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121 consejo de administración
* * ** * *(n.) = board of trustees, trustees, directorate, trust, trustee board, board of directorsEx. At the last meeting of the board of trustees of OCLC the staff was empowered to initiate scheduling the development of an interface between the OCLC network and these other nonmonographic data bases.Ex. Some of the rules were imposed on Panizzi by the trustees of the British Museum, and Panizzi could only join his critics in denouncing those rules, such as the rules for entry of anonymous publications.Ex. The work of the Statistical Office is undertaken by six directorates headed by the Director-General who is assisted by a secretariat.Ex. In 1974 the Museum trust was funded to preserve local industrial and social heritage, including the library.Ex. This article highlights the general duties and responsibilities of library trustee boards as outlined by statute.Ex. Any organisation's board of directors and its professionals and staff are jointly liable for their actions and/or omissions whether the latter are based on malice or ignorance.* * ** * *(n.) = board of trustees, trustees, directorate, trust, trustee board, board of directorsEx: At the last meeting of the board of trustees of OCLC the staff was empowered to initiate scheduling the development of an interface between the OCLC network and these other nonmonographic data bases.
Ex: Some of the rules were imposed on Panizzi by the trustees of the British Museum, and Panizzi could only join his critics in denouncing those rules, such as the rules for entry of anonymous publications.Ex: The work of the Statistical Office is undertaken by six directorates headed by the Director-General who is assisted by a secretariat.Ex: In 1974 the Museum trust was funded to preserve local industrial and social heritage, including the library.Ex: This article highlights the general duties and responsibilities of library trustee boards as outlined by statute.Ex: Any organisation's board of directors and its professionals and staff are jointly liable for their actions and/or omissions whether the latter are based on malice or ignorance.* * *board of directors -
122 contestar favorablemente
(v.) = respond + favourablyEx. The Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology responded favourably to the idea and a course was held, with six participants.* * *(v.) = respond + favourablyEx: The Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology responded favourably to the idea and a course was held, with six participants.
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123 contestar positivamente
(v.) = respond + favourablyEx. The Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology responded favourably to the idea and a course was held, with six participants.* * *(v.) = respond + favourablyEx: The Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology responded favourably to the idea and a course was held, with six participants.
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124 contratar
v.1 to hire (obreros, personal, detective).María contrató al jardinero Mary hired the gardener.Pedro contrató el apartamento Peter rented=hired the apartment.2 to enter into a contract.María contrató por mil dólares Mary entered into a contract for a thousand...* * *1 (servicio etc) to sign a contract for3 (un arriendo) to take on* * *verb* * *VT1) [+ empleado] to take on; [+ albañil, abogado] to hire; [+ jugador, artista] to sign (up)le contrataron por un año — they took her on for a year, they gave her a one-year contract
han contratado nuevo personal — they have taken on o recruited new staff
2) (=alquilar) [+ vehículo, servicio] to hire3) [+ obra] to put out to contract* * *verbo transitivoa) <empleado/obrero> to hire, take on; <artista/deportista> to sign up; < servicios> to contractme contrataron para terminarlo — I was taken on o hired to finish it
b) (Const) < ejecución de una obra> to put... out to contract* * *= commission, contract, hire, lease, engage, recruit.Ex. Some libraries opt to commission a central agency to support their catalogue creation.Ex. Discount charges are available by contracting to buy a predetermined number of connect hours per year.Ex. Plantin of Antwerp sacked him in 1573, but hired him again a few days later = Plantin de Antwerp le despidió en 1573, pero le contrató de nuevo unos pocos días después.Ex. Many packages are available for purchase or lease, but there are also strictly in-house packages and packages developed by specific software houses under contract from one organisation.Ex. Some questions to consider before engaging a consultant are: are the consultant's services needed?, could existing staff do the job?, can you afford aconsultant?.Ex. Reduced establishments have made it very difficult to recruit new IT talent.----* contratar al primero que solicita el trabajo = hire on a first-come, first-take basis.* contratar como/de = engage as.* contratar gente = take on + people.* contratar los servicios de Alguien = enrol [enroll -USA].* contratar un póliza de seguros = take out + insurance policy.* contratar un seguro = take out + insurance policy.* volver a contratar = rehire [re-hire].* * *verbo transitivoa) <empleado/obrero> to hire, take on; <artista/deportista> to sign up; < servicios> to contractme contrataron para terminarlo — I was taken on o hired to finish it
b) (Const) < ejecución de una obra> to put... out to contract* * *= commission, contract, hire, lease, engage, recruit.Ex: Some libraries opt to commission a central agency to support their catalogue creation.
Ex: Discount charges are available by contracting to buy a predetermined number of connect hours per year.Ex: Plantin of Antwerp sacked him in 1573, but hired him again a few days later = Plantin de Antwerp le despidió en 1573, pero le contrató de nuevo unos pocos días después.Ex: Many packages are available for purchase or lease, but there are also strictly in-house packages and packages developed by specific software houses under contract from one organisation.Ex: Some questions to consider before engaging a consultant are: are the consultant's services needed?, could existing staff do the job?, can you afford aconsultant?.Ex: Reduced establishments have made it very difficult to recruit new IT talent.* contratar al primero que solicita el trabajo = hire on a first-come, first-take basis.* contratar como/de = engage as.* contratar gente = take on + people.* contratar los servicios de Alguien = enrol [enroll -USA].* contratar un póliza de seguros = take out + insurance policy.* contratar un seguro = take out + insurance policy.* volver a contratar = rehire [re-hire].* * *contratar [A1 ]vt1 ‹empleado/obrero› to hire, take on, contract ( frml); ‹artista/deportista› to sign up; ‹servicios› to contractha sido contratado por seis meses he has been hired o taken on for six months, he has been given a six-month contractme contrataron para terminarlo I was taken on o hired o contracted to finish it2 ( Const) ‹ejecución de una obra› to put … out to contract■ contratarvito enter into a contractcon capacidad para contratar with the capacity to enter into contracts* * *
contratar ( conjugate contratar) verbo transitivo
‹artista/deportista› to sign up;
‹ servicios› to contract
contratar verbo transitivo to hire, engage
' contratar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
seguridad
- arrendar
- tomar
English:
book
- contract
- engage
- hire
- hire out
- recruit
- sign
- sign on
- take on
- wrong
- employ
- take
* * *contratar vt1. [obreros, personal, detective] to hire;[deportista] to sign* * *v/t trabajadores hire, take on; servicios contract* * *contratar vt1) : to contract for2) : to hire, to engage* * * -
125 coordinarlo todo
(v.) = tie + the pieces togetherEx. The six essential planning guidelines are: identify the project, nail down the details, determine conversion methodology, develop a realistic conversion schedule, determine who is going to do your conversion, and tie the pieces together.* * *(v.) = tie + the pieces togetherEx: The six essential planning guidelines are: identify the project, nail down the details, determine conversion methodology, develop a realistic conversion schedule, determine who is going to do your conversion, and tie the pieces together.
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126 copo de nieve
(n.) = snowflakeEx. Snowflakes always have six arms or sides because of the way the crystals grow.* * *(n.) = snowflakeEx: Snowflakes always have six arms or sides because of the way the crystals grow.
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127 cortometraje
m.1 short (movie or film).2 short film, short.* * *1 short film, short* * *SM short* * *masculino short (movie o film)* * *= short film.Ex. With an eclectic mix of high-end quality short films and a devoted audience it is little wonder the event has sold out ever year for the past six years.----* festival de cortometrajes = short film festival.* * *masculino short (movie o film)* * *= short film.Ex: With an eclectic mix of high-end quality short films and a devoted audience it is little wonder the event has sold out ever year for the past six years.
* festival de cortometrajes = short film festival.* * *short, short movie o film* * *
cortometraje sustantivo masculino
short (movie o film)
cortometraje sustantivo masculino short (film)
' cortometraje' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
corto
English:
short
* * *cortometraje nmshort (film) -
128 costar
v.1 to cost (money).¿cuánto cuesta? how much is it?me costó 3.000 pesos it cost me 3,000 pesoscostó muy barato it was very cheapEso cuesta mil dólares That costs a thousand dollars.2 to take (time).nos costó seis horas llegar it took us six hours to get there3 to be difficult to.Cuesta concentrar la atención It is difficult to focus your attention.4 to be expensive, to turn out to be expensive.El mármol cuesta Marble is expensive.5 to find it difficult to, to find it hard to.Me cuesta ser profesor I find it difficult to be a teacher.6 to be hard to do, to be difficult to do, to be hard to accomplish, to cost.La perfección cuesta Perfection is hard to accomplish.* * *1 (valer) to cost■ ¿cuánto costó? how much was it?2 (ser difícil) to be hard, be difficult; (resultar difícil) to be difficult for3 (tiempo) to take\costar barato,-a to be cheapcostar caro,-a to be expensive, cost a lot 2 to pay dearly for somethingcostar mucho / costar trabajo to be difficult, be hard workcostar un ojo de la cara familiar to cost an arm and a legcueste lo que cueste at any cost, whatever it costs* * *verb* * *1. VT1) [en dinero] to costla lámpara cuesta 45 euros — the lamp is o costs 45 euros
¿cuánto te ha costado el libro? — how much did you pay for the book?, how much did the book cost (you)?
¿cuánto cuesta este libro? — how much is this book?, how much does this book cost?
el porte no me ha costado nada — it didn't cost me anything to have it delivered, the delivery didn't cost me anything
2) [en esfuerzo, tiempo]•
costar trabajo, cuesta poco trabajo ser amable — it doesn't take much to be pleasant, it's not so hard to be pleasant¿te ha costado trabajo encontrar la casa? — did you have trouble finding the house?
costar Dios y ayuda —
sangre 2)me costó Dios y ayuda convencerla — I had a hard job o time persuading her
3) [en consecuencias] to costese error te costará el puesto — that mistake will cost you your job o will lose you your job
la violación le costó doce años de cárcel — the rape earned him twelve years in prison, he got twelve years in prison for the rape
2. VI1) [en dinero]2) [en dificultad] to be hard, be difficultal principio cuesta, pero luego se hace más fácil — it's hard o difficult at first but then it gets easier
cuesta reconocerlo, pero es verdad — it's hard o difficult to admit it, but it's true
•
costar a algn, lo que más me cuesta es el inglés — the thing I find hardest o most difficult is Englishme cuesta creer que seas hermano suyo — I find it hard o difficult to believe that you are his brother
¿por qué no me llamas? ¡si no te cuesta nada! — why don't you give me a call? it's not so hard o difficult!
3) [en consecuencias]•
costar caro a algn — to cost sb dear* * *1.verbo transitivo1) ( en dinero) to cost¿cuánto me costará arreglarlo? — how much will it be o cost to fix it?
2) ( en perjuicios) (+ me/te/le etc)3) ( en esfuerzo)¿qué te cuesta hacerlo? — go on, why don't you do it?
me cuesta trabajo creerlo — I find it hard o difficult to believe
2.lo logró, pero le costó lo suyo — he managed it in the end, but not without a struggle
costar vi1) ( en dinero) to costel reloj me costó caro/barato — the watch cost a lot/didn't cost much
2) ( resultar perjudicial)3) ( resultar difícil)me cuesta creerlo — I find it hard o difficult to believe
nos costó convencerla/dormirnos — we had trouble persuading her/getting to sleep
cuesta un poco/mucho acostumbrarse — it's not easy/it's very hard to get used to
¿te costó mucho encontrarlo? — did you have much trouble finding it?
* * *= cost.Nota: Verbo irregular: pasado y participio cost.Ex. The Mansell pre-1956 imprint catalog, in 604 volumes, is being edited at the rate of 20,000 entries a week, and is costing $1 million per year to edit.----* costar + Cantidad = run into + Cantidad.* costar dinero = cost + money, take + money.* costar el oro y el moro = cost + the earth, cost + an arm and a leg, cost + a pretty penny, cost + a fortune.* costar la vida = cost + life.* costar muchísimo dinero = break + the bank.* costar mucho trabajo = have + a tough time, have + a hard time.* costar poquísimo = pay + peanuts.* costar trabajo = have + Posesivo + work cut out for + Pronombre, have + Posesivo + job cut out for + Pronombre.* costar una fortuna = cost + a fortune.* costar un dineral = break + the bank, cost + an arm and a leg, cost + a fortune.* costar un montón = cost + a bundle.* costar un ojo de la cara = cost + the earth, cost + an arm and a leg, cost + a pretty penny, cost + a fortune.* costar un riñón = cost + an arm and a leg, cost + the earth, pay through + the nose, cost + a fortune.* cueste lo que cueste = at any cost, at all costs, at any price.* quien algo quiere algo le cuesta = no pain, no gain.* todo cuesta algo = nothing comes without a cost.* * *1.verbo transitivo1) ( en dinero) to cost¿cuánto me costará arreglarlo? — how much will it be o cost to fix it?
2) ( en perjuicios) (+ me/te/le etc)3) ( en esfuerzo)¿qué te cuesta hacerlo? — go on, why don't you do it?
me cuesta trabajo creerlo — I find it hard o difficult to believe
2.lo logró, pero le costó lo suyo — he managed it in the end, but not without a struggle
costar vi1) ( en dinero) to costel reloj me costó caro/barato — the watch cost a lot/didn't cost much
2) ( resultar perjudicial)3) ( resultar difícil)me cuesta creerlo — I find it hard o difficult to believe
nos costó convencerla/dormirnos — we had trouble persuading her/getting to sleep
cuesta un poco/mucho acostumbrarse — it's not easy/it's very hard to get used to
¿te costó mucho encontrarlo? — did you have much trouble finding it?
* * *= cost.Nota: Verbo irregular: pasado y participio cost.Ex: The Mansell pre-1956 imprint catalog, in 604 volumes, is being edited at the rate of 20,000 entries a week, and is costing $1 million per year to edit.
* costar + Cantidad = run into + Cantidad.* costar dinero = cost + money, take + money.* costar el oro y el moro = cost + the earth, cost + an arm and a leg, cost + a pretty penny, cost + a fortune.* costar la vida = cost + life.* costar muchísimo dinero = break + the bank.* costar mucho trabajo = have + a tough time, have + a hard time.* costar poquísimo = pay + peanuts.* costar trabajo = have + Posesivo + work cut out for + Pronombre, have + Posesivo + job cut out for + Pronombre.* costar una fortuna = cost + a fortune.* costar un dineral = break + the bank, cost + an arm and a leg, cost + a fortune.* costar un montón = cost + a bundle.* costar un ojo de la cara = cost + the earth, cost + an arm and a leg, cost + a pretty penny, cost + a fortune.* costar un riñón = cost + an arm and a leg, cost + the earth, pay through + the nose, cost + a fortune.* cueste lo que cueste = at any cost, at all costs, at any price.* quien algo quiere algo le cuesta = no pain, no gain.* todo cuesta algo = nothing comes without a cost.* * *vtA (en dinero) to cost¿cuánto te costó la maleta? how much did the suitcase cost you?, how much did you pay for the suitcase?¿cuánto or ( crit) qué costaron las entradas? how much were the tickets?, how much did the tickets cost?¿cuánto me costará arreglar el reloj? how much will it be o cost to fix my watch?B (en perjuicios) (+ me/te/le etc):el atentado que le costó la vida the attack in which he was killed, the attack which cost him his lifeel accidente le costó una pierna he lost a leg in the accidentle costó el puesto it cost him his jobel robo le costó 10 años de cárcel he got 10 years for the robbery¿qué te cuesta invitarla? go on, why don't you invite her?C(en esfuerzo): me ha costado mucho trabajo llegar hasta aquí it has taken me a lot of hard work to get this farme cuesta trabajo creerlo I find it hard o difficult to believeme costó varias noches sin dormir I lost several nights' sleep over ital fin lo logró — sí, pero le costó lo suyo he managed it in the end — yes, but not without a struggleme costó sangre, sudor y lágrimas terminarlo a tiempo I sweated blood to get it finished on time¿tanto te cuesta pedir perdón? is it really so hard for you to say sorry?cueste lo que cueste at all costs, no matter whatD ( esp Esp) ‹tiempo› to takeme cuesta 45 minutos llegar a la oficina it takes me 45 minutes to get to the office■ costarviA (en dinero) to costel bolso me costó barato/caro the bag was cheap/expensive, the bag didn't cost much/cost a lotB(resultar perjudicial): esto te va a costar caro you're going to pay dearly for thisC(resultar difícil): me cuesta creerlo I find it hard o difficult to believenos costó convencerla it wasn't easy to persuade her, we had trouble o difficulty persuading hercuesta, pero uno se va acostumbrando it's not easy, but you get used to it¿te ha costado mucho encontrar la casa? did you have much trouble o problem finding the house?le cuesta mucho la física he finds physics very difficult o hard* * *
costar ( conjugate costar) verbo transitivo
◊ ¿cuánto me costará arreglarlo? how much will it cost to fix it?b) ( en perjuicios):
le costó el puesto it cost him his jobc) ( en esfuerzo):
cuesta abrirlo it's hard to open;
me cuesta trabajo creerlo I find it hard o difficult to believe
verbo intransitivo
b) ( resultar perjudicial):
c) ( resultar difícil):
no te cuesta nada intentarlo it won't do you any harm to give it a try;
la física le cuesta he finds physics difficult;
me costó dormirme I had trouble getting to sleep
costar verbo transitivo & verbo intransitivo
1 (tener un precio) to cost: ¿cuánto dinero te costó?, how much did it cost you?
2 (llevar tiempo) to take
3 (ser trabajoso) me cuesta hablar alemán, I find it difficult to speak German
nos costó mucho conseguir el empleo, it was really hard to get the job
♦ Locuciones: figurado te va a costar caro, you'll pay dearly for this
cueste lo que cueste, cost what it may
' costar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
ojo
- riñón
- salir
- valer
- barato
- barbaridad
- cuánto
English:
be
- bomb
- come to
- cost
- set back
- lose
* * *costar vi1. [dinero] to cost;¿cuánto cuesta? how much is it?;me costó 300 pesos it cost me 300 pesos;costó muy barato it was very cheap;costar caro: esa broma le va a costar caro he's going to pay dearly for that joke2. [tiempo] to take;nos costó seis horas llegar it took us six hours to get there;rellenar ese impreso no te costará ni cinco minutos it won't take you five minutes to fill in that forma este niño le cuesta dormirse this child has difficulty getting to sleep;no le habría costado nada ayudarme it wouldn't have cost him anything to help me;costar trabajo to be difficult, to take a lot of work;me costó (trabajo) acostumbrarme it took me a while to get used to it;cuesta (trabajo) abrir esa puerta this door is difficult to open;le costó mucho tiempo olvidarse de ella it took him a long time to forget her;cueste lo que cueste whatever the cost;le costó la vida/el trabajo it cost him his life/his job;me costó lo mío convencerles I had a real job persuading them, they took a lot of persuading;me costó sangre, sudor y lágrimas terminarlo I sweated blood to get it finished;nos costó Dios y ayuda it took a huge effort* * *I v/t1 en dinero cost;¿cuánto cuesta? how much does it cost?II v/i1 en dinero cost;cueste lo que cueste at all costs;costar caro fig cost dear2:me costó it was hard work* * *costar {19} v: to cost¿cuánto cuesta?: how much does it cost?* * *costar vb¿cuánto te ha costado el billete? how much did your ticket cost?2. (resultar difícil) to be hard
См. также в других словарях:
six — six … Dictionnaire des rimes
six — [ sis ] adj. numér. et n. m. • XIIIe; sis 1080; lat. sex REM. Six se prononce [ si ] devant un nom commençant par une consonne; [ siz ] devant un nom commençant par une voyelle; [ sis ] dans les autres cas. I ♦ Adj. numér. card. Nombre entier… … Encyclopédie Universelle
Six — ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Bruno Six (1906–1984), deutscher Politiker (CDU) Daniel Six (auch: Daniël Sicx, Zix; 1620–1674), Kaufmann der Niederländischen Ostindien Kompanie (VOC) in Formosa, Arakan und Japan Didier Six (* 1954),… … Deutsch Wikipedia
six — six·ain; six·er; six·ern; six·foil; six·mo; six·pence; six·pen·ny; six·pen·ny·worth; six·some; six·teen·mo; six·ty·ish; six·ty·pen·ny; six; six·fold; six·teen; six·teenth; six·ti·eth; six·ty; six·ty·fold; … English syllables
six — [sıks] number, n [: Old English;] 1.) the number 6 ▪ six months ago ▪ She arrived just after six (=six o clock) . ▪ He learnt to play the violin when he was six (=six years old) . 2.) six figures/digits used to talk about a number that is between … Dictionary of contemporary English
six — SIX. adj. numeral de tout genre. Le nombre qui suit immediatement le nombre de cinq. Six hommes. six chevaux. carrosse à six chevaux. six pistoles. six escus, &c. Il est aussi quelquefois subst. Un six de chiffre. un six de carreau. joüer au… … Dictionnaire de l'Académie française
six — ► CARDINAL NUMBER 1) one more than five; 6. (Roman numeral: vi or VI.) 2) Cricket a hit that reaches the boundary without first striking the ground, scoring six runs. ● at sixes and sevens Cf. ↑at sixes and sevens ● … English terms dictionary
Six TV — Launched June 1999 Closed April 2009 Owned by Milestone Group Formerly called The Oxford Channel Availability … Wikipedia
six — Six, nom numeral, omn. gen. Contenant six unitez, Sex. Dont il est fait. Six ans, Seni anni. Six fois, Sexies. Six cens fois, Sexcenties. L an six cens, Anno vrbis sexcentesimo. Qui contient six, Senarius … Thresor de la langue françoyse
Six — Six, a. [AS. six, seox, siex; akin to OFries. sex, D. zes, OS. & OHG. sehs, G. sechs, Icel., Sw., & Dan. sex, Goth. sa[ i]hs, Lith. szeszi, Russ. sheste, Gael. & Ir. se, W. chwech, L. sex, Gr. ??, Per. shesh, Skr. shash. [root]304. Cf. {Hexagon} … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
SIX — Store, Köln SIX ist eine Marke des in Köln ansässigen Modeschmuckunternehmens beeline. Unter dem Namen SIX werden Modeschmuck, Piercings, sowie Silberschmuck, Textilaccessoires, Haarschmuck, Sonnenbrillen und modische Damenuhren verkauft. Neben… … Deutsch Wikipedia