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1 sequía
f.drought, dry season.* * *1 drought* * *noun f.* * *SF1) (=falta de lluvias) drought2) (=temporada) dry season3) And (=sed) thirst* * *femenino drought* * *= drought.Ex. This is a gardening technique aimed at conserving water in areas of drought and limited water supplies.----* afectado por la sequía = drought-plagued, drought-parched.* agostado por la sequía = drought-parched.* período de sequía = dry spell.* * *femenino drought* * *= drought.Ex: This is a gardening technique aimed at conserving water in areas of drought and limited water supplies.
* afectado por la sequía = drought-plagued, drought-parched.* agostado por la sequía = drought-parched.* período de sequía = dry spell.* * *drought* * *
sequía sustantivo femenino
drought
sequía sustantivo femenino drought
' sequía' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
consigo
- destructor
- destructora
- tenaz
- asolar
English:
drought
- push
* * *sequía nf1. [falta de agua] drought* * *f drought* * *sequía nf: drought* * *sequía n drought -
2 sequía
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3 sequía
• drought• dry season -
4 sequía fisiológica
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5 afectado por la sequía
(adj.) = drought-plagued, drought-parchedEx. A model for the development of information services in buoyant but debt-riddled Brazil may only be partially relevant to post oil-boom Nigeria, and consequently inappropriate to drought-plagued Ethiopia.Ex. In drought-parched Somalia, pastoralists are on the move, desperately seeking scarce resources.* * *(adj.) = drought-plagued, drought-parchedEx: A model for the development of information services in buoyant but debt-riddled Brazil may only be partially relevant to post oil-boom Nigeria, and consequently inappropriate to drought-plagued Ethiopia.
Ex: In drought-parched Somalia, pastoralists are on the move, desperately seeking scarce resources. -
6 agostado por la sequía
(adj.) = drought-parchedEx. In drought-parched Somalia, pastoralists are on the move, desperately seeking scarce resources.* * *(adj.) = drought-parchedEx: In drought-parched Somalia, pastoralists are on the move, desperately seeking scarce resources.
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7 período de sequía
(n.) = dry spellEx. There seems to be some authorities that still believe this ' dry-spell' will eventually right itself and things will get back to normal weather and rainfall.* * *(n.) = dry spellEx: There seems to be some authorities that still believe this ' dry-spell' will eventually right itself and things will get back to normal weather and rainfall.
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8 zona de sequía
• dust bowl -
9 resistencia a sequía
Diccionario geografía española-Inglés > resistencia a sequía
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10 índice de sequía
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11 pertinaz
adj.1 stubborn (terco).2 persistent (persistente).3 pertinacious, firm, dogged, stick-to-itive.* * *(pl pertinaces)► adjetivo1 (sequía, frío) prolonged, persistent2 (persona) obstinate* * *ADJ1) [tos] persistent; [sequía] long-lasting, prolonged2) [persona] obstinate* * *adjetivo (frml)a) ( persistente) < sequía> prolonged; < tos> persistentb) ( obstinado) obstinate* * *= refractory.Ex. However, these mushy words do little to reveal the refractory person uttering them.* * *adjetivo (frml)a) ( persistente) < sequía> prolonged; < tos> persistentb) ( obstinado) obstinate* * *= refractory.Ex: However, these mushy words do little to reveal the refractory person uttering them.
* * *( frml)1 (persistente) ‹sequía› prolonged; ‹tos› persistent2 (obstinado) obstinate, pertinacious ( frml)* * *
pertinaz adjetivo
1 (tos, lluvia, etc) persistent, prolonged
2 (persona) obstinate
' pertinaz' also found in these entries:
English:
diehard
- stubborn
* * *pertinaz adj1. [terco] stubborn2. [persistente] persistent* * *adj1 ( prolongado) persistent2 ( terco) obstinate* * *1) obstinado: obstinate2) persistente: persistent -
12 asolar
v.1 to devastate.2 to desolate, to destroy, to devastate, to lay flat.Los vientos desolaron el bosque The winds desolated the forest.3 to raze, to level with ground, to strip.Los tractores asolaron la tierra The tractors razed the land.4 to vanquish.* * ** * *verbto raze, destroy* * *I= asolanarII1.VT to raze, raze to the ground, destroy2.See:* * *verbo transitivo guerra/huracán/sequía to devastateun país asolado por el hambre — a country ravaged o devastated by hunger
* * *= plague, devastate, lay + waste to, desolate.Ex. Title indexes have always been plagued by the absence of terminology control.Ex. The article 'Sorting a mountain of books' relates how when the law library was devastated by fire what had been a library became a jumble of 100,000 books and periodicals.Ex. The mutilation of periodicals is laying waste to vital and expensive periodical collections in all kinds of library across the USA, and it seems to strike academic libraries with particular virulence.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 guerra/huracán/sequía to devastateun país asolado por el hambre — a country ravaged o devastated by hunger
* * *= plague, devastate, lay + waste to, desolate.Ex: Title indexes have always been plagued by the absence of terminology control.
Ex: The article 'Sorting a mountain of books' relates how when the law library was devastated by fire what had been a library became a jumble of 100,000 books and periodicals.Ex: The mutilation of periodicals is laying waste to vital and expensive periodical collections in all kinds of library across the USA, and it seems to strike academic libraries with particular virulence.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.* * *vt«guerra/huracán/sequía» to devastateel terremoto asoló la ciudad the earthquake devastated the townun país asolado por el hambre a country ravaged o devastated by hunger* * *
asolar ( conjugate asolar) verbo transitivo [guerra/huracán/sequía] to devastate
asolar verbo transitivo to devastate, destroy
' asolar' also found in these entries:
English:
devastate
- plague
- blight
* * *asolar vtto devastate* * *v/t devastate* * *asolar {19} vt: to devastate, to destroy -
13 castigar
v.1 to punish (imponer castigo a).castigaron a los niños sin cena they punished the children by sending them to bed without dinnerlo castigaron con la pena capital he was given the death penaltyElsa castiga a los chicos Elsa punishes the kids.Dios castiga la maldad God punishes evil.2 to penalize (sport).3 to damage.una zona castigada por las inundaciones a region severely hit by the floods4 to seduce.5 to ravage.6 to recur to punishment.* * *1 (aplicar una pena) to punish2 (dañar) to damage, ruin3 (una cabalgadura) to ride hard* * *verb* * *VT1) [por delito, falta]a) [+ delincuente, pecador, culpable] to punish ( por for)[+ niño] [gen] to punish; [sin salir] to ground, keep ines un delito que puede ser castigado con 15 años de prisión — it is a crime punishable by 15 years' imprisonment
la profesora me dejó castigado al terminar las clases — the teacher kept me in o made me stay behind after school
castigar la carne — (Rel) to mortify the flesh
b) (Dep) to penalize ( por for)c) (Com, Pol) to punish2) (=perjudicar) [guerra, crisis] to afflict, affect; [calor] to beat down on; [frío] to bite into3) [físicamente] (=maltratar) to damage, harmcastigamos a nuestro cuerpo con los excesos en la bebida — we harm our bodies with excessive drinking
castigar el hígado — iró to damage one's liver
4) [+ caballo] to ride hard5) (=corregir) [+ estilo] to refine; [+ texto] to correct, revise6) (=enamorar) to seduce7) (Com) [+ gastos] to reduce* * *verbo transitivo1)a) < criminal> to punishb) < niño> ( a quedarse en el colegio) to keep... in detention; ( a quedarse en casa) to keep... in as a punishment, to ground (esp AmE colloq)se quedó castigado por contestarle al profesor — he was kept in detention for answering the teacher back
mi padre me ha castigado — my father's keeping me in, my father's grounded me
2) crisis/enfermedad to affect* * *= punish, slap, victimise [victimize, -USA], put + Nombre + on the rack, discipline, chastise, smite.Nota: Verbo irregular: pasado smote, participio smitten. Usado comúnmente con un sentido religioso o bíblico.Ex. They admitted that they did not evaluate their technicians and aides, and confirmed that increases were automatic and the same 'across-the-board'; superior performance was not rewarded, nor inferior performance punished.Ex. I wonder if she did quit if she could slap us with a lawsuit.Ex. In the name of collegiality, students are victimized, considerable intellectual resources are being squandered, and the general public is deliberately misled.Ex. The article ' Putting publishers on the rack' discusses the implications for publishers of supermarkets' greater interest in books.Ex. It draws from the cases some practical pointers for librariansin hiring, firing, and disciplining employees = Deduce de los casos algunos consejos prácticos para los bibliotecarios de cómo contratar, despedir y sancionar a los empleados.Ex. The profession should cease practising the amateurism for which it chastises employers who have untrained persons trying to function as librarians.Ex. Instead, this may come off as a sort of mixed signal considering that God has chosen to smite California right after a proposition was passed banning same sex marriage.----* castigar con la prisión = punish with + prison.* castigar con todo el peso de la ley = punish + to the full extent of the law.* castigar duramente = smite.* castigar severamente = blast.* * *verbo transitivo1)a) < criminal> to punishb) < niño> ( a quedarse en el colegio) to keep... in detention; ( a quedarse en casa) to keep... in as a punishment, to ground (esp AmE colloq)se quedó castigado por contestarle al profesor — he was kept in detention for answering the teacher back
mi padre me ha castigado — my father's keeping me in, my father's grounded me
2) crisis/enfermedad to affect* * *= punish, slap, victimise [victimize, -USA], put + Nombre + on the rack, discipline, chastise, smite.Nota: Verbo irregular: pasado smote, participio smitten. Usado comúnmente con un sentido religioso o bíblico.Ex: They admitted that they did not evaluate their technicians and aides, and confirmed that increases were automatic and the same 'across-the-board'; superior performance was not rewarded, nor inferior performance punished.
Ex: I wonder if she did quit if she could slap us with a lawsuit.Ex: In the name of collegiality, students are victimized, considerable intellectual resources are being squandered, and the general public is deliberately misled.Ex: The article ' Putting publishers on the rack' discusses the implications for publishers of supermarkets' greater interest in books.Ex: It draws from the cases some practical pointers for librariansin hiring, firing, and disciplining employees = Deduce de los casos algunos consejos prácticos para los bibliotecarios de cómo contratar, despedir y sancionar a los empleados.Ex: The profession should cease practising the amateurism for which it chastises employers who have untrained persons trying to function as librarians.Ex: Instead, this may come off as a sort of mixed signal considering that God has chosen to smite California right after a proposition was passed banning same sex marriage.* castigar con la prisión = punish with + prison.* castigar con todo el peso de la ley = punish + to the full extent of the law.* castigar duramente = smite.* castigar severamente = blast.* * *castigar [A3 ]vtA1 ‹criminal› to punishserán castigados de acuerdo a la ley they will be punished according to the lawfueron castigados con la pena máxima they received the maximum sentencecrímenes que son castigados con la pena de muerte crimes punishable by death2 ‹niño›lo castigaron sin postre as a punishment he was made to go without dessert o they wouldn't let him have any dessertme castigaron a aprendérmelo de memoria as a punishment I was made to learn it off by heart o they made me learn it off by heartse quedó castigado por contestarle al profesor he was kept in detention for answering the teacher backmi padre me ha castigado por llegar tarde my father's keeping me in o my father's grounded me for being lateB1«crisis/enfermedad»: castigó duramente su ya débil organismo it severely affected her already weakened bodyla zona más castigada por la sequía the area hardest hit o worst affected by the drought2 ‹caballo› to ride … hard3 ‹toro› to inflict a great deal of punishment on4 ‹motor/frenos› to work … hard* * *
castigar ( conjugate castigar) verbo transitivo
( a quedarse en casa) to keep … in as a punishment, to ground (esp AmE colloq);
castigar verbo transitivo
1 to punish
2 (hacer sufrir, hacer padecer) to harm, ruin
3 Jur Dep to penalize
' castigar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
enterarse
- sancionar
English:
book
- cane
- deal with
- penalize
- punish
- chastise
* * *♦ vt1. [imponer castigo a] to punish;castigaron a los niños sin cena they punished the children by sending them to bed without dinner;lo castigaron con la pena capital he was given the death penalty;los castigaron a copiar la lección diez veces they had to write out the lesson ten times as a punishment2. Dep to penalize;el árbitro castigó la acción con penalti the referee awarded a penalty for the foul3. [dañar] [piel, salud] to damage;[sujeto: sol, viento, epidemia] to devastate;una zona castigada por las inundaciones a region severely hit by the floods;las nuevas medidas castigan a los pequeños inversores the new measures are prejudicial to small investors4. [enamorar] to seduce5. [caballo] [con espuelas] to spur;[con látigo] to whip6. Taurom to wound♦ See also the pronominal verb castigarse* * *v/t punish* * *castigar {52} vt: to punish* * *castigar vb to punish -
14 damnificado
adj.injured, harmed, hurt, wounded.f. & m.victim, victim of a natural disaster.past part.past participle of spanish verb: damnificar.* * *1→ link=damnificar damnificar► adjetivo1 (persona) injured, harmed2 (cosa) damaged► nombre masculino,nombre femenino1 victim* * *damnificado, -aSM / F victim* * *- da masculino, femenino (frml) victim* * *= victim.Ex. The question can be raised about whether the 'noise' created by Beauperthuy drowned out the cries of pain and suffering of the victims of yellow fever.* * *- da masculino, femenino (frml) victim* * *= victim.Ex: The question can be raised about whether the 'noise' created by Beauperthuy drowned out the cries of pain and suffering of the victims of yellow fever.
* * *damnificado -damasculine, feminine( frml); victimlos damnificados por la sequía the victims of the drought, the drought victims* * *
Del verbo damnificar: ( conjugate damnificar)
damnificado es:
el participio
damnificado◊ -da sustantivo masculino, femenino (frml) victim
damnificado,-a
I sustantivo masculino y femenino victim: los damnificados por el tornado, those affected by the tornado
II adj (persona) injured
(lugar, país) affected: las zonas damnificadas, the affected areas
' damnificado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
damnificada
English:
stricken
* * *damnificado, -a♦ adjaffected, damaged;un envío de ayuda urgente para la población damnificada por el terremoto an urgent consignment of aid for the people affected by the earthquake♦ nm,fvictim;los damnificados por el huracán Mitch the victims of hurricane Mitch* * *I adj affectedII m, damnificada f victim* * *damnificado, -da n: victim (of a disaster) -
15 perjudicial
adj.harmful.* * *► adjetivo1 harmful* * *adj.* * *1.ADJ damaging, harmful, detrimental frm2.SM Méx ** secret policeman* * *adjetivo damaging, harmful, detrimental (frml)el alcohol es perjudicial para la salud — alcohol is damaging o detrimental to your health
* * *= adverse, bad [worse -comp., worst -sup.], detrimental, damaging, harmful, crippling, prejudicial, disruptive, destructive, deleterious, untoward.Ex. An increase in recall tends to have an adverse effect on another measure of performance, precision -- as recall is increased precision is lowered.Ex. I'm not saying that it is bad, but it is a real difference of interest between the needs and purposes of research libraries and the public libraries, and I would also throw in the school and almost certainly junior college libraries.Ex. But the proposal to enter all serials under their titles, while obviously easier to apply, is equally detrimental to the integrity of the catalog.Ex. Potentially as damaging are errors that result from poor editing and proofreading.Ex. These multiple-concept terms yield greater precision, but are associated with a rather larger indexing language and a higher likelihood of harmful scatter.Ex. Can we avoid racism, sexism and the crippling effects of other forms of prejudicial stereotyping without recourse to censorship?.Ex. Decentralisation of corporate libraries into smaller units can be prejudicial to the technical and market development in the company.Ex. The crisis in South African education -- particularly black education -- has resulted from the disruptive effects of apartheid.Ex. The Archives are located in an area that experiences severe air pollution and levels of ozone that are very destructive to paper and parchment.Ex. This article attempts to show the influence of man on the beneficial or deleterious use of information.Ex. Efforts to destigmatize euthanasia or even encourage it for some groups may have the untoward effect of promoting suicide in other groups.----* efecto perjudicial = harmful effect.* hacer que sea perjudicial para = render + detrimental to.* perjudicial para = injurious to.* perjudicial para el entorno = environmentally-damaging.* perjudicial para el medioambiente = environmentally-damaging.* * *adjetivo damaging, harmful, detrimental (frml)el alcohol es perjudicial para la salud — alcohol is damaging o detrimental to your health
* * *= adverse, bad [worse -comp., worst -sup.], detrimental, damaging, harmful, crippling, prejudicial, disruptive, destructive, deleterious, untoward.Ex: An increase in recall tends to have an adverse effect on another measure of performance, precision -- as recall is increased precision is lowered.
Ex: I'm not saying that it is bad, but it is a real difference of interest between the needs and purposes of research libraries and the public libraries, and I would also throw in the school and almost certainly junior college libraries.Ex: But the proposal to enter all serials under their titles, while obviously easier to apply, is equally detrimental to the integrity of the catalog.Ex: Potentially as damaging are errors that result from poor editing and proofreading.Ex: These multiple-concept terms yield greater precision, but are associated with a rather larger indexing language and a higher likelihood of harmful scatter.Ex: Can we avoid racism, sexism and the crippling effects of other forms of prejudicial stereotyping without recourse to censorship?.Ex: Decentralisation of corporate libraries into smaller units can be prejudicial to the technical and market development in the company.Ex: The crisis in South African education -- particularly black education -- has resulted from the disruptive effects of apartheid.Ex: The Archives are located in an area that experiences severe air pollution and levels of ozone that are very destructive to paper and parchment.Ex: This article attempts to show the influence of man on the beneficial or deleterious use of information.Ex: Efforts to destigmatize euthanasia or even encourage it for some groups may have the untoward effect of promoting suicide in other groups.* efecto perjudicial = harmful effect.* hacer que sea perjudicial para = render + detrimental to.* perjudicial para = injurious to.* perjudicial para el entorno = environmentally-damaging.* perjudicial para el medioambiente = environmentally-damaging.* * *damaging, harmful, detrimental ( frml)el alcohol y el tabaco son perjudiciales para la salud alcohol and tobacco are harmful o damaging o detrimental to your healthesta sequía es muy perjudicial para el campo this drought is very bad for agriculture o is seriously damaging agricultureresultaría perjudicial para la economía it would be damaging o prejudicial to the economy* * *
perjudicial adjetivo [ser] damaging, harmful, detrimental (frml);
perjudicial para algo/algn damaging o harmful o detrimental to sth/sb
perjudicial adjetivo damaging, harmful: esa amistad es perjudicial para ti, that friendship is bad for you
' perjudicial' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
fatal
- costar
- demasía
English:
damaging
- detrimental
- disruptive
- harmful
- injurious
- damage
- untoward
* * *perjudicial adjharmful ( para to);el exceso de colesterol es perjudicial para la salud too much cholesterol is damaging to your health;la decisión es perjudicial para nuestros planes the decision upsets our plans* * *adj harmful, damaging;perjudicial para la salud harmful to one’s health* * *perjudicial adj: harmful, detrimental* * *perjudicial adj bad / harmful -
16 remediar
v.to remedy, to put right (daño).si puedes remediarlo, no vayas ese día don't go on that day if you can help itya no se puede remediar there's nothing to be done about it, it can't be helpedno lo puedo remediar I can't help ital fin se remedió su situación her situation was finally resolvedEl amor cura la tristeza Love remedies loneliness.* * *1 (poner remedio) to remedy2 (reparar) to repair, make good3 (resolver) to solve4 (socorrer) to help, assist5 (evitar) to avoid, prevent* * *verb* * *VT1) (=solucionar) to remedysi el gobierno no lo remedia se perderán muchos puestos de trabajo — if the government does not remedy the situation a lot of jobs will be lost
llorando no remedias nada — you're not going to solve anything by crying, crying won't solve anything
2) (=evitar)es un mujeriego pero le quiero, no puedo remediarlo — he's a womanizer but I love him, I can't help it
3) [+ necesidades] to meet, help with* * *verbo transitivo1) <situación/problema> to remedy; < daño> to repair¿qué piensas hacer para remediarlo? — what are you going to do to put things right?
2) ( evitar)perdí dinero, no pude remediarlo — there was nothing else for it, I lost money
* * *= remedy.Ex. After 1728, the initiative for investigating and remedying the state of the public records passed to the House of Commons.----* remediar la falta de = remedy + the lack of.* remediar una situación = remedy + situation.* * *verbo transitivo1) <situación/problema> to remedy; < daño> to repair¿qué piensas hacer para remediarlo? — what are you going to do to put things right?
2) ( evitar)perdí dinero, no pude remediarlo — there was nothing else for it, I lost money
* * *= remedy.Ex: After 1728, the initiative for investigating and remedying the state of the public records passed to the House of Commons.
* remediar la falta de = remedy + the lack of.* remediar una situación = remedy + situation.* * *remediar [A1 ]vtA ‹situación/problema› to remedy; ‹daño› to repairesto se puede remediar fácilmente this can be easily remedied, this can be put right quite easilysólo la muerte no se puede remediar there's a cure for everything except deathhicieron lo posible por remediar los efectos de la sequía they did everything possible to repair the damage done by the droughtla has ofendido ¿qué piensas hacer para remediarlo? you've offended her, what are you going to do to put things right o to make it up to her?con pedirle perdón no remedias nada saying you're sorry won't solve anythingtratando sólo los síntomas no se remedia el problema the problem won't be solved by treating the symptoms aloneB(evitar): me puse a llorar, no lo pude remediar I burst into tears, I couldn't help it o I couldn't help myselftuve que pagarle 500 pesos más, no pude remediarlo there was nothing else for it o there was no alternative, I had to give him another 500 pesosle tengo gran antipatía, no lo puedo remediar I can't help it, I really can't stand him* * *
remediar ( conjugate remediar) verbo transitivo
1 ‹situación/problema› to remedy;
‹ daño› to repair;◊ ¿qué piensas hacer para remediarlo? what are you going to do to put things right?;
con llorar no remedias nada crying won't solve anything
2 ( evitar):◊ no lo puedo/pude remediar I can't/couldn't help it
remediar verbo transitivo
1 (un daño, un perjuicio) to repair, put right
2 (una necesidad, urgencia) to find a remedy for, solve: cree que puede remediar el problema con fármacos, she thinks she can resolve the problem with medication
3 (evitar) to avoid
♦ Locuciones: no poder remediar, cannot help: no he podido remediar reírme de él, I couldn't help laughing at him
' remediar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
evitar
English:
remedy
- help
* * *remediar vt1. [daño] to remedy, to put right;[problema] to solve;al fin se remedió su situación her situation was finally resolved;un mejunje que se solía beber para remediar la impotencia a concoction that people used to drink as a cure for impotence;ya no se puede remediar there's nothing to be done about it, it can't be helped;no sé qué remedias con insultarla I don't know what good you hope to do by insulting her2. [peligro] to avoid, to prevent;si puedes remediarlo, no vayas ese día don't go on that day if you can help it;no lo puedo remediar I can't help it;no pudo remediar que muchos militantes abandonaran el partido he couldn't prevent many of the rank and file from leaving the party;si alguien no lo remedia, vamos a perder el tren if somebody doesn't do something, we're going to miss the train* * *no puedo remediarlo I can’t do anything about it* * *remediar vt1) : to remedy, to repair2) : to help out, to assist3) evitar: to prevent, to avoid* * *remediar vb1. (problema) to solve -
17 afectado
adj.1 affected, impressed, cut-up.2 affected, concerned, interested.3 affected, hammy, unnatural.f. & m.sufferer.past part.past participle of spanish verb: afectar.* * *1→ link=afectar afectar► adjetivo1 (gen) affected2 (emocionado) affected, upset\estar afectado,-a de to be suffering from* * *(f. - afectada)adj.1) affected2) afflicted* * *ADJ1) (=forzado) [acento, persona] affected; [estilo] stilted, precious2) (Med) (=aquejado)estar afectado — Méx to be consumptive; Cono Sur to be hurt
* * *- da adjetivoa) <gestos/acento> affectedb) <área/órgano> affectedestá afectado de una grave enfermedad — (frml) he is suffering from a serious disease
* * *= affected, mannered, concerned, devastated, stilted, camp, shaken.Ex. A collection of such affected words from the Latin and Greek are either to be used warily or to be rejected totally as barbarous.Ex. Since 1975 his work has become mannered and predictable.Ex. Mainframe computers are rarely dedicated to the library's own sole application, unless the library concerned happens to be a national library, offering online access to its data bases to a wide audience.Ex. The most devastated countries have seen almost no debt relief, and most of the bank's aid has come in the form of loans, not grants.Ex. His eccentricity was stilted and contrived.Ex. There is an obvious positive correlation between camp behaviour and homosexuality.Ex. I felt lorn and bereft, then suddenly it was gone, leaving me empty and shaken the way a storm shakes the land and the sea.----* afectado por el oídio = mildewed.* afectado por la sequía = drought-plagued, drought-parched.* afectado por las inundaciones = flood-hit.* afectado por las mareas = tidal.* evitar ser afectado = escape + unaffected.* no verse afectado = be none the worse for wear, be none the worse for (that).* peor afectado = worst-hit.* usar sobre la zona afectada = use + topically.* * *- da adjetivoa) <gestos/acento> affectedb) <área/órgano> affectedestá afectado de una grave enfermedad — (frml) he is suffering from a serious disease
* * *= affected, mannered, concerned, devastated, stilted, camp, shaken.Ex: A collection of such affected words from the Latin and Greek are either to be used warily or to be rejected totally as barbarous.
Ex: Since 1975 his work has become mannered and predictable.Ex: Mainframe computers are rarely dedicated to the library's own sole application, unless the library concerned happens to be a national library, offering online access to its data bases to a wide audience.Ex: The most devastated countries have seen almost no debt relief, and most of the bank's aid has come in the form of loans, not grants.Ex: His eccentricity was stilted and contrived.Ex: There is an obvious positive correlation between camp behaviour and homosexuality.Ex: I felt lorn and bereft, then suddenly it was gone, leaving me empty and shaken the way a storm shakes the land and the sea.* afectado por el oídio = mildewed.* afectado por la sequía = drought-plagued, drought-parched.* afectado por las inundaciones = flood-hit.* afectado por las mareas = tidal.* evitar ser afectado = escape + unaffected.* no verse afectado = be none the worse for wear, be none the worse for (that).* peor afectado = worst-hit.* usar sobre la zona afectada = use + topically.* * *afectado -daaffected* * *
Del verbo afectar: ( conjugate afectar)
afectado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
afectado
afectar
afectado◊ -da adjetivo
afectar ( conjugate afectar) verbo transitivo
1
2 ( fingir) ‹admiración/indiferencia› to affect, feign
afectado,-a I adj (amanerado) affected
II sustantivo masculino y femenino los afectados por el terremoto, those affected by the earthquake
los afectados de hepatitis, the hepatitis victims
afectar verbo transitivo
1 (incumbir) to affect: la medida nos afecta a todos, the measure affects us all
2 (impresionar, entristecer) to affect, sadden: le afectó mucho la muerte de su padre, she was deeply affected by her father's death
' afectado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
afectada I
- hinchada
- hinchado
- remilgada
- remilgado
- retórica
- amanerado
English:
affected
- concerned
- precious
- self-conscious
- unaffected
- unnatural
- untouched
- visibly
- any
- camp
- diseased
- Down's syndrome
- fog
- hard
- self
- stricken
- suffer
* * *afectado, -a♦ adj1. [amanerado] affected2. [afligido] upset, badly affected3. RP [asignado] assigned♦ nm,fvictim;los afectados por las inundaciones serán indemnizados the people affected by the floods will receive compensation* * *I adj2 ( amanerado) affectedII m, afectada f:es un afectado he is so affected* * *afectado, -da adj1) : affected, mannered2) : influenced3) : afflicted4) : feigned* * *afectado adj (conmovido) affected / upset -
18 agostado
adj.1 scorched.2 parched, barren, desertic.past part.past participle of spanish verb: agostar.* * *= blasted, parched.Ex. In the midst of green and growing lands was a moonscape city of blasted land where no leaf of tree or blade of grass could grow.Ex. If predictions are right, an even larger expanse of land will become parched every year owing to global warming, urbanization, and deforestation.----* agostado por la sequía = drought-parched.* * *= blasted, parched.Ex: In the midst of green and growing lands was a moonscape city of blasted land where no leaf of tree or blade of grass could grow.
Ex: If predictions are right, an even larger expanse of land will become parched every year owing to global warming, urbanization, and deforestation.* agostado por la sequía = drought-parched.* * *agostado, -a adjparched -
19 cosecha
f.1 harvest (agriculture).ser de la (propia) cosecha de alguien (informal figurative) to be made up o invented by somebody2 vintage.3 harvest time.pres.indicat.3rd person singular (él/ella/ello) present indicative of spanish verb: cosechar.imperat.2nd person singular (tú) Imperative of Spanish verb: cosechar.* * *1 harvest, crop2 (tiempo) harvest time3 (año del vino) vintage\* * *noun f.crop, harvest* * *SF1) (=recogida) harvest; (=temporada) harvest, harvest timela cosecha de 1972 — (=vino) the 1972 vintage
2) (=producto) cropde cosecha propia — home-grown, home-produced
3) (=producción) yield* * *1)a) (acción, época) harvestb) ( producto) cropde mi/tu/su (propia) cosecha: estas zanahorias son de mi propia cosecha I grew these carrots myself; unos poemas de su propia cosecha — some of his own poems
2) (de premios, éxitos)* * *= crop, harvesting, vintage, harvest.Ex. There will be occasions when it is difficult to see any helpful principle; for example, in what order should we arrange grain crops, root crops, legumes, etc. in the crops facet in Agriculture?.Ex. This collocation surely meets a general need more effectively than if everything were brought together under process, scattering materials on crops: harvesting of wheat, oats, barlye, etc., all colocated at harvesting.Ex. Bibliometric analyses confirmed that review articles on topics that are generating high levels of research activity tend to have relatively voluminous bibliographies made up of a disproportionate number of citations to source materials of very recent vintage.Ex. The article is entitled 'Bountiful harvest: aquaculture and agriculture information services for the Pacific'.----* cosecha de fruta = fruit crop.* cosecha extraordinariamente buena = bumper crop.* de cosecha propia = home-grown [home grown/homegrown], home-produced.* de propia cosecha = home-grown [home grown/homegrown].* vino de cosecha = young wine.* * *1)a) (acción, época) harvestb) ( producto) cropde mi/tu/su (propia) cosecha: estas zanahorias son de mi propia cosecha I grew these carrots myself; unos poemas de su propia cosecha — some of his own poems
2) (de premios, éxitos)* * *= crop, harvesting, vintage, harvest.Ex: There will be occasions when it is difficult to see any helpful principle; for example, in what order should we arrange grain crops, root crops, legumes, etc. in the crops facet in Agriculture?.
Ex: This collocation surely meets a general need more effectively than if everything were brought together under process, scattering materials on crops: harvesting of wheat, oats, barlye, etc., all colocated at harvesting.Ex: Bibliometric analyses confirmed that review articles on topics that are generating high levels of research activity tend to have relatively voluminous bibliographies made up of a disproportionate number of citations to source materials of very recent vintage.Ex: The article is entitled 'Bountiful harvest: aquaculture and agriculture information services for the Pacific'.* cosecha de fruta = fruit crop.* cosecha extraordinariamente buena = bumper crop.* de cosecha propia = home-grown [home grown/homegrown], home-produced.* de propia cosecha = home-grown [home grown/homegrown].* vino de cosecha = young wine.* * *A1 (acción, época) harvestun vino de la cosecha del 70 a 1970 vintage wine2 (producto) cropel mal tiempo echó a perder la cosecha the bad weather caused the crop to failde mi/tu/su (propia) cosecha: estas zanahorias son de mi propia cosecha I grew these carrots myself, these carrots are from my gardenunos poemas de su propia cosecha some of his own poemsB(de premios, éxitos): nuestra cosecha en las olimpíadas fue pobre our medal tally at the Olympics was poor, we did not win many medals at the Olympicsdespués de su cosecha de éxitos en Europa following his many successes in Europe, following the successes he reaped in Europe ( journ)* * *
Del verbo cosechar: ( conjugate cosechar)
cosecha es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativo
Multiple Entries:
cosecha
cosechar
cosecha sustantivo femenino
cosechar ( conjugate cosechar) verbo transitivo
‹ legumbres› to pick
‹ éxitos› to achieve
verbo intransitivo
to harvest
cosecha sustantivo femenino
1 Agr harvest
2 (año de vendimia) vintage
cosechar
I verbo transitivo
1 Agr to harvest, gather (in)
2 (éxitos) to reap, achieve
(críticas, aplausos) to win
II verbo intransitivo to harvest
' cosecha' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
coger
- diezmar
- falta
- granizada
- malograrse
- precoz
- recoger
- recolectar
- vendimiar
- abundante
- adelantar
- copioso
- echar
- helar
- malograr
- pizca
English:
bumper
- crop
- gather in
- harvest
- homegrown
- pick
- vintage
- yield
* * *cosecha nf1. [recogida, época] harvest;es de la cosecha del 79 it's the 1979 vintage;hacer la cosecha to harvest;ser de la (propia) cosecha de alguien to be made up o invented by sb2. [producto] crop;la cosecha de vid de este año ha sido muy buena the grape harvest has been very good this year;se ha perdido toda la cosecha the entire crop o harvest has been lost3. [de títulos, premios] tally;este último galardón se añade a su cosecha personal this latest award adds one more to his personal tally* * *f1 harvest; figtally, score2:de cosecha propia one’s own;no ser de su cosecha fig fam not be one’s own work* * *cosecha nf: harvest, crop* * *cosecha n1. (acción) harvest2. (producto) crop -
20 perjudicar
v.to damage, to harm.Maleficiaron a María They harmed Mary.* * *1 to adversely affect, be bad for, be detrimental to* * *verb* * *1. VT1) (=dañar) to harm2) † (=desfavorecer)ese sombrero la perjudica — that hat doesn't suit her, she doesn't look good in that hat
3) LAm (=calumniar) to malign, slander2.See:* * *verbo transitivoa) ( dañar) to be detrimental to (frml)está perjudicando sus estudios — it is having an adverse effect on o it is proving detrimental to his schoolwork
estas medidas perjudican a los jóvenes — these measures are prejudicial to o harm young people
b) (Col, Per fam & euf) ( violar) to rape, have one's way with (euph)* * *= damage, disserve, do + disservice, do in, harm, impair, cause + erosion, injure, prejudice, work against, disadvantage, bring + harm, wrong, take + a toll on, hobble, screw + Nombre + up.Ex. Single holds are useful, for example, when a particular copy of a document is damaged or needs rebinding.Ex. We will not disserve readers by instructing them through our subject headings in nonbiased terminology; we will, in fact, be keeping all of our readers in focus.Ex. I think that Mr. Scilken's point was that there's so much material on the traditional three-by-five card that it's less useful, that it's distracting, in fact, and does a disservice to the public library.Ex. I think he outlined the feasible way to go about meeting our needs without doing in anybody else in the process.Ex. Principles developed over a century and a quarter of thought and experience were poorly defended by professional catalogers, and even less so by administrators harmed by increasing personnel budgets.Ex. It is difficult to neglect either entirely, without impairing the effectiveness in fulfilling the other objective.Ex. The replacement of the book catalog by the card catalog has caused a grave erosion of the ideal catalog sought by Panizzi and Cutter.Ex. Dialog is being injured and will continue to be injured if the American Chemical Society continues to assert falsely that Dialog is underpaying royalties.Ex. The very requirements for success in one area may prejudice success in another.Ex. Which means we must create a reading environment that helps and encourages reading rather than works against it.Ex. When students were tested at the end of the course, those students taught using flexible learning techniques did not seem to have been either advantaged or disadvantaged by their use when compared with the students taught using conventional techniques.Ex. It is political incorrectness, not political correctness, that has brought harm to this nation.Ex. The case raises the age-old issue of how best to resolve disputes between the press and a subject that feels wronged.Ex. Agoraphobia can take a toll on sufferers' families as well as the sufferers themselves, as some agoraphobics may become housebound or cling to certain people for safety.Ex. With Florida's no-fault auto insurance law set to expire in October, there are fears that that medical services could be hobbled.Ex. Her past relationship screwed her up mentally, physically and emotionally.----* perjudicar a = to + Posesivo + detriment.* perjudicar las posibilidades de = prejudice + chances of.* perjudicar los intereses = prejudice + interests.* perjudicarse a Uno mismo = shoot + Reflexivo + in the foot.* que no perjudica el medio ambiente = environmentally sound, environmentally friendly, eco-friendly.* * *verbo transitivoa) ( dañar) to be detrimental to (frml)está perjudicando sus estudios — it is having an adverse effect on o it is proving detrimental to his schoolwork
estas medidas perjudican a los jóvenes — these measures are prejudicial to o harm young people
b) (Col, Per fam & euf) ( violar) to rape, have one's way with (euph)* * *= damage, disserve, do + disservice, do in, harm, impair, cause + erosion, injure, prejudice, work against, disadvantage, bring + harm, wrong, take + a toll on, hobble, screw + Nombre + up.Ex: Single holds are useful, for example, when a particular copy of a document is damaged or needs rebinding.
Ex: We will not disserve readers by instructing them through our subject headings in nonbiased terminology; we will, in fact, be keeping all of our readers in focus.Ex: I think that Mr. Scilken's point was that there's so much material on the traditional three-by-five card that it's less useful, that it's distracting, in fact, and does a disservice to the public library.Ex: I think he outlined the feasible way to go about meeting our needs without doing in anybody else in the process.Ex: Principles developed over a century and a quarter of thought and experience were poorly defended by professional catalogers, and even less so by administrators harmed by increasing personnel budgets.Ex: It is difficult to neglect either entirely, without impairing the effectiveness in fulfilling the other objective.Ex: The replacement of the book catalog by the card catalog has caused a grave erosion of the ideal catalog sought by Panizzi and Cutter.Ex: Dialog is being injured and will continue to be injured if the American Chemical Society continues to assert falsely that Dialog is underpaying royalties.Ex: The very requirements for success in one area may prejudice success in another.Ex: Which means we must create a reading environment that helps and encourages reading rather than works against it.Ex: When students were tested at the end of the course, those students taught using flexible learning techniques did not seem to have been either advantaged or disadvantaged by their use when compared with the students taught using conventional techniques.Ex: It is political incorrectness, not political correctness, that has brought harm to this nation.Ex: The case raises the age-old issue of how best to resolve disputes between the press and a subject that feels wronged.Ex: Agoraphobia can take a toll on sufferers' families as well as the sufferers themselves, as some agoraphobics may become housebound or cling to certain people for safety.Ex: With Florida's no-fault auto insurance law set to expire in October, there are fears that that medical services could be hobbled.Ex: Her past relationship screwed her up mentally, physically and emotionally.* perjudicar a = to + Posesivo + detriment.* perjudicar las posibilidades de = prejudice + chances of.* perjudicar los intereses = prejudice + interests.* perjudicarse a Uno mismo = shoot + Reflexivo + in the foot.* que no perjudica el medio ambiente = environmentally sound, environmentally friendly, eco-friendly.* * *perjudicar [A2 ]vtel tabaco perjudica tu salud smoking is detrimental to your health, smoking damages your healthestá perjudicando sus estudios it is having an adverse effect on o it is affecting o it is proving detrimental to his schoolworkestas medidas perjudican a los jóvenes these measures harm o have adverse effects for o are prejudicial to young people, young people are losing out because of these measurespara no perjudicar las investigaciones in order not to prejudice the investigations* * *
perjudicar ( conjugate perjudicar) verbo transitivo ( dañar) to be detrimental to (frml), damage;◊ el tabaco perjudica salud smoking is detrimental to o damages your health;
estas medidas perjudican a los jóvenes these measures are detrimental to o harm young people
perjudicar verbo transitivo to damage, harm: el alcohol perjudica la salud, alcohol damages your health
esa medida me perjudicaría, that measure will be against my interests
' perjudicar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
cama
- dañar
- embromar
English:
damage
- handicap
- harm
- impair
- injure
- prejudice
- weigh
- reflect
* * *perjudicar vtto damage, to harm;el tabaco perjudica la salud smoking damages your health;esa decisión perjudica nuestros intereses this decision damages our interests* * *v/t harm, damage* * *perjudicar {72} vt: to harm, to be detrimental to* * *perjudicar vb1. (salud) to damage2. (persona) to affect
См. также в других словарях:
sequía — sustantivo femenino 1. Falta de lluvias, periodo prolongado de tiempo seco: Una larga sequía agostó los campos … Diccionario Salamanca de la Lengua Española
sequía — 1. f. Tiempo seco de larga duración. 2. C. Rica. Desvío del cauce de un río con el fin de sacar camarones. 3. ant. Sequedad o sed de la boca. U. en Andalucía y Colombia … Diccionario de la lengua española
Sequía — Los suelos resecos suelen agrietarse debido a la falta de lluvia. La sequía se puede definir como una anomalía transitoria en la que la disponibilidad de agua se sitúa por debajo de los requerimientos estadísticos de un área geográfica dada. El… … Wikipedia Español
Sequía — ► sustantivo femenino 1 Estado climático caracterizado por la ausencia prolongada de lluvias: ■ la persistente sequía está dejando los pantanos a niveles muy bajos. 2 Ausencia de cualquier cosa: ■ sequía de trabajo; sequía de goles. * * * sequía… … Enciclopedia Universal
sequía — {{#}}{{LM S35498}}{{〓}} {{SynS36384}} {{[}}sequía{{]}} ‹se·quí·a› {{《}}▍ s.f.{{》}} Período prolongado de tiempo seco o sin lluvias: • La sequía hace prolongar la cosecha de este año.{{○}} {{#}}{{LM SynS36384}}{{〓}} {{CLAVE… … Diccionario de uso del español actual con sinónimos y antónimos
sequía — (f) (Intermedio) periodo muy largo de tiempo en el que no llueve Ejemplos: Durante la sequía los animales se desplazan en busca de agua. La sequía destruyó toda la cosecha. Sinónimos: seca, sed, sequedad, estiaje, agostamiento … Español Extremo Basic and Intermediate
sequía — s f Falta o escasez prolongada de lluvias que afecta a una región: Estas lluvias tempraneras anuncian larga sequía , La pasada sequía aumentó el precio de los forrajes y afectó a la ganadería … Español en México
Sequía en Chile de 1968-1969 — La sequía que enfrentó Chile entre 1968 y 1969, conocida como la Gran sequía de 1968, fue uno de los mayores déficit pluviométricos en el país austral durante el siglo XX, sólo comparable a los similares fenómenos de 1924[1] y 1998 1999. La… … Wikipedia Español
Sequía en Chile de 1998-1999 — Entre 1998 y 1999, Chile enfrentó una sequía en gran parte de su territorio nacional. Ello provocó una crisis en la generación de energía eléctrica, debido a que ésta depende en gran parte de las centrales hidroeléctricas ubicadas en embalses del … Wikipedia Español
Sequía en Chile de 2010-2011 — Durante fines de 2010 y principios de 2011 Chile enfrentó una sequía que se extiendió por las regiones de Atacama, Coquimbo, Valparaíso, Metropolitana y O Higgins. Los principales efectos del evento se observaron en el sector agrícola, siendo las … Wikipedia Español
Sequía en Chile de 2007-2008 — Porción de barro seco y agrietado en El Quisco, 2007. Entre fines de 2007 y principios de 2008 Chile enfrentó una sequía que afectó a gran parte del territorio nacional, abarcando las regiones de Atacama, Coquimbo, Valparaíso, Metropolitana, O… … Wikipedia Español