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61 Ldo.
adj.Dr..m.Dr..* * *Ldo.1 ( licenciado) man graduate, graduate* * *ABR= Licenciado* * *Ldo. (abrev de licenciado)graduate [used as title] -
62 graduada
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63 graduarse de
• be graduated as• gradually increasing• graduate as• graduate degree• graduate from college -
64 Generación Y
Ex. The 'Millennial Generation' -- also known as Generation Y -- are those who will graduate from high school in the first decade of the new millennium.* * *Ex: The 'Millennial Generation' -- also known as Generation Y -- are those who will graduate from high school in the first decade of the new millennium.
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65 acuñar
v.1 to rock.2 to cradle, to rock.Luisa acuna al bebé Louise rocks=cradles the baby.3 to nestle.* * *1 to rock* * *verbto cradle, rock* * *VT to rock, rock to sleep* * *verbo transitivo to rock* * *= coin, mint.Ex. It needs a name, and, to coin one at random, 'memex' will do.Ex. The article 'The newly minted MLS: what do we need to know today?' describes the skills which, ideally, every US library school graduate should possess at the end of the 1990s.----* acuñar una expresión = coin + phrase.* acuñar una frase = coin + phrase.* acuñar un término = coin + term.* * *verbo transitivo to rock* * *= coin, mint.Ex: It needs a name, and, to coin one at random, 'memex' will do.
Ex: The article 'The newly minted MLS: what do we need to know today?' describes the skills which, ideally, every US library school graduate should possess at the end of the 1990s.* acuñar una expresión = coin + phrase.* acuñar una frase = coin + phrase.* acuñar un término = coin + term.* * *acunar [A1 ]vtto rock* * *
Multiple Entries:
acunar
acuñar
acunar ( conjugate acunar) verbo transitivo
to rock
acuñar ( conjugate acuñar) verbo transitivo ‹ moneda› to mint;
‹frase/palabra› to coin
acunar verbo transitivo to rock
acuñar verbo transitivo
1 (moneda) to mint
2 (una expresión) to coin
' acuñar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
acunar
- moneda
English:
coin
- mint
- rock
- strike
- cradle
- stamp
* * *acunar vt[en cuna] to rock; [en brazos] to cradle* * *v/t rock* * *acunar vt: to rock, to cradle* * *acunar vb to rock -
66 adquirir experiencia
v.to acquire experience, to become versed, to gain experience, to get experience.* * *(v.) = gain + experience, cut + Posesivo + teeth (on)Ex. As the library gains experience with its vendors, these claim categories should be updated and the vendor records changed to reflect the delivery lags.Ex. This is a useful collection of essays, particularly for graduate students and high-powered undergraduates cutting their teeth on Aristotle.* * *(v.) = gain + experience, cut + Posesivo + teeth (on)Ex: As the library gains experience with its vendors, these claim categories should be updated and the vendor records changed to reflect the delivery lags.
Ex: This is a useful collection of essays, particularly for graduate students and high-powered undergraduates cutting their teeth on Aristotle. -
67 artículo científico
(n.) = scientific article, academic paper, scientific paper, scholarly articleEx. The titles of scientific articles that are primarily reports of experiments usually contain information about the cause-effect relation investigated.Ex. Graduate students who are either working on research grants or have published academic papers on research in the field are included.Ex. About 70% of scientific papers are now in English.Ex. He wrote, co-wrote, edited, or coedited ten books and more then 60 scholarly articles.* * *(n.) = scientific article, academic paper, scientific paper, scholarly articleEx: The titles of scientific articles that are primarily reports of experiments usually contain information about the cause-effect relation investigated.
Ex: Graduate students who are either working on research grants or have published academic papers on research in the field are included.Ex: About 70% of scientific papers are now in English.Ex: He wrote, co-wrote, edited, or coedited ten books and more then 60 scholarly articles. -
68 avanzado
adj.1 advanced, progressive, developed.2 advanced, high-tech, hi-tech, high-technology.past part.past participle of spanish verb: avanzar.* * *1→ link=avanzar avanzar► adjetivo1 advanced\de avanzada edad advanced in years, elderly* * *(f. - avanzada)adj.* * *ADJ (=adelantado) advanced; [pómulo] prominent; [diseño] advanced; [ideas, tendencia] advanced, avant-garde, progressivede edad avanzada, avanzado de edad — advanced in years
* * *- da adjetivo advancedde avanzada edad — of advanced years, advanced in years
* * *= advanced, sophisticated, developed, high-powered, stepped-up.Ex. It is quite common for document titles to provide an indication of the level of presentation of their subject in the use of such terms as 'Introduction', 'Primer', 'Popular', ' advanced'.Ex. Effective retrieval from natural language indexed data bases requires sophisticated search software.Ex. Developed libraries can quote a whole series of discrete services built up over the recent past, which somehow need to be integrated.Ex. This is a useful collection of essays, particularly for graduate students and high-powered undergraduates cutting their teeth on Aristotle.Ex. These unique hair claws covered with rhinestone are a stepped-up version of today's most popular accessories.----* búsqueda avanzada = advanced search.* de edad avanzada = over the hill.* estar avanzado = be well under way.* usuario avanzado = advanced user, power user.* * *- da adjetivo advancedde avanzada edad — of advanced years, advanced in years
* * *= advanced, sophisticated, developed, high-powered, stepped-up.Ex: It is quite common for document titles to provide an indication of the level of presentation of their subject in the use of such terms as 'Introduction', 'Primer', 'Popular', ' advanced'.
Ex: Effective retrieval from natural language indexed data bases requires sophisticated search software.Ex: Developed libraries can quote a whole series of discrete services built up over the recent past, which somehow need to be integrated.Ex: This is a useful collection of essays, particularly for graduate students and high-powered undergraduates cutting their teeth on Aristotle.Ex: These unique hair claws covered with rhinestone are a stepped-up version of today's most popular accessories.* búsqueda avanzada = advanced search.* de edad avanzada = over the hill.* estar avanzado = be well under way.* usuario avanzado = advanced user, power user.* * *avanzado -da1 ‹proceso› advancedtenía muy avanzado el cáncer his cancer had reached a very advanced stagede avanzada edad of advanced years, advanced in yearsa horas tan avanzadas at such a late hour2 ‹alumno/curso/nivel› advanced3 ‹ideas› advanced* * *
Del verbo avanzar: ( conjugate avanzar)
avanzado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
avanzado
avanzar
avanzado◊ -da adjetivo
advanced;
de avanzada edad of advanced years, advanced in years;
a horas tan avanzadas at such a late hour
avanzar ( conjugate avanzar) verbo intransitivo
[negociaciones/proyecto] to progress
verbo transitivo
avanzado,-a adjetivo advanced
avanzar verbo transitivo to advance, make progress
' avanzado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
avanzada
- adelantado
English:
advanced
- late
- progress
- visualize
- come
- heavily
* * *avanzado, -a♦ adj1. [en desarrollo, proceso] [alumno, curso, tecnología, país] advanced;tiene un cáncer muy avanzado she is in the advanced stages of cancer2. [progresista] [ideas] advanced3. [hora] late;a avanzadas horas de la noche late at night;acabamos avanzada ya la tarde we finished late in the afternoon♦ nm,fperson ahead of his/her time* * *adj advanced* * *avanzado, -da adj1) : advanced2) : progressive -
69 beca de investigación
(n.) = research grantEx. Graduate students who are either working on research grants or have published academic papers on research in the field are included.* * *(n.) = research grantEx: Graduate students who are either working on research grants or have published academic papers on research in the field are included.
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70 bibliotecario de prisiones
(n.) = prison librarianEx. Some librarians were surveyed about the usefulness of a special graduate programme for persons planning to become prison librarians.* * *(n.) = prison librarianEx: Some librarians were surveyed about the usefulness of a special graduate programme for persons planning to become prison librarians.
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71 campo de concentración
concentration camp* * *(n.) = concentration camp, gulag, internment campEx. The archive of the Auschwitz Museum has evidence of the existence of a small library in the concentration camp, which was stocked largely with Nazi propaganda.Ex. So if ALA won't speak out when books are burned and librarians are tossed into the Cuban gulag, then they would betray the values drilled into us in graduate school.Ex. During World War I and World War II the Australian Government established internment camps across the country.* * *(n.) = concentration camp, gulag, internment campEx: The archive of the Auschwitz Museum has evidence of the existence of a small library in the concentration camp, which was stocked largely with Nazi propaganda.
Ex: So if ALA won't speak out when books are burned and librarians are tossed into the Cuban gulag, then they would betray the values drilled into us in graduate school.Ex: During World War I and World War II the Australian Government established internment camps across the country.* * *concentration camp -
72 campo de prisioneros
(n.) = prison camp, P.O.W. camp, prisoner of war camp, gulagEx. In this sense the book resembles one of Solzhenitsyn's novels about one good day in the life of one of Stalin's victims living out a wretched existence in a Siberian prison camp.Ex. The article 'Libraries and reading in P.O.W. camps' describes the establishment of the concentration camp library of Oflag IIC at Woldenberg, and its management, largely by the inmates, which was typical of many prisoner of war camps.Ex. The article 'Libraries and reading in P.O.W. camps' describes the establishment of the concentration camp library of Oflag IIC at Woldenberg, and its management, largely by the inmates, which was typical of many prisoner of war camps.Ex. So if ALA won't speak out when books are burned and librarians are tossed into the Cuban gulag, then they would betray the values drilled into us in graduate school.* * *(n.) = prison camp, P.O.W. camp, prisoner of war camp, gulagEx: In this sense the book resembles one of Solzhenitsyn's novels about one good day in the life of one of Stalin's victims living out a wretched existence in a Siberian prison camp.
Ex: The article 'Libraries and reading in P.O.W. camps' describes the establishment of the concentration camp library of Oflag IIC at Woldenberg, and its management, largely by the inmates, which was typical of many prisoner of war camps.Ex: The article 'Libraries and reading in P.O.W. camps' describes the establishment of the concentration camp library of Oflag IIC at Woldenberg, and its management, largely by the inmates, which was typical of many prisoner of war camps.Ex: So if ALA won't speak out when books are burned and librarians are tossed into the Cuban gulag, then they would betray the values drilled into us in graduate school. -
73 completado
adj.completed, complete, perfect.past part.past participle of spanish verb: completar.* * *----* estudiante que ha completado los estudios secundarios = high school graduate, high school leaver.* * ** estudiante que ha completado los estudios secundarios = high school graduate, high school leaver. -
74 con respecto a si ... o ...
= as to whether... or...Ex. The article 'The grad versus the undergrad debate: a most ingenious paradox' suggests that opinion is divided as to whether to focus bibliographic instruction on the undergraduate or the graduate student.* * *= as to whether... or...Ex: The article 'The grad versus the undergrad debate: a most ingenious paradox' suggests that opinion is divided as to whether to focus bibliographic instruction on the undergraduate or the graduate student.
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75 con vistas a + Nombre
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76 crear
v.1 to create.me crea muchos problemas it gives me a lot of trouble, it causes me a lot of problemsPicasso creó escuela Picasso's works have had a seminal influenceRicardo crea obras de arte Richard creates works of art.Ellas crean criaturas raras They create weird creatures.2 to invent.3 to found.4 to make, to make up.* * *1 (gen) to create3 (inventar) to invent1 to make, make for oneself2 (imaginarse) to imagine* * *verb1) to create2) originate* * *VT1) (=hacer, producir) [+ obra, objeto, empleo] to create2) (=establecer) [+ comisión, comité, fondo, negocio, sistema] to set up; [+ asociación, cooperativa] to form, set up; [+ cargo, puesto] to create; [+ movimiento, organización] to create, establish, found¿qué se necesita para crear una empresa? — what do you need in order to set up o start a business?
esta organización se creó para defender los derechos humanos — this organization was created o established o founded to defend human rights
aspiraban a crear un estado independiente — they aimed to create o establish o found an independent state
3) (=dar lugar a) [+ condiciones, clima, ambiente] to create; [+ problemas] to cause, create; [+ expectativas] to raiseel vacío creado por su muerte — the gap left o created by her death
4) liter (=nombrar) to make, appoint* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) <obra/modelo/tendencia> to create, < producto> to developb) < sistema> to create, establish, set up; < institución> to set up, create; <comisión/fondo> to set up; < empleo> to create; < ciudad> to build2) <dificultades/problemas> to cause, create; <ambiente/clima> to create; <fama/prestigio> to bring; < reputación> to earn2.* * *= design (for/to), construct, create, engender, establish, fashion, forge, form, invent, set up, compose, originate, bring into + being, mint, found, institute, come into + existence, mother, come up with.Ex. In lists designed for international use a symbolic notation instead of textual notes may be used.Ex. The objective in executing these three stages is to construct a document profile which reflects its subject = El propósito de llevar a cabo estas tres etapas es elaborar un perfil documental que refleje su materia.Ex. National agencies creating MARC records use national standards within their own country, and re-format records to UNIMARC for international exchange.Ex. In addition to problems with new subjects which lacked 'accepted' or established names, this guiding principle engendered inconsistency in the form of headings.Ex. The intention is to establish a general framework, and then to give exceptions or further explanation and examples for each area in turn.Ex. The preliminary discussions and proposals which led up to the AACR, did start out with an attempt to fashion an ideology, a philosophical context, for those rules.Ex. This article calls on libraries to forge a renewed national commitment to cooperate in the building of a national information network for scholarly communications.Ex. Formed in 1969, the first operational system was implemented in 1972-3.Ex. Frequently, but not always, this same process will have been attempted by the author when inventing the title, and this explains why the title is often a useful aid to indexing.Ex. By imposing a ban one is only likely to set up antagonism and frustration which will turn against the very thing we are trying to encourage.Ex. There have never been any attempts to compose a bibliography of US government documents relating to international law.Ex. In the 'office of the present', a document is usually produced by several people: someone, say an administrator or manager, who originates and checks it, a typist, who prepares the text, and a draughtsman or artist who prepares the diagrams.Ex. MARC was brought into being originally to facilitate the creation of LC catalogue cards.Ex. The article 'The newly minted MLS: what do we need to know today?' describes the skills which, ideally, every US library school graduate should possess at the end of the 1990s.Ex. The earliest community information service in Australia dates from as recently as 1958 when Citizens' Advice Bureaux, modelled on their British namesake, were founded in Perth = El primer servicio de información ciudadana de Australia es reciente y data de 1958 cuando se creó en Perth la Oficina de Información al Ciudadano, a imitación de su homónima británica.Ex. The librarians have instituted a series of campaigns, including displays and leaflets on specific issues, eg family income supplement, rent and rates rebates, and school grants.Ex. Some university libraries have been built up over the centuries; others have come into existence over the last 40 years.Ex. Necessity mothers invention, and certainly invention in the presentation of books mothers surprised interest.Ex. Derfer corroborated her: 'I'd be very proud of you if you could come up with the means to draft a model collection development policy'.----* crear adicción = be addictive.* crear alianzas = form + alliances, make + alliances.* crear apoyo = build + support.* crear canales para = establish + channels for.* crear con gran destreza = craft.* crear consenso = forge + consensus.* crear demanda = make + demand.* crear de nuevo = recreate [re-create].* crear desconfianza = create + distrust.* crear desesperación = yield + despair.* crear falsas ilusiones = create + false illusions.* crear interés = build + interest.* crear la ilusión = generate + illusion.* crear lazos = build up + links.* crear lazos afectivos = bond.* crear posibilidades = open + window, create + possibilities.* crear problemas = make + waves, build up + problems, make + trouble.* crear prototipos = prototype.* crear relaciones = structure + relationships.* crearse = build up, hew.* crearse el prestigio de ser = establish + a record as.* crear servidor web = put up + web site.* crearse una identidad = forge + identity.* crearse una vida = build + life.* crear una alianza = forge + alliance.* crear una base = form + a basis.* crear una buena impresión en = make + a good impression on.* crear una coalición = forge + coalition.* crear una colección = build + collection.* crear un acuerdo = work out + agreement.* crear una familia = have + a family.* crear una ilusión = create + illusion.* crear una imagen = build + an image, create + image, summon up + image.* crear una injusticia = create + injustice.* crear una marca de identidad = branding.* crear una ocasión = create + opportunity.* crear una preocupación = create + concern.* crear una situación = create + a situation.* crear un clima = promote + climate.* crear un comité = set up + committee.* crear un entorno = create + an environment.* crear un equilibrio = establish + a balance.* crear un fondo común de conocimientos = pool + knowledge.* crear un fondo común de experiencias profesionales = pool + expertise.* crear un grupo = set up + group.* crear un índice = generate + index.* crear un mercado para = produce + a market for.* crear un perfil = compile + profile, formulate + profile.* crear un servidor web = open up + web site.* crear vínculos = build up + links.* crear vínculos afectivos = bond.* oposición + crear = opposition + line up.* que crea adicción = addictive.* que crea hábito = addictive.* volver a crear = recreate [re-create].* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) <obra/modelo/tendencia> to create, < producto> to developb) < sistema> to create, establish, set up; < institución> to set up, create; <comisión/fondo> to set up; < empleo> to create; < ciudad> to build2) <dificultades/problemas> to cause, create; <ambiente/clima> to create; <fama/prestigio> to bring; < reputación> to earn2.* * *= design (for/to), construct, create, engender, establish, fashion, forge, form, invent, set up, compose, originate, bring into + being, mint, found, institute, come into + existence, mother, come up with.Ex: In lists designed for international use a symbolic notation instead of textual notes may be used.
Ex: The objective in executing these three stages is to construct a document profile which reflects its subject = El propósito de llevar a cabo estas tres etapas es elaborar un perfil documental que refleje su materia.Ex: National agencies creating MARC records use national standards within their own country, and re-format records to UNIMARC for international exchange.Ex: In addition to problems with new subjects which lacked 'accepted' or established names, this guiding principle engendered inconsistency in the form of headings.Ex: The intention is to establish a general framework, and then to give exceptions or further explanation and examples for each area in turn.Ex: The preliminary discussions and proposals which led up to the AACR, did start out with an attempt to fashion an ideology, a philosophical context, for those rules.Ex: This article calls on libraries to forge a renewed national commitment to cooperate in the building of a national information network for scholarly communications.Ex: Formed in 1969, the first operational system was implemented in 1972-3.Ex: Frequently, but not always, this same process will have been attempted by the author when inventing the title, and this explains why the title is often a useful aid to indexing.Ex: By imposing a ban one is only likely to set up antagonism and frustration which will turn against the very thing we are trying to encourage.Ex: There have never been any attempts to compose a bibliography of US government documents relating to international law.Ex: In the 'office of the present', a document is usually produced by several people: someone, say an administrator or manager, who originates and checks it, a typist, who prepares the text, and a draughtsman or artist who prepares the diagrams.Ex: MARC was brought into being originally to facilitate the creation of LC catalogue cards.Ex: The article 'The newly minted MLS: what do we need to know today?' describes the skills which, ideally, every US library school graduate should possess at the end of the 1990s.Ex: The earliest community information service in Australia dates from as recently as 1958 when Citizens' Advice Bureaux, modelled on their British namesake, were founded in Perth = El primer servicio de información ciudadana de Australia es reciente y data de 1958 cuando se creó en Perth la Oficina de Información al Ciudadano, a imitación de su homónima británica.Ex: The librarians have instituted a series of campaigns, including displays and leaflets on specific issues, eg family income supplement, rent and rates rebates, and school grants.Ex: Some university libraries have been built up over the centuries; others have come into existence over the last 40 years.Ex: Necessity mothers invention, and certainly invention in the presentation of books mothers surprised interest.Ex: Derfer corroborated her: 'I'd be very proud of you if you could come up with the means to draft a model collection development policy'.* crear adicción = be addictive.* crear alianzas = form + alliances, make + alliances.* crear apoyo = build + support.* crear canales para = establish + channels for.* crear con gran destreza = craft.* crear consenso = forge + consensus.* crear demanda = make + demand.* crear de nuevo = recreate [re-create].* crear desconfianza = create + distrust.* crear desesperación = yield + despair.* crear falsas ilusiones = create + false illusions.* crear interés = build + interest.* crear la ilusión = generate + illusion.* crear lazos = build up + links.* crear lazos afectivos = bond.* crear posibilidades = open + window, create + possibilities.* crear problemas = make + waves, build up + problems, make + trouble.* crear prototipos = prototype.* crear relaciones = structure + relationships.* crearse = build up, hew.* crearse el prestigio de ser = establish + a record as.* crear servidor web = put up + web site.* crearse una identidad = forge + identity.* crearse una vida = build + life.* crear una alianza = forge + alliance.* crear una base = form + a basis.* crear una buena impresión en = make + a good impression on.* crear una coalición = forge + coalition.* crear una colección = build + collection.* crear un acuerdo = work out + agreement.* crear una familia = have + a family.* crear una ilusión = create + illusion.* crear una imagen = build + an image, create + image, summon up + image.* crear una injusticia = create + injustice.* crear una marca de identidad = branding.* crear una ocasión = create + opportunity.* crear una preocupación = create + concern.* crear una situación = create + a situation.* crear un clima = promote + climate.* crear un comité = set up + committee.* crear un entorno = create + an environment.* crear un equilibrio = establish + a balance.* crear un fondo común de conocimientos = pool + knowledge.* crear un fondo común de experiencias profesionales = pool + expertise.* crear un grupo = set up + group.* crear un índice = generate + index.* crear un mercado para = produce + a market for.* crear un perfil = compile + profile, formulate + profile.* crear un servidor web = open up + web site.* crear vínculos = build up + links.* crear vínculos afectivos = bond.* oposición + crear = opposition + line up.* que crea adicción = addictive.* que crea hábito = addictive.* volver a crear = recreate [re-create].* * *crear [A1 ]vtA1 ‹obra/modelo› to create; ‹tendencia› to createcrear una nueva imagen para el producto to create a new image for the productcrearon un producto revolucionario they developed o created a revolutionary product2 ‹sistema› to create, establish, set up; ‹institución› to set up, create; ‹comisión/fondo› to set up; ‹empleo› to createcrearon una ciudad en pleno desierto they built a city in the middle of the desertB ‹dificultades/problemas› to cause, create; ‹ambiente/clima› to create; ‹fama/prestigio› to bring; ‹reputación› to earnsu arrogancia le creó muchas enemistades his arrogance made him many enemiesno quiero crear falsas expectativas en mis alumnos I don't want to raise false hopes among my students, I don't want to give my students false hopesse crea muchas dificultades he creates o makes a lot of problems for himself¿para qué te creas más trabajo? why make more work for yourself?será difícil llenar el vacío creado con su desaparición it will be difficult to fill the gap left by his death* * *
crear ( conjugate crear) verbo transitivo
to create;
‹ producto› to develop;
‹institución/comisión/fondo› to set up;
‹fama/prestigio› to bring;
‹ reputación› to earn;◊ crea muchos problemas it causes o creates a lot of problems;
no quiero crear falsas expectativas I don't want to raise false hopes
crearse verbo pronominal ‹ problema› to create … for oneself;
‹ enemigos› to make
crear verbo transitivo to create
' crear' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
falsificar
- hacer
- ilusionar
- infundio
- rompecabezas
- constituir
- formar
- meter
English:
boat
- bonding
- create
- fashion
- never-never land
- rapport
- stage
- afoot
- develop
- devise
- disrupt
- establish
- illusion
- set
- you
* * *♦ vt1. [hacer, producir, originar] to create;crear empleo/riqueza to create jobs/wealth;han creado un nuevo ministerio para él they have created a new ministry for him;me crea muchos problemas it gives me a lot of trouble, it causes me a lot of problems;Picasso creó escuela Picasso's works have had a seminal influence2. [inventar] to invent;[poema, sinfonía] to compose, to write; [cuadro] to paint3. [fundar] to found* * *v/t create; empresa set up* * *crear vt1) : to create, to cause2) : to originate* * *crear vb1. (en general) to createlas esculturas que el artista ha creado en los últimos años the sculptures created by the artist during the last few years2. (comité, empresa, etc) to set up -
77 crear de nuevo
(v.) = recreate [re-create]Ex. Schools of library and information science are once again intellectually impoverished, and the Graduate Library School ought to be reinvented or re-created.* * *(v.) = recreate [re-create]Ex: Schools of library and information science are once again intellectually impoverished, and the Graduate Library School ought to be reinvented or re-created.
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78 creérselas de
(v.) = fancy + ReflexivoEx. A chemical engineering graduate of the California Institute of Technology, he fancied himself a scientist and something of an amateur theologian.* * *(v.) = fancy + ReflexivoEx: A chemical engineering graduate of the California Institute of Technology, he fancied himself a scientist and something of an amateur theologian.
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79 curso académico
(n.) = academic courseEx. At both undergraduate and graduate levels, the Center offers academic courses in jazz studies.* * *(n.) = academic courseEx: At both undergraduate and graduate levels, the Center offers academic courses in jazz studies.
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80 de alto nivel
(adj.) = of a high order, high level [high-level], high-poweredEx. 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. Online services have made it possible to offer high level services, with a small staff, to a demanding clientele for an acceptable cost.Ex. This is a useful collection of essays, particularly for graduate students and high-powered undergraduates cutting their teeth on Aristotle.* * *(adj.) = of a high order, high level [high-level], high-poweredEx: 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: Online services have made it possible to offer high level services, with a small staff, to a demanding clientele for an acceptable cost.Ex: This is a useful collection of essays, particularly for graduate students and high-powered undergraduates cutting their teeth on Aristotle.
См. также в других словарях:
Graduate — refers to someone who has been the subject of a Graduation. See also: Alumnus.It may also refer to: * someone who has been awarded a degree by a university or college. *Graduate school, a school that awards advanced degrees. *Graduate student or… … Wikipedia
graduate — [gra′jo͞o it; ] for v. [ gra′jo͞o āt΄] n. [< ML graduatus, pp. of graduare, to graduate < L gradus: see GRADE] 1. a person who has completed a course of study at a school or college and has received a degree or diploma 2. a flask, tube, or… … English World dictionary
Graduate — Grad u*ate, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Graduated}p. pr. & vb. n. {Graduating}.] [Cf. F. graduer. See {Graduate}, n., {Grade}.] [1913 Webster] 1. To mark with degrees; to divide into regular steps, grades, or intervals, as the scale of a thermometer, a… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Graduate — Grad u*ate, a. [See {Graduate}, n. & v.] Arranged by successive steps or degrees; graduated. [1913 Webster] Beginning with the genus, passing through all the graduate and subordinate stages. Tatham. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
graduate — [n] person who completes education, pursuit alum*, alumnus, baccalaureate, bachelor, collegian, diplomate, doctor, former student, grad, holder, licentiate, master, Ph.D., product, recipient; concept 350 Ant. undergraduate graduate [v1] complete… … New thesaurus
Graduate — Grad u*ate, v. i. 1. To pass by degrees; to change gradually; to shade off; as, sandstone which graduates into gneiss; carnelian sometimes graduates into quartz. [1913 Webster] 2. (Zo[ o]l.) To taper, as the tail of certain birds. [1913 Webster]… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
graduate — verb. There is no problem with the ordinary intransitive meaning (without an object), as in He graduated from Yale in 1994 and She graduated last year. The newer AmE use with the name of the university or college as a kind of adverbial with from… … Modern English usage
graduate — ► NOUN ▪ a person who has been awarded a first academic degree, or (N. Amer. ) a high school diploma. ► VERB 1) successfully complete a degree, course, or (N. Amer. ) high school. 2) (graduate to) move up to (something more advanced). 3) arrange… … English terms dictionary
Graduate — Grad u*ate, n. [LL. graduatus, p. p. of graduare to admit to a degree, fr. L. gradus grade. See {Grade}, n.] 1. One who has received an academical or professional degree; one who has completed the prescribed course of study in any school or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
graduate — index file (arrange), fix (arrange), measure, prefer, promote (advance), sort … Law dictionary
graduate — vb *class, grade, rank, rate, gradate Analogous words: *order, arrange: divide, *separate: *distinguish, differentiate, demarcate, discriminate … New Dictionary of Synonyms