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61 instintivamente
adv.instinctively, intuitively.* * *► adverbio1 instinctively* * *ADV instinctively* * *Ex. The author discusses the virtual reality techniques developed to allow a human being to control a simulator instantly and instinctively, using body movements.----* venir instintivamente a = come + naturally to, be second nature to + Pronombre.* * *Ex: The author discusses the virtual reality techniques developed to allow a human being to control a simulator instantly and instinctively, using body movements.
* venir instintivamente a = come + naturally to, be second nature to + Pronombre.* * *instinctively* * *instintivamente advinstinctively -
62 insurreccional
adj.insurrectional, insurrectionary.* * *ADJ insurrectionary* * *= rebellious, insurrectionary.Ex. The urge to mechanize paper-making came at first as much from the papermakers' desire to free themselves from dependence upon their skilled but rebellious workmen as from the pursuit of production economies.Ex. Most obviously, the insurrectionary movements of the late-eighteenth and nineteenth centuries were informed by notions of nationality.* * *= rebellious, insurrectionary.Ex: The urge to mechanize paper-making came at first as much from the papermakers' desire to free themselves from dependence upon their skilled but rebellious workmen as from the pursuit of production economies.
Ex: Most obviously, the insurrectionary movements of the late-eighteenth and nineteenth centuries were informed by notions of nationality. -
63 insurrección
f.insurrection, rebellion, revolt, upheaval.* * *1 insurrection, uprising* * *SF revolt, insurrection* * *femenino (frml) uprising, insurrection (frml)* * *= insurgency, uprising, insurrection.Ex. With changing political circumstances there is an increased likelihood of low-intensity conflicts which may take the form of guerrilla warfare, coups d'etat, ethnic violence, terrorism, resistance movements or insurgency.Ex. The author describes the destruction and dispersal of the contents of the Hanlin library in Beijing during the uprising in 1900, when the Western government diplomatic offices came under siege by the Chinese government.Ex. Mrs Thatcher went on to win two more elections while defeating the organised insurrection of the miners' union.----* insurrección armada = armed uprising.* insurrección política = political uprising.* * *femenino (frml) uprising, insurrection (frml)* * *= insurgency, uprising, insurrection.Ex: With changing political circumstances there is an increased likelihood of low-intensity conflicts which may take the form of guerrilla warfare, coups d'etat, ethnic violence, terrorism, resistance movements or insurgency.
Ex: The author describes the destruction and dispersal of the contents of the Hanlin library in Beijing during the uprising in 1900, when the Western government diplomatic offices came under siege by the Chinese government.Ex: Mrs Thatcher went on to win two more elections while defeating the organised insurrection of the miners' union.* insurrección armada = armed uprising.* insurrección política = political uprising.* * *( frml)uprising, insurrection ( frml)* * *
insurrección sustantivo femenino (frml) uprising, insurrection (frml)
insurrección sustantivo femenino insurrection
' insurrección' also found in these entries:
English:
insurrection
* * *insurrección nfinsurrection, revolt* * *f insurrection* * * -
64 intensificación
f.1 intensification, accentuation, increase, amplification.2 exaggeration.* * *1 intensification* * ** * *femenino intensification* * *= deepening, intensification, escalation, heightening.Ex. There is a categorical moral imperative for a deepening and a renewal of the concept of collegiality -- that is a blend of intense competition and mutual support -- in relations between research scholars and research librarians.Ex. This article outlines the measures agreed in Suzdal in April '87 in response to the all-Soviet plan for the intensification of information work in the field of electricity.Ex. We find that mediators also caucus with disputants when they are hostile to each other or have a prior history of escalation.Ex. The arts can serve the heightening of our sensibilities to the theological dimensions of cultural movements.* * *femenino intensification* * *= deepening, intensification, escalation, heightening.Ex: There is a categorical moral imperative for a deepening and a renewal of the concept of collegiality -- that is a blend of intense competition and mutual support -- in relations between research scholars and research librarians.
Ex: This article outlines the measures agreed in Suzdal in April '87 in response to the all-Soviet plan for the intensification of information work in the field of electricity.Ex: We find that mediators also caucus with disputants when they are hostile to each other or have a prior history of escalation.Ex: The arts can serve the heightening of our sensibilities to the theological dimensions of cultural movements.* * *intensificationa pesar de la intensificación de los esfuerzos despite intensified efforts* * *
intensificación sustantivo femenino escalation, strengthening: la intensificación de la guerra es inminente, escalation of the war is imminent
' intensificación' also found in these entries:
English:
escalation
* * *intensification* * *f intensification -
65 intrépidamente
adv.adventurously, dauntlessly, audaciously, fearlessly.* * *ADV intrepidly* * *= boldly.Ex. And thirdly and most importantly, I am concerned about some movements which I think symptomatize ideological deterioration and would have us, as someone put it, march boldly backwards into the future.* * *= boldly.Ex: And thirdly and most importantly, I am concerned about some movements which I think symptomatize ideological deterioration and would have us, as someone put it, march boldly backwards into the future.
* * *intrepidly -
66 juego de dedos
(n.) = fingerplayEx. Fingerplays are rhymes for very young children that use hand movements coordinated with words to engage and sustain children's interest.* * *(n.) = fingerplayEx: Fingerplays are rhymes for very young children that use hand movements coordinated with words to engage and sustain children's interest.
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67 lastrar
v.to ballast.* * *1 MARÍTIMO to ballast2 figurado to hinder* * *VT1) [+ embarcación, globo] to ballast2) (=obstaculizar) to burden, weigh down* * *verbo transitivoa) <buque/globo> to ballastb) ( entorpecer) to burden, weigh down* * *= weight down.Ex. If they were watching the nimble movements of a compositor as he gathered the types from the hundred and fifty-two boxes of his case, they would run into a ream of wetted paper weighted down with paving stones.* * *verbo transitivoa) <buque/globo> to ballastb) ( entorpecer) to burden, weigh down* * *= weight down.Ex: If they were watching the nimble movements of a compositor as he gathered the types from the hundred and fifty-two boxes of his case, they would run into a ream of wetted paper weighted down with paving stones.
* * *lastrar [A1 ]vt1 ‹buque/globo› to ballast2 (entorpecer) to encumber, burden, weigh down■ lastrarvi* * *♦ vt1. [globo, barco] to ballast2. [estorbar] to hamper♦ viRP Fam to pig out, to stuff one's face* * *v/t MAR ballast; figburden* * *lastrar vt1) : to ballast2) : to burden, to encumber -
68 levantarse de un salto
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69 lo que es más importante
= most importantly, more importantly, most of all, most importantEx. And thirdly and most importantly, I am concerned about some movements which I think symptomatize ideological deterioration and would have us, as someone put it, march boldly backwards into the future.Ex. Therefore, as a logical corollary, the catalog is itself a surrogate of the collection, more importantly, as a result of the added entry structure, several simultaneous surrogates.Ex. Teacher herself is worked off her shoes coping with appeals for help with grammar, style, spelling, and, most of all, providing infusions of energy when authorial spirits run low.Ex. Most important, moving house is very thirsty work for everyone involved so keep the kettle boiling and the biscuits flowing.* * *= most importantly, more importantly, most of all, most importantEx: And thirdly and most importantly, I am concerned about some movements which I think symptomatize ideological deterioration and would have us, as someone put it, march boldly backwards into the future.
Ex: Therefore, as a logical corollary, the catalog is itself a surrogate of the collection, more importantly, as a result of the added entry structure, several simultaneous surrogates.Ex: Teacher herself is worked off her shoes coping with appeals for help with grammar, style, spelling, and, most of all, providing infusions of energy when authorial spirits run low.Ex: Most important, moving house is very thirsty work for everyone involved so keep the kettle boiling and the biscuits flowing. -
70 losa
f.1 paving stone, flagstone (piedra).2 stone slab, flagstone, slab, tile.3 gravestone.* * *1 flagstone, slab2 (de sepulcro) gravestone* * *noun f.* * *SF (stone) slab, flagstonelosa radiante — Arg underfloor heating
losa sepulcral — gravestone, tombstone
* * ** * *= slab, paving stone, flagstone.Ex. What is absolutely certain is that without some preparation by the teacher, a visitor cannot hope to achieve very much; he is in little better a position than cold fish on a marble slab.Ex. If they were watching the nimble movements of a compositor as he gathered the types from the hundred and fifty-two boxes of his case, they would run into a ream of wetted paper weighted down with paving stones.Ex. The location of the quarries strongly supports the hypothesis that the Romans carried the flagstones by ship towards the coasts of the central Adriatic Sea.* * ** * *= slab, paving stone, flagstone.Ex: What is absolutely certain is that without some preparation by the teacher, a visitor cannot hope to achieve very much; he is in little better a position than cold fish on a marble slab.
Ex: If they were watching the nimble movements of a compositor as he gathered the types from the hundred and fifty-two boxes of his case, they would run into a ream of wetted paper weighted down with paving stones.Ex: The location of the quarries strongly supports the hypothesis that the Romans carried the flagstones by ship towards the coasts of the central Adriatic Sea.* * *1 (de sepulcro) tombstone2 (de suelo, piso) flagstone, flagCompuesto:* * *
Del verbo losar: ( conjugate losar)
losa es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativo
losa sustantivo femenino ( de sepulcro) tombstone;
( de suelo) flagstone
losa sustantivo femenino
1 (stone) slab, flagstone
(de una tumba) gravestone
2 (carga, remordimiento) burden
' losa' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
esculpir
- lápida
English:
flagstone
- mark
- paving stone
- slab
- flag
- paving
- tile
* * *losa nf1. [piedra] paving stone, flagstoneRP losa radiante [calefacción] underfloor heating2. [de tumba] tombstone* * *f flagstone* * *losa nf: flagstone, paving stone* * *losa n slab -
71 mirada inexpresiva
f.inexpressive look, glassy look.* * *(n.) = blank look, blank expressionEx. The women will either look uncomfortable and make a hasty exit or will stand there with blank looks on their faces pretending not to have heard.Ex. His unnamed protagonist is a squat little bookstore clerk of blank expression and deadpan movements.* * *(n.) = blank look, blank expressionEx: The women will either look uncomfortable and make a hasty exit or will stand there with blank looks on their faces pretending not to have heard.
Ex: His unnamed protagonist is a squat little bookstore clerk of blank expression and deadpan movements. -
72 mirada vacía
(n.) = blank look, blank expressionEx. The women will either look uncomfortable and make a hasty exit or will stand there with blank looks on their faces pretending not to have heard.Ex. His unnamed protagonist is a squat little bookstore clerk of blank expression and deadpan movements.* * *(n.) = blank look, blank expressionEx: The women will either look uncomfortable and make a hasty exit or will stand there with blank looks on their faces pretending not to have heard.
Ex: His unnamed protagonist is a squat little bookstore clerk of blank expression and deadpan movements. -
73 moción
f.1 motion, proposal.2 movement, motion.* * *1 motion2 (movimiento) motion, movement\aprobar una moción to pass a motionmoción de censura vote of no confidence* * *noun f.* * *SF1) (Parl) motionhacer o presentar una moción — to propose o table a motion
moción de censura — motion of censure, censure motion
2) (=movimiento) motion* * *femenino motionpresentar una moción — to propose o (BrE) table a motion
* * *= resolution, motion, movement.Ex. I was one of the cosigners of a resolution which tried to have the ISBD repealed.Ex. Policies are official statements of authority, having been developed, passed by formal motion, and recorded by the board of trustees.Ex. She is a dynamic dancer and expresses her movements with ultimate power.----* aprobar por moción = pass by + motion.* aprobar una moción = pass + resolution, adopt + resolution, approve + resolution, pass + motion.* moción de censura = censure motion, vote of no confidence.* persona que apoya una moción o propuesta = seconder.* proponer una moción = propose + motion.* rechazar una moción = defeat + motion.* * *femenino motionpresentar una moción — to propose o (BrE) table a motion
* * *= resolution, motion, movement.Ex: I was one of the cosigners of a resolution which tried to have the ISBD repealed.
Ex: Policies are official statements of authority, having been developed, passed by formal motion, and recorded by the board of trustees.Ex: She is a dynamic dancer and expresses her movements with ultimate power.* aprobar por moción = pass by + motion.* aprobar una moción = pass + resolution, adopt + resolution, approve + resolution, pass + motion.* moción de censura = censure motion, vote of no confidence.* persona que apoya una moción o propuesta = seconder.* proponer una moción = propose + motion.* rechazar una moción = defeat + motion.* * *motionpresentar una moción to propose o ( BrE) table a motionno apoyaron la moción they didn't support the motionvotar una moción to vote on a motionpromover una moción to bring forward a motion (for discussion)aceptar/rechazar una moción to pass/reject a motionla moción se aprobó por 130 votos a favor y 70 en contra the motion was carried o passed by 130 votes to 70hacer una moción de orden to make a point of orderCompuesto:vote of censure o no confidence* * *
moción sustantivo femenino
motion;◊ presentar una moción to propose o (BrE) table a motion;
moción de censura vote of censure o no confidence
moción sustantivo femenino motion: se aprobó la moción, the motion was accepted/passed
moción de censura, vote of no confidence
' moción' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
censura
- unanimidad
- aprobación
- aprobar
- proponer
- rechazar
- rechazo
English:
carry
- motion
- roll
- second
- sponsor
* * *moción nfmotion;presentar una moción to present o bring a motion;apoyo la moción I second the motionmoción de censura motion of censure;moción de confianza motion of confidence* * *f POL motion* * *1) movimiento: motion, movement2) : motion (to a court or assembly) -
74 mojado
adj.wet, soaking, moist, damp.f. & m.wetback, illegal immigrant.past part.past participle of spanish verb: mojar.* * *► adjetivo1 (húmedo) wet, moist; (empapado) drenched, soaked, wet through* * *(f. - mojada)adj.* * *1.ADJ (=húmedo) damp, wet; (=empapado) soaked, drenchedlloverllegamos a casa completamente mojados — we were completely soaked o drenched when we got home
2.SM Méx wetback (EEUU), illegal immigrant* * *I- da adjetivo wetIIestaba completamente mojado — he was dripping o soaking wet
- da masculino, femenino (Méx fam) wetback (colloq & pej)* * *= damp, sodden, wet, wetted, soggy [soggier -comp., soggiest -sup.].Ex. The raw material of white paper was undyed linen -- or in very early days hempen -- rags, which the paper-maker bought in bulk, sorted and washed, and then put by in a damp heap for four or five days to rot.Ex. He looked up and descried a gym class, all wet and draggled, scurrying back across the sodden football field.Ex. When Brady made his Civil War pictures, the plate had to be wet at the time of exposure.Ex. If they were watching the nimble movements of a compositor as he gathered the types from the hundred and fifty-two boxes of his case, they would run into a ream of wetted paper weighted down with paving stones.Ex. The snakes had been kept in the soggy bilges for forty days and forty nights and were in pretty sad shape.----* suelo mojado = wet floor.* * *I- da adjetivo wetIIestaba completamente mojado — he was dripping o soaking wet
- da masculino, femenino (Méx fam) wetback (colloq & pej)* * *= damp, sodden, wet, wetted, soggy [soggier -comp., soggiest -sup.].Ex: The raw material of white paper was undyed linen -- or in very early days hempen -- rags, which the paper-maker bought in bulk, sorted and washed, and then put by in a damp heap for four or five days to rot.
Ex: He looked up and descried a gym class, all wet and draggled, scurrying back across the sodden football field.Ex: When Brady made his Civil War pictures, the plate had to be wet at the time of exposure.Ex: If they were watching the nimble movements of a compositor as he gathered the types from the hundred and fifty-two boxes of his case, they would run into a ream of wetted paper weighted down with paving stones.Ex: The snakes had been kept in the soggy bilges for forty days and forty nights and were in pretty sad shape.* suelo mojado = wet floor.* * *‹pelo/calle› wet; ‹hierba› wetle pasas un trapo mojado you (just) wipe it over with a wet clothllegó a casa completamente mojado he arrived home dripping o soaking wetno te quedes con los calcetines mojados, que te vas a resfriar take your wet socks off, you'll catch coldmasculine, feminine* * *
Del verbo mojar: ( conjugate mojar)
mojado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
mojado
mojar
mojado◊ -da adjetivo
wet
■ sustantivo masculino, femenino (Méx fam) wetback (colloq &
pej)
mojar ( conjugate mojar) verbo transitivo
( a propósito) to wet;
mojado la cama (euf) to wet the bed
mojarse verbo pronominal
me mojé toda I got soaked
( accidentalmente) to get … wet
mojado,-a adjetivo wet
(húmedo) damp
mojar verbo transitivo
1 to wet
2 (en la leche, el café, etc) to dip, dunk
3 fam (celebrar) vamos a mojar este éxito, let's go and celebrate this success with a drink
' mojado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
médula
- mojada
- papel
- toda
- todo
- chorrear
English:
damp
- through
- wet
* * *mojado, -a♦ adj[empapado] wet; [húmedo] damp;ten cuidado, el suelo está mojado be careful, the floor is wet;llegué a casa completamente mojado I got home completely soaked;tengo los zapatos mojados my shoes are wet;todavía tengo la ropa mojada my clothes are still damp♦ nm,fMéx Fam [inmigrante] wetback;irse de mojado to enter the United States as an illegal immigrant* * *wetback* * *mojado, -da adj: wet* * * -
75 movilidad
f.mobility.* * *1 mobility* * *noun f.* * *SF mobility* * *femenino mobility* * *= mobility, movement.Ex. Today, because of increasing mobility, people learn about other cultures not just from reading books, going to museums, and visiting abroad, but also by getting to know people from these cultures living in their midst.Ex. She is a dynamic dancer and expresses her movements with ultimate power.----* beca de movilidad = travel grant, mobility grant.* movilidad geográfica = geographical mobility, geographical relocation.* movilidad laboral = job mobility.* tener movilidad = be mobile.* * *femenino mobility* * *= mobility, movement.Ex: Today, because of increasing mobility, people learn about other cultures not just from reading books, going to museums, and visiting abroad, but also by getting to know people from these cultures living in their midst.
Ex: She is a dynamic dancer and expresses her movements with ultimate power.* beca de movilidad = travel grant, mobility grant.* movilidad geográfica = geographical mobility, geographical relocation.* movilidad laboral = job mobility.* tener movilidad = be mobile.* * *mobilityde escasa movilidad with limited mobilityCompuestos:upward mobilitysocial mobility* * *
movilidad sustantivo femenino
mobility
movilidad sustantivo femenino mobility
' movilidad' also found in these entries:
English:
mobility
- movement
- mobile
- upwardly mobile
* * *movilidad nf1. [movimiento] mobility;tener coche me da mucha movilidad owning a car makes me very mobile;una indemnización por movilidad geográfica a relocation allowancemovilidad social social mobility* * *f mobility* * *movilidad nf: mobility -
76 movimiento cultural
(n.) = cultural movementEx. The arts can serve the heightening of our sensibilities to the theological dimensions of cultural movements.* * *(n.) = cultural movementEx: The arts can serve the heightening of our sensibilities to the theological dimensions of cultural movements.
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77 movimiento de liberación nacional
(n.) = national liberation movementEx. At our library in Minnesota we have clearly identified material that deals with many types of business and consumer frauds, national liberation movements, bedtime, Kwanza, the Afro-American holiday.* * *(n.) = national liberation movementEx: At our library in Minnesota we have clearly identified material that deals with many types of business and consumer frauds, national liberation movements, bedtime, Kwanza, the Afro-American holiday.
Spanish-English dictionary > movimiento de liberación nacional
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78 movimiento en defensa de los derechos de la mujer
(n.) = women's rights movementEx. Historians have generally held that before the Civil War the popular press did little to help the women's rights movements.* * *(n.) = women's rights movementEx: Historians have generally held that before the Civil War the popular press did little to help the women's rights movements.
Spanish-English dictionary > movimiento en defensa de los derechos de la mujer
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79 movimiento político
(n.) = political movementEx. The political movements of the 19th century that used public libraries and reading rooms as camouflage are described.* * *(n.) = political movementEx: The political movements of the 19th century that used public libraries and reading rooms as camouflage are described.
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80 neoprimitivismo
Ex. Different movements in art are briefly covered, and examples of artists of that period are offered: Dadaism, impressionism, pointillism, expressionism, cubism, surrealism, and neoprimitivism.* * *Ex: Different movements in art are briefly covered, and examples of artists of that period are offered: Dadaism, impressionism, pointillism, expressionism, cubism, surrealism, and neoprimitivism.
См. также в других словарях:
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