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1 nociones aritméticas elementales
(n.) = numeracyEx. This is one of the first assessable skills which the young child can demonstrate and literacy normally carries greater prestige than numeracy.* * *(n.) = numeracyEx: This is one of the first assessable skills which the young child can demonstrate and literacy normally carries greater prestige than numeracy.
Spanish-English dictionary > nociones aritméticas elementales
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2 calculable
adj.calculable.* * *► adjetivo1 calculable* * *ADJ calculable* * *= assessable, calculable, determinable.Ex. This is one of the first assessable skills which the young child can demonstrate and literacy normally carries greater prestige than numeracy.Ex. International exchange of publications between libraries has long been a successful solution to the problem of barter where no absolute value is calculable.Ex. The authentic name of ethnic, national, religious, social, or sexual groups should be established if such a name is determinable.* * *= assessable, calculable, determinable.Ex: This is one of the first assessable skills which the young child can demonstrate and literacy normally carries greater prestige than numeracy.
Ex: International exchange of publications between libraries has long been a successful solution to the problem of barter where no absolute value is calculable.Ex: The authentic name of ethnic, national, religious, social, or sexual groups should be established if such a name is determinable.* * *calculable adjcalculable* * *adj calculable -
3 evaluable
adj.1 calculable.2 appraisable.* * *= assessable.Ex. This is one of the first assessable skills which the young child can demonstrate and literacy normally carries greater prestige than numeracy.* * *= assessable.Ex: This is one of the first assessable skills which the young child can demonstrate and literacy normally carries greater prestige than numeracy.
* * *evaluable adjcalculable* * *adj which can be assessed oevaluated -
4 medible
adj.measurable, appraisable.* * *ADJ (=mensurable) measurable; (=observable) detectable, appreciable* * *= measurable, quantifiable, testable, assessable.Ex. One of the goals of health care planning is to foster research which will lead eventually to measurable improvements in mortality and morbidity rates.Ex. Facts are easy to evaluate because in many cases they are quantifiable and can be verified.Ex. The role of the technology-driven university library dwindles as students learn testable data instead of a coherent body of knowledge.Ex. This is one of the first assessable skills which the young child can demonstrate and literacy normally carries greater prestige than numeracy.* * *= measurable, quantifiable, testable, assessable.Ex: One of the goals of health care planning is to foster research which will lead eventually to measurable improvements in mortality and morbidity rates.
Ex: Facts are easy to evaluate because in many cases they are quantifiable and can be verified.Ex: The role of the technology-driven university library dwindles as students learn testable data instead of a coherent body of knowledge.Ex: This is one of the first assessable skills which the young child can demonstrate and literacy normally carries greater prestige than numeracy.* * *measurable -
5 noción
f.notion, idea, belief, concept.* * *1 notion, idea\perder la noción del tiempo to lose track of time* * *noun f.notion, conception* * *SF1) (=idea) notion, idea2) pl nociones (=conocimientos) [de electrónica, música] basics, rudiments; [de lenguas] smattering sing* * *a) (idea, concepto) notion, ideaha perdido la noción del tiempo — he has lost all sense o notion of time
b) nociones femenino plural ( conocimientos)les dio unas nociones de electrónica — she taught them the basics o rudiments of electronics
* * *= belief, claim, notion, perspective, conception, inkling.Ex. Written substantiation of this belief, from a wide variety of points of view, has become plentiful in the 1970s.Ex. The final justification is to be found in the claim that SLIS provide a form of information education that is not provided elsewhere.Ex. A focus conveys the key or principal notion of a concept.Ex. It is easy to see that users and separate pieces of literature may hold different perspectives on one subject.Ex. Different conceptions of what subject indexing means are described.Ex. Her experience with many children has shown that often they can repeat sentences and read quite well without any inkling of what they are saying.----* corroborar una noción = support + notion.* explicar una noción = put across + conception.* noción del tiempo = notion of time, sense of time.* nociones aritméticas elementales = numeracy.* nociones elementales = rudiments.* perder la noción del tiempo = lose + track of time, lose + all notion of time, lose + all sense of time.* * *a) (idea, concepto) notion, ideaha perdido la noción del tiempo — he has lost all sense o notion of time
b) nociones femenino plural ( conocimientos)les dio unas nociones de electrónica — she taught them the basics o rudiments of electronics
* * *= belief, claim, notion, perspective, conception, inkling.Ex: Written substantiation of this belief, from a wide variety of points of view, has become plentiful in the 1970s.
Ex: The final justification is to be found in the claim that SLIS provide a form of information education that is not provided elsewhere.Ex: A focus conveys the key or principal notion of a concept.Ex: It is easy to see that users and separate pieces of literature may hold different perspectives on one subject.Ex: Different conceptions of what subject indexing means are described.Ex: Her experience with many children has shown that often they can repeat sentences and read quite well without any inkling of what they are saying.* corroborar una noción = support + notion.* explicar una noción = put across + conception.* noción del tiempo = notion of time, sense of time.* nociones aritméticas elementales = numeracy.* nociones elementales = rudiments.* perder la noción del tiempo = lose + track of time, lose + all notion of time, lose + all sense of time.* * *1 (idea, concepto) notion, ideano tiene la menor noción del tema he doesn't know the first thing about o he doesn't have the first idea about the subjectno tiene noción de lo que su ausencia significa para mí she has no idea what her absence means to meha perdido la noción del tiempo he has lost all sense o notion of time(conocimientos): tengo nociones de ruso I know a little Russian, I have a smattering of Russianles dio unas nociones de electrónica she taught them the basics o rudiments of electronics* * *
noción sustantivo femenino
b)◊ nociones sustantivo femenino plural ( conocimientos): tengo nociones de ruso I have a smattering of Russian;
las nociones de electrónica the basics o rudiments of electronics
noción sustantivo femenino
1 notion, idea 2 nociones, basic knowledge sing
tiene algunas nociones de euskera, she has a smattering of Basque
' noción' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
idea
- neta
- neto
- ilusión
- sentido
English:
inkling
- notion
- conception
- sense
* * *noción nf1. [concepto] notion;tener noción (de) to have an idea (of);perdió la noción del tiempo he lost all track of time2.nociones [conocimiento básico] a basic knowledge;se busca guía con nociones de japonés we are looking for a guide with a basic knowledge of Japanese;tener nociones de to have a smattering of* * *f1 notion2:nociones pl rudiments, basics* * *1) concepto: notion, concept2) nociones nfpl: smattering, rudiments pl* * *noción n idea -
6 noción
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7 capacidad para la aritmética
• ability with numbers• numeracyDiccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > capacidad para la aritmética
См. также в других словарях:
numeracy — umeracy n. skill with numbers and mathematics; the skill with numbers analogous to {literacy}, the skill of reading. [WordNet 1.5 +PJC] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
numeracy — (n.) 1957, from numerate (adj.), from L. numeratus counted out, from numerus a number (see NUMBER (Cf. number) (n.)) on model of LITERACY (Cf. literacy), etc … Etymology dictionary
numeracy — a term denoting competence with basic mathematical concepts, was coined in 1959 on the analogy of literacy by a UK committee on education reporting in that year. The corresponding adjective is numerate … Modern English usage
Numeracy — Innumeracy redirects here. For the book of same name, see Innumeracy (book). Numeracy is the ability to reason with numbers and other mathematical concepts. A numerically literate person can manage and respond to the mathematical demands of… … Wikipedia
numeracy — [[t]nju͟ːmərəsi, AM nu͟ː [/t]] N UNCOUNT: oft N n Numeracy is the ability to do arithmetic. Six months later John had developed literacy and numeracy skills, plus confidence … English dictionary
numeracy — nu|me|ra|cy [ˈnju:mərəsi US ˈnu: ] n [U] the ability to do calculations and understand simple mathematics →↑literacy ▪ The report suggests that students need to improve their numeracy skills … Dictionary of contemporary English
numeracy — numerate ► ADJECTIVE ▪ having a good basic knowledge of arithmetic. DERIVATIVES numeracy noun. ORIGIN from Latin numerus a number , on the pattern of literate … English terms dictionary
numeracy — noun Etymology: Latin numerus number + English acy (as in literacy) Date: 1959 the capacity for quantitative thought and expression • numerate adjective … New Collegiate Dictionary
numeracy — See numerate. * * * … Universalium
numeracy — noun The quality of being numerate; numerical skill … Wiktionary
numeracy — nu|mer|a|cy [ numərəsi ] noun uncount basic skills in mathematics … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English