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121 preestructurado
Ex. The logical, miniature catalog at each position in a matrix is in essence a prestructured catalog and can be treated as such if it has fewer entries than the upper limit determined for display.* * *Ex: The logical, miniature catalog at each position in a matrix is in essence a prestructured catalog and can be treated as such if it has fewer entries than the upper limit determined for display.
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122 pregonar
v.1 to proclaim, to announce (bando).2 to spread about (secreto).3 to proclaim to, to claim to, to preach to, to declare to.* * *■ se lo dije en secreto, pero lo ha estado pregonando por ahí I told him in confidence, but he's been broadcasting it2 (mercancia) to cry3 (bando municipal) to proclaim* * *VT [+ inocencia propia, interés] to proclaim, announce; [+ secreto] to disclose, reveal; [+ mercancía] to hawk; [+ méritos] to proclaim (for all to hear)* * *verbo transitivoa) <noticia/secreto> to make... publicno lo vayas pregonando por ahí — (fam) don't go spreading it around
b) <virtudes/méritos> to extolc) < mercancía> to hawk, cryd) <bando/aviso> to proclaim* * *= tout, bruit.Ex. And may I say parenthetically that two publishers out of the enormous number that are so often touted as belonging to the CIP program are now printing their own homemade and superior cataloging in publication data.Ex. Among many observations in this widely bruited report, one in particular struck home: fewer books had been translated into Arabic in a millennium than were translated into Spanish in a year.* * *verbo transitivoa) <noticia/secreto> to make... publicno lo vayas pregonando por ahí — (fam) don't go spreading it around
b) <virtudes/méritos> to extolc) < mercancía> to hawk, cryd) <bando/aviso> to proclaim* * *= tout, bruit.Ex: And may I say parenthetically that two publishers out of the enormous number that are so often touted as belonging to the CIP program are now printing their own homemade and superior cataloging in publication data.
Ex: Among many observations in this widely bruited report, one in particular struck home: fewer books had been translated into Arabic in a millennium than were translated into Spanish in a year.* * *pregonar [A1 ]vt1 ‹noticia/secreto› to make … publicno lo vayas pregonando por ahí ( fam); don't go spreading it around2 ‹virtudes/méritos› to extol3 ‹mercancía› to hawk, cry4 ‹bando/aviso› to proclaim* * *
pregonar ( conjugate pregonar) verbo transitivoa) ‹noticia/secreto› to make … public
pregonar verbo transitivo
1 (un bando) to proclaim, announce
2 (una mercancía) to cry, hawk
3 (una noticia) to make public, reveal: no lo vayas pregonando por ahí, don't go spreading it around
4 (cualidades) to praise publicly, extol
' pregonar' also found in these entries:
English:
hawk
* * *pregonar vt1. [bando] to proclaim, to announce2. [secreto] to spread about;no vayas por ahí pregonando la noticia don't go spreading the news around3. [cualidades, virtudes] to praise, to extol* * *v/t proclaim, make public* * *pregonar vt1) : to proclaim, to announce2) : to hawk (merchandise)3) : to extol4) : to reveal, to disclose -
123 procedente de
Ex. Both the Aldine and the Vicentine italics were gradually superseded in the mid sixteenth century by a more practical form of the face emanating from Paris, which had sloped capital and fewer ligatures.* * *Ex: Both the Aldine and the Vicentine italics were gradually superseded in the mid sixteenth century by a more practical form of the face emanating from Paris, which had sloped capital and fewer ligatures.
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124 prolijo
adj.1 excessively meticulous, meticulous.2 neat, tidy.3 long-winded, long-drawn, drawn-out, wordy.4 thorough, untiring, careful, painstaking.* * *► adjetivo1 (largo en exceso) long-winded, verbose2 (meticuloso) meticulous* * *ADJ1) (=extenso) prolix frm; (=largo) long-winded; (=pesado) tedious; (=muy minucioso) excessively meticulous2) Arg (=pulcro) smart, neat3) Cono Sur (=incansable) untiring* * *- ja adjetivo2) (RPl) (ordenado, aseado) <persona/casa> tidy; < cuaderno> neat* * *= long-winded, verbose, wordy, voluble.Ex. Instructors may sharpen a difference of opinion between two students and also may tactfully cut short long-winded contributions in a debate.Ex. It is important not to transfer verbose words or phrases from the original and to heed the other points of good style that are summarized in the section below.Ex. Very rare were other suggestions for fewer clichés and less wordy phrases.Ex. A voluble talker, he is known as a person with a large talent and a large ego.----* frase prolija = verbose phrasing.* * *- ja adjetivo2) (RPl) (ordenado, aseado) <persona/casa> tidy; < cuaderno> neat* * *= long-winded, verbose, wordy, voluble.Ex: Instructors may sharpen a difference of opinion between two students and also may tactfully cut short long-winded contributions in a debate.
Ex: It is important not to transfer verbose words or phrases from the original and to heed the other points of good style that are summarized in the section below.Ex: Very rare were other suggestions for fewer clichés and less wordy phrases.Ex: A voluble talker, he is known as a person with a large talent and a large ego.* frase prolija = verbose phrasing.* * *prolijo -jaA1 (minucioso) detailedB ( RPl) (ordenado, aseado) ‹persona/casa› tidy; ‹cuaderno› neat* * *
prolijo◊ -ja adjetivo
1 ( extenso) protracted, long-winded;
( minucioso) detailed
2 (RPl) (ordenado, aseado) ‹persona/casa› tidy;
‹ cuaderno› neat
' prolijo' also found in these entries:
English:
long-winded
- verbose
- long
- neat
- tidy
* * *prolijo, -a adj1. [extenso] long-winded2. [esmerado] meticulous3. [detallado] exhaustive;una explicación prolija en detalles an exhaustively detailed explanation4. RP [pulcro] tidy, neat* * *adj2 ( minucioso) detailed* * *prolijo, -ja adj: wordy, long-winded -
125 que puede salir en préstamo
(adj.) = loanableEx. At any given level of demand, fewer loanable copies of an item are needed if provision is made on a national rather than a regional basis.* * *(adj.) = loanableEx: At any given level of demand, fewer loanable copies of an item are needed if provision is made on a national rather than a regional basis.
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126 recursos
m.pl.resources, means, assets, money.* * *1 resources, means* * *means, resources* * *= assets, resourcing, inputs, resource base, ways and meansEx. Those eligible normally include only companies with less than 45 million of net fixed assets and fewer than 500 employees.Ex. Credibility as providers of information technology-based programmes required SLIS to develop radically different course programmes with substantial additional resourcing.Ex. Inputs are the resources used by the library.Ex. For New Zealand university libraries the emergence of large fee-based document delivery systems accessible via existing international electronic networks has provided an opportunity to escape the shackles of a limited national library resource base.Ex. Teachers need to be more familiar with bibliographical ways and means: librarians should be more aware of problems from the teachers' perspective and make active efforts to inform teachers of sources of help.* * *los recursos(n.) = wherewithal, theEx: The computer has now been provided with the wherewithal to complete the generation of index entries.
= assets, resourcing, inputs, resource base, ways and meansEx: Those eligible normally include only companies with less than 45 million of net fixed assets and fewer than 500 employees.
Ex: Credibility as providers of information technology-based programmes required SLIS to develop radically different course programmes with substantial additional resourcing.Ex: Inputs are the resources used by the library.Ex: For New Zealand university libraries the emergence of large fee-based document delivery systems accessible via existing international electronic networks has provided an opportunity to escape the shackles of a limited national library resource base.Ex: Teachers need to be more familiar with bibliographical ways and means: librarians should be more aware of problems from the teachers' perspective and make active efforts to inform teachers of sources of help.* * *recursos npl resources -
127 requerir
v.1 to require.Ellos requieren un auto They require a car.Ella requiere amor She demands love.La necesidad demanda proceder Need requires proceeding.2 to demand.3 to order (law).4 to summon.El juez requirió al demandado The judge summoned the defendant.5 to require to, to need to.Ella requiere firmar She requires to sign.6 to take.Requiere tiempo It requires time to things correctly.7 to page, to call out for, to call.Ellos requieren a María They page Mary.8 to want.9 to call to.This situation calls to act rapidly Esta situación requiere actuar rápido.* * *1 (necesitar) to require, need2 (decir con autoridad) to demand, call for3 (solicitar) to request4 (persuadir) to persuade5 DERECHO to summon\requerir de amores literal to court, woo* * *1. VT1) (=necesitar) to need, require"se requiere dominio del inglés" — "fluent English required", "good command of English required"
2) (=solicitar) to request, askrequerir a algn que haga algo — to request o ask sb to do sth
3) (=llamar) to send for, summon frm2.VIrequerir de — esp LAm to need, require
* * *verbo transitivo1) ( necesitar) to requirerequiere paciencia — it requires o demands patience
* * *= have + calls for, call for, call on/upon, cry for, demand, involve, make + demand, require, elicit, requisition.Ex. For some while there have been calls for an abbreviated version of AACR, for small libraries and for non-cataloguers.Ex. The main rules call for entry of societies under name and institutions under place.Ex. The difference is only that an indexer is not usually called upon to appreciate the subtleties of the subject to the same extent as an abstractor.Ex. However, this work still cries for expansion, and it must also become more systematic.Ex. The other part of the picture reveals title indexes to be only crude subject indexes, which for effective use demand imagination and searching skills on the part of the user.Ex. Generating author indexes or catalogues involves creating headings from author's names, that is the names of persons or organisations.Ex. Also, informative abstracts make greater demands upon appreciation of subject content than indicative abstracts.Ex. The condition approach should require less enumeration of rules for different types of materials, and therefore should require fewer rules.Ex. This article looks at ways in which librarians in leadership roles can elicit the motivation, commitment, and personal investment of members of the organisation.Ex. More specialised titles are requisitioned through interlending.----* requerir atención = require + consideration, require + attention.* requerir más destreza = be more of an art.* * *verbo transitivo1) ( necesitar) to requirerequiere paciencia — it requires o demands patience
* * *= have + calls for, call for, call on/upon, cry for, demand, involve, make + demand, require, elicit, requisition.Ex: For some while there have been calls for an abbreviated version of AACR, for small libraries and for non-cataloguers.
Ex: The main rules call for entry of societies under name and institutions under place.Ex: The difference is only that an indexer is not usually called upon to appreciate the subtleties of the subject to the same extent as an abstractor.Ex: However, this work still cries for expansion, and it must also become more systematic.Ex: The other part of the picture reveals title indexes to be only crude subject indexes, which for effective use demand imagination and searching skills on the part of the user.Ex: Generating author indexes or catalogues involves creating headings from author's names, that is the names of persons or organisations.Ex: Also, informative abstracts make greater demands upon appreciation of subject content than indicative abstracts.Ex: The condition approach should require less enumeration of rules for different types of materials, and therefore should require fewer rules.Ex: This article looks at ways in which librarians in leadership roles can elicit the motivation, commitment, and personal investment of members of the organisation.Ex: More specialised titles are requisitioned through interlending.* requerir atención = require + consideration, require + attention.* requerir más destreza = be more of an art.* * *vtA (necesitar) to requireéstos son los precios de los productos que requieren these are the prices of the products you requirerequiere mucha paciencia it calls for o requires o demands o needs a great deal of patienceuna enfermedad que requirió su hospitalización an illness which necessitated o required her hospitalization[ S ] se requiere buena presencia good appearance essentialB ‹documento› to require; ‹persona› to summonel juez requirió su presencia como testigo the judge summoned him to appear as a witnessfue requerido de pago he was ordered to pay* * *
requerir ( conjugate requerir) verbo transitivo
‹ persona› to summon
requerir verbo transitivo
1 Jur (la presencia de alguien) to summon: el juez requirió la presencia del principal acusado, the judge required the primary defendant to appear in court
2 (necesitar) to require: esta planta requiere muchos cuidados, this plant needs a lot of care
3 (pedir) to request
4 (exigir) to demand
' requerir' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
pedir
- reclamar
- demandar
- exigir
- llevar
English:
demand
- need
- require
- call
* * *requerir vt1. [necesitar] to require;es un asunto que requiere mucha diplomacia it is a matter which requires a great deal of tact;se requieren conocimientos de francés a knowledge of French is essential3. Der to order;el juez requirió la extradición del terrorista the judge ordered the extradition of the terrorist* * *v/t1 ( necesitar) require2 JUR summons* * *requerir {76} vt1) : to require, to call for2) : to summon, to send for* * *requerir vb to require -
128 ser rentable
v.to be profitable, to pay back, to pay off.* * *(v.) = pay off, be a money-maker, pay, turn + a profitEx. This is an address given at a seminar on 'Books and businesses: an investment that pays off' at the Turin book fair on 17 May 89.Ex. The onion business is economically stable and is generally a money-maker.Ex. Simply put, it just doesn't pay to digitise information that few can use, and even fewer will pay for.Ex. Libraries are a public good, supported by tax dollars because they are essential to democracy, not because they turn a profit.* * *(v.) = pay off, be a money-maker, pay, turn + a profitEx: This is an address given at a seminar on 'Books and businesses: an investment that pays off' at the Turin book fair on 17 May 89.
Ex: The onion business is economically stable and is generally a money-maker.Ex: Simply put, it just doesn't pay to digitise information that few can use, and even fewer will pay for.Ex: Libraries are a public good, supported by tax dollars because they are essential to democracy, not because they turn a profit.
См. также в других словарях:
fewer — fewer, less As a general guide, fewer is used with plural nouns (fewer books, fewer people) and indicates number, whereas less is used with singular nouns and indicates amount (less money / less happiness). However, there is an extensive no man s … Modern English usage
fewer — *less, lesser, smaller … New Dictionary of Synonyms
fewer — adjective (comparative of few used with count nouns) quantifier meaning a smaller number of (Freq. 11) fewer birds came this year the birds are fewer this year fewer trains were late • Ant: ↑more • Similar to: ↑l … Useful english dictionary
Fewer — Few Few (f[=u]), a. [Compar. {Fewer} (f[=u] [ e]r); superl. {Fewest}.] [OE. fewe, feawe, AS. fe[ a], pl. fe[ a]we; akin to OS. f[=a]h, OHG. f[=o] fao, Icel. f[=a]r, Sw. f[*a], pl., Dan. faa, pl., Goth. faus, L. paucus, cf. Gr. pay^ros. Cf.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
fewer — /fyooh euhr/, adj. 1. of a smaller number: fewer words and more action. pron. 2. (used with a pl. v.) a smaller number: Fewer have come than we hoped. [ME fewere, OE *feawran. See FEW, ER4] Usage. See less. * * * … Universalium
fewer — few•er [[t]ˈfyu ər[/t]] adj. 1) of a smaller number: fewer words and more action[/ex] 2) fun (used with a pl. v.) a smaller number: Fewer have come than we hoped[/ex] • Etymology: ME fewere, OE usage: See less … From formal English to slang
fewer — See fewer, less … Dictionary of problem words and expressions
fewer / less — Fewer should be used when talking about things that can be counted: Lureen has fewer ideas than you; also a few keys, few clouds, few values, few diseases. Less is used when talking about things that can t be counted: Lureen shows less… … Confused words
fewer / less — Fewer should be used when talking about things that can be counted: Lureen has fewer ideas than you; also a few keys, few clouds, few values, few diseases. Less is used when talking about things that can t be counted: Lureen shows less… … Confused words
fewer, less — In the first four months of the year Rome s tourists were 700,000 less than in the corresponding period last year (Guardian). Probably no other pair of words causes more problems, and with less justification, than less and fewer. The… … Dictionary of troublesome word
fewer vs less — Everyone gets this wrong including native speakers. The general rule is to use fewer for things you can count (individually), and less for things you can only measure For example: There were fewer people in the class than usual. (People can … English dictionary of common mistakes and confusing words