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1 infinité
infinité [ɛ̃finite]feminine noun* * *ɛ̃finite* * *ɛ̃finite nf* * *infinité nf infinity; une infinité de an endless number of.[ɛ̃finite] nom féminin1. [très grand nombre]on me posa une infinité de questions I was asked endless ou a great many questions2. (littéraire) -
2 sonsuz sayı
infinite number -
3 бесконечное число
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4 tau whāioio
infinite number -
5 бесконечное число
Русско-английский словарь по общей лексике > бесконечное число
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6 tau whāioio
infinite number -
7 бесконечное число
infinite number мат., infinitely manyРусско-английский научно-технический словарь Масловского > бесконечное число
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8 бесчисленное множество
infinite number; countless numbers мн. ч.; infinitely manyРусско-английский словарь по общей лексике > бесчисленное множество
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9 unendlich
I Adj. PHYS., MATH., MUS. infinite (auch fig. Sorgfalt, Vergnügen etc.); unendliche Größe oder Zahl MATH. infinite quantity; unendliche Reihe MATH. infinite series; das Unendliche infinity (auch MATH.); unendlicher Kreislauf recurring spiral; auf unendlich einstellen FOT. focus at infinity; ( bis) ins Unendliche on and on and on, endlessly, ad infinitum; das geht ins Unendliche it’s never-ending; unendliche Geduld ( mit jemandem) haben have infinite patience (with s.o.); Die unendliche Geschichte Roman: The Neverending StoryII Adv. infinitely; fig. (sehr) exceedingly, incredibly umg.; sich unendlich freuen etc. be pleased etc. no end umg.; unendlich traurig / glücklich tremendously sad / happy; unendlich klein infinitesimal; unendlich lang endless; unendlich lange warten umg. wait for absolute(ly) ages; unendlich viel(e ) Zahl: an infinite number (of); Menge: an infinite amount (of); mit Ergänzung: auch no end of umg.; unendlich viel(e) Sorgen etc. no end of trouble etc.; er hat sich unendlich bemüht he took infinite (umg. no end of) pains; jemanden unendlich lieben love s.o. so very much ( oder infinitely geh., oder to bits, Am. pieces umg.)* * *unending; infinite; endless* * *un|ẹnd|lich1. adjinfinite; (zeitlich) endless; Universum infinite, boundless(bis) ins Unendliche (lit, Math) — to infinity
2. advendlessly; infinitely; (fig = sehr) terriblyunendlich viele Dinge/Leute etc — no end of things/people etc
* * *1) (extremely; to a very great degree: The time at which our sun will finally cease to burn is infinitely far away.) infinitely2) (without end or limits: We believe that space is infinite.) infinite* * *un·end·lich[ʊnˈʔɛntlɪç]I. adj1. (nicht überschaubar) infinite2. (unbegrenzt) endless, infinite, boundless3. (überaus groß) infinite, immensemit \unendlicher Liebe/Geduld/Güte with infinite [or endless] love/patience/goodness\unendliche Strapazen immense [or endless] strainetw auf \unendlich einstellen to focus sth at infinity\unendlich viele Leute heaven [or god] knows how many people* * *1.Adjektiv infinite, boundless <space, sea, expanse, fig.: love, care, patience, etc.>; (zeitlich) endless; never-endingdas Unendliche — the infinite (Philos.); infinity (Math.)
2.auf unendlich stellen — (Fot.) focus < lens> on infinity
* * *A. adj PHYS, MATH, MUS infinite (auch fig Sorgfalt, Vergnügen etc);Zahl MATH infinite quantity;unendliche Reihe MATH infinite series;unendlicher Kreislauf recurring spiral;auf unendlich einstellen FOTO focus at infinity;(bis) ins Unendliche on and on and on, endlessly, ad infinitum;das geht ins Unendliche it’s never-ending;unendliche Geduld (mit jemandem) haben have infinite patience (with sb);Die unendliche Geschichte Roman: The Neverending StoryB. adv infinitely; fig (sehr) exceedingly, incredibly umg;unendlich traurig/glücklich tremendously sad/happy;unendlich klein infinitesimal;unendlich lang endless;unendlich lange warten umg wait for absolute(ly) ages;unendlich viel(e) Zahl: an infinite number (of); Menge: an infinite amount (of); mit Ergänzung: auch no end of umg;er hat sich unendlich bemüht he took infinite (umg no end of) pains;* * *1.Adjektiv infinite, boundless <space, sea, expanse, fig.: love, care, patience, etc.>; (zeitlich) endless; never-endingdas Unendliche — the infinite (Philos.); infinity (Math.)
2.auf unendlich stellen — (Fot.) focus < lens> on infinity
* * *(Mathematik) adj.infinity n. (Mathematik) adv.infinite n. adj.infinite adj. adv.indefinitely adv.infinitely adv.unendingly adv. -
10 infinità
f infinityho un'infinità di cose da fare I've got no end of things to do* * *infinità s.f.1 infinity; infiniteness: l'infinità del creato, the infinity of the universe; l'infinità della misericordia divina, the infiniteness of God's mercy2 (gran numero) infinite number, infinity, endless number: un'infinità di cose, an infinite number of things; un'infinità di gente, an endless crowd of people (o swarms of people); un'infinità di modi di fare qlco., infinite ways of doing sthg.; un'infinità di ragioni, endless reasons.* * *[infini'ta]sostantivo femminile invariabile infinityun'infinità di — an infinity of, an endless number of
* * *infinità/infini'ta/f.inv.infinity; un'infinità di an infinity of, an endless number of. -
11 immensità
immensità s.f.1 immensity; vastness; hugeness, enormousness: l'immensità dell'universo, the vastness of the universe2 (grande quantità) infinite number: ha un'immensità di preoccupazioni, he has an enormous number of worries.* * *[immensi'ta]sostantivo femminile invariabile1) (di luogo) immensity, vastness2) (grande quantità) infinity, infinite number* * *immensità/immensi'ta/f.inv.1 (di luogo) immensity, vastness2 (grande quantità) infinity, infinite number. -
12 uendelig
no end (of), infinite* * *adj infinite ( fx distance, number, time, patience, kindness),( uden grænser) boundless ( fx desert, ocean, energy, optimism);( som aldrig får ende) unending, endless,F interminable ( fx discussions);sb (mat.) infinity;adv infinitely;[ i det uendelige] indefinitely ( fx it may be prolonged indefinitely),(neds) for ever ( fx it seemed to last for ever), for ages ( fxwe waited for ages); perpetually, eternally ( fx they wereeternally postponing it);[ han beklager sig i det uendelige] he is always complaining;[ uendelig lille] infinitesimal;[ uendelig mange] an infinite number of, countless,T any amount of;[ uendelig stor] infinite, infinitely great. -
13 infinidad
f.infinity.* * *1 (infinito) infinity2 (gran cantidad) great number, infinite number* * *SF1) (Mat) infinity2) (=gran cantidad)infinidad de veces — countless times, innumerable times
hay infinidad de personas que creen... — any number of people believe..., there's no end of people who believe...
* * *femenino (multitud, gran cantidad)infinidad de veces — innumerable o countless times
* * *= infinity.Ex. Knowledge, in its growth, must obey the universal laws which prohibit the continuance of any form of exponential increase toward infinity.* * *femenino (multitud, gran cantidad)infinidad de veces — innumerable o countless times
* * *= infinity.Ex: Knowledge, in its growth, must obey the universal laws which prohibit the continuance of any form of exponential increase toward infinity.
* * *(multitud, gran cantidad) infinidad DE algo:en infinidad de ocasiones on countless occasionshay infinidad de personas dispuestas a colaborar there are vast numbers of people willing to cooperate, there are no end of people willing to cooperate ( colloq)el frío ha causado infinidad de roturas de cañerías de gas the cold has caused an enormous o a huge number of burst gas pipesrecibimos infinidad de cartas/llamadas we received countless letters/callsse lo he dicho infinidad de veces I've told him innumerable o countless times* * *
infinidad sustantivo femenino ( gran cantidad):
infinidad de veces innumerable o countless times
infinidad f (multitud, muchas) great number
en infinidad de casos, in countless cases
' infinidad' also found in these entries:
English:
infinity
- overwhelm
* * *infinidad nfinfinidad de countless, innumerable;existen infinidad de formas de hacerlo there are countless ways of doing it;en un día sucedieron infinidad de cosas in the course of one day thousands of things happened;en infinidad de ocasiones on countless occasions;nos ofrecieron una infinidad de regalos they showered us with gifts* * *f:infinidad de countless* * *infinidad nf1) : infinity2) sinfín: great number, huge quantityuna infinidad de veces: countless times* * *infinidad n a great many -
14 अनन्त _ananta
अनन्त a. [नास्ति अन्तो यस्य] Endless, infinite, eternal, boundless, inexhaustible; ˚रत्नप्रभवस्य यस्य Ku.1.3.-न्तः 1 N. of Viṣṇu; गन्धर्वाप्सरसः सिद्धाः किन्नरोरगचारणाः । नान्तं गुणानां जानन्ति (नास्यान्तमधिगच्छन्ति) तेनानन्तो$यमुच्यते ॥; also of Viṣṇu's couch, the serpent -Śeṣa; of Kṛiṣṇa and his brother; of Siva, the 14th Arhat; Vāsuki, the lord of serpents अनन्तश्चास्मि नागानाम् Bg.1.29.-2 A cloud.-3 Talc.-4 N. of a plant (सिन्दु- वार) Vitex Trifolia (Mar. निरगुडी).-5 The asterism श्रवण.-6 A silken cord with 14 knots tied round the right arm on the अनन्तचतुर्दशी day.-7 The letter आ.-न्ता 1 The earth (the endless).-2 The number one.-3 Names of various females; N. of Pārvatī.-4 Names of various plants; शारिवा, अनन्तमूल (a very medicinal plant) दूर्वा, आमलकी, गुडूची, अग्निमन्थ, कणा, लाङ्गली, दुरालाभा, हरीतकी, अग्निशिखा, श्यामलता, पिप्पली.-न्ती A small silken cord tied round the left arm of a woman.-न्तम् 1 The sky, atmosphere.-2 Infinity, eternity.-3 Absolution, final beatitude; तदनन्ताय कल्पते Pt.2.72.-4 The Supreme Spirit, Brahman (परब्रह्म,); सत्यं ज्ञानमनन्तं ब्रह्मेति श्रुतिः । न व्यापित्वाद्देशतो$न्तो नित्यत्वान्नापि कालतः । न वस्तुतो$पि सर्वात्म्यादानन्त्यं ब्रह्मणि त्रिधा ॥-5 A sloping and a projecting member of the entabla- ture representing a continued pent-roof; अनन्तं चान्तरिक्षं च प्रस्तरं चाष्टधा लुपाः । Māna.18.174-175. cf. अनन्तः शेषविष्ण्वोश्चानवधौ क्लीबमम्बरे । स्त्रियां स्याच्छारिपादूर्वाविशल्याला- ङ्गलीषु च । हैमवत्यां गळूच्यां च...। Nm.-Comp. -आत्मन् m. the Supreme Spirit;-कर a. magnifying to any extent; P.III.2.21.-ग a. moving forever.-गुण a. possessed of endless merits; of countless or infinite possessed of endless merits; of countless or infinite number; प्लवङ्गानामनन्तगुणतैधते Mv.6.55.-चतुर्दशी, -˚व्रतम् [अनन्तस्य आराधनं यस्यां सा चतुर्दशी] the 14th day of the bright half of Bhādrapada when Ananta is worshipped-चरित्रः N. of a Bodhisattva.-जित् (अनन्तानि भूतानि जितवान्)1 N. of Vāsudeva, the conqueror of all.-2 N. of an Arhat deity.-तान a. of endless width, extensive.-तीर्थकृत् m.1 one who visits many places of polgimage.-2 a Jaina deity.-तृतीया the third day of the bright half of भाद्रपद, मार्गशीर्ष or वैशाख; नभस्ये वाथ वैशाखे मार्गशीर्षे$थवा पुनः । शुक्ल- पक्षतृतीयायां... उक्तानन्ततृतीयैषा सुतानन्दफलप्रदा.-दृष्टिः [अनन्ता दृष्टयो नेत्राणि यस्य] N. of Śiva, or of Indra.-देवः [अनन्तो देव इव]1 the serpent Seṣa.-2 [अनन्ते दीव्यति; दिव्-अच्] N. of Nārayaṇa who sleeps on Seṣa.-3 N. of the king of Kashmir.-नेमिः N. of the king of Mālava, a contemporary of शाक्यमुनि-पार a. of endless width, boundless; ˚रं किल शब्दशास्त्रम् Pt.1.-पालः N. of a warrior- chief in Kashmir.-मतिः N. of a Bodhisattva.-मायिन् a. of endless tricks, endlessly deceitful.-मूलः a medi- cinal plant (शारिवा).-राशिः an infinite quantity.-रूप a. of innumerable forms or shapes; epithet of Visnu.-वातः a disease of the head, resembling teta- nus.-विक्रमिन् N. of a Bodhisattva.-विजयः [अनन्तान् विजयते ध्वनिद्वारा अनेन] N. of Yudhiṣṭhira's conchshell. अनन्तविजयं राजा कुन्तीपुत्रो युधिष्ठिरः Bg.1.16.-वीर्यः N. of the 23rd Jaina Arhat of a future age.-व्रतम् 1 See अनन्तचतुर्दशी above.-2 N. of the 12nd Adhyaya of the Bhaviṣyottara-Purāṇa.-शक्ति a. of boundless power, omnipotent, epithet of the Supreme Being.-शयनम् Travancore; Sriraṅgapaṭṭaṇa (because there are temples of Viṣṇu reclining on अनन्त Serpent).-शीर्ष N. of Visnu or the Supreme Being. (-र्षा) N. of the wife of Vāsuki.-शुष्म a. Ved. possessing endless strength; endlessly blowing.-श्री a. of boundless magnificence, an epithet of the Supreme Being. -
15 Grammar
I think that the failure to offer a precise account of the notion "grammar" is not just a superficial defect in linguistic theory that can be remedied by adding one more definition. It seems to me that until this notion is clarified, no part of linguistic theory can achieve anything like a satisfactory development.... I have been discussing a grammar of a particular language here as analogous to a particular scientific theory, dealing with its subject matter (the set of sentences of this language) much as embryology or physics deals with its subject matter. (Chomsky, 1964, p. 213)Obviously, every speaker of a language has mastered and internalized a generative grammar that expresses his knowledge of his language. This is not to say that he is aware of the rules of grammar or even that he can become aware of them, or that his statements about his intuitive knowledge of his language are necessarily accurate. (Chomsky, 1965, p. 8)Much effort has been devoted to showing that the class of possible transformations can be substantially reduced without loss of descriptive power through the discovery of quite general conditions that all such rules and the representations they operate on and form must meet.... [The] transformational rules, at least for a substantial core grammar, can be reduced to the single rule, "Move alpha" (that is, "move any category anywhere"). (Mehler, Walker & Garrett, 1982, p. 21)4) The Relationship of Transformational Grammar to Semantics and to Human Performancehe implications of assuming a semantic memory for what we might call "generative psycholinguistics" are: that dichotomous judgments of semantic well-formedness versus anomaly are not essential or inherent to language performance; that the transformational component of a grammar is the part most relevant to performance models; that a generative grammar's role should be viewed as restricted to language production, whereas sentence understanding should be treated as a problem of extracting a cognitive representation of a text's message; that until some theoretical notion of cognitive representation is incorporated into linguistic conceptions, they are unlikely to provide either powerful language-processing programs or psychologically relevant theories.Although these implications conflict with the way others have viewed the relationship of transformational grammars to semantics and to human performance, they do not eliminate the importance of such grammars to psychologists, an importance stressed in, and indeed largely created by, the work of Chomsky. It is precisely because of a growing interdependence between such linguistic theory and psychological performance models that their relationship needs to be clarified. (Quillian, 1968, p. 260)here are some terminological distinctions that are crucial to explain, or else confusions can easily arise. In the formal study of grammar, a language is defined as a set of sentences, possibly infinite, where each sentence is a string of symbols or words. One can think of each sentence as having several representations linked together: one for its sound pattern, one for its meaning, one for the string of words constituting it, possibly others for other data structures such as the "surface structure" and "deep structure" that are held to mediate the mapping between sound and meaning. Because no finite system can store an infinite number of sentences, and because humans in particular are clearly not pullstring dolls that emit sentences from a finite stored list, one must explain human language abilities by imputing to them a grammar, which in the technical sense is a finite rule system, or programme, or circuit design, capable of generating and recognizing the sentences of a particular language. This "mental grammar" or "psychogrammar" is the neural system that allows us to speak and understand the possible word sequences of our native tongue. A grammar for a specific language is obviously acquired by a human during childhood, but there must be neural circuitry that actually carries out the acquisition process in the child, and this circuitry may be called the language faculty or language acquisition device. An important part of the language faculty is universal grammar, an implementation of a set of principles or constraints that govern the possible form of any human grammar. (Pinker, 1996, p. 263)A grammar of language L is essentially a theory of L. Any scientific theory is based on a finite number of observations, and it seeks to relate the observed phenomena and to predict new phenomena by constructing general laws in terms of hypothetical constructs.... Similarly a grammar of English is based on a finite corpus of utterances (observations), and it will contain certain grammatical rules (laws) stated in terms of the particular phonemes, phrases, etc., of English (hypothetical constructs). These rules express structural relations among the sentences of the corpus and the infinite number of sentences generated by the grammar beyond the corpus (predictions). (Chomsky, 1957, p. 49)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Grammar
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16 ἄπειρος
A without trial or experience of a thing, unused to, unacquainted with,ἄθλων Thgn.1013
;καλῶν Pi.I.8(7).70
;κακότητος Emp.112.3
;τυράννων Hdt.5.92
.ά; τῆς ναυτικῆς Id.8.1
;Περσέων Id.9.58
, cf. 46; πόνων, νόσων, A.Ch. 371, Fr.350.2; ; ;πολέμων Th.1.141
;τοῦ μεγέθους τῆς νήσου Id.6.1
; ;ἀνδρῶν ἀγαθῶν Lys.2.27
; of a woman, ἄ. ἄλλων ἀνδρῶν not having known other men (beside her husband), Hdt.2.111;ἄ. λέχους E.Med. 672
: abs. in same sense, ib. 1091 (lyr.).2 abs., inexperienced, ignorant, Pi.I.8(7).48, etc.;γλυκὺ δ' ἀπείροισι πόλεμος Id.Fr. 110
;δίδασκ' ἄπειρον A.Ch. 118
. Adv.ἀπείρως, ἔχειν τῶν νόμων Hdt.2.45
;πρός τι X.Mem.2.6.29
;περί τινος Isoc.5.19
: [comp] Comp.ἀπειρότερον, παρεσκευασμένοι Th.1.49
;- οτέρως Isoc.12.37
, Arist.Resp. 470b9.------------------------------------A boundless, infinite,σκότος Pi.Fr. 130.8
;τὸν ὑψοῦ τόνδ' ἄ. αἰθέρα E.Fr. 941
; ἤπειρον εἰς ἄ. ib. 998; of number, countless,πλῆθος Hdt.1.204
;ἀριθμὸς ἄ. πλήθει Pl.Prm. 144a
;ἄ. τὸ πλῆθος Id.R. 525a
, al.;εἰς ἄ. τὴν ἀδικίαν αὐξάνειν Id.Lg. 910b
;χρόνος ἄ. OGI383.113
(i B.C.): [comp] Comp.- ότερος Dam.Pr.50
, Phlp.in Mete.17.15; τὸ ἄ. the Infinite, as a first principle, Arist.Ph. 203a3, etc.; esp. in the system of Anaximander, D.L.2.1, etc.; but τὰ ἄπειρα individuals, opp. τὰ εἴδη, Arist.Top. 109b14, cf. Metaph. 999a27, al.; ἄπειρος, opp. πεπερασμένος, Ph. 202b31; εἰς ἄ. ἰέναι, προϊέναι, ἥκειν, etc., APo. 81b33, Ph. 209a25, EN 1113a2, etc.; [γῆ] ἐπ' ἄπειρον ἐρριζωμένη Str.1.1.20
; also, indefinite,ὕλη Stoic.2.86
.2 in Trag., freq.of garments, etc., in which one is entangled past escape, i.e. without outlet,ἀμφίβληστρον A.Ag. 1382
; ;ὕφασμα E.Or.25
.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἄπειρος
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17 oneindig
♦voorbeelden:1 met oneindig geduld • with infinite/endless patienceiets oneindig mooi/goed vinden • find something infinitely beautiful/incredibly well done〈 wiskunde〉 oneindig groot/klein • infinite(ly big), infinitesimalwe voelen ons oneindig veel beter • we're feeling tons better -
18 число
ср.1) ( количество) numberбез числа — without number, in great numbers
огромное число (чего-л.) — great number (of), abundance (of)
2) матем. numberоднозначное число — ( от 0 до 9) simple quantity
передаточное число — тех. gear-ratio
целое число — whole number, integer
энное число — any number, n number
3) date, day (месяца)пометить задним числом — to antedate, to predate, to backdate
какого числа вы уезжаете? — what is the date of your departure?, which day are you leaving?
4) грам. number•в числе — (кого-л./чего-л.) among
входить в число — to be among, to rank among
из числа — of, from among(st), of a list of
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19 agresivo
adj.1 aggressive, assertive, belligerent, go-getter.2 aggressive, combative, hostile, truculent.3 aggressive.4 predatory.* * *► adjetivo1 aggressive* * *(f. - agresiva)adj.* * *ADJ (=violento) aggressive; (=vigoroso) forceful, vigorous* * *- va adjetivo aggressive* * *= aggressive, belligerent, truculent, killer, sociopathic, combative, pushy [pushier -comp., pushiest -sup.], bellicose, campaigning.Ex. Problem patrons include, but are not limited to, illiterates simply seeking shelter, alcoholics, the homeless, the mentally disturbed, aggressive young people, and those with offensive odours.Ex. Dexter Rundle thought: 'The day was progressing serenely and I was feeling not at all belligerent' = Dexter Rundle pensó: "El día iba progresando con serenidad y no me sentía de ninguna manera agresivo".Ex. Senior staff members said that these fevers of truculent behavior had manifested themselves only within the past two or three years.Ex. The article has the title 'Guerilla Web strategies: killer marketing tactics to make your site the most popular on the Web'.Ex. The problem of optimally refining sociopathic knowledge bases is modeled as a bipartite graph.Ex. His book is a one-sided insider account of the scrappy, often combative style that characterized the New York intellectual crowd from the late 1940s to the mid 1960s.Ex. Parents can help the development of a child prodigy in an infinite number of ways, ranging from the attentive but not too pushy to the downright obsessive.Ex. For all their bellicose rhetoric, they still hope that diplomatic pressure will persuade Iran to compromise.Ex. He is fearless, courageous, campaigning, waspish and wise.----* comportamiento agresivo = aggressive behaviour.* de modo agresivo = aggressively.* venta agresiva = hard-sell.* * *- va adjetivo aggressive* * *= aggressive, belligerent, truculent, killer, sociopathic, combative, pushy [pushier -comp., pushiest -sup.], bellicose, campaigning.Ex: Problem patrons include, but are not limited to, illiterates simply seeking shelter, alcoholics, the homeless, the mentally disturbed, aggressive young people, and those with offensive odours.
Ex: Dexter Rundle thought: 'The day was progressing serenely and I was feeling not at all belligerent' = Dexter Rundle pensó: "El día iba progresando con serenidad y no me sentía de ninguna manera agresivo".Ex: Senior staff members said that these fevers of truculent behavior had manifested themselves only within the past two or three years.Ex: The article has the title 'Guerilla Web strategies: killer marketing tactics to make your site the most popular on the Web'.Ex: The problem of optimally refining sociopathic knowledge bases is modeled as a bipartite graph.Ex: His book is a one-sided insider account of the scrappy, often combative style that characterized the New York intellectual crowd from the late 1940s to the mid 1960s.Ex: Parents can help the development of a child prodigy in an infinite number of ways, ranging from the attentive but not too pushy to the downright obsessive.Ex: For all their bellicose rhetoric, they still hope that diplomatic pressure will persuade Iran to compromise.Ex: He is fearless, courageous, campaigning, waspish and wise.* comportamiento agresivo = aggressive behaviour.* de modo agresivo = aggressively.* venta agresiva = hard-sell.* * *agresivo -va1 (feroz, violento) aggressive2 ‹campaña/publicidad› aggressive, forceful* * *
agresivo◊ -va adjetivo
aggressive
agresivo,-a adjetivo aggressive
' agresivo' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
agresiva
- volverse
- combativo
English:
aggressive
- belligerent
- hawkish
- pushy
- truculent
* * *agresivo, -a adj1. [violento] aggressive2. [osado] aggressive;una publicidad muy agresiva very aggressive advertising* * *adj aggressive* * *agresivo, -va adj: aggressive♦ agresivamente adv* * *agresivo adj aggressive -
20 insistente
adj.insistent.f. & m.insistent person.* * *► adjetivo1 insistent* * *ADJ [persona] insistent; [quejas] persistent* * *adjetivo < persona> insistent; <recomendaciones/pedidos> repeated (before n), persistent; < timbrazos> insistent, repeated (before n)* * *= insistent, undaunted, importunate, pushy [pushier -comp., pushiest -sup.], tenacious.Ex. Increasingly insistent, however, are the voices of those who disagree.Ex. His novels reflect the story of the spirit of man, undaunted and ceaselessly toiling and achieving ever higher levels of culture.Ex. She concludes that this problem probes the importunate boundaries separating man from beast and the natural from the monstrous.Ex. Parents can help the development of a child prodigy in an infinite number of ways, ranging from the attentive but not too pushy to the downright obsessive.Ex. She's tough and tenacious and she still has almost as many as she has friends.* * *adjetivo < persona> insistent; <recomendaciones/pedidos> repeated (before n), persistent; < timbrazos> insistent, repeated (before n)* * *= insistent, undaunted, importunate, pushy [pushier -comp., pushiest -sup.], tenacious.Ex: Increasingly insistent, however, are the voices of those who disagree.
Ex: His novels reflect the story of the spirit of man, undaunted and ceaselessly toiling and achieving ever higher levels of culture.Ex: She concludes that this problem probes the importunate boundaries separating man from beast and the natural from the monstrous.Ex: Parents can help the development of a child prodigy in an infinite number of ways, ranging from the attentive but not too pushy to the downright obsessive.Ex: She's tough and tenacious and she still has almost as many as she has friends.* * *‹persona› insistent; ‹recomendaciones/pedidos› repeated ( before n), persistent; ‹timbrazos› insistent, repeated ( before n)se dieron insistentes avisos por megafonía they made repeated announcements over the loudspeaker* * *
insistente adjetivo ‹ persona› insistent;
‹recomendaciones/pedidos› repeated ( before n), persistent;
‹ timbrazos› insistent, repeated ( before n)
insistente adjetivo insistent, persistent, repeated
' insistente' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
machacón
- machacona
English:
insistent
- nagging
- persistent
* * *insistente adj[persona] insistent; [preguntas] persistent;la insistente lluvia obligó a cancelar el concierto the persistent rain meant that the concert had to be cancelled;circulaban insistentes rumores sobre un golpe de estado there were persistent rumours of a coup d'état* * *adj insistent* * *insistente adj: insistent♦ insistentemente adv
См. также в других словарях:
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