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21 presume
prə'zju:m1) (to believe that something is true without proof; to take for granted: When I found the room empty, I presumed that you had gone home; `Has he gone?' `I presume so.') presumir, suponer2) (to be bold enough (to act without the right, knowledge etc to do so): I wouldn't presume to advise someone as clever as you.) atreverse, permitirse•- presumption
- presumptuous
- presumptuousness
presume vb suponertr[prɪ'zjʊːm]1 suponer, imaginarse, presumir1 suponer2 (venture to) atreverse a\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto presume on somebody's generosity abusar de la generosidad de alguien1) assume, suppose: suponer, asumir, presumir2)to presume to : atreverse a, osarv.• presumir v.• suponer v.prɪ'zuːm, prɪ'zjuːm
1.
a) ( assume) suponer*I presume so — supongo or me imagino que sí
missing, presumed dead — desaparecido, dado por muerto
a defendant is presumed innocent until proved guilty — un acusado es inocente hasta que se demuestre lo contrario
Mr Vidal, I presume? — usted debe (de) ser el señor Vidal ¿o me equivoco?
b) ( dare)to presume to + INF — atreverse a + inf
2.
vi[prɪ'zjuːm]I have already presumed on/upon your generosity quite enough — ya he abusado bastante de su generosidad
1. VT1) (=suppose) suponer, presumirhis death must be presumed — es de suponer que ha muerto, hay que presumir que ha muerto
to presume that... — suponer que...
it may be presumed that... — es de suponer que...
Dr Livingstone, I presume — Dr Livingstone según creo
2) (=venture)2. VI1) (=suppose) suponer2) (=take liberties)you presume too much — no sabes lo que pides, pides demasiado
* * *[prɪ'zuːm, prɪ'zjuːm]
1.
a) ( assume) suponer*I presume so — supongo or me imagino que sí
missing, presumed dead — desaparecido, dado por muerto
a defendant is presumed innocent until proved guilty — un acusado es inocente hasta que se demuestre lo contrario
Mr Vidal, I presume? — usted debe (de) ser el señor Vidal ¿o me equivoco?
b) ( dare)to presume to + INF — atreverse a + inf
2.
viI have already presumed on/upon your generosity quite enough — ya he abusado bastante de su generosidad
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22 arrogancia
arrogancia sustantivo femenino arrogance;
arrogancia sustantivo femenino arrogance ' arrogancia' also found in these entries: Spanish: fachada - fanfarronear - creer - dejo - molestar English: arrogance - haughtily - haughtiness - outward - presumption - pride - superciliousness -
23 atrevimiento
atrevimiento sustantivo masculino nerve
atrevimiento sustantivo masculino
1 (audacia) daring, audacity
2 (insolencia) insolence, impudence ' atrevimiento' also found in these entries: Spanish: confianza - desvergüenza - intromisión - pagar English: daring - presumption - suggestiveness - audacity -
24 gilipollez
gilipollez sustantivo femenino (Esp fam o vulg):◊ decir gilipolleces to talk garbage (AmE) o (BrE) rubbish;no discutáis por esa gilipollez don't argue over a stupid o silly thing like that; pagar tanto es una gilipollez it's stupid paying that much
gilipollez sustantivo femenino fam (tontería) stupidity (vanidad) presumption ' gilipollez' also found in these entries: English: bollocks -
25 suposición
suposición sustantivo femenino supposition
suposición sustantivo femenino supposition ' suposición' also found in these entries: Spanish: deber English: assumption - presumption - supposition
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См. также в других словарях:
presumption — pre·sump·tion /pri zəmp shən/ n: an inference as to the existence of a fact not certainly known that the law requires to be drawn from the known or proven existence of some other fact conclusive presumption: a presumption that the law does not… … Law dictionary
Presumption — • A product of pride, and a vice opposed to the theological virtue of hope • A term signifying a reasonable conjecture concerning something doubtful, drawn from arguments and appearances, which by the force of circumstances can be accepted as a… … Catholic encyclopedia
Presumption — Pre*sump tion (?; 215), n. [L. praesumptio: cf. F. pr[ e]somption, OF. also presumpcion. See {Presume}.] 1. The act of presuming, or believing upon probable evidence; the act of assuming or taking for granted; belief upon incomplete proof. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
presumption — pre‧sump‧tion [prɪˈzʌmpʆn] noun [countable, uncountable] LAW the act of thinking that something is true because it seems very likely, although there is no proof: • The amendment would create a legal presumption. presumption of • The claims… … Financial and business terms
presumption — [n1] belief, hypothesis anticipation, apriorism, assumption, basis, chance, conjecture, grounds, guess, likelihood, opinion, plausibility, posit, postulate, postulation, premise, presupposition, probability, reason, shot, shot in the dark*,… … New thesaurus
presumption — (n.) mid 13c., seizure and occupation without right, also taking upon oneself more than is warranted, from L.L. praesumptionem confidence, audacity, in classical Latin, a taking for granted, anticipation, from praesumere to take beforehand, from… … Etymology dictionary
presumption — presupposition, assumption, postulate, premise, posit (see under PRESUPPOSE) Analogous words: view, *opinion, conviction, belief: conjecture, surmise (see under CONJECTURE vb) … New Dictionary of Synonyms
presumption — ► NOUN 1) an act or instance of presuming something to be the case. 2) an idea that is presumed to be true. 3) arrogant or disrespectful behaviour. 4) chiefly Law an attitude adopted towards something in the absence of contrary factors … English terms dictionary
presumption — [prē zump′shən, prizump′shən] n. [ME < OFr presumpcion < L praesumptio, a taking beforehand < praesumptus, pp. of praesumere: see PRESUME] 1. the act of presuming; specif., a) an overstepping of proper bounds; forwardness; effrontery b)… … English World dictionary
presumption — An inference in favor of a particular fact. A presumption is a rule of law, statutory or judicial, by which finding of a basic fact gives rise to existence of presumed fact, until presumption is rebutted. Van Wart v. Cook, Okl.App., 557 P.2d 1161 … Black's law dictionary
Presumption — In the law of evidence, a presumption of a particular fact can be made without the aid of proof in some situations. The types of presumption includes a rebuttable discretionary presumption, a rebuttable mandatory presumption, and an irrebutable… … Wikipedia