-
1 enranciamiento
• staleness -
2 ranciedad
f.rancidity, rankness, rancidness, staleness.* * *1→ link=rancidez rancidez* * *= staleness.Nota: En Internet, usado para referirse al mayor o menor número de páginas que que recupera un buscador como respuesta a una búsqueda del usuario y que no están accesibles en ese momento.Ex. One aspect of this is the 'staleness' of Web search engines; that is, a search engine goes stale for users when a significant number of hits it returns at any given time point to Web pages that are no longer viable.* * *= staleness.Nota: En Internet, usado para referirse al mayor o menor número de páginas que que recupera un buscador como respuesta a una búsqueda del usuario y que no están accesibles en ese momento.Ex: One aspect of this is the 'staleness' of Web search engines; that is, a search engine goes stale for users when a significant number of hits it returns at any given time point to Web pages that are no longer viable.
* * *ranciedad nf[mal estado] [de mantequilla, aceite] rancidness; [de pan] staleness -
3 anquilosamiento
m.1 paralysis.2 stagnation (economy, science).3 anchylosis, paralysing, paralysis, ankylosis.* * *1 ankylosis, anchylosis2 figurado stagnation, paralysis* * ** * *= staleness, fossilisation [fossilization, -USA].Ex. One aspect of this is the 'staleness' of Web search engines; that is, a search engine goes stale for users when a significant number of hits it returns at any given time point to Web pages that are no longer viable.Ex. The article is entitled 'Avoiding fossilization: migrating information between databases'.* * ** * *= staleness, fossilisation [fossilization, -USA].Ex: One aspect of this is the 'staleness' of Web search engines; that is, a search engine goes stale for users when a significant number of hits it returns at any given time point to Web pages that are no longer viable.
Ex: The article is entitled 'Avoiding fossilization: migrating information between databases'.* * *1 (atrofia) ankylosis; (entumecimiento) stiffness2 (estancamiento) stagnation* * *
anquilosamiento sustantivo masculino ankylosis
* * *1. [de articulación] [parálisis] paralysis;[entumecimiento] stiffening2. [de economía, ciencia] stagnation* * *1) : stiffness (of joints)2) : stagnation, paralysis -
4 en un momento dado
= at a given point in time, at any one time, at any given point, at one particular time, at any given time, at any given moment, at a given moment in time, at a given momentEx. It is easy to install appropriate guiding at a given point in time.Ex. Any one document may be required by author, title, subject, form or other characteristics, but this one document can only be grouped according to one of these characteristics at any one time.Ex. Unlike alphabetical arrangement, systematic order is not self-evident, and indeed there may be differing views as to the best order at any given point.Ex. The inflexibility of notation tends to crystallize (fossilize!) the arrangement in a structure reflecting the approach to knowledge at one particular time.Ex. One aspect of this is the 'staleness' of Web search engines; that is, a search engine goes stale for users when a significant number of hits it returns at any given time point to Web pages that are no longer viable.Ex. At any given moment, several hundred titles are available in print, and dozes more are published each year = En un momento dado, hay varios cientos títulos disponibles y cada año aparecen otros tantos nuevos.Ex. Librarians have no control over the effect that a book will have on a particular reader at a given moment in time.Ex. The study attempts to find out the percentage of Web sites that on average remain accessible to the user at a given moment.* * *= at a given point in time, at any one time, at any given point, at one particular time, at any given time, at any given moment, at a given moment in time, at a given momentEx: It is easy to install appropriate guiding at a given point in time.
Ex: Any one document may be required by author, title, subject, form or other characteristics, but this one document can only be grouped according to one of these characteristics at any one time.Ex: Unlike alphabetical arrangement, systematic order is not self-evident, and indeed there may be differing views as to the best order at any given point.Ex: The inflexibility of notation tends to crystallize (fossilize!) the arrangement in a structure reflecting the approach to knowledge at one particular time.Ex: One aspect of this is the 'staleness' of Web search engines; that is, a search engine goes stale for users when a significant number of hits it returns at any given time point to Web pages that are no longer viable.Ex: At any given moment, several hundred titles are available in print, and dozes more are published each year = En un momento dado, hay varios cientos títulos disponibles y cada año aparecen otros tantos nuevos.Ex: Librarians have no control over the effect that a book will have on a particular reader at a given moment in time.Ex: The study attempts to find out the percentage of Web sites that on average remain accessible to the user at a given moment. -
5 tiempo de espera
(n.) = lead time, wait time, waiting time, waiting periodEx. Priority is awarded to projects aiming to cut down the lead time for exploiting newly discovered fields.Ex. This paper presents some extensions to the mechanism to reduce user wait times and decrease the staleness of returned WWW pages.Ex. The number of pages available for display is limited to about a hundred because of the acceptable waiting time for a page to be presented.Ex. This article presents a fuzzy system of determining the required waiting period after traffic accidents.* * *(n.) = lead time, wait time, waiting time, waiting periodEx: Priority is awarded to projects aiming to cut down the lead time for exploiting newly discovered fields.
Ex: This paper presents some extensions to the mechanism to reduce user wait times and decrease the staleness of returned WWW pages.Ex: The number of pages available for display is limited to about a hundred because of the acceptable waiting time for a page to be presented.Ex: This article presents a fuzzy system of determining the required waiting period after traffic accidents. -
6 deterioro
m.1 damage (daño).el deterioro de la situación the worsening of o deterioration in the situation2 deterioration, damage, impairment, staleness.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: deteriorar.* * *1 (daño) damage, deterioration; (desgaste) wear and tear2 figurado (empeoramiento) deterioration, worsening\ir en deterioro de to harm* * *noun m.1) worsening, decline2) deterioration, wear* * *SM1) (=daño) damagesin deterioro de sus derechos — without affecting his rights, without impinging on his rights más frm
2) (=empeoramiento) deterioration3) (Mec) wear and tear* * *a) (de edificio, muebles) deterioration, wearb) ( empeoramiento) deterioration, worsening* * *= damage, decay, deterioration, impairment, embrittlement, slippage, degradation, degeneration, rot, decline, rack and ruin, worsening, dilapidation.Ex. Wastage is sometimes defined as material which temporarily or permanently has evaded the usual lending procedures due to misplacement, damage, non-registration, theft or non-returns.Ex. Nevertheless, deacidification alone will not stop the decay unless soluble copper compounds are removed from the object or converted to chemically inert compounds.Ex. And thirdly and most importantly, I am concerned about some movements which I think symptomatize ideological deterioration and would have us, as someone put it, march boldly backwards into the future.Ex. A well-designed multimodal application can be used by people with a wide variety of impairments.Ex. This article considers the need for a survey of modern printed book collections, in the context of the embrittlement of book papers.Ex. The Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) also publishes FAO Books in Print on an intended annual cycle but the programme has been subject to slippage in recent years.Ex. This article describes how the property of chemiluminescence -- the faint emission of light from organic materials undergoing oxidisation -- may be used to measure the rate of degradation of paper.Ex. The article 'The degeneration of the work of man' examines the work of hunter/gathers, farmers, factory workers, and information handlers from the Ice Age to the Information Age.Ex. The article 'Stop the rot!' reports on a half-day seminar on audiovisual conservation.Ex. Library automation was in its ascendancy at precisely the same time that the nation's economy was firmly embarked on its present calamitous decline.Ex. The policies that the Mugabe government have taken have lead the country to economic and political rack and ruin.Ex. We have also considered other possible mechanisms to explain the worsening of hypokalemia in this patient.Ex. If Central Park is to be rescued from the general dilapidation it is much money and energy intelligently directed must be expended.----* acelerar el proceso de deterioro = hasten + rot.* deterioro biológico = biodeterioration.* deterioro cognitivo = cognitive impairment.* deterioro del CDROM = CD rot.* deterioro de los discos = disc rot.* deterioro de los enlaces = link rot.* deterioro de propiedad alquilada = dilapidation.* en deterioro = deteriorating, crumbling, decaying, dilapidated, disintegrating.* en estado de deterioro = decaying, dilapidated.* * *a) (de edificio, muebles) deterioration, wearb) ( empeoramiento) deterioration, worsening* * *= damage, decay, deterioration, impairment, embrittlement, slippage, degradation, degeneration, rot, decline, rack and ruin, worsening, dilapidation.Ex: Wastage is sometimes defined as material which temporarily or permanently has evaded the usual lending procedures due to misplacement, damage, non-registration, theft or non-returns.
Ex: Nevertheless, deacidification alone will not stop the decay unless soluble copper compounds are removed from the object or converted to chemically inert compounds.Ex: And thirdly and most importantly, I am concerned about some movements which I think symptomatize ideological deterioration and would have us, as someone put it, march boldly backwards into the future.Ex: A well-designed multimodal application can be used by people with a wide variety of impairments.Ex: This article considers the need for a survey of modern printed book collections, in the context of the embrittlement of book papers.Ex: The Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) also publishes FAO Books in Print on an intended annual cycle but the programme has been subject to slippage in recent years.Ex: This article describes how the property of chemiluminescence -- the faint emission of light from organic materials undergoing oxidisation -- may be used to measure the rate of degradation of paper.Ex: The article 'The degeneration of the work of man' examines the work of hunter/gathers, farmers, factory workers, and information handlers from the Ice Age to the Information Age.Ex: The article 'Stop the rot!' reports on a half-day seminar on audiovisual conservation.Ex: Library automation was in its ascendancy at precisely the same time that the nation's economy was firmly embarked on its present calamitous decline.Ex: The policies that the Mugabe government have taken have lead the country to economic and political rack and ruin.Ex: We have also considered other possible mechanisms to explain the worsening of hypokalemia in this patient.Ex: If Central Park is to be rescued from the general dilapidation it is much money and energy intelligently directed must be expended.* acelerar el proceso de deterioro = hasten + rot.* deterioro biológico = biodeterioration.* deterioro cognitivo = cognitive impairment.* deterioro del CDROM = CD rot.* deterioro de los discos = disc rot.* deterioro de los enlaces = link rot.* deterioro de propiedad alquilada = dilapidation.* en deterioro = deteriorating, crumbling, decaying, dilapidated, disintegrating.* en estado de deterioro = decaying, dilapidated.* * *1 (de un edificio, muebles) deterioration, wear2 (empeoramiento) deterioration, worseningel deterioro de las relaciones entre los dos países the deterioration in relations o the worsening of relations between the two countriessu salud ha sufrido un considerable deterioro his health has deteriorated considerablyel deterioro de la calidad de la enseñanza the decline in the quality of education* * *
Del verbo deteriorar: ( conjugate deteriorar)
deterioro es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
deterioró es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo
Multiple Entries:
deteriorar
deterioro
deteriorar ( conjugate deteriorar) verbo transitivo ‹relaciones/salud/situación› to cause … to deteriorate
deteriorarse verbo pronominal [relaciones/salud/situación] to deteriorate, worsen;
[ mercancías] to get damaged
deterioro sustantivo masculino
deteriorar verbo transitivo to spoil, damage
deterioro sustantivo masculino
1 (de la salud, las relaciones, etc) deterioration: he notado un marcado deterioro en su estado de salud, I've noticed that her health has deteriorated considerably
2 (de un cuadro, edificio) damage: estos edificios han sufrido un deterioro notable, these buildings have deteriorated quite a bit
(de una máquina, zapatos, etc) wear: es normal que después de un uso intensivo los zapatos muestren señales de deterioro, it's normal for shoes to show wear and tear after constant use
' deterioro' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
causa
- daño
- decadencia
- frenar
English:
damage
- decline
- deterioration
- decay
- degeneration
* * *deterioro nm1. [daño] damage;sufrir deterioro to be damaged;la mercancía no sufrió deterioro alguno the goods were not damaged at all2. [empeoramiento] deterioration;las relaciones entre ambos países han experimentado un serio deterioro relations between the two countries have deteriorated considerably;el deterioro de la situación the worsening of o deterioration in the situation;el progresivo deterioro de los servicios públicos the progressive deterioration in public services;el deterioro medioambiental the deterioration of the environment* * *m deterioration* * *deterioro nm1) : deterioration, wear2) : worsening, decline -
7 dureza
f.1 hardness.2 harshness.3 callus, patch of hard skin.* * *1 hardness, toughness2 figurado (de carácter) toughness, harshness, severity3 (callosidad) corn\dureza de corazón hardheartedness, callousness* * *SF1) (=resistencia) [de mineral, roca, agua] hardness; [de carne] toughness2) (=agresividad) [de clima, régimen, crítica] harshness, severity; [de deporte, juego] roughness; [de ataque] fierceness; [de castigo, multa, sentencia] severity, harshnesscon dureza: los delitos serán castigados con dureza — any offence will be severely punished
3) [de tarea, prueba, examen] hardness4) (=fortaleza) hardiness, strengthla dureza de las mujeres campesinas — the hardiness o strength of country women
5) (=callo) callus* * *1) (de mineral, del agua) hardness; ( de material) hardness, toughness; ( de la carne) toughness2)a) (severidad, inflexibilidad) harshnessb) ( en el deporte) roughness* * *= hardness, harshness, ruggedness.Ex. Hardness and the penetration of the ink layer into the paper were also measured = También se midió la solidez y la penetración de la tinta en el papel.Ex. Ghobadi does not flinch from confronting the harshness of daily life in Iran in this portrayal of a small village high in the mountains.Ex. In the 10-year gap between the publication of her first book and her second, she stretched her imagination to match the diversity and ruggedness of America.----* con dureza = harshly.* * *1) (de mineral, del agua) hardness; ( de material) hardness, toughness; ( de la carne) toughness2)a) (severidad, inflexibilidad) harshnessb) ( en el deporte) roughness* * *= hardness, harshness, ruggedness.Ex: Hardness and the penetration of the ink layer into the paper were also measured = También se midió la solidez y la penetración de la tinta en el papel.
Ex: Ghobadi does not flinch from confronting the harshness of daily life in Iran in this portrayal of a small village high in the mountains.Ex: In the 10-year gap between the publication of her first book and her second, she stretched her imagination to match the diversity and ruggedness of America.* con dureza = harshly.* * *A2 (de una luz) harshness3 (del agua) hardnessB (callosidad) callusC1 (severidad, inflexibilidad) harshnessnos trataban con dureza they treated us harshlyfue castigado con dureza he was severely punishedme miró con dureza he gave me a stern look2 (en el deporte) roughness* * *
dureza sustantivo femenino
1 ( en general) hardness;
( de la carne) toughness
2
fue castigado con dureza he was severely punished
dureza sustantivo femenino
1 hardness
(de una persona) harshness, severity
2 (en las manos, en los pies) callus
' dureza' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
rigor
- tralla
- vapulear
- suavizar
English:
hardness
- sharply
* * *dureza nf1. [de objeto, material, superficie, colchón, cama, sofá] hardness;[de carne] toughness; [de pan] staleness3. [de agua] hardness4. [de clima, invierno] harshness, severity5. [severidad, aspereza] [de persona] harshness;[de críticas, acciones] harshness, severity; [de juego, partido] roughness;la criticó/reprendió con dureza he criticized/reprimanded her harshly;la dureza de la entrada le cortó la respiración the tackle was so hard it left him gasping for breath;la violencia racista debe ser castigada con dureza racist violence must be severely punished;el árbitro permitió demasiada dureza en el juego the referee allowed the game to get too rough6. [fortaleza, resistencia] strength7. [callosidad] callus, patch of hard skin;tener durezas en las manos/los pies to have calluses on the hands/feet* * *f2 de clima, figharshness* * *dureza nf1) : hardness, toughness2) : severity, harshness -
8 rancidez SF
1) [de vino] age, mellowness; [de mantequilla, tocino] staleness2) (=antigüedad) great age, antiquity; pey antiquatedness -
9 ranciedad SF
1) [de vino] age, mellowness; [de mantequilla, tocino] staleness2) (=antigüedad) great age, antiquity; pey antiquatedness -
10 ranciedad
• rancidity• rancidness• staleness -
11 enranciamiento
m.staleness. -
12 sobreentrenamiento
m.overtraining, staleness.
См. также в других словарях:
Staleness — Stale ness, n. The quality or state of being stale. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
staleness — index disuse Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
staleness — stale ► ADJECTIVE (staler, stalest) 1) (of food) no longer fresh or pleasant to eat. 2) no longer new and interesting. 3) no longer performing well because of having done something for too long. ► VERB ▪ make or become stale. DERIVATIVES … English terms dictionary
staleness — noun see stale I … New Collegiate Dictionary
staleness — See stalely. * * * … Universalium
staleness — noun a) The state or quality of being stale. b) The result or product of being stale … Wiktionary
staleness — stale·ness || steɪlnɪs n. lack of freshness, oldness, dryness, moldiness … English contemporary dictionary
staleness — stale·ness … English syllables
staleness — See: stale … English dictionary
staleness — noun 1. unoriginality as a result of being dull and hackneyed • Syn: ↑triteness • Derivationally related forms: ↑stale, ↑trite (for: ↑triteness) • Hypernyms: ↑ … Useful english dictionary
Insane Clown Posse — ICP, 2010. Surnom ICP Inner City Posse JJ Boyz Pays d’origine Détroit (Michigan) … Wikipédia en Français