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1 rigor
m.1 strictness.con rigor strictly2 accuracy, rigor.no tiene ningún rigor científico it's totally lacking in scientific rigoren rigor strictly (speaking)3 harshness (inclemencia).* * *1 (severidad) rigour (US rigor), strictness, severity2 (dureza) rigour (US rigor), harshness3 (exactitud) precision, exactness\con rigor rigorouslyde rigor essential, indispensableen rigor strictly speakingser el rigor de las desdichas figurado to be born under an unlucky star* * *SM1) (=severidad) severity, harshness; (=dureza) toughness2) (Meteo) harshness, severitylos rigores del clima — the rigours o (EEUU) rigors of the climate
3) (=exactitud) rigour, rigor (EEUU)4)ser de rigor — (=esencial) to be de rigueur, be absolutely essential
después de los saludos de rigor — after the usual o customary greetings
5)un rigor de cosas — And (=muchos) a whole lot of things
6) Cono Sur* (=paliza)* * *1) ( severidad) rigor*el rigor de estas medidas — the harshness o severity of these measures
2) ( precisión) rigor*con rigor — rigorously, strictly
en una ocasión así el frac es de rigor — tails are de rigueur o are a must on such an occasion
en rigor — ( honestamente) honestly, in all honesty; ( estrictamente) strictly speaking
* * *= precision, strictness, rigour [rigor, -USA], severity, stringency.Ex. Whether such precision will result in a catalogue more satisfactory to readers than that produced by the reasonable application of the vaguer AA is a moot point.Ex. They see people as marked by one particular attribute, cleverness, or kindness, or strictness, or being a good shot, and they mind whether things are right or wrong.Ex. Praiseworthy piecemeal modifications of this library rigour stand out as exceptions to prove the rule.Ex. Exuberance and enthusiasm are proper to the young, as Quintillian remarked: 'The young should be daring and inventive and should rejoice in their inventions, even though correctiveness and severity are still to be acquired'.Ex. Even when Community-wide regulations do apply, for example in matters of safety at work, the stringency of laws may vary from country to country.----* con rigor = rigourously [rigorously, -USA], harshly.* de rigor = de rigueur.* en rigor = strictly speaking.* rigores del clima = rigours of the climate.* rigor intelectual = intellectual rigour.* sin excesivo rigor = loosely.* * *1) ( severidad) rigor*el rigor de estas medidas — the harshness o severity of these measures
2) ( precisión) rigor*con rigor — rigorously, strictly
en una ocasión así el frac es de rigor — tails are de rigueur o are a must on such an occasion
en rigor — ( honestamente) honestly, in all honesty; ( estrictamente) strictly speaking
* * *= precision, strictness, rigour [rigor, -USA], severity, stringency.Ex: Whether such precision will result in a catalogue more satisfactory to readers than that produced by the reasonable application of the vaguer AA is a moot point.
Ex: They see people as marked by one particular attribute, cleverness, or kindness, or strictness, or being a good shot, and they mind whether things are right or wrong.Ex: Praiseworthy piecemeal modifications of this library rigour stand out as exceptions to prove the rule.Ex: Exuberance and enthusiasm are proper to the young, as Quintillian remarked: 'The young should be daring and inventive and should rejoice in their inventions, even though correctiveness and severity are still to be acquired'.Ex: Even when Community-wide regulations do apply, for example in matters of safety at work, the stringency of laws may vary from country to country.* con rigor = rigourously [rigorously, -USA], harshly.* de rigor = de rigueur.* en rigor = strictly speaking.* rigores del clima = rigours of the climate.* rigor intelectual = intellectual rigour.* sin excesivo rigor = loosely.* * *A (severidad) rigor*con todo el rigor de la ley with the utmost severity o full rigor of the lawel rigor de las medidas disciplinarias the harshness o severity of the disciplinary measuresel rigor del invierno the rigors of winterB (precisión) rigor*rigor científico scientific rigorlos criterios se aplicarán con rigor the criteria will be rigorously o strictly applied, the criteria will be applied with rigorde rigor usualcontéstale con la carta de rigor send him the usual o the standard replylos saludos de rigor the usual greetingsdespués de la ceremonia, las fotos de rigor after the ceremony there were the inevitable o usual o obligatory photosen una ocasión así el frac es de rigor tails are de rigueur o are a must on such an occasionser el rigor de las desdichas to be very unfortunate* * *
rigor sustantivo masculino ( en general) rigor( conjugate rigor);
(de medidas, castigo) harshness, severity;
el rigor del invierno the rigors of winter;
con rigor rigorously, strictly;
los saludos de rigor the usual greetings
rigor sustantivo masculino
1 (dureza, inflexibilidad) severity
el rigor de la ley/del invierno, the severity of the law/winter
2 (precisión, fundamento) rigour, US rigor: su teoría carece de rigor científico, her theory lacks scientific rigor
♦ Locuciones: de rigor, indispensable, customary
en rigor, strictly speaking
' rigor' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
rigurosamente
- exactitud
English:
rigor
- rigor mortis
- rigorousness
- rigour
- severity
- loosely
- strictly
- unscientific
* * *rigor nm1. [severidad] strictness;criticaron el rigor de la pena they criticized the severity o harshness of the sentence;con rigor strictly2. [exactitud] accuracy, rigour;a este análisis le falta rigor this analysis isn't rigorous enough;esta teoría no tiene ningún rigor científico this theory is totally lacking in scientific rigour;me dieron las instrucciones de rigor they gave me the usual instructions;nos cayó la bronca de rigor we got the inevitable telling-off;es de rigor en esas ocasiones it's de rigueur on such occasions;en rigor strictly (speaking)3. [inclemencia] harshness;los rigores del invierno the rigours of winter;los rigores del verano the harshness of the summer climate5. CompFames el rigor de las desdichas she was born unlucky* * *m1 rigor, Brrigour;ser de rigor be a must, be obligatory2 ( precisión) rigor, Brrigour;rigor científico scientific rigor;en rigor strictly3 ( dureza) rigor, Brrigour;los rigores del invierno the rigors of winter;los rigores estivales the extremes of summer* * *rigor nm1) : rigor, harshness2) : precision, meticulousness3)de rigor : usualla respuesta de rigor: the standard reply4)de rigor : essential, obligatory5)en rigor : strictly speaking, in reality -
2 rigores del clima
(n.) = rigours of the climateEx. The rigours of the climate and the effects of war and political unrest have ravaged this country's cultural heritage.* * *(n.) = rigours of the climateEx: The rigours of the climate and the effects of war and political unrest have ravaged this country's cultural heritage.
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3 clima
m.1 climate.clima continental continental climateclima mediterráneo mediterranean climateclima tropical tropical climate2 atmosphere (ambiente).las negociaciones se desarrollaron en un clima de distensión the talks took place in a relaxed atmosphere3 weather, climate, clime.* * *1 climate2 figurado atmosphere, climate* * *noun m.* * *SM (Meteo) climate; [de reunión] atmosphere; [de situación] climateclima artificial — LAm air conditioning
* * *1) (Meteo) climate2) ( ambiente) atmosphereal clima — (Col) at room temperature
* * *1) (Meteo) climate2) ( ambiente) atmosphereal clima — (Col) at room temperature
* * *clima11 = climate, weather.Ex: These figures are based on UK climate where the winter external temperature is about -1ºC (degree centigrade).
Ex: Data Resources Inc., again US-based, covers data bases in economics, finance, energy and weather.* clima árido = arid climate.* clima boreal = boreal climate.* clima de invierno = winter weather.* clima desértico = desert climate.* clima de verano = summer weather.* clima estival = summer weather.* clima invernal = winter weather.* clima subártico = subarctic climate.* clima tropical = tropical climate.* degradación del clima = climate deterioration.* microclima = micro-climate [microclimate].* paleoclima = palaeoclimate [paleoclimate, -USA].* rigores del clima = rigours of the climate.clima22 = climate.Ex: The article 'Keeping your ear to the ground' discusses the skills and knowledge information professionals need to have in today's IT-rich climate.
* clima de cambio = climate of change.* clima económico = economic climate.* clima político = political climate.* clima social = social climate.* crear un clima = promote + climate.* en el clima actual de = in the present climate of.* propiciar un clima = promote + climate.* * *A ( Meteo) climateun clima malsano an unhealthy climateCompuestos:continental climatemaritime climateMediterranean climatepolar climatetemperate climatetropical climateB (ambiente) atmosphereen un clima festivo in a festive atmosphereel clima económico the economic climateuna cerveza al clima a beer served at room temperature, a beer that isn't chilledCompuestos:investment climateclimate of public opinion* * *
clima sustantivo masculinoa) (Meteo) climate
el clima económico the economic climate
clima sustantivo masculino climate
' clima' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
aclimatarse
- agobiante
- benigna
- benigno
- cruda
- crudeza
- crudo
- destemplada
- destemplado
- hecha
- hecho
- húmeda
- húmedo
- propia
- propio
- reinar
- reinante
- rigurosa
- riguroso
- saludable
- sentar
- severa
- severidad
- severo
- suave
- suavidad
- suavizarse
- tórrida
- tórrido
- apacible
- aspereza
- áspero
- benignidad
- bondad
- caluroso
- contrario
- desértico
- franco
- hostil
- hostilidad
- malsano
- privilegiado
- sabroso
- sabrosón
- sano
- seco
- templado
English:
balmy
- changeable
- climate
- dry
- dryness
- enjoy
- erratic
- healthy
- hot
- humid
- mild
- mildness
- severe
- severity
- snowy
- sticky
- temperate
- toll
* * *clima nm1. [atmosférico] climateclima de alta montaña high mountain climate;clima árido arid climate;clima continental continental climate;clima desértico desert climate;clima ecuatorial equatorial climate;clima marítimo maritime climate;clima mediterráneo Mediterranean climate;clima de montaña mountain climate;clima polar polar climate;clima subtropical subtropical climate;clima tropical tropical climate2. [ambiente] atmosphere;las negociaciones se desarrollaron en un clima de distensión the talks took place in a relaxed atmosphere;un clima de nerviosismo dominó la reunión there was a tense atmosphere throughout the meeting;se detecta un clima de euforia there is a palpable mood of euphoria* * *m climate* * *clima nm1) : climate2) ambiente: atmosphere, ambience* * *clima n climate -
4 destrozar
v.1 to smash (físicamente) (romper).2 to shatter, to devastate (emocionalmente) (person).3 to tear apart, to destroy, to shatter, to break down into pieces.Eso rompe huesos That breaks bones.* * *1 (romper) to destroy, shatter, wreck; (despedazar) to tear to pieces, tear to shreds4 figurado (causar daño moral) to crush, shatter, devastate* * *1. VT1) (=romper) [+ cristal, cerámica] to smash; [+ edificio] to destroy; [+ ropa, zapatos] to ruin; [+ nervios] to shatter2) (=dejar abatido a) [+ persona] to shatter; [+ corazón] to break; [+ ejército, enemigo] to crushle ha destrozado el que no quisiera casarse con él — her refusal to marry him has devastated o shattered him
3) (=arruinar) [+ persona, vida] to ruin2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) (romper, deteriorar) to breakla bomba destrozó varios edificios — the bomb destroyed o wrecked several buildings
b) <felicidad/armonía> to destroy, shatter; < corazón> to break; < matrimonio> to ruin, destroy2.su muerte la destrozó — she was devastated o shattered by his death
destrozarse v pron (refl)a) ( romperse)b) <estómago/hígado> to ruin* * *= shatter, batter, vandalise [vandalize, -USA], wreak + devastation, smash, pull apart, ravage, go out + the window, tear + apart, mangle, dismember, shred, slaughter, blow away, wreck, rip through, pull + Nombre + to bits, wipe + the floor with, rubbish, blight, chew up.Ex. Her feeling of well-being was soon rudely shattered.Ex. But the early cylinder machines worked less accurately than the platens, tending to slur the impression and batter the type.Ex. This article argues in favour of the term 'conservator' rather than 'restorer' of books as the former does not conjure up a picture of the Victorian artisan vandalising documents with irreversible treatments simply for effect.Ex. This article describes the experiences of a fledgling information system in dealing with a hurricane which wreaked devastation on some of the most remote areas of Hawaii = Este artículo describe las experiencias de un sistema de información nuevo al verse afectado por un huracán que devastó algunas de las zonas más remotas de Hawaii.Ex. The library was badly vandalised and the intruders overturned 10 large bookcases, tore paintings down, emptied catalogues, and smashed intercoms, chairs, tables and windows.Ex. If solutions are not found to meet this challenge, users' hunger for multimedia could pull the Internet apart.Ex. The rigours of the climate and the effects of war and political unrest have ravaged this country's cultural heritage.Ex. The lack of centralisation means that good management goes out the window and everything gets sloppier.Ex. He is a stickler for detail and can tear apart a budget or a balance sheet faster than anyone.Ex. In places the waters had swept container lorries loaded with goods yards off the road where they now lay twisted and mangled and almost unrecognizable as vehicles.Ex. Books can seldom be disbound for the benefit of bibliographers (although it is worth remembering that they sometimes have to be rebound, when they are completely dismembered), but we can now see through printing ink by means of betaradiography.Ex. If they do muster up the courage to participate, they have learned what it is like to lose: they describe it as being 'slaughtered,' 'blown away,' or ' shredded'.Ex. These small small but very sharp flakes were used by hunters to slaughter animals.Ex. If they do muster up the courage to participate, they have learned what it is like to lose: they describe it as being 'slaughtered,' ' blown away,' or 'shredded'.Ex. They had made a secret deal with Otto Reich to wreck Cuba's economy.Ex. Storms in this part of the world are common and the people didn't seem to bat an eyelid at the prospect of a 135km wind ripping through their town.Ex. Microscopists think very little about plucking an innocent and unsuspecting insect from the garden, killing it, and pulling it to bits for study under a microscope.Ex. One by one, he wiped the floor with opponents who had spoken in the debate -- with a ferocious blend of rant, rhetoric and rumbustious counterattack.Ex. The theory of Scandinavian racial purity cherished by Hitler and the Nazis has been rubbished by new scientific research.Ex. The global outbreak of swine flu has spread fear through the travel sector, blighting any green shoots of recovery from the financial crisis.Ex. Cattle ranches are chewing up the Amazon rainforest.----* destrozar completamente = blow + Nombre + to bits.* destrozarse = come + undone, go to + rack and ruin, come apart at + the seams, fall apart at + the seams, go to + ruin.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) (romper, deteriorar) to breakla bomba destrozó varios edificios — the bomb destroyed o wrecked several buildings
b) <felicidad/armonía> to destroy, shatter; < corazón> to break; < matrimonio> to ruin, destroy2.su muerte la destrozó — she was devastated o shattered by his death
destrozarse v pron (refl)a) ( romperse)b) <estómago/hígado> to ruin* * *= shatter, batter, vandalise [vandalize, -USA], wreak + devastation, smash, pull apart, ravage, go out + the window, tear + apart, mangle, dismember, shred, slaughter, blow away, wreck, rip through, pull + Nombre + to bits, wipe + the floor with, rubbish, blight, chew up.Ex: Her feeling of well-being was soon rudely shattered.
Ex: But the early cylinder machines worked less accurately than the platens, tending to slur the impression and batter the type.Ex: This article argues in favour of the term 'conservator' rather than 'restorer' of books as the former does not conjure up a picture of the Victorian artisan vandalising documents with irreversible treatments simply for effect.Ex: This article describes the experiences of a fledgling information system in dealing with a hurricane which wreaked devastation on some of the most remote areas of Hawaii = Este artículo describe las experiencias de un sistema de información nuevo al verse afectado por un huracán que devastó algunas de las zonas más remotas de Hawaii.Ex: The library was badly vandalised and the intruders overturned 10 large bookcases, tore paintings down, emptied catalogues, and smashed intercoms, chairs, tables and windows.Ex: If solutions are not found to meet this challenge, users' hunger for multimedia could pull the Internet apart.Ex: The rigours of the climate and the effects of war and political unrest have ravaged this country's cultural heritage.Ex: The lack of centralisation means that good management goes out the window and everything gets sloppier.Ex: He is a stickler for detail and can tear apart a budget or a balance sheet faster than anyone.Ex: In places the waters had swept container lorries loaded with goods yards off the road where they now lay twisted and mangled and almost unrecognizable as vehicles.Ex: Books can seldom be disbound for the benefit of bibliographers (although it is worth remembering that they sometimes have to be rebound, when they are completely dismembered), but we can now see through printing ink by means of betaradiography.Ex: If they do muster up the courage to participate, they have learned what it is like to lose: they describe it as being 'slaughtered,' 'blown away,' or ' shredded'.Ex: These small small but very sharp flakes were used by hunters to slaughter animals.Ex: If they do muster up the courage to participate, they have learned what it is like to lose: they describe it as being 'slaughtered,' ' blown away,' or 'shredded'.Ex: They had made a secret deal with Otto Reich to wreck Cuba's economy.Ex: Storms in this part of the world are common and the people didn't seem to bat an eyelid at the prospect of a 135km wind ripping through their town.Ex: Microscopists think very little about plucking an innocent and unsuspecting insect from the garden, killing it, and pulling it to bits for study under a microscope.Ex: One by one, he wiped the floor with opponents who had spoken in the debate -- with a ferocious blend of rant, rhetoric and rumbustious counterattack.Ex: The theory of Scandinavian racial purity cherished by Hitler and the Nazis has been rubbished by new scientific research.Ex: The global outbreak of swine flu has spread fear through the travel sector, blighting any green shoots of recovery from the financial crisis.Ex: Cattle ranches are chewing up the Amazon rainforest.* destrozar completamente = blow + Nombre + to bits.* destrozarse = come + undone, go to + rack and ruin, come apart at + the seams, fall apart at + the seams, go to + ruin.* * *destrozar [A4 ]vt1 (romper, deteriorar) to breakla bomba destrozó varios edificios the bomb destroyed o wrecked several buildingsno hagas eso que vas a destrozar los zapatos don't do that, you'll ruin your shoes2 ‹felicidad/armonía› to destroy, shatter; ‹corazón› to break; ‹matrimonio› to ruin, destroyme está destrozando los nervios she's making me a nervous wreckla muerte de su marido la destrozó she was devastated o shattered by her husband's death1(romperse): se cayó al suelo y se destrozó it fell to the ground and smashedse me han destrozado los zapatos my shoes are ruined o have fallen to pieces2 ( refl) ‹estómago/hígado› to ruinte vas a destrozar los pies usando esos zapatos you're going to ruin o damage your feet wearing those shoes* * *
destrozar ( conjugate destrozar) verbo transitivo
‹cristal/jarrón› to smash;
‹ juguete› to pull … apart;
‹ coche› to wreck;
‹ libro› to pull apart
‹ corazón› to break;
destrozarse verbo pronominal
[jarrón/cristal] to smash
destrozar verbo transitivo
1 (romper) to tear up, wreck, ruin
2 (una tela, un papel) to tear to shreds, rip up
3 (apenar, desgarrar) to shatter, devastate: me destroza verte así, it breaks my heart to see you this way
4 (los planes, la convivencia, etc) to ruin
' destrozar' also found in these entries:
English:
break
- destroy
- mangle
- shatter
- smash
- smash up
- tear apart
- trash
- vandalize
- wreck
- write off
- get
- murder
- piece
- pull
- write
* * *♦ vt1. [físicamente] [romper] to smash;[estropear] to ruin;el terremoto destrozó la ciudad the earthquake destroyed the city;vas a destrozar o [m5] destrozarte los zapatos de tanto usarlos you'll ruin your shoes, wearing them so much2. [emocionalmente] [persona] to shatter, to devastate;[matrimonio, relación] to wreck; [pareja] to break up; [vida] to ruin; [corazón] to break;el divorcio la ha destrozado she was devastated by the divorce;ese ruido le destroza los nervios a cualquiera that noise is enough to drive anyone up the wall;destrozó a su oponente en el debate he destroyed his opponent in the debate* * *v/t1 destroy* * *destrozar {21} vt1) : to smash, to shatter2) : to destroy, to wreck* * *destrozar vb1. (en general) to destroy / to wreck2. (hacer trozos) to smash -
5 desolar
v.1 to devastate, to lay waste.2 to cause anguish to.la muerte del padre desoló a la familia the father's death devastated the family3 to desolate, to lay waste, to afflict, to despoil.Ellos desolaron el pueblo They desolated the town.4 to bereave, to make desolate, to deprive.5 to desert, to forsake, to abandon completely.Ellos desolaron a la gente They deserted the people.* * *1 (devastar) to devastate2 (desconsolar) to desolate, distress1 to be grieved* * *1. VT1) [+ ciudad, poblado] to devastate, lay waste (to) liter2) [+ persona] to devastate2.See:* * *verbo transitivo <país/campos> to lay waste (to) (liter)* * *= ravage, rack [wrack], despoil, desolate.Ex. The rigours of the climate and the effects of war and political unrest have ravaged this country's cultural heritage.Ex. Both countries that have been wracked for the last ten years by violent civil wars.Ex. The main justifications, couched mostly in race-neutral terms, were that the squatters would increase crime, decrease property values, spread disease, & despoil the natural environment.Ex. You cannot make an omelette without breaking eggs; you cannot destroy the practices of barbarism which for centuries have desolated Africa without the use of force.* * *verbo transitivo <país/campos> to lay waste (to) (liter)* * *= ravage, rack [wrack], despoil, desolate.Ex: The rigours of the climate and the effects of war and political unrest have ravaged this country's cultural heritage.
Ex: Both countries that have been wracked for the last ten years by violent civil wars.Ex: The main justifications, couched mostly in race-neutral terms, were that the squatters would increase crime, decrease property values, spread disease, & despoil the natural environment.Ex: You cannot make an omelette without breaking eggs; you cannot destroy the practices of barbarism which for centuries have desolated Africa without the use of force.* * *vtB (afligir) to devastate* * *
desolar verbo transitivo to devastate
' desolar' also found in these entries:
English:
devastate
* * *♦ vt1. [destruir] to devastate, to lay waste2. [afligir] to cause anguish to;la muerte del padre desoló a la familia the father's death devastated the family* * *v/t tb figdevastate -
6 causar estragos
v.to create chaos, to ravage.* * *(v.) = wreak + havoc, ravage, run + amok, cause + havoc, create + havoc, play + havoc withEx. I would, nonetheless, like to consider a common type of a change, which normally presents no problem under a manual system, but which could wreak havoc in an automated system.Ex. The rigours of the climate and the effects of war and political unrest have ravaged this country's cultural heritage.Ex. Term paper fraud runs amok on the Web as dozens of fee and free sites have thousands of term papers available for lazy and unprincipled students.Ex. It was found that someone had dumped a load of builders' rubble down a manhole blocking the sewer and causing havoc.Ex. Power-hungry politicians are creating havoc everywhere.Ex. To treat these reports differently only because some are serial and the others are monographic in form is to play havoc with the integrity of the catalog and to confound its users.* * *(v.) = wreak + havoc, ravage, run + amok, cause + havoc, create + havoc, play + havoc withEx: I would, nonetheless, like to consider a common type of a change, which normally presents no problem under a manual system, but which could wreak havoc in an automated system.
Ex: The rigours of the climate and the effects of war and political unrest have ravaged this country's cultural heritage.Ex: Term paper fraud runs amok on the Web as dozens of fee and free sites have thousands of term papers available for lazy and unprincipled students.Ex: It was found that someone had dumped a load of builders' rubble down a manhole blocking the sewer and causing havoc.Ex: Power-hungry politicians are creating havoc everywhere.Ex: To treat these reports differently only because some are serial and the others are monographic in form is to play havoc with the integrity of the catalog and to confound its users. -
7 descontento político
(n.) = political unrestEx. The rigours of the climate and the effects of war and political unrest have ravaged the cultural heritage..* * *(n.) = political unrestEx: The rigours of the climate and the effects of war and political unrest have ravaged the cultural heritage..
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8 disturbios políticos
(n.) = political unrestEx. The rigours of the climate and the effects of war and political unrest have ravaged the cultural heritage..* * *(n.) = political unrestEx: The rigours of the climate and the effects of war and political unrest have ravaged the cultural heritage..
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9 malestar político
(n.) = political unrestEx. The rigours of the climate and the effects of war and political unrest have ravaged the cultural heritage..* * *(n.) = political unrestEx: The rigours of the climate and the effects of war and political unrest have ravaged the cultural heritage..
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10 efecto de la guerra
(n.) = effect of warEx. The rigours of the climate and the effects of war and political unrest have ravaged this country's cultural heritage.* * *(n.) = effect of warEx: The rigours of the climate and the effects of war and political unrest have ravaged this country's cultural heritage.
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11 clima1
1 = climate, weather.Ex. These figures are based on UK climate where the winter external temperature is about -1ºC (degree centigrade).Ex. Data Resources Inc., again US-based, covers data bases in economics, finance, energy and weather.----* clima árido = arid climate.* clima boreal = boreal climate.* clima de invierno = winter weather.* clima desértico = desert climate.* clima de verano = summer weather.* clima estival = summer weather.* clima invernal = winter weather.* clima subártico = subarctic climate.* clima tropical = tropical climate.* degradación del clima = climate deterioration.* microclima = micro-climate [microclimate].* paleoclima = palaeoclimate [paleoclimate, -USA].* rigores del clima = rigours of the climate.
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United Kingdom — a kingdom in NW Europe, consisting of Great Britain and Northern Ireland: formerly comprising Great Britain and Ireland 1801 1922. 58,610,182; 94,242 sq. mi. (244,100 sq. km). Cap.: London. Abbr.: U.K. Official name, United Kingdom of Great… … Universalium
Portugal — /pawr cheuh geuhl, pohr /; Port. /pawrdd too gahl /, n. a republic in SW Europe, on the Iberian Peninsula, W of Spain. (Including the Azores and the Madeira Islands) 9,867,654; 35,414 sq. mi. (91,720 sq. km). Cap.: Lisbon. * * * Portugal… … Universalium