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101 comuna
f.1 commune.2 town, municipality.* * *1 commune* * *SF1) (=comunidad) commune2) LAm (=municipio) municipality, county (EEUU)* * *1) ( de convivencia) commune2) (CS, Per) ( municipio) town, municipality (frml)* * *= commune.Ex. Some librarians have found opposition to the setting up of 'alternative rooms' containing 'movement publications and trade books on women's and gay liberation, the third world, imperialism, yoga, rock music, the draft, prisons, the counter-culture, communes, social change'.* * *1) ( de convivencia) commune2) (CS, Per) ( municipio) town, municipality (frml)* * *= commune.Ex: Some librarians have found opposition to the setting up of 'alternative rooms' containing 'movement publications and trade books on women's and gay liberation, the third world, imperialism, yoga, rock music, the draft, prisons, the counter-culture, communes, social change'.
* * *A (de convivencia) commune* * *
comuna sustantivo femenino
comuna sustantivo femenino commune
' comuna' also found in these entries:
English:
commune
* * *comuna nf1. [colectividad] communeHist la Comuna de París the Paris Commune2. Am [municipalidad] municipality* * *f1 commune2 L.Am. ( población) town* * *comuna nf: commune -
102 de precio fijo
(adj.) = fixed-priceEx. This study found that online access to scientific serials is most appropriate in the third world, principally due to the presence of a small number of scientists with a broad range of interests which makes the fixed-price regimes of print, microform or CD-ROM disadvantageous.* * *(adj.) = fixed-priceEx: This study found that online access to scientific serials is most appropriate in the third world, principally due to the presence of a small number of scientists with a broad range of interests which makes the fixed-price regimes of print, microform or CD-ROM disadvantageous.
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103 dejarse llevar
v.1 to get carried away, to be moved, to be carried away, to be carried away with emotion.Ellos se dejaron llevar por la ira They got carried away with anger.2 to let oneself be led without resistance, to go without resistance.El chico se dejó llevar a la casa The kid let himself be led without...3 to sway.* * *(v.) = become + carried away by, drift along, drift, coast along, go with + the flow, let + go, go along with + the flowEx. It is easy to become carried away by the sheer size of the so-called 'information explosion' and to regard the growth of literature as a phenomenon as threatening to civilization as a virulent epidemic or the 'population explosion' in the third world.Ex. The group of employees seems to ' drift along'.Ex. Now that libraries have been catapulted out of the ice age by the online catalogue, they cannot afford to drift through the strong, variable winds of technological change.Ex. Unless more of us refuse to be content to coast along, living off the fat of the land and leaving others to pay the tab, there is no guarantee that America will be a better place for our children than it was for us.Ex. The author takes this case as a model to illustrate how academic libraries can go with the flow instead of being swept upstream.Ex. To be the life and soul of a party or social gathering requires you to come out of your shell and let go.Ex. Finally, we have someone who is not just folding his arms and going along with the flow.* * *(v.) = become + carried away by, drift along, drift, coast along, go with + the flow, let + go, go along with + the flowEx: It is easy to become carried away by the sheer size of the so-called 'information explosion' and to regard the growth of literature as a phenomenon as threatening to civilization as a virulent epidemic or the 'population explosion' in the third world.
Ex: The group of employees seems to ' drift along'.Ex: Now that libraries have been catapulted out of the ice age by the online catalogue, they cannot afford to drift through the strong, variable winds of technological change.Ex: Unless more of us refuse to be content to coast along, living off the fat of the land and leaving others to pay the tab, there is no guarantee that America will be a better place for our children than it was for us.Ex: The author takes this case as a model to illustrate how academic libraries can go with the flow instead of being swept upstream.Ex: To be the life and soul of a party or social gathering requires you to come out of your shell and let go.Ex: Finally, we have someone who is not just folding his arms and going along with the flow. -
104 desfavorable
adj.1 unfavorable.2 unfavourable, infaust.* * *► adjetivo1 unfavourable (US unfavorable)* * *adj.unfavorable, adverse* * *ADJ unfavourable, unfavorable (EEUU)* * *adjetivo <circunstancia/crítica/opinión> unfavorable** * *= unfavourable [unfavorable, -USA], disadvantageous, dissatisfying.Ex. There is evidence of this in the events leading up to the unfavourable subject weighting adopted by the National Advisory Board in respect of librarianship and information work resourcing.Ex. This study found that online access to scientific serials is most appropriate in the third world, principally due to the presence of a small number of scientists with a broad range of interests which makes the fixed-price regimes of print, microform or CD-ROM disadvantageous.Ex. 21 per cent of respondents were unable to think of anything dissatisfying about their job.----* probabilidades desfavorables = odds against.* * *adjetivo <circunstancia/crítica/opinión> unfavorable** * *= unfavourable [unfavorable, -USA], disadvantageous, dissatisfying.Ex: There is evidence of this in the events leading up to the unfavourable subject weighting adopted by the National Advisory Board in respect of librarianship and information work resourcing.
Ex: This study found that online access to scientific serials is most appropriate in the third world, principally due to the presence of a small number of scientists with a broad range of interests which makes the fixed-price regimes of print, microform or CD-ROM disadvantageous.Ex: 21 per cent of respondents were unable to think of anything dissatisfying about their job.* probabilidades desfavorables = odds against.* * *‹circunstancia/crítica/opinión› unfavorable*el tiempo nos ha sido desfavorable we have had unfavorable o adverse weather conditions, the weather hasn't been on our side o hasn't been kind to us ( colloq)* * *
desfavorable adjetivo
unfavorable( conjugate unfavorable);
desfavorable adjetivo unfavourable, US unfavorable
' desfavorable' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
temor
English:
adverse
- disadvantageous
- go against
- inauspicious
- unfavorable
- unfavourable
- go
- unsympathetic
* * *desfavorable adjunfavourable;en condiciones desfavorables in unfavourable o adverse conditions;navegar con tiempo desfavorable to sail in unfavourable o adverse weather conditions;la reacción de la crítica le fue desfavorable the critics' reaction was largely negative* * *adj unfavorable, Brunfavourable* * *desfavorable adj: unfavorable, adverse♦ desfavorablemente adv* * *desfavorable adj unfavourable -
105 desventajoso
adj.disadvantageous, unfavourable, unfavorable, unprofitable.* * *► adjetivo1 disadvantageous, unfavourable (US unfavorable)* * *ADJ disadvantageous, unfavourable, unfavorable (EEUU)* * *Ex. This study found that online access to scientific serials is most appropriate in the third world, principally due to the presence of a small number of scientists with a broad range of interests which makes the fixed-price regimes of print, microform or CD-ROM disadvantageous.* * *Ex: This study found that online access to scientific serials is most appropriate in the third world, principally due to the presence of a small number of scientists with a broad range of interests which makes the fixed-price regimes of print, microform or CD-ROM disadvantageous.
* * *desventajoso, -a adjdisadvantageous, unfavourable* * *adj disadvantageous* * *desventajoso, -sa adj: disadvantageous, unfavorable -
106 distanciamiento
m.1 distance, coldness (afectivo).2 separation, isolation, coming apart, distance.* * *1 distancing, separation* * *SM1) (=acto) spacing out2) (=estado) remoteness, isolation3) (=distancia) distance4) (Teat, Literat) distancing effect* * *se nota un cierto distanciamiento entre ellos — they seem to have grown o drifted apart
* * *= remoteness, rift, estrangement, move away from, aloofness, distancing.Ex. Their expressed concern is far more with his remoteness, unresponsiveness, lack of sympathy, glibness, or dogmatism.Ex. Chief among these challenges is the technological rift that exists between the Third World and on-line systems that have their roots in technologically advanced societies.Ex. The key will be to minimize the problems of estrangement and contradiction caused by economic, political, social and cultural imbalances and differences, through greater cultural information dissemination and exchange.Ex. This is a radical move away from the accepted principle of using the actual item as the primary source of cataloguing data.Ex. Social distance, the aloofness and unapproachability of persons of different social strata, is both a symbol of class standing.Ex. Visual problems may be overcome by the correct distancing of screen and keyboard.----* distanciamiento cada vez mayor entre... y = widening of the gap beween.... and, widening gap between... and.* distanciamiento de = swing away from.* orden judicial de distanciamiento = restraining order.* * *se nota un cierto distanciamiento entre ellos — they seem to have grown o drifted apart
* * *= remoteness, rift, estrangement, move away from, aloofness, distancing.Ex: Their expressed concern is far more with his remoteness, unresponsiveness, lack of sympathy, glibness, or dogmatism.
Ex: Chief among these challenges is the technological rift that exists between the Third World and on-line systems that have their roots in technologically advanced societies.Ex: The key will be to minimize the problems of estrangement and contradiction caused by economic, political, social and cultural imbalances and differences, through greater cultural information dissemination and exchange.Ex: This is a radical move away from the accepted principle of using the actual item as the primary source of cataloguing data.Ex: Social distance, the aloofness and unapproachability of persons of different social strata, is both a symbol of class standing.Ex: Visual problems may be overcome by the correct distancing of screen and keyboard.* distanciamiento cada vez mayor entre... y = widening of the gap beween.... and, widening gap between... and.* distanciamiento de = swing away from.* orden judicial de distanciamiento = restraining order.* * *(acción) distancing(efecto): se nota un cierto distanciamiento entre ellos they seem to have grown o drifted apart* * *
distanciamiento sustantivo masculino distancing: ha habido un distanciamiento entre ellos, they've grown apart
' distanciamiento' also found in these entries:
English:
rift
* * *1. [afectivo] distance, coldness;con los años, se produjo un distanciamiento entre ellos as the years passed, they grew apart;ver un asunto con cierto distanciamiento to consider an issue with a certain detachment2. [de opiniones, posturas] distancing;se ha dado un claro distanciamiento de posturas entre ambos bandos the two sides have adopted more clearly opposing positions* * ** * *1) : distancing2) : rift, estrangement -
107 en igualdad de condiciones
= other things being equal, on equal terms, one of equals, ceteris paribus, in a tie, on an equal footing, on an equal basis, all (other) things being equalEx. Other things being equal, the capability of a service will tend to increase as the resources devoted to it increase.Ex. Rather than take a whole lot of time on this, let me utter a brief commercial on behalf of a book which addresses precisely this area of women-related headings, Joan Marshall's 'On Equal Terms'.Ex. Above all, the relationship between Western experts and the Third World must be one of equal partners, not of donor and recipient.Ex. It is seen that open access to land can lead to overpopulation in a ceteris paribus sense.Ex. In a tie, the data suggests the nod would go to search engines = En igualdad de condiciones, los datos nos dan a entender que serían los buscadores los que ganarían el pulso, en última instancia.Ex. With a payment system the consumer controls production, and all goods compete on an equal footing.Ex. All appropriate measures shall be taken to establish adequate legal protection of the rights of women on an equal basis with men.Ex. Some of the modern evidence supporting the law of demand shows that, all other things being equal, when the price of a good rises, the amount of it demanded decreases.* * *= other things being equal, on equal terms, one of equals, ceteris paribus, in a tie, on an equal footing, on an equal basis, all (other) things being equalEx: Other things being equal, the capability of a service will tend to increase as the resources devoted to it increase.
Ex: Rather than take a whole lot of time on this, let me utter a brief commercial on behalf of a book which addresses precisely this area of women-related headings, Joan Marshall's 'On Equal Terms'.Ex: Above all, the relationship between Western experts and the Third World must be one of equal partners, not of donor and recipient.Ex: It is seen that open access to land can lead to overpopulation in a ceteris paribus sense.Ex: In a tie, the data suggests the nod would go to search engines = En igualdad de condiciones, los datos nos dan a entender que serían los buscadores los que ganarían el pulso, en última instancia.Ex: With a payment system the consumer controls production, and all goods compete on an equal footing.Ex: All appropriate measures shall be taken to establish adequate legal protection of the rights of women on an equal basis with men.Ex: Some of the modern evidence supporting the law of demand shows that, all other things being equal, when the price of a good rises, the amount of it demanded decreases. -
108 encontrar oposición
(v.) = meet with + opposition, find + oppositionEx. The ruling, which spells out academic requirements for athletes who play at universities, has met with much opposition, the primary criticism being that the ruling is racially discriminatory.Ex. Some librarians have found opposition to the setting up of 'alternative rooms' containing 'movement publications and trade books on women's and gay liberation, the third world, imperialism, yoga, rock music, the draft, prisons, the counter-culture, communes, social change'.* * *(v.) = meet with + opposition, find + oppositionEx: The ruling, which spells out academic requirements for athletes who play at universities, has met with much opposition, the primary criticism being that the ruling is racially discriminatory.
Ex: Some librarians have found opposition to the setting up of 'alternative rooms' containing 'movement publications and trade books on women's and gay liberation, the third world, imperialism, yoga, rock music, the draft, prisons, the counter-culture, communes, social change'. -
109 enfrentarse a un reto
(v.) = face + challenge, meet + challenge, undertake + challenge, handle + challenge, confront + challengeEx. While on-line systems possess the potential to fill a majority of Third World information gaps, they face tremendous practical challenges in these areas.Ex. They have to be reformed into organizations better fitted to meet the challenges of technology-dominated futures.Ex. When the students undertook the challenge of preparing cumulative author and subject indexes for the first ten volumes of the bulletin, they decided to invent procedures that would take advantage of the data base already available in the National Library of Medicine's MEDLINE.Ex. The author claims that by skirting the issue in the past with their video collections librarians have left themselves ill equipped to handle these new challenge.Ex. It is very important to establish information networks as a mechanism to confront the challenges presented by the 'information explosion'.* * *(v.) = face + challenge, meet + challenge, undertake + challenge, handle + challenge, confront + challengeEx: While on-line systems possess the potential to fill a majority of Third World information gaps, they face tremendous practical challenges in these areas.
Ex: They have to be reformed into organizations better fitted to meet the challenges of technology-dominated futures.Ex: When the students undertook the challenge of preparing cumulative author and subject indexes for the first ten volumes of the bulletin, they decided to invent procedures that would take advantage of the data base already available in the National Library of Medicine's MEDLINE.Ex: The author claims that by skirting the issue in the past with their video collections librarians have left themselves ill equipped to handle these new challenge.Ex: It is very important to establish information networks as a mechanism to confront the challenges presented by the 'information explosion'. -
110 escisión
f.1 scission, split, schism, division.2 scission, cleave, abscission.* * *1 split, division2 FÍSICA fission3 MEDICINA excision* * *SF1) (=división) split, division2) (Med) excision frm, surgical removal* * *femenino split* * *= fission, rift, splinter.Ex. New topics develop not merely by fission -- the splitting up of established subjects -- but also by fusion -- the merging of previously distinct subjects.Ex. Chief among these challenges is the technological rift that exists between the Third World and on-line systems that have their roots in technologically advanced societies.Ex. However, others see the splinters in the discipline as a step in its revitalization.* * *femenino split* * *= fission, rift, splinter.Ex: New topics develop not merely by fission -- the splitting up of established subjects -- but also by fusion -- the merging of previously distinct subjects.
Ex: Chief among these challenges is the technological rift that exists between the Third World and on-line systems that have their roots in technologically advanced societies.Ex: However, others see the splinters in the discipline as a step in its revitalization.* * *1 (división) split, division2 (separación) split* * *
escisión sustantivo femenino split
' escisión' also found in these entries:
English:
rift
- split
- break
* * *escisión nf1. [del átomo] splitting2. [de partido político] split* * *f1 ( fragmentación) split2 ( segregación) break* * *1) : split, division2) : excision -
111 estudios afroamericanos
(n.) = black studiesEx. The bookshop also has sections on feminism, black studies, third world countries and many more topics.* * *(n.) = black studiesEx: The bookshop also has sections on feminism, black studies, third world countries and many more topics.
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112 exasperarse por
(v.) = become + carried away byEx. It is easy to become carried away by the sheer size of the so-called 'information explosion' and to regard the growth of literature as a phenomenon as threatening to civilization as a virulent epidemic or the 'population explosion' in the third world.* * *(v.) = become + carried away byEx: It is easy to become carried away by the sheer size of the so-called 'information explosion' and to regard the growth of literature as a phenomenon as threatening to civilization as a virulent epidemic or the 'population explosion' in the third world.
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113 fomento
m.encouragement, fostering.Ministerio de fomento Ministry of Public Workspres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: fomentar.* * *1 (promoción) promotion, encouragement2 MEDICINA fomentation* * *noun m.* * *SM1) (=ayuda) promotion, encouragement; [de ventas] promotionMinisterio de Fomento — ministry responsible for public works, buildings etc
2) (Med) poultice* * *masculino (impulso, promoción) promotion* * *= propagation, promoting, furtherance.Ex. As part of an imported culture libraries may be associated with influences undermining traditional values and self-confidence and with the propagation of negative values such as consumerism.Ex. Promoting can be via advertising, personal contact or atmospherics (building design for users).Ex. The aims of the centre are the furtherance of teaching and research on any aspect of South Asia.----* fomento de espíritu de equipo = team building.* Fomento de la Biblioteconomía en el Tercer Mundo (ALP) = Advancement of Librarianship in the Third World (ALP).* fomento de la lectura = reading promotion.* fomento de la salud = health promotion.* fomento del hábito de la lectura = reading promotion.* fomento del hábito lector = reading promotion.* * *masculino (impulso, promoción) promotion* * *= propagation, promoting, furtherance.Ex: As part of an imported culture libraries may be associated with influences undermining traditional values and self-confidence and with the propagation of negative values such as consumerism.
Ex: Promoting can be via advertising, personal contact or atmospherics (building design for users).Ex: The aims of the centre are the furtherance of teaching and research on any aspect of South Asia.* fomento de espíritu de equipo = team building.* Fomento de la Biblioteconomía en el Tercer Mundo (ALP) = Advancement of Librarianship in the Third World (ALP).* fomento de la lectura = reading promotion.* fomento de la salud = health promotion.* fomento del hábito de la lectura = reading promotion.* fomento del hábito lector = reading promotion.* * *A (impulso, promoción) promotionB ( Med) fomentation* * *
Del verbo fomentar: ( conjugate fomentar)
fomento es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
fomentó es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo
Multiple Entries:
fomentar
fomento
fomentar ( conjugate fomentar) verbo transitivo ‹industria/turismo› to promote;
‹ahorro/inversión› to encourage, boost;
‹disturbio/odio› to incite, foment (frml);
‹interés/afición› to encourage
fomentar verbo transitivo to promote
fomento sustantivo masculino
1 promotion
2 Med fomentation: la enfermera le puso unos fomentos sobre la frente, the nurse applied fomentations to his forehead 3 Ministerio de Fomento, Ministry of Public Works
' fomento' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
injusticia
English:
advancement
- development
- encouragement
- promotion
- seminar
* * *fomento nm1. [de cultura, comercio, turismo] encouragement, promotion;Ministerio de Fomento Ministry of Public Works2. Med poultice* * *m COM promotion* * *fomento nm: promotion, encouragement* * *fomento n promotion -
114 hermanar
v.1 to unite (esfuerzos, personas).2 to match, to mate, to partner, to treat as similar.El mecánico acopla los engranajes The mechanic matches the gear assembly.* * *1 (unir) to unite, join2 (combinar) to combine3 (personas) to unite spiritually4 (ciudades) to twin1 (combinarse) to combine3 (ciudades) to become twinned* * *VT1) (=hacer juego) to match2) (=unir) [+ ciudades] to twin, make sister cities (EEUU)3) (=armonizar) to harmonize, bring into harmony4) Cono Sur (=hacer pares) to pair* * *verbo transitivoa) (en sentimiento, propósito) to uniteb) < ciudades> to twin (BrE)c) < calcetines> to match up, put... in pairs; <fichas/naipes> to match up* * *= twin.Ex. For medical libraries, a library from the West would ' twin' with a Third World library, with activities sorted out between the libraries on a one-to-one basis = En el caso de las bibliotecas médicas, una biblioteca del mundo occidental se " hermanaba" con otra del tercer mundo, decidiendo entre ellas qué actividades iban a realizar.* * *verbo transitivoa) (en sentimiento, propósito) to uniteb) < ciudades> to twin (BrE)c) < calcetines> to match up, put... in pairs; <fichas/naipes> to match up* * *= twin.Ex: For medical libraries, a library from the West would ' twin' with a Third World library, with activities sorted out between the libraries on a one-to-one basis = En el caso de las bibliotecas médicas, una biblioteca del mundo occidental se " hermanaba" con otra del tercer mundo, decidiendo entre ellas qué actividades iban a realizar.
* * *hermanar [A1 ]vt1 (en un sentimiento, un propósito) to unitehermanados en el dolor united in griefeste acuerdo hermanará a nuestros dos países this agreement will bring our two countries closer together o will unite our two countries2 ‹ciudades› to twinla ciudad está hermanada con Oxford the city is twinned with Oxford3 ‹calcetines› to match up, put … in pairs; ‹fichas/naipes› to match up* * *
hermanar ( conjugate hermanar) verbo transitivo
‹fichas/naipes› to match up
hermanar verbo transitivo
1 (sentimientos, objetos) to unite, combine
2 (personas) to unite spiritually
(ciudades) to twin
' hermanar' also found in these entries:
English:
twin
* * *♦ vt1. [esfuerzos, personas] to unite2. [ciudades] to twin3. [compatibilizar] to combine;el director hermana la tragedia y la comedia the director combines o blends tragedy with comedy;hermana la inteligencia con la sencillez she combines intelligence with unaffectedness* * *v/t1 personas unite2 ciudades twin* * *hermanar vt1) : to unite, to bring together2) : to match up, to twin (cities) -
115 liberación de los homosexuales
(n.) = gay liberationEx. Some librarians have found opposition to the setting up of 'alternative rooms' containing 'movement publications and trade books on women's and gay liberation, the third world, imperialism, yoga, rock music, the draft, prisons, the counter-culture, communes, social change'.* * *(n.) = gay liberationEx: Some librarians have found opposition to the setting up of 'alternative rooms' containing 'movement publications and trade books on women's and gay liberation, the third world, imperialism, yoga, rock music, the draft, prisons, the counter-culture, communes, social change'.
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116 libro comercial
(n.) = trade bookEx. Some librarians have found opposition to the setting up of 'alternative rooms' containing 'movement publications and trade books on women's and gay liberation, the third world, imperialism, yoga, rock music, the draft, prisons, the counter-culture, communes, social change'.* * *(n.) = trade bookEx: Some librarians have found opposition to the setting up of 'alternative rooms' containing 'movement publications and trade books on women's and gay liberation, the third world, imperialism, yoga, rock music, the draft, prisons, the counter-culture, communes, social change'.
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117 organizar
v.to organize.María organizó los papeles Mary organized the documents.María organizó una fiesta Mary organized a shindig.* * *1 to organize1 (ordenarse) to get organized2 (crearse) to be organized3 (armarse) to be, occur* * *verbto organize, arrange* * *1. VT1) [+ fiesta, espectáculo] to organize2) * [+ jaleo, pelea]los marineros organizaron un auténtico alboroto — the sailors created o made a real commotion
¡menuda has organizado! — you've really stirred things up, haven't you!
2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo to organize, arrange2.organizarse v pron to organize oneself* * *= arrange, make + arrangements, organise [organize, -USA], put together, run, stage, structure, put on, marshal, orchestrate, set up, create + order, mastermind.Ex. A catalogue is a list of the materials or items in a library, with the entries representing the items arranged in some systematic order.Ex. An earlier leakage had prompted library staff to make arrangements with a nearby firm of book conservation specialists in the event of a further disaster.Ex. Equally, various trade directories and other lists need to list and organise names in a form that will enable a searcher to find information about an organisation or person.Ex. I have many people to acknowledge, beginning with my co-editor who offered untiring support and many useful suggestions in putting together the institutes.Ex. The service is run by Radio-Suisse and can be accessed via de PSS.Ex. Book shops also participated by staging similar special features.Ex. The large cataloguing record data bases are structured according to a format known as the MARC format.Ex. A book fair cannot be put on at a few days' notice.Ex. The use of new information technologies ought to be marshalled for use in the developing countries.Ex. Change is needed and inevitable but it must be orchestrated by the national library.Ex. The reference service is set up next to, on in the case of small units, in the reading room.Ex. The information rich are similarly paralyzed because of their inability to create order from all the information washing over them.Ex. The centre is also masterminding a number of projects concerning Third World needs for microcomputers.----* organizar Algo por + Posesivo + propia cuenta = make + Posesivo + own arrangements.* organizar en colaboración = co-organise [co-organize, -USA].* organizarse = get + Reflexivo + organised.* organizar según un orden específico = organise in + Adjetivo + order.* organizar una actuación musical = put on + musical event.* organizar un acto = hold + event.* organizar un acto público = organise + function.* organizar una huelga = stage + strike.* organizar una manifestación = stage + demonstration, stage + protest.* organizar una reunión = arrange for + meeting, mount + meeting.* organizar una visita a = arrange + expedition to.* organizar un concurso = conduct + contest.* organizar un congreso = hold + conference, host + conference, host + congress.* organizar un curso = arrange + course, run + course.* organizar un plan = put + a plan in place.* organizar un reunión = organise + meeting.* organizar un seminario = run + seminar.* organizar un sistema de turnos de + Nombre = organise + a rota of + Nombre.* * *1.verbo transitivo to organize, arrange2.organizarse v pron to organize oneself* * *= arrange, make + arrangements, organise [organize, -USA], put together, run, stage, structure, put on, marshal, orchestrate, set up, create + order, mastermind.Ex: A catalogue is a list of the materials or items in a library, with the entries representing the items arranged in some systematic order.
Ex: An earlier leakage had prompted library staff to make arrangements with a nearby firm of book conservation specialists in the event of a further disaster.Ex: Equally, various trade directories and other lists need to list and organise names in a form that will enable a searcher to find information about an organisation or person.Ex: I have many people to acknowledge, beginning with my co-editor who offered untiring support and many useful suggestions in putting together the institutes.Ex: The service is run by Radio-Suisse and can be accessed via de PSS.Ex: Book shops also participated by staging similar special features.Ex: The large cataloguing record data bases are structured according to a format known as the MARC format.Ex: A book fair cannot be put on at a few days' notice.Ex: The use of new information technologies ought to be marshalled for use in the developing countries.Ex: Change is needed and inevitable but it must be orchestrated by the national library.Ex: The reference service is set up next to, on in the case of small units, in the reading room.Ex: The information rich are similarly paralyzed because of their inability to create order from all the information washing over them.Ex: The centre is also masterminding a number of projects concerning Third World needs for microcomputers.* organizar Algo por + Posesivo + propia cuenta = make + Posesivo + own arrangements.* organizar en colaboración = co-organise [co-organize, -USA].* organizarse = get + Reflexivo + organised.* organizar según un orden específico = organise in + Adjetivo + order.* organizar una actuación musical = put on + musical event.* organizar un acto = hold + event.* organizar un acto público = organise + function.* organizar una huelga = stage + strike.* organizar una manifestación = stage + demonstration, stage + protest.* organizar una reunión = arrange for + meeting, mount + meeting.* organizar una visita a = arrange + expedition to.* organizar un concurso = conduct + contest.* organizar un congreso = hold + conference, host + conference, host + congress.* organizar un curso = arrange + course, run + course.* organizar un plan = put + a plan in place.* organizar un reunión = organise + meeting.* organizar un seminario = run + seminar.* organizar un sistema de turnos de + Nombre = organise + a rota of + Nombre.* * *organizar [A4 ]vt1 ‹fiesta/actividades› to organize, arrangeestaba muy bien organizado it was very well organized1 «persona» to organize oneself ( o one's time etc)2* * *
organizar ( conjugate organizar) verbo transitivo
to organize, arrange
organizarse verbo pronominal
to organize oneself
organizar verbo transitivo
1 to organize: organizaron una fiesta de despedida, they planned a farewell party
2 (provocar) to cause: sus declaraciones organizaron un escándalo, her statements caused a scandal
' organizar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
armar
- dar
- orquestar
- regular
- arreglar
- juerga
- montar
English:
arrange
- fix
- line up
- marshal
- mount
- organize
- picket
- promote
- showmanship
- stage
- mastermind
- put
- run
- sort
* * *♦ vt1. [estructurar, ordenar] to organize2. [fiesta, partido] to organize* * *v/t organize* * *organizar {21} vt: to organize, to arrange* * *organizar vb to organize¿por qué no organizamos un viaje a Londres? why don't we organize a trip to London? -
118 publicación de movimiento
(n.) = movement publicationEx. Some librarians have found opposition to the setting up of 'alternative rooms' containing ' movement publications and trade books on women's and gay liberation, the third world, imperialism, yoga, rock music, the draft, prisons, the counter-culture, communes, social change'.* * *(n.) = movement publicationEx: Some librarians have found opposition to the setting up of 'alternative rooms' containing ' movement publications and trade books on women's and gay liberation, the third world, imperialism, yoga, rock music, the draft, prisons, the counter-culture, communes, social change'.
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119 que hace época
(adj.) = epoch-makingEx. This project on electronic document delivery using radio links, if successful, could be epoch-making for third world libraries.* * *(adj.) = epoch-makingEx: This project on electronic document delivery using radio links, if successful, could be epoch-making for third world libraries.
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120 que marca un hito
(adj.) = epoch-makingEx. This project on electronic document delivery using radio links, if successful, could be epoch-making for third world libraries.* * *(adj.) = epoch-makingEx: This project on electronic document delivery using radio links, if successful, could be epoch-making for third world libraries.
См. также в других словарях:
Third World — ˌThird ˈWorld noun the Third World ECONOMICS the poorer countries of the world, that are not industrially developed: • The bank had stakes in several operations in the Third World. Third World adjective : • Third World countries * * * Third World … Financial and business terms
Third World — (reggae) Pour les articles homonymes, voir Third World (homonymie). Third World est un groupe de reggae formé en 1973 par Stephen Cat Coore, guitariste, et Michael Ibo Cooper, clavier, qui venaient de quitter Inner Circle. Sommaire 1 Biographie … Wikipédia en Français
Third world — (reggae) Pour les articles homonymes, voir Third World (homonymie). Third World est un groupe de reggae formé en 1973 par Stephen Cat Coore, guitariste, et Michael Ibo Cooper, clavier, qui venaient de quitter Inner Circle. Sommaire 1 Biographie … Wikipédia en Français
Third World — ist eine jamaikanische Reggae Band. Ihr Sound beinhaltet Einflüsse von Funk, Soul und Disco. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Geschichte 2 Alben (Auswahl) 3 Weblinks … Deutsch Wikipedia
Third World — n the Third World the poorer countries of the world that are not industrially developed. Some people now consider this expression offensive. >Third World adj ▪ Third World debt … Dictionary of contemporary English
Third-World — [thʉrd′wʉrld΄] adj. of or like the Third World; specif., economically underdeveloped, politically unstable, etc. [a third world standard of living] * * * See Third World. * * * … Universalium
Third World — adjective 1. ) OFFENSIVE Third World countries are poor and do not have much industrial development. People now prefer to use the word developing. 2. ) relating to developing countries: Third World debt … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
third-world — [thʉrd′wʉrld΄] adj. of or like the Third World; specif., economically underdeveloped, politically unstable, etc. [a third world standard of living] … English World dictionary
Third World — 1963, from Fr. tiers monde, formulated 1952 by A. Sauvy on model of the third estate (Fr. tiers état) of Revolutionary France; his first world (The West) and second world (the Soviet bloc) never caught on … Etymology dictionary
Third World|er — «WURL duhr», a person belonging to the Third World, especially an African or Asian … Useful english dictionary
Third World — n. [<Fr tiers monde] [also t w ] 1. those countries and territories, chiefly of Africa and Asia, once thought of as being outside the worlds, or spheres of influence, of the Western capitalist nations and the Soviet bloc 2. the poor and… … English World dictionary