-
21 practical knowledge
prac.ti.cal know.ledge[pr'æktikəl nɔlidʒ] n conhecimentos empíricos, sabedoria empírica. -
22 self-knowledge
self-know.ledge[self n'ɔlidʒ] n conhecimento de si próprio. -
23 special knowledge
spe.cial knowl.edge[speʃəl n'ɔlidʒ] n conhecimento especializado. -
24 tacit knowledge
conhecimento tácitoConhecimento que um falante nativo tem de sua língua, e refere-se ao fato de que são inconscientes suas intuições sobre a maneira como é estruturada e funciona sua língua. -
25 common
['komən] 1. adjective1) (seen or happening often; quite normal or usual: a common occurrence; These birds are not so common nowadays.) vulgar2) (belonging equally to, or shared by, more than one: This knowledge is common to all of us; We share a common language.) comum3) (publicly owned: common property.) público4) (coarse or impolite: She uses some very common expressions.) ordinário5) (of ordinary, not high, social rank: the common people.) plebeu6) (of a noun, not beginning with a capital letter (except at the beginning of a sentence): The house is empty.) comum2. noun((a piece of) public land for everyone to use, with few or no buildings: the village common.) espaço aberto- commoner- common knowledge
- common law
- common-law
- commonplace
- common-room
- common sense
- the Common Market
- the House of Commons
- the Commons
- in common* * *com.mon[k'ɔmən] n 1 terra comum, terra para uso de uma comunidade. 2 o que é geral ou usual, o comum. 3 Jur servidão. • adj 1 comum, de todos ou de muitos. 2 popular, geral, universal. 3 público, que pertence à comunidade. 4 usual, familiar, habitual. 5 notório. 6 raso, sem graduação ou posto. 7 vulgar, trivial. 8 ordinário, medíocre, inferior, baixo, barato. 9 Gram comum de dois. above ou beyond the common, out of the extraordinário, fora do comum. by common consent com o consentimento de todos. common of pasture servidão de pastagem. common to all geral, comum a todos. in common with em comum. the common people o povo. the commons = link=commons commons. to make common cause with unir-se em uma causa comum com. -
26 finite
1) (having an end or limit: Human knowledge is finite, divine knowledge infinite.) finito2) ((of a verb) having a subject: He speaks; I ran; She fell.) finito* * *fi.nite[f'ainait] n finito, coisas finitas. • adj finito, limitado, terminável, contingente. -
27 frontier
1) (a boundary between countries: We crossed the frontier; ( also adjective) a frontier town.) fronteira2) (the farthest area of land on which people live and work, before the country becomes wild and deserted: Many families went to make a new life on the frontier.) fronteira3) (the limits or boundaries (of knowledge etc): the frontiers of scientific knowledge.) fronteira* * *fron.tier[fr'∧ntiə] n fronteira: a) parte mais remota de um país, duma colônia, onde começa o sertão. b) limite, divisa entre dois países, raia. c) região pouco explorada. • adj fronteiriço, limítrofe. -
28 quiz
[kwiz]plural - quizzes; noun1) (a game or competition in which knowledge is tested by asking questions: a television quiz; a general-knowledge quiz.) jogo de perguntas2) (a short test given to students.)•* * *[kwiz] n 1 jogo ou competição em que se fazem perguntas para testar conhecimento geral. 2 exame oral ou escrito de um indivíduo ou grupo. • vt 1 questionar, interrogar. 2 aplicar um teste oral. -
29 science
1) (knowledge gained by observation and experiment.) ciência2) (a branch of such knowledge eg biology, chemistry, physics etc.) ciência3) (these sciences considered as a whole: My daughter prefers science to languages.) ciências•- scientifically
- scientist
- science fiction* * *sci.ence[s'aiəns] n 1 ciência. 2 conhecimento, sabedoria. 3 conhecimento teórico e prático. 4 sistema ou método baseado em princípios científicos. Christian Science ciência cristã. doctor of science doutor em ciências naturais. man of science homem de ciência, cientista. natural science ciências naturais. the science of mathematics matemática. -
30 sophisticated
[sə'fistikeitid]1) ((of a person) having a great deal of experience and worldly wisdom, knowledge of how to dress elegantly etc: a sophisticated young man; She has become very sophisticated since she went to live in London.) sofisticado2) (suitable for, or typical of, sophisticated people: The joke was too sophisticated for the child to understand; sophisticated clothes/hairstyles.) sofisticado3) ((of machines, processes etc) highly-developed, elaborate and produced with a high degree of skill and knowledge: sophisticated photographic techniques.) sofisticado•* * *so.phis.ti.ca.ted[səf'istikeitid] adj 1 afetado, artificial, falso. 2 sofisticado, mundano, requintado. 3 enganador, adulterador. 4 conhecedor da vida, intelectual, exigente. 5 que não tem ilusões. -
31 study
1. verb1) (to give time and attention to gaining knowledge of a subject: What subject is he studying?; He is studying French; He is studying for a degree in mathematics; She's studying to be a teacher.) estudar2) (to look at or examine carefully: He studied the railway timetable; Give yourself time to study the problem in detail.) examinar2. noun1) (the act of devoting time and attention to gaining knowledge: He spends all his evenings in study; She has made a study of the habits of bees.) estudo2) (a musical or artistic composition: a book of studies for the piano; The picture was entitled `Study in Grey'.) estudo3) (a room in a house etc, in which to study, read, write etc: The headmaster wants to speak to the senior pupils in his study.) gabinete* * *stud.y[st'∧di] n 1 estudo. 2 exame, investigação, examinação, pesquisa. 3 matéria estudada, disciplina, objeto ou ramo de estudo. he makes literature his special study / ele especializou-se no ramo da literatura. 4 trabalho científico. 5 consideração. 6 sala de estudos, estúdio. 7 Arts modelo, esboço. 8 Mus estudo, peça musical (para o desenvolvimento de certa técnica). 9 esforço, aplicação, dedicação. 10 pensamento profundo, fantasia. • vt+vi 1 estudar. 2 examinar cuidadosamente, investigar, pesquisar. 3 considerar, ponderar, pensar, planejar, meditar, refletir. 4 observar atentamente. 5 visar, buscar, procurar. to be a fast study Theat decorar o papel rapidamente. to be in a brown study pensar muito em algo. -
32 common
['komən] 1. adjective1) (seen or happening often; quite normal or usual: a common occurrence; These birds are not so common nowadays.) comum2) (belonging equally to, or shared by, more than one: This knowledge is common to all of us; We share a common language.) comum3) (publicly owned: common property.) comum4) (coarse or impolite: She uses some very common expressions.) vulgar5) (of ordinary, not high, social rank: the common people.) comum6) (of a noun, not beginning with a capital letter (except at the beginning of a sentence): The house is empty.) comum2. noun((a piece of) public land for everyone to use, with few or no buildings: the village common.) área comum- commoner- common knowledge - common law - common-law - commonplace - common-room - common sense - the Common Market - the House of Commons - the Commons - in common -
33 finite
1) (having an end or limit: Human knowledge is finite, divine knowledge infinite.) finito2) ((of a verb) having a subject: He speaks; I ran; She fell.) finito -
34 frontier
1) (a boundary between countries: We crossed the frontier; ( also adjective) a frontier town.) fronteira2) (the farthest area of land on which people live and work, before the country becomes wild and deserted: Many families went to make a new life on the frontier.) divisa3) (the limits or boundaries (of knowledge etc): the frontiers of scientific knowledge.) fronteira -
35 quiz
[kwiz]plural - quizzes; noun1) (a game or competition in which knowledge is tested by asking questions: a television quiz; a general-knowledge quiz.) jogo de perguntas2) (a short test given to students.)• -
36 science
1) (knowledge gained by observation and experiment.) ciência2) (a branch of such knowledge eg biology, chemistry, physics etc.) ciência3) (these sciences considered as a whole: My daughter prefers science to languages.) ciências•- scientifically - scientist - science fiction -
37 sophisticated
[sə'fistikeitid]1) ((of a person) having a great deal of experience and worldly wisdom, knowledge of how to dress elegantly etc: a sophisticated young man; She has become very sophisticated since she went to live in London.) sofisticado, refinado2) (suitable for, or typical of, sophisticated people: The joke was too sophisticated for the child to understand; sophisticated clothes/hairstyles.) complexo, sutil3) ((of machines, processes etc) highly-developed, elaborate and produced with a high degree of skill and knowledge: sophisticated photographic techniques.) elaborado, complexo• -
38 study
1. verb1) (to give time and attention to gaining knowledge of a subject: What subject is he studying?; He is studying French; He is studying for a degree in mathematics; She's studying to be a teacher.) estudar2) (to look at or examine carefully: He studied the railway timetable; Give yourself time to study the problem in detail.) estudar2. noun1) (the act of devoting time and attention to gaining knowledge: He spends all his evenings in study; She has made a study of the habits of bees.) estudo2) (a musical or artistic composition: a book of studies for the piano; The picture was entitled `Study in Grey'.) estudo3) (a room in a house etc, in which to study, read, write etc: The headmaster wants to speak to the senior pupils in his study.) escritório -
39 ABC
[eibi:'si:]1) (the alphabet: The child has not learnt his ABC.) abc2) (the simplest and most basic knowledge: the ABC of engineering.) rudimentos* * *[ei bi: s'i:] n 1 abecedário, alfabeto. 2 fig princípios, rudimentos. ABC of science / rudimentos de ciências naturais. -
40 Basic
['beisik]1) (of, or forming, the main part or foundation of something: Your basic theory is wrong.) básico2) (restricted to a fundamental level, elementary: a basic knowledge of French.) básico•* * *Ba.sic2[b'eisik] Comp linguagem elementar de programação de computadores.
См. также в других словарях:
Knowledge — • Knowledge, being a primitive fact of consciousness, cannot, strictly speaking, be defined; but the direct and spontaneous consciousness of knowing may be made clearer by pointing out its essential and distinctive characteristics Catholic… … Catholic encyclopedia
Knowledge — is defined (Oxford English Dictionary) variously as (i) expertise, and skills acquired by a person through experience or education; the theoretical or practical understanding of a subject, (ii) what is known in a particular field or in total;… … Wikipedia
knowledge — know·ledge n 1 a: awareness or understanding esp. of an act, a fact, or the truth: actual knowledge (1) in this entry b: awareness that a fact or circumstance probably exists; broadly: constructive knowledge in this entry see also … Law dictionary
knowledge — knowl‧edge [ˈnɒlɪdʒ ǁ ˈnɑː ] noun [uncountable] facts, skills and understanding gained through learning or experience: • Given its market knowledge, Price Waterhouse was able to provide a useful insight into each supplier. knowledge of • Auditors … Financial and business terms
knowledge — knowledge, science, learning, erudition, scholarship, information, lore are comparable when they mean what is known or can be known, usually by an individual but sometimes by human beings in general. Knowledge applies not only to a body of facts… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Knowledge — Knowl edge, n. [OE. knowlage, knowlege, knowleche, knawleche. The last part is the Icel. suffix leikr, forming abstract nouns, orig. the same as Icel. leikr game, play, sport, akin to AS. l[=a]c, Goth. laiks dance. See {Know}, and cf. {Lake}, v.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
knowledge — ► NOUN 1) information and skills acquired through experience or education. 2) the sum of what is known. 3) awareness or familiarity gained by experience of a fact or situation: he denied all knowledge of the incident. ● come to one s knowledge Cf … English terms dictionary
knowledge — [näl′ij] n. [ME knoweleche, acknowledgment, confession < Late OE cnawlæc < cnawan (see KNOW) + læc < lācan, to play, give, move about] 1. the act, fact, or state of knowing; specif., a) acquaintance or familiarity (with a fact, place,… … English World dictionary
Knowledge — Knowl edge, v. t. To acknowledge. [Obs.] Sinners which knowledge their sins. Tyndale. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
knowledge — knowledge, sociology of … Dictionary of sociology
knowledge — (n.) early 12c., cnawlece acknowledgment of a superior, honor, worship; for first element see KNOW (Cf. know). Second element obscure, perhaps from Scandinavian and cognate with the lock action, process, found in WEDLOCK (Cf. wedlock). Meaning… … Etymology dictionary