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61 общепризнанный
прил.reconocido por todos, universalmente reconocido* * *adjgener. noto, notorio, reconocido por todos, universalmente reconocido -
62 признанный
-
63 признанный
1) прич. от признать2) прил. reconocidoпри́знанный факт — hecho reconocido ( consabido)при́знанный тала́нт — talento reconocido (de fama) -
64 accepted
adjective (generally recognized: It is an accepted fact that the world is round.) reconocidoadj.• aceptado, -a adj.• admitido, -a adj.• aprobado, -a adj.[ǝk'septɪd]ADJ [fact, idea, practice] reconocido, establecidoit's the accepted thing — es lo establecido, es la norma
-
65 acknowledged
adj.• reconocido, -a adj.[ǝk'nɒlɪdʒd]ADJ -
66 medically
adverb médicamentetr['medɪkəlɪ]1 desde el punto de vista médico\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be medically examined ser reconocido,-a, por un médico'medɪklia)to be medically examined — ser* reconocido por un médico
b) (indep) desde el punto de vista médico or clínico['medɪkǝlɪ]ADV [prove, explain, treat] médicamentehe was medically examined — se le hizo un reconocimiento médico or un exámen médico or una revisión médica
it is recognized medically as being a good diet — se considera una buena dieta desde el punto de vista médico
he was pronounced medically fit — dictaminaron que estaba sano or que su salud era buena; (for army) los médicos lo declararon apto
* * *['medɪkli]a)to be medically examined — ser* reconocido por un médico
b) (indep) desde el punto de vista médico or clínico -
67 anerkannt
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68 admirado
adj.1 wonder-stricken, wonder-struck.2 admired, well-thought of.past part.past participle of spanish verb: admirar.* * *- da adjetivoa) ( reconocido) admiredb) ( sorprendido) amazed* * *= impressed.Ex. On the other hand, Johnson's powerful baritone voice vibrated throughout the auditorium, captivating an impressed audience.----* muy admirado = much-admired.* * *- da adjetivoa) ( reconocido) admiredb) ( sorprendido) amazed* * *= impressed.Ex: On the other hand, Johnson's powerful baritone voice vibrated throughout the auditorium, captivating an impressed audience.
* muy admirado = much-admired.* * *admirado -da1 (reconocido) admiredun pintor muy admirado en su época a painter much admired in his time2 (sorprendido) amazedme quedé admirada al verla I was amazed when I saw her¿pero cómo lo lograste? me preguntó admirado but how did you do it? he asked me, amazed o in amazement* * *admirado, -a adj1. [respetado]está con nosotros nuestro admirado Sánchez we have with us our very good friend Mr Sánchez;como diría mi admirado Federico… as my dear friend Federico would say…2. [sorprendido] amazed;me quedé admirado con sus conocimientos I was amazed at how much she knew* * *I adj:quedarse admirado be amazedII part → admirar -
69 непризнанный
прил.no reconocido, desconocidoнепри́знанный ге́ний — genio no reconocido
* * *adjgener. desconocido, no reconocido -
70 признательный
прил.reconocido; agradecido ( благодарный)* * *прил.reconocido; agradecido ( благодарный)* * *adjgener. agradecido, agradecido (благодарный), reconocido -
71 благодарный
прил.1) reconocido, agradecido; de agradecimiento ( выражающий благодарность)благода́рный взгляд — mirada de agradecimiento(я вам) о́чень благода́рен (благода́рна) — (le) estoy sumamente reconocido (reconocida)2) перен. remuneradorблагода́рная те́ма — tema con perspectivas -
72 непризнанный
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73 общепризнанный
прил.reconocido por todos, universalmente reconocido -
74 обязанный
прил.1) + неопр. obligado (a + inf.)быть обя́занным — estar obligado, deber vt; haber de, tener queты обя́зан э́то сде́лать — estás obligado a (tienes la obligación de) hacerlo2) + дат. п. obligado (a); reconocido (a) ( признательный)быть обя́занным кому́-либо — estar obligado a unoя вам о́чень обя́зан — le estoy muy reconocidoбыть обя́занным кому́-либо че́м-либо — deber una cosa a uno, estar obligado a alguien por algo; ser deudor (de)он обя́зан свои́м успе́хом слу́чаю — debe su éxito a una ocasión, su éxito es debido a la casualidad -
75 accredit
tr[ə'kredɪt]1 (gen) autorizar, reconocer; (diplomat) acreditar■ it said "accredited organically grown tomatoes' ponía "garantizamos que estos tomates han sido cultivados biológicamente"3 (attribute) atribuiraccredit [ə'krɛdət] vt: acreditar, autorizarv.• acreditar v.• reconocer v.(§pres: reconozco, reconoces...)ə'kredət, ə'kredɪttransitive verb (usu pass)a) acreditarb) accredited past p < representative> acreditado; < qualification> reconocido; < agent> autorizado[ǝ'kredɪt]VT1) (=credit) atribuir (to a)to accredit a quality to sb, accredit sb with a quality — atribuir una cualidad a algn
2) (=recognize) [+ qualification] reconocer (oficialmente); [+ representative, body] autorizar, acreditar3) (=appoint) acreditar* * *[ə'kredət, ə'kredɪt]transitive verb (usu pass)a) acreditarb) accredited past p < representative> acreditado; < qualification> reconocido; < agent> autorizado -
76 known
see knowknown vbtr[nəʊn]1→ link=know know{1 conocido,-a\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLthe known facts los hechos establecidosknown ['no:n] adj: conocido, familiaradj.• conocido, -a adj.p.p.(Participio pasivo de "to know")
I nəʊn
II
to be known AS something — ( have reputation) tener* fama de algo; ( be called)
you'll need what's known as an affidavit — vas a necesitar lo que se conoce como or lo que llaman un afidávit
better known as... — más conocido como...
[nǝʊn]to be known TO somebody: she is known to the police la policía la tiene fichada; for reasons best known to herself por motivos que ella conocerá; to be known FOR something: he's better known for his work in films — se le conoce mejor por su trabajo cinematográfico
1.PP of know2. ADJ1) [+ person, fact] conocido•
he is known as Hercules — es conocido por el nombre de Hércules•
it soon became known that... — tardó poco en saberse que...•
to be known for sth — ser conocido por algo•
he let it be known that... — dio a entender que...•
to make o.s. known to sb — presentarse a algnthey made it known that they did not intend to prosecute — dieron a saber que no tenían intención de interponer una acción judicial
•
he is known to be unreliable — tiene fama de no ser una persona en la que se pueda confiarthe most dangerous snake known to man — la serpiente más peligrosa de todas las conocidas por el hombre
know 1., 3)•
it's well known that... — es bien sabido que..., es de todos conocido que...2) (=acknowledged) reconocido* * *
I [nəʊn]
II
to be known AS something — ( have reputation) tener* fama de algo; ( be called)
you'll need what's known as an affidavit — vas a necesitar lo que se conoce como or lo que llaman un afidávit
better known as... — más conocido como...
to be known TO somebody: she is known to the police la policía la tiene fichada; for reasons best known to herself por motivos que ella conocerá; to be known FOR something: he's better known for his work in films — se le conoce mejor por su trabajo cinematográfico
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77 status
'steitəs, ]( American also) 'stæ-1) (the position of a person with regard to his legal rights etc: If she marries a foreigner, will her status as a British citizen be affected?)2) (a person's social rank.)•status n categoría / estatus
status /(e)s'tatus/ sustantivo masculino (pl
status m inv status ' status' also found in these entries: Spanish: barra - caché - cachet - condición - estado - profesionalizar - rango - categoría - estatus - franquicia - rangoso English: marital status - status - status quo - status symbol - high - marital - rank - royalty - stature - system - title - undignifiedtr['steɪtəs]1 (official position, condition) situación nombre femenino, condición nombre femenino, posición nombre femenino■ what's his status in the organization? ¿cuál es su posición en la organización?■ what is your legal status? ¿cuál es su situación legal?2 (prestige, social standing) status nombre masculino, prestigio (social)\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLmarital status estado civilstatus quo statu quo nombre masculinostatus symbol símbolo de prestigiostatus ['steɪt̬əs, 'stæ-] n: condición f, situación f, estatus m (social)marital status: estado civiln.(§ pl.: statuses) = condición s.f.• estado s.m.• estatus (social) s.m.• posición s.f.• prestigio s.m.• rango s.m.'stætəs, 'steɪtəs1)a) u c (category, situation)member status — categoría f de socio
what's his legal status? — ¿cuál es su situación legal?
marital status — estado m civil
financial status — situación f or posición f económica
b) u ( social status) posición f social, estatus mc) u ( kudos) estatus m, prestigio m, standing m; (before n)status symbol — símbolo m de estatus or de prestigio
2) u (state, condition) situación f; (before n)['steɪtǝs]status report — informe m de progreso
1. N(pl statuses)marital status — estado m civil
social status — posición f social, estatus m inv
2) (=rank, prestige)what is his status in the profession? — ¿qué rango ocupa en la profesión?, ¿cómo se le considera en la profesión?
2.CPDstatus inquiry N — comprobación f de valoración crediticia
status line N — (Comput) línea f de situación
status quo N — (e)statu quo m
status report N — informe m situacional
status symbol N — símbolo m de rango
* * *['stætəs, 'steɪtəs]1)a) u c (category, situation)member status — categoría f de socio
what's his legal status? — ¿cuál es su situación legal?
marital status — estado m civil
financial status — situación f or posición f económica
b) u ( social status) posición f social, estatus mc) u ( kudos) estatus m, prestigio m, standing m; (before n)status symbol — símbolo m de estatus or de prestigio
2) u (state, condition) situación f; (before n)status report — informe m de progreso
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78 staatlich
1. 'ʃtaːtlɪç adjestatal, gubernamental, público, oficial2. 'ʃtaːtlɪç advI AdjektivII Adverbpor el Estado; staatlich anerkannt reconocido oficialmenteAdjektiv————————Adverb -
79 agrupar
v.1 to group (together).Ricardo agrupa las flores rojas Richard groups red flowers.María agrupa a las chicas Mary groups the girls.2 to consolidate.El sufrimiento agrupa a las personas Suffering consolidates people.3 to join together, to herd together, to cluster together, to crowd together.Ricardo agrupa a los cadetes Richard joins the cadets together.* * *1 to group, put into groups1 to group together, form a group2 (asociarse) to associate* * *verb* * *1.VT (=reunir en grupo) to group, group together; [+ gente, datos etc] to gather, assemble; (=amontonar) to crowd together2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( formar grupos) to put... into groups, to groupb) ( reunir) <organizaciones/partidos> to bring together2.agruparse v prona) ( formar un grupo) niños/policías to gather; partidos to come togetherb) ( dividirse en grupos) to get into groups* * *= bring together, categorise [categorize, -USA], draw together, fall into, group, group together, merge, pull together, put together, stack, encapsulate, coalesce, lump together, juxtapose, stand + together, pool, band, shuffle together.Nota: De un modo poco preciso.Ex. For example, Recreation, previously dispersed over several main classes, is now brought together as a new main class, and Space Science has been added between Astronomy and the Earth Sciences.Ex. It is widely recognised that it is difficult and unhelpful to categorise fiction according to a subject classification = Es un hecho ampliamente reconocido la dificultad y la poca utilidad de clasificar la literatura narrativa de acuerdo con una clasificación por materias.Ex. The application of the classification schemes, once constructed, involves synthesis, or the drawing together of the single concepts which are listed in the scheme from their different facets, in order to specify compound subjects.Ex. References will also be necessary, and will fall into the same types as those identified for personal authors, that is, 'see', 'see also', and explanatory references.Ex. There are a number of types of abstracts which will be grouped under the term 'mini-abstracts'.Ex. Some schools favor subject arrangement, other group together everything by publisher, and others sort everything out according to a theme.Ex. During the construction of a thesaurus, the computer can be enlisted to sort, merge, edit and compare terms.Ex. This library decided to launch an attack on illiteracy by pulling together a variety of approaches to learning to read.Ex. The way in which this scheme is put together in book form often causes some confusion at first.Ex. Cards are filed in drawers, approximately 1000 cards per drawer, which when stacked together may form a catalogue cabinet.Ex. The fundamental OOP technique is to encapsulate data with the operations/code that operate on that data into a single entity which is called an object.Ex. Mayo's conclusion was that 'the singling out of certain groups of employees for special attention had the effect of coalescing previously indifferent individuals into cohesive groups with a high degree of group ride or esprit-de-corps'.Ex. He also lumps himself and librarians together as 'devoted and in some instances veteran pursuers, preservers, and disseminators of truth'.Ex. We might consider that the key term, the one on which the others depend and which will juxtapose the document most usefully with others of a like kind, is Home Office.Ex. For instance, in reproduction of Renoir's work under the subject IMPRESSIONISM, Renoir's works would not stand together in the catalog but be spread out according to their titles.Ex. The results of two studies of the way reference librarians work were pooled to provide an understanding of the important features necessary in software for computerized reference work.Ex. The author advises banding retention policies to focus on a few clear options.Ex. This volume is in fact three books shuffled together under one luscious cover, unfurling as a fantasia on technique that explores, among other things, Mau's riffs on modernism.----* agrupar los términos sinónimos = merge + synonyms.* agrupar palabras que tienen la misma raíz = merge + word forms.* agruparse = band together, cluster, team, partner.* agruparse (con) = team up (with).* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( formar grupos) to put... into groups, to groupb) ( reunir) <organizaciones/partidos> to bring together2.agruparse v prona) ( formar un grupo) niños/policías to gather; partidos to come togetherb) ( dividirse en grupos) to get into groups* * *= bring together, categorise [categorize, -USA], draw together, fall into, group, group together, merge, pull together, put together, stack, encapsulate, coalesce, lump together, juxtapose, stand + together, pool, band, shuffle together.Nota: De un modo poco preciso.Ex: For example, Recreation, previously dispersed over several main classes, is now brought together as a new main class, and Space Science has been added between Astronomy and the Earth Sciences.
Ex: It is widely recognised that it is difficult and unhelpful to categorise fiction according to a subject classification = Es un hecho ampliamente reconocido la dificultad y la poca utilidad de clasificar la literatura narrativa de acuerdo con una clasificación por materias.Ex: The application of the classification schemes, once constructed, involves synthesis, or the drawing together of the single concepts which are listed in the scheme from their different facets, in order to specify compound subjects.Ex: References will also be necessary, and will fall into the same types as those identified for personal authors, that is, 'see', 'see also', and explanatory references.Ex: There are a number of types of abstracts which will be grouped under the term 'mini-abstracts'.Ex: Some schools favor subject arrangement, other group together everything by publisher, and others sort everything out according to a theme.Ex: During the construction of a thesaurus, the computer can be enlisted to sort, merge, edit and compare terms.Ex: This library decided to launch an attack on illiteracy by pulling together a variety of approaches to learning to read.Ex: The way in which this scheme is put together in book form often causes some confusion at first.Ex: Cards are filed in drawers, approximately 1000 cards per drawer, which when stacked together may form a catalogue cabinet.Ex: The fundamental OOP technique is to encapsulate data with the operations/code that operate on that data into a single entity which is called an object.Ex: Mayo's conclusion was that 'the singling out of certain groups of employees for special attention had the effect of coalescing previously indifferent individuals into cohesive groups with a high degree of group ride or esprit-de-corps'.Ex: He also lumps himself and librarians together as 'devoted and in some instances veteran pursuers, preservers, and disseminators of truth'.Ex: We might consider that the key term, the one on which the others depend and which will juxtapose the document most usefully with others of a like kind, is Home Office.Ex: For instance, in reproduction of Renoir's work under the subject IMPRESSIONISM, Renoir's works would not stand together in the catalog but be spread out according to their titles.Ex: The results of two studies of the way reference librarians work were pooled to provide an understanding of the important features necessary in software for computerized reference work.Ex: The author advises banding retention policies to focus on a few clear options.Ex: This volume is in fact three books shuffled together under one luscious cover, unfurling as a fantasia on technique that explores, among other things, Mau's riffs on modernism.* agrupar los términos sinónimos = merge + synonyms.* agrupar palabras que tienen la misma raíz = merge + word forms.* agruparse = band together, cluster, team, partner.* agruparse (con) = team up (with).* * *agrupar [A1 ]vtagruparon a los niños por edades they divided o put the children into groups according to their agesagrupa esos libros por autores group those books by authorla coalición agrupa a siete partidos distintos the coalition is made up of seven different partiesagrupó a varias organizaciones ecologistas it brought together several ecologist groups1 (formar un grupo) «niños/policías» to gather, form a group; «partidos» to come together, join forces2 (dividirse en grupos) to get into groups* * *
agrupar ( conjugate agrupar) verbo transitivo
agruparse verbo pronominal
[ partidos] to come together
agrupar verbo transitivo to group
' agrupar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
aunar
English:
bracket
- group
- lump
* * *♦ vtto group (together);la red agrupa a veinte emisoras locales the network brings together o is made up of twenty local radio stations;la guía agrupa toda la información disponible sobre el tema the guide brings together all the available information on the subject;una asociación que agrupa a más de 10.000 médicos an association of more than 10,000 doctors* * *v/t group, put into groups* * *agrupar vt: to group together* * * -
80 ampliamente
adv.1 easily.aquí cabe todo ampliamente there's more than enough room for everything here2 widely (extensamente) (aceptado, admitido).3 largely, thoroughly, amply, broadly.* * *► adverbio1 largely* * *adv.widely, extensively* * *ADV (=cumplidamente) amply; (=extensamente) extensively* * *a) ( con holgura) easilyb) ( extensamente) at (great) length* * *= amply, richly.Ex. As amply demonstrated in the examples above, the notation in CC is mixed.Ex. This is a simply written, richly illustrated weekly tabloid newspaper covering domestic and foreign affairs, sport, culture, everyday matters and television programmes.----* ampliamente aceptado = widely accepted.* ampliamente generalizado = rife.* ampliamente usado = widely-used.* ser un hecho ampliamente aceptado = it + be + widely agreed.* ser un hecho ampliamente reconocido = it + be + widely recognised.* * *a) ( con holgura) easilyb) ( extensamente) at (great) length* * *= amply, richly.Ex: As amply demonstrated in the examples above, the notation in CC is mixed.
Ex: This is a simply written, richly illustrated weekly tabloid newspaper covering domestic and foreign affairs, sport, culture, everyday matters and television programmes.* ampliamente aceptado = widely accepted.* ampliamente generalizado = rife.* ampliamente usado = widely-used.* ser un hecho ampliamente aceptado = it + be + widely agreed.* ser un hecho ampliamente reconocido = it + be + widely recognised.* * *1 (con holgura) easilyganaron el partido ampliamente they won the game easilypaso ampliamente de ti ( Esp fam); I couldn't care less o two hoots what you think ( o want etc) ( colloq)2 (extensamente) at (great) length* * *ampliamente adv1. [con espacio] easily;aquí cabe todo ampliamente there's more than enough room for everything here;batió el récord del mundo ampliamente she easily beat the world record, she beat the world record by some distance2. [extensamente] [aceptado, debatido] widely;el público ha sido informado ampliamente the public has been fully informed;la eficacia del método ha quedado ampliamente demostrada the method has clearly been shown to be effective* * *adv widely
См. также в других словарях:
reconocido — reconocido, da (Del part. de reconocer). adj. Dicho de una persona: Que reconoce el favor o beneficio que otra le ha hecho. ☛ V. hijo reconocido … Diccionario de la lengua española
reconocido — reconocido, da adjetivo agradecido, obligado. * * * Sinónimos: ■ comprobado, identificado ■ agradecido … Diccionario de sinónimos y antónimos
reconocido — reconocido, da adjetivo 1. (estar) Que se siente muy agradecido: Le estamos muy reconocidos por su colaboración … Diccionario Salamanca de la Lengua Española
reconocido — ► adjetivo 1 Que agradece el favor que otro le ha hecho. SINÓNIMO agradecido 2 Que es destacado o relevante: ■ el reconocido doctor asistió a la conferencia. SINÓNIMO famoso ilustre * * * reconocido, a 1 Participio adjetivo de « … Enciclopedia Universal
reconocido — {{#}}{{LM R33151}}{{〓}} {{SynR33966}} {{[}}reconocido{{]}}, {{[}}reconocida{{]}} ‹re·co·no·ci·do, da› {{《}}▍ adj.{{》}} Agradecido por un favor o un beneficio recibidos. {{#}}{{LM SynR33966}}{{〓}} {{CLAVE R33151}}{{\}}{{CLAVE}}{{/}}{{\}}SINÓNIMOS… … Diccionario de uso del español actual con sinónimos y antónimos
reconocido — I. pp de reconocer. Para el año 1180 Brujas era reconocida capital de Flandes II. adj 1 Que es famoso o célebre, que es conocido por muchos debido a sus cualidades o méritos: reconocidos escritores, personas de reconocida capacidad intelectual,… … Español en México
reconocido generalmente como seguro — Norma de 1958 establecida por la Food and Drug Administration (FDA) de EE.UU. para identificar alimentos reconocidos como inocuos para su uso a causa de la ausencia de evidencia de que puedan ser nocivos. La norma se aplicó originalmente a todos… … Diccionario médico
Estado no reconocido — Este artículo o sección necesita referencias que aparezcan en una publicación acreditada, como revistas especializadas, monografías, prensa diaria o páginas de Internet fidedignas. Puedes añadirlas así o avisar a … Wikipedia Español
hijo reconocido — ► locución Hijo natural al que uno o ambos padres reconocen de forma legal … Enciclopedia Universal
hijo reconocido — Derecho. El natural al que padre o madre, o ambos a la vez, reconocen en forma legal … Diccionario de Economía Alkona
hijo reconocido — Derecho. El natural al que padre o madre, o ambos a la vez, reconocen en forma legal … Diccionario de Economía