-
1 extent
-t1) (the area or length to which something extends: The bird's wings measured 20 centimetres at their fullest extent; The garden is nearly a kilometre in extent; A vast extent of grassland.) extensión2) (amount; degree: What is the extent of the damage?; To what extent can we trust him?) amplitud, alcance•extent n extensión / alcancetr[ɪk'stent]1 (expanse) extensión nombre femenino2 (range, scale, scope) amplitud nombre femenino, vastedad nombre femenino, alcance nombre masculino3 (point) punto\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto a certain extent hasta cierto puntoto a large extent en gran parte, en gran medidato some extent hasta cierto puntoto such an extent that... hasta tal punto que...to that extent hasta tal puntoto the extent that... hasta el punto de que...to what extent? ¿hasta qué punto?extent [ɪk'stɛnt, ɛk-] n1) size: extensión f, magnitud f2) degree, scope: alcance m, grado mto a certain extent: hasta cierto punton.• alcance s.m.• amplitud s.f.• círculo s.m.• ensanche s.m.• extensión s.f.• grado s.m.• latitud s.f.• magnitud s.f.ɪk'stentmass noun1) (size, area) extensión f2)a) (range, degree - of knowledge) amplitud f, vastedad f; (- of problem) alcance mthe extent of the damage — la importancia or el alcance de los daños; ( in monetary terms) la cuantía de los daños
b) (in phrases)to some extent, to a certain extent — hasta cierto punto, en cierta medida
to a large extent — en gran parte, en buena medida
to a greater/lesser extent — en mayor/menor medida, en mayor/menor grado
to what extent — en qué medida, hasta qué punto
[ɪks'tent]N2) (=scope) [of knowledge, damage, activities] alcance m ; [of power] límite mthe extent of the problem — el alcance or la envergadura del problema
we did not know the extent of his injuries until later — no tuvimos conocimiento del alcance de sus lesiones hasta más tarde
3) (=degree) [of commitment, loss] grado mto what extent? — ¿hasta qué punto?
to a certain or to some extent — hasta cierto punto
to a large extent — en gran parte or medida
to the extent of — (=as far as) hasta el punto de; (in money) por la cantidad de
to that extent, she is right — en ese sentido, ella tiene razón
* * *[ɪk'stent]mass noun1) (size, area) extensión f2)a) (range, degree - of knowledge) amplitud f, vastedad f; (- of problem) alcance mthe extent of the damage — la importancia or el alcance de los daños; ( in monetary terms) la cuantía de los daños
b) (in phrases)to some extent, to a certain extent — hasta cierto punto, en cierta medida
to a large extent — en gran parte, en buena medida
to a greater/lesser extent — en mayor/menor medida, en mayor/menor grado
to what extent — en qué medida, hasta qué punto
См. также в других словарях:
damage — dam·age 1 n [Old French, from dam injury, harm, from Latin damnum financial loss, fine] 1: loss or harm resulting from injury to person, property, or reputation 2 pl: the money awarded to a party in a civil suit as reparation for the loss or… … Law dictionary
damage — ▪ I. damage dam‧age 1 [ˈdæmɪdʒ] noun 1. [uncountable] a bad effect on something that makes it weaker or less successful: damage to • The result of this policy will be severe damage to the British economy. 2. [uncountable] physical harm caused to… … Financial and business terms
Monetary Gold Removed from Rome in 1943 (Italy v. France, United Kingdom and United States) — The Monetary Gold Removed from Rome in 1943 Case (Italy v. France, United Kingdom and United States) was part of a long running dispute over the fate of Nazi gold that was originally seized from Rome. On 17 September 1943, 2,338 kg of gold were… … Wikipedia
monetary laws — regulations for financial issues, laws for damage or injury … English contemporary dictionary
Irreparable damage or injury — An irreparable damage or injury is, in tort law or equity, the type of harm which no monetary compensation can cure or put conditions back the way they were.... [ [http://dictionary.law.com/default2.asp?selected=1031 bold=%7C%7C%7C%7C Law… … Wikipedia
irreparable damage or injury — n. the type of harm which no monetary compensation can cure or put conditions back the way they were, such as cutting down shade trees, polluting a stream, not giving a child needed medication, not supporting an excavation which may cause… … Law dictionary
List of Florida hurricanes (1900–1949) — The list of Florida hurricanes from 1900 to 1949 encompasses 108 Atlantic tropical cyclones that affected the U.S. state of Florida. Collectively, tropical cyclones in Florida during the time period resulted in about $4 billion (2008 USD) in… … Wikipedia
INFORMERS — (Heb. malshinim, slanderers ; moserim, informers ; delatorim, delators ), informers or slanderers who denounce individual Jews or the Jewish people in general to a foreign ruler. In Talmudic Tradition The attitude of the Talmud toward such… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
Effects of Hurricane Isabel in Virginia — Infobox Hurricane Impact Name=Hurricane Isabel Type=hurricane Year=2003 Basin=Atl Image location=TRC4isabel261 G12.jpg Virginia Date=September 18 19, 2003 1 min winds=65 Gusts=93 Da Fatalities=10 direct, 26 indirect Areas=Virginia Rainfall=20.2… … Wikipedia
List of Florida hurricanes (1975–1999) — The list of Florida hurricanes from 1975 to 1999 encompasses 83 Atlantic tropical cyclones that affected the U.S. state of Florida. Collectively, tropical cyclones in Florida during the time period resulted in at least $45 billion (2008 USD) in… … Wikipedia
Hurricane Andrew — This article is about the 1992 hurricane. For the 1986 tropical storm, see Tropical Storm Andrew (1986). Hurricane Andrew Category 5 Hurricane (SSHS) Hurricane Andrew approaching the Bahamas and Florida as a Category 5 hurricane Formed … Wikipedia