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1 novelty value
s.novedad. -
2 novelty
plural - novelties; noun1) (newness and strangeness: It took her a long time to get used to the novelty of her surroundings.) novedad2) (something new and strange: Snow is a novelty to people from hot countries.) novedad3) (a small, cheap manufactured thing sold as a toy or souvenir: a stall selling novelties.) novedadtr['nɒvəltɪ]1 novedad nombre femenino2 (trinket) chuchería1) : novedad f2) novelties npltrinkets: baratijas fpl, chucherías fpln.• innovación s.f.• novedad s.f.'nɑːvəlti, 'nɒvəltia) u ( newness)the novelty will soon wear off — pronto dejará de ser novedad or (esp AmL) novedoso
b) c (new thing, situation) novedad fto be a novelty — ser* una novedad
c) c (small toy, trinket) (esp BrE) chuchería f['nɒvǝltɪ]1.N (=quality, thing) novedad f2.CPDnovelty value N — novedad f
* * *['nɑːvəlti, 'nɒvəlti]a) u ( newness)the novelty will soon wear off — pronto dejará de ser novedad or (esp AmL) novedoso
b) c (new thing, situation) novedad fto be a novelty — ser* una novedad
c) c (small toy, trinket) (esp BrE) chuchería f -
3 value
'vælju:
1. noun1) (worth, importance or usefulness: His special knowledge was of great value during the war; She sets little value on wealth.) valor, importancia2) (price: What is the value of that stamp?) valor3) (purchasing power: Are those coins of any value?) valor4) (fairness of exchange (for one's money etc): You get good value for money at this supermarket!) precio, valor5) (the length of a musical note.) valor
2. verb1) (to suggest a suitable price for: This painting has been valued at $50,000.) valorar, tasar2) (to regard as good or important: He values your advice very highly.) valorar•- valuable- valuables
- valued
- valueless
- values
- value-added tax
value1 n valorvalue2 vb1. valorar / tasarthe house is valued at £75,000 la casa está valorada en 75.000 libras2. valorar / apreciartr['væljʊː]1 valor nombre masculino1 (estimate value of) valorar, tasar2 (appreciate) valorar, apreciar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLit's good value for money bien vale lo que cuestaof great/little value de gran/poco valorof no value sin valorto get good value for money sacarle jugo al dineroto the value of... por el valor de...value added tax impuesto sobre el valor añadidovalue judgment juicio de valor1) appraise: valorar, avaluar, tasar2) appreciate: valorar, apreciarvalue n1) : valor mof little value: de poco valorto be a good value: estar bien de precio, tener buen precioat face value: en su sentido literal2) values npl: valores mpl (morales), principios mplv.• apreciar v.• estimar v.• tallar v.• tasar v.• tener en mucho v.• valorar v.• valuar v.n.• entidad s.f.• importe s.m.• mérito s.m.• precio s.m.• valer s.m.• valimiento s.m.• valor (Matemática) s.m.• valor (Precio) s.m.• valía s.f.
I 'væljuː1) u c ( worth) valor mto gain o increase (in) value — aumentar de valor, revalorizarse*
books to the value of $500 — libros por valor de 500 dólares
have you anything of value in your bag? — ¿lleva algo de valor en el bolso?
II
a) ( Fin) \<\<assets/property\>\> tasar, valorar, avaluar* (AmL)to value something AT something — tasar (or valorar etc) algo en algo
b) ( regard highly) \<\<friendship/advice\>\> valorar, apreciar; \<\<freedom/privacy\>\> valorarc) valued past p <friend/colleague> apreciado, estimado['væljuː]1. N1) (monetary) valor mproperty/land values — valores mpl de propiedad/tierras
•
it's good value — sale a cuenta, está bien de precioSpanish wines are still the best value — los vinos españoles todavía son los que más salen a cuenta or los que mejor están de precio
•
to go down or decrease in value — bajar de valor, depreciarseto go up or increase in value — subir de valor, revalorizarse
a rise/drop in the value of the pound — una subida/bajada del valor de la libra
•
the company offers good service and value for money — la compañía ofrece un buen servicio a buen precio•
it might contain something of value — puede que contenga algo de valorbook 4., cash 3., face 4.•
goods to the value of £100 — bienes por valor de 100 libras2) (=merit) valor mliterary/artistic/scientific value — valor m literario/artístico/científico
his visit to the country will have huge symbolic value — su visita al país tendrá un gran valor simbólico
•
to attach a great deal of value to sth — conceder gran valor or importancia a algo, valorar mucho algoto attach no value to sth — no dar importancia a algo, no valorar algo
•
something of value — algo valioso or de valorto be of value (to sb) — ser útil or de utilidad (para algn), servir (a algn)
noveltystrategically, the city was of little value to the British — desde el punto de vista estratégico, la ciudad era de poca utilidad or tenía poco valor para los británicos
3) (moral)values valores mpl (morales)family values — valores mpl de familia
4) (Math, Mus, Gram) valor mwhat is the value of x when y is 5? — ¿qué valor tiene x cuando y es igual a 5?
2. VT1) (=estimate worth of) [+ property, jewellery, painting] valorar, tasar•
to value sth at £200 — valorar or tasar algo en 200 libras•
I had to have my jewellery valued for insurance purposes — tuve que valorar or tasar mis joyas para poder asegurarlas2) (=appreciate) [+ health, life, independence,] valorar; [+ sb's work, opinion, friendship] valorar, apreciar3.CPDvalue judgment N — juicio m de valor
value system N — sistema m de valores, escala f de valores
* * *
I ['væljuː]1) u c ( worth) valor mto gain o increase (in) value — aumentar de valor, revalorizarse*
books to the value of $500 — libros por valor de 500 dólares
have you anything of value in your bag? — ¿lleva algo de valor en el bolso?
II
a) ( Fin) \<\<assets/property\>\> tasar, valorar, avaluar* (AmL)to value something AT something — tasar (or valorar etc) algo en algo
b) ( regard highly) \<\<friendship/advice\>\> valorar, apreciar; \<\<freedom/privacy\>\> valorarc) valued past p <friend/colleague> apreciado, estimado -
4 curiosity
- 'o-1) (eagerness to learn: She was very unpopular because of her curiosity about other people's affairs.) curiosidad2) (something strange and rare: That old chair is quite a curiosity.) curiosidadcuriosity n curiosidadtr[kjʊərɪ'ɒsətɪ]noun (pl curiosities)1 curiosidad nombre femenino\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLcuriosity killed the cat por querer saber, la zorra perdió la colan.• curiosidad s.f.'kjʊri'ɑːsəti, ˌkjʊəri'ɒsəti1) u ( inquisitive interest) curiosidad fcuriosity killed the cat — por querer saber, la zorra perdió la cola
2) c ( novelty) curiosidad f; (before n)[ˌkjʊǝrɪ'ɒsɪtɪ]curiosity value — valor m de pieza rara
1. N2) (=rare thing) curiosidad f2.CPDcuriosity shop N — tienda f de curiosidades
curiosity value N —
* * *['kjʊri'ɑːsəti, ˌkjʊəri'ɒsəti]1) u ( inquisitive interest) curiosidad fcuriosity killed the cat — por querer saber, la zorra perdió la cola
2) c ( novelty) curiosidad f; (before n)curiosity value — valor m de pieza rara
См. также в других словарях:
novelty — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ great ▪ This tropical fruit is still a great novelty in the north. ▪ sheer ▪ The sheer novelty of the band s performance won them many fans. NOVELTY + VERB … Collocations dictionary
novelty — nov|el|ty [ˈnɔvəlti US ˈna: ] n plural novelties [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: novelté, from novel; NOVEL2] 1.) [U] the quality of being new, unusual, and interesting novelty of ▪ the novelty of the ideas ▪ Many toys have no attraction… … Dictionary of contemporary English
value — [[t]væ̱ljuː[/t]] ♦ values, valuing, valued 1) N UNCOUNT: also a N, usu with supp The value of something such as a quality, attitude, or method is its importance or usefulness. If you place a particular value on something, that is the importance… … English dictionary
Novelty theory — attempts to calculate the ebb and flow of novelty in the universe as an inherent quality of time. It is an idea conceived of and discussed at length by Terence McKenna from the early 1970s until his death in the year 2000. Novelty theory involves … Wikipedia
Novelty — Nov el*ty, n.; pl. {Novelties}. [OF. novelt[ e], F. nouveaut[ e], L. novellitas.] 1. The quality or state of being novel; newness; freshness; recentness of origin or introduction. [1913 Webster] Novelty is the great parent of pleasure. South.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
novelty — /nov euhl tee/, n., pl. novelties, adj. n. 1. state or quality of being novel, new, or unique; newness: the novelty of a new job. 2. a novel occurrence, experience, or proceeding: His sarcastic witticisms had ceased being an entertaining novelty … Universalium
Value of monogamy — The value of monogamy refers to people s views about the contributions monogamy makes, good or bad, to individual and social well being. Some cultures value monogamy as an ideal form of family organization. However, many cultures prefer other… … Wikipedia
value — val|ue1 W1S3 [ˈvælju:] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(money)¦ 2¦(worth the money paid)¦ 3¦(importance/usefulness)¦ 4 of value 5¦(interesting quality)¦ 6¦(ideas)¦ 7¦(amount)¦ ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: Vulgar Latin … Dictionary of contemporary English
value — val|ue1 [ vælju ] noun *** ▸ 1 amount something is worth ▸ 2 importance/usefulness ▸ 3 interesting quality ▸ 4 principles/beliefs ▸ 5 in mathematics ▸ 6 length of musical note 1. ) count or uncount the amount that something is worth, measured… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
value — I UK [ˈvæljuː] / US [ˈvælju] noun Word forms value : singular value plural values *** 1) a) [countable/uncountable] the amount that something is worth, measured especially in money You can t put a value on a human life. value of: The value of the … English dictionary
value — 1 noun (U) 1 MONEY (C, U) the amount of money that something is worth: The alterations doubled the value of the house. | increase/go down etc in value: Shares can go down as well as go up in value. | market value (=the amount of money that… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English