of acceptable behavior are in some people's eyes expendable.Ex. The trouble began when some journalists got their knickers in a twist over Reich's unusual theories -- one of these being the notion that every individual should have a healthy satisfying sex life.Ex. I cannot for the life of me understand what you see in the Serb's cause that gets your panties in a bundle.Ex. In fact, many successful working women begrudge their partner's lack of earning power.Ex. He did not grudge them the money, but he grudged terribly the risk which the spending of that money might bring on them.Ex. In one interview, piqued by this recurrent comment on his Irishness, he pointed out that he came not from idyllic emerald green surroundings.* * *(v.) = stir + uneasily, get + Posesivo + knickers in a twist, get + Posesivo + panties in a bundle, begrudge, grudge, piqueEx: She did stir uneasily when one day he exhorted her to be careful whom she was seen with, and when he advised her to remember that in her new and different setting people who fail to observe unwritten rules of acceptable behavior are in some people's eyes expendable.
Ex: The trouble began when some journalists got their knickers in a twist over Reich's unusual theories -- one of these being the notion that every individual should have a healthy satisfying sex life.Ex: I cannot for the life of me understand what you see in the Serb's cause that gets your panties in a bundle.Ex: In fact, many successful working women begrudge their partner's lack of earning power.Ex: He did not grudge them the money, but he grudged terribly the risk which the spending of that money might bring on them.Ex: In one interview, piqued by this recurrent comment on his Irishness, he pointed out that he came not from idyllic emerald green surroundings.* * *
■molestarse verbo reflexivo
1 (ofenderse) to take offence o US offense [por, at]
2 (hacer el esfuerzo) to bother: no se molestó en llamar, she didn't even bother to phone
' molestarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
chocar
- chorear
- fastidiar
- molestar
- resentirse
English:
annoy
- bother
- bridle
- trouble
* * *vpr1. [tomarse molestias] to bother;no te molestes, yo lo haré don't bother, I'll do it;molestarse en hacer algo to bother to do sth;se molestó en prepararnos una comida vegetariana she went to the trouble of preparing a vegetarian meal for us;te agradezco que te hayas molestado en llamar thank you for taking the trouble to phone;ni siquiera se molestó en acompañarme a la puerta he didn't even bother to show me to the door;molestarse por algo/alguien to put oneself out for sth/sb;por mí no te molestes, aquí estoy bien don't worry about me, I'm fine hereespero que no se molestara por lo que le dije I hope what I said didn't upset you* * *v/r1 get upset2 ( ofenderse) take offense, Brtake offence3 ( enojarse) get annoyed;molestarse en hacer algo take the trouble to do sth* * *vrmolestarse en : to take the trouble to* * *molestarse vb to bother -
13 no escrito
adj.unwritten, untyped.* * *(adj.) = unwrittenEx. She did stir uneasily when one day he exhorted her to be careful whom she was seen with, and when he advised her to remember that in her new and different setting people who fail to observe unwritten rules of acceptable behavior are in some people's eyes expendable.* * *(adj.) = unwrittenEx: She did stir uneasily when one day he exhorted her to be careful whom she was seen with, and when he advised her to remember that in her new and different setting people who fail to observe unwritten rules of acceptable behavior are in some people's eyes expendable.
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14 sentirse molesto
(v.) = stir + uneasily, look + uncomfortable, feel + wrongEx. She did stir uneasily when one day he exhorted her to be careful whom she was seen with, and when he advised her to remember that in her new and different setting people who fail to observe unwritten rules of acceptable behavior are in some people's eyes expendable.Ex. The women will either look uncomfortable and make a hasty exit or will stand there with blank looks on their faces pretending not to have heard.Ex. Usually, when I have trouble sleeping it's not because I feel wrong or anything like that, it just happens.* * *(v.) = stir + uneasily, look + uncomfortable, feel + wrongEx: She did stir uneasily when one day he exhorted her to be careful whom she was seen with, and when he advised her to remember that in her new and different setting people who fail to observe unwritten rules of acceptable behavior are in some people's eyes expendable.
Ex: The women will either look uncomfortable and make a hasty exit or will stand there with blank looks on their faces pretending not to have heard.Ex: Usually, when I have trouble sleeping it's not because I feel wrong or anything like that, it just happens. -
15 soldado de infantería
infantryman* * *(n.) = infantrymanEx. The writer challenges that idea that the auxiliary infantryman of the Roman army was merely expendable 'cannon fodder'.* * *(n.) = infantrymanEx: The writer challenges that idea that the auxiliary infantryman of the Roman army was merely expendable 'cannon fodder'.
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16 verbal
adj.verbal.* * *► adjetivo1 verbal, oral* * *adj.* * *ADJ (gen) verbal; [mensaje] oral* * *adjetivo verbal* * *= vocal, unwritten, verbal.Ex. Some books provoke vocal responses while others seem to turn people in on themselves, when they prefer to say nothing but savor the reading in silence.Ex. She did stir uneasily when one day he exhorted her to be careful whom she was seen with, and when he advised her to remember that in her new and different setting people who fail to observe unwritten rules of acceptable behavior are in some people's eyes expendable.Ex. Instead of struggling alone, locked in our inadequacy with words, we couple with the writer in an act of verbal creation in which communication is consummated.----* abuso verbal = verbal abuse.* acuerdo verbal = verbal agreement.* agresión verbal = verbal aggression, verbal assault, verbal abuse.* apéndice verbal = verbal extension.* compromiso verbal = verbal commitment.* diarrea verbal = verbal diarrhoea.* intercambio verbal = exchange, verbal exchange.* nombre verbal = verbal noun.* plano verbal = verbal plane.* sistema de clasificación verbal = verbal classification system.* tiempo verbal = tense.* * *adjetivo verbal* * *= vocal, unwritten, verbal.Ex: Some books provoke vocal responses while others seem to turn people in on themselves, when they prefer to say nothing but savor the reading in silence.
Ex: She did stir uneasily when one day he exhorted her to be careful whom she was seen with, and when he advised her to remember that in her new and different setting people who fail to observe unwritten rules of acceptable behavior are in some people's eyes expendable.Ex: Instead of struggling alone, locked in our inadequacy with words, we couple with the writer in an act of verbal creation in which communication is consummated.* abuso verbal = verbal abuse.* acuerdo verbal = verbal agreement.* agresión verbal = verbal aggression, verbal assault, verbal abuse.* apéndice verbal = verbal extension.* compromiso verbal = verbal commitment.* diarrea verbal = verbal diarrhoea.* intercambio verbal = exchange, verbal exchange.* nombre verbal = verbal noun.* plano verbal = verbal plane.* sistema de clasificación verbal = verbal classification system.* tiempo verbal = tense.* * *1 ( Ling) verbaldesinencias verbales verb endings2 (oral, de palabra) verbalacuerdo/contrato verbal verbal agreement/contract* * *
verbal adjetivo
verbal
verbal adjetivo verbal
' verbal' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
apalabrar
- pretérita
- pretérito
- verborrea
- voz
- ataque
- en
- palabra
English:
fear
- verbal
- word-of-mouth
- attack
- joke
- unwritten
* * *verbal adjverbal* * *adj GRAM verbal* * *verbal adj: verbal♦ verbalmente adv -
17 gastable
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18 fungible
adj.1 disposable.2 fungible, consumable, expendable.* * *ADJ(Jur)* * *= fungible, consumable.Ex. One of the reasons why previous studies have failed to provide meaningful techniques for measuring the value of information is the predilection to analyse information as a fungible commodity or resource.Ex. Increasingly worrying to all however was the provision of the expensive consumables of the IT trade -disks, tapes and stationery.* * *= fungible, consumable.Ex: One of the reasons why previous studies have failed to provide meaningful techniques for measuring the value of information is the predilection to analyse information as a fungible commodity or resource.
Ex: Increasingly worrying to all however was the provision of the expensive consumables of the IT trade -disks, tapes and stationery.* * *bienes fungibles fungibles* * *fungible adjdisposable;bienes fungibles perishables -
19 no renovable
adj.non renewable, expendable, nonrenewable.* * *(adj.) = non-renewableEx. Oil, natural gas, coal and uranium - the most common fuels in the world - are considered to be non-renewable, due to the eons it took to create them and mankind's inability to synthesize similar fuels readily.* * *(adj.) = non-renewableEx: Oil, natural gas, coal and uranium - the most common fuels in the world - are considered to be non-renewable, due to the eons it took to create them and mankind's inability to synthesize similar fuels readily.
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20 sustituible
adj.replaceable, able to be substituted, substitutable.* * *► adjetivo1 replaceable, expendable* * *ADJ replaceable* * *= substitutable, replaceable.Ex. A paradigm constitutes a class of substitutable elements which share something in common.Ex. However, materials are usually replaceable, whereas good user relations are not.* * *= substitutable, replaceable.Ex: A paradigm constitutes a class of substitutable elements which share something in common.
Ex: However, materials are usually replaceable, whereas good user relations are not.* * *replaceableser sustituible por algo/algn to be replaceable by sth/sb* * *
sustituible adjetivo replaceable
* * *sustituible, substituible adjreplaceable* * *adj replaceable
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
expendable — ex‧pend‧a‧ble [ɪkˈspendəbl] adjective ACCOUNTING expendable supplies or items are ones of little value. Companies do not have to keep records of who has expendable items, and what they are being used for * * * expendable UK US /ɪkˈspendəbl/… … Financial and business terms
expendable — [ek spen′də bəl, ikspen′də bəl] adj. 1. that can be expended 2. Mil. designating or of equipment or personnel considered worth sacrificing to achieve an objective 3. designating or of a person or thing regarded as worth sacrificing under… … English World dictionary
expendable — I adjective accessory, added, additional, auxiliary, dispensable, disposable, duplicate, excess, excessive, expletive, extra, extraneous, functionless, futile, gratuitous, impotent, inapplicable, inconsequential, ineffectual, inessential,… … Law dictionary
expendable — 1805, from EXPEND (Cf. expend) + ABLE (Cf. able) … Etymology dictionary
expendable — [adj] not important dispensable, disposable, excess, inessential, nonessential, replaceable, superfluous, unimportant; concepts 546,575 Ant. important, indispensable, necessary, useful … New thesaurus
expendable — ► ADJECTIVE 1) suitable to be used once only; not worth preserving. 2) able to be sacrificed because of little significance when compared to an overall purpose. DERIVATIVES expendability noun expendably adverb … English terms dictionary
Expendable — This article is about James Alan Gardner s science fiction novel. For the video game, see . For the Philip K. Dick short story, see Expendable (short story).infobox Book | name = Expendable title orig = translator = author = James Alan Gardner… … Wikipedia
expendable — 1. adjective a) Able to be expended; not inexhaustible. Oil and other expendable resources are frequently the subject of military disputes. b) Designed for a single use; not reusable. The anti ai … Wiktionary
expendable — [[t]ɪkspe̱ndəb(ə)l[/t]] ADJ GRADED If you regard someone or something as expendable, you think it is acceptable to get rid of them, abandon them, or allow them to be destroyed when they are no longer needed. [FORMAL] Once our services cease to be … English dictionary
expendable — I. adjective Date: 1805 that may be expended: as a. normally used up or consumed in service < expendable supplies like pencils and paper > b. more easily or economically replaced than rescued, salvaged, or protected • expendability noun II. noun… … New Collegiate Dictionary
expendable — ex|pend|a|ble [ ık spendəbl ] adjective used for describing someone or something that you are willing to get rid of, lose, or allow to be killed because they are no longer useful or necessary: DISPENSABLE: His manager made it clear to him that he … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English