-
1 secuestro
m.1 kidnapping (rapto).2 hijack.3 seizure, confiscation.4 sequestration, distress.5 sequestrum, sequestra.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: secuestrar.* * *1 (personas) kidnapping; (de avión) hijacking2 DERECHO sequestration, seizure, confiscation* * *SM1) [de persona etc] kidnapping, kidnaping (EEUU)2) [de avión] hijack, hijackingsecuestro aéreo — hijack, hijacking
3) (Jur) [de cargamento, contrabando] seizure; [de propiedad] sequestration* * *a) ( de persona) kidnapping; ( de avión) hijack(ing)b) ( de periódico) seizure; ( de bienes) sequestration, confiscation* * *= highjack, kidnapping, sequestration, abduction.Ex. This article reports on the coverage by the New York Times of the killing of a hostage victim during a highjack.Ex. This is an introduction in accessing basic legal resources pertaining to parental kidnapping on the state, federal, and international levels.Ex. Ignoring saturation leads to an overstatement of the potential importance of sequestration strategies.Ex. This paper chronicles the growing frequency of child abductions by divorced parents who are warring over child custody.* * *a) ( de persona) kidnapping; ( de avión) hijack(ing)b) ( de periódico) seizure; ( de bienes) sequestration, confiscation* * *= highjack, kidnapping, sequestration, abduction.Ex: This article reports on the coverage by the New York Times of the killing of a hostage victim during a highjack.
Ex: This is an introduction in accessing basic legal resources pertaining to parental kidnapping on the state, federal, and international levels.Ex: Ignoring saturation leads to an overstatement of the potential importance of sequestration strategies.Ex: This paper chronicles the growing frequency of child abductions by divorced parents who are warring over child custody.* * *1 (de una persona) kidnap, kidnapping; (de un avión) hijack, hijacking2 (de un periódico) seizure; (de bienes) sequestration, confiscation* * *
Del verbo secuestrar: ( conjugate secuestrar)
secuestro es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
secuestró es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo
Multiple Entries:
secuestrar
secuestro
secuestrar ( conjugate secuestrar) verbo transitivo ‹ persona› to kidnap;
‹ avión› to hijack
secuestro sustantivo masculino ( de persona) kidnapping;
( de avión) hijack(ing)
secuestrar verbo transitivo
1 (a una persona) to kidnap
2 (un vehículo) to hijack
3 Jur (una edición, una publicación) to confiscate
secuestro sustantivo masculino
1 (de una persona) kidnapping
2 (de un vehículo) hijacking
3 Jur (de una edición, etc) confiscation
' secuestro' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
abortar
- cómplice
- determinar
- artífice
- rapto
English:
hijack
- kidnapping
- of
- snatch
- abduction
* * *secuestro nm1. [rapto] kidnapping2. [de avión, barco] hijack3. [de bienes, publicación] seizure* * ** * *secuestro nm1) rapto: kidnapping, abduction2) : hijacking3) : seizure, confiscation* * *1. (de persona) kidnapping2. (de avión) hijacking -
2 secuestro
• abduction• highjack• highland• hijack• hike• kidnapping• sequestration• sequestrum -
3 secuestro primario
m.primary sequestrum. -
4 secuestro secundario
m.secondary sequestrum. -
5 secuestro terciario
m.tertiary sequestrum.
См. также в других словарях:
Sequestrum — Se*ques trum, n.; pl. {Sequestra}. [NL. See {Sequester}.] (Med.) A portion of dead bone which becomes separated from the sound portion, as in necrosis. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
sequestrum — [si kwes′trəm] n. pl. sequestrums or sequestra [si kwes′trə] [ModL < L, a deposit: see SEQUESTER] Med. a piece of dead bone which has become separated from the surrounding healthy bone … English World dictionary
Sequestrum — A sequestrum is a piece of dead bone that has become separated during the process of necrosis from normal/sound bone.It is a complication (sequelae) of osteomyelitis. The pathological process is as follows: *infection in the bone leads to an… … Wikipedia
sequestrum — A piece of necrotic tissue, usually bone, that has become separated from the surrounding healthy tissue. [Mod. L. use of Mediev. L. s., something laid aside, fr. L. sequestro, to lay aside, separate] primary s. a completely detached s.. * * *… … Medical dictionary
sequestrum — /səˈkwɛstrəm/ (say suh kwestruhm) noun (plural sequestra /səˈkwɛstrə/ (say suh kwestruh)) a dead portion of bone separated from the living bone. {New Latin, special use of Latin sequestrum something detached, properly neuter of sequester… …
sequestrum forceps — forceps with small but strong serrated jaws for removing the portions of bone forming a sequestrum … Medical dictionary
sequestrum — noun (plural trums; also sequestra) Etymology: New Latin, from Latin, legal sequestration, from sequester Date: 1831 a fragment of dead bone detached from adjoining sound bone … New Collegiate Dictionary
sequestrum — sequestral, adj. /si kwes treuhm/, n., pl. sequestra / treuh/. Pathol. a fragment of bone that has become necrotic as a result of disease or injury and has separated from the normal bone structure. [1825 35; < NL; ML: sequestrated property, deriv … Universalium
sequestrum — noun A fragment of bone or other dead tissue that has separated during necrosis … Wiktionary
sequestrum — n. piece of tissue (especially bone) that has detached from the surrounding healthy tissue (Medicine) … English contemporary dictionary
sequestrum — [sɪ kwɛstrəm] noun (plural sequestra trə) Medicine a piece of dead bone tissue formed within a diseased or injured bone, typically in chronic osteomyelitis. Derivatives sequestral adjective Origin C19: mod. L., neut. of L. sequester standing… … English new terms dictionary