-
1 falto de energía
• lacking detail• lacking in cash• lacking in quality -
2 carente de calidad
• lacking in color• lacking in willpower• low-quality -
3 que no tiene iniciativa
• lacking in quality• lacking naivetéDiccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > que no tiene iniciativa
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4 deficiente
adj.1 deficient (defectuoso) (producto, cantidad, persona).2 poor, unsatisfactory (mediocre).3 handicapped.f. & m.1 mentally handicapped person.2 poor grade.* * *► adjetivo1 (defectuoso) deficient, faulty2 (insuficiente) lacking, insufficient1 mentally retarded person\deficiente mental mentally retarded person* * *noun mf.* * *1. ADJ1) (=imperfecto) [mercancía, motor] defective; [sistema, estructura] inadequate2) (=falto) deficient (en in)2.SMFdeficiente mental, deficiente psíquico — mentally handicapped person
* * *Ia) ( insuficiente) poor, inadequateuna alimentación deficiente en vitaminas — a diet deficient o lacking in vitamins
b) ( insatisfactorio) < trabajo> poor, inadequate; < salud> poor; < inteligencia> lowII* * *= deficient, poor [poorer -comp., poorest -sup.], flawed, defective.Ex. Product liability laws allow the customer to sue for damage because of deficient or incorrent documentation.Ex. Examples are generally poor or obscure (often in Latin or German).Ex. Librarians should welcome this document, which is nonetheless considered flawed = Los bibliotecarios deberían acoger bien este documento, aunque se considera defectuoso.Ex. The learning of these people is very defective, consisting only of morality, history, poetry and mathematics.----* de deficiente calidad = of poor quality.* deficiente mental = mentally deficient.* deficientes visuales, los = visually disabled, the, visually handicapped, the, visually impaired people (VIPs), visually challenged, the.* ser deficiente = be wanting.* * *Ia) ( insuficiente) poor, inadequateuna alimentación deficiente en vitaminas — a diet deficient o lacking in vitamins
b) ( insatisfactorio) < trabajo> poor, inadequate; < salud> poor; < inteligencia> lowII* * *= deficient, poor [poorer -comp., poorest -sup.], flawed, defective.Ex: Product liability laws allow the customer to sue for damage because of deficient or incorrent documentation.
Ex: Examples are generally poor or obscure (often in Latin or German).Ex: Librarians should welcome this document, which is nonetheless considered flawed = Los bibliotecarios deberían acoger bien este documento, aunque se considera defectuoso.Ex: The learning of these people is very defective, consisting only of morality, history, poetry and mathematics.* de deficiente calidad = of poor quality.* deficiente mental = mentally deficient.* deficientes visuales, los = visually disabled, the, visually handicapped, the, visually impaired people (VIPs), visually challenged, the.* ser deficiente = be wanting.* * *1 (insuficiente) poor, inadequate deficiente EN algo deficient IN sthuna alimentación deficiente en vitaminas a diet deficient o lacking in vitaminssu conocimiento de la materia es deficiente his knowledge of the subject is inadequate o poor, he does not know enough about the subject2 (insatisfactorio) ‹trabajo› poor, inadequate; ‹salud› poor; ‹inteligencia› lowel deficiente estado de las carreteras the poor o unsatisfactory state of the roadsA (persona) tbdeficiente mental mentally handicapped personnos tratan como si fuéramos deficientes mentales they treat us as if we were subnormalB* * *
deficiente adjetivo
poor, inadequate;
‹ salud› poor;
deficiente en algo deficient in sth
■ sustantivo masculino y femenino ( persona) tb
■ sustantivo masculino ( calificación) poor
deficiente
I adjetivo deficient
II mf mentally handicapped person
III m Educ fail
' deficiente' also found in these entries:
English:
challenged
- deficient
- feeble-minded
- substandard
- wanting
- incompetent
* * *♦ adj1. [defectuoso] [producto] deficient;[audición, vista] defective2. [insuficiente] [cantidad] insufficient, inadequate;[nutrición, dieta, aporte vitamínico] deficient, inadequate3. [persona] handicapped;las personas deficientes the handicapped4. [mediocre] poor, unsatisfactory;el deficiente estado de las instalaciones the unsatisfactory state of the facilities♦ nmfdeficiente (mental) mentally handicapped person♦ nm[nota]muy deficiente very poor, US ≈ F* * *I adj1 dieta deficient2 ( insatisfactorio) inadequateII m/f mentally handicapped person* * *deficiente adj: deficient* * *deficiente adj inadequate / poor -
5 abúlico
• aboulic• abulic• indifference analysis• indifferently• lacking detail• lacking in cash• lacking in energy• lacking in quality• lacking initiative• lacking sufficient funds• lackluster• nonce word• nonchalantly• unflappable• weakness• weal -
6 manipular
v.1 to handle.2 to manipulate.Ricardo manipula los alimentos Richard manipulates=handles the food.El mafioso manipulaba al alcalde The mobster manipulated the mayor.3 to use.El chico manipula a su novia The boy uses his girlfriend.* * *1 (persona) to manipulate2 (mercancías, alimentos) to handle3 (aparato, máquina) to use, operate4 figurado to interfere with* * *verb2) handle* * *1. VT1) (=manejar) [+ alimentos, géneros] to handle; [+ aparato] to operate, use2) (=mangonear) to manipulate2.VImanipular con o en algo — to manipulate sth
* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) < mercancías> to handleb) <aparato/máquina> to operate, use2) <persona/información/datos> to manipulate; < cifras> to massage, manipulate2.manipular los resultados — to fix o rig the results
manipular vimanipulaba en or con las cuentas de sus clientes — he made illicit use of his clients' accounts
* * *= manipulate, tamper (with), fiddle, fuss with, tweak, twiddle, muck around/about, finesse, massage, fiddle with, play + Nombre + along, play + fast and loose with.Ex. Different stores offer access to distinct types of information or data and permit the information to be manipulated to varying extents.Ex. Their effective operation is not immediately obvious to the uninitiated and the cards in the index are liable to become disorganized if inexperienced information seekers tamper with the index.Ex. Thus, the wrong impression was gained, for instance, when the olive oil subsidies were being ' fiddled' in Italy.Ex. Editors are a bridge between the abstract writer and the printer: on the one hand they fuss with the content and intellectual quality of the abstract, and on the other hand they prepare copy that conforms to the constraints of the publishing world.Ex. This book offers strategies for high school teachers that provide tools for creating, repairing, and tweaking all the discernible components of teaching.Ex. Meek took her glasses off and twiddled them as her supervisor related the following incident.Ex. I have looked at the book and mucked around with the database and using switches but can't see a solution.Ex. The story of the postwar diner suggests some ways that purveyors of consumer commodities finessed and exploited emergent social dislocations in the drive to expand and diversify markets.Ex. The author suggests ways of massaging the data contained in legacy systems lacking a good export function.Ex. The writer bemoans record studios' tendency to chop up and fiddle with opera performances.Ex. Dennis played her along until she decided to back out at which time he threatened to imprison her unless she paid up $2 million.Ex. Journalists are still playing fast and loose with the truth.----* manipular el mercado = rig + the market.* manipular indebidamente = meddle (in/with).* manipular la opinión = manipulate + opinion.* manipular las urnas = stuff + the ballot box.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) < mercancías> to handleb) <aparato/máquina> to operate, use2) <persona/información/datos> to manipulate; < cifras> to massage, manipulate2.manipular los resultados — to fix o rig the results
manipular vimanipulaba en or con las cuentas de sus clientes — he made illicit use of his clients' accounts
* * *= manipulate, tamper (with), fiddle, fuss with, tweak, twiddle, muck around/about, finesse, massage, fiddle with, play + Nombre + along, play + fast and loose with.Ex: Different stores offer access to distinct types of information or data and permit the information to be manipulated to varying extents.
Ex: Their effective operation is not immediately obvious to the uninitiated and the cards in the index are liable to become disorganized if inexperienced information seekers tamper with the index.Ex: Thus, the wrong impression was gained, for instance, when the olive oil subsidies were being ' fiddled' in Italy.Ex: Editors are a bridge between the abstract writer and the printer: on the one hand they fuss with the content and intellectual quality of the abstract, and on the other hand they prepare copy that conforms to the constraints of the publishing world.Ex: This book offers strategies for high school teachers that provide tools for creating, repairing, and tweaking all the discernible components of teaching.Ex: Meek took her glasses off and twiddled them as her supervisor related the following incident.Ex: I have looked at the book and mucked around with the database and using switches but can't see a solution.Ex: The story of the postwar diner suggests some ways that purveyors of consumer commodities finessed and exploited emergent social dislocations in the drive to expand and diversify markets.Ex: The author suggests ways of massaging the data contained in legacy systems lacking a good export function.Ex: The writer bemoans record studios' tendency to chop up and fiddle with opera performances.Ex: Dennis played her along until she decided to back out at which time he threatened to imprison her unless she paid up $2 million.Ex: Journalists are still playing fast and loose with the truth.* manipular el mercado = rig + the market.* manipular indebidamente = meddle (in/with).* manipular la opinión = manipulate + opinion.* manipular las urnas = stuff + the ballot box.* * *manipular [A1 ]vtA1 ‹mercancías› to handleel permiso para manipular alimentos the license to handle food2 ‹aparato/máquina› to operate, useB1 ‹persona› to manipulate2 ‹información/datos› to manipulatemanipular los resultados to fix o rig the results■ manipularvimanipulaba en or con las cuentas de sus clientes he made illicit use of his clients' accounts* * *
manipular ( conjugate manipular) verbo transitivo
1
2 ‹persona/información/datos› to manipulate;◊ manipular los resultados to fix o rig the results
manipular verbo transitivo
1 (con manos, instrumento) to handle: manipula sustancias químicas, he handles chemicals
2 (dirigir, utilizar) to manipulate: te está manipulando, she's using you
' manipular' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
jugar
- manejar
- tocar
English:
engineer
- handle
- manipulate
- manoeuvre
- rig
- tamper
- play
* * *manipular vt1. [manejar] to handle;manipuló el explosivo con mucho cuidado he handled the explosives very carefully;alguien había manipulado la cerradura someone had tampered with the lock;manipular genéticamente to genetically modify2. [trastocar, dominar] to manipulate;le acusaron de manipular las papeletas they accused him of tampering with the ballot papers;están manipulando a las masas they are manipulating the masses* * *v/t1 información, persona manipulate2 ( manejar) handle* * *manipular vt1) : to manipulate2) manejar: to handle* * *manipular vb1. (influir, dominar) to manipulate2. (manejar) to handle -
7 aborregado
• covered with fleecy clouds• lacking in quality• lacking naiveté• sheep-like -
8 sin iniciativa
• irresolute• lacking in quality• lacking naiveté• unenterprising
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