Перевод: с испанского на английский

с английского на испанский

pathways

  • 1 bien andado

    Ex. Like Theseus in the Labyrinth we need to be able to follow well trodden pathways through hypermedia materials and re-track our journey along an imaginary thread when we get lost.
    * * *

    Ex: Like Theseus in the Labyrinth we need to be able to follow well trodden pathways through hypermedia materials and re-track our journey along an imaginary thread when we get lost.

    Spanish-English dictionary > bien andado

  • 2 canal de comunicación

    (n.) = line of communication, communication channel, communication pathway
    Ex. In the latter case particularly, there should be a clear line of communication between staff operating the system and those above them.
    Ex. More disciplining in the enunciation of objectives and more concern for communication channels is needed = Se necesita mayor rigurosidad en la enunciación de los objetivos y una mayor preocupación por los canales de comunicación.
    Ex. Traditional communication pathways between acquisitions and other departments are inadequate in the process of acquiring the electronic resources increasingly in demand by the community.
    * * *
    (n.) = line of communication, communication channel, communication pathway

    Ex: In the latter case particularly, there should be a clear line of communication between staff operating the system and those above them.

    Ex: More disciplining in the enunciation of objectives and more concern for communication channels is needed = Se necesita mayor rigurosidad en la enunciación de los objetivos y una mayor preocupación por los canales de comunicación.
    Ex: Traditional communication pathways between acquisitions and other departments are inadequate in the process of acquiring the electronic resources increasingly in demand by the community.

    Spanish-English dictionary > canal de comunicación

  • 3 especialización

    f.
    1 specialization, specialism.
    2 specialty, specialty field, discipline, specialty area.
    * * *
    1 specialization
    * * *
    * * *
    femenino specialization
    * * *
    = speciality, specialism, specialisation [specialization, -USA], pathway, expertise.
    Ex. The final order on the shelves is the reverse of this, so that an order of increasing speciality is achieved.
    Ex. Thus all students will initially follow a common core syllabus, then opt for particular specialisms linked to specific fields of activity.
    Ex. There is a conflict between specialisation and interdisciplinary studies in education and in scientific research.
    Ex. The course is composed of 5 pathways, 1 of which is information and communication.
    Ex. Its primary function is to provide a centre for software and hardware expertise for its members.
    ----
    * área de especialización = niche, area of competence.
    * campo de especialización = area of competence, field of specialisation.
    * con una nivel de especialización medio = semi-skilled.
    * especialización académica = academic major.
    * especialización en bibliotecas de prisiones = prison librarianship.
    * especialización temática = subject specialism, subject speciality, subject specialty.
    * especialización universitaria = major.
    * sin ningún nivel de especialización = unskilled.
    * * *
    femenino specialization
    * * *
    = speciality, specialism, specialisation [specialization, -USA], pathway, expertise.

    Ex: The final order on the shelves is the reverse of this, so that an order of increasing speciality is achieved.

    Ex: Thus all students will initially follow a common core syllabus, then opt for particular specialisms linked to specific fields of activity.
    Ex: There is a conflict between specialisation and interdisciplinary studies in education and in scientific research.
    Ex: The course is composed of 5 pathways, 1 of which is information and communication.
    Ex: Its primary function is to provide a centre for software and hardware expertise for its members.
    * área de especialización = niche, area of competence.
    * campo de especialización = area of competence, field of specialisation.
    * con una nivel de especialización medio = semi-skilled.
    * especialización académica = academic major.
    * especialización en bibliotecas de prisiones = prison librarianship.
    * especialización temática = subject specialism, subject speciality, subject specialty.
    * especialización universitaria = major.
    * sin ningún nivel de especialización = unskilled.

    * * *
    specialization
    * * *

    especialización sustantivo femenino
    specialization
    ' especialización' also found in these entries:
    English:
    specialization
    * * *
    specialization
    * * *
    f specialization

    Spanish-English dictionary > especialización

  • 4 imaginario

    adj.
    imaginary, fancied, imaginative, utopian.
    m.
    imaginary number, imaginary, pure imaginary number.
    * * *
    1 imaginary
    * * *
    (f. - imaginaria)
    adj.
    * * *
    1.
    2. SM
    1) (Literat) imagery
    2) (=imaginación) imagination
    * * *
    - ria adjetivo imaginary
    * * *
    = imaginary, imagined, fictitious, fictionalised [fictionalized, -USA], fictional, hallucinatory, make-believe, fictious, fantastic, fantastical.
    Ex. Like Theseus in the Labyrinth we need to be able to follow well trodden pathways through hypermedia materials and re-track our journey along an imaginary thread when we get lost.
    Ex. In recent years, then, there has been much less scaremongering about the imagined horrors of drowning in a sea of paper.
    Ex. Certainly there are very serious novels which, by means of a fictitious story, have a great deal to say about human relationships and social structures.
    Ex. This is a humourous and cautionary fictionalised account of a disastrous author visit to a public library to do a reading for children.
    Ex. No one, in this purely hypothetical example, has thought that the reader might be happy with a factual account of an Atlantic convoy as well as, or in place of, a purely fictional account.
    Ex. Subject-matter, portrayed with hallucinatory realism, is largely autobiographical -- mainly people connected with the artist and places associated with them.
    Ex. This book illustrates and describes the features of a monster and reinsures the children not to be frightened of make-believe monsters.
    Ex. Many of them are fictious, but there are also real artists and scientists, who play parts in the book, in one way or another.
    Ex. He builds up a picture of human anguish in the face of the mysteries of existence that is both dreamlike and concrete, fantastic and real at the same time.
    Ex. Filled with allegory and allusion, his paintings portray a fantastical universe inhabited by mysterious and fanciful creatures.
    ----
    * pasado imaginario = imaginary past.
    * * *
    - ria adjetivo imaginary
    * * *
    = imaginary, imagined, fictitious, fictionalised [fictionalized, -USA], fictional, hallucinatory, make-believe, fictious, fantastic, fantastical.

    Ex: Like Theseus in the Labyrinth we need to be able to follow well trodden pathways through hypermedia materials and re-track our journey along an imaginary thread when we get lost.

    Ex: In recent years, then, there has been much less scaremongering about the imagined horrors of drowning in a sea of paper.
    Ex: Certainly there are very serious novels which, by means of a fictitious story, have a great deal to say about human relationships and social structures.
    Ex: This is a humourous and cautionary fictionalised account of a disastrous author visit to a public library to do a reading for children.
    Ex: No one, in this purely hypothetical example, has thought that the reader might be happy with a factual account of an Atlantic convoy as well as, or in place of, a purely fictional account.
    Ex: Subject-matter, portrayed with hallucinatory realism, is largely autobiographical -- mainly people connected with the artist and places associated with them.
    Ex: This book illustrates and describes the features of a monster and reinsures the children not to be frightened of make-believe monsters.
    Ex: Many of them are fictious, but there are also real artists and scientists, who play parts in the book, in one way or another.
    Ex: He builds up a picture of human anguish in the face of the mysteries of existence that is both dreamlike and concrete, fantastic and real at the same time.
    Ex: Filled with allegory and allusion, his paintings portray a fantastical universe inhabited by mysterious and fanciful creatures.
    * pasado imaginario = imaginary past.

    * * *
    imaginary
    * * *

    imaginario
    ◊ - ria adjetivo

    imaginary
    imaginario,-a adjetivo imaginary
    número imaginario, imaginary number

    ' imaginario' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    imaginaria
    - unicornio
    English:
    imaginary
    - never-never land
    - shadow-box
    - shadow-boxing
    - fictitious
    * * *
    imaginario, -a
    adj
    imaginary
    nm
    [conjunto de imágenes] imagery;
    el imaginario colectivo the collective consciousness
    * * *
    adj imaginary
    * * *
    imaginario, - ria adj
    : imaginary
    * * *
    imaginario adj imaginary

    Spanish-English dictionary > imaginario

  • 5 itinerario

    m.
    route, itinerary.
    * * *
    1 itinerary
    * * *
    noun m.
    route, itinerary
    * * *
    SM
    1) (=ruta) itinerary, route
    2) Méx (Ferro) timetable
    * * *
    masculino itinerary, route
    * * *
    = itinerary, road map [roadmap], route map, pathway, pathway, course.
    Ex. There will be full welcome kits (in the language of the travelers) with day to day itinerary and maps.
    Ex. The Computing Information Directory (CID) has been a road map to the computing literature since 1981.
    Ex. This service aims to provide refugees with a cultural route map through the confused and sometimes hostile environment in which they find themselves.
    Ex. The course is composed of 5 pathways, 1 of which is information and communication.
    Ex. This system automates the scientific task of determining the pathway of steps underlying a chemical reaction.
    Ex. The course of the race contains many steep hills, often paved with cobblestones.
    * * *
    masculino itinerary, route
    * * *
    = itinerary, road map [roadmap], route map, pathway, pathway, course.

    Ex: There will be full welcome kits (in the language of the travelers) with day to day itinerary and maps.

    Ex: The Computing Information Directory (CID) has been a road map to the computing literature since 1981.
    Ex: This service aims to provide refugees with a cultural route map through the confused and sometimes hostile environment in which they find themselves.
    Ex: The course is composed of 5 pathways, 1 of which is information and communication.
    Ex: This system automates the scientific task of determining the pathway of steps underlying a chemical reaction.
    Ex: The course of the race contains many steep hills, often paved with cobblestones.

    * * *
    itinerary, route
    * * *

     

    itinerario sustantivo masculino
    itinerary, route
    itinerario sustantivo masculino itinerary: seguimos el itinerario que venía marcado en el mapa, we're following the itinerary outlined on the map
    ' itinerario' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    camino
    - ruta
    English:
    itinerary
    - route
    - schedule
    * * *
    1. [ruta] route, itinerary
    2. Educ branch [of curriculum]
    * * *
    m itinerary
    * * *
    : itinerary, route
    * * *
    1. (camino) route
    2. (plan de ruta) itinerary [pl. itineraries]

    Spanish-English dictionary > itinerario

  • 6 modo de comunicación

    Ex. Traditional communication pathways between acquisitions and other departments are inadequate in the process of acquiring the electronic resources increasingly in demand by the community.
    * * *

    Ex: Traditional communication pathways between acquisitions and other departments are inadequate in the process of acquiring the electronic resources increasingly in demand by the community.

    Spanish-English dictionary > modo de comunicación

  • 7 método de comunicación

    Ex. Traditional communication pathways between acquisitions and other departments are inadequate in the process of acquiring the electronic resources increasingly in demand by the community.
    * * *

    Ex: Traditional communication pathways between acquisitions and other departments are inadequate in the process of acquiring the electronic resources increasingly in demand by the community.

    Spanish-English dictionary > método de comunicación

  • 8 perderse

    1 (extraviarse - persona) to get lost; (- animal) to go missing
    2 (confundirse) to get confused, get mixed up
    3 (desaparecer) to disappear, take off
    en cuanto ve problemas, se pierde as soon as there's a problem, he disappears
    4 (dejar escapar) to miss
    ¡no te lo pierdas! don't miss it!
    * * *
    2) miss
    * * *
    VPR
    1) [persona] to get lost

    ¡piérdete! — * get lost! *

    2) [objeto]

    ¿qué se les ha perdido en Alemania? — what business have they in Germany?

    3) [+ programa, fiesta] to miss

    ¡no te lo pierdas! — don't miss it!

    4) (=desaparecer) to disappear
    5) (=desperdiciarse) to be wasted, go to waste
    6) (=arruinarse) [persona] to lose one's way; [cosecha] to be ruined, get spoiled
    7)

    perderse por algo/algn — to be mad about sth/sb

    perderse por hacer algo — to be dying to do sth, long to do sth

    8) LAm (=prostituirse) to go on the streets
    * * *
    (v.) = go astray, get + lost, lose + Posesivo + way, go + missing, miss out on, slip through + the cracks, get out of + Posesivo + depth, wander off + route, disorient, disorientate, wander off + track, lose + Posesivo + bearings
    Ex. If you have a different answer check to see where you went astray.
    Ex. Like Theseus in the Labyrinth we need to be able to follow well trodden pathways through hypermedia materials and re-track our journey along an imaginary thread when we get lost.
    Ex. They had lost their way; most had completely lost sight of the founders' vision, and the few who could still see it had lost their faith in its potential for fulfillment.
    Ex. This article describes the consequences of a burglary of a during which the desktop system, computer, image setter, and a FAX machine went missing.
    Ex. The author regrets the struggle which Greco-Roman studies have to survive in the USA arguing that US students miss out on understanding the origins of much of their culture and government.
    Ex. The author discusses the factors which have led to early adolescent services slipping through the cracks.
    Ex. It sounds like it could be quite easy for you to get out of your depth with this problem.
    Ex. If one with route knowledge wanders off the route, it would be very difficult for them to backtrack to the route of their own.
    Ex. The author illustrates a method of organising the hypertext files so as to prevent the user from becoming disoriented in the system.
    Ex. Being disorientated or lost is one of the fundamental difficulties which users experience when trying to navigate within hypertext systems.
    Ex. You may find that it is easy to find ourself wandering off track, following something that really interests you, and ultimately not answering the question.
    Ex. Around and around she went, becoming disoriented and losing her bearings, buffeted to and fro by the awesome power of Mother Nature.
    * * *
    (v.) = go astray, get + lost, lose + Posesivo + way, go + missing, miss out on, slip through + the cracks, get out of + Posesivo + depth, wander off + route, disorient, disorientate, wander off + track, lose + Posesivo + bearings

    Ex: If you have a different answer check to see where you went astray.

    Ex: Like Theseus in the Labyrinth we need to be able to follow well trodden pathways through hypermedia materials and re-track our journey along an imaginary thread when we get lost.
    Ex: They had lost their way; most had completely lost sight of the founders' vision, and the few who could still see it had lost their faith in its potential for fulfillment.
    Ex: This article describes the consequences of a burglary of a during which the desktop system, computer, image setter, and a FAX machine went missing.
    Ex: The author regrets the struggle which Greco-Roman studies have to survive in the USA arguing that US students miss out on understanding the origins of much of their culture and government.
    Ex: The author discusses the factors which have led to early adolescent services slipping through the cracks.
    Ex: It sounds like it could be quite easy for you to get out of your depth with this problem.
    Ex: If one with route knowledge wanders off the route, it would be very difficult for them to backtrack to the route of their own.
    Ex: The author illustrates a method of organising the hypertext files so as to prevent the user from becoming disoriented in the system.
    Ex: Being disorientated or lost is one of the fundamental difficulties which users experience when trying to navigate within hypertext systems.
    Ex: You may find that it is easy to find ourself wandering off track, following something that really interests you, and ultimately not answering the question.
    Ex: Around and around she went, becoming disoriented and losing her bearings, buffeted to and fro by the awesome power of Mother Nature.

    * * *

    ■perderse verbo reflexivo
    1 (extraviarse) to get lost: es fácil perderse en el metro, it's easy to get lost on the underground
    2 (desaparecer) to disappear
    perderse entre la multitud, to disappear into the crowd
    3 (pervertirse) to go to rack and ruin
    ' perderse' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    despistarse
    - perder
    - vista
    English:
    astray
    - lose
    - lost
    - miss out
    - way
    - fail
    - lapse
    - miss
    - recede
    - stray
    * * *
    vpr
    1. [extraviarse] to get lost;
    me he perdido I'm lost;
    se han perdido las tijeras the scissors have disappeared;
    se me ha perdido el reloj I've lost my watch;
    Fig
    a mí no se me ha perdido nada por allí I've no desire to go there
    2. [desaparecer] to disappear;
    se perdió entre el gentío she disappeared amongst the crowd;
    Fam
    ¡piérdete! get lost!
    3. [distraerse, no seguir el hilo]
    me he perdido, ¿podría repetir? I'm lost, would you mind repeating what you just said?;
    cuando empiezan a hablar de toros yo me pierdo when they start talking about bullfighting, I get completely lost;
    uno se pierde entre tantas siglas de partidos políticos all these acronyms for the different political parties are so confusing;
    explícamelo otra vez, que me he perdido explain it to me again, you lost me
    4. [desaprovechar]
    perderse algo to miss out on sth;
    ¡no te lo pierdas! don't miss it!;
    me he perdido el principio I missed the beginning;
    no te has perdido gran cosa you didn't miss much
    5. [desperdiciarse] to be wasted
    6. [por los vicios, las malas compañías] to be beyond salvation
    7. [anhelar]
    perderse por to be mad about
    * * *
    v/r get lost;
    no se te ha perdido nada aquí fig there’s nothing here for you
    * * *
    vr
    extraviarse: to get lost, to stray
    * * *
    1. (extraviarse) to get lost
    ¡piérdete! get lost!
    2. (concierto, película, etc) to miss
    ¡no te lo pierdas! don't miss it!

    Spanish-English dictionary > perderse

  • 9 repetir el recorrido

    (v.) = re-track [retrack]
    Ex. Like Theseus in the Labyrinth we need to be able to follow well trodden pathways through hypermedia materials and re-track our journey along an imaginary thread when we get lost.
    * * *
    (v.) = re-track [retrack]

    Ex: Like Theseus in the Labyrinth we need to be able to follow well trodden pathways through hypermedia materials and re-track our journey along an imaginary thread when we get lost.

    Spanish-English dictionary > repetir el recorrido

  • 10 trillado

    adj.
    1 hackneyed, cliché, timeworn, trite.
    2 well-trodden, footworn, beaten, threshed.
    3 common, everyday.
    past part.
    past participle of spanish verb: trillar.
    * * *
    1→ link=trillar trillar
    1 (camino) beaten, well-trodden
    2 figurado (expresión etc) overworked, well-worn
    * * *
    1. ADJ
    1) (Agr) threshed
    2) [camino] well-trodden
    3) [tema] (=gastado) well-worn, hackneyed; (=conocido) well-known
    2. SM
    1) (=investigación) thorough investigation
    2) Caribe (=sendero) path, track
    * * *
    - da adjetivo hackneyed, trite
    * * *
    = well trodden, hackneyed, well-worn, well-tread, overused [over-used], overworked, stale, timeworn.
    Ex. Like Theseus in the Labyrinth we need to be able to follow well trodden pathways through hypermedia materials and re-track our journey along an imaginary thread when we get lost.
    Ex. It is the order of words that helps us to distinguish between 'office post' and 'post office' or, to quote the hackneyed example, 'blind Venetian' and 'Venetian blind'.
    Ex. To use a well-worn example, the string (2) physiotherapy (6) nurses $h for (6) bibliographies obviously represents a different sense from the similar string (2) physiotherapy (6) bibliographies (6) nurses $h for.
    Ex. All the contributions provide well-articulated, fresh insights, even on well-tread subjects.
    Ex. Sustainable agriculture has become a very over-used concept.
    Ex. User-friendliness is a much overworked phrase which has been interpreted in different ways by software houses.
    Ex. We librarians are already infiltrators into the stale round of our readers' domestic daily life.
    Ex. This is in stark contrast to the warped logic and timeworn language to which Lebanon's rulers resorted in the wake of the tragedy.
    ----
    * camino trillado = beaten road.
    * trillado, lo = tired, the, worn, the.
    * * *
    - da adjetivo hackneyed, trite
    * * *
    = well trodden, hackneyed, well-worn, well-tread, overused [over-used], overworked, stale, timeworn.

    Ex: Like Theseus in the Labyrinth we need to be able to follow well trodden pathways through hypermedia materials and re-track our journey along an imaginary thread when we get lost.

    Ex: It is the order of words that helps us to distinguish between 'office post' and 'post office' or, to quote the hackneyed example, 'blind Venetian' and 'Venetian blind'.
    Ex: To use a well-worn example, the string (2) physiotherapy (6) nurses $h for (6) bibliographies obviously represents a different sense from the similar string (2) physiotherapy (6) bibliographies (6) nurses $h for.
    Ex: All the contributions provide well-articulated, fresh insights, even on well-tread subjects.
    Ex: Sustainable agriculture has become a very over-used concept.
    Ex: User-friendliness is a much overworked phrase which has been interpreted in different ways by software houses.
    Ex: We librarians are already infiltrators into the stale round of our readers' domestic daily life.
    Ex: This is in stark contrast to the warped logic and timeworn language to which Lebanon's rulers resorted in the wake of the tragedy.
    * camino trillado = beaten road.
    * trillado, lo = tired, the, worn, the.

    * * *
    hackneyed, trite
    * * *

    Del verbo trillar: ( conjugate trillar)

    trillado es:

    el participio

    Multiple Entries:
    trillado    
    trillar
    trillar ( conjugate trillar) verbo transitivo
    to thresh
    trillado,-a adjetivo fig (muy conocido) trite, commonplace
    trillar verbo transitivo to thresh
    ' trillado' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    trillada
    - tópico
    - visto
    English:
    derivative
    - hackneyed
    - trite
    - well
    * * *
    trillado, -a adj
    [tema] well-worn, hackneyed; [eslogan] trite, hackneyed; [camino] well-trodden;
    fuera de los caminos trillados off the beaten track
    * * *
    adj fig
    hackneyed, clichéd
    * * *
    trillado, -da adj
    : trite, hackneyed

    Spanish-English dictionary > trillado

  • 11 vía de comunicación

    communication channel
    * * *
    road (o rail etc) link
    * * *
    (n.) = communication pathway, highway
    Ex. Traditional communication pathways between acquisitions and other departments are inadequate in the process of acquiring the electronic resources increasingly in demand by the community.
    Ex. Having entered the next state and a highway off the turnpike, he was amazed by the extraordinary flatness of the land, especially in contrast to the hilly terrain he had grown up with back home.
    * * *
    road (o rail etc) link
    * * *
    (n.) = communication pathway, highway

    Ex: Traditional communication pathways between acquisitions and other departments are inadequate in the process of acquiring the electronic resources increasingly in demand by the community.

    Ex: Having entered the next state and a highway off the turnpike, he was amazed by the extraordinary flatness of the land, especially in contrast to the hilly terrain he had grown up with back home.

    Spanish-English dictionary > vía de comunicación

  • 12 querencia

    (Sp. model spelled same [kerénsja] < querer < Latin quaerere 'to seek; inquire; request')
       The place where a person (or animal) was born. Also a favorite spot or 'haunt.' Watts, quoting Dobie, says that Texan cowboys use the term to refer to a longhorn's birthplace or a place the cow persistently returns to. The OED notes that in bullfighting it refers to the place in the ring where a bull takes his stand, or his "stamping ground." The DRAE indicates that it refers to the inclination or tendency of a person or animal to return to the place where s/he was raised or has become accustomed to. It may also refer to the place itself. Santamaría quotes Valle, who reports that this term refers (in Nicaragua) to the native territory of an animal, meaning the place where it was raised, where it has become accustomed to graze, and whose pathways and landmarks it knows and remembers instinctively. By extension, it is also used for the place a person calls home and where his or her loved ones reside.

    Vocabulario Vaquero > querencia

См. также в других словарях:

  • Pathways to Housing — is a not for profit organization founded in 1992 by Dr. Sam Tsemberis, who has a PhD in Clinical Community Psychology, is a faculty member of the Department of Psychiatry of the New York University Medical Center, and originally from Greece. [… …   Wikipedia

  • Pathways of Belief — is a British Television Series that is Educational and shows people what they do in certain religions. It Aired on BBC2 between 1996 and 2001. It ran for 6 Series. The religions are Christianity, Silkisim, Islam, Hindu, Buddisim and Jeudisim.… …   Wikipedia

  • Pathways into Darkness — Infobox VG title = Pathways Into Darkness developer = Bungie Software Products Corporation publisher = Bungie Software Products Corporation distributor = designer = Jason Jones engine = version = released = 1993 genre = Blend of Role Playing Game …   Wikipedia

  • Pathways Foundation — The Pathways Foundation is an Australian non profit organization aiming to provide boys and girls with a contemporary rite of passage to manhood or womanhood. Their most popular program is the Pathways to Manhood camp at which over two thousand… …   Wikipedia

  • Pathways of Life — Infobox Film name = Pathways of Life image size = caption = director = Christy Cabanne producer = writer = narrator = starring = Spottiswoode Aitken Lillian Gish music = cinematography = editing = distributor = released = 1916 runtime = country …   Wikipedia

  • pathways — n. route, course; series of reactions that results in one substance being transformed into another (Chemistry) …   English contemporary dictionary

  • Career Pathways — is a workforce development strategy used in the U.S. to support workers’ transitions from education into and through the workforce. This strategy has been adopted at the federal, state and local levels in order to increase education, training and …   Wikipedia

  • Participatory Impact Pathways Analysis — People act on the basis of their understanding of how the world works their theories of action (Argyris and Schön, 1974). This applies to projects and programs as well. If you can improve a program s theory you can improve how people implement it …   Wikipedia

  • Dopaminergic pathways — Mesolimbic dopaminergic and serotonergic pathways. Dopaminergic pathways are neural pathways in the brain which transmit the neurotransmitter dopamine from one region of the brain to another.[1] The neurons of the dopaminergic pathways hav …   Wikipedia

  • Biochemical Pathways — („Biochemische Reaktionswege“) ist der Titel einer in verschiedenen Formen verfügbaren graphischen Darstellung der in Lebewesen ablaufenden chemischen Reaktionen mit den daran beteiligten chemischen Verbindungen und Enzymen, weiteren… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Sacred Pathways — Infobox Album | Name = Sacred Pathways Type = Studio album Artist = Artension Released = 2001 Recorded = Frontiers Records in Napoli, Italy, 2001 Genre = Progressive metal Length = 54:07 (58:11 with bonus track) Label = Frontiers Records Producer …   Wikipedia

Поделиться ссылкой на выделенное

Прямая ссылка:
Нажмите правой клавишей мыши и выберите «Копировать ссылку»