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1 cuidar
cuidar ( conjugate cuidar) verbo transitivo ‹ niño› to look after, take care of; ‹ enfermo› to care for, look after verbo intransitivo cuidar de algo/algn to take care of sth/sb; cuidarse verbo pronominal ( refl) to take care of oneself, look after oneself; ¡cuídate! take care!; se cuidó bien de no volver por ahí he made very sure he didn't go back there; cuídate de decir algo que te comprometa take care not to say something which might compromise you
cuidar verbo transitivo & verbo intransitivo (vigilar, atender) to care for, look after: cuida tu ortografía, mind your spelling cuida de que tu hermano vaya pronto a la cama, make sure that your brother goes to bed soon ' cuidar' also found in these entries: Spanish: fregado - mirar - tratar - velar - criar - cuidado - enfermo - línea - vigilar English: attend - attend to - baby-sit - care - care for - grouse - house-sit - look after - mind - mother - notion - nurse - tend - watch - baby - eye - look - minister - nurture - scrimp -
2 derive
1. verb( with from)1) (to come or develop from: The word `derives' is derived from an old French word.) derivar2) (to draw or take from (a source or origin): We derive comfort from his presence.) sacar, recibir•- derivative
2. noun(a word, substance etc formed from another word, substance etc: `Reader' is a derivative of `read'.) derivadotr[dɪ'raɪv]1 (get, obtain) sacar, recibir■ we can derive comfort from the fact that he is still in good health es un consuelo para nosotros que aún esté bien de salud\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALL1) obtain: obtener, sacar2) deduce: deducir, inferirderive vi: provenir, derivar, procederv.• deducir (Matemática) v.• derivar v.dɪ'raɪv
1.
to derive something FROM something: children can derive great enjoyment from the simplest things las cosas más simples pueden dar enorme placer a un niño; penicillin is derived from mold la penicilina se obtiene (a partir) del moho; the name is derived from the Greek — el nombre viene or deriva del griego
2.
vi1) ( stem from)to derive FROM something — \<\<attitude/problem\>\> provenir* de algo; \<\<idea\>\> tener* su origen en algo
2) ( Ling)[dɪ'raɪv]1.it derives its name or its name is derived from the Latin word "linum" — su nombre viene or procede del latín "linum"
derived demand — demanda f indirecta
2.VIto derive from — [word, name] proceder de, venir de; [view, notion] basarse en; [problem, power, fortune] provenir de
* * *[dɪ'raɪv]
1.
to derive something FROM something: children can derive great enjoyment from the simplest things las cosas más simples pueden dar enorme placer a un niño; penicillin is derived from mold la penicilina se obtiene (a partir) del moho; the name is derived from the Greek — el nombre viene or deriva del griego
2.
vi1) ( stem from)to derive FROM something — \<\<attitude/problem\>\> provenir* de algo; \<\<idea\>\> tener* su origen en algo
2) ( Ling)
См. также в других словарях:
take\ a\ notion — • take (it) into one s head • take a notion informal v. phr. To get a sudden idea; decide without thinking. The boy suddenly took it into his head to leave school and get a job. Grandmother keeps a bag packed so that she can go visiting whenever… … Словарь американских идиом
take a notion — See: TAKE INTO ONE S HEAD … Dictionary of American idioms
take a notion — See: TAKE INTO ONE S HEAD … Dictionary of American idioms
take\ into\ one's\ head — • take (it) into one s head • take a notion informal v. phr. To get a sudden idea; decide without thinking. The boy suddenly took it into his head to leave school and get a job. Grandmother keeps a bag packed so that she can go visiting whenever… … Словарь американских идиом
take\ it\ into\ one's\ head — • take (it) into one s head • take a notion informal v. phr. To get a sudden idea; decide without thinking. The boy suddenly took it into his head to leave school and get a job. Grandmother keeps a bag packed so that she can go visiting whenever… … Словарь американских идиом
notion — See: HALF A MIND also HALF A NOTION, TAKE INTO ONE S HEAD or TAKE A NOTION … Dictionary of American idioms
notion — See: HALF A MIND also HALF A NOTION, TAKE INTO ONE S HEAD or TAKE A NOTION … Dictionary of American idioms
notion — See: half a mind also half a notion, take into one s head or take a notion … Словарь американских идиом
take it into one's head — or {informal}[take a notion] {v. phr.} To get a sudden idea; decide without thinking. * /The boy suddenly took it into his head to leave school and get a job./ * /Grandmother keeps a bag packed so that she can go visiting whenever she takes a… … Dictionary of American idioms
take it into one's head — or {informal}[take a notion] {v. phr.} To get a sudden idea; decide without thinking. * /The boy suddenly took it into his head to leave school and get a job./ * /Grandmother keeps a bag packed so that she can go visiting whenever she takes a… … Dictionary of American idioms
take it into one's head — 1. To conceive the (esp wrong or foolish) notion, believe (with that) 2. To conceive the (esp misguided) intention of (with to) • • • Main Entry: ↑head … Useful english dictionary