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1 unanswerable
tr[ʌn'ɑːnsərəbəl]1 (question) incontestable, sin respuesta2 (attack, criticism) irrebatible, irrefutableadj.• incontestable adj.• incontrovertible adj.• irrebatible adj.'ʌn'ænsərəbəl, ʌn'ɑːnsərəbəl[ʌn'ɑːnsǝrǝbl]ADJ [question] incontestable; [attack etc] irrebatible, irrefutable* * *['ʌn'ænsərəbəl, ʌn'ɑːnsərəbəl] -
2 degree
di'ɡri:1) ((an) amount or extent: There is still a degree of uncertainty; The degree of skill varies considerably from person to person.) grado2) (a unit of temperature: 20° (= 20 degrees) Celsius.) grado3) (a unit by which angles are measured: at an angle of 90° (= 90 degrees).) grado4) (a title or certificate given by a university etc: He took a degree in chemistry.) título•- to a degree
degree n1. grado2. título universitariotr[dɪ'griː]1 (unit of measurement) grado3 (stage, grade, step) grado, etapa4 SMALLEDUCATION/SMALL título\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLby degrees poco a poco, gradualmente, paulatinamenteto take a degree licenciarse (in, en)first degree licenciaturahonourary degree título honoris causadegree [di'gri:] n1) extent: grado ma third degree burn: una quemadura de tercer grado2) : título m (de enseñanza superior)3) : grado m (de un círculo, de la temperatura)4)by degrees : gradualmente, poco a pocon.• escalón s.m.• grado (Unidades) s.m.• licencia s.f.• licenciatura s.f.• título (Académico) s.m.dɪ'griː1) (level, amount) grado m, nivel mit's a matter o question of degree — es cuestión de grados
to a certain o limited degree — hasta cierto punto
to a degree — ( extremely) en grado sumo; ( to some extent) hasta cierto punto
2) (grade, step) grado mfirst/third degree burns — quemaduras fpl de primer/tercer grado
first/second degree murder — ( in US) homicidio m en primer/segundo grado
by degrees — gradualmente, paulatinamente; see also third degree
3) (Math, Geog, Meteo, Phys) grado mthis wine is 12 degrees proof — este vino es de or tiene 12 grados
4) ( Educ) título mhe has o (frml) holds a degree in chemistry — es licenciado en química
[dɪ'ɡriː]to take a philosophy degree — hacer* la carrera de filosofía, licenciarse en filosofía; (before n)
1. N1) (gen) (Geog, Math) grado m2) (=extent) punto m, grado mto such a degree that... — hasta tal punto que...
they have some or a certain degree of freedom — tienen cierto grado de libertad
to some or a certain degree — hasta cierto punto
he is superstitious to a degree — (esp Brit) es sumamente supersticioso
3) (=stage in scale) grado mby degrees — poco a poco, gradualmente, por etapas
first/second/third degree burns — quemaduras fpl de primer/segundo/tercer grado
first degree murder, murder in the first degree — homicidio m en primer grado
second degree murder, murder in the second degree — homicidio m en segundo grado
- give sb the third degree4) (Univ) título mhonorary degree — doctorado m "honoris causa"
to take a degree in — (=study) hacer la carrera de; (=graduate) licenciarse en
5) (=social standing) rango m, condición f social2.CPDdegree ceremony N — (Brit) ceremonia f de graduación
degree course N — (Brit) (Univ) licenciatura f
DEGREE Al título universitario equivalente a la licenciatura se le conoce como Bachelor's degree, que se obtiene generalmente tras tres años de estudios. Las titulaciones más frecuentes son las de Letras: Bachelor of Arts o BA y Ciencias: Bachelor of Science o BSc en el Reino Unido, BS en Estados Unidos. En el Reino Unido, la mayoría de los estudiantes reciben un honours degree, cuyas calificaciones, en orden descendente son: first (1) la nota más alta, seguida de upper second (2-1), lower second (2-2) y third (3). En algunas ocasiones se puede obtener un ordinary degree, por ejemplo en el caso de que no se aprueben los exámenes para obtener el título pero los examinadores consideren que a lo largo de la carrera se han tenido unos resultados mínimos satisfactorios. En Estados Unidos los estudiantes no reciben calificaciones en sus titulaciones de fin de carrera, pero sí existe la matrícula de honor ( honours), que puede ser, de menor a mayor importancia: cum laude, magna cum laude y summa cum laude.degree day N — (at university) día m de la graduación
Master's degree es normalmente un título que se recibe tras estudios de postgrado, en los que se combinan horas lectivas o investigación con una tesina final, conocida como dissertation. Las titulaciones más frecuentes son las de Master of Arts o MA, Master of Science o MSc y Master of Business Administration o MBA. El título se concede con la única calificación de apto. En algunas universidades, como las escocesas, el título de master's degree no es de postgrado, sino que corresponde a la licenciatura. El título universitario más alto es el de doctorado, doctorate o doctor's degree, abreviado normalmente como PhD o DPhil.
* * *[dɪ'griː]1) (level, amount) grado m, nivel mit's a matter o question of degree — es cuestión de grados
to a certain o limited degree — hasta cierto punto
to a degree — ( extremely) en grado sumo; ( to some extent) hasta cierto punto
2) (grade, step) grado mfirst/third degree burns — quemaduras fpl de primer/tercer grado
first/second degree murder — ( in US) homicidio m en primer/segundo grado
by degrees — gradualmente, paulatinamente; see also third degree
3) (Math, Geog, Meteo, Phys) grado mthis wine is 12 degrees proof — este vino es de or tiene 12 grados
4) ( Educ) título mhe has o (frml) holds a degree in chemistry — es licenciado en química
to take a philosophy degree — hacer* la carrera de filosofía, licenciarse en filosofía; (before n)
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3 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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