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it's+of+no+importance+for

  • 21 caribeño

    adj.
    Caribbean.
    m.
    Caribbean.
    * * *
    1 Caribbean
    * * *
    caribeño, -a
    1.
    2.
    SM / F Carib
    * * *
    I
    - ña adjetivo Caribbean
    II
    - ña masculino, femenino: person from the Caribbean region
    * * *
    Ex. These organizations are of particular importance for information on primary commodities which the European Community trades with the ACP countries (African, Caribbean and Pacific countries).
    ----
    * afrocaribeño = Afro-Caribbean.
    * islas caribeñas, las = Caribbean islands, the.
    * * *
    I
    - ña adjetivo Caribbean
    II
    - ña masculino, femenino: person from the Caribbean region
    * * *

    Ex: These organizations are of particular importance for information on primary commodities which the European Community trades with the ACP countries (African, Caribbean and Pacific countries).

    * afrocaribeño = Afro-Caribbean.
    * islas caribeñas, las = Caribbean islands, the.

    * * *
    caribeño1 -ña
    Caribbean
    caribeño2 -ña
    masculine, feminine
    * * *

    caribeño
    ◊ -ña adjetivo

    Caribbean
    ■ sustantivo masculino, femenino: person from the Caribbean region
    caribeño,-a
    I adjetivo Caribbean
    II sustantivo masculino y femenino person from the Caribbean region

    ' caribeño' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    caribeña
    English:
    Caribbean
    * * *
    caribeño, -a
    adj
    Caribbean
    nm,f
    person from the Caribbean
    * * *
    adj Caribbean
    * * *
    caribeño, -ña adj
    : Caribbean

    Spanish-English dictionary > caribeño

  • 22 coleccionista de discos

    (n.) = discologist
    Ex. The author emphasises the importance for sound archives of making their resources more readily available to discographies and discologists.
    * * *

    Ex: The author emphasises the importance for sound archives of making their resources more readily available to discographies and discologists.

    Spanish-English dictionary > coleccionista de discos

  • 23 de forma que

    so that
    * * *
    Ex. The author discusses the importance for libraries of presenting books to children in ways that will encourage them to read.
    * * *

    Ex: The author discusses the importance for libraries of presenting books to children in ways that will encourage them to read.

    Spanish-English dictionary > de forma que

  • 24 del Caribe

    (adj.) = Caribbean
    Ex. These organizations are of particular importance for information on primary commodities which the European Community trades with the ACP countries (African, Caribbean and Pacific countries).
    * * *
    (adj.) = Caribbean

    Ex: These organizations are of particular importance for information on primary commodities which the European Community trades with the ACP countries (African, Caribbean and Pacific countries).

    Spanish-English dictionary > del Caribe

  • 25 del Pacífico

    adj.
    Pacific.
    * * *
    (adj.) = pacific
    Ex. These organizations are of particular importance for information on primary commodities which the European Community trades with the ACP countries (African, Caribbean and pacific countries).
    * * *
    (adj.) = pacific

    Ex: These organizations are of particular importance for information on primary commodities which the European Community trades with the ACP countries (African, Caribbean and pacific countries).

    Spanish-English dictionary > del Pacífico

  • 26 enfrentarse a Algo cara a cara

    (v.) = address + Nombre + head-on, meet + Nombre + head-on, tackle + Nombre + head-on, face + Nombre + head-on
    Ex. The inclusion of vendors and publishers allows everyone to address sticky business relationships head-on.
    Ex. While we lament the changed environment in which we live, we must not permit inertia and rigidity to prohibit us from meeting head on the demands it makes on us.
    Ex. The author emphasizes the importance for libraries of tackling copyright issues head on.
    Ex. Both stress the need to face the issues head on, but prudently, by documenting the extent of the problem before meeting with the library director.
    * * *
    (v.) = address + Nombre + head-on, meet + Nombre + head-on, tackle + Nombre + head-on, face + Nombre + head-on

    Ex: The inclusion of vendors and publishers allows everyone to address sticky business relationships head-on.

    Ex: While we lament the changed environment in which we live, we must not permit inertia and rigidity to prohibit us from meeting head on the demands it makes on us.
    Ex: The author emphasizes the importance for libraries of tackling copyright issues head on.
    Ex: Both stress the need to face the issues head on, but prudently, by documenting the extent of the problem before meeting with the library director.

    Spanish-English dictionary > enfrentarse a Algo cara a cara

  • 27 hacer frente

    v.
    to cope, to face it.
    * * *
    (v.) = combat, come to + terms with, contain, address + Nombre + head-on, meet + Nombre + head-on, tackle + Nombre + head-on, face + Nombre + head-on, engage
    Ex. The faithful adherents of the ideology of the finding catalog were determined to combat the unwelcome intrusion of Panizzi's scheme before the Royal Commission.
    Ex. Much of the conventional wisdom of librarianship is going to have to undergo what is so aptly described as an 'agonizing reappraisal' before we can come to terms with the new information age.
    Ex. The huge upsurge in publishing activity outran the rudimentary abilities of libraries and contemporary bibliographers to contain it.
    Ex. The inclusion of vendors and publishers allows everyone to address sticky business relationships head-on.
    Ex. While we lament the changed environment in which we live, we must not permit inertia and rigidity to prohibit us from meeting head on the demands it makes on us.
    Ex. The author emphasizes the importance for libraries of tackling copyright issues head on.
    Ex. Both stress the need to face the issues head on, but prudently, by documenting the extent of the problem before meeting with the library director.
    Ex. Australian destroyers engaged the Japanese shore guns and the mine sweepers carried out their task successfully, but not without loss.
    * * *
    (v.) = combat, come to + terms with, contain, address + Nombre + head-on, meet + Nombre + head-on, tackle + Nombre + head-on, face + Nombre + head-on, engage

    Ex: The faithful adherents of the ideology of the finding catalog were determined to combat the unwelcome intrusion of Panizzi's scheme before the Royal Commission.

    Ex: Much of the conventional wisdom of librarianship is going to have to undergo what is so aptly described as an 'agonizing reappraisal' before we can come to terms with the new information age.
    Ex: The huge upsurge in publishing activity outran the rudimentary abilities of libraries and contemporary bibliographers to contain it.
    Ex: The inclusion of vendors and publishers allows everyone to address sticky business relationships head-on.
    Ex: While we lament the changed environment in which we live, we must not permit inertia and rigidity to prohibit us from meeting head on the demands it makes on us.
    Ex: The author emphasizes the importance for libraries of tackling copyright issues head on.
    Ex: Both stress the need to face the issues head on, but prudently, by documenting the extent of the problem before meeting with the library director.
    Ex: Australian destroyers engaged the Japanese shore guns and the mine sweepers carried out their task successfully, but not without loss.

    Spanish-English dictionary > hacer frente

  • 28 países ACP

    Ex. These organizations are of particular importance for information on primary commodities which the European Community trades with the ACP countries (African, Caribbean and Pacific countries).
    * * *

    Ex: These organizations are of particular importance for information on primary commodities which the European Community trades with the ACP countries (African, Caribbean and Pacific countries).

    Spanish-English dictionary > países ACP

  • 29 tina de baño

    (n.) = bathtub
    Ex. The article 'The beast in the bathtub, and other archival laments' stresses the importance for bibliographers and historians of printing of printed items in archives and manuscript collections.
    * * *
    (n.) = bathtub

    Ex: The article 'The beast in the bathtub, and other archival laments' stresses the importance for bibliographers and historians of printing of printed items in archives and manuscript collections.

    Spanish-English dictionary > tina de baño

  • 30 tratar Algo sin rodeos

    (v.) = address + Nombre + head-on, meet + Nombre + head-on, tackle + Nombre + head-on, face + Nombre + head-on
    Ex. The inclusion of vendors and publishers allows everyone to address sticky business relationships head-on.
    Ex. While we lament the changed environment in which we live, we must not permit inertia and rigidity to prohibit us from meeting head on the demands it makes on us.
    Ex. The author emphasizes the importance for libraries of tackling copyright issues head on.
    Ex. Both stress the need to face the issues head on, but prudently, by documenting the extent of the problem before meeting with the library director.
    * * *
    (v.) = address + Nombre + head-on, meet + Nombre + head-on, tackle + Nombre + head-on, face + Nombre + head-on

    Ex: The inclusion of vendors and publishers allows everyone to address sticky business relationships head-on.

    Ex: While we lament the changed environment in which we live, we must not permit inertia and rigidity to prohibit us from meeting head on the demands it makes on us.
    Ex: The author emphasizes the importance for libraries of tackling copyright issues head on.
    Ex: Both stress the need to face the issues head on, but prudently, by documenting the extent of the problem before meeting with the library director.

    Spanish-English dictionary > tratar Algo sin rodeos

  • 31 vendedor

    adj.
    selling.
    m.
    1 salesman, salesperson, venditor.
    2 sales attendant, sales-clerk, salesclerk.
    3 supplier, purveyor, manufacturer, seller.
    * * *
    1 selling
    nombre masculino,nombre femenino
    1 (gen) seller; (hombre) salesman; (mujer) saleswoman
    2 (dependiente) shop assistant
    \
    vendedor ambulante street seller, hawker
    * * *
    (f. - vendedora)
    noun
    salesperson, salesman / saleswoman
    * * *
    vendedor, -a
    1.
    (Econ)

    corriente vendedora — selling tendency, tendency to sell

    2.
    SM/ F (gen) seller, vendor; (en tienda) shop assistant, sales assistant, sales clerk (EEUU); (=minorista) retailer; [de empresa] sales representative, salesman/saleswoman

    vendedor(a) a domicilio — door-to-door salesman/saleswoman

    vendedor(a) ambulante — hawker, pedlar, peddler (EEUU)

    vendedor(a) de seguros — insurance salesman/saleswoman

    * * *
    - dora masculino, femenino
    a) ( en mercado) stallholder, stallkeeper (AmE); ( en tienda) salesclerk (AmE), shop assistant (BrE); (viajante, representante) sales representative
    b) (Der) ( propietario que vende) vendor
    * * *
    = salesman [salesmen, -pl.], salesperson [salespeople, -pl.], merchant, seller, marketer, marketeer.
    Ex. It does not sanction subsuming saleswomen under salesmen.
    Ex. SALESPEOPLE AND SELLING and FIRE FIGHTERS would be specific, and the user would not have to intuit that these headings, perhaps, covered the activities of women as well as men.
    Ex. A considerable amount of archival material relating to Africa, Asia and Oceania has been created by the various activities of Austrian diplomats, merchants and pilgrims since the early modern period.
    Ex. The author stresses the importance for booksellers of seeing themselves as sellers of information rather than of books or other media = El autor resalta la importancia de que los libreros se consideren ellos mismos como vendedores de información más que de libros u otros soportes.
    Ex. Branding is the means by which marketers differentiate their product from alternative services and products.
    Ex. Their aim was to mount a spirited attack on a consumer driven and marketeers' approach to reading and books, and on relativism and populism.
    ----
    * vendedor ambulante = pedlar [peddler, -USA], huckster, roadside vendor, street vendor.
    * vendedor de coches de ocasión = second-hand car dealer, used-car dealer.
    * vendedor de coches de segunda mano = used-car dealer, second-hand car dealer.
    * vendedor de coches usados = used-car dealer, second-hand car dealer.
    * vendedor de fruta = fruit vendor.
    * vendedor de helados = ice cream man.
    * vendedor de pornografía = pornographer.
    * vendedor de sistemas = systems vendor.
    * vendedor electrónico = e-tailer.
    * vendedor ilegal de bebidas alcohólicas = moonshiner.
    * vendedor por Internet = e-tailer.
    * * *
    - dora masculino, femenino
    a) ( en mercado) stallholder, stallkeeper (AmE); ( en tienda) salesclerk (AmE), shop assistant (BrE); (viajante, representante) sales representative
    b) (Der) ( propietario que vende) vendor
    * * *
    = salesman [salesmen, -pl.], salesperson [salespeople, -pl.], merchant, seller, marketer, marketeer.

    Ex: It does not sanction subsuming saleswomen under salesmen.

    Ex: SALESPEOPLE AND SELLING and FIRE FIGHTERS would be specific, and the user would not have to intuit that these headings, perhaps, covered the activities of women as well as men.
    Ex: A considerable amount of archival material relating to Africa, Asia and Oceania has been created by the various activities of Austrian diplomats, merchants and pilgrims since the early modern period.
    Ex: The author stresses the importance for booksellers of seeing themselves as sellers of information rather than of books or other media = El autor resalta la importancia de que los libreros se consideren ellos mismos como vendedores de información más que de libros u otros soportes.
    Ex: Branding is the means by which marketers differentiate their product from alternative services and products.
    Ex: Their aim was to mount a spirited attack on a consumer driven and marketeers' approach to reading and books, and on relativism and populism.
    * vendedor ambulante = pedlar [peddler, -USA], huckster, roadside vendor, street vendor.
    * vendedor de coches de ocasión = second-hand car dealer, used-car dealer.
    * vendedor de coches de segunda mano = used-car dealer, second-hand car dealer.
    * vendedor de coches usados = used-car dealer, second-hand car dealer.
    * vendedor de fruta = fruit vendor.
    * vendedor de helados = ice cream man.
    * vendedor de pornografía = pornographer.
    * vendedor de sistemas = systems vendor.
    * vendedor electrónico = e-tailer.
    * vendedor ilegal de bebidas alcohólicas = moonshiner.
    * vendedor por Internet = e-tailer.

    * * *
    ‹empresa› selling ( before n)
    la parte vendedora the vendor/vendors
    masculine, feminine
    1 (en el mercado) stallholder, stallkeeper ( AmE); (en una tienda) salesclerk ( AmE), shop assistant ( BrE); (viajante, representante) ( masculine) salesman, sales representative; ( feminine) saleswoman, sales representative
    es un vendedor nato he's a born salesman
    los gastos correrán por cuenta del vendedor the costs will be borne by the vendor
    Compuestos:
    vendedor/vendedora a domicilio
    masculine, feminine door-to-door salesman/saleswoman, door-to-door sales agent
    vendedor/vendedora ambulante
    masculine, feminine peddler, hawker
    vendedor callejero, vendedora callejera
    masculine, feminine
    street trader or ( AmE) also street vendor
    vendedor/vendedora de periódicos
    masculine, feminine newspaper vendor o seller
    * * *

     

    vendedor
    ◊ - dora sustantivo masculino, femenino


    ( en tienda) salesclerk (AmE), shop assistant (BrE);
    (viajante, representante) sales representative;

    vendedor ambulante peddler, hawker;
    vendedor de periódicos newspaper vendor o seller

    vendedor,-ora sustantivo masculino y femenino
    1 (hombre) salesman
    (mujer) saleswoman
    3 (en un contrato, relación) seller: el vendedor y el comprador no se ponían de acuerdo, the seller and the buyer didn't agree
    ' vendedor' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    colocar
    - tabacalera
    - tabacalero
    - vendedora
    - zapatera
    - zapatero
    - algodonero
    - carnicero
    - casero
    - charlatán
    - chiclero
    - frutero
    - lechero
    - marchante
    - papelero
    - pastelero
    - puestero
    English:
    aggressive
    - clerk
    - door-to-door
    - fleece
    - hawker
    - newsagent
    - peddler
    - pedlar
    - salesman
    - salesperson
    - seller
    - spiel
    - traveling
    - travelling
    - vendor
    - door
    - sales
    - shop
    * * *
    vendedor, -ora
    adj
    selling
    nm,f
    [en general] seller; [de coches, seguros] salesman, f saleswoman; [en tienda] shop o sales assistant; [en terminología legal] vendor;
    el mayor vendedor de juguetes del país the biggest seller of toys in the country
    vendedor ambulante street vendor;
    vendedor a domicilio door-to-door salesperson;
    vendedor de periódicos newspaper seller
    * * *
    m, vendedora f seller;
    vendedor ambulante peddler, street trader
    * * *
    : salesperson, salesman m, saleswoman f
    * * *
    vendedor n salesman [pl. salesmen]

    Spanish-English dictionary > vendedor

  • 32 иметь второстепенное значение

    * * *
    Иметь второстепенное значение
     The influence of buoyancy on the turbulent transport is of secondary importance for vertically discharging jets.
     The use of this fuel for boilers is a secondary consideration.
     Other possible effects are secondary in significance.

    Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > иметь второстепенное значение

  • 33 приобретать важность

    to become of importance for smth/smb

    Знание, являющееся самым ценным богатством нашего времени, и информационная теория приобрели огромную важность для национальной экономики. — Knowledge being the most valuable wealth of our times, the information theory became of great importance for the national economy.

    Дополнительный универсальный русско-английский словарь > приобретать важность

  • 34 Combing

    This term is used literally and denotes the combing of fibrous materials in sliver form by mechanically actuated combs, or by hand-operated combs. In general, the objects in combing are two, namely (1) to obtain the maximum parallelisation of the fibres, and (2) to remove impurities and undesired short fibres. Combing machines differ considerably in their action on fibres, and in practice the different types of combs are used in somewhat restricted fields. For combing cotton the Nasmith and Heilmann combs are principally used. In the United States of America the Whitin comb is much used. In all three of these machines successive rows of combs are set in cylinders, the material being presented for combing in the form of thin narrow laps, which after combing are formed into a sliver and coiled in a can. For combing wool, four types of comb are in use, namely, the Noble, Lister, Holden and Heilmann. Also see under each name. The combs of the Noble machine are in the form of pins set vertically in one large and two small circles with appropriate mechanism for dabbing the wool into the pins of the combs and means for drawing off the combed wool in a continuous sliver, which is wound into a ball and constitutes the " top " of the worsted trade. The machine has a high production and is suitable for use on a large variety of wools, particularly those of 4-in. to 8-in. staple. The Lister comb is specially suitable for long wools. The combing mechanism includes a gill-box and comb circle. The Holden comb is suitable for wools of 3-in. to 6-in. staple, and of 50's to 70's quality. The Heilmann, also known as the " rectilinear " comb, is used for short wools, say, up to about 2-in. staple, and when used for wool is arranged differently for feed and delivery than for combing cotton. It is becoming of increasing importance for combing short fibred wools for subsequent spinning into fine, full handling hosiery yarns.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Combing

  • 35 особенно важен

    Mathematics: of prime importance is (This is of particular importance for mechanics.;...)

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > особенно важен

  • 36 Б-236

    БУКВА В БУКВУ повторять, запоминать, передавать что и т. п. ( Invar adv fixed WO
    (to repeat, memorize, recount etc sth.) exactly as sth. was said, written etc
    word for word
    verbatim literally.
    Вот мой разговор с I... Я воспроизвожу этот разговор буква в букву - потому что он, как мне кажется, будет иметь огромное, решающее значение для судьбы Единого Государства... (Замятин 1). Here is my conversation with 1-330....I shall reproduce the conversation word for word, for it seems to me that it may have an enormous and decisive importance for the fate of the United State... (1b).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > Б-236

  • 37 буква в букву

    БУКВА В БУКВУ повторять, запоминать, передавать что и т.п.
    [Invar; adv; fixed WO]
    =====
    (to repeat, memorize, recount etc sth.) exactly as sth. was said, written etc:
    - literally.
         ♦ Вот мой разговор с I... Я воспроизвожу этот разговор буква в букву - потому что он, как мне кажется, будет иметь огромное, решающее значение для судьбы Единого Государства... (Замятин 1). Here is my conversation with 1-330....I shall reproduce the conversation word for word, for it seems to me that it may have an enormous and decisive importance for the fate of the United State... (1b).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > буква в букву

  • 38 Mansfield, Charles Blachford

    SUBJECT AREA: Chemical technology
    [br]
    b. 8 May 1819 Rowner, Hampshire, England
    d. 26 February 1855 London, England
    [br]
    English chemist, founder of coal-tar chemistry.
    [br]
    Mansfield, the son of a country clergyman, was educated privately at first, then at Winchester College and at Cambridge; ill health, which dogged his early years, delayed his graduation until 1846. He was first inclined to medicine, but after settling in London, chemistry seemed to him to offer the true basis of the grand scheme of knowledge he aimed to establish. After completing the chemistry course at the Royal College of Chemistry in London, he followed the suggestion of its first director, A.W.von Hofmann, of investigating the chemistry of coal tar. This work led to a result of great importance for industry by demonstrating the valuable substances that could be extracted from coal tar. Mansfield obtained pure benzene, and toluene by a process for which he was granted a patent in 1848 and published in the Chemical Society's journal the same year The following year he published a pamphlet on the applications of benzene.
    Blessed with a private income, Mansfield had no need to support himself by following a regular profession. He was therefore able to spread his brilliant talents in several directions instead of confining them to a single interest. During the period of unrest in 1848, he engaged in social work with a particular concern to improve sanitation. In 1850, a description of a balloon machine in Paris led him to study aeronautics for a while, which bore fruit in an influential book, Aerial Navigation (London, 1851). He then visited Paraguay, making a characteristically thorough and illuminating study of conditions there. Upon his return to London in 1853, Mansfield resumed his chemical studies, especially on salts. He published his results in 1855 as Theory of Salts, his most important contribution to chemical theory.
    Mansfield was in the process of preparing specimens of benzene for the Paris Exhibition of 1855 when a naphtha still overflowed and caught fire. In carrying it to a place of safety, Mansfield sustained injuries which unfortunately proved fatal.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1851, Aerial Navigation, London. 1855, Theory of Salts, London.
    Further Reading
    E.R.Ward, 1969, "Charles Blachford Mansfield, 1819–1855, coal tar chemist and social reformer", Chemistry and Industry 66:1,530–7 (offers a good and well-documented account of his life and achievements).
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Mansfield, Charles Blachford

  • 39 Leschot, Georges Auguste

    [br]
    b. 24 March 1800 Geneva, Switzerland
    d. 4 February 1884 Geneva, Switzerland
    [br]
    Swiss clockmaker, inventor of diamond drilling.
    [br]
    By about 1843, Leschot, who was renowned for designing machines to produce parts of clocks on an industrialized scale, had gathered that the fine, deep lines he found on an Egyptian red porphyry plate must have been cut by diamonds. He thus resurrected a technology that had been largely forgotten over the centuries, when in 1862 his son, who was engaged in constructing a railway line in Italy, was confronted with the problems of tunnelling through hard rock. In Paris he developed a drilling machine consisting of a casing that rotated in a similar way to the American rope drilling method. The crown of the machine was mounted with eight black diamonds, and inside the casing a stream of water circulated continuously to flush out the mud.
    He took out his first patent in France in 1862, and followed it with further ones in many European countries and in America. He continued to concentrate on his watchmaker's profession and left the rights to his patents to his son. It was Leschot's ingenious idea of utilizing diamonds for drilling hard rock that was later applied in different mining processes. It influenced a series of further developments in many countries, including those of Alfred Brandt and Major Beaumont in England. In particular, the fact that the hollow casing produced a complete core was of importance for the increasing amount of petroleum prospecting in Pennsylvania after Edwin Laurentine Drake's find of 1859, where M.C.Bullock sunk the first deep well (200 m) in the world by diamond drilling in 1870. The efforts of Per Anton Crælius in Sweden made diamond drilling a success worldwide.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    D.Colladon, 1884, "Notice sur les inventions mécaniques de M.G.Leschot, horloger", Archives des Sciences Physiques et Naturelles 3, XI (1):297–313 (discusses the influences of Leschot's invention on other engineers in Europe).
    D.Hoffmann, 1962, "Die Erfindung der Diamantbohrmaschine vor 100 Jahren", Der Anschnitt 14(1):15–19 (contains detailed biographical outlines).
    WK

    Biographical history of technology > Leschot, Georges Auguste

  • 40 охраняемый район

    1. protected area

     

    охраняемый район

    [ http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]

    EN

    protected area
    Portions of land protected by special restrictions and laws for the conservation of the natural environment. They include large tracts of land set aside for the protection of wildlife and its habitat; areas of great natural beauty or unique interest; areas containing rare forms of plant and animal life; areas representing unusual geologic formation; places of historic and prehistoric interest; areas containing ecosystems of special importance for scientific investigation and study; and areas which safeguard the needs of the biosphere. (Source: DODERO / WPR)
    [http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]

    Тематики

    EN

    DE

    FR

    Русско-английский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > охраняемый район

См. также в других словарях:

  • importance — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ cardinal, central, considerable, critical, crucial, enormous, extreme, fundamental, great, high, immense …   Collocations dictionary

  • importance — n. 1) to acquire, assume importance 2) to attach, attribute importance to 3) great, paramount, utmost, vital importance (the matter assumed paramount importance) 4) importance for, to 5) of importance (it was a question of great importance to us) …   Combinatory dictionary

  • importance*/*/*/ — [ɪmˈpɔːt(ə)ns] noun [U] the fact of being important, or the degree to which something or someone is important The company recognizes the importance of training its employees.[/ex] The issue has special importance for people in rural areas.[/ex] I …   Dictionary for writing and speaking English

  • importance — importance, consequence, moment, weight, significance, import are comparable when they denote the quality or the character or the state of someone or something that impresses others as of great or sometimes eminent worth, value, or influence.… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • Importance — is a notion of ecommerce (and other) systems that use a combination of user contribution and viewer ranking to determine a contributors value. A contributor who writes 1,000 product reviews but has them all ranked negatively by the viewing… …   Wikipedia

  • for what it is worth — A phrase implying that one is doubtful of the truth of what one has to report or unwilling to be responsible for its accuracy, or aware that one s proposal or suggestion may be of minimal worth • • • Main Entry: ↑worth * * * used to present a… …   Useful english dictionary

  • Importance sampling — In statistics, importance sampling is a general technique for estimating the properties of a particular distribution, while only having samples generated from a different distribution rather than the distribution of interest. Depending on the… …   Wikipedia

  • importance — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Consequence Nouns 1. importance, import, consequence, moment, prominence, consideration, mark, materialness, primacy; significance, concern; emphasis, interest; distinction, prestige, grandeur, majesty,… …   English dictionary for students

  • importance — /im pawr tns/, n. 1. the quality or state of being important; consequence; significance. 2. important position or standing; personal or social consequence. 3. consequential air or manner: an air of bustling importance. 4. Obs. an important matter …   Universalium

  • Importance — (Roget s Thesaurus) < N PARAG:Importance >N GRP: N 1 Sgm: N 1 importance importance consequence moment prominence consideration mark materialness GRP: N 2 Sgm: N 2 import import significance concern …   English dictionary for students

  • importance — im•por•tance [[t]ɪmˈpɔr tns[/t]] n. 1) the quality or state of being important; significance 2) Obs. an important matter 3) Obs. importunity 4) Obs. import; meaning • syn: importance, consequence, significance, moment refer to something valuable …   From formal English to slang

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