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1 facultades humanas
Ex. Are we not perhaps then amputating our human faculties by limiting ourselves to the kind of meaningless cacophonation of symbols with which computers deal?.* * *Ex: Are we not perhaps then amputating our human faculties by limiting ourselves to the kind of meaningless cacophonation of symbols with which computers deal?.
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2 facultad
f.1 faculty.facultades (mentales) (mental) facultiesestá empezando a perder facultades his mind is beginning to go2 faculty (universitaria).facultad de Filosofía y Letras Arts Faculty, Faculty of Arts3 power, right.4 property.tiene la facultad de ablandar la madera it has the property of softening wood5 authorization, right, permission.6 institute, research center, research centre.imperat.2nd person plural (vosotros/vosotras) Imperative of Spanish verb: facultar.* * *1 (capacidad) faculty, ability2 (poder) faculty, power3 (universitaria) faculty, school\tener facultad para hacer algo to be authorized to do somethingfacultades mentales mental powers* * *noun f.1) faculty2) authority, power3) school* * *SF1) (=capacidad) facultyfirmó el testamento en pleno uso de sus facultades — he signed the will in full possession of his faculties
facultades mentales — mental faculties, mental powers
2) (=autoridad) power, authoritytener la facultad de hacer algo — to have the power o authority to do sth
3) (Univ) faculty* * *1) (capacidad, don) faculty2) (autoridad, poder) power, authority3) (Educ) faculty* * *1) (capacidad, don) faculty2) (autoridad, poder) power, authority3) (Educ) faculty* * *facultad11 = faculty.Ex: Sophia no sooner saw Blifil than she turned pale, and almost lost the use of all her faculties.
* conceder facultades = endow with + powers.* en plenitud de facultades = at + Posesivo + (very) best.* en pleno uso de + Posesivo + facultades físicas y mentales = of (a) sound mind, of (a) sound and disposing mind and memory, physically and mentally fit.* en pleno uso de + Posesivo + Posesivo + facultades mentales = mentally fit.* facultad de recordar = power of recall.* facultades humanas = human faculties.* facultad física = physical faculty.* facultad mental = mental faculty.* no estar en plenitud de facultades = be past + Posesivo + best.* perder las facultades = lose + Posesivo + faculties.* tener la facultad de = have + powers to.facultad22 = graduate school, university college, faculty.Ex: It was decided that checking of content and format should be left to the graduate school and academic departments = Se decidió que la comprobación del contenido y el formato debería dejarse a la facultad y a los departamentos universitarios.
Ex: This article describes the setting up of a permanent exhibition in the newly-created Clinical Research Unit Library at university college Galway, Eire.Ex: The article 'An exercise in archival exhibitionism' describes the display to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the University's faculty of Medicine.* facultad de biblioteconomía y documentación = graduate library school, LIS school.* Facultad de Biblioteconomía y Documentación (FBYD) = Graduate School of Library and Information Science (GSLIS).* facultad de ciencias de la educación = teachers college, teacher training college.* facultad de derecho = law school.* facultad de empresariales = Graduate School of Management, business school.* facultad de medicina = medical school, university medical school.* facultad universitaria = college.* junta de facultad = faculty board.* * *A (capacidad, don) facultyla facultad del habla the power o faculty of speechcon los años se van perdiendo facultades as you get older you start to lose your facultiesCompuesto:fpl mental faculties (pl)tiene perturbadas sus facultades mentales he is mentally disturbeden pleno uso de mis facultades mentales in full command o possession of my facultiesB (autoridad, poder) power, authorityeso no está dentro de sus facultades that is beyond the scope of your powersC ( Educ) facultyFacultad de Filosofía y Letras Arts FacultyFacultad de Medicina/Derecho Faculty of Medicine/Lawfue compañero mío de facultador en la facultad he was at college o ( BrE) university with me* * *
Del verbo facultar: ( conjugate facultar)
facultad es:
2ª persona plural (vosotros) imperativo
Multiple Entries:
facultad
facultar
facultad sustantivo femenino
1 ( capacidad) faculty;
facultades mentales (mental) faculties (pl)
2 (Educ) faculty;
facultar ( conjugate facultar) verbo transitivo (frml) facultad a algn para hacer algo [jefe/presidente] to authorize sb to do sth;
[carnet/documento] to entitle sb to do sth;
[ ley] to allow sb to do sth
facultad sustantivo femenino
1 (capacidad) faculty
perder facultades, to lose one's faculties
(disposición, aptitud) ability, competence: tiene grandes facultades para el dibujo, she has great drawing ability
2 Univ faculty, school
facultad de Económicas, Economics Faculty o Department
' facultad' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
encierro
- inteligencia
- juicio
- oído
- razón
- audición
- decano
- derecho
- habla
- pensamiento
- poder
- raciocinio
- uso
- voluntad
English:
dull
- faculty
- legislate
- memory
- power
- reason
- school
- sensation
- sense
- speech
- vision
- college
- law
- medical
- prom
* * *facultad nf1. [capacidad] faculty;facultades (mentales) (mental) faculties;está en pleno uso de sus facultades mentales she is in full possession of her mental faculties;está empezando a perder facultades his mind is beginning to go;un corredor con portentosas facultades físicas a runner with remarkable physical attributes;tiene grandes facultades para la pintura he's a very talented painter2. [centro universitario] faculty;estudio en la Facultad de Química I'm studying in the Faculty of Chemistry;Amllegué a las nueve de facultad I got back from the university at nine o'clockFacultad de Derecho Law Faculty, Faculty of Law;Facultad de Filosofía y Letras Arts Faculty, Faculty of Arts;Facultad de Humanidades Arts Faculty, Faculty of Arts;Facultad de Medicina Medical Faculty, Faculty of Medicine3. Am [enseñanza superior] college;mi hermano está en facultad my brother goes to college4. [poder] power, right;su cargo no le da facultad para autorizar compras his position doesn't allow him to authorize purchases5. [propiedad] property;tiene la facultad de ablandar la madera it has the property of softening wood* * *f2 ( autoridad) authority3:facultades pl mentales faculties* * *facultad nf1) : faculty, abilityfacultades mentales: mental faculties2) : authority, power3) : school (of a university)facultad de derecho: law school* * *facultad n3. (rama de estudios) Faculty -
3 amputar
v.1 to amputate.El hacha cercenó la mano de Ricardo The axe amputated John's finger.2 to suppress, to curtail.* * *1 to amputate2 figurado to cut out* * *VT to amputate, cut off* * ** * *= amputate, excise.Ex. Are we not perhaps then amputating our human faculties by limiting ourselves to the kind of meaningless cacophonation of symbols with which computers deal?.Ex. Once a new digitized system has been introduced irrelevancies and redundant features can more easily be seen and excised.* * ** * *= amputate, excise.Ex: Are we not perhaps then amputating our human faculties by limiting ourselves to the kind of meaningless cacophonation of symbols with which computers deal?.
Ex: Once a new digitized system has been introduced irrelevancies and redundant features can more easily be seen and excised.* * *amputar [A1 ]vt1 ‹brazo/pierna› to amputate2 ‹texto› to cut (out)* * *
amputar ( conjugate amputar) verbo transitivo ‹brazo/pierna› to amputate
amputar vtr Med to amputate
fig (una película, un texto) to cut out
' amputar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
cortar
English:
amputate
- sever
* * *amputar vt1. [miembro] to amputate;le amputaron un brazo one of his arms was amputated2. [libro, película] to mutilate* * ** * *amputar vt: to amputate♦ amputación nf -
4 cacofonía
f.cacophony.* * *1 cacophony* * *SF cacophony* * *femenino cacophony* * *= cacophonation, cacophony.Ex. Are we not perhaps then amputating our human faculties by limiting ourselves to the kind of meaningless cacophonation of symbols with which computers deal?.Ex. The book contributors have produced a work that is intricate and persuasive, and they have also produced a deafening cacophony of concepts.* * *femenino cacophony* * *= cacophonation, cacophony.Ex: Are we not perhaps then amputating our human faculties by limiting ourselves to the kind of meaningless cacophonation of symbols with which computers deal?.
Ex: The book contributors have produced a work that is intricate and persuasive, and they have also produced a deafening cacophony of concepts.* * *cacophony* * *
cacofonía sustantivo femenino cacophony
* * *cacofonía nfLing cacophony* * *f cacophony* * *cacofonía nf: cacophony -
5 tosco
► adjetivo1 (basto) rough, rustic2 (persona) uncouth* * *ADJ coarse, rough, crude* * *- ca adjetivoa) <utensilio/mueble/construcción> crude, basic; < tela> coarse, rough* * *= crude [cruder -comp., crudest -sup.], benighted, rugged, rough [rougher -comp., roughest -sup.], clunky [clunkier -comp., clunkiest -sup.], coarsened, coarse [coarser -comp.; coarsest -sup.], rough and rugged, unpolished, crass [crasser -comp., crassest -sup.].Ex. Keywords or indexing terms may serve as a crude indicator of subject scope of a document.Ex. Are we not making a rather benighted assumption that tools should be extensions of our human faculties?.Ex. This article describes a prototype kiosk which, despite being rugged, would be better suited to location within a public building = Este artículo describe un prototipo de kiosco que, a pesar de su apariencia tosca, sería más adecuado para ubicarlo dentro de un edificio público.Ex. In addition they are able to sustain the library services in this rough terrain.Ex. The simplest tack would be to include the metadata in the notes field but sorting by metadata attributes is problematic and clunky.Ex. Van Dijck's widely-used italics of the mid seventeenth century were slightly coarsened versions of Granjon's types.Ex. The sections of a book were stapled to a coarse cloth backing, but unfortunately the staples soon rusted and became brittle.Ex. The western shoreline of Lake Superior has rough and rugged beauty.Ex. It seems too rush, too unpolished to be a final product.Ex. In these new book, he is still at bay, pursued by the hounds of desire and anxiety in a literary world ever more crass.----* de aspecto tosco = rough-looking.* de un modo tosco = crudely.* hacer tosco = coarsen.* * *- ca adjetivoa) <utensilio/mueble/construcción> crude, basic; < tela> coarse, rough* * *= crude [cruder -comp., crudest -sup.], benighted, rugged, rough [rougher -comp., roughest -sup.], clunky [clunkier -comp., clunkiest -sup.], coarsened, coarse [coarser -comp.; coarsest -sup.], rough and rugged, unpolished, crass [crasser -comp., crassest -sup.].Ex: Keywords or indexing terms may serve as a crude indicator of subject scope of a document.
Ex: Are we not making a rather benighted assumption that tools should be extensions of our human faculties?.Ex: This article describes a prototype kiosk which, despite being rugged, would be better suited to location within a public building = Este artículo describe un prototipo de kiosco que, a pesar de su apariencia tosca, sería más adecuado para ubicarlo dentro de un edificio público.Ex: In addition they are able to sustain the library services in this rough terrain.Ex: The simplest tack would be to include the metadata in the notes field but sorting by metadata attributes is problematic and clunky.Ex: Van Dijck's widely-used italics of the mid seventeenth century were slightly coarsened versions of Granjon's types.Ex: The sections of a book were stapled to a coarse cloth backing, but unfortunately the staples soon rusted and became brittle.Ex: The western shoreline of Lake Superior has rough and rugged beauty.Ex: It seems too rush, too unpolished to be a final product.Ex: In these new book, he is still at bay, pursued by the hounds of desire and anxiety in a literary world ever more crass.* de aspecto tosco = rough-looking.* de un modo tosco = crudely.* hacer tosco = coarsen.* * *tosco -ca1 ‹utensilio/mueble/construcción› crude, basic; ‹tela› coarse, rough; ‹cerámica› rough, coarse2 ‹persona› rough; ‹lenguaje› unrefined, earthy; ‹modales› rough, unpolished3 ‹manos› rough* * *
tosco◊ -ca adjetivo
‹ tela› coarse, rough
‹ lenguaje› unrefined;
‹ modales› coarse;
‹ facciones› coarse
tosco,-a adjetivo
1 (aplicado a cosas) crude, rough
2 (comportamiento, modales) uncouth, coarse
' tosco' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
grosera
- grosero
- rústica
- rústico
- tosca
- rudo
English:
clumsy
- rough
- coarse
- heavy
* * *tosco, -a adj1. [acabado, herramienta] crude2. [persona, modales] rough, coarse* * *adj figrough, coarse* * *tosco, -ca adj: rough, coarse -
6 vociferío
= cacophonation, cacophony.Ex. Are we not perhaps then amputating our human faculties by limiting ourselves to the kind of meaningless cacophonation of symbols with which computers deal?.Ex. The book contributors have produced a work that is intricate and persuasive, and they have also produced a deafening cacophony of concepts.* * *= cacophonation, cacophony.Ex: Are we not perhaps then amputating our human faculties by limiting ourselves to the kind of meaningless cacophonation of symbols with which computers deal?.
Ex: The book contributors have produced a work that is intricate and persuasive, and they have also produced a deafening cacophony of concepts. -
7 facultad1
1 = faculty.Ex. Sophia no sooner saw Blifil than she turned pale, and almost lost the use of all her faculties.----* conceder facultades = endow with + powers.* en plenitud de facultades = at + Posesivo + (very) best.* en pleno uso de + Posesivo + facultades físicas y mentales = of (a) sound mind, of (a) sound and disposing mind and memory, physically and mentally fit.* en pleno uso de + Posesivo + Posesivo + facultades mentales = mentally fit.* facultad de recordar = power of recall.* facultades humanas = human faculties.* facultad física = physical faculty.* facultad mental = mental faculty.* no estar en plenitud de facultades = be past + Posesivo + best.* perder las facultades = lose + Posesivo + faculties.* tener la facultad de = have + powers to. -
8 canalla
adj.rotten, wicked, mean.f. & m.1 swine, dog.2 knave, despicable person, scoundrel, scum.3 mob, rabble, canaille, doggery.* * *1 peyorativo (chusma) riffraff, mob, rabble1 peyorativo (hombre ruin) rascal, scoundrel, swine, rotter* * *noun mf.swine, rat* * *masculino y femeninoa) (fam) (bribón, granuja) swine (colloq)la canalla — the rabble o riffraff
* * *= scoundrel, miscreant, scumbag, rascal, scallywag [scalawag, -USA], rapscallion, cad, swine, pig, badass, nasty piece of work.Ex. Here came every sort of human ingredient -- sturdy homesteaders, skilled craftsmen, precious scoundrels.Ex. The forest, therefore, is regarded as the abode of robbers & sundry miscreants, implying its relation to the forces of chaos & disorder.Ex. He then made the comment that our soldiers are fighting 'detestable murderers and scumbags'.Ex. And although they may pose themselves as very religious, they are simply rascals.Ex. In other words, we either have morons or thugs running the White House -- or perhaps one moron, one thug, and a smattering of scalawags in between.Ex. In all truth, it must be said that this howling, hissing, foot-scraping body of young rapscallions found some cause for complaint.Ex. Not only that, but this cad has also convinced them she is losing her faculties.Ex. In German law it is a criminal offense for A to insult B, for example, by calling him a swine.Ex. He was waiting for the opportunity to unleash his fury, no one calls him a pig and gets away with it.Ex. In the hardscrabble times of the Bible, where there were plagues, invasions from foreign powers, and swarms of locusts, you pretty much had to be a badass.Ex. Mary, on the other hand, is a nasty piece of work who is at her best is frosty and aloof and at her worst is hostile and cruel.----* comportarse como un canalla con = be rotten to.* portarse como un canalla con = be rotten to.* * *masculino y femeninoa) (fam) (bribón, granuja) swine (colloq)la canalla — the rabble o riffraff
* * *= scoundrel, miscreant, scumbag, rascal, scallywag [scalawag, -USA], rapscallion, cad, swine, pig, badass, nasty piece of work.Ex: Here came every sort of human ingredient -- sturdy homesteaders, skilled craftsmen, precious scoundrels.
Ex: The forest, therefore, is regarded as the abode of robbers & sundry miscreants, implying its relation to the forces of chaos & disorder.Ex: He then made the comment that our soldiers are fighting 'detestable murderers and scumbags'.Ex: And although they may pose themselves as very religious, they are simply rascals.Ex: In other words, we either have morons or thugs running the White House -- or perhaps one moron, one thug, and a smattering of scalawags in between.Ex: In all truth, it must be said that this howling, hissing, foot-scraping body of young rapscallions found some cause for complaint.Ex: Not only that, but this cad has also convinced them she is losing her faculties.Ex: In German law it is a criminal offense for A to insult B, for example, by calling him a swine.Ex: He was waiting for the opportunity to unleash his fury, no one calls him a pig and gets away with it.Ex: In the hardscrabble times of the Bible, where there were plagues, invasions from foreign powers, and swarms of locusts, you pretty much had to be a badass.Ex: Mary, on the other hand, is a nasty piece of work who is at her best is frosty and aloof and at her worst is hostile and cruel.* comportarse como un canalla con = be rotten to.* portarse como un canalla con = be rotten to.* * *el muy canalla se largó con toda la plata the rotten swine ran off with all the cash2la canalla periodística the press mob ( pej)* * *
canalla sustantivo masculino y femenino (fam) (bribón, granuja) swine (colloq)
canalla pey
I mf swine, rotter
II sustantivo femenino riffraff, mob
' canalla' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
miserable
- sinvergüenza
English:
heel
- rat
- scoundrel
- swine
- unmitigated
* * *♦ adj1 [miserable] beastly;[bribón] roguish2 [barriobajero] low-life3 [estado] rogue♦ nmf[persona] swine, dog♦ nfla canalla the rabble, the riffraff* * *I m/f swine fam, rat famII f riff-raff* * * -
9 caradura
f. & m.bully, brass neck.* * *► adjetivo1 familiar cheeky1 familiar cheeky devil\tener (mucha) caradura familiar to have (a lot of) cheek* * *1.SMF cheeky person, sassy person (EEUU)¡caradura! — you've got a cheek o a nerve! *
2.SF cheek *, nerve ** * *Iadjetivo (fam) sassy (AmE colloq), cheeky (BrE colloq)IImasculino y femenino1) (fam) cara 4) b)* * *= chutzpah, cad.Ex. Typical examples are 'Who is it that has made most gramophone records?' 'What is the diameter of a human hair?' Which are the commonest surnames?' 'What was it that Jane Austen said about apple pie?' 'What does ' chutzpah' mean?'.Ex. Not only that, but this cad has also convinced them she is losing her faculties.* * *Iadjetivo (fam) sassy (AmE colloq), cheeky (BrE colloq)IImasculino y femenino1) (fam) cara 4) b)* * *= chutzpah, cad.Ex: Typical examples are 'Who is it that has made most gramophone records?' 'What is the diameter of a human hair?' Which are the commonest surnames?' 'What was it that Jane Austen said about apple pie?' 'What does ' chutzpah' mean?'.
Ex: Not only that, but this cad has also convinced them she is losing her faculties.* * *B* * *
caradura adjetivo (fam) sassy (AmE colloq), cheeky (BrE colloq)
■ sustantivo masculino y femenino (fam) sassy devil (AmE colloq), cheeky swine (BrE colloq)
■ sustantivo femenino (fam) nerve (colloq), cheek (BrE colloq)
caradura mf familiar cheeky devil: ¡qué caradura es!, he's got a cheek!, US he has a lot of nerve!
' caradura' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
morro
- valor
English:
sassy
* * *♦ adj♦ nmf* * *m/f famguy/woman with a nerve, Brcheeky devil fam* * *caradura2 n cheeky devil -
10 depravado
adj.depraved, corrupt, perverse, degenerate.m.depraved man, unprincipled person, reprobate.past part.past participle of spanish verb: depravar.* * *1→ link=depravar depravar► adjetivo1 depraved► nombre masculino,nombre femenino1 depraved person, degenerate* * *depravado, -a1.ADJ depraved, corrupt2.SM / F degenerate* * *- da masculino, femenino degenerate* * *= vicious, degenerate, pervert, cad.Ex. For in the eyes of many, even the most desultory reading of fiction was preferable to the ' vicious' entertainments designed to satisfy the 'lower impulses in human nature'.Ex. Music by Jewish composers and works were branded in Nazi Germany as degenerate art.Ex. The ratings war between TV programmes has produced an emphasis on 'nuts, sluts, & perverts' & their victims, & discussion of sexual problems are commonplace on TV talk shows.Ex. Not only that, but this cad has also convinced them she is losing her faculties.* * *- da masculino, femenino degenerate* * *= vicious, degenerate, pervert, cad.Ex: For in the eyes of many, even the most desultory reading of fiction was preferable to the ' vicious' entertainments designed to satisfy the 'lower impulses in human nature'.
Ex: Music by Jewish composers and works were branded in Nazi Germany as degenerate art.Ex: The ratings war between TV programmes has produced an emphasis on 'nuts, sluts, & perverts' & their victims, & discussion of sexual problems are commonplace on TV talk shows.Ex: Not only that, but this cad has also convinced them she is losing her faculties.* * *depravedmasculine, femininedegenerateun depravado sexual a pervert, a sexual pervert* * *
Del verbo depravar: ( conjugate depravar)
depravado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
depravado
depravar
depravado◊ -da sustantivo masculino, femenino
degenerate
depravado,-a
I sustantivo masculino y femenino depraved person
depravado sexual, (sexual) pervert
II adjetivo depraved, corrupt
depravar verbo transitivo to deprave, corrupt
' depravado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
depravada
English:
depraved
* * *depravado, -a♦ adjdepraved♦ nm,fdepraved person;ser un depravado to be depraved o degenerate* * *adj depraved* * *depravado, -da adjdegenerado: depraved, degenerate -
11 habilidad
f.1 skill (destreza).tener habilidad para algo to be good at somethingsalió del compromiso con habilidad she cleverly extricated herself from the situation2 ability, aptitude, capacity, craft.* * *1 (aptitud) skill2 (astucia) cleverness, smartness3 DERECHO capacity, competence4 (gracia) talent\con gran habilidad very skilfullytener habilidad manual to be good with one's handstener habilidad para algo to be good at something* * *noun f.ability, skill* * *SF1) (=capacidad) ability; (=destreza) skilltiene una gran habilidad para evitar enfrentamientos — he's very skilful o clever at avoiding confrontation
tiene habilidad manual — he's good o clever with his hands
con habilidad: le sacó el secreto con habilidad — he cleverly o skilfully got the secret out of him
2) (Jur) competence* * *1)a) (para actividad manual, física) skilltiene gran habilidad para la carpintería — he is very good o adept at carpentry
b) (astucia, inteligencia) skill, clevernesscon habilidad — cleverly, skillfully
2) (Der) competence* * *= ability, competence, skill, talent, capacity, savoir faire, aptitude, dexterity, ingeniousness, skilfulness [skillfulness, -USA], prowess, faculty.Ex. The ability to search on word stems is particularly valuable where the text to be searched is in free-language format.Ex. In order that you should be able to perform these required skills with greater competence, selected elements of the theory of subject indexing will be included.Ex. However, successful human free language indexing is very dependent upon the skills of the individual indexer.Ex. This example goes to show that talent for academic work is only one variety of giftedness.Ex. Older people have suffered some losses in sensory and physical capacity, and newer teaching techniques might intimidate them.Ex. Library staff should be provided with the opportunity to see blunders which they occasionally commit as well as the laudable ' savoir faire' with which they dispatch some reference question.Ex. In tracking, schools categorize according to measures of intelligence, achievement, or aptitude and then assign students to ability or interest-grouped classes = En la subdivisión de los alumnos en clases según su nivel académico, las escuelas agrupan a los alumnos de acuerdo con su nivel de inteligencia, habilidad o aptitud y luego los asignan a las clases según su capacidad o por sus intereses.Ex. Reference work is merely a practical skill -- of a high-grade kind, to be sure -- but a mere dexterity, a mental facility, acquired by practice.Ex. But if, in the digital era, libraries must continue to compete, it will be about services -- the ingeniousness with which individual libraries tailor resource access to particular needs of their user communities.Ex. At present, limited data concerning the conversational skilfulness of school-age children have been available.Ex. The results endorse the need for continued application of marketing prowess, information science research, and library support systems.Ex. Sophia no sooner saw Blifil than she turned pale, and almost lost the use of all her faculties.----* con habilidad = adeptly.* con pocas habilidades = poor-ability.* habilidad artística = artistry.* habilidad cognitiva = cognitive skill, cognitive ability, cognitive capacity.* habilidad de interpretar imágenes = visual literacy.* habilidad de razonar = thinking skills.* habilidad en el manejo de diferentes soportes = media competency.* habilidades = competency.* habilidades comunicativas = speaking skills.* habilidades lectoras = reading skills.* habilidades necesarias para la vida cotidiana = life skills.* habilidades orales = speaking skills.* habilidad especial = knack, knack.* habilidad física = physical ability, physical ability.* habilidad lectora = reading ability.* habilidad manual = manual skill.* habilidad mental = mental ability.* habilidad natural = knack, knack, natural ability.* habilidad política = statesmanship, political wisdom.* habilidad verbal = verbal skill.* perfeccionar una habilidad = hone + skill.* * *1)a) (para actividad manual, física) skilltiene gran habilidad para la carpintería — he is very good o adept at carpentry
b) (astucia, inteligencia) skill, clevernesscon habilidad — cleverly, skillfully
2) (Der) competence* * *= ability, competence, skill, talent, capacity, savoir faire, aptitude, dexterity, ingeniousness, skilfulness [skillfulness, -USA], prowess, faculty.Ex: The ability to search on word stems is particularly valuable where the text to be searched is in free-language format.
Ex: In order that you should be able to perform these required skills with greater competence, selected elements of the theory of subject indexing will be included.Ex: However, successful human free language indexing is very dependent upon the skills of the individual indexer.Ex: This example goes to show that talent for academic work is only one variety of giftedness.Ex: Older people have suffered some losses in sensory and physical capacity, and newer teaching techniques might intimidate them.Ex: Library staff should be provided with the opportunity to see blunders which they occasionally commit as well as the laudable ' savoir faire' with which they dispatch some reference question.Ex: In tracking, schools categorize according to measures of intelligence, achievement, or aptitude and then assign students to ability or interest-grouped classes = En la subdivisión de los alumnos en clases según su nivel académico, las escuelas agrupan a los alumnos de acuerdo con su nivel de inteligencia, habilidad o aptitud y luego los asignan a las clases según su capacidad o por sus intereses.Ex: Reference work is merely a practical skill -- of a high-grade kind, to be sure -- but a mere dexterity, a mental facility, acquired by practice.Ex: But if, in the digital era, libraries must continue to compete, it will be about services -- the ingeniousness with which individual libraries tailor resource access to particular needs of their user communities.Ex: At present, limited data concerning the conversational skilfulness of school-age children have been available.Ex: The results endorse the need for continued application of marketing prowess, information science research, and library support systems.Ex: Sophia no sooner saw Blifil than she turned pale, and almost lost the use of all her faculties.* con habilidad = adeptly.* con pocas habilidades = poor-ability.* habilidad artística = artistry.* habilidad cognitiva = cognitive skill, cognitive ability, cognitive capacity.* habilidad de interpretar imágenes = visual literacy.* habilidad de razonar = thinking skills.* habilidad en el manejo de diferentes soportes = media competency.* habilidades = competency.* habilidades comunicativas = speaking skills.* habilidades lectoras = reading skills.* habilidades necesarias para la vida cotidiana = life skills.* habilidades orales = speaking skills.* habilidad especial = knack, knack.* habilidad física = physical ability, physical ability.* habilidad lectora = reading ability.* habilidad manual = manual skill.* habilidad mental = mental ability.* habilidad natural = knack, knack, natural ability.* habilidad política = statesmanship, political wisdom.* habilidad verbal = verbal skill.* perfeccionar una habilidad = hone + skill.* * *A1 (para una actividad manual, física) skillsiempre ha tenido gran habilidad para la carpintería he's always been very good o adept at carpentry, he's always been a very skilled o adept carpentertiene especial habilidad para la costura he has a real gift o flair for sewing2 (astucia, inteligencia) skill, clevernesstiene gran habilidad para convencer a sus oponentes she is very clever o good o skilled at convincing her opponents, she has a great gift for convincing her opponentsla película está realizada con gran habilidad it is a very cleverly o skillfully made movieB (de un testigo) competenceCompuesto:* * *
habilidad sustantivo femenino
1
2 (Der) competence
habilidad sustantivo femenino
1 (con una herramienta, etc) skill: nos impresionó su habilidad al volante, we were impressed with his driving ability
2 (astucia, ingenio) cleverness
' habilidad' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
acierto
- apañada
- apañado
- arte
- cabeza
- capaz
- conquista
- darse
- defenderse
- ejercitar
- habilidosa
- habilidoso
- incapaz
- mía
- mío
- oxidada
- oxidado
- torpeza
- apabullante
- competencia
- inexperto
- maestría
- manual
- maña
- razón
English:
aptitude
- born
- capability
- cleverness
- confidence
- craft
- display
- expertise
- facility
- fluent
- green fingers
- green thumb
- inexpertly
- innate
- mental
- moderate
- proficiency
- qualify
- skill
- touch
- workmanship
- accomplishment
- dexterity
* * *habilidad nf1. [destreza] skill;una de sus muchas habilidades es la música music is just one of his many skills;tener habilidad para algo to be good at sth2. [inteligencia] cleverness;salió del compromiso con habilidad she cleverly extricated herself from the situation3. Ling performance* * *f1 skill2 ( capacidad) ability3 ( astucia) cleverness* * *habilidad nfcapacidad: ability, skill* * *habilidad n skill -
12 sinvergüenza
adj.shameless, barefaced, brazen, cynical.intj.you little beggar.f. & m.1 scoundrel, son of a gun, rogue, shyster.2 shameless person, shameless individual, cheeky devil, cheeky person.* * *► adjetivo1 (pícaro) shameless2 (descarado) cheeky1 (pícaro) rotter, swine, louse2 (descarado) cheeky devil* * *1.ADJ (=pillo) rotten; (=descarado) brazen, shameless2.SMF (=pillo) scoundrel, rogue; (=canalla) rotter *; (=insolente) cheeky devil¡sinvergüenza! — hum you villain!
* * *Ia) ( canalla)b) (hum) ( pícaro) naughtyIImasculino y femeninoa) ( canalla) swine (colloq), scoundrel (dated); (estafador, ladrón) crook (colloq)b) (hum) ( pícaro) rascal (hum), little devil o rascal (hum)* * *= scoundrel, shameless, shyster, rascal, scallywag [scalawag, -USA], rapscallion, thug, cad.Ex. Here came every sort of human ingredient -- sturdy homesteaders, skilled craftsmen, precious scoundrels.Ex. Another librarian described herself as 'a shameless, self-promoter'.Ex. When loss of physical and mental rigor is accompanied by financial problems, the retiree may reject himself and fall victim to the con man and shyster.Ex. And although they may pose themselves as very religious, they are simply rascals.Ex. In other words, we either have morons or thugs running the White House -- or perhaps one moron, one thug, and a smattering of scalawags in between.Ex. In all truth, it must be said that this howling, hissing, foot-scraping body of young rapscallions found some cause for complaint.Ex. Poole was a notorious gang leader & street thug, murdered by enemies of similar background.Ex. Not only that, but this cad has also convinced them she is losing her faculties.* * *Ia) ( canalla)b) (hum) ( pícaro) naughtyIImasculino y femeninoa) ( canalla) swine (colloq), scoundrel (dated); (estafador, ladrón) crook (colloq)b) (hum) ( pícaro) rascal (hum), little devil o rascal (hum)* * *= scoundrel, shameless, shyster, rascal, scallywag [scalawag, -USA], rapscallion, thug, cad.Ex: Here came every sort of human ingredient -- sturdy homesteaders, skilled craftsmen, precious scoundrels.
Ex: Another librarian described herself as 'a shameless, self-promoter'.Ex: When loss of physical and mental rigor is accompanied by financial problems, the retiree may reject himself and fall victim to the con man and shyster.Ex: And although they may pose themselves as very religious, they are simply rascals.Ex: In other words, we either have morons or thugs running the White House -- or perhaps one moron, one thug, and a smattering of scalawags in between.Ex: In all truth, it must be said that this howling, hissing, foot-scraping body of young rapscallions found some cause for complaint.Ex: Poole was a notorious gang leader & street thug, murdered by enemies of similar background.Ex: Not only that, but this cad has also convinced them she is losing her faculties.* * *1(canalla): ¡qué hombre más sinvergüenza! what a swine! ( colloq)2 ( hum) ‹niño› (travieso) naughty* * *
sinvergüenza adjetivoa) ( canalla):◊ ¡qué tipo más sinvergüenza! what a swine! (colloq)
■ sustantivo masculino y femenino
(estafador, ladrón) crook (colloq)
sinvergüenza
I adjetivo
1 pey (granuja, inmoral) shameless
2 hum (pillo) cheeky: pero qué sinvergüenza eres, what a rogue you are
II mf
1 (inmoral, sin escrúpulos) crook
2 (pillo, descarado) rogue
' sinvergüenza' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
conchudo
- redomada
- redomado
- atorrante
- gandalla
English:
scoundrel
- so-and-so
- crook
* * *♦ adj1. [canalla] shameless2. [fresco, descarado] cheeky♦ nmf1. [canalla] scoundrel;ser un sinvergüenza to be shameless2. [fresco, descarado] cheeky person;ser un sinvergüenza to be a cheeky rascal o so-and-so;ese sinvergüenza me ha quitado el bocadillo that cheeky rascal o so-and-so stole my sandwich* * *I adj shameless, unscrupulousII m/f swine;¡qué sinvergüenza! ( descarado) what a nerve!* * *sinvergüenza adj1) descarado: shameless, brazen, impudent2) travieso: naughtysinvergüenza nmf1) : rogue, scoundrel2) : brat, rascal* * *sinvergüenza n rogue -
13 regir
v.1 to rule, to govern.2 to govern.las leyes que rigen los intercambios comerciales the laws governing trade3 to govern (linguistics).4 to be in force, to apply (ley).5 to be in effect, to predominate, to be in force, to prevail.* * *1 (gobernar) to govern, rule2 (dirigir) to manage, direct, run3 LINGÚÍSTICA to govern1 (ley etc) to be in force, apply; (costumbre) to prevail\el mes que rige the present month* * *verb1) to rule2) govern3) be in force* * *1. VT1) [+ país] to rule, govern; [+ colegio] to run; [+ empresa] to manage, run2) (Econ, Jur) to governlos factores que rigen los cambios del mercado — the factors which govern o control changes in the market
3) (Ling) to take2. VI1) (=estar en vigor) [ley, precio] to be in force; [condición] to prevail, obtain2) [con mes, año]el mes que rige — the present month, the current month
3) (=funcionar) to work, go4) * (=estar cuerdo)no regir — to have a screw loose *, not be all there *
3.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( gobernar) to governb) ley/disposición to governlos factores que rigen la economía — the factors governing o which control the economy
c) (Ling) to take2.regir vi ley/disposición to be in force, be valid3.regirse v pronregirse por algo — sociedad to be governed by something; economía/mercado to be controlled by something o subject to something
* * *= govern, obtain, hold + sway (over).Ex. It is not sufficient merely to describe the processes that govern the creation and generation of indexing and abstracting data.Ex. This simple rule obtains no matter what the type of book may be, unless the publishing house is enabled to run at a loss through some form of external subsidy.Ex. This ideology appealed widely to the librarian as well as the library user and held sway for nearly a quarter of a millennium when, in 1841, a catalytic event in the history of cataloging took place.----* regir el destino = determine + destiny.* regirse = run.* regir una decisión = govern + decision.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( gobernar) to governb) ley/disposición to governlos factores que rigen la economía — the factors governing o which control the economy
c) (Ling) to take2.regir vi ley/disposición to be in force, be valid3.regirse v pronregirse por algo — sociedad to be governed by something; economía/mercado to be controlled by something o subject to something
* * *= govern, obtain, hold + sway (over).Ex: It is not sufficient merely to describe the processes that govern the creation and generation of indexing and abstracting data.
Ex: This simple rule obtains no matter what the type of book may be, unless the publishing house is enabled to run at a loss through some form of external subsidy.Ex: This ideology appealed widely to the librarian as well as the library user and held sway for nearly a quarter of a millennium when, in 1841, a catalytic event in the history of cataloging took place.* regir el destino = determine + destiny.* regirse = run.* regir una decisión = govern + decision.* * *regir [I8 ]vt1 (gobernar) to governel partido que rige los destinos de la nación the party which controls o governs o determines the nation's destiny2 «ley/disposición» to governlas leyes que rigen el comportamiento humano the laws governing o which determine human behaviorlos factores que rigen la economía the factors governing the economy o which control the economyel reglamento que rige la adjudicación de premios the rules governing the awarding of prizes3 ( Ling) to takepreposiciones que rigen acusativo prepositions which take the accusative■ regirviA «ley/disposición» to be in force, be validesa ley ya no rige that law is no longer valid o in forceese horario ya no rige that timetable no longer applies o is no longer validB■ regirselos valores morales por los que todavía se rige esta comunidad the moral values which still hold sway in this community, the moral values by which the community is still governedel mercado libre se rige por las leyes de la oferta y la demanda the free market is controlled by o is subject to the laws of supply and demandlos criterios por los cuales se rige la organización the criteria which are the basic tenets of the organization* * *
regir ( conjugate regir) verbo transitivo
to govern
verbo intransitivo [ley/disposición] to be in force, be valid;
regirse verbo pronominal regirse por algo [ sociedad] to be governed by sth;
[economía/mercado] to be controlled by sth o subject to sth
regir
I verbo transitivo
1 (un país, una conducta) to govern, rule
2 (un negocio) to manage, run
3 Ling to take
II verbo intransitivo
1 (una ley, moda, un horario) to be valid o in force, apply [ para, to]
2 (la mente de alguien) to have all one's faculties
3 (un mecanismo) to work, go
' regir' also found in these entries:
English:
govern
- operate
- operation
- take
* * *♦ vt1. [gobernar] to rule, to govern2. [administrar] to run, to manage3. Ling to take;este verbo rige la preposición “de” this verb takes the preposition “de”4. [determinar] to govern;las leyes que rigen los intercambios comerciales the laws governing trade;las normas básicas que rigen la convivencia en una sociedad the basic rules governing how people live together in a society♦ vi1. [ley] to be in force;rige una moratoria sobre la caza de ballenas a moratorium on whaling is in force;rige el toque de queda en la zona a curfew is in force in the area;la ley regirá con efecto retroactivo the law will apply retrospectively2. [funcionar] to work;este reloj no rige this watch doesn't work* * *I v/t rule, governII v/i apply, be in force* * *regir {28} vt1) : to rule2) : to manage, to run3) : to control, to governlas costumbres que rigen la conducta: the customs which govern behaviorregir vi: to apply, to be in forcelas leyes rigen en los tres países: the laws apply in all three countries
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