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81 espiración
f.breathing-out, expiration, exhalation.* * *1 breathing out, exhalation, expiration* * *femenino exhalation* * *= expiration.Ex. A new method is proposed to obtain detailed information about respiratory parameters without interfering with the expiration.* * *femenino exhalation* * *= expiration.Ex: A new method is proposed to obtain detailed information about respiratory parameters without interfering with the expiration.
* * *exhalation* * *
espiración sustantivo femenino breathing out, exhaling: en el yoga son muy importantes los ejercicios de espiración, exhaling exercises are very important in yoga
* * *espiración nfexhalation, breathing out* * *f exhalation* * * -
82 esquema
m.1 diagram.2 sketch, skeleton, design, diagram.3 way of thinking.4 scheme, plan, schedule, rede.5 layout.* * *1 (gráfica) diagram2 (plan) outline, plan* * *noun m.* * *SM1) [en esbozo] (=resumen) outline; (=diagrama) diagram; (=dibujo) sketch2) (=conjunto de ideas) thinking, way of thinkingsus esquemas mentales están anclados en el pasado — his thinking o way of thinking is rooted in the past
no me imaginaba que fueras a hacerte monja, me has roto todos los esquemas — I never imagined you'd become a nun, you've really thrown me *
3) (Rel, Fil) schema* * *2) ( de ideas)el esquema liberal — liberal philosophy o thinking
romperle los esquemas a alguien — (fam) ( echar abajo - conceptos) to shatter somebody's preconceptions; (- planes) to ruin somebody's plans
* * *= framework, schema [schemas/schemata, -pl.], schematisation [schematization, -USA], schematic, landscape.Ex. The intention is to establish a general framework, and then to give exceptions or further explanation and examples for each area in turn.Ex. A schema of information sciences is put forward with the plea that any discussion of information and information science should first declare the definitions to be used.Ex. The proposed schematisation provides librarians who have collection development responsibilities with a mechanism for assigning a specific priority to each selection.Ex. The schematic for this structure can be found in figure 2.1.Ex. During the post-war period international organizations have become a prominent feature of the international landscape.----* esquema del cableado eléctrico = wiring diagram.* esquema general = outline, overview.* esquemas = schemata [schema, -sing.].* romper los esquemas = think out(side) + (of) the box.* * *2) ( de ideas)el esquema liberal — liberal philosophy o thinking
romperle los esquemas a alguien — (fam) ( echar abajo - conceptos) to shatter somebody's preconceptions; (- planes) to ruin somebody's plans
* * *= framework, schema [schemas/schemata, -pl.], schematisation [schematization, -USA], schematic, landscape.Ex: The intention is to establish a general framework, and then to give exceptions or further explanation and examples for each area in turn.
Ex: A schema of information sciences is put forward with the plea that any discussion of information and information science should first declare the definitions to be used.Ex: The proposed schematisation provides librarians who have collection development responsibilities with a mechanism for assigning a specific priority to each selection.Ex: The schematic for this structure can be found in figure 2.1.Ex: During the post-war period international organizations have become a prominent feature of the international landscape.* esquema del cableado eléctrico = wiring diagram.* esquema general = outline, overview.* esquemas = schemata [schema, -sing.].* romper los esquemas = think out(side) + (of) the box.* * *A1 (croquis) sketch, diagram2(sinopsis): mándales un esquema del argumento/guión send them an outline o a synopsis of the plot/scripthazte un esquema de lo que quieres decir draw up an outline o a plan of what you want to sayel esquema narrativo de la novela es simple the novel has a simple plotB(de ideas): la interpretación de nuestra realidad con esquemas ajenos the use of foreign ways of thinking o foreign perceptions to try to understand our own situationproyectos opuestos al esquema liberal projects at odds with liberal philosophy o thinkinges imposible sacarla de sus esquemas you'll never get her to change her way of thinkingromperle los esquemas a algn ( fam) (echar abajo — conceptos) to shatter sb's preconceptions; (— planes) to ruin sb's plans* * *
esquema sustantivo masculino
1 ( croquis) sketch, diagram;
( sinopsis) outline
2 ( de ideas):◊ el esquema liberal liberal philosophy o thinking;
no se sale de sus esquemas she doesn't change her way of thinking
esquema sustantivo masculino
1 (dibujo) diagram, sketch
2 (resumen de ideas) outline: les quiero presentar un esquema de nuestros objetivos, I'd like to submit an outline of our objectives
3 (base) preconceptions, philosophy: tiene unos esquemas de comportamiento muy maduros, he conducts himself in a mature manner
' esquema' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
cuadro
- guion
English:
diagram
- frame
- skeleton
- outline
- plan
* * *esquema nm1. [gráfico] diagram;hazme un esquema de la ruta hasta tu casa draw me a map of the route to your house2. [resumen] outline;hacerse un esquema to draw up an outlinelos esquemas de comportamiento del enfermo anoréxico the behaviour patterns of anorexics;romper los esquemas a alguien: sus ideas sobre las drogas me rompieron los esquemas his ideas on drugs really challenged my preconceptions;ya tenía el itinerario preparado pero su respuesta me rompió los esquemas I had already worked out the itinerary but her answer threw all my plans up in the air* * *m1 ( croquis) sketch, diagram;2 ( sinopsis) outline, summary* * *esquema nfbosquejo: outline, sketch, plan* * *esquema n1. (diagrama) diagram2. (resumen) outline -
83 esquematización
f.1 schematization, plotting.2 scheme, plot.* * *= schematisation [schematization, -USA].Ex. The proposed schematisation provides librarians who have collection development responsibilities with a mechanism for assigning a specific priority to each selection.* * *= schematisation [schematization, -USA].Ex: The proposed schematisation provides librarians who have collection development responsibilities with a mechanism for assigning a specific priority to each selection.
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84 estupideces
f.pl.nonsense, drivel, inane remarks, inanities.* * *(n.) = drivel, nonsense, baloney, blather, piffle, palaver, claptrap, buncombe, bunkum, bunkEx. The article 'In defense of 'ignorant drivel'' criticises the reforms in scholarly serials publication proposed by John Lubans.Ex. Since 'added entry' maps to 'access point' and 'main entry' maps to 'access point', some curious, but harmless non-sense results.Ex. The author characterises the strategic plan as baloney carefully crafted to conceal the real problem.Ex. The article 'Information science: blather and piffle?' points out that the term 'Information science' is used in a variety of ways often to mean quite different things.Ex. The article 'Information science: blather and piffle?' points out that the term 'Information science' is used in a variety of ways often to mean quite different things.Ex. To speak the argot, one of the main rules is called 'police palaver' -- never use a short word where a long one will do.Ex. Such antediluvian claptrap has every appearance of using a presumed hurt to military effectiveness as a shield for prejudice.Ex. The word ' buncombe,' often misspelled as 'bunkum,' soon came to refer to any sort of spurious or questionable statement.Ex. The word 'buncombe,' often misspelled as ' bunkum,' soon came to refer to any sort of spurious or questionable statement.Ex. Henry Ford is often quoted as saying 'History is bunk'.* * *(n.) = drivel, nonsense, baloney, blather, piffle, palaver, claptrap, buncombe, bunkum, bunkEx: The article 'In defense of 'ignorant drivel'' criticises the reforms in scholarly serials publication proposed by John Lubans.
Ex: Since 'added entry' maps to 'access point' and 'main entry' maps to 'access point', some curious, but harmless non-sense results.Ex: The author characterises the strategic plan as baloney carefully crafted to conceal the real problem.Ex: The article 'Information science: blather and piffle?' points out that the term 'Information science' is used in a variety of ways often to mean quite different things.Ex: The article 'Information science: blather and piffle?' points out that the term 'Information science' is used in a variety of ways often to mean quite different things.Ex: To speak the argot, one of the main rules is called 'police palaver' -- never use a short word where a long one will do.Ex: Such antediluvian claptrap has every appearance of using a presumed hurt to military effectiveness as a shield for prejudice.Ex: The word ' buncombe,' often misspelled as 'bunkum,' soon came to refer to any sort of spurious or questionable statement.Ex: The word 'buncombe,' often misspelled as ' bunkum,' soon came to refer to any sort of spurious or questionable statement.Ex: Henry Ford is often quoted as saying 'History is bunk'. -
85 evitar
v.1 to avoid, to prevent (impedir) (desastre, accidente).podría haberse evitado esta catástrofe this disaster could have been avoided o preventedevitar que alguien haga algo to stop o prevent somebody from doing somethingRicardo previno el accidente Richard prevented the accident.María se guarda de decir mentiras Mary takes care not to tell lies.2 to avoid (eludir) (cuestión, persona).no puede evitarlo he can't help itJavier siempre evita encontrarse conmigo Javier always avoids meeting me3 to save.esto me evita tener que ir this saves me (from) having to go* * *1 (gen) to avoid2 (impedir) to prevent, avoid3 (ahorrar) to spare, save* * *verb1) to avoid2) prevent* * *1. VT1) (=eludir) to avoid2) (=ahorrar) to saveme evita (el) tener que... — it saves me having to...
2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) (eludir, huir de) to avoidb) ( impedir) to avoid, preventpara evitar que sufran — to avoid o prevent them suffering
c) ( ahorrar)2.evitarle algo a alguien — <molestia/preocupación> to save o spare somebody something
* * *= avoid, bypass [by-pass], eschew, guard against, impede, prevent, shy away from, deflect, forestall, avert, preempt [pre-empt], shun, be shy of + Gerundio, sidestep [side-step], steer + clear of, steer away from, get (a)round, shy from, stay away from, stave off, baulk [balk, -USA], hamstring, ward off, head off, skirt, give + Nombre + a wide berth.Ex. This situation requires a very skilled information worker if total disaster is to be avoided.Ex. She repeatedly bypassed the catalog because she was an inveterate fiction reader and approached the A section of the fiction shelf expecting to find Sholom Aleichem under ALEICHEM.Ex. However, most contributors to the debate about the future of SLIS have eschewed practicalities in favour of sweeping and dramatic generalizations.Ex. The system will ask you to enter the new password a second time to help guard against keying errors.Ex. In early 1984 we were invited to undertake a survey of the fourteen schools of librarianship and information studies in England and Wales, giving particular attention to the constraints impeding or preventing desirable change.Ex. To prevent an entry under the first name(s), these must be entered on a separate line with the subfield code 'j'.Ex. Those who conscientiously attempt to keep abreast of current thought might well shy away from an examination calculated to show how much of the previous month's efforts could be produced on call.Ex. Questions such as 'Can I help you?' on the part of the librarian are easily deflected by a hasty, perhaps automatic and ill-considered, 'Oh, no thanks' by the user.Ex. In order to forestall such an event, some libraries in Britain were stung into action by the publication of an Act of Parliament which totally ignored public libraries.Ex. He often did this, almost unconsciously, to avert an immediate sign of reaction to an irksome confrontation.Ex. This article concludes that the main value of the indicators is as a management tool, as a means of preempting problems.Ex. Traditionally these books have been shunned because of their fragile nature, but librarians are finding that a small collection can enliven story times.Ex. Printers or publishers were sometimes shy of giving their real names -- usually because a book was treasonable, or libellous, or a piracy -- and for similar reasons they might give a false place of publication and a false date.Ex. This article discusses how to start projects on the right footing by defining objectives and planning properly to help sidestep pitfalls which can be associated with bespoke software development.Ex. This entire target market has steered clear of the public library.Ex. This article gives guidance for steering away from some of the more obvious pitfalls when buying software.Ex. The view of most users is that they can get around the restriction in a number of ways.Ex. I have not shied from identifying some of the obstacles to achieving this vision.Ex. This, again, is an area most libraries -- at least the ones I'm familiar with -- have tended to stay away from.Ex. They resorted to exercising to stave off unwanted weight gain believed to be caused by alcohol use.Ex. While many scholars concede that military interventions are sometimes permissible, they balk when it comes to deciding whether they are ever a moral duty.Ex. Instead, the proposed regulations would hamstring public access.Ex. The most strenuous efforts will not always ensure success, nor the boldest arm of human power ward off the stroke of misfortune.Ex. And this stimulus is working in the sense that it has headed off the imminent risk of a deflationary spiral.Ex. Bridleways that cross arable land may be legally ploughed up, but not those that skirt a field.Ex. Under the new law, motorists must give 'a wide berth' to stationary emergency vehicles displaying blue, red, or amber emergency warning lights.----* acto de evitar = avoidance.* agacharse para evitar = duck out of + harm's way.* el evitar = avoidance.* evitar discutir una cuestión = circumvent + issue.* evitar el desastre = ward off + disaster.* evitar el encuentro con = steer + clear of, give + Nombre + a wide berth, steer away from.* evitar el enfrentamiento = avoid + confrontation.* evitar el mal = shun + evil.* evitar la confrontación = avoid + confrontation.* evitar la fama = shun + the public eye, keep out of + the public eye.* evitar la publicidad = shun + the public eye, keep out of + the public eye.* evitar + Nombre = get (a)round + Nombre.* evitar polémicas = eschew + issues.* evitar problemas = stay out of + trouble.* evitar que = keep from.* evitar que + entrar = keep + Nombre + out.* evitar que + escapar = keep + Nombre + in.* evitar que + Nombre + Subjuntivo = save + Nombre + from + Gerundio.* evitar que + salir = keep + Nombre + in.* evitar ser afectado = escape + unaffected.* evitar temas delicados = eschew + issues.* evitar una cuestión = skirt + issue, tiptoe around + issue.* evitar una infección = prevent + infection.* evitar un error = avoid + error.* evitar un problema = avoid + problem.* evitar un riesgo = duck + risk.* evitar un tema = skirt + issue, tiptoe around + issue.* forma de evitar Algo = way round + Algo.* forma de evitar una dificultad = way (a)round + difficulty.* forma de evitar un problema = way round + problem.* intentar evitar = fight + shy of.* lo que hay que hacer y lo que hay que evitar = do's and don'ts, rights and wrongs.* no poder evitar + Infinitivo = cannot help + Gerundio, cannot help but + Verbo.* no poder evitar mencionar = cannot but notice.* no pude evitar notar que = couldn't help but notice (that).* para evitar su uso indebido por los niños = childproof.* proteger Algo para evitar su uso indebido por los niños = childproof.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) (eludir, huir de) to avoidb) ( impedir) to avoid, preventpara evitar que sufran — to avoid o prevent them suffering
c) ( ahorrar)2.evitarle algo a alguien — <molestia/preocupación> to save o spare somebody something
* * *= avoid, bypass [by-pass], eschew, guard against, impede, prevent, shy away from, deflect, forestall, avert, preempt [pre-empt], shun, be shy of + Gerundio, sidestep [side-step], steer + clear of, steer away from, get (a)round, shy from, stay away from, stave off, baulk [balk, -USA], hamstring, ward off, head off, skirt, give + Nombre + a wide berth.Ex: This situation requires a very skilled information worker if total disaster is to be avoided.
Ex: She repeatedly bypassed the catalog because she was an inveterate fiction reader and approached the A section of the fiction shelf expecting to find Sholom Aleichem under ALEICHEM.Ex: However, most contributors to the debate about the future of SLIS have eschewed practicalities in favour of sweeping and dramatic generalizations.Ex: The system will ask you to enter the new password a second time to help guard against keying errors.Ex: In early 1984 we were invited to undertake a survey of the fourteen schools of librarianship and information studies in England and Wales, giving particular attention to the constraints impeding or preventing desirable change.Ex: To prevent an entry under the first name(s), these must be entered on a separate line with the subfield code 'j'.Ex: Those who conscientiously attempt to keep abreast of current thought might well shy away from an examination calculated to show how much of the previous month's efforts could be produced on call.Ex: Questions such as 'Can I help you?' on the part of the librarian are easily deflected by a hasty, perhaps automatic and ill-considered, 'Oh, no thanks' by the user.Ex: In order to forestall such an event, some libraries in Britain were stung into action by the publication of an Act of Parliament which totally ignored public libraries.Ex: He often did this, almost unconsciously, to avert an immediate sign of reaction to an irksome confrontation.Ex: This article concludes that the main value of the indicators is as a management tool, as a means of preempting problems.Ex: Traditionally these books have been shunned because of their fragile nature, but librarians are finding that a small collection can enliven story times.Ex: Printers or publishers were sometimes shy of giving their real names -- usually because a book was treasonable, or libellous, or a piracy -- and for similar reasons they might give a false place of publication and a false date.Ex: This article discusses how to start projects on the right footing by defining objectives and planning properly to help sidestep pitfalls which can be associated with bespoke software development.Ex: This entire target market has steered clear of the public library.Ex: This article gives guidance for steering away from some of the more obvious pitfalls when buying software.Ex: The view of most users is that they can get around the restriction in a number of ways.Ex: I have not shied from identifying some of the obstacles to achieving this vision.Ex: This, again, is an area most libraries -- at least the ones I'm familiar with -- have tended to stay away from.Ex: They resorted to exercising to stave off unwanted weight gain believed to be caused by alcohol use.Ex: While many scholars concede that military interventions are sometimes permissible, they balk when it comes to deciding whether they are ever a moral duty.Ex: Instead, the proposed regulations would hamstring public access.Ex: The most strenuous efforts will not always ensure success, nor the boldest arm of human power ward off the stroke of misfortune.Ex: And this stimulus is working in the sense that it has headed off the imminent risk of a deflationary spiral.Ex: Bridleways that cross arable land may be legally ploughed up, but not those that skirt a field.Ex: Under the new law, motorists must give 'a wide berth' to stationary emergency vehicles displaying blue, red, or amber emergency warning lights.* acto de evitar = avoidance.* agacharse para evitar = duck out of + harm's way.* el evitar = avoidance.* evitar discutir una cuestión = circumvent + issue.* evitar el desastre = ward off + disaster.* evitar el encuentro con = steer + clear of, give + Nombre + a wide berth, steer away from.* evitar el enfrentamiento = avoid + confrontation.* evitar el mal = shun + evil.* evitar la confrontación = avoid + confrontation.* evitar la fama = shun + the public eye, keep out of + the public eye.* evitar la publicidad = shun + the public eye, keep out of + the public eye.* evitar + Nombre = get (a)round + Nombre.* evitar polémicas = eschew + issues.* evitar problemas = stay out of + trouble.* evitar que = keep from.* evitar que + entrar = keep + Nombre + out.* evitar que + escapar = keep + Nombre + in.* evitar que + Nombre + Subjuntivo = save + Nombre + from + Gerundio.* evitar que + salir = keep + Nombre + in.* evitar ser afectado = escape + unaffected.* evitar temas delicados = eschew + issues.* evitar una cuestión = skirt + issue, tiptoe around + issue.* evitar una infección = prevent + infection.* evitar un error = avoid + error.* evitar un problema = avoid + problem.* evitar un riesgo = duck + risk.* evitar un tema = skirt + issue, tiptoe around + issue.* forma de evitar Algo = way round + Algo.* forma de evitar una dificultad = way (a)round + difficulty.* forma de evitar un problema = way round + problem.* intentar evitar = fight + shy of.* lo que hay que hacer y lo que hay que evitar = do's and don'ts, rights and wrongs.* no poder evitar + Infinitivo = cannot help + Gerundio, cannot help but + Verbo.* no poder evitar mencionar = cannot but notice.* no pude evitar notar que = couldn't help but notice (that).* para evitar su uso indebido por los niños = childproof.* proteger Algo para evitar su uso indebido por los niños = childproof.* * *evitar [A1 ]vt1 (eludir, huir de) to avoidevita entrar en discusiones con él avoid getting into arguments with himpara evitar problemas decidí no ir to avoid problems I decided not to go¿por qué me estás evitando? why are you avoiding me?2 (impedir) to avoid, preventse podría haber evitado la tragedia the tragedy could have been avoided o averted o preventedharemos lo posible para evitarlo we'll do everything we can to avoid o prevent itpara evitar que sufran to avoid o prevent them suffering3 (ahorrar) to saveuna simple llamada nos habría evitado muchas molestias a simple phone call would have saved us a lot of troubleasí les evitarás muchos quebraderos de cabeza that way you'll save them a lot of worrypor esta ruta evitas tener que pasar por el centro if you go this way you avoid going through o it saves you going through the center■ evitarse‹problemas› to save oneselfevítese la molestia de ir a la tienda avoid the inconvenience of going to the storesi aceptas, te evitarás muchos problemas if you accept, you'll save yourself a lot of problemsme evitaría tener que pintarlo it would save me having to paint it* * *
Multiple Entries:
evitar
evitar algo
evitar ( conjugate evitar) verbo transitivo
◊ para evitar que sufran to avoid o prevent them sufferingc) ( remediar):◊ me puse a llorar, no lo puede evitar I started to cry, I couldn't help it
evitarse verbo pronominal ‹ problemas› to save oneself;
evitar verbo transitivo
1 to avoid: no pude evitar reírme, I couldn't help laughing
2 (una enfermedad, etc) to prevent
(una desgracia) to avert
3 (a una persona) to avoid ➣ Ver nota en avoid
' evitar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
ahorrar
- alarde
- carcajada
- contemporizar
- hincapié
- mortificar
- mortificarse
- murmuración
- para
- remediar
- aglomeración
- huir
English:
avert
- avoid
- breath
- bypass
- cheat
- clampdown
- clear
- deny
- get round
- harm
- head off
- hedge
- help
- loophole
- miss
- pair off
- prevent
- pussyfoot
- save
- scandal
- should
- stave off
- steer
- step in
- way
- get
- guard
- keep
- rat
- shun
- stave
- unavoidably
* * *♦ vt1. [impedir] [desastre, accidente] to avoid, to prevent;¿podría haberse evitado esta catástrofe ecológica? could this environmental disaster have been avoided o prevented?;evitar que alguien haga algo to stop o prevent sb from doing sth;no pude evitar que se pelearan I couldn't stop o prevent them from having a fight;hemos de evitar que se extienda el incendio we have to stop the fire spreading2. [eludir] [problema, cuestión, persona] to avoid;siempre me está evitando she's always trying to avoid me;Javier siempre evita encontrarse conmigo Javier always avoids meeting me;yo evité hablar del tema I kept o steered clear of the subject;no puede evitarlo he can't help it;no puedo evitar ser como soy I can't help (being) the way I am3. [ahorrar] to save;esta máquina nos evitaría mucho trabajo this machine would save us a lot of work;esto me evita tener que ir this gets me out of going, this saves me (from) having to go* * *v/t1 avoid;no puedo evitarlo I can’t help it2 ( impedir) prevent3 molestias save* * *evitar vt1) : to avoid2) prevenir: to prevent3) eludir: to escape, to elude* * *evitar vb1. (en general) to avoid2. (impedir) to prevent3. (ahorrar) to save -
86 exagerar
v.to exaggerate.yo creo que exageras I think you're exaggeratingno exageremos, no fue para tanto let's not exaggerate, it wasn't that badtantas precauciones, ¿no estás exagerando un poco? aren't you going a bit too far with o overdoing it with all these precautions?María magnificó sus sentimientos Mary exaggerated her feelings.* * *1 to exaggerate1 to exaggerate2 (abusar) to overdo it, do too much* * *verb* * *1.creo que eso sería exagerar las cosas — I think that would be going a bit far o overdoing it a bit
2.* * *1.verbo transitivo <suceso/noticia> to exaggerate2.exagerar vi ( al hablar) to exaggerate; ( al hacer algo)tampoco hay que exagerar, no tienes que acabarlo todo hoy — there's no need to overdo it, you don't have to finish it all today
* * *= exaggerate, overstate, inflate, make + a mountain out of a molehill, overplay + Posesivo + hand, go + overboard, dramatise [dramatize, -USA], get + worked up about nothing, fret about + nothing, hype.Ex. Users do not find this intolerable, so it may be that we tend to exaggerate the hostility that would be aroused by a similar approach in library catalogues.Ex. There is a tendency for people interviewed to overstate their use of public libraries.Ex. However, their average results were considerably inflated by one query which retrieved 412 items.Ex. 'After all,' he thought to himself, 'I may be making a mountain out of a molehill in this thing'.Ex. Whatever the situation, prepared for or unexpected, it is always too easy to overplay one's hand, praising a book so extravagantly, so effusively, that many children are put off.Ex. The article ' Going overboard with micros in the small library' offers guidelines for the small library on approaching the subject of microcomputers.Ex. This article describes how a group of 12-18 teenage volunteers formed a group to dramatise children's books for young children and their parents at a public library.Ex. Here's why I think this really was a mistake, and why we're getting worked up about nothing in this particular instance.Ex. I suggest that we are fretting about nothing and that we would do well to go with the flow and let the systems be introduced, as has been proposed.Ex. The field is clouded by manufacturers hyping their own products and industry factions spin-doctoring new technologies.----* exagerar las cualidades de Algo = oversell.* exagerar los méritos de Algotiene = oversell.* * *1.verbo transitivo <suceso/noticia> to exaggerate2.exagerar vi ( al hablar) to exaggerate; ( al hacer algo)tampoco hay que exagerar, no tienes que acabarlo todo hoy — there's no need to overdo it, you don't have to finish it all today
* * *= exaggerate, overstate, inflate, make + a mountain out of a molehill, overplay + Posesivo + hand, go + overboard, dramatise [dramatize, -USA], get + worked up about nothing, fret about + nothing, hype.Ex: Users do not find this intolerable, so it may be that we tend to exaggerate the hostility that would be aroused by a similar approach in library catalogues.
Ex: There is a tendency for people interviewed to overstate their use of public libraries.Ex: However, their average results were considerably inflated by one query which retrieved 412 items.Ex: 'After all,' he thought to himself, 'I may be making a mountain out of a molehill in this thing'.Ex: Whatever the situation, prepared for or unexpected, it is always too easy to overplay one's hand, praising a book so extravagantly, so effusively, that many children are put off.Ex: The article ' Going overboard with micros in the small library' offers guidelines for the small library on approaching the subject of microcomputers.Ex: This article describes how a group of 12-18 teenage volunteers formed a group to dramatise children's books for young children and their parents at a public library.Ex: Here's why I think this really was a mistake, and why we're getting worked up about nothing in this particular instance.Ex: I suggest that we are fretting about nothing and that we would do well to go with the flow and let the systems be introduced, as has been proposed.Ex: The field is clouded by manufacturers hyping their own products and industry factions spin-doctoring new technologies.* exagerar las cualidades de Algo = oversell.* exagerar los méritos de Algotiene = oversell.* * *exagerar [A1 ]vt‹suceso/noticia› to exaggerateestás exagerando la importancia del asunto you're exaggerating o overstating the importance of the matter■ exagerarvi(al hablar) to exaggerate(al hacer algo): tampoco hay que exagerar, no tienes que acabarlo todo hoy there's no need to overdo it, you don't have to finish it all today* * *
Multiple Entries:
exagerar
exagerar algo
exagerar ( conjugate exagerar) verbo transitivo ‹suceso/noticia› to exaggerate
verbo intransitivo ( al hablar) to exaggerate;
( al hacer algo) to overdo it, go over the top (colloq)
exagerar verbo transitivo to exaggerate
' exagerar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
dramatizar
- magnificar
- tinta
- agrandar
- tendencia
English:
dramatize
- embellish
- embroider
- exaggerate
- magnify
- overdo
- overstate
- pile on
- stretch
- blow
- over
- proportion
* * *♦ vtto exaggerate;la oposición exagera la trascendencia de este asunto the opposition has blown this issue out of proportion♦ vi1. [al describir, calificar] to exaggerate;yo creo que exageras I think you're exaggerating;no exageremos, no fue para tanto let's not exaggerate, it wasn't that bad2. [al actuar] to go too far, to overdo it ( con with);tantas precauciones, ¿no estás exagerando un poco? aren't you going a bit too far with o overdoing it with all these precautions?* * *v/t exaggerate* * *exagerar v: to exaggerate* * *exagerar vb to exaggerate -
87 excederse
1 (pasarse) to overdo it, go too far2 (en atenciones etc) to be extremely kind* * *VPR1) (=sobrepasarse) to excel o.s.2) (=exagerar)* * *(v.) = overrun [over-run], go + too farEx. The frequency of telephone reference enquiries has overrun the ability of the reference staff to respond.Ex. He argues that some of the laws being proposed go too far in restricting rights.* * *(v.) = overrun [over-run], go + too farEx: The frequency of telephone reference enquiries has overrun the ability of the reference staff to respond.
Ex: He argues that some of the laws being proposed go too far in restricting rights.* * *
■excederse verbo reflexivo to go too far
' excederse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
pasarse
- pecar
- exceder
- propasarse
English:
carry
- overrun
- run over
- exceed
* * *vpr* * *v/r go too far, get carried away* * *vr: to go too far -
88 experimentado
adj.experienced, old-hand, deft, veteran.past part.past participle of spanish verb: experimentar.* * *1→ link=experimentar experimentar► adjetivo1 (persona) experienced2 (método) tested, tried* * *(f. - experimentada)adj.* * *ADJ experienced* * *- da adjetivo experienced* * *= experienced, mature, veteran, well-tried, tried.Ex. Thus, complex and irrational arrangements can be tolerated, since only relatively experienced staff need to be able to locate items.Ex. There may be conflicts between the needs of new and mature users.Ex. He also lumps himself and librarians together as 'devoted and in some instances veteran pursuers, preservers, and disseminators of truth'.Ex. The following are some well-tried activities.Ex. The proposed reform ideas are retreads of tried and untrue conservative concepts with a history of failure.* * *- da adjetivo experienced* * *= experienced, mature, veteran, well-tried, tried.Ex: Thus, complex and irrational arrangements can be tolerated, since only relatively experienced staff need to be able to locate items.
Ex: There may be conflicts between the needs of new and mature users.Ex: He also lumps himself and librarians together as 'devoted and in some instances veteran pursuers, preservers, and disseminators of truth'.Ex: The following are some well-tried activities.Ex: The proposed reform ideas are retreads of tried and untrue conservative concepts with a history of failure.* * *experimentado -daexperienced* * *
Del verbo experimentar: ( conjugate experimentar)
experimentado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
experimentado
experimentar
experimentado◊ -da adjetivo
experienced
experimentar ( conjugate experimentar) verbo intransitivo experimentado con algo to experiment on o with sth
verbo transitivo
‹tristeza/alegría› to feel
experimentado,-a adjetivo experienced
experimentar
I verbo transitivo
1 (una sensación) to experience, feel: cuando la cuerda se rompió, experimentó un miedo abrumador, when the rope broke, he felt overwhelming fear
2 (un cambio) to undergo
Med experimentar una mejora, to improve
II verbo intransitivo (hacer experimentos) to experiment [con, with]
' experimentado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
experimentada
- metamorfosis
- experimentar
English:
experienced
- slight
- worldly-wise
- seasoned
* * *experimentado, -a adj1. [persona] experienced2. [método] tried and tested* * *adj experienced;no experimentado inexperienced* * *experimentado adj experienced -
89 falta de certeza
(n.) = uncertaintyEx. A language interface based on fuzzy set techniques is proposed to handle the uncertainty inherent in natural-language semantics.* * *(n.) = uncertaintyEx: A language interface based on fuzzy set techniques is proposed to handle the uncertainty inherent in natural-language semantics.
-
90 fluctuación
f.fluctuation, vacillation, change, wavering.* * *1 fluctuation* * *SF1) (=cambio) fluctuation2) (=indecisión) uncertainty, hesitation* * *femenino fluctuation* * *= fluctuation, ebb and flow, oscillation.Ex. There were abrupt fluctuations in his output from one week to the next.Ex. This natural ebb and flow necessarily picks up speed as change accelerates.Ex. This is proposed to reduce the oscillation while maintaining fast response to network dynamics.----* fluctuaciones emocionales = emotional ups and downs.* * *femenino fluctuation* * *= fluctuation, ebb and flow, oscillation.Ex: There were abrupt fluctuations in his output from one week to the next.
Ex: This natural ebb and flow necessarily picks up speed as change accelerates.Ex: This is proposed to reduce the oscillation while maintaining fast response to network dynamics.* fluctuaciones emocionales = emotional ups and downs.* * *fluctuationlas fluctuaciones de las opiniones en los últimos días the fluctuations o the shifts in people's opinions in the last few days* * *
fluctuación sustantivo femenino fluctuation
' fluctuación' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
oscilación
English:
fluctuation
* * *fluctuación nf1. [variación] fluctuationfluctuación del mercado market fluctuation2. [vacilación] wavering* * *f fluctuation -
91 formato legible por máquina
(n.) = machine-readable form, machine readable format, machine scannable formatEx. It will be a long time before all documents are available in machine-readable form.Ex. A computer-held data base is held in machine readable format.Ex. This was a test project to evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of a proposed serial issue identifier and its bar code symbology which converts the serial issue identifier into a machine scannable format.* * *(n.) = machine-readable form, machine readable format, machine scannable formatEx: It will be a long time before all documents are available in machine-readable form.
Ex: A computer-held data base is held in machine readable format.Ex: This was a test project to evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of a proposed serial issue identifier and its bar code symbology which converts the serial issue identifier into a machine scannable format. -
92 frustrar
v.1 to frustrate (person).El accidente frustró sus planes The accident frustrated her plans.Su actitud frustró al gerente His attitude frustrated the manager.2 to thwart, to put paid to (posibilidades, ilusiones).* * *1 (cosa) to frustrate, thwart2 (persona) to disappoint1 (proyectos, planes) to fail, come to nothing2 (persona) to get frustrated, get disappointed* * *verb* * *1. VT1) [+ persona] to frustrate; [+ proyecto, aspiración, deseo, sueño] to thwartno quiero frustrar sus esperanzas — I don't want to frustrate o thwart their hopes
2) (=abortar) [+ atentado, operación] to foil2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) < persona> to frustrate; < planes> to thwart; < esperanzas> to dashb) < atentado> to foil2.* * *= thwart, scupper, cripple, frustrate, baffle, stymie, foil, defeat, forestall, spoil, hamstring, exasperate, cast + a blight on, blight.Ex. A public library's design can go far in either reinforcing or thwarting the intimacy of reading and in determining its success -- functionally, aesthetically and financially.Ex. This arrangement could definitely help solve the librarian's problems, unless unexpected events scupper it.Ex. The objection to it seems to be that by reading rubbish children cripple their own imaginative, linguistic or moral powers.Ex. The psychologist Abraham H Maslow has warned of 'true psychopathological effects when the cognitive needs are frustrated'.Ex. As the domain expands, the problem of rule formalisation may even baffle a human expert.Ex. So, in a lot of cases the ability to take advantage of technologically sophisticated younger faculty is stymied by these conflicting interests.Ex. The author considers the incidence of arson in US libraries and some ways of foiling arsonists through constant vigilance and observation of library users.Ex. There are hundreds, if not thousands, of software programs intended to defeat some of these sabotage actions.Ex. In order to forestall such an event, some libraries in Britain were stung into action by the publication of an Act of Parliament which totally ignored public libraries.Ex. But if set-off did occur and threatened to set back and spoil subsequent impressions of the first forme, the tympan cloth could be rubbed over with lye to clean it.Ex. Instead, the proposed regulations would hamstring public access.Ex. Radical intellectuals often seem exasperated by what appears as excessive attention paid to conceptualization.Ex. Rampant commercialisation of publishing is casting a blight on literature.Ex. The global outbreak of swine flu has spread fear through the travel sector, blighting any green shoots of recovery from the financial crisis.----* frustrar el esfuerzo = frustrate + effort.* frustrar las esperanzas = shatter + Posesivo + hopes, dampen + Posesivo + hopes, dash + Posesivo + hopes.* frustrarse = become + frustrated, run into + the sand(s).* * *1.verbo transitivoa) < persona> to frustrate; < planes> to thwart; < esperanzas> to dashb) < atentado> to foil2.* * *= thwart, scupper, cripple, frustrate, baffle, stymie, foil, defeat, forestall, spoil, hamstring, exasperate, cast + a blight on, blight.Ex: A public library's design can go far in either reinforcing or thwarting the intimacy of reading and in determining its success -- functionally, aesthetically and financially.
Ex: This arrangement could definitely help solve the librarian's problems, unless unexpected events scupper it.Ex: The objection to it seems to be that by reading rubbish children cripple their own imaginative, linguistic or moral powers.Ex: The psychologist Abraham H Maslow has warned of 'true psychopathological effects when the cognitive needs are frustrated'.Ex: As the domain expands, the problem of rule formalisation may even baffle a human expert.Ex: So, in a lot of cases the ability to take advantage of technologically sophisticated younger faculty is stymied by these conflicting interests.Ex: The author considers the incidence of arson in US libraries and some ways of foiling arsonists through constant vigilance and observation of library users.Ex: There are hundreds, if not thousands, of software programs intended to defeat some of these sabotage actions.Ex: In order to forestall such an event, some libraries in Britain were stung into action by the publication of an Act of Parliament which totally ignored public libraries.Ex: But if set-off did occur and threatened to set back and spoil subsequent impressions of the first forme, the tympan cloth could be rubbed over with lye to clean it.Ex: Instead, the proposed regulations would hamstring public access.Ex: Radical intellectuals often seem exasperated by what appears as excessive attention paid to conceptualization.Ex: Rampant commercialisation of publishing is casting a blight on literature.Ex: The global outbreak of swine flu has spread fear through the travel sector, blighting any green shoots of recovery from the financial crisis.* frustrar el esfuerzo = frustrate + effort.* frustrar las esperanzas = shatter + Posesivo + hopes, dampen + Posesivo + hopes, dash + Posesivo + hopes.* frustrarse = become + frustrated, run into + the sand(s).* * *frustrar [A1 ]vt1 ‹persona› to frustrate; ‹planes› to thwart; ‹esperanzas› to dashme frustra que no entiendan I find it frustrating o it frustrates me that they don't understand2 ‹atentado› to foil«planes» to be thwarted, fail; «esperanzas» to be dashed, come to nothing* * *
frustrar ( conjugate frustrar) verbo transitivo ‹ persona› to frustrate;
‹ planes› to thwart;
‹ esperanzas› to dash;
frustrarse verbo pronominal [ planes] to be thwarted, fail;
[ esperanzas] to come to nothing
frustrar verbo transitivo to frustrate
(una esperanza) to disappoint
' frustrar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
estropear
- impedir
- tronchar
English:
defeat
- disappoint
- foil
- frustrate
- thwart
- baffle
- confound
- cross
* * *♦ vt1. [persona] to frustrate2. [posibilidades, ilusiones] to thwart, Br to put paid to;[plan, robo] to thwart;el mal tiempo frustró nuestras vacaciones the bad weather ruined our holiday* * ** * *frustrar vt: to frustrate, to thwart -
93 gasto deducible
(n.) = tax deduction, income-tax deductionEx. All too many conferences, workshops, and courses are much ado about nothing, devoted to providing the sponsors with extra revenue and participants with tax deductions.Ex. The elimination of income-tax deductions for children & the establishment of a refundable tax credit to support poor families in the US is proposed.* * *(n.) = tax deduction, income-tax deductionEx: All too many conferences, workshops, and courses are much ado about nothing, devoted to providing the sponsors with extra revenue and participants with tax deductions.
Ex: The elimination of income-tax deductions for children & the establishment of a refundable tax credit to support poor families in the US is proposed. -
94 grieta
f.1 crack.2 chap.* * *1 crack, crevice2 (en la piel) chap, crack* * *noun f.* * *SF1) (=fisura) fissure, crack; (=hendidura) chink; (=quiebra) crevice; [en la piel] chap, crack2) (Pol) rift* * ** * *= cleavage, fissure, crack, cranny, crevice, crevasse, chink, fracture.Ex. After the Civil War, Emerson saw in collegiate education 'a cleavage occurring in the hitherto firm granite of the past'.Ex. Fissures within British society and inadequate public funding meant that libraries were not linked to communities to the degree that they were in America.Ex. The author attempts to explain the events of 1997 in which the cracks and crumbling of the information industry showed in mergers and closures.Ex. Where harm over the Internet is caused by viruses, hidden in ' crannies' in the network, traditional legal enforcement is more difficult.Ex. Rampant commercialism is seeping into every crevice of American culture.Ex. Solutions proposed by climbers included using more latrines and using crevasses to dispose of waste.Ex. War of words exposed chinks in coalition.Ex. In soccer, females injured their toe 17% more than males and sustained 19% more fractures.----* grieta del grosor de un pelo = hairline crack.* grietas = cracks and crevices.* salir grietas = develop + cracks.* tapar grietas = caulk + cracks, chink.* * ** * *= cleavage, fissure, crack, cranny, crevice, crevasse, chink, fracture.Ex: After the Civil War, Emerson saw in collegiate education 'a cleavage occurring in the hitherto firm granite of the past'.
Ex: Fissures within British society and inadequate public funding meant that libraries were not linked to communities to the degree that they were in America.Ex: The author attempts to explain the events of 1997 in which the cracks and crumbling of the information industry showed in mergers and closures.Ex: Where harm over the Internet is caused by viruses, hidden in ' crannies' in the network, traditional legal enforcement is more difficult.Ex: Rampant commercialism is seeping into every crevice of American culture.Ex: Solutions proposed by climbers included using more latrines and using crevasses to dispose of waste.Ex: War of words exposed chinks in coalition.Ex: In soccer, females injured their toe 17% more than males and sustained 19% more fractures.* grieta del grosor de un pelo = hairline crack.* grietas = cracks and crevices.* salir grietas = develop + cracks.* tapar grietas = caulk + cracks, chink.* * *la luz entraba por una pequeña grieta en la pared the light was coming in through a chink in the wall* * *
grieta sustantivo femenino ( en una pared) crack;
( en la tierra) crack, crevice;
( en la piel) crack
grieta (en la pared, terreno) crack
(en la piel, los labios) chap, crack
' grieta' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
abertura
- chorro
- rellena
- relleno
- salirse
- introducir
- rellenar
- rendija
- resquicio
- salir
- superficial
English:
aperture
- breach
- break
- chink
- cleft
- crack
- crevice
- fill in
- hairline
- slide
- split
- stop
* * *grieta nf[ranura] crack; [entre montañas] crevice; [en glaciar] crevasse; [que deja pasar luz] chink* * *f crack* * *grieta nf: crack, crevice* * *grieta n crack -
95 hemorragia
f.hemorrhage.hemorragia nasal nosebleedse puso un torniquete para detener la hemorragia he put on a tourniquet to stop the bleeding* * *1 haemorrhage (US hemorrhage)\hemorragia cerebral cerebral haemorrhage (US hemorrhage)hemorragia interna internal bleeding, internal haemorrhage (US hemorrhage)hemorragia nasal nosebleed* * *SF1) (Med) haemorrhage, hemorrhage (EEUU), bleedinghemorragia cerebral — cerebral haemorrhage, brain haemorrhage
2) [de científicos, técnicos] drain* * *femenino hemorrhage** * *= haemorrhage [hemorrhage, -USA], bleeding, bleed.Ex. The primary purpose of the proposed research is to identify the data set used by clinical specialists to diagnose cases of haemorrhage.Ex. Abnormal uterine bleeding is experienced by most women at sometime during their reproductive years.Ex. The bleed was so severe that she almost lost her consciousness and had to be hospitalised for 10 weeks.----* hemorragia cerebral = cerebral haemorrhage.* hemorragia nasal = nosebleed.* * *femenino hemorrhage** * *= haemorrhage [hemorrhage, -USA], bleeding, bleed.Ex: The primary purpose of the proposed research is to identify the data set used by clinical specialists to diagnose cases of haemorrhage.
Ex: Abnormal uterine bleeding is experienced by most women at sometime during their reproductive years.Ex: The bleed was so severe that she almost lost her consciousness and had to be hospitalised for 10 weeks.* hemorragia cerebral = cerebral haemorrhage.* hemorragia nasal = nosebleed.* * *hemorrhage*sufrió una hemorragia interna she suffered internal bleeding o an internal hemorrhage* * *
hemorragia sustantivo femenino
hemorrhage( conjugate hemorrhage)
hemorragia f Med haemorrhage, US hemorrhage
' hemorragia' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
taponar
- detener
- parar
English:
haemorrhage
- nosebleed
- bleeding
- hemorrhage
- nose
* * *hemorragia nfhaemorrhage;se puso un torniquete para detener la hemorragia he put on a tourniquet to stop the bleedinghemorragia cerebral brain haemorrhage;hemorragia nasal nosebleed* * *f MED hemorrhage, Brhaemorrhage, bleeding* * *hemorragia nf1) : hemorrhage2)hemorragia nasal : nosebleed* * *hemorragia n bleeding -
96 huelga
f.strike.estar/declararse en huelga to be/to go on strikehuelga de brazos caídos sit-down (strike)huelga general general strikehuelga de hambre hunger strikehuelga indefinida indefinite strikehuelga salvaje wildcat strikehuelga de solidaridad sympathy strikepres.indicat.3rd person singular (él/ella/ello) present indicative of spanish verb: holgar.* * *1 strike\estar en huelga / estar de huelga to be on strikehacer huelga to go on strikeir a la huelga to go on strikehuelga a la japonesa work-inhuelga de brazos caídos go-slowhuelga de celo work-to-rulehuelga general general strikehuelga de hambre hunger strikehuelga salvaje wildcat strike Table 1 NOTA See also holgar/Table 1* * *noun f.* * *SF1) [de trabajo] strike, stoppage, walkoutlos obreros en huelga — the workers on strike, the striking workers
declarar la huelga, declararse en huelga, hacer huelga, ir a la huelga, ponerse en huelga — to go on strike, come out on strike
huelga (a la) japonesa — industrial action characterized by overproduction by the workforce
huelga de celo — work-to-rule, go-slow, slowdown (strike) (EEUU)
huelga de reglamento — work-to-rule, go-slow, slowdown (strike) (EEUU)
2) (=descanso) rest, repose frm3) (Mec) play, free movement* * *Ifemenino strikedeclararse en huelga — to come out on o go on strike
hacer huelga — to strike, go on strike
IIestar en or de huelga — to be on strike
* * *= strike, industrial action, strike action.Ex. What to one author is a ' strike' to another is an industrial dispute.Ex. More than 500 library users returning items borrowed before the industrial action were interviewed during the 4 weeks following the reopening of the libraries.Ex. The author considers what the attitude of the profession should be to proposed strike action.----* declararse en huelga = strike, stage + strike, strike + break out.* de huelga = striking.* dejar de hacer huelga = cross + the picket line.* en huelga = striking.* hacer huelga = strike.* huelga de camioneros = trucker strike, haulage strike, lorry strike, road haulage strike, haulier strike.* huelga decir = needless to say.* huelga de hambre = hunger strike.* huelga del metal = metalworkers' strike.* huelga del transporte = lorry strike, trucker strike, haulage strike, road haulage strike, haulier strike.* huelga del transporte público = public transport strike.* huelga de silencio = silent strike.* huelga de transportistas = trucker strike, haulage strike, lorry strike, road haulage strike, haulier strike.* huelga jurisdiccional = jurisdictional strike.* huelga por solidaridad = sympathy strike.* organizar una huelga = stage + strike.* romper la huelga = cross + the picket line.* * *Ifemenino strikedeclararse en huelga — to come out on o go on strike
hacer huelga — to strike, go on strike
IIestar en or de huelga — to be on strike
* * *= strike, industrial action, strike action.Ex: What to one author is a ' strike' to another is an industrial dispute.
Ex: More than 500 library users returning items borrowed before the industrial action were interviewed during the 4 weeks following the reopening of the libraries.Ex: The author considers what the attitude of the profession should be to proposed strike action.* declararse en huelga = strike, stage + strike, strike + break out.* de huelga = striking.* dejar de hacer huelga = cross + the picket line.* en huelga = striking.* hacer huelga = strike.* huelga de camioneros = trucker strike, haulage strike, lorry strike, road haulage strike, haulier strike.* huelga decir = needless to say.* huelga de hambre = hunger strike.* huelga del metal = metalworkers' strike.* huelga del transporte = lorry strike, trucker strike, haulage strike, road haulage strike, haulier strike.* huelga del transporte público = public transport strike.* huelga de silencio = silent strike.* huelga de transportistas = trucker strike, haulage strike, lorry strike, road haulage strike, haulier strike.* huelga jurisdiccional = jurisdictional strike.* huelga por solidaridad = sympathy strike.* organizar una huelga = stage + strike.* romper la huelga = cross + the picket line.* * *strikese han declarado en huelga they have come out on o gone on strikeirán a la huelga they'll come out on o go on strikehace tres semanas que están en or de huelga they've been on strike for three weekslos trabajadores que no secundaron la huelga the workers who did not support the strikehacer huelga to strike, to go on strikeCompuestos:sit-down strike( Esp) go-slow, work-to-rulehunger strike● huelga de solidaridad or apoyosympathy strike● huelga general/parcialgeneral/selective strikewildcat strike● huelga oficial/no oficialofficial/unofficial strikelightning strikewildcat strikeall-out strike* * *
Del verbo holgar: ( conjugate holgar)
huelga es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativo
Multiple Entries:
holgar
huelga
holgar ( conjugate holgar) verbo intransitivo (en 3a pers) (frml) ( estar de más):◊ huelga decir que … it goes without saying that …;
huelgan los comentarios what can one say?
huelga 1 sustantivo femenino
strike;
hacer huelga to (go on) strike;
estar en huelga to be on strike
huelga 2, huelgan, etc see holgar
holgar vi frml
1 (estar ocioso) to be idle
2 (ser ocioso, estar de más) huelga decir que no estaré allí, it goes without saying that I won't be there
huelga sustantivo femenino strike
ponerse en huelga, to go on strike
huelga de brazos caídos, go-slow, slowdown
huelga de celo, work- to-rule, slowdown strike
huelga de hambre, hunger strike
huelga general, general strike
' huelga' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
acordar
- celo
- convocatoria
- declarada
- declarado
- declararse
- énfasis
- general
- holgar
- paro
- piquete
- reventar
- salvaje
- sumarse
- convocar
- correo
- declarar
- desautorizar
- llamar
- participación
- promotor
- sancionar
- trastorno
- venir
English:
all-out
- call
- call out
- come out
- complication
- cripple
- delay
- down
- go-slow
- hunger strike
- industrial action
- inform
- lightning
- needless
- out
- rail strike
- right
- rule
- stay out
- stoppage
- strike
- strike pay
- striking
- unnecessary
- walk out
- walkout
- work-to-rule
- come
- general
- hunger
- levy
- resort
- say
- sympathy
- withdraw
* * *♦ nfstrike;estar en huelga to be on strike;declararse en huelga to go on strike;hacer huelga to strike;ir a la huelga to go on strike;los trabajadores en huelga the strikershuelga de apoyo sympathy strike;huelga de brazos caídos sit-down (strike);huelga general general strike;huelga de hambre hunger strike;huelga indefinida indefinite strike;huelga patronal lockout;huelga salvaje wildcat strike;huelga de solidaridad sympathy strike* * *f strike;declararse en huelga, ir a la huelga go on strike;estar en huelga be on strike* * *huelga nf1) paro: strike2)hacer huelga : to strike, to go on strike* * *huelga n strike -
97 idea de reforma
(n.) = reform ideaEx. The proposed reform ideas are retreads of tried and untrue conservative concepts with a history of failure.* * *(n.) = reform ideaEx: The proposed reform ideas are retreads of tried and untrue conservative concepts with a history of failure.
-
98 idea reciclada
-
99 imaginativo
adj.imaginative, resourceful, fanciful, creative.* * *► adjetivo1 imaginative* * *(f. - imaginativa)adj.* * *ADJ imaginative* * *- va adjetivo imaginative* * *= imaginative, confabulatory.Ex. Various imaginative graphic displays have been proposed.Ex. The present study investigated the content of the confabulations of a neurological patient who developed a striking confabulatory syndrome following removal of a meningioma in the pituitary region.----* de forma imaginativa = imaginatively.* de forma poco imaginativa = unimaginatively.* de modo imaginativo = imaginatively.* de modo poco imaginativo = unimaginatively.* poco imaginativo = unimaginative.* * *- va adjetivo imaginative* * *= imaginative, confabulatory.Ex: Various imaginative graphic displays have been proposed.
Ex: The present study investigated the content of the confabulations of a neurological patient who developed a striking confabulatory syndrome following removal of a meningioma in the pituitary region.* de forma imaginativa = imaginatively.* de forma poco imaginativa = unimaginatively.* de modo imaginativo = imaginatively.* de modo poco imaginativo = unimaginatively.* poco imaginativo = unimaginative.* * *imaginativo -vaimaginative* * *
imaginativo◊ -va adjetivo
imaginative
imaginativo,-a adjetivo imaginative
' imaginativo' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
imaginativa
English:
imaginative
- unimaginative
- unimaginatively
- fanciful
* * *imaginativo, -a adjimaginative* * *adj imaginative* * *imaginativo, -va adj: imaginative♦ imaginativamente adv -
100 impedir
v.1 to prevent.impedir a alguien hacer algo to prevent somebody from doing somethingla lesión le impedía correr the injury stopped o prevented him from runningla nieve impidió la celebración del partido the snow prevented the match from taking placeimpedirle el paso a alguien to bar somebody's waysi nada lo impide saldremos por la mañana all being well we'll leave in the morning2 to hinder, to obstruct.3 to impede, to obstruct, to hold up, to prevent.Ella impidió el accidente She impeded the accident.4 to handicap, to cripple, to disable.El accidente impidió a Ricardo The accident handicapped Richard.5 to prevent from, to keep from, to avert from, to deter from.María le impidió a Ricardo jugar Mary prevented Richard from playing.6 to make it impossible to, to make it difficult to.Esa luz impide leer That light makes it impossible to read.* * *1 (hacer imposible) to prevent, stop■ ¿hay algo que te lo impida? is there anything stopping you?2 (obstaculizar) to hinder, impede\impedir el paso to block the way* * *verb1) to impede2) prevent3) block* * *VT1) (=parar) to prevent, stoptrataron de impedir la huida de los presos — they tried to prevent the prisoners escaping o the prisoners escape
impedir a algn hacer algo, impedir que algn haga algo — to prevent sb (from) doing sth, stop sb doing sth
esto no impide que... — this does not alter the fact that...
2) (=dificultar) [con obstáculos] to impede, obstruct; [con problemas] to hinder, hamper* * *verbo transitivoa) ( imposibilitar) to preventimpedirle a alguien + inf — to prevent somebody from -ing
b) < paso> to blockc) ( dificultar) to hamper, hinder* * *= guard against, impede, inhibit, prevent, forestall, restrain from, foreclose, get in + the way (of), hamstring, head off, ward off, hamper, thwart.Ex. The system will ask you to enter the new password a second time to help guard against keying errors.Ex. In early 1984 we were invited to undertake a survey of the fourteen schools of librarianship and information studies in England and Wales, giving particular attention to the constraints impeding or preventing desirable change.Ex. Likewise, a library or consortium -- and ultimately the user -- is ill-served by a system which inhibits the realization of a rational collection policy by permitting the duplication of expensive items.Ex. To prevent an entry under the first name(s), these must be entered on a separate line with the subfield code 'j'.Ex. In order to forestall such an event, some libraries in Britain were stung into action by the publication of an Act of Parliament which totally ignored public libraries.Ex. 'We also need to know the kinds of questions we are legally restrained from asking'.Ex. The USA must act quickly before the rush of events forecloses some of the options now available for developing and managing this technology.Ex. At the end of the day, librarians must 'produce the goods' and prove their worth -- professionalism could get in the way.Ex. Instead, the proposed regulations would hamstring public access.Ex. And this stimulus is working in the sense that it has headed off the imminent risk of a deflationary spiral.Ex. The most strenuous efforts will not always ensure success, nor the boldest arm of human power ward off the stroke of misfortune.Ex. Unfortunately, the inclusion of abstracts in most services tends to hamper currency.Ex. A public library's design can go far in either reinforcing or thwarting the intimacy of reading and in determining its success -- functionally, aesthetically and financially.----* impedir el paso = block in.* impedir la entrada = keep out.* impedir que = keep from.* impedir que + Subjuntivo = prevent from + Gerundio.* si no lo impide el tiempo = weather permitting.* * *verbo transitivoa) ( imposibilitar) to preventimpedirle a alguien + inf — to prevent somebody from -ing
b) < paso> to blockc) ( dificultar) to hamper, hinder* * *= guard against, impede, inhibit, prevent, forestall, restrain from, foreclose, get in + the way (of), hamstring, head off, ward off, hamper, thwart.Ex: The system will ask you to enter the new password a second time to help guard against keying errors.
Ex: In early 1984 we were invited to undertake a survey of the fourteen schools of librarianship and information studies in England and Wales, giving particular attention to the constraints impeding or preventing desirable change.Ex: Likewise, a library or consortium -- and ultimately the user -- is ill-served by a system which inhibits the realization of a rational collection policy by permitting the duplication of expensive items.Ex: To prevent an entry under the first name(s), these must be entered on a separate line with the subfield code 'j'.Ex: In order to forestall such an event, some libraries in Britain were stung into action by the publication of an Act of Parliament which totally ignored public libraries.Ex: 'We also need to know the kinds of questions we are legally restrained from asking'.Ex: The USA must act quickly before the rush of events forecloses some of the options now available for developing and managing this technology.Ex: At the end of the day, librarians must 'produce the goods' and prove their worth -- professionalism could get in the way.Ex: Instead, the proposed regulations would hamstring public access.Ex: And this stimulus is working in the sense that it has headed off the imminent risk of a deflationary spiral.Ex: The most strenuous efforts will not always ensure success, nor the boldest arm of human power ward off the stroke of misfortune.Ex: Unfortunately, the inclusion of abstracts in most services tends to hamper currency.Ex: A public library's design can go far in either reinforcing or thwarting the intimacy of reading and in determining its success -- functionally, aesthetically and financially.* impedir el paso = block in.* impedir la entrada = keep out.* impedir que = keep from.* impedir que + Subjuntivo = prevent from + Gerundio.* si no lo impide el tiempo = weather permitting.* * *vt1 (imposibilitar) to preventno logró impedir el accidente she was unable to prevent the accidentnos impidió el paso he wouldn't let us through, he blocked our wayesta válvula impide el paso del gas this valve stops o blocks the flow of gasnadie te lo impide nobody's stopping youimpedirle a algn + INF to prevent sb FROM -INGel dolor le impedía caminar the pain prevented her from walking o meant that she couldn't walk o stopped her walkingimpedir QUE + SUBJ:quiso impedir que nos viéramos she tried to stop us seeing each other, she tried to prevent us from seeing each othertenemos que impedir que ocurra otra vez we must see that it doesn't happen again, we must stop o prevent it happening again2 (dificultar) to hamper, hinderla ropa me impedía los movimientos my clothes hampered o hindered o impeded my movements* * *
impedir ( conjugate impedir) verbo transitivo
impedirle a algn hacer algo to prevent sb from doing sth;
quiso impedir que nos viéramos she tried to stop us seeing each other
impedir verbo transitivo
1 (entorpecer) to impede, hinder: un coche impedía el paso a la ambulancia, a car was in the way of the ambulance
2 (frustrar) to prevent, stop
' impedir' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
atravesar
- bloquear
- cortar
- imposibilitar
- inmovilizar
- trabar
- evitar
- impida
English:
bar
- deter
- forestall
- impede
- inhibit
- interfere
- keep
- occur
- prevent
- restrain
- stop
- avert
- obscure
- prohibit
* * *impedir vt1. [imposibilitar] to prevent;impedir a alguien hacer algo to prevent sb from doing sth;la lesión le impedía correr the injury stopped o prevented her from running;impedirle el paso a alguien to bar sb's way;la nieve impidió la celebración del partido the snow prevented the game from taking place;nada te impide hacerlo there's nothing to stop you doing it;si nada lo impide saldremos por la mañana all being well we'll leave in the morning2. [dificultar] to hinder, to obstruct* * *v/t prevent; ( estorbar) impede* * *impedir {54} vt1) : to prevent, to block2) : to impede, to hinder* * *impedir vb2. (paso) to block
См. также в других словарях:
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