-
41 febrícula
f.1 melitensis, Mediterranean fever, brucellosis, abortus fever.2 low-grade fever.* * *slight fever* * *febrícula nfslight fever* * *f slight fever, Brslight temperature -
42 brucelosis
f. s.&pl.brucellosis, abortus fever, Mediterranean fever, undulant fever.* * *1 brucellosis* * *SF INV brucellosis* * *= brucellosis.Ex. Goiter, paludic fever and brucellosis were common in the region.* * *= brucellosis.Ex: Goiter, paludic fever and brucellosis were common in the region.
* * *brucellosis* * *brucelosis nf invMed brucellosis -
43 destemplado
adj.1 out of tone, out of tune.2 harsh, angry, bad-tempered, gruff.past part.past participle of spanish verb: destemplar.* * *1→ link=destemplar destemplar► adjetivo1 MÚSICA out of tune2 (voz, gesto) sharp, snappy3 (carácter) irritable, tetchy4 (tiempo) unpleasant5 MEDICINA off colour, unwell6 (acero) untempered\con cajas destempladas rudely, brusquelysentirse destemplado,-a not to feel well* * *ADJ1) (Mús) out of tune2) (Med) (=con fiebre) feverishestar destemplado — to have a slight temperature o (EEUU) fever
3) [carácter] (=malhumorado) ill-tempered; (=áspero) harsh4) (Meteo) unpleasant* * *- da adjetivo1) < persona>estoy or ando destemplado — ( con fiebre) I have a slight fever; ( indispuesto) I'm feeling off-color*
2)a) < instrumento> discordant, out-of-tuneb) <voz/tono> harsh, discordantc) < nervios> frayed* * *= raucous, out of tune.Ex. This is an important point which has been poorly neglected in this lively and, at times, raucous debate.Ex. Soon they started receiving complaints that he left the pianos more out of tune than he found them.* * *- da adjetivo1) < persona>estoy or ando destemplado — ( con fiebre) I have a slight fever; ( indispuesto) I'm feeling off-color*
2)a) < instrumento> discordant, out-of-tuneb) <voz/tono> harsh, discordantc) < nervios> frayed* * *= raucous, out of tune.Ex: This is an important point which has been poorly neglected in this lively and, at times, raucous debate.
Ex: Soon they started receiving complaints that he left the pianos more out of tune than he found them.* * *destemplado -daA1 ‹persona›estoy or ando destemplado (con fiebre) I have a slight fever, I've got a bit of a temperature ( BrE) (indispuesto) I'm feeling out of sorts o a bit under the weather2 ‹tiempo› unpleasant¡qué día tan destemplado! what a horrible o miserable day!B1 ‹instrumento› discordant, out-of-tune2 ‹voz/tono› harsh, discordant3 [ ESTAR] ‹nervios› frayedlos ánimos están destemplados tempers are getting frayed, people are getting agitated, things are getting fraughtC ‹diente› sensitive* * *
Del verbo destemplar: ( conjugate destemplar)
destemplado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
destemplado
destemplar
destemplado◊ -da adjetivo
1 ‹ persona›:
( indispuesto) I'm feeling off-color( conjugate color)
2
destemplar ( conjugate destemplar) verbo transitivo
1 ‹guitarra/violín› to make … go out of tune
2 ‹ánimos/nervios› to fray
3 (AmL) ‹ dientes› to set … on edge
destemplado,-a adjetivo
1 (con malestar físico) out of sorts: estoy destemplada, I'm under the weather
2 (clima, tiempo) unpleasant
3 (actitudes, palabras) harsh, sharp
4 Mús (desafinado) out of tune, discordant
' destemplado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
destemplada
- destemplarse
* * *destemplado, -a adj2. [instrumento] out of tune3. [tiempo, clima] unpleasant4. [carácter, actitud] irritable5. [voz, tono] harsh, jarring* * *adj out of tune* * *destemplado, -da adj1) : out of tune2) : irritable, out of sorts3) : unpleasant (of weather) -
44 décima
f.tenth.* * *1 LITERATURA stanza of ten octosyllabic lines\tener (unas) décimas familiar to have a slight temperature* * *f., (m. - décimo)* * *SF1) [de segundo, grado] tenthtiene 37 y tres décimas — his temperature is 37.3 (degrees)
2) (Rel) tithe3) (Literat, Hist) a ten-line stanza* * *femenino (de segundo, grado) tenthtiene 39 y tres décimas — his temperature is 39.3 (degrees)
no tiene más que unas décimas — he only has a slight fever o (BrE) temperature
* * *----* décima de segundo = split second.* * *femenino (de segundo, grado) tenthtiene 39 y tres décimas — his temperature is 39.3 (degrees)
no tiene más que unas décimas — he only has a slight fever o (BrE) temperature
* * ** décima de segundo = split second.* * *(de un segundo) tenth; (de un grado) tenthtiene 39 y tres décimas his temperature is 39.3 (degrees)no tiene más que unas décimas he only has a slight fever o ( BrE) temperature* * *
décima sustantivo femenino (de segundo, grado) tenth;◊ tiene 39 y tres décimas his temperature is 39.3 (degrees)
décimo,-a
I adjetivo & sustantivo masculino y femenino tenth: me corresponde la décima parte del premio, my share amounts to a tenth of the prize money
II sustantivo masculino
1 (fracción) tenth
2 (de lotería) tenth part of a lottery ticket
décima sustantivo femenino tenth
♦ Locuciones: tener unas décimas, to have a slight temperature
' décima' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
décimo
English:
tenth
* * *décima nf1. [en medidas] tenth;una décima de segundo a tenth of a second;ganó por décimas de segundo he won by tenths of a second;tiene unas décimas de fiebre she has a slight fever* * *f1 tenth2:tener décimas MED have a slight fever, Br have a slight temperature* * *décima n (de segundo) tenth of a second -
45 fiebre catarral
f.catarrhal fever.* * *(n.) = catarrhal feverEx. Bluetongue disease (also called catarrhal fever) is a non-contagious, insect-borne viral disease of ruminants.* * *(n.) = catarrhal feverEx: Bluetongue disease (also called catarrhal fever) is a non-contagious, insect-borne viral disease of ruminants.
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46 fiebre porcina
f.swine fever.* * *(n.) = swine flu, swine fever, swine influenzaEx. The global outbreak of swine flu has spread fear through the travel sector, blighting any green shoots of recovery from the financial crisis.Ex. The latest swine fever scare scythed through stock markets, cutting back gains made last week.Ex. Swine influenza is a virus disease that can cause epidemics of acute respiratory disease in pigs.* * *(n.) = swine flu, swine fever, swine influenzaEx: The global outbreak of swine flu has spread fear through the travel sector, blighting any green shoots of recovery from the financial crisis.
Ex: The latest swine fever scare scythed through stock markets, cutting back gains made last week.Ex: Swine influenza is a virus disease that can cause epidemics of acute respiratory disease in pigs. -
47 mononucleosis infecciosa
f. s.&pl.infectious mononucleosis, monocytangina, lymphatic reaction, glandular fever.* * *(n.) = glandular feverEx. Glandular fever is a viral infection that causes an illness similar to influenza.* * *(n.) = glandular feverEx: Glandular fever is a viral infection that causes an illness similar to influenza.
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48 peste
f.1 plague.peste bubónica bubonic plaguela peste negra the Black Death2 stink, stench (informal) (mal olor).3 pest (informal) (molestia).4 St. Roch's disease.* * *1 (epidemia) plague2 (mal olor) stink, stench■ ¡qué peste a tabaco hay aquí! it stinks of tobacco smoke in here!3 (cosa molesta) pest\decir/echar pestes de alguien to slag somebody offpeste bubónica bubonic plaguepeste negra Black Death* * *noun f.1) plague2) stink* * *SF1) (Med) plague2) (=mal olor) stink, foul smell¡qué peste hay aquí! — there's a real stink in here!
3)5) And (=resfriado) cold* * *a) (Med, Vet) plague, epidemicdecir or echar or hablar pestes de alguien — (fam) to run somebody down (colloq), to slag somebody off (BrE colloq)
huirle a alguien/algo como a la peste — (fam) to avoid somebody/something like the plague
ser la peste — (fam) to be a nuisance
b) (AmL fam) ( enfermedad contagiosa) bug (colloq); ( resfriado) coldc) (fam) ( mal olor) stink* * *= pestilence, fug, reeker.Ex. Much of what lies before our eyes today like a tongue of fire -- animal pestilences and the poisoning of our foodstuffs -- was already announced many years ago.Ex. Pork scratchings behind the bar, a well-used dartboard in the corner and a fug of smoke hanging over the tables are all hallmarks of the traditional English pub.Ex. When the doors opened and she got on, the elevator was empty but the previous occupant left behind a real reeker.----* hablar pestes = trash, call + Nombre + all the names under the sun, say + nasty things about, slag + Nombre + off, cut + Nombre + up, tear + Nombre + down, rubbish.* peste bubónica = bubonic plague.* peste negra = plague.* peste negra, la = Black Death, the.* peste neumónica = pneumonic plague.* * *a) (Med, Vet) plague, epidemicdecir or echar or hablar pestes de alguien — (fam) to run somebody down (colloq), to slag somebody off (BrE colloq)
huirle a alguien/algo como a la peste — (fam) to avoid somebody/something like the plague
ser la peste — (fam) to be a nuisance
b) (AmL fam) ( enfermedad contagiosa) bug (colloq); ( resfriado) coldc) (fam) ( mal olor) stink* * *= pestilence, fug, reeker.Ex: Much of what lies before our eyes today like a tongue of fire -- animal pestilences and the poisoning of our foodstuffs -- was already announced many years ago.
Ex: Pork scratchings behind the bar, a well-used dartboard in the corner and a fug of smoke hanging over the tables are all hallmarks of the traditional English pub.Ex: When the doors opened and she got on, the elevator was empty but the previous occupant left behind a real reeker.* hablar pestes = trash, call + Nombre + all the names under the sun, say + nasty things about, slag + Nombre + off, cut + Nombre + up, tear + Nombre + down, rubbish.* peste bubónica = bubonic plague.* peste negra = plague.* peste negra, la = Black Death, the.* peste neumónica = pneumonic plague.* * *huirle a algn/algo como a la peste or huir de algn/algo como de la peste ( fam); to avoid sb/sth like the plagueser la peste ( fam); to be a nuisance¡qué peste hay aquí, abran las ventanas! what a stink there is in here, open the windows!Compuestos:rinderpestbubonic plague( Chi) chickenpoxBlack Death* * *
peste sustantivo femenino
◊ peste cristal (Chi) chickenpox;
peste negra Black Death
( resfriado) cold
peste sustantivo femenino
1 (mal olor) stench, stink
2 Med plague
peste porcina, swine fever
♦ Locuciones: echar pestes de alguien, to run sb down
' peste' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
apestar
- apestado
English:
plague
- stink
- blight
- chickenpox
- pest
- pong
* * *peste nf1. [enfermedad epidémica] plague;huir de alguien como de la peste to avoid sb like the plaguepeste aviar o aviaria fowl pest;peste bubónica bubonic plague;peste equina African horse sickness;la peste negra the Black Death;[gripe] flu;se agarró una peste que anda rondando she caught a flu bug that's going around¡qué peste de vecinos tenemos! what a pain (in the neck) our neighbours are!5. CompFam Famechar pestes to curse, to swear* * *f1 MED plague2 famolor stink fam3:echar pestes fam curse and swear* * *peste nf1) : plague, pestilence2) : stench, stink3) : nuisance, pest* * *peste n (mal olor) stink -
49 tener calentura
v.to have a fever.* * *(v.) = have + a temperature, have + a feverEx. After the first injection, 113 children had a temperature of 37.5°C or higher -- 81 in the vaccine group and 32 in the placebo group.Ex. Parents were asked to subjectively assess whether their child had a fever.* * *(v.) = have + a temperature, have + a feverEx: After the first injection, 113 children had a temperature of 37.5°C or higher -- 81 in the vaccine group and 32 in the placebo group.
Ex: Parents were asked to subjectively assess whether their child had a fever. -
50 delirar
v.to be delirious (un enfermo, un borracho).* * *1 to be delirious2 figurado (decir despropósitos) to talk nonsense* * *verb1) to rave2) be delirious* * *VI1) (Med) to be delirious2) (=desatinar) to rave, talk nonsense¡tú deliras! — * you must be mad!
* * *verbo intransitivo (Med) to be delirious* * *verbo intransitivo (Med) to be delirious* * *delirar [A1 ]vi1 ( Med) to be deliriousla fiebre lo hacía delirar the fever made him delirious* * *
delirar ( conjugate delirar) verbo intransitivo (Med) to be delirious;
delirar verbo intransitivo
1 Med to be delirious
2 (decir disparates) to talk nonsense
' delirar' also found in these entries:
English:
rave
- delirious
* * *delirar vi1. [enfermo, borracho] to be delirious;la fiebre lo hizo delirar the fever made him delirious2. [decir disparates] to talk nonsense;¡tú deliras! you're off your head!* * *v/i be delirious;¡tú deliras! fig you must be crazy!* * *delirar vi1) desvariar: to be delirious2) : to rave, to talk nonsense -
51 destemplanza
f.1 unsettledness.2 disorder, intemperance; excess in the desires, or in the use of certain things.3 indisposition, an alteration in the pulse, not approaching fever symptoms.4 disorder, alteration in words or actions, lack of moderation.* * *1 (falta de sobriedad) intemperance2 (del clima) unsettledness3 (malestar general) indisposition4 (de un instrumento) dissonance5 figurado (falta de moderación) lack of moderation* * *SF1) (Mús) tunelessness2) (Med) (=fiebre) slight temperature, slight fever (EEUU); (=malestar) indisposition3) (=falta de moderación) intemperance, harshness4) (Meteo) unpleasantness, inclemency* * *b) ( del tiempo) unpleasantness* * *b) ( del tiempo) unpleasantness* * *2 (del tiempo) unpleasantness3 ( Mús) tunelessness* * *destemplanza nf1. [malestar] indisposition;tener destemplanza to feel out of sorts o under the weather2. [del tiempo, clima] unpleasantness3. [del pulso] irregularity, unevenness4. [en el tono, las palabras] harshness* * *f tunelessness -
52 tifoideo
adj.typhoid, typhoidal.* * *► adjetivo1 typhoid\fiebre tifoidea typhoid fever* * *ADJ* * ** * *
tifoideo,-a f Med typhoid
(fiebre) typhoid (fever)
' tifoideo' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
tifoidea
* * *tifoideo, -a adjtyphoid;fiebres tifoideas typhoid fever* * *adj MED:fiebre tifoidea typhoid* * *: typhoidfiebre tifoidea: typhoid fever -
53 fiebre de los cardadores
spa fiebre (f) de los cardadores, enfermedad (f) de los colchoneros, enfermedad (f) de Nealeng mattress makers' fever__________spa fiebre (f) de los hilanderos de algodón, fiebre (f) de los hiladores, fiebre (f) de los cardadoreseng cotton mill fever, comber's fever, cotton cold, flax fever, hackling feverБезопасность и гигиена труда. Испано-английский > fiebre de los cardadores
-
54 alergia al polen
(n.) = hay feverEx. R. Shaw examined a collection of documents on hay fever in detail, and came to the conclusion that all the information to be found was contained in 96 of the total of four thousand!.* * *(n.) = hay feverEx: R. Shaw examined a collection of documents on hay fever in detail, and came to the conclusion that all the information to be found was contained in 96 of the total of four thousand!.
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55 contagiarse
1 (enfermar) to get infected2 (transmitirse) to be contagious* * ** * *VPR1) (Med) [enfermedad] to be contagious, be catching; [persona] to become infectedcontagiarse de algo — to become infected with sth, catch sth
tiene la gripe y no quiere que los niños se contagien — he has (the) flu and doesn't want the children to catch it
2) (fig) (=transmitirse) to be contagiousel mal ejemplo se contagia — a bad example is contagious o catching
* * *(v.) = catch + the fever, rub off onEx. Everyone is riding the hype of 'An Inconvenient Truth,' and even Congress has caught the fever... but it doesn't feel rigth yet.Ex. If all that good stuff rubs off on her, she will eventually quit being such a gossip over time.* * *(v.) = catch + the fever, rub off onEx: Everyone is riding the hype of 'An Inconvenient Truth,' and even Congress has caught the fever... but it doesn't feel rigth yet.
Ex: If all that good stuff rubs off on her, she will eventually quit being such a gossip over time.* * *
■contagiarse verbo reflexivo
1 (ser contagioso) to be contagious
2 (adquirir por contagio) to get infected [de, by o with]
' contagiarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
pegar
English:
catch
* * *vpr1. [enfermedad] to be contagious;[persona] to become infected;una enfermedad que se contagia con rapidez a disease that spreads quickly;me contagié de mi hermano I caught it from my brother2. [risa, entusiasmo] to be infectious;se contagió de su optimismo he infected her with his optimism* * *v/r become infected* * *vr1) : to be contagious2) : to become infected* * *contagiarse vb to be contagious -
56 disminuir
v.1 to reduce.2 to decrease.El medicamento disminuyó la fiebre The drug decreased the fever.Me disminuyó la temperatura My temperature decreased.3 to diminish, to decrease, to fall off, to drop off.El calor disminuyó The heat diminished.4 to lessen, to take down, to humiliate, to deflate.Su actitud disminuyó a su hijo His attitude lessened his son.5 to have less.Te disminuyó la fiebre You have less fever.* * *1 (gen) to decrease2 (medidas, velocidad) to reduce1 (gen) to diminish2 (temperatura, precios) to drop, fall* * *verb1) to decrease2) drop, fall* * *1. VT1) (=reducir) [+ nivel, precio, gastos, intereses] to reduce, bring down; [+ riesgo, incidencia, dolor] to reduce, lessen; [+ temperatura] to lower, bring down; [+ prestigio, autoridad] to diminish, lessen; [+ fuerzas] to sap; [+ entusiasmo] to dampenalgunos bancos han disminuido en un 0,15% sus tipos de interés — some banks have reduced o brought down their interest rates by 0.15%
disminuyó la velocidad para tomar la curva — she slowed down o reduced her speed to go round the bend
esta medicina me disminuye las fuerzas — this medicine is making me weaker o sapping my strength
2) (Cos) [+ puntos] to decrease2. VI1) (=decrecer) [número, población] to decrease, drop, fall; [temperatura, precios] to drop, fall; [distancia, diferencia, velocidad, tensión] to decrease; [fuerzas, autoridad, poder] to diminish; [días] to grow shorter; [luz] to fade; [prestigio, entusiasmo] to dwindleha disminuido la tasa de natalidad — the birth rate has decreased o dropped o fallen
el número de asistentes ha disminuido últimamente — attendance has decreased o dropped o fallen recently
ya le está disminuyendo la fiebre — his temperature is dropping o falling now
el paro disminuyó en un 0,3% — unemployment dropped o fell by 0.3%
con esta pastilla te disminuirá el dolor — this tablet will relieve o ease your pain
2) (=empeorar) [memoria, vista] to fail3) (Cos) [puntos] to decrease* * *1.verbo intransitivo1) ( menguar) número/cantidad to decrease, drop, fall; entusiasmo/interés to wane, diminish; precios/temperaturas to drop, fall; poder/fama to diminish; dolor to diminish, lessendisminuyó la intensidad del viento — the wind died down o dropped
2) ( al tejer) to decrease2.disminuir vt1) ( reducir) <gastos/costos/impuestos> to reduce, cut; < velocidad> to reduce; <número/cantidad> to reduce, diminish* * *= decline, decrease, diminish, dwindle, fall off, reduce, relax, shrink, slow down, tail off, lower, dip, subside, mitigate, lessen, abate, decelerate, regress, wane, take + a dive, ebb, slacken, whittle (away/down/at), slow up, taper, scale back, remit, take + a dip, turn down.Ex. Library use declines during the June-October period when examinations have finished and the students are on vacation.Ex. Recall is inversely proportional to precision, and vice versa, or in other words, as one increases, the other must decrease.Ex. While another colleague of mine offered the wry comment that 'as the computer's capabilities have increased our expectations of what it can do have proportionally diminished'.Ex. Whereas this proportion is dwindling as a percentage of the total budget, agricultural spending continues to rise in real terms.Ex. When the recording procedures were removed study time fell off immediately.Ex. The disadvantage of inversion of words is that inversion or indirect word order reduces predictability of form of headings.Ex. Since the Federal Government has not been willing to relax import restrictions on books, academic librarians have had to devise a number of strategies for the survival of collection development.Ex. The 'false hit' problem still arises, but becomes less likely as the 'neighborhood' of the two words shrinks.Ex. However, the flight from DC appears to have slowed down more quickly than was anticipated, and we no longer read of large numbers of libraries making the change.Ex. In this unsettled atmosphere, it is not surprising that enthusiasm for membership of the Community should tail off.Ex. When a forme was in place on the press stone, paper was lowered on to it by means of a tympan and frisket.Ex. The proportions of books bought for children have been extraordinarily steady for four of the five years, only dipping at all appreciably in the last year of 1979-80.Ex. Her agitation subsided suddenly.Ex. Confusion caused by repetition of descriptive information in access points can be mitigated by careful screen design.Ex. Two possible solutions are possible: (1) to lessen the frequency of production, or (2) to reduce the amount of detail in the entries.Ex. As the sobbing abated, the secretary's voice regained some steadiness.Ex. Accumulation of new data bases is decelerating rapidly with the focus on deriving subsets from current files to serve niche markets.Ex. Interloans have regressed recently, despite the rapid advancement of the computer age.Ex. The population waxed again slightly, then waned again, until it finally stabilized around its present 55,000.Ex. The article 'Wages, hours, bookfunds take a dive' examines how some authorities are proposing cuts in wages to preserve services; others reducing bookfunds by as much as a quarter, or cutting their opening hours in half.Ex. Subsequently, library development stalled as cultural interaction ebbed from classical levels.Ex. The trend direct supply of books to schools shows no sign of slackening.Ex. However, such idealism is often whittled away over time by bureaucratic problems & organizational demands.Ex. Since cataloging is the most time consuming part of digitization, it has slowed up the placement of files.Ex. The tube in the two types tapers almost unnoticeably from base to tip.Ex. He first spotted trouble when she started being short with users and so he solved the problem by scaling back her workload.Ex. The fever was resolved and the skin lesions started to remit during the following 3 weeks.Ex. Sales took a dip in 2005 but exploded in 2006.Ex. Cytokines are small proteins used to communicate messages between the immune cells in the immune system to either turn up or down the immune response.----* atención + disminuir = attention + wane.* disminuir casi hasta su desaparación = drop to + near vanishing point.* disminuir de tamaño = dwindle in + size.* disminuir el riesgo = reduce + risk.* disminuir el valor de = belittle.* disminuir la importancia de = lessen + the importance of.* disminuir la marcha = slow down.* disminuir la posibilidad = lessen + possibility.* disminuir la probabilidad = reduce + chances.* disminuir las probabilidades = lengthen + the odds.* disminuir la velocidad = slow up.* sin disminuir = non-decreasing, unabated.* * *1.verbo intransitivo1) ( menguar) número/cantidad to decrease, drop, fall; entusiasmo/interés to wane, diminish; precios/temperaturas to drop, fall; poder/fama to diminish; dolor to diminish, lessendisminuyó la intensidad del viento — the wind died down o dropped
2) ( al tejer) to decrease2.disminuir vt1) ( reducir) <gastos/costos/impuestos> to reduce, cut; < velocidad> to reduce; <número/cantidad> to reduce, diminish* * *= decline, decrease, diminish, dwindle, fall off, reduce, relax, shrink, slow down, tail off, lower, dip, subside, mitigate, lessen, abate, decelerate, regress, wane, take + a dive, ebb, slacken, whittle (away/down/at), slow up, taper, scale back, remit, take + a dip, turn down.Ex: Library use declines during the June-October period when examinations have finished and the students are on vacation.
Ex: Recall is inversely proportional to precision, and vice versa, or in other words, as one increases, the other must decrease.Ex: While another colleague of mine offered the wry comment that 'as the computer's capabilities have increased our expectations of what it can do have proportionally diminished'.Ex: Whereas this proportion is dwindling as a percentage of the total budget, agricultural spending continues to rise in real terms.Ex: When the recording procedures were removed study time fell off immediately.Ex: The disadvantage of inversion of words is that inversion or indirect word order reduces predictability of form of headings.Ex: Since the Federal Government has not been willing to relax import restrictions on books, academic librarians have had to devise a number of strategies for the survival of collection development.Ex: The 'false hit' problem still arises, but becomes less likely as the 'neighborhood' of the two words shrinks.Ex: However, the flight from DC appears to have slowed down more quickly than was anticipated, and we no longer read of large numbers of libraries making the change.Ex: In this unsettled atmosphere, it is not surprising that enthusiasm for membership of the Community should tail off.Ex: When a forme was in place on the press stone, paper was lowered on to it by means of a tympan and frisket.Ex: The proportions of books bought for children have been extraordinarily steady for four of the five years, only dipping at all appreciably in the last year of 1979-80.Ex: Her agitation subsided suddenly.Ex: Confusion caused by repetition of descriptive information in access points can be mitigated by careful screen design.Ex: Two possible solutions are possible: (1) to lessen the frequency of production, or (2) to reduce the amount of detail in the entries.Ex: As the sobbing abated, the secretary's voice regained some steadiness.Ex: Accumulation of new data bases is decelerating rapidly with the focus on deriving subsets from current files to serve niche markets.Ex: Interloans have regressed recently, despite the rapid advancement of the computer age.Ex: The population waxed again slightly, then waned again, until it finally stabilized around its present 55,000.Ex: The article 'Wages, hours, bookfunds take a dive' examines how some authorities are proposing cuts in wages to preserve services; others reducing bookfunds by as much as a quarter, or cutting their opening hours in half.Ex: Subsequently, library development stalled as cultural interaction ebbed from classical levels.Ex: The trend direct supply of books to schools shows no sign of slackening.Ex: However, such idealism is often whittled away over time by bureaucratic problems & organizational demands.Ex: Since cataloging is the most time consuming part of digitization, it has slowed up the placement of files.Ex: The tube in the two types tapers almost unnoticeably from base to tip.Ex: He first spotted trouble when she started being short with users and so he solved the problem by scaling back her workload.Ex: The fever was resolved and the skin lesions started to remit during the following 3 weeks.Ex: Sales took a dip in 2005 but exploded in 2006.Ex: Cytokines are small proteins used to communicate messages between the immune cells in the immune system to either turn up or down the immune response.* atención + disminuir = attention + wane.* disminuir casi hasta su desaparación = drop to + near vanishing point.* disminuir de tamaño = dwindle in + size.* disminuir el riesgo = reduce + risk.* disminuir el valor de = belittle.* disminuir la importancia de = lessen + the importance of.* disminuir la marcha = slow down.* disminuir la posibilidad = lessen + possibility.* disminuir la probabilidad = reduce + chances.* disminuir las probabilidades = lengthen + the odds.* disminuir la velocidad = slow up.* sin disminuir = non-decreasing, unabated.* * *viA (menguar) «número/cantidad» to decrease, drop, fall; «desempleo/exportaciones/gastos» to decrease, drop, fall; «entusiasmo» to wane, diminish; «interés» to wane, diminish, fall offel número de fumadores ha disminuido the number of smokers has dropped o fallen o decreasedlos impuestos no disminuyeron there was no decrease o cut in taxeslos casos de malaria han disminuido there has been a drop o fall o decrease in the number of malaria casesdisminuyó la intensidad del viento the wind died down o droppedla agilidad disminuye con los años one becomes less agile with ageB (al tejer) to decrease■ disminuirvtA (reducir) ‹gastos/costos› to reduce, bring down, cutdisminuimos la velocidad we reduced speedes un asunto muy grave y se intenta disminuir su importancia it is a very serious matter, and its importance is being played downel alcohol disminuye la rapidez de los reflejos alcohol slows down your reactionsB (al tejer) ‹puntos› to decrease* * *
disminuir ( conjugate disminuir) verbo intransitivo ( menguar) [número/cantidad] to decrease, fall;
[precios/temperaturas] to drop, fall;
[ dolor] to diminish, lessen
verbo transitivo ( reducir) ‹gastos/producción› to cut back on;
‹ impuestos› to cut;
‹velocidad/número/cantidad› to reduce
disminuir
I verbo transitivo to reduce: esto disminuye sus probabilidades de entrar en la Universidad, this lowers his chances of admission to the University
II verbo intransitivo to diminish: el calor ha disminuido, the heat has lessened
' disminuir' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
aclararse
- atenuar
- bajar
- descender
- enfriar
- perder
- rebajar
- reducir
- reducirse
- velocidad
English:
cut back
- decline
- decrease
- die down
- diminish
- drop
- dwindle
- ease off
- ease up
- lessen
- lower
- odds
- reduce
- shrink
- sink
- slacken
- slacken off
- taper off
- thin out
- abate
- ease
- flag
- go
- let
- tail
- taper
- wane
* * *♦ vtto reduce, to decrease;disminuye la velocidad al entrar en la curva reduce speed as you go into the curve;pastillas que disminuyen el sueño tablets that prevent drowsiness;la lesión no ha disminuido su habilidad con el balón the injury hasn't affected his skill with the ball♦ vi[cantidad, velocidad, intensidad, contaminación] to decrease, to decline; [desempleo, inflación] to decrease, to fall; [precios, temperatura] to fall, to go down; [vista, memoria] to fail; [interés] to decline, to wane;disminuye el número de matriculaciones en la universidad university enrolments are down;medidas para que disminuyan los costes cost-cutting measures;no disminuye la euforia inversora investor enthusiasm continues unabated* * *II v/i decrease, diminish* * *disminuir {41} vtreducir: to reduce, to decrease, to lowerdisminuir vi1) : to lower2) : to drop, to fall* * *disminuir vb1. (reducir) to reduce -
57 fiebre consumista
(n.) = shopping feverEx. Malls with hundreds of stores offering the latest designs and pleasant surroundings all under one roof can spark shopping fever.* * *(n.) = shopping feverEx: Malls with hundreds of stores offering the latest designs and pleasant surroundings all under one roof can spark shopping fever.
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58 fiebre de las compras
(n.) = shopping feverEx. Malls with hundreds of stores offering the latest designs and pleasant surroundings all under one roof can spark shopping fever.* * *(n.) = shopping feverEx: Malls with hundreds of stores offering the latest designs and pleasant surroundings all under one roof can spark shopping fever.
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59 gripe porcina
f.swine flu.* * *(n.) = swine flu, swine fever, swine influenzaEx. The global outbreak of swine flu has spread fear through the travel sector, blighting any green shoots of recovery from the financial crisis.Ex. The latest swine fever scare scythed through stock markets, cutting back gains made last week.Ex. Swine influenza is a virus disease that can cause epidemics of acute respiratory disease in pigs.* * *(n.) = swine flu, swine fever, swine influenzaEx: The global outbreak of swine flu has spread fear through the travel sector, blighting any green shoots of recovery from the financial crisis.
Ex: The latest swine fever scare scythed through stock markets, cutting back gains made last week.Ex: Swine influenza is a virus disease that can cause epidemics of acute respiratory disease in pigs. -
60 heno
m.hay.* * *1 hay* * *noun m.* * *SM hay* * *masculino hay* * *= hay.Ex. These are animal sculptures created from natural materials, e.g., hay, moss and peat.----* fiebre del heno = hay fever.* heno de alfalfa = alfalfa hay.* * *masculino hay* * *= hay.Ex: These are animal sculptures created from natural materials, e.g., hay, moss and peat.
* fiebre del heno = hay fever.* heno de alfalfa = alfalfa hay.* * *hay* * *
heno sustantivo masculino
hay
heno sustantivo masculino hay
' heno' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
empacar
- fiebre
- zacate
English:
fever
- hay
- hay fever
- pitchfork
* * *heno nmhay* * *m hay* * *heno nm: hay* * *heno n hay
См. также в других словарях:
Fever — (also known as pyrexia, from the Greek pyretos meaning fire, or a febrile response, from the Latin word febris , meaning fever, and archaically known as ague) is a frequent medical sign that describes an increase in internal body temperature to… … Wikipedia
Fever — Fe ver (f[=e] v[ e]r), n. [OE. fever, fefer, AS. fefer, fefor, L. febris: cf. F. fi[ e]vre. Cf. {Febrile}.] 1. (Med.) A diseased state of the system, marked by increased heat, acceleration of the pulse, and a general derangement of the functions … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Fever — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda La palabra fever (fiebre en inglés) puede referirse a: Música Fever (2001), álbum de Kylie Minogue; Fever to Tell (2003), álbum de Yeah Yeah Yeahs; Fever*Fever (1999), álbum de Puffy AmiYumi; Fever (1956), canción de … Wikipedia Español
Fever — (англ. лихорадка). Fever (песня) песня Отиса Блэквелла, представленная Пегги Ли и перепетая множеством артистов, в частности: Fever в исполнении Элвиса Пресли Fever (песня Мадонны) кавер предыдущей песни, спетый Мадонной. Fever… … Википедия
Fever — (engl.: Fieber) bezeichnet: Fever (Bullet for My Valentine Album), Album der Band Bullet for My Valentine (2010) Fever (Kylie Minogue Album), Album von Kylie Minogue (2001) Fever (Lied), Lied von Little Willie John (1956) Fever (Roman), Roman von … Deutsch Wikipedia
Fever — Fe ver, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Fevered} (f[=e] v[ e]rd); p. pr. & vb. n. {Fevering}.] To put into a fever; to affect with fever; as, a fevered lip. [R.] [1913 Webster] The white hand of a lady fever thee. Shak. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
fever — [fē′vər] n. [ME < OE fefer & OFr fievre, both < L febris < IE base * dhegwh , to burn > L fovere, to warm, MIr daig, fire] 1. a body temperature that is higher than normal, caused by an infection, ovulation, vigorous exercise, etc.;… … English World dictionary
fever — late O.E. fefor, fefer fever, from L. febris fever, related to fovere to warm, heat, probably from PIE root *dhegh burn (Cf. Goth. dags, O.E. dæg day, originally the heat ); but some suggest a reduplication of a root represented by Skt. *bhur … Etymology dictionary
fever — index furor Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
fever — [n] state of high temperature or agitation burning up*, delirium, ecstasy, excitement, febrile disease, ferment, fervor, fire, flush, frenzy, heat, intensity, passion, pyrexia, restlessness, running a temperature*, the shakes*, turmoil, unrest;… … New thesaurus
fever — ► NOUN 1) an abnormally high body temperature, usually accompanied by shivering, headache, and in severe instances, delirium. 2) a state of nervous excitement or agitation. DERIVATIVES feverish adjective feverishly adverb feverishness noun.… … English terms dictionary