-
1 separado
• separated -
2 separados, los
= separated, the -
3 separado
adj.1 separate, separated.2 separate, discrete, not joined together.past part.past participle of spanish verb: separar.* * *1→ link=separar separar► adjetivo1 separate2 (divorciado) separated\por separado separately, individually* * *(f. - separada)adj.* * *separado, -a1. ADJ1) (=independiente) separate2) [cónyuge] separated2.SM / F* * *I- da adjetivo1) < persona> separated2)a) < camas> separateb)II- da masculino, femeninoes hijo de separados — his parents are separated, he's the child of separated parents
* * *= separate, free-standing, estranged, divided.Ex. One of the most obvious of the limitations of this approach is that it is difficult to decide what constitutes a separate work.Ex. A free-standing terminal is a computer in its own right, which processes and stores data about the transactions and which may also exchange data with a central computer at predetermined intervals, say at the end of a working day.Ex. Estranged couples need help in understanding their disappointment and identifying available support.Ex. This kind of marriage was traditionally associated with a desire to rejoin divided properties.----* cada caso por separado = on a case-by-case basis.* cada uno por separado = each one alone.* estar muy separado = set + far apart.* estar separado de = be remote from.* mantener separado = keep apart.* orden separado = separate sequence.* por separado = at different times, in isolation, separately, singly.* separado de = at one remove from.* separados, los = separated, the.* separado un nivel o más de = at one or more removes from.* * *I- da adjetivo1) < persona> separated2)a) < camas> separateb)II- da masculino, femeninoes hijo de separados — his parents are separated, he's the child of separated parents
* * *= separate, free-standing, estranged, divided.Ex: One of the most obvious of the limitations of this approach is that it is difficult to decide what constitutes a separate work.
Ex: A free-standing terminal is a computer in its own right, which processes and stores data about the transactions and which may also exchange data with a central computer at predetermined intervals, say at the end of a working day.Ex: Estranged couples need help in understanding their disappointment and identifying available support.Ex: This kind of marriage was traditionally associated with a desire to rejoin divided properties.* cada caso por separado = on a case-by-case basis.* cada uno por separado = each one alone.* estar muy separado = set + far apart.* estar separado de = be remote from.* mantener separado = keep apart.* orden separado = separate sequence.* por separado = at different times, in isolation, separately, singly.* separado de = at one remove from.* separados, los = separated, the.* separado un nivel o más de = at one or more removes from.* * *A ‹persona› separatedestá separado de su mujer he is separated from his wifeB1 ‹camas/literas› separatetiene los dientes muy separados her teeth are very far apart o are very widely spaced o have big gaps between themllevan vidas separadas they live separate lives2por separado separatelyse entrevistó con los dos por separado she interviewed the two of them separately o individuallymasculine, femininees hijo de separados his parents are separated, he's the child of parents who have separated o of separated parents* * *
Del verbo separar: ( conjugate separar)
separado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
separado
separar
separado◊ -da adjetivo
1 ‹ persona› separated
2
b)
■ sustantivo masculino, femenino:
separar ( conjugate separar) verbo transitivo
1
separa la cama de la pared move the bed away from the wall
c) (guardar, reservar) to put o set aside
2
b) ( despegar):
separarse verbo pronominal
separadose DE algn to separate from sb
c) (apartarse, alejarse):◊ no se separen, que los pequeños se pueden perder please stay together in case the children get lost;
no me he separado nunca de mis hijos I've never been away o apart from my children
separado,-a adjetivo
1 (diferente, aparte) separate
2 (persona casada) separated
♦ Locuciones: por separado, separately, individually
separar verbo transitivo
1 (aumentar la distancia física) to move apart
2 (poner aparte) to separate: separa las rosas de los claveles, separate the roses from the carnations
3 (reservar) to save
4 (algo pegado, grapado) to detach
5 (distanciar, disgregar) to divide
' separado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
aparte
- dispersa
- disperso
- separada
- suelta
- suelto
- separar
English:
apart
- bust up
- cover
- detached
- separate
- separated
- separately
- singly
- estrange
- individual
* * *separado, -a♦ adj1. [apartado] separate;está muy separado de la pared it's too far away from the wall;por separado separately2. [del cónyuge] separated♦ nm,fseparated person* * *adj separated;por separado separately* * *separado, -da adj1) : separated2) : separatevidas separadas: separate lives3)por separado : separately* * *separado adj1. (persona) separated2. (cosa) separate -
4 separar
v.1 to separate.las hojas se han pegado y no las puedo separar the pages have stuck together and I can't separate them o get them apartson muchas las cosas que nos separan there are many differences between usMaría separó las galletas Mary separated the cookies.2 to move away.separa un poco las sillas move the chairs apart a bit3 to put aside.4 to split, to draw apart, to pull away, to pull apart.El adulterio separa a las parejas Adultery splits couples.5 to set apart, to put away.6 to abduce.* * *1 (gen) to separate2 (hacer grupos) to separate, sort out3 (guardar aparte) to set aside, put aside4 (apartar) to move away (de, from)5 (de empleo, cargo) to remove (de, from), dismiss (de, from)6 figurado (mantener alejado) to keep away (de, from)1 (tomar diferente camino) to separate, part company2 (matrimonio) to separate3 (apartarse) to move away (de, from)4 (desprenderse) to separate (de, from), come off (de, -)5 (de amigo etc) to part company (de, with)6 separarse de (dejar algo) to part with* * *verb1) to separate2) divide•* * *1. VT1) (=apartar) to separatela maestra nos separó para que no habláramos — the teacher split us up o separated us so that we wouldn't talk
si no los llegan a separar se matan — if no one had pulled them apart o separated them, they would have killed each other
separar algn/algo de algn/algo — to separate sb/sth from sb/sth
al nacer los separaron de sus padres — they were taken (away) o separated from their parents at birth
los separaron del resto de los pasajeros — they were split up o separated from the rest of the passengers
2) (=distanciar)éramos buenos amigos, pero la política nos separó — we were good friends but politics came between us
3) (=existir entre)el abismo que separa a los ricos de los pobres — the gulf between o separating (the) rich and (the) poor
4) (=deslindar)unas barreras de protección separaban el escenario de la plaza — there were crash barriers separating the stage from the rest of the square
la frontera que separa realidad y ficción — the dividing line between reality and fiction, the line that separates reality from o and fiction
5) (=dividir) to divide6) (=poner aparte)¿me puedes separar un poco de tarta? — can you put aside some cake for me?
7) (=destituir) [de un cargo] to remove, dismissser separado del servicio — (Mil) to be discharged
2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) (apartar, alejar) to separate; < boxeadores> to separate, partno se aconseja separar a la madre de su ternero — it is not advisable to take the calf away from its mother
b) ( dividir un todo) to divide2)a) ( deslindar) to separate, divideb) ( despegar)3) (frml) ( destituir) to dismiss (frml)2.fue separado de su cargo/sus funciones — he was removed from office/relieved of his duties (frml)
separarse v prona) matrimonio to separatese separaron hace un mes — they separated o split up a month ago
b) (apartarse, alejarse) to split upno se separen, que los pequeños se pueden perder — please stay together in case the children get lost
separarse DE algo/alguien: esta niña no se separa del televisor this child is always glued to the television; no me he separado nunca de mis hijos I've never been away o apart from my children; no se separen de su equipaje — do not leave your luggage unattended
c) (guardar, reservar) to put o set aside* * *= carry off, cut off, detach, put by, segregate, separate, sift, screen out, tell out into, sort out + Nombre + from + Nombre, drive + a wedge between, hive off, disaggregate, sever, prise + Nombre + apart, unbundle, spread out, sift out, cleave, tease apart, balkanize, sunder, decouple, strip off, splay.Ex. The 'sweated' rags were pounded to a pulp (or stuff) by water-powered hammers, impurities being carried off through filters by running water.Ex. The stages are not cut off from one another, are not sharply defined.Ex. The words from the deleted abstract in the abstract word file will be detached when DOBIS/LIBIS is not busy with other work.Ex. The raw material of white paper was undyed linen -- or in very early days hempen -- rags, which the paper-maker bought in bulk, sorted and washed, and then put by in a damp heap for four or five days to rot.Ex. In summary, the advantages of the electronic catalog is the ability to segregate the fast searches from the slowest.Ex. The description of the component part is separated from that of the host document by a double slash.Ex. Thus many non-relevant documents have been retrieved and examined in the process of sifting relevant and non-relevant documents.Ex. Most journals rely for a substantial part of their income on advertisements; how would advertisers view the prospect of being selectively screened out by readers?.Ex. The finished paper was sorted for imperfections and told out into quires and reams for sale.Ex. Ward's study is likely to remain a standard reference source for years to come, but trying to sort out the generalities from the particularities is a very difficult business.Ex. While the current problems associated with serial economics have driven a wedge between vendors, librarians and publishers, they should be cooperating and communicating in order to withstand the information explosion.Ex. Non-fiction is normally shelved according to the Dewey decimal system with perhaps a major category such as autobiography and biography hived off as a completely separate ad hoc classification.Ex. Outcomes can be disaggregated along age, class, ethnic, racial, & gender dimensions.Ex. This art is is mass produced, often mechanically, and thus severed from tradition.Ex. The symbiotic relationship between scholarly discourse and scholarly publication that has existed for 3 centuries is being prised apart by new technology.Ex. It is recommended that CD-ROM producers unbundle the retrieval software from the data.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. Whichever he chooses he will still have to sift out and categorize the numerous errors that disfigure all the early texts of the play.Ex. Ethnic and racial differences cleaved the American working class.Ex. The author and his colleagues embarked on a series of studies to tease apart hereditary and environmental factors thought to be implicated in schizophrenia.Ex. The scholarly system has become balkanized into autonomous, even antagonistic, cultures or camps based on differing technological competencies and interests.Ex. Both novels tell essentially the same story, that of a woman sundered from her high estate and her betrothed.Ex. The physical library will probably become less viable over time and so it is important to decouple the information professional from the library unit.Ex. They gathered a whole sackful, stripped off the husks, and filled the sack again.Ex. Walk your feet up the wall, then take the belt and place it on your upper arms right above your elbows to keep your arms from splaying.----* Hasta que la muerte nos separe = Till death do us part.* que se puede separar = detachable.* separar aun más = widen + the gap between... and.* separar con una cortina = curtain off.* separar de = wean from, isolate from, divide from, wean away from.* separar el grano de la paja = divide into + Adjetivo + sheep and + Adjetivo + goats, sort the + Adjetivo + sheep from the + Adjetivo + goats, separate + the wheat from the chaff, sort out + the wheat from the chaff, sift + the wheat from the chaff.* separar haciendo palanca = pry + Nombre + out, prise + Nombre + out.* separar la realidad de la ficción = distinguish + fact from fiction.* separar las manos = spread out + hands.* separar + Nombre + de + Nombre = discern + Nombre + from + Nombre.* separarse = drift apart, part, divorce, go (our/their) separate ways, fork.* separarse (de) = become + parted from, move away from, turn away from, secede (from).* separarse descendiendo = droop away from.* separar una pelea = break up + fight, break up + fight.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) (apartar, alejar) to separate; < boxeadores> to separate, partno se aconseja separar a la madre de su ternero — it is not advisable to take the calf away from its mother
b) ( dividir un todo) to divide2)a) ( deslindar) to separate, divideb) ( despegar)3) (frml) ( destituir) to dismiss (frml)2.fue separado de su cargo/sus funciones — he was removed from office/relieved of his duties (frml)
separarse v prona) matrimonio to separatese separaron hace un mes — they separated o split up a month ago
b) (apartarse, alejarse) to split upno se separen, que los pequeños se pueden perder — please stay together in case the children get lost
separarse DE algo/alguien: esta niña no se separa del televisor this child is always glued to the television; no me he separado nunca de mis hijos I've never been away o apart from my children; no se separen de su equipaje — do not leave your luggage unattended
c) (guardar, reservar) to put o set aside* * *= carry off, cut off, detach, put by, segregate, separate, sift, screen out, tell out into, sort out + Nombre + from + Nombre, drive + a wedge between, hive off, disaggregate, sever, prise + Nombre + apart, unbundle, spread out, sift out, cleave, tease apart, balkanize, sunder, decouple, strip off, splay.Ex: The 'sweated' rags were pounded to a pulp (or stuff) by water-powered hammers, impurities being carried off through filters by running water.
Ex: The stages are not cut off from one another, are not sharply defined.Ex: The words from the deleted abstract in the abstract word file will be detached when DOBIS/LIBIS is not busy with other work.Ex: The raw material of white paper was undyed linen -- or in very early days hempen -- rags, which the paper-maker bought in bulk, sorted and washed, and then put by in a damp heap for four or five days to rot.Ex: In summary, the advantages of the electronic catalog is the ability to segregate the fast searches from the slowest.Ex: The description of the component part is separated from that of the host document by a double slash.Ex: Thus many non-relevant documents have been retrieved and examined in the process of sifting relevant and non-relevant documents.Ex: Most journals rely for a substantial part of their income on advertisements; how would advertisers view the prospect of being selectively screened out by readers?.Ex: The finished paper was sorted for imperfections and told out into quires and reams for sale.Ex: Ward's study is likely to remain a standard reference source for years to come, but trying to sort out the generalities from the particularities is a very difficult business.Ex: While the current problems associated with serial economics have driven a wedge between vendors, librarians and publishers, they should be cooperating and communicating in order to withstand the information explosion.Ex: Non-fiction is normally shelved according to the Dewey decimal system with perhaps a major category such as autobiography and biography hived off as a completely separate ad hoc classification.Ex: Outcomes can be disaggregated along age, class, ethnic, racial, & gender dimensions.Ex: This art is is mass produced, often mechanically, and thus severed from tradition.Ex: The symbiotic relationship between scholarly discourse and scholarly publication that has existed for 3 centuries is being prised apart by new technology.Ex: It is recommended that CD-ROM producers unbundle the retrieval software from the data.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: Whichever he chooses he will still have to sift out and categorize the numerous errors that disfigure all the early texts of the play.Ex: Ethnic and racial differences cleaved the American working class.Ex: The author and his colleagues embarked on a series of studies to tease apart hereditary and environmental factors thought to be implicated in schizophrenia.Ex: The scholarly system has become balkanized into autonomous, even antagonistic, cultures or camps based on differing technological competencies and interests.Ex: Both novels tell essentially the same story, that of a woman sundered from her high estate and her betrothed.Ex: The physical library will probably become less viable over time and so it is important to decouple the information professional from the library unit.Ex: They gathered a whole sackful, stripped off the husks, and filled the sack again.Ex: Walk your feet up the wall, then take the belt and place it on your upper arms right above your elbows to keep your arms from splaying.* Hasta que la muerte nos separe = Till death do us part.* que se puede separar = detachable.* separar aun más = widen + the gap between... and.* separar con una cortina = curtain off.* separar de = wean from, isolate from, divide from, wean away from.* separar el grano de la paja = divide into + Adjetivo + sheep and + Adjetivo + goats, sort the + Adjetivo + sheep from the + Adjetivo + goats, separate + the wheat from the chaff, sort out + the wheat from the chaff, sift + the wheat from the chaff.* separar haciendo palanca = pry + Nombre + out, prise + Nombre + out.* separar la realidad de la ficción = distinguish + fact from fiction.* separar las manos = spread out + hands.* separar + Nombre + de + Nombre = discern + Nombre + from + Nombre.* separarse = drift apart, part, divorce, go (our/their) separate ways, fork.* separarse (de) = become + parted from, move away from, turn away from, secede (from).* separarse descendiendo = droop away from.* separar una pelea = break up + fight, break up + fight.* * *separar [A1 ]vtA1 (apartar, alejar) to separatedos transeúntes intentaron separarlos two passersby tried to separate o part themha hecho todo lo posible por separarnos he has done everything he can to split us uplas consonantes dobles no se separan en español in Spanish, double consonants should not be split upla maestra las separó porque charlaban mucho the teacher separated them o split them up because they were talking so muchsepara la cama de la pared move the bed away from the wallno se aconseja separar a la madre de su ternero it is not advisable to take the calf away from its motherseparar la yema de la clara separate the white from the yolkseparar los machos de las hembras to separate the males from the females2 (dividir un todo) to divideseparar las palabras en sílabas divide the words into syllablesla guerra separó a muchas familias the war divided many families3 (guardar, reservar) to put o set asidesepárame un trocito para Pablo, que va a venir más tarde can you put o set aside a slice for Pablo, he'll be coming latersepara la ropa que llevarás puesta put the clothes you're going to wear on one sideB1 (deslindar) to separate, divideuna valla separa a los hinchas de los dos equipos there is a fence separating the fans of the two teamslos separan profundas diferencias they are divided by deepseated differencesseparar algo DE algo to separate sth FROM sthlos Andes separan Argentina de Chile the Andes separate Argentina from Chile2(despegar): no puedo separar estas dos fotos I can't get these two photographs apartsepara las lonchas de jamón separate the slices of hamno separe la etiqueta antes de rellenarla do not remove o detach the label before filling it infue separado de su cargo/sus funciones he was removed from office/relieved of his duties ( frml)separar del servicio ( Mil) to discharge1 «matrimonio» to separatese separaron tras diez años de matrimonio they separated o split up after ten years of marriagees hijo de padres separados his parents are separatedsepararse DE algn to separate FROM sbse separó de su marido en octubre she separated from her husband in October2 (alejarse, apartarse) to split upa mitad de camino nos separamos we split up half waylos socios se separaron en 1996 they dissolved their partnership in 1996 ( frml), the partners split up in 1996no se separen, que los pequeños se pueden perder please don't split up o divide up o please stay together in case the children get lostsepararse DE algo/algn:esta niña no se separa del televisor this child is always glued to the televisionno me he separado nunca de mis hijos I've never been away o apart from my childrenno se separen de su equipaje do not leave your luggage unattended* * *
separar ( conjugate separar) verbo transitivo
1
separa la cama de la pared move the bed away from the wall
c) (guardar, reservar) to put o set aside
2
b) ( despegar):
separarse verbo pronominal
separarse DE algn to separate from sb
c) (apartarse, alejarse):◊ no se separen, que los pequeños se pueden perder please stay together in case the children get lost;
no me he separado nunca de mis hijos I've never been away o apart from my children
separar verbo transitivo
1 (aumentar la distancia física) to move apart
2 (poner aparte) to separate: separa las rosas de los claveles, separate the roses from the carnations
3 (reservar) to save
4 (algo pegado, grapado) to detach
5 (distanciar, disgregar) to divide
' separar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
abrir
- desgajar
- desunir
- paja
- quitar
- segregar
- aislar
- apartar
- cortar
- desmontar
- desprender
English:
detach
- divide
- divorce
- fence off
- part
- peel off
- prise
- pull apart
- screen off
- separate
- sort out
- space
- split up
- twist off
- wall off
- fence
- pull
- screen
- sort
- splay
- split
- wall
* * *♦ vt1. [alejar, dividir, aislar] to separate (de from);lo han separado de sus hijos they've taken his children away from him;tuvo que venir la policía para separarlos the police had to be called to break them up o separate them;el muro que separa los dos campos the wall separating o that separates the two fields;separar algo en grupos/partes iguales to divide sth into groups/equal parts;son muchas las cosas que nos separan there are many differences between us;quiere separar su vida privada de su vida pública she wants to keep her private life separate from her public life2. [apartar, dejar espacio entre] to move away (de from);separe el cuerpo del volante keep your body away from the steering wheel;separa un poco las sillas move the chairs apart a bit;separa bien las piernas open your legs wide3. [desunir, quitar]las hojas se han pegado y no las puedo separar the pages have stuck together and I can't separate them o get them apart;separe la carne del caldo remove the meat from the stock;no separaba los ojos del reloj she never took her eyes off the clock4. [reservar] to put asidefue separado del cargo he was removed (from his post), he was dismissed (from his job);separaron al coronel del servicio the colonel was removed from active service* * *v/t separate* * *separar vt1) : to separate, to divide2) : to split up, to pull apart♦ separarse vr* * *separar vb1. (en general) to separate2. (apartar) to move away -
5 mediar
v.1 to be halfway through.mediaba julio it was mid-July2 to mediate.3 to intervene, to happen.media la circunstancia de que… (interceder) it so happens that…* * *1 (interceder) to intercede ( en favor de, on behalf of)2 (interponerse) to mediate (en, in), intervene (en, in)3 (estar en medio) to be■ media el hecho de que... it so happens that...* * *verb1) to mediate2) intervene* * *VI1) (=estar en medio) to be halfway through; (=llegar a la mitad) to get to the middle, get halfway; [tiempo] to elapse, passentre los dos sucesos mediaron varios años — the two events were separated by several years, several years elapsed between the two events
mediaba el otoño — autumn was half over, it was halfway through autumn
2) (=ocurrir) to come up, happen; (=intervenir) to intervene; (=existir) to existmedia el hecho de que... — we must take into account the fact that...
3) (=interceder) to mediate (en in) ( entre between)intervenemediar en favor de algn, mediar por algn — to intercede o intervene on sb's behalf
* * *verbo intransitivo1) persona/organizacióna) ( intervenir) to mediatemediar EN algo — en conflicto/negociaciones to mediate in something, to act as mediator in something
b) ( interceder)mediar POR alguien — to intercede for somebody o on somebody's behalf
mediar ANTE alguien — to intercede o intervene with somebody
2)a) tiempo/distanciamediaron dos años antes de volverla a ver — two years passed o elapsed before he saw her again
b) ( interponerse)entre nosotros media un abismo — we are poles o worlds apart
no debemos permitir que medien intereses personales — we must not allow personal interests to enter into it
c) ( transcurrir)mediaba la tarde/el mes de mayo cuando... — it was mid-afternoon/mid-may when...
* * *= mediate, come into + play.Ex. School library media professionals who mediate in the learning experiences of students must be well informed critical thinkers.Ex. There are, of course, all sorts of other considerations which come into play in determining the income which a publisher might obtain from a book.* * *verbo intransitivo1) persona/organizacióna) ( intervenir) to mediatemediar EN algo — en conflicto/negociaciones to mediate in something, to act as mediator in something
b) ( interceder)mediar POR alguien — to intercede for somebody o on somebody's behalf
mediar ANTE alguien — to intercede o intervene with somebody
2)a) tiempo/distanciamediaron dos años antes de volverla a ver — two years passed o elapsed before he saw her again
b) ( interponerse)entre nosotros media un abismo — we are poles o worlds apart
no debemos permitir que medien intereses personales — we must not allow personal interests to enter into it
c) ( transcurrir)mediaba la tarde/el mes de mayo cuando... — it was mid-afternoon/mid-may when...
* * *= mediate, come into + play.Ex: School library media professionals who mediate in the learning experiences of students must be well informed critical thinkers.
Ex: There are, of course, all sorts of other considerations which come into play in determining the income which a publisher might obtain from a book.* * *mediar [A1 ]viA «persona/organización»1 (intervenir) to mediate mediar EN algo ‹en un conflicto› to mediate ( IN sth), to act as mediator ( IN sth)medió en las negociaciones entre los secuestradores y el gobierno she acted as intermediary o she mediated in the negotiations between the kidnappers and the government2 (interceder) mediar POR algn to intercede FOR sb o on sb's behalf, intervene on sb's behalf mediar ANTE algn to intercede o intervene WITH sbB1«tiempo/distancia»: entre los dos hechos mediaron cinco meses the two incidents were separated by an interval of five months, five months elapsed between o separated the two incidentsentre los dos pueblos median 50 kms the two villages are separated by a distance of 50 kmsme parece bastante inteligente pero de ahí a decir que es un genio media un abismo he seems quite intelligent but that's a long way from saying he's a geniussiempre medió entre nosotros un abismo we were always poles o worlds apartpasé la primera prueba pero de ahí a tener el puesto media un buen trecho I passed the first test but I'm still a long way from getting the job2(interponerse): sin mediar palabra, se levantó y se marchó without saying a word, she got up and leftno debemos permitir que medien intereses personales we must not allow personal interests to enter into itC(existir) «hecho/circunstancia»: media la circunstancia de que es casado the fact is that he's married* * *
mediar ( conjugate mediar) verbo intransitivo
mediar EN algo ‹en conflicto/negociaciones› to mediate in sth, to act as mediator in sthb) ( interceder) mediar POR algn to intercede for sb;
mediar ANTE algn to intercede o intervene with sb
mediar verbo intransitivo
1 (arbitrar, intervenir) to mediate: España mediará en el conflicto, Spain will mediate in the conflict
2 (interceder) to intercede: mediará por ti, she'll intercede on your behalf
3 (interponerse) media la circunstancia de que..., you must take into account that...
4 (periodo de tiempo) to pass: mediaron un par de días, two days passed
' mediar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
intervenir
English:
afraid
- intercede
- mediate
* * *mediar vi1. [llegar a la mitad] to be halfway through;mediaba julio it was mid-July;al mediar la tarde halfway through the afternoonmedia un jardín/un kilómetro entre las dos casas there is a garden/one kilometre between the two houses;la distancia que media entre las dos capitales the distance between o that separates the two capitals;media un abismo entre ambas posturas the two positions are poles apart;de ahí a decir que es el mejor media un abismo there's a world of difference between that and saying he's the best;medió una semana a week passed by;sin mediar palabra without saying a word3. [intervenir] to mediate;medió en la disputa entre las dos partes he mediated between the two sides in the dispute4. [interceder] to intercede, to intervene;medió por su sobrino para que le dieran el trabajo he interceded o intervened on behalf of his nephew in order to get him the job5. [ocurrir] to intervene, to happen;íbamos a reunirnos el sábado, pero medió el accidente we were going to meet on Saturday, but then the accident happened;media la circunstancia de que… it so happens that…* * *v/i1 ( arbitrar) mediate2 ( interceder) intercede3 ( intervenir) intervene4 de tiempo elapse;median 4km entre los dos pueblos the two towns are 4km apart5:sin mediar palabra without a word* * *mediar vi1) : to mediate2) : to be in the middle, to be halfway through3) : to elapse, to passmediaron cinco años entre el inicio de la guerra y el armisticio: five years passed between the start of the war and the armistice4) : to be a considerationmedia el hecho de que cuesta mucho: one must take into account that it is costly5) : to come up, to happenmedió algo urgente: something pressing came up -
6 separada
adj.separate, separated.* * *f., (m. - separado)* * *
separado,-a adjetivo
1 (diferente, aparte) separate
2 (persona casada) separated
♦ Locuciones: por separado, separately, individually
' separada' also found in these entries:
English:
separated
-
7 cortado
adj.1 cut, severed, split.2 cut, wounded.3 timid, ashamed, embarrassed, tongue-tied.4 choppy.5 broken.past part.past participle of spanish verb: cortar.* * *1 (café) coffee with a dash of milk————————1→ link=cortar cortar► adjetivo1 (troceado) cut; (en lonchas) sliced2 (leche) sour4 familiar (aturdido) dumbfounded1 (café) coffee with a dash of milk\quedarse cortado,-a familiar (sin palabras) to be speechless, be lost for words 2 (avergonzado) to become embarrassed* * *1. ADJ1) (=recortado, partido) cutcortado a pico — [montaña, acantilado] steep, sheer, precipitous
2) (=pasado) [leche, mayonesa] offtener o sentir el cuerpo cortado — to feel off colour
3) [piel, labios] chapped4) [calle, carretera] closed5) [café] coffee with a little milk6) [estilo] [gen] disjointed; [al hablar] clipped7) [película] cut8) * [persona] shy•
dejar cortado — to cut shortme dejó cortado en mitad de lo que estaba diciendo — he cut me short in the middle of what I was saying
•
quedarse cortado, no te quedes cortado, hombre, di algo — come on, don't be shy, say somethingme quedé cortado cuando entré en la habitación y los vi besándose — I was left speechless when I came into the room and found them kissing
9)2. SM1) (=café) coffee with a little milk2) (Ballet) leap* * *I- da adjetivo1) < persona>a) [estar] (Chi, Esp) (turbado, avergonzado) embarrassedb) [estar] (Esp, CS) ( aturdido) stunnedc) [ser] (Esp) ( tímido) shy2) [estar] <calle/carretera> closed, closed off3)a) [estar] <mayonesa/salsa> separatedb) < café> with a dash of milk4) < película> cutIImasculino expresso with a dash of milk•• Cultural note:Popular in Spain and known also as café cortado. Black coffee is ‘cut’ by adding a little milk to it* * *= clipped, severed.Ex. Length is also a function of style and most abstracts, though avoiding clipped telegraphese, have certain stylistic features which help to keep wordage to a minimum.Ex. Gericault's paintings of severed heads and limbs explored the taste for the macabre and uncanny rampant in the popular terror novels of his time.----* cortado en tacos = diced.* recién cortado = fresh-cut, freshly-cut.* sentirse cortado = self-conscious.* ya cortado en rodajas = pre-sliced [presliced], pre-sliced [presliced].* * *I- da adjetivo1) < persona>a) [estar] (Chi, Esp) (turbado, avergonzado) embarrassedb) [estar] (Esp, CS) ( aturdido) stunnedc) [ser] (Esp) ( tímido) shy2) [estar] <calle/carretera> closed, closed off3)a) [estar] <mayonesa/salsa> separatedb) < café> with a dash of milk4) < película> cutIImasculino expresso with a dash of milk•• Cultural note:Popular in Spain and known also as café cortado. Black coffee is ‘cut’ by adding a little milk to it* * *= clipped, severed.Ex: Length is also a function of style and most abstracts, though avoiding clipped telegraphese, have certain stylistic features which help to keep wordage to a minimum.
Ex: Gericault's paintings of severed heads and limbs explored the taste for the macabre and uncanny rampant in the popular terror novels of his time.* cortado en tacos = diced.* recién cortado = fresh-cut, freshly-cut.* sentirse cortado = self-conscious.* ya cortado en rodajas = pre-sliced [presliced], pre-sliced [presliced].* * *A ‹persona›1 [ ESTAR] ( Esp) (turbado, avergonzado) embarrassed2 [ ESTAR] (CS) (aturdido) stunnedme quedé cortado con la respuesta que me dio I was stunned by her reply, her reply stunned mecomo es tan cortado, no se atrevió a decirle que no being so shy he couldn't bring himself to say noB [ ESTAR] ‹calle/carretera› closed, closed offla calle está cortada al tráfico the street is closed to traffic[ S ] carretera cortada por obras road closed (for repairs)C1 ‹leche/mayonesa›la leche estaba cortada the milk had curdled, the milk was off o had gone off ( BrE)la mayonesa está cortada the mayonnaise is curdled2 ‹café› with a dash of milkD ‹película› cutE ‹estilo› clippedFcortado (↑ cortado a1)coffee with a dash of milkPopular in Spain and known also as café cortado. Black coffee is "cut" by adding a little milk to it.* * *
Del verbo cortar: ( conjugate cortar)
cortado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
cortado
cortar
cortado 1◊ -da adjetivo
1 ‹ persona›
2 [estar]
3
◊ la leche está cortada the milk is curdled o off
cortado 2 sustantivo masculino
expresso with a dash of milk
cortar ( conjugate cortar) verbo transitivo
1 ( dividir) ‹cuerda/pastel› to cut, chop;
‹ asado› to carve;
‹leña/madera› to chop;
‹ baraja› to cut;◊ cortado algo por la mitad to cut sth in half o in two;
cortado algo en rodajas/en cuadritos to slice/dice sth;
cortado algo en trozos to cut sth into pieces
2 (quitar, separar) ‹rama/punta/pierna› to cut off;
‹ árbol› to cut down, chop down;
‹ flores› (CS) to pick;
3 ( hacer más corto) ‹pelo/uñas› to cut;
‹césped/pasto› to mow;
‹ seto› to cut;
‹ rosal› to cut back;
‹ texto› to cut down
4 ( en costura) ‹falda/vestido› to cut out
5 ( interrumpir)
‹película/programa› to interrupt
[ manifestantes] to block;
6 (censurar, editar) ‹ película› to cut;
‹escena/diálogo› to cut (out)
7 [ frío]:◊ el frío me cortó los labios my lips were chapped o cracked from the cold weather
verbo intransitivo
1 [cuchillo/tijeras] to cut
2a) (Cin):◊ ¡corten! cut!
cortarse verbo pronominal
1 ( interrumpirse) [proyección/película] to stop;
[llamada/gas] to get cut off;
se me cortó la respiración I could hardly breathe
2
‹brazo/cara› to cut;
3 ( cruzarse) [líneas/calles] to cross
4 [ leche] to curdle;
[mayonesa/salsa] to separate
5 (Chi, Esp) [ persona] (turbarse, aturdirse) to get embarrassed
cortado,-a
I adjetivo
1 cut (up)
carretera cortada, no through road o road blocked
2 (leche) sour
3 (piel) flaky, dry
(labios) chapped
4 familiar (tímido) shy
II sustantivo masculino small coffee with a dash of milk
III sustantivo masculino y femenino shy person
cortar
I verbo transitivo
1 to cut
(un árbol) to cut down
(el césped) to mow
2 (amputar) to cut off
3 (la luz, el teléfono) to cut off
4 (impedir el paso) to block
5 (eliminar, censurar) to cut out
II verbo intransitivo
1 (partir) to cut
2 (atajar) to cut across, to take a short cut
3 familiar (interrumpir una relación) to split up: cortó con su novia, he split up with his girlfriend
♦ Locuciones: familiar cortar por lo sano, to put an end to
' cortado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
cortada
- el
- café
- capa
- cepillo
- comunicación
- cristal
- rape
- te
English:
bad
- cut
- cut off
- dead
- her
- nick
- sour
- crew
- off
* * *cortado, -a♦ adj1. [labios, manos] chapped2. [leche] curdled;[mayonesa] Br off, US spoiled3. [carretera] closed;cortado por obras [en letrero] road closed for repairs4.café cortado = small coffee with just a little milkquedarse cortado to be left speechless;ser cortado to be shy6. Comp♦ nm1. [café] = small coffee with just a little milk* * *I adj1 cut2 calle closed3 leche curdled4 persona shy;quedarse cortado be embarrassedII m coffee with a dash of milk* * *cortado1 adj2. (avergonzado) embarrassed -
8 distanciarse
1 to move away, become separated2 figurado (no tratarse) to grow apart, drift apart3 figurado (desvincularse) to distance oneself, disassociate oneself* * *VPR1) [dos personas] to grow apart2) [en carrera]consiguió distanciarse del otro corredor — he managed to put some distance between himself and the other runner
* * *(v.) = outdistance, distance, take + a step back, step backEx. The public library cannot outdistance the intellectual climate in which it finds itself.Ex. They were to a much greater extent distanced from popula reading by the increasing gap between high and low culture.Ex. To make sure why we believe it important to bring up children as willing, avid, responsive readers of literature we have to take a step back and sort out why literature is important to ourselves.Ex. Before that, however, let us step back for a moment and look at the total picture from the user's point of view.* * *(v.) = outdistance, distance, take + a step back, step backEx: The public library cannot outdistance the intellectual climate in which it finds itself.
Ex: They were to a much greater extent distanced from popula reading by the increasing gap between high and low culture.Ex: To make sure why we believe it important to bring up children as willing, avid, responsive readers of literature we have to take a step back and sort out why literature is important to ourselves.Ex: Before that, however, let us step back for a moment and look at the total picture from the user's point of view.* * *
■distanciarse verbo reflexivo
1 (de un punto) to become separated, get further away [de, from]
2 (de otra persona) to distance oneself
' distanciarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
alejarse
- desligarse
- desmarcarse
- despegarse
- distanciar
English:
alienate
- distance
- drift
- step
* * *vpr1. [afectivamente] to grow apart;con el tiempo se fueron distanciando they grew o drifted apart as time went on2. [físicamente] to move away;el barco se distanció de la costa the ship drew away from the coast;no se distancien del grupo don't become separated from the group;el corredor no consiguió distanciarse del pelotón the runner couldn't pull away from the pack* * *v/r distance o.s. (de from)* * *vr: to grow apart, to become estranged -
9 separarse
1 (tomar diferente camino) to separate, part company2 (matrimonio) to separate3 (apartarse) to move away (de, from)4 (desprenderse) to separate (de, from), come off (de, -)5 (de amigo etc) to part company (de, with)6 separarse de (dejar algo) to part with* * ** * *VPR1) [en el espacio] to partcaminaron hasta la plaza, donde se separaron — they walked as far as the square, where they went their separate ways o where they parted
al llegar a la juventud sus destinos parecen separarse — when they became teenagers they seemed to go their separate ways
separarse de algn/algo: no se separa de él ni un solo instante — she never leaves him o leaves his side for a moment
no se separan ni un momento del televisor — they sit there glued to the television, they never take their eyes off the television
no se separen del grupo hasta que estemos dentro de la catedral — stay with the group until we are in the cathedral
se separó de la vida pública — she withdrew o retired from public life
2) [en una relación] [cónyuges] to separate, split up; [socios, pareja] to split upsus padres se han separado — his parents have separated o split up
¿en qué año se separaron los Beatles? — what year did the Beatles break up o split up?
separarse de — [+ cónyuge] to separate from, split up with; [+ socio, pareja] to split up with
se separó de su marido — she separated from o split up with her husband
3) (=desprenderse) [fragmento, trozo] to detach itself (de from)come away; [pedazos] to come apart4) (Pol, Rel) to break awaycuando la Iglesia anglicana se separó de Roma — when the Anglican Church broke away o frm seceded from Rome
5) (Jur) to withdraw (de from)* * *(v.) = drift apart, part, divorce, go (our/their) separate ways, forkEx. UDC was originally based on the fifth edition of DC, and though the two schemes tended to drift apart, there was for some time an attempt to bring them into line again.Ex. Anthony Datto thanked them for having permitted him to unburden himself and after a few desultory remarks about the nasty weather and nothing in particular, they parted.Ex. These relations are constructed through negotiations and contestations that cannot be easily divorced from cultural context.Ex. After having gone their separate ways, today we see these institutions coming back together = Tras haber estado separadas, en la actualidad estas instituciones están volviendo a colaborar.Ex. Meanings in art come in layers, their ways forking and crossing one another like the meandering paths of a labyrinth.* * *(v.) = drift apart, part, divorce, go (our/their) separate ways, forkEx: UDC was originally based on the fifth edition of DC, and though the two schemes tended to drift apart, there was for some time an attempt to bring them into line again.
Ex: Anthony Datto thanked them for having permitted him to unburden himself and after a few desultory remarks about the nasty weather and nothing in particular, they parted.Ex: These relations are constructed through negotiations and contestations that cannot be easily divorced from cultural context.Ex: After having gone their separate ways, today we see these institutions coming back together = Tras haber estado separadas, en la actualidad estas instituciones están volviendo a colaborar.Ex: Meanings in art come in layers, their ways forking and crossing one another like the meandering paths of a labyrinth.* * *
■separarse verbo reflexivo
1 (aumentar la distancia) to move away [de, from]: no te separes de mí, stay with me
2 (coger rumbos distintos) to part: nos separamos para buscarte, we split up to look for you
3 (una banda, un grupo, un partido) to split up
4 (un matrimonio) to separate
' separarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
apartar
- separar
English:
break away
- draw
- part
- secede
- separate
- split off
- split up
- break
- company
- diverge
- split
- stick
* * *vpr1. [apartarse] to move apart;separaos un poco move apart a bit;separarse de to move away from;sepárese un poco del micrófono don't speak too close to the microphone;no se separen del grupo don't leave the group, stay together with the group;no se separaba de mí he didn't leave my side;jamás se separa de su osito de peluche she never goes anywhere without her teddy bear;es la primera vez que se separa de sus padres it's the first time he's been away from his parents2. [ir por distinto lugar] [personas] to separate, to part company;[caminos, vías, carreteras] to diverge;aquí se separan nuestros caminos this is where we each go our separate way, this is where we part company3. [matrimonio] to separate (de from); [novios, grupo musical, entidades] to split up (de with);se ha separado de su marido she has separated from her husband5. [desprenderse] to come away o off* * *v/r separate, split up fam* * *separarse vb2. (ir por distinto lugar) to go separate ways3. (apartarse) to move away -
10 distanciado
adj.1 remote; widely separated, isolated (aislado).2 far apart. (Figurative)3 distant, isolated, remote, separate.past part.past participle of spanish verb: distanciar.* * *1→ link=distanciar distanciar► adjetivo1 distant, separated* * *ADJ1) (=remoto) remote (de from)2) (=separado) widely separated3) [en relación afectiva]estamos distanciados en nuestras ideas — our ideas are a long way o poles apart
* * *- da adjetivo ( afectivamente)* * *- da adjetivo ( afectivamente)* * *distanciado -da1(afectivamente): discutimos y ahora estamos algo distanciadas we had an argument and we're not as close as we were before o it has distanced us somewhat2 ‹fecha/hecho› remote, far-off, distant* * *
Del verbo distanciar: ( conjugate distanciar)
distanciado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
distanciado
distanciar
distanciado◊ -da adjetivo ( afectivamente): estamos algo distanciadas we're not as close as we were
distanciar ( conjugate distanciar) verbo transitivo
distanciado a algn de algn to distance sb from sb
distanciarse verbo pronominala) ( en el espacio) distanciadose de algo to get far from sth
( refl) distanciadose de algn to distance oneself from sb
distanciar verbo transitivo to separate
' distanciado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
alejada
- alejado
-
11 aclaración
f.explanation, clarification.* * *1 explanation* * *noun f.clarification, explanation* * *SF [para hacer entender] clarification; [para dar razones] explanation* * *femenino explanationesto requiere una aclaración — this needs some explanation o clarification
quisiera hacer una aclaración — I'd like to make one thing clear o I'd like to clarify one thing
pedir aclaraciones — to ask for an explanation of o for clarification
* * *= annotation, clarification, clarity, designation, elucidation.Ex. An annotation is a note added to the title and/or other bibliographic information of a document by way of comment or explanation.Ex. Although the work of the CRG makes fascinating reading, and magnificent contributions were made towards the clarification of the principles of classification, much work remain to be done.Ex. In the interests of clarity an integrated account of the appropriate added entry headings is to be found in 21.29 and 21.30.Ex. The designation should be clearly separated from the variant heading itself by means of punctuation or typography.Ex. An editor is a person who prepares for publication an item not his own and whose labour may be limited to the revision or elucidation of the text.----* a modo de aclaración = in parenthesis, on a sidenote.* como aclaración = in parenthesis.* * *femenino explanationesto requiere una aclaración — this needs some explanation o clarification
quisiera hacer una aclaración — I'd like to make one thing clear o I'd like to clarify one thing
pedir aclaraciones — to ask for an explanation of o for clarification
* * *= annotation, clarification, clarity, designation, elucidation.Ex: An annotation is a note added to the title and/or other bibliographic information of a document by way of comment or explanation.
Ex: Although the work of the CRG makes fascinating reading, and magnificent contributions were made towards the clarification of the principles of classification, much work remain to be done.Ex: In the interests of clarity an integrated account of the appropriate added entry headings is to be found in 21.29 and 21.30.Ex: The designation should be clearly separated from the variant heading itself by means of punctuation or typography.Ex: An editor is a person who prepares for publication an item not his own and whose labour may be limited to the revision or elucidation of the text.* a modo de aclaración = in parenthesis, on a sidenote.* como aclaración = in parenthesis.* * *escribió una aclaración al margen he wrote a note in the margin to clarify it, he wrote an explanation in the marginquisiera hacer una aclaración, yo no tuve nada que ver con esto I'd like to make one thing clear o I'd like to clarify one thing, I had nothing to do with thisle pediré aclaraciones sobre las circunstancias del accidente I will ask him for an explanation of o for clarification of the circumstances surrounding the accident* * *
aclaración sustantivo femenino
explanation;
aclaración sustantivo femenino explanation
' aclaración' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
matización
English:
clarification
- explanation
- illumination
* * *aclaración nfclarification, explanation;me gustaría hacer una aclaración I'd like to clarify something;los miembros del partido le pidieron una aclaración the party members asked her for an explanation* * *f clarification* * * -
12 apartar
v.1 to move away.el polémico ministro ha sido apartado de su cargo the controversial minister has been removed from officeapartar la mirada to look away2 to separate.El regalo apartó a los hermanos The gift separated the brothers.3 to take, to select.ya he apartado la ropa para el viaje I've already put out the clothes for the journey4 to push aside, to discard, to get away, to lay aside.Ricardo apartó al mal amigo Richard pushed aside his lousy friend.5 to put aside, to lay by, to put to one side.Ricardo apartó los muebles Richard put the furniture aside.6 to set apart, to earmark, to singularize.Su elegancia apartó a Denise Her elegance set Denise apart.7 to leave out, to exclude from the conversation.* * *1 (alejar) to move away■ ¿puedes apartar la moto? can you move your motorbike?2 (separar) to separate; (preservar de) to protect from, keep away from■ peleaban con tanta violencia que nadie pudo apartarlos they were fighting so fiercely that nobody could separate them■ lo que haga falta para apartar al menor del peligro whatever is necessary to protect the child from danger3 (reservar) to put aside, set aside■ te he apartado un trozo de pastel I've put a piece of cake aside for you, I've saved you a piece of cake4 (de un cargo) to remove1 (alejarse) to move away2 (separarse) to withdraw, move away\apartar los ojos de to take one's eyes off'Se aparta género' "A deposit secures any item"* * *verb1) to separate, put aside, set aside2) move away•* * *1. VT1) (=alejar)lograron apartar la discusión de ese punto — they managed to turn the discussion away from that point
•
apartar la mirada/los ojos de algo — to look away from sth, avert one's gaze/one's eyes from sth literapartó la mirada de la larga fila de casas — she looked away from o liter averted her gaze from the long row of houses
2) (=quitar de en medio)tuvo que apartar los papeles de la mesa para colocar allí sus libros — he had to push aside the papers on the table to place his books there
apartó el micrófono a un lado — she put the microphone aside o to one side
apartó la cortina y miró a la calle — he drew o pulled back the curtain and looked out into the street
avanzaban apartando la maleza — they made their way through the undergrowth, pushing o brushing it aside as they went
3) [+ persona]a) [de lugar]lo apartó un poco para hacerle algunas preguntas — she took him to one side to ask him a few questions
b) [de otra persona] (lit) to separate; (fig) to drift apartel tiempo los ha ido apartando — they have grown o drifted apart with time
c) [de actividad, puesto] to removesu enfermedad la apartó de la política activa — her illness kept her away from playing an active role in politics
si yo fuera el entrenador, lo apartaría del equipo — if I was the coach I would remove him from the team
4) (=reservar) to put aside, set asidesi le interesa este vestido se lo puedo apartar — if you like this dress I can put o set it aside for you
hemos apartado un poco de comida para él — we've put o set aside a little food for him
5) (Correos) to sort6) (Ferro) to shunt, switch (EEUU)7) (Agr) [+ ganado] to separate, cut out8) (Jur) to set aside, waive9) (Min) to extract2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) ( alejar) to move awayapartó los ojos or la mirada — he averted his eyes
b) < obstáculo> to move, move... out of the wayc) (frml) ( de un cargo) to removed) ( separar) to separate2) (guardar, reservar) to set aside2.apartarse v pron (refl)a) ( despejar el camino) to stand asideb) (alejarse, separarse)apartarse de algo/alguien: el satélite se apartó de su trayectoria the satellite strayed from its orbit; apártate de ahí get/come away from there; no se aparta de su lado he never leaves her side; apártate de mi vista! get out of my sight!; se apartó bastante de su familia she drifted away from her family; nos estamos apartando del tema — we're going off the subject
* * *= put + aside, put by, lock out, push + to one side, keep in + reserve, leave + aside, set + apart, lay + Nombre + aside, brush aside, set + aside, nudge + Nombre + aside, leave by + the wayside, push aside, turn + Nombre + away.Ex. If there is one, the borrower must be notified, and the copy somehow put aside for that borrower for a limited amount of time.Ex. The raw material of white paper was undyed linen -- or in very early days hempen -- rags, which the paper-maker bought in bulk, sorted and washed, and then put by in a damp heap for four or five days to rot.Ex. This article examines the role of public library trustees who appear to live on the fringes of the library profession, locked out of the decision making mainstream.Ex. The compositor therefore pushed the forme to one side (or stood it on its edge on the floor, leaning against its frame) and proceeded to impose the second forme of the sheet in the same way..Ex. The notation employed by the Library of Congress scheme is based on letters of the alphabet, twenty-one of which have been used and five kept in reserve for further expansion.Ex. Leaving aside the heretical thought that perhaps 'all things to all men' is exactly what the public library should be, this alone is not enough.Ex. Storytelling and reading in a room set apart and led by competent people can be an entertainment designed for all.Ex. If a book does not yield immediate pleasure they tend to lay it aside.Ex. This paper discusses ways in which library staff become demotivated, including rigid hierarchies, ignoring staff, brushing aside suggestions, and claiming credit for their ideas.Ex. When new songbooks arrive in the library they are set aside until indexing is completed.Ex. It calls upon the leaders of the Union to respond without delay -- for, very quickly, the position will be taken, the habits will be formed, it will be to late to nudge them aside later on.Ex. She seeks to recontextualize those events that history has estranged, destroyed or capriciously left by the wayside.Ex. She's just an airheaded bimbo, with an endless capacity to push aside unpleasant realities in favor of her more satisfying interests: young men and jewels.Ex. They will be patrolling in plain clothes to spot doormen who turn away people apparently on the basis of their ethnicity.----* apartar a la fuerza = prise + Nombre + away.* apartar de = wean from, wean away from.* apartar + Dinero + para gastárselo en = set + aside + Dinero + for.* apartar la vista = look + the other way.* apartarse = step + aside, stray (from/outside), skew away.* apartarse a un lado = pull over.* apartarse (de) = depart from, turn away from, become + detached from, pull away (from), deviate (from).* apartarse de la realidad = stray from + reality.* apartarse del buen camino = go off + the rails, stray from + the straight and narrow.* apartarse del camino de la verdad = stray from + the straight and narrow.* apartarse de los caminos principales = go + off-road.* apartarse el pelo de los ojos = flick + Posesivo + hair out of + Posesivo + eyes.* no apartarse del buen camino = keep on + the right track.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) ( alejar) to move awayapartó los ojos or la mirada — he averted his eyes
b) < obstáculo> to move, move... out of the wayc) (frml) ( de un cargo) to removed) ( separar) to separate2) (guardar, reservar) to set aside2.apartarse v pron (refl)a) ( despejar el camino) to stand asideb) (alejarse, separarse)apartarse de algo/alguien: el satélite se apartó de su trayectoria the satellite strayed from its orbit; apártate de ahí get/come away from there; no se aparta de su lado he never leaves her side; apártate de mi vista! get out of my sight!; se apartó bastante de su familia she drifted away from her family; nos estamos apartando del tema — we're going off the subject
* * *= put + aside, put by, lock out, push + to one side, keep in + reserve, leave + aside, set + apart, lay + Nombre + aside, brush aside, set + aside, nudge + Nombre + aside, leave by + the wayside, push aside, turn + Nombre + away.Ex: If there is one, the borrower must be notified, and the copy somehow put aside for that borrower for a limited amount of time.
Ex: The raw material of white paper was undyed linen -- or in very early days hempen -- rags, which the paper-maker bought in bulk, sorted and washed, and then put by in a damp heap for four or five days to rot.Ex: This article examines the role of public library trustees who appear to live on the fringes of the library profession, locked out of the decision making mainstream.Ex: The compositor therefore pushed the forme to one side (or stood it on its edge on the floor, leaning against its frame) and proceeded to impose the second forme of the sheet in the same way..Ex: The notation employed by the Library of Congress scheme is based on letters of the alphabet, twenty-one of which have been used and five kept in reserve for further expansion.Ex: Leaving aside the heretical thought that perhaps 'all things to all men' is exactly what the public library should be, this alone is not enough.Ex: Storytelling and reading in a room set apart and led by competent people can be an entertainment designed for all.Ex: If a book does not yield immediate pleasure they tend to lay it aside.Ex: This paper discusses ways in which library staff become demotivated, including rigid hierarchies, ignoring staff, brushing aside suggestions, and claiming credit for their ideas.Ex: When new songbooks arrive in the library they are set aside until indexing is completed.Ex: It calls upon the leaders of the Union to respond without delay -- for, very quickly, the position will be taken, the habits will be formed, it will be to late to nudge them aside later on.Ex: She seeks to recontextualize those events that history has estranged, destroyed or capriciously left by the wayside.Ex: She's just an airheaded bimbo, with an endless capacity to push aside unpleasant realities in favor of her more satisfying interests: young men and jewels.Ex: They will be patrolling in plain clothes to spot doormen who turn away people apparently on the basis of their ethnicity.* apartar a la fuerza = prise + Nombre + away.* apartar de = wean from, wean away from.* apartar + Dinero + para gastárselo en = set + aside + Dinero + for.* apartar la vista = look + the other way.* apartarse = step + aside, stray (from/outside), skew away.* apartarse a un lado = pull over.* apartarse (de) = depart from, turn away from, become + detached from, pull away (from), deviate (from).* apartarse de la realidad = stray from + reality.* apartarse del buen camino = go off + the rails, stray from + the straight and narrow.* apartarse del camino de la verdad = stray from + the straight and narrow.* apartarse de los caminos principales = go + off-road.* apartarse el pelo de los ojos = flick + Posesivo + hair out of + Posesivo + eyes.* no apartarse del buen camino = keep on + the right track.* * *apartar [A1 ]vtA1 (alejar) to move awayaparta la ropa del fuego move the clothes away from the fireaparta eso de mi vista get that out of my sightaparta de mí este cáliz ( Bib) take this cup from meaquellas amistades lo apartaron del buen camino those friends led him astray o off the straight and narrowlo apartaron de su propósito de estudiar medicina they dissuaded him from studying medicineapartó los ojos or la mirada he averted his eyesla apartó de un manotazo he pushed her aside o to one side2 ‹obstáculo› to move, move … out of the wayaparte ese coche move that car (out of the way)le apartó el pelo de los ojos she brushed the hair out of his eyes3 ( frml) (de un cargo) to removeha sido apartado de su cargo/del servicio activo he has been removed from his post/from active service4 (aislar) to separatesi no los apartamos se van a matar if we don't separate them they'll kill each otherse los mete en la cárcel para apartarlos de la sociedad they are put in jail to separate them from o to keep them away from societyB (guardar, reservar) to set asideapartó lo que se iba a llevar she set aside what she was going to take, she put the things she was going to take on one sidetenemos que apartar el dinero del alquiler we must set o put aside the rent moneyvoy a apartar un poco de comida para él I'm going to put a bit of food aside for himlas gambas se pelan y se apartan peel the prawns and set aside o put them to one sidedejé el libro apartado I had them set the book aside o put the book to one side for me( refl)1 (despejar el camino) to stand aside¡apártense! ¡dejen pasar! stand aside! make way!2 (alejarse, separarse) apartarse DE algo/algn:nos apartamos de la carretera principal we got off o left the main roadel satélite se ha apartado de su trayectoria the satellite has strayed from its orbitapártate de ahí que te puedes quemar get/come away from there, you might burn yourself¡apártate de mi vista! get out of my sight!¡apártate de mí! get away from me!no te apartes del buen camino stick to the straight and narrowse ha apartado bastante de su familia she's drifted away from o grown apart from her familynos estamos apartando del tema we're getting off o straying away from o going off the subject* * *
apartar ( conjugate apartar) verbo transitivo
1
apartó los ojos he averted his eyes
2 (guardar, reservar) to set aside;
apartarse verbo pronominal ( refl)
b) (alejarse, separarse):◊ apártate de ahí get/come away from there;
no se aparta de su lado he never leaves her side;
¡apártate de mi vista! get out of my sight!;
se apartó de su familia she drifted away from her family;
nos estamos apartando del tema we're getting off the subject
apartar
I verbo transitivo
1 (alejar) to move away, remove
apartar la vista, to look away
2 (guardar) to put aside
II verbo intransitivo ¡aparta!, move out of the way!
' apartar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
destinar
- grano
- soplar
- aislar
- entretener
- quitar
- retirar
- separar
English:
avert
- away
- block out
- kick away
- look away
- move over
- push aside
- set back
- sidetrack
- sweep aside
- take aside
- throw aside
- thrust aside
- look
- set
- sweep
* * *♦ vt1. [alejar] to move away;[quitar] to remove;¡apártense de la carretera, niños! come away from the road, children!;aparta el coche, que no puedo pasar move the car out of the way, I can't get past;aparta de mí estos pensamientos [cita bíblica] protect me from such thoughts;el polémico ministro ha sido apartado de su cargo the controversial minister has been removed from office;apartar la mirada to look away;no apartó la mirada de nosotros he never took his eyes off us;sus ojos no se apartaban de ella his eyes never left her;aparté la vista de aquel espectáculo tan desagradable I averted my gaze o I turned away from that unpleasant sight;apartar a alguien de un codazo to elbow sb aside;apartar a alguien de un empujón to push sb out of the way2. [separar] to separate;aparta las fichas blancas de las negras separate the white counters from the black ones;nadie los apartó, y acabaron a puñetazos nobody attempted to separate them and they ended up coming to blows3. [escoger] to take, to select;ya he apartado la ropa para el viaje I've already put out the clothes for the trip4. [disuadir] to dissuade;lo apartó de su intención de ser médico she dissuaded him from becoming a doctor* * *v/t2:apartar a alguien de hacer algo dissuade s.o. from doing sth* * *apartar vt1) alejar: to move away, to put at a distance2) : to put aside, to set aside, to separate* * *apartar vb1. (mover) to move / to move out of the away¿puedes apartar la moto? can you move your motorbike?2. (separar) to separatehe apartado los tomates más maduros de los más verdes I've separated the ripe tomatoes from the green onesapartar la mirada / apartar la vista to look away -
13 barra inclinada ()
(n.) = slash (/), diagonal slash, oblique stroke (/), stroke (/), sloped stroke (/), oblique line (/), obliqueEx. Use a slash (/) to search for all the terms in a range of terms.Ex. Spaces, dashes, hyphens, diagonal slashes, all of which have equal filing value.Ex. It is useful to employ some device, such as an oblique stroke (/), to separate clearly the elementary concepts in the summarization.Ex. The stroke / (slash in USA) is used to join consecutive UDC numbers to indicate a broader heading for which no single piece of notation exists.Ex. It is not recommended to use the sloped stroke, /, instead of the vertical stroke, |, for line endings, since in early printing it was used as a mark of punctuation.Ex. In full cataloguing the author's name follows the title and should be separated from it by an oblique line.Ex. The system makes use of hyphens, commas and obliques to deal with more complicated situations: GR/EN/FR/IT would mean that the text is published in each of the 4 languages indicated.* * *(n.) = slash (/), diagonal slash, oblique stroke (/), stroke (/), sloped stroke (/), oblique line (/), obliqueEx: Use a slash (/) to search for all the terms in a range of terms.
Ex: Spaces, dashes, hyphens, diagonal slashes, all of which have equal filing value.Ex: It is useful to employ some device, such as an oblique stroke (/), to separate clearly the elementary concepts in the summarization.Ex: The stroke / (slash in USA) is used to join consecutive UDC numbers to indicate a broader heading for which no single piece of notation exists.Ex: It is not recommended to use the sloped stroke, /, instead of the vertical stroke, |, for line endings, since in early printing it was used as a mark of punctuation.Ex: In full cataloguing the author's name follows the title and should be separated from it by an oblique line.Ex: The system makes use of hyphens, commas and obliques to deal with more complicated situations: GR/EN/FR/IT would mean that the text is published in each of the 4 languages indicated. -
14 cadena de órdenes
(n.) = command chainEx. A command chain may consist of any number of commands separated by slashes and the systems processes the commands one after the other as though they had been entered on successive screens, but the intermediate screens are not displayed.* * *(n.) = command chainEx: A command chain may consist of any number of commands separated by slashes and the systems processes the commands one after the other as though they had been entered on successive screens, but the intermediate screens are not displayed.
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15 cresta de montaña
(n.) = mountain ridgeEx. New Zealand is a long, narrow, mountainous country; its islands are the unsubmerged parts of mountain ridges separated from Australia.* * *(n.) = mountain ridgeEx: New Zealand is a long, narrow, mountainous country; its islands are the unsubmerged parts of mountain ridges separated from Australia.
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16 cuadrilla
f.1 group.2 team of helpers.3 gang, caboodle, crew, band.4 square dance, folkloric dance.* * *1 (grupo) party, gang2 (de bandidos etc) gang, band3 (de obreros) gang, team4 MILITAR squad5 (de toreros) bullfighter's team* * *noun f.* * *SF1) [de amigos] party, group; [de obreros] gang, team¡menuda cuadrilla! — a fine bunch they are!
2) (Taur) bullfighting team3) (Mil) squadcuadrilla de noche — night shift, night squad
* * *a) (Taur) cuadrilla ( team of matador's assistants)b) ( de obreros) team, gang; ( de soldados) squad; ( de maleantes) gang* * *= squad, team.Ex. This concept comes mainly from the military, where a designated number of troops make a squad, a platoon, a regiment, etc..Ex. Guidelines are also valuable introductory material for any new abstractors, whether geographically separated from the remainder of the abstracting team or not.----* miembro de una cuadrilla = crew member.* * *a) (Taur) cuadrilla ( team of matador's assistants)b) ( de obreros) team, gang; ( de soldados) squad; ( de maleantes) gang* * *= squad, team.Ex: This concept comes mainly from the military, where a designated number of troops make a squad, a platoon, a regiment, etc..
Ex: Guidelines are also valuable introductory material for any new abstractors, whether geographically separated from the remainder of the abstracting team or not.* miembro de una cuadrilla = crew member.* * *1 ( Taur) cuadrilla ( team of matador's assistants)¡vaya cuadrilla de vagos! what a bunch of layabouts!* * *
cuadrilla sustantivo femenino
( de soldados) squad;
( de maleantes) gang
cuadrilla sustantivo femenino
1 (equipo) team
2 Taur bullfighter's team
3 Mil squad
' cuadrilla' also found in these entries:
English:
band
- gang
- squad
* * *cuadrilla nf1. [de amigos, trabajadores] group;[de maleantes] gang2. Taurom team of helpers* * *f squad, team* * *cuadrilla nf: gang, team, group* * *cuadrilla n gang -
17 demarcación mediante párrafos
(n.) = paragraphingEx. Each area, and each repetition of an area must be clearly separated from the preceding area by paragraphing, typography, or indentation.* * *(n.) = paragraphingEx: Each area, and each repetition of an area must be clearly separated from the preceding area by paragraphing, typography, or indentation.
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18 denominación
f.1 denomination, name.2 sect.* * *1 (acción) denomination, naming2 (nombre) denomination, name\denominación de origen (vinos) guarantee of origin, ≈ appellation d'origine contrôlée* * *SF1) (=acto) naming2) (=nombre) name, designationdenominación social — Méx official company name
3) [de billete] denominationDENOMINACIÓN DE ORIGEN The Denominación de Origen, abbreviated to D.O., is a prestigious product classification which is awarded to food products such as wines, cheeses, sausages and hams that are produced in designated Spanish regions according to stringent production criteria. D.O. labels serve as a guarantee of quality.moneda de baja denominación — LAm low value coin
* * *a) (frml) ( nombre) nameb) ( acción) naming* * *= designation, label, labelling [labeling, -USA], appellation, denomination.Ex. The designation should be clearly separated from the variant heading itself by means of punctuation or typography.Ex. There are a number of types of abstracts or labels that can be applied to abstracts.Ex. Labelling of subjects presents problems mainly because, in order to achieve a user-orientated approach, the various approaches of different users must be catered for.Ex. The name to be chosen for the author must be, by rule 40, 'the name by which he is commonly identified, whether it is his real name, or an assumed name, nickname, title of nobility, or other appellation'.Ex. This paper presents a survey of denominations used by industrial property offices for the various kinds of patent documents published by them.----* Denominación Común de Productos Industriales (NIPRO) = Common Nomenclature of Industrial Products (NIPRO).* denominación del puesto de trabajo = job title, occupational title.* Denominación de Productos para las Estadísticas del Comercio Externo de la = Nomenclature of Goods for the External Trade Statistics of the Community and Statistics of Trade between Member States (NIMEXE).* denominación general = umbrella term.* * *a) (frml) ( nombre) nameb) ( acción) naming* * *= designation, label, labelling [labeling, -USA], appellation, denomination.Ex: The designation should be clearly separated from the variant heading itself by means of punctuation or typography.
Ex: There are a number of types of abstracts or labels that can be applied to abstracts.Ex: Labelling of subjects presents problems mainly because, in order to achieve a user-orientated approach, the various approaches of different users must be catered for.Ex: The name to be chosen for the author must be, by rule 40, 'the name by which he is commonly identified, whether it is his real name, or an assumed name, nickname, title of nobility, or other appellation'.Ex: This paper presents a survey of denominations used by industrial property offices for the various kinds of patent documents published by them.* Denominación Común de Productos Industriales (NIPRO) = Common Nomenclature of Industrial Products (NIPRO).* denominación del puesto de trabajo = job title, occupational title.* Denominación de Productos para las Estadísticas del Comercio Externo de la = Nomenclature of Goods for the External Trade Statistics of the Community and Statistics of Trade between Member States (NIMEXE).* denominación general = umbrella term.* * *ACompuestos:company name2 (acción) naming* * *
denominación sustantivo femenino denomination
denominación de origen, (vinos y alimentos) guarantee of origin
' denominación' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
origen
English:
appellation
- champagne
- denomination
* * *denominación nf1. [nombre] namedenominación de origen = certification that a product (e.g. wine) comes from a particular region and conforms to certain quality standards2. [confesión religiosa] denomination3. Am [valor] low denomination noteDENOMINACIÓN DE IGENOriginally designed as a guarantee of the place of origin and quality of wine, the Denominación de Origen is now also used for other products such as cheeses, vegetables, olive oil, fruit and meat, especially where the production of a particular region is highly regarded (as in the case of olive oil from Jaén, Manchego cheese, or Jabugo cured ham). EU law now regulates the use of such labelling.* * *f name* * *denominación nf, pl - ciones1) : name, designation2) : denomination (of money) -
19 designación
f.designation, selection, appointment, commission.* * *1 (nombre) name, designation2 (nombramiento) designation, appointment* * *SF1) [para un cargo] appointment2) (=nombre) designation* * *femenino (frml)a) ( de persona) appointment, designation (frml)fueron nombrados mediante libre designación — they were appointed without having to sit competitive exams
b) (de fecha, lugar)la designación de la fecha/lugar para la reunión — the fixing of a date/place for the meeting
* * *= appointment, designation, co-option.Nota: Selección de alguien como miembro de un comité por elección entre los miembros integrantes de un grupo.Ex. The deputy librarian or deputy director's duties are to take the place of the director in his absence, to organize the general routine of the library, to supervise the staff and to deal with matters such as interviews, appointments and resignations.Ex. The designation should be clearly separated from the variant heading itself by means of punctuation or typography.Ex. The policy of FIAC is determined by an annual conference and carried out during the year by its National Co-ordinating Group, which consists of regional representatives, network delegates, and individual co-options from member centres.----* designación específica de la clase de documento = specific material designation.* designación general de la clase de documento = general material designation.* puesto de trabajo de libre designación = line position.* * *femenino (frml)a) ( de persona) appointment, designation (frml)fueron nombrados mediante libre designación — they were appointed without having to sit competitive exams
b) (de fecha, lugar)la designación de la fecha/lugar para la reunión — the fixing of a date/place for the meeting
* * *= appointment, designation, co-option.Nota: Selección de alguien como miembro de un comité por elección entre los miembros integrantes de un grupo.Ex: The deputy librarian or deputy director's duties are to take the place of the director in his absence, to organize the general routine of the library, to supervise the staff and to deal with matters such as interviews, appointments and resignations.
Ex: The designation should be clearly separated from the variant heading itself by means of punctuation or typography.Ex: The policy of FIAC is determined by an annual conference and carried out during the year by its National Co-ordinating Group, which consists of regional representatives, network delegates, and individual co-options from member centres.* designación específica de la clase de documento = specific material designation.* designación general de la clase de documento = general material designation.* puesto de trabajo de libre designación = line position.* * *su designación como embajador his appointment o designation as ambassadorfueron nombrados mediante libre designación they were appointed without having to sit competitive examsaccedió a la cancillería por designación real he became chancellor by royal appointmentla designación de la fecha para la retirada the fixing of a date for the withdrawalB ( frml) (denominación)1 (acción) naming, designating2 (nombre) name* * *
designación sustantivo femenino designation, appointment
' designación' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
nombramiento
* * *designación nf1. [nombre] designation2. [nombramiento] appointment;* * ** * * -
20 desvainar
v.1 to husk, to strip off the outward integument.2 to unsheath.3 to shell, to pod, to shuck, to unsheathe.Los granjeros desgranaron frijol The farmers removed the grain from the bean* * *1 to shell* * *VT to shell* * *= shell.Ex. At harvest, plants were separated into three sections and all pods were removed by hand from each of the three sections and then hand shelled.* * *= shell.Ex: At harvest, plants were separated into three sections and all pods were removed by hand from each of the three sections and then hand shelled.
* * *desvainar [A1 ]vtto shell* * *desvainar vt: to shell
См. также в других словарях:
Separated — can refer to:*Legal separation of spouses * Separated (song) by Avant *Separated sets, a concept in mathematical topology *Separation of conjoined twins, a procedure that gives them allows them to live independently … Wikipedia
separated — sep·a·rat·ed / se pə ˌrā təd/ adj: being in a state of estrangement between spouses usu. requiring the maintenance of separate residences and the intent to live apart permanently: being in a state of separation has been separated for a year… … Law dictionary
separated — separated; un·separated; … English syllables
separated — [[t]se̱pəreɪtɪd[/t]] 1) ADJ: v link ADJ, oft ADJ from n Someone who is separated from their wife or husband lives apart from them, but is not divorced. Most single parents are either divorced or separated... Tristan had been separated from his… … English dictionary
separated — adjective 1. being or feeling set or kept apart from others (Freq. 5) she felt detached from the group could not remain the isolated figure he had been Sherwood Anderson thought of herself as alone and separated from the others had a set apart… … Useful english dictionary
Separated — Separate Sep a*rate, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Separated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Separating}.] [L. separatus, p. p. of separare to separate; pfref. se aside + parare to make ready, prepare. See {Parade}, and cf. {Sever}.] 1. To disunite; to divide; to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
separated — Synonyms and related words: alien, alienated, alone, aloof, apart, assorted, asunder, at a distance, at odds, at variance, away, companionless, contrary, contrasted, contrasting, cordoned, cordoned off, departing, detached, deviating, deviative,… … Moby Thesaurus
separated — sep|a|rat|ed [ˈsepəreıtıd] adj not living with your husband, wife, or sexual partner any more →↑divorced ▪ We ve been separated for six months … Dictionary of contemporary English
separated — sep|a|rat|ed [ sepə,reıtəd ] adjective no longer living with your husband, wife, or sexual partner: They ve been separated for years … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
separated — adjective not living with your husband, wife or sexual partner any more: David and I have been separated for six months but we re not divorced yet … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
separated — UK [ˈsepəˌreɪtɪd] / US [ˈsepəˌreɪtəd] adjective no longer living with your husband, wife, or sexual partner They ve been separated for years … English dictionary