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only+a+very+little

  • 61 supiera

    Del verbo saber: ( conjugate saber) \ \
    supiera es: \ \
    1ª persona singular (yo) imperfecto(1) subjuntivo
    3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) imperfecto(1) subjuntivo
    Multiple Entries: saber     supiera
    saber 1 sustantivo masculino knowledge;
    saber 2 ( conjugate saber) verbo transitivo 1
    a)nombre/dirección/canción to know;
    no lo sé I don't know; no sé cómo se llama I don't know his name; ¡yo qué sé! how (on earth) should I know! (colloq); que yo sepa as far as I know; supiera algo de algo to know sth about sth; sé muy poco de ese tema I know very little about the subject; no sabe lo que dice he doesn't know what he's talking about sin que lo supiéramos without our knowing; ¡si yo lo hubiera sabido antes! if I had only known before!; ¡cómo iba yo a supiera que …! how was I to know that …! 2 ( ser capaz de): ¿sabes nadar? can you swim?, do you know how to swim?; sabe escuchar she's a good listener; sabe hablar varios idiomas she can speak several languages verbo intransitivo
    ¿quién sabe? who knows?;
    supiera de algo/algn to know of sth/sb; yo sé de un lugar donde te lo pueden arreglar I know of a place where you can get it fixed
    b) (tener noticias, enterarse):
    yo supe del accidente por la radio I heard about the accident on the radio
    a) ( tener sabor) (+ compl) to taste;
    sabe dulce/bien it tastes sweet/nice;
    supiera a algo to taste of sth; no sabe a nada it doesn't taste of anything; sabe a podrido it tastes rotten
    b) ( causar cierta impresión): me sabe mal or no me sabe bien tener que decírselo I don't like having to tell him
    saberse verbo pronominal ( enf) ‹lección/poema to know
    supiera,
    supiste, etc see saber

    saber sustantivo masculino knowledge, learning, information
    saber
    I verbo transitivo
    1 (una cosa) to know: no sé su dirección, I don't know her address
    para que lo sepas, for your information
    que yo sepa, as far as I know
    2 (hacer algo) to know how to: no sabe nadar, he can't swim
    3 (capacidad, destreza) sabe dibujar muy bien, he knows how to draw really well
    4 (comportarse, reaccionar) can: no sabe aguantar una broma, she can't take a joke
    no sabe perder, he's a bad loser
    5 (tener conocimientos elevados sobre una materia) sabe mucho de música, she knows a lot about music
    6 (enterarse) to learn, find out: lo llamé en cuanto lo supe, I called him as soon as I heard about it
    7 (estar informado) sabía que te ibas a retrasar, he knew that you were going to be late
    8 (imaginar) no sabes qué frío hacía, you can't imagine how cold it was
    II verbo intransitivo
    1 (sobre una materia) to know [de, of]: sé de un restaurante buenísimo, I know of a very good restaurant
    2 (tener noticias) (de alguien por él mismo) to hear from sb (de alguien por otros) to have news of sb (de un asunto) to hear about sthg
    3 (tener sabor) to taste [a, of]: este guiso sabe a quemado, this stew tastes burnt
    4 (producir agrado o desagrado) to like, please: me supo mal que no viniera, it upset me that he didn't come Locuciones: el saber no ocupa lugar, you can never learn too much
    me ha sabido a poco, I couldn't get enough of it
    quién sabe, who knows
    vas a saber lo que es bueno, I'll show you what's what
    vete a saber, God knows
    a saber, namely ' supiera' also found in these entries: Spanish: si English: whether

    English-spanish dictionary > supiera

  • 62 trivial

    1) (of very little importance: trivial details.) smávægilegur
    2) ((especially of people) only interested in unimportant things; not at all serious: She's a very trivial person.) yfirborðslegur, léttúðugur

    English-Icelandic dictionary > trivial

  • 63 trivial

    elcsépelt, csekély fontosságú, hétköznapias
    * * *
    1) (of very little importance: trivial details.) jelentéktelen
    2) ((especially of people) only interested in unimportant things; not at all serious: She's a very trivial person.) igénytelen

    English-Hungarian dictionary > trivial

  • 64 trivial

    1) (of very little importance: trivial details.)
    2) ((especially of people) only interested in unimportant things; not at all serious: She's a very trivial person.)
    * * *
    triv.i.al
    [tr'iviəl] adj 1 trivial, insignificante, não importante. 2 comum.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > trivial

  • 65 trivial

    adj. küçük, değersiz, önemsiz, abes, saçma
    * * *
    önemsiz
    * * *
    1) (of very little importance: trivial details.) önemsiz, değersiz
    2) ((especially of people) only interested in unimportant things; not at all serious: She's a very trivial person.) önemsiz ayrıntılarla ilgilenen

    English-Turkish dictionary > trivial

  • 66 trivial

    1) (of very little importance: trivial details.) nepomemben
    2) ((especially of people) only interested in unimportant things; not at all serious: She's a very trivial person.) trivialen
    * * *
    [triviəl]
    adjective ( trivially adverb)
    trivialen, banalen, navaden, vsakdanji, enoličen; obrabljen; neznaten, nepomemben; beden, ničeven, nič vreden; plehek, neduhovit, plitev, cenen; botany & zoology (o imenih) ljudski
    the trivial round — vsakdanjost, vsakdanje življenje, rutina življenja

    English-Slovenian dictionary > trivial

  • 67 trivial

    • triviaali
    • joutava
    • jonninjoutava
    • jokapäiväinen
    • joutavanpäiväinen
    • turhanpäiväinen
    • turha
    • tyhjänpäiväinen
    • epäolennainen
    • epäoleellinen
    • vähämerkityksinen
    • vähäpätöinen
    • mitäänsanomaton
    • merkityksetön
    • mitätön
    • ylimalkainen
    • pikku
    • pikkuinen
    • pintapuolinen
    * * *
    1) (of very little importance: trivial details.) vähäpätöinen
    2) ((especially of people) only interested in unimportant things; not at all serious: She's a very trivial person.) pinnallinen

    English-Finnish dictionary > trivial

  • 68 trivial

    ['trɪvɪəl]
    aggettivo [matter, scale, film] insignificante; [error, offence] irrilevante, trascurabile; [conversation, argument, person] banale, futile
    * * *
    1) (of very little importance: trivial details.) insignificante
    2) ((especially of people) only interested in unimportant things; not at all serious: She's a very trivial person.) frivolo
    * * *
    trivial /ˈtrɪvɪəl/
    a.
    1 insignificante; di nessun conto; di scarso rilievo; futile; banale: trivial details, particolari insignificanti (o di nessun conto); trivial matters, cose da nulla; inezie; a trivial remark, un'osservazione banale
    2 ( di una persona) leggero; superficiale; frivolo
    FALSI AMICI: trivial non significa triviale trivially avv.
    * * *
    ['trɪvɪəl]
    aggettivo [matter, scale, film] insignificante; [error, offence] irrilevante, trascurabile; [conversation, argument, person] banale, futile

    English-Italian dictionary > trivial

  • 69 trivial

    adjective
    belanglos; trivial (geh.)
    * * *
    1) (of very little importance: trivial details.) unbedeutend
    2) ((especially of people) only interested in unimportant things; not at all serious: She's a very trivial person.) oberflächlich
    * * *
    triv·ial
    [ˈtrɪvɪəl]
    1. (unimportant) trivial geh, banal; dispute, issue belanglos; details bedeutungslos
    2. (petty) kleinlich; remark oberflächlich
    3. (easy) problem leicht, einfach
    * * *
    ['trIvɪəl]
    adj
    1) trivial; objection, loss, details, matters geringfügig, belanglos, trivial; mistake belanglos

    look, your health is not something trivial — hör mal, mit der Gesundheit ist nicht zu spaßen!

    2) person oberflächlich
    * * *
    trivial [ˈtrıvıəl] adj (adv trivially)
    1. trivial, platt, banal, alltäglich
    2. nichtssagend, gering(fügig), unbedeutend, belanglos
    3. unbedeutend, oberflächlich (Person)
    4. BIOL volkstümlich (Ggs wissenschaftlich)
    * * *
    adjective
    belanglos; trivial (geh.)
    * * *
    adj.
    alltäglich adj.
    gehaltlos adj.
    gewöhnlich adj.
    unbedeutend adj.

    English-german dictionary > trivial

  • 70 trivial

    ['trɪvɪəl]
    adj
    ( unimportant) błahy; ( commonplace) trywialny, banalny
    * * *
    1) (of very little importance: trivial details.) nieistotny
    2) ((especially of people) only interested in unimportant things; not at all serious: She's a very trivial person.) powierzchowny

    English-Polish dictionary > trivial

  • 71 trivial

    1) (of very little importance: trivial details.) triviāls; banāls; nenozīmīgs
    2) ((especially of people) only interested in unimportant things; not at all serious: She's a very trivial person.) sīks; aprobežots
    * * *
    triviāls, banāls, ikdienišķs; niecīgs, nenozīmīgs; aprobežots; tautā lietots, nezinātnisks

    English-Latvian dictionary > trivial

  • 72 trivial

    1) (of very little importance: trivial details.) nereikšmingas
    2) ((especially of people) only interested in unimportant things; not at all serious: She's a very trivial person.) banalus, lėkštas, tuščias

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > trivial

  • 73 trivial

    adj. obetydlig, ytlig
    * * *
    1) (of very little importance: trivial details.) obetydlig, trivial
    2) ((especially of people) only interested in unimportant things; not at all serious: She's a very trivial person.) ytlig

    English-Swedish dictionary > trivial

  • 74 trivial

    1) (of very little importance: trivial details.) bezvýznamný
    2) ((especially of people) only interested in unimportant things; not at all serious: She's a very trivial person.) povrchní
    * * *
    • triviální
    • obyčejný

    English-Czech dictionary > trivial

  • 75 trivial

    1) (of very little importance: trivial details.) bezvýznamný
    2) ((especially of people) only interested in unimportant things; not at all serious: She's a very trivial person.) povrchný
    * * *
    • všedný
    • bezvýznamný
    • banálny
    • plytký
    • povrchný
    • nevzdelaný
    • obycajný

    English-Slovak dictionary > trivial

  • 76 trivial

    1) (of very little importance: trivial details.) neînsemnat
    2) ((especially of people) only interested in unimportant things; not at all serious: She's a very trivial person.) frivol

    English-Romanian dictionary > trivial

  • 77 trivial

    1) (of very little importance: trivial details.) ασήμαντος, πεζός
    2) ((especially of people) only interested in unimportant things; not at all serious: She's a very trivial person.) επιπόλαιος, μη σοβαρός

    English-Greek dictionary > trivial

  • 78 trivial

    1) (of very little importance: trivial details.) insignifiant
    2) ((especially of people) only interested in unimportant things; not at all serious: She's a very trivial person.) frivole

    English-French dictionary > trivial

  • 79 trivial

    1) (of very little importance: trivial details.) insignificante
    2) ((especially of people) only interested in unimportant things; not at all serious: She's a very trivial person.) frívolo, leviano

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > trivial

  • 80 Hetzel, Max

    [br]
    b. 5 March 1921 Basle, Switzerland
    [br]
    Swiss electrical engineer who invented the tuning-fork watch.
    [br]
    Hetzel trained as an electrical engineer at the Federal Polytechnic in Zurich and worked for several years in the field of telecommunications before joining the Bulova Watch Company in 1950. At that time several companies were developing watches with electromagnetically maintained balances, but they represented very little advance on the mechanical watch and the mechanical switching mechanism was unreliable. In 1952 Hetzel started work on a much more radical design which was influenced by a transistorized tuning-fork oscillator that he had developed when he was working on telecommunications. Tuning forks, whose vibrations were maintained electromagnetically, had been used by scientists during the nineteenth century to measure small intervals of time, but Niaudet- Breguet appears to have been the first to use a tuning fork to control a clock. In 1866 he described a mechanically operated tuning-fork clock manufactured by the firm of Breguet, but it was not successful, possibly because the fork did not compensate for changes in temperature. The tuning fork only became a precision instrument during the 1920s, when elinvar forks were maintained in vibration by thermionic valve circuits. Their primary purpose was to act as frequency standards, but they might have been developed into precision clocks had not the quartz clock made its appearance very shortly afterwards. Hetzel's design was effectively a miniaturized version of these precision devices, with a transistor replacing the thermionic valve. The fork vibrated at a frequency of 360 cycles per second, and the hands were driven mechanically from the end of one of the tines. A prototype was working by 1954, and the watch went into production in 1960. It was sold under the tradename Accutron, with a guaranteed accuracy of one minute per month: this was a considerable improvement on the performance of the mechanical watch. However, the events of the 1920s were to repeat themselves, and by the end of the decade the Accutron was eclipsed by the introduction of quartz-crystal watches.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Neuchâtel Observatory Centenary Prize 1958. Swiss Society for Chronometry Gold Medal 1988.
    Bibliography
    "The history of the “Accutron” tuning fork watch", 1969, Swiss Watch \& Jewellery Journal 94:413–5.
    Further Reading
    R.Good, 1960, "The Accutron", Horological Journal 103:346–53 (for a detailed technical description).
    J.D.Weaver, 1982, Electrical \& Electronic Clocks \& Watches, London (provides a technical description of the tuning-fork watch in its historical context).
    DV

    Biographical history of technology > Hetzel, Max

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