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it+is+not+necessarily+true

  • 1 officially

    ə'fiʃəli
    1) ((negative unofficially) as an official: He attended the ceremony officially.) oficialmente
    2) (formally: The new library was officially opened yesterday.) oficialmente
    3) (according to what is announced publicly (though not necessarily true in fact): Officially he is on holiday - actually he is working on a new book.) oficialmente
    - officious
    - officiously
    - officiousness
    - office-bearer
    - through the kind offices of
    - through the offices of

    officially adv oficialmente
    tr[ə'fɪʃəlɪ]
    1 oficialmente
    adv.
    oficialmente adv.
    ə'fɪʃəli
    adverb oficialmente
    [ǝ'fɪʃǝlɪ]
    ADV oficialmente
    * * *
    [ə'fɪʃəli]
    adverb oficialmente

    English-spanish dictionary > officially

  • 2 ostensible

    o'stensəbl
    ((of reasons etc) apparent, but not necessarily true: Illness was the ostensible reason for his absence, but in fact he was just lazy.) aparente

    ostensible adjetivo obvious, evident
    ostensible adjetivo ostensible: sus gestos de dolor eran muy ostensibles, he very clearly showed his pain ' ostensible' also found in these entries: Spanish: sensible English: ostensible
    tr[ɒ'stensɪbəl]
    1 (apparent) aparente; (alleged) pretendido,-a, fingido,-a
    ostensible [ɑ'stɛntsəbəl] adj
    apparent: aparente, ostensible
    ostensibly [-bli] adv
    adj.
    aparente adj.
    ostensible adj.
    pretendido, -a adj.
    supuesto, -a adj.
    ɑːs'tensəbəl, ɒ'stensəbəl
    adjective aparente, pretendido
    [ɒs'tensǝbl]
    ADJ aparente
    * * *
    [ɑːs'tensəbəl, ɒ'stensəbəl]
    adjective aparente, pretendido

    English-spanish dictionary > ostensible

  • 3 interject

    verb (to say (something) which interrupts what one, or someone else, is saying.) interponer
    tr[ɪntə'ʤekt]
    1 interponer
    interject [.ɪntər'ʤɛkt] vt
    : interponer, agregar
    v.
    interponer v.
    'ɪntər'dʒekt, ˌɪntə'dʒekt
    transitive verb \<\<cry\>\> lanzar*; \<\<remark\>\> agregar*, hacer*

    not necessarily, he interjected — - no necesariamente - interpuso or terció

    [ˌɪntǝ'dʒekt]
    VT [+ question, remark] interponer

    "that's not true," he interjected — -eso no es cierto -interpuso él

    * * *
    ['ɪntər'dʒekt, ˌɪntə'dʒekt]
    transitive verb \<\<cry\>\> lanzar*; \<\<remark\>\> agregar*, hacer*

    not necessarily, he interjected — - no necesariamente - interpuso or terció

    English-spanish dictionary > interject

См. также в других словарях:

  • Not Necessarily the News — Format Satire Country of origin  United States Production …   Wikipedia

  • not necessarily — 1) not always, or not in every situation Individual symptoms are not necessarily typical of the disease. Headings within the text should be bold but not necessarily bigger. Our clients won t necessarily understand why we are raising our prices.… …   English dictionary

  • necessarily — ne|ces|sar|i|ly W2S1 [ˈnesısərıli, ˌnesıˈserıli US ˌnesıˈserıli] adv 1.) not necessarily possibly, but not certainly ▪ That is not necessarily true. ▪ Expensive restaurants aren t necessarily the best. ▪ Having this disease does not necessarily… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • Not Quite Hollywood: The Wild, Untold Story of Ozploitation! — Promotional poster Directed by Mark Hartley Produced by …   Wikipedia

  • Not Quite Dead Enough —   …   Wikipedia

  • true copy — n. A copy of a document that is not necessarily an exact duplicate of the original but is close enough to be clearly understood and recognized. The Essential Law Dictionary. Sphinx Publishing, An imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc. Amy Hackney Blackwell …   Law dictionary

  • necessarily — [[t]ne̱sɪse̱rɪli, srɪli[/t]] ♦♦♦ 1) ADV: with neg, ADV group, ADV before v (vagueness) If you say that something is not necessarily the case, you mean that it may not be the case or is not always the case. Anger is not necessarily the most useful …   English dictionary

  • True Jesus Church in China — Contents 1 Background …   Wikipedia

  • true — adj. 1 right or correct VERBS ▪ be, ring, seem, sound ▪ Her explanation doesn t ring quite true. ▪ come ▪ All her wishes came tr …   Collocations dictionary

  • necessarily — nec|es|sar|i|ly [ ,nesə serəli ] adverb *** always or in every situation: Public spending necessarily affects the economy. not necessarily 1. ) not always or not in every situation: Individual symptoms are not necessarily typical of the disease.… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • True History — Infobox Book name = True History or True Story translator = image caption = author = Lucian of Samosata country = Rome language = Latin genre = Science fiction publisher = Various release date = 2nd century AD isbn = n/a True History or True… …   Wikipedia

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