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121 que crea hábito
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122 recorrer
v.1 to travel through or across, to cross (atravesar) (lugar, país).recorrieron la sabana en un camión they drove round the savannah in a truckrecorrió la región a pie he walked round the regionRecorrimos dos kilómetros We traveled two kilometers.Ellos recorren la ciudad They tour the city.2 to cover (distancia).3 to look over.lo recorrió de arriba a abajo con la mirada she looked him up and down4 to go over, to run by, to course, to go through.Ellos recorren el camino They go over the road.* * *1 (distancia) to cover, travel2 (país) to tour, travel over, travel round3 (ciudad) to visit, walk round4 (registrar) to check, go through, examine■ recorrimos toda la biblioteca y no encontramos el libro we checked the whole library and couldn't find the book5 (un escrito) to look over, go over, look through6 (reparar) to mend, repair* * *verb2) cover* * *VT1) [+ ciudad, país] to travel aroundrecorrer una ciudad a pie — to walk round a city, do a city on foot
2) [+ trayecto] to cover, doese día recorrimos 100 kilómetros — we covered o did 100 kilometres that day
3) (=inspeccionar) to go roundhe recorrido todas las librerías buscando esa novela — I've been round all the bookshops looking for that novel
4) (Tip) [+ letras] to take over5) † (=leer por encima)recorrer un escrito — to run one's eye over o look through a document
6) † (=reparar) to repair, mend* * *1.verbo transitivoa) <país/ciudad>recorrí toda España — I traveled o went all over Spain
recorrimos toda la costa — we went o traveled the whole length of the coast
recorrerla — (Chi fam) to live it up (colloq)
b) <distancia/trayecto> to cover, doc) ( con la mirada)2.recorrerse v pron (enf)a) <ciudad/país>se recorrió toda Europa — she went all over o around Europe
b) <distancia/trayecto> to cover, do* * *= move through, step through, traverse, trek, tour, make + the rounds, rove, travel around, parade.Ex. Use PgDn (Page Down) to move through INDEX screens.Ex. If he deflects the lever further to the right, he steps through the book 10 pages at a time.Ex. As he traversed the length of the corridor to the media center, Anthony Datto reflected on the events that had brought him to this unhappy pass.Ex. It makes sound sense to house all materials on the same subject together so that the information seeker needs to go to one place only rather than trek to half a dozen different areas to discover the books, pamphlets, periodicals, portfolios, cassettes and slides on his chosen subject.Ex. A 5-day symposium was held at Champagne Public Library and an exhibition toured the public libraries of the state.Ex. You may have seen the lines making the rounds of library e-mail: 'A Zen librarian searched for 'nothing' on the Internet and received 28 million hits'.Ex. The production is extremely lively: Wandering musicians rove the tiny stage and aisles, competing with birdsong and baroque concertos over the tannoy.Ex. If you plan to travel around Britain, a combination of trains and rental cars is usually the best way to do this.Ex. A boy was paraded naked with "I am thief" written on his stomach and back for allegedly stealing a dress from a boutique where he worked.----* camino por recorrer, el = road ahead, the.* el camino por recorrer = the way ahead.* haber recorrido mucho mundo = be well-travelled.* recorrer cielo y tierra = travel + far and wide.* recorrer el mundo = travel around + the world, span + the globe.* recorrer grandes distancias = travel + long distances.* recorrer las calles = pound + the streets.* recorrer olgadamente = wander about, wander around.* tener mucha distancia que recorrer = have + a long way to go.* tener mucho camino que recorrer = have + a long way to go.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) <país/ciudad>recorrí toda España — I traveled o went all over Spain
recorrimos toda la costa — we went o traveled the whole length of the coast
recorrerla — (Chi fam) to live it up (colloq)
b) <distancia/trayecto> to cover, doc) ( con la mirada)2.recorrerse v pron (enf)a) <ciudad/país>se recorrió toda Europa — she went all over o around Europe
b) <distancia/trayecto> to cover, do* * *= move through, step through, traverse, trek, tour, make + the rounds, rove, travel around, parade.Ex: Use PgDn (Page Down) to move through INDEX screens.
Ex: If he deflects the lever further to the right, he steps through the book 10 pages at a time.Ex: As he traversed the length of the corridor to the media center, Anthony Datto reflected on the events that had brought him to this unhappy pass.Ex: It makes sound sense to house all materials on the same subject together so that the information seeker needs to go to one place only rather than trek to half a dozen different areas to discover the books, pamphlets, periodicals, portfolios, cassettes and slides on his chosen subject.Ex: A 5-day symposium was held at Champagne Public Library and an exhibition toured the public libraries of the state.Ex: You may have seen the lines making the rounds of library e-mail: 'A Zen librarian searched for 'nothing' on the Internet and received 28 million hits'.Ex: The production is extremely lively: Wandering musicians rove the tiny stage and aisles, competing with birdsong and baroque concertos over the tannoy.Ex: If you plan to travel around Britain, a combination of trains and rental cars is usually the best way to do this.Ex: A boy was paraded naked with "I am thief" written on his stomach and back for allegedly stealing a dress from a boutique where he worked.* camino por recorrer, el = road ahead, the.* el camino por recorrer = the way ahead.* haber recorrido mucho mundo = be well-travelled.* recorrer cielo y tierra = travel + far and wide.* recorrer el mundo = travel around + the world, span + the globe.* recorrer grandes distancias = travel + long distances.* recorrer las calles = pound + the streets.* recorrer olgadamente = wander about, wander around.* tener mucha distancia que recorrer = have + a long way to go.* tener mucho camino que recorrer = have + a long way to go.* * *recorrer [E1 ]vt1 ‹país/ciudad›recorrieron toda España en tren they traveled o went all over Spain by trainha recorrido mucho mundo he has been all over the place o the worldrecorrimos toda la costa del sur we went o traveled the whole length of the south coastrecorrimos toda la ciudad en busca de otro igual we scoured the whole city looking for another one like it, we searched the whole city for another one like it2 ‹distancia/trayecto› to cover, doya hemos recorrido más de la mitad del trayecto we have already covered o done more than half the distance3(con la mirada): recorrió la habitación con la mirada he looked around the roommientras recorría la carta con la vista while I looked through o ran my eyes over the letter( enf)1 ‹ciudad/país›se recorrió Europa en dos semanas she went all over o around Europe in two weeks, she did Europe in two weeks ( colloq)2 ‹distancia/trayecto› to cover, donos recorrimos los 300 kilómetros en tres horas we covered o did the 300 kilometers in three hours* * *
recorrer ( conjugate recorrer) verbo transitivoa) ( viajar por):◊ recorrí toda España I traveled o went all over Spain;
( como turista) I toured all over Spain;
recorrimos toda la costa we traveled the whole length of the coast
c) ( con la mirada):
recorrer verbo transitivo
1 (una distancia) to cover, travel
2 (un territorio) to travel across
recorrer el mundo, to travel around the world
3 (un museo, etc) to visit, go round
4 (con la vista) (una sala, etc) to look around
(un escrito) to run one's eyes over, to scan
' recorrer' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
andar
- batir
- caminar
- patear
- patearse
- salvar
- hacer
- pasar
English:
cover
- do
- fly
- go
- ply
- roam
- sweep
- tour
- travel
- trudge
- walk
- scan
* * *♦ vt1. [atravesar] [lugar, país] to travel through o across, to cross;[ciudad] to go round;recorrieron la sabana en un camión they drove round the savannah in a truck;recorrió la región a pie he walked round the region;recorrieron el perímetro de la isla they went round the island2. [distancia] to cover;recorrió los 42 km en tres horas he covered o did the 42 km in three hours3. [con la mirada] to look over;lo recorrió de arriba a abajo con la mirada she looked him up and down♦ See also the pronominal verb recorrerse* * *v/t1 distancia cover, do; a pie walk; territorio, país go around, travel around; camino go along, travel along2:recorrer algo con la vista look sth over, run one’s eyes over sth* * *recorrer vt1) : to travel through, to tour2) : to cover (a distance)3) : to go over, to look over* * *recorrer vb1. (atravesar) to go round / to travel round2. (hacer un trayecto) to travel / to do -
123 reducido
adj.reduced, small.past part.past participle of spanish verb: reducir.* * *1→ link=reducir reducir► adjetivo1 (limitado) limited; (pequeño) small2 (precio) low* * *ADJ [grupo, número] small; [ingresos, recursos] limited; [tarifa, precio] reduced; [espacio] confined* * ** * *= confined, reduced, decreased, cut-down, scaled down [scaled-down], shrunken, marked-down.Ex. No problem usually with terminals and micros but there could be an undesirable temperature build-up in confined areas.Ex. The model shows that market concentration rises with inelastic demand, reduced marginal costs and efficient technology.Ex. This article considers the consequences of electronic ordering and stresses the need to strive for decreased costs and the services and systems that are really necessary.Ex. The 8088 is a ' cut-down' version of the 8086, having a smaller databus.Ex. The choice for those interested in creating an expert system lies between a specialised development tool and a scaled down version of an programming language = La alternativa para aquellos interesados en crear un sistema experto está entre una herramienta de desarrollo especializada o una versión reducida de un lenguaje de programación.Ex. Everything that happens in the couple's tiny, shrunken, enclosed world is addictive, unglamorous, and boringly awful.Ex. Their marked-down food products are right after the meat department.----* a precio reducido = at a discount.* con un presupuesto reducido = low-budget.* plantilla reducida = skeleton staff.* precio reducido = marked-down price.* reducido a la pulpa = pulped.* reducido al mínimo = stripped down.* tamaño reducido = reduced size.* un número reducido de = a residue of.* * ** * *= confined, reduced, decreased, cut-down, scaled down [scaled-down], shrunken, marked-down.Ex: No problem usually with terminals and micros but there could be an undesirable temperature build-up in confined areas.
Ex: The model shows that market concentration rises with inelastic demand, reduced marginal costs and efficient technology.Ex: This article considers the consequences of electronic ordering and stresses the need to strive for decreased costs and the services and systems that are really necessary.Ex: The 8088 is a ' cut-down' version of the 8086, having a smaller databus.Ex: The choice for those interested in creating an expert system lies between a specialised development tool and a scaled down version of an programming language = La alternativa para aquellos interesados en crear un sistema experto está entre una herramienta de desarrollo especializada o una versión reducida de un lenguaje de programación.Ex: Everything that happens in the couple's tiny, shrunken, enclosed world is addictive, unglamorous, and boringly awful.Ex: Their marked-down food products are right after the meat department.* a precio reducido = at a discount.* con un presupuesto reducido = low-budget.* plantilla reducida = skeleton staff.* precio reducido = marked-down price.* reducido a la pulpa = pulped.* reducido al mínimo = stripped down.* tamaño reducido = reduced size.* un número reducido de = a residue of.* * *reducido -da‹espacio› limited; ‹tamaño› smalllibros a precios reducidos books at reduced pricesun número reducido de personas a small number of peoplenuestro presupuesto es muy reducido we have a very limited budgettrabaja jornada reducida she is on short-time working o on short time, she is working reduced hours* * *
Del verbo reducir: ( conjugate reducir)
reducido es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
reducido
reducir
reducido◊ -da adjetivo
‹ tamaño› small
trabaja jornada reducida she is on short-time (working)
reducir ( conjugate reducir) verbo transitivo
1
‹velocidad/producción/consumo› to reduce;
reducido algo A algo to reduce sth to sth;
reducido algo EN algo to reduce sth by sth
2a) ( transformar):
quedaron reducidos a cenizas they were reduced to ashes
3 ( dominar) ‹enemigo/rebeldes› to subdue;
‹ ladrón› to overpower
reducirse verbo pronominal:
reducido,-a adj (espacio, tiempo) limited, small
reducir
I verbo transitivo
1 (disminuir) to reduce
reducir algo en algo, to reduce sthg by sthg
(gastos, consumo, etc) to cut (down), minimize
2 (convertir, transformar) to reduce: el incendio redujo el bosque a cenizas, the fire reduced the wood to ashes
3 (subyugar) to subdue
II vi Auto to change down, US to downshift
' reducido' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
ámbito
- íntegra
- íntegro
- mayoría
- par
- reducida
English:
confined
- depleted
- diminished
- inexpensively
- narrow
- skeleton
- discount
- reduced
- small
* * *reducido, -a adj1. [pequeño] small;un espacio muy reducido a very limited space;lo compré a un precio reducido I bought it at a reduced price2. [limitado] limited;hay un número reducido de plazas there is a limited number of places* * ** * *reducido, -da adj1) : reduced, limited2) : small* * *reducido adj small -
124 repleto
adj.full, full-up, abounding, chock-full.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: repletar.* * *► adjetivo1 full up, full (de, of), jam-packed (de, with)* * *ADJ1) (=lleno) full uprepleto de — full of, crammed with
2)estar repleto — [persona] to be full up ( with food)
3) [aspecto] well-fed* * *- ta adjetivo1) <calle/vehículo/sala>el tren iba repleto — the train was packed o (colloq) jam-packed
2) < persona> replete (frml or hum), full* * *= stuffed looking, saturated, densely packed, packed, plethoric, turgid, packed full.Ex. As one librarian summarized, 'people are not into the stuffed looking, dingy, dust smelling type of libraries anymore... they expect atmospheres more like coffeehouses or nice bookstores'.Ex. Place a drop of a saturated solution of sugar in water on the paper and dab up the excess liquid with cotton wool.Ex. The square was humble and nondescript, part of a maze of narrow streets and densely packed shops and houses.Ex. Here and there, elderly citizens tend tiny, packed shops selling candy and chipped bottles of cold soda.Ex. Not far off, the barn, plethoric with the autumn's harvest spoils, holds the farmer's well-earned trophies -- the guerdon of his toils.Ex. I recently found out that ' turgid,' which actually means 'swollen' and that I was confusing it with 'turbid,' a word I've never heard.Ex. The days will be packed full, without any filler and without a moment wasted.----* auditorio repleto = packed house.* repleto de = replete with, full of, teeming with, brimful (of/with), jam-packed (with), filled to capacity, flush with.* repleto de información = information packed [information-packed].* repleto hasta el borde = full to the brim.* * *- ta adjetivo1) <calle/vehículo/sala>el tren iba repleto — the train was packed o (colloq) jam-packed
2) < persona> replete (frml or hum), full* * *= stuffed looking, saturated, densely packed, packed, plethoric, turgid, packed full.Ex: As one librarian summarized, 'people are not into the stuffed looking, dingy, dust smelling type of libraries anymore... they expect atmospheres more like coffeehouses or nice bookstores'.
Ex: Place a drop of a saturated solution of sugar in water on the paper and dab up the excess liquid with cotton wool.Ex: The square was humble and nondescript, part of a maze of narrow streets and densely packed shops and houses.Ex: Here and there, elderly citizens tend tiny, packed shops selling candy and chipped bottles of cold soda.Ex: Not far off, the barn, plethoric with the autumn's harvest spoils, holds the farmer's well-earned trophies -- the guerdon of his toils.Ex: I recently found out that ' turgid,' which actually means 'swollen' and that I was confusing it with 'turbid,' a word I've never heard.Ex: The days will be packed full, without any filler and without a moment wasted.* auditorio repleto = packed house.* repleto de = replete with, full of, teeming with, brimful (of/with), jam-packed (with), filled to capacity, flush with.* repleto de información = information packed [information-packed].* repleto hasta el borde = full to the brim.* * *repleto -taA ‹calle/vehículo› repleto DE algo packed WITH sthlas calles estaban repletas de gente the streets were packed o crammed with peoplela ciudad está repleta de atracciones históricas y culturales the city is full of historical and cultural attractionsel tren iba repleto the train was packed o ( colloq) jam-packed¡qué comilona, estoy repleto! what a feast, I'm absolutely full!* * *
repleto◊ -ta adjetivoa) ‹calle/vehículo/sala› repleto DE algo full of sth, packed with sth;◊ el tren iba repleto the train was packed o (colloq) jam-packed
repleto,-a adjetivo
1 full (up)
2 familiar (de gente) jam-packed: el autobús iba repleto (de gente), the bus was packed (with people)
3 frml (una persona) replete
' repleto' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
repleta
English:
bulge
- congested
- jam-packed
- laden
- bursting
- jam
- loaded
- packed
- replete
- teem
* * *repleto, -a adj[habitación, autobús] packed;estoy repleto [de comida] I'm full (up);el centro estaba repleto de turistas the town centre was packed with tourists* * *adj full (de of)* * *repleto, -ta adj1) : replete, full2)repleto de : packed with, crammed with* * *repleto adj full -
125 resto
m.1 return (of serve).al resto, Jiménez Jiménez to return2 rest, remain, remnant, leftover.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: restar.* * *1 remainder, rest2 MATEMÁTICAS remainder3 DEPORTE return2 (de comida) leftovers\echar el resto familiar to give something all one has got, go all outrestos mortales mortal remains* * *noun m.- restos* * *SM1) (=lo que queda) rest; (Mat) remainderpara los restos * —
2) pl restos [de edificio, muralla] remains; [de comida] leftovers, scraps; [de avión, naufragio] wreckage sing ; (=escombros) debris sing, rubble singrestos de serie — leftovers, remainders
3) (Dep) (=devolución de pelota) return (of service); (=jugador) receiver4) (=apuesta) stakeechar el resto — * (=apostar) to stake all one's money; (=esforzarse al máximo) to do one's utmost
echar el resto por hacer algo — to go all out to do sth, do one's utmost to do sth
* * *1)a) (lo demás, lo que queda)el resto del dinero — the rest o the remainder of the money
¿qué importa lo que haga el resto (de la gente)? — what does it matter what everybody else does?
b) (Mat) remainder2) restos masculino plurala) ( despojos) remains (pl)b) ( de comida) leftovers (pl)3) (Esp) (Dep) return (of service)4) (Col, Méx fam) ( montón)un resto de gente — loads of people (colloq)
* * *= deposit, residue, trace, remnant, residuum, remainder, hangover [hang-over], holdover.Ex. Can you wonder that it should carry such deposits of jam, egg, butter, coffee and personal dirt?.Ex. I have noted elsewhere that structure is the residue of function.Ex. But there was no trace of sinisterness in Balzac's manner.Ex. What survived was a tiny remnant, sometimes, to judge from the binding, a relic of earlier antiquarianism.Ex. Any representative sample, any cross-section, any week's harvest of queries in a busy library is sure to include a residuum that does not fit into any of the categories so far outlined.Ex. The article 'Bargains or bummers? remainders' suggests that despite problems attaching to buying remainders, judicious purchasing of this stock can add valuable books to a library's collection at a very reasonable cost.Ex. English's dominant role is a hangover from colonialism.Ex. As I've said before, these conventions are antiquated -- they are holdovers from an older era.----* el resto = rest, the.* el resto (de) = the remainder (of), the rest (of).* en el resto = everywhere else.* en el resto de = elsewhere.* una manzana podrida echar a perder el resto de la cesta = one rotten apple spoils the whole barrel.* * *1)a) (lo demás, lo que queda)el resto del dinero — the rest o the remainder of the money
¿qué importa lo que haga el resto (de la gente)? — what does it matter what everybody else does?
b) (Mat) remainder2) restos masculino plurala) ( despojos) remains (pl)b) ( de comida) leftovers (pl)3) (Esp) (Dep) return (of service)4) (Col, Méx fam) ( montón)un resto de gente — loads of people (colloq)
* * *= deposit, residue, trace, remnant, residuum, remainder, hangover [hang-over], holdover.Ex: Can you wonder that it should carry such deposits of jam, egg, butter, coffee and personal dirt?.
Ex: I have noted elsewhere that structure is the residue of function.Ex: But there was no trace of sinisterness in Balzac's manner.Ex: What survived was a tiny remnant, sometimes, to judge from the binding, a relic of earlier antiquarianism.Ex: Any representative sample, any cross-section, any week's harvest of queries in a busy library is sure to include a residuum that does not fit into any of the categories so far outlined.Ex: The article 'Bargains or bummers? remainders' suggests that despite problems attaching to buying remainders, judicious purchasing of this stock can add valuable books to a library's collection at a very reasonable cost.Ex: English's dominant role is a hangover from colonialism.Ex: As I've said before, these conventions are antiquated -- they are holdovers from an older era.* el resto = rest, the.* el resto (de) = the remainder (of), the rest (of).* en el resto = everywhere else.* en el resto de = elsewhere.* una manzana podrida echar a perder el resto de la cesta = one rotten apple spoils the whole barrel.* * *A1(lo demás, lo que queda): el resto the restel resto del dinero the rest o the remainder of the money, the remaining moneyel resto ya lo conoces you already know the restquiere vivir aquí el resto de sus días he wants to spend the rest of his days here¿qué importa lo que haga el resto (de la gente)? what does it matter what everybody else does?2 ( Mat) remainder1 (despojos, residuos) remains (pl)restos arqueológicos archaeological remainslos restos del avión siniestrado the wreckage of the airplane2 (de comida) leftovers (pl)Compuestos:mpl end-of-line goods (pl)mpl end-of-season goods (pl)D( Col fam) (montón): todavía falta un resto para llegar there's a long way to go yet, we won't be there for ages yet ( colloq)había un resto de gente there were loads of people ( colloq)* * *
Del verbo restar: ( conjugate restar)
resto es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
restó es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo
Multiple Entries:
restar
resto
restar ( conjugate restar) verbo transitivo
resto algo DE algo to take (away) o subtract sth from sth
c) ( quitar):◊ restole importancia a algo to minimize o play down the importance of sth
verbo intransitivo
1 (Mat) to subtract, take away
2 (Esp) (Dep) to return (service)
resto sustantivo masculino
1a) (lo demás, lo que queda)
b) (Mat) remainder
2
(de avión, barco siniestrado) wreckage;
( de comida) leftovers (pl)
3 (Esp) (Dep) return (of service)
restar
I verbo transitivo
1 Mat to subtract, take away
2 (quitar) to minimize: me estáis restando autoridad, you are undermining my authority
le restó importancia, she played down its importance
3 (en tenis) to return
II vi (quedar) to be left, remain: solo me resta decir..., it only remains for me to say...
¿Cómo se dice 8 - 2 = 6?
Two from eight leaves/is six.
Eight take away two leaves/is six.
What's two from eight?
What's eight minus two?
resto sustantivo masculino
1 rest, remainder: el resto de mi familia vive en Segovia, the rest of my family lives in Segovia
2 Mat remainder
3 Tenis return 4 restos, remains
Arqueol remains
restos mortales, mortal remains
(de alimento) leftovers
♦ Locuciones: echar el resto, to go for broke
' resto' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
eclipsar
- honda
- protagonismo
- remanente
- rescoldo
- restar
- saldo
- vitalicia
- vitalicio
- diferencia
- pucho
- resquicio
English:
remainder
- remnant
- rest
- apart
- balance
- catch
- end
- just
- off
- unaccounted for
* * *resto nm1.el resto [lo que queda] the rest;el resto se fue a bailar the rest (of them) went dancing;me da igual lo que opine el resto I don't care what the rest of them think o what the others think;… y el resto de la historia ya la sabes … and you already know the rest of the story;Famechar el resto: tenemos que echar el resto we have to give it our all3.[cadáver] remains; [ruinas] ruins;restos [sobras] leftovers;encontraron los cuerpos entre los restos del naufragio the bodies were found amidst the wreckage of the shiprestos mortales (mortal) remains4. [en tenis] return (of serve);al resto, Jiménez Jiménez to receive* * *m rest, remainder;los restos mortales the (mortal) remains;echar el resto go all out* * *resto nm1) : rest, remainder2) restos nmpl: remainsrestos de comida: leftoversrestos arqueológicos: archeological ruins3)restos mortales : mortal remains* * *resto n1. (lo que queda) rest2. (en matemáticas) remainder -
126 retal
m.remnant.* * *1 (sobrante) oddment, remnant, scrap2 (de tela) offcut, remnant* * *SM remnant* * *= remnant.Ex. What survived was a tiny remnant, sometimes, to judge from the binding, a relic of earlier antiquarianism.* * *= remnant.Ex: What survived was a tiny remnant, sometimes, to judge from the binding, a relic of earlier antiquarianism.
* * *( Esp)remnant* * *
retal sustantivo masculino remnant
' retal' also found in these entries:
English:
remnant
* * *retal nmremnant* * *m remnant -
127 retazo
m.1 remnant.2 remnant of cloth, left-over piece, remnant, remnant of clothes.3 offal, giblets.4 bargain.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: retazar.* * *1 (retal) remnant, scrap2 (fragmento) fragment, piece* * *noun m.1) scrap2) excerpt, fragment* * *SM1) (Cos) remnant, bit, piecepl retazos snippets, bits and pieces2) Caribe bargain* * ** * *= remnant, snippet, scrap.Ex. What survived was a tiny remnant, sometimes, to judge from the binding, a relic of earlier antiquarianism.Ex. Automation in libraries can only provide snippets of information, not knowledge.Ex. The demand for the old faces came to an abrupt end and the founders withdrew them from sale, some even destroying the old punches and matrices as so much scrap.----* retazo de = scrap of.* retazos = odds and ends, shavings, bits and pieces, bits and bobs.* * ** * *= remnant, snippet, scrap.Ex: What survived was a tiny remnant, sometimes, to judge from the binding, a relic of earlier antiquarianism.
Ex: Automation in libraries can only provide snippets of information, not knowledge.Ex: The demand for the old faces came to an abrupt end and the founders withdrew them from sale, some even destroying the old punches and matrices as so much scrap.* retazo de = scrap of.* retazos = odds and ends, shavings, bits and pieces, bits and bobs.* * *1 (de tela) remnant2 (de un texto, una obra) snippetretazos de varias obras snippets o bits and pieces of several works* * *
retazo sustantivo masculino
1 (de tela) remnant
2 (de información, etc) snippet
' retazo' also found in these entries:
English:
remnant
* * *retazo nm1. [resto] remnant2. [pedazo] fragment;una conferencia hecha de retazos a speech patched together from bits and pieces of other speeches* * *m figsnippet, fragment* * *retazo nm1) : remnant, scrap2) : fragment, pieceretazos de su obra: bits and pieces from his writings -
128 romo
adj.blunt, dull, edgeless, obtuse.* * *► adjetivo1 (sin punta) blunt, dull2 (nariz) snub* * *ADJ1) (=sin punta) blunt; [persona] snub-nosed2) (=aburrido) dull, lifeless* * *- ma adjetivo1) <cuchillo/tijeras> blunt; < nariz> snub (before n)2) < persona> dull* * *= dull, chipped.Ex. These librarians are given Haykin upon the day of their arrival and are expected to read the entire dull document and use it as a guideline in establishing subject headings.Ex. Here and there, elderly citizens tend tiny, packed shops selling candy and chipped bottles of cold soda.----* antigua Roma = ancient Rome.* Tratado de Roma, el = Treaty of Rome, the.* * *- ma adjetivo1) <cuchillo/tijeras> blunt; < nariz> snub (before n)2) < persona> dull* * *= dull, chipped.Ex: These librarians are given Haykin upon the day of their arrival and are expected to read the entire dull document and use it as a guideline in establishing subject headings.
Ex: Here and there, elderly citizens tend tiny, packed shops selling candy and chipped bottles of cold soda.* antigua Roma = ancient Rome.* Tratado de Roma, el = Treaty of Rome, the.* * *romo -maA1 ‹cuchillo/tijeras› blunt2 ‹nariz› snub ( before n)B ‹persona›1 (tosco) uncouth2 (lerdo) dull* * *
romo,-a adjetivo
1 (cuchillo, tijeras) blunt
2 (sin gracia, sin agudeza) dull, boorish, uncouth: tiene un ingenio muy romo, his humour is quite boorish
3 (nariz) snub
' romo' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
roma
English:
blunt
- dull
* * *romo, -a adj1. [sin filo] blunt2. [de nariz] snub-nosed* * *adj blunt* * *romo, -ma adj: blunt, dull
См. также в других словарях:
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tiny — index impalpable, minimal, remote (small), tenuous Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
tiny — (adj.) c.1400, tyne very small, perhaps from TINE (Cf. tine) … Etymology dictionary
tiny — *minute, miniature, diminutive, wee, *small, little, teeny, weeny … New Dictionary of Synonyms
tiny — [adj] very small bitsy*, bitty, diminutive, infinitesimal, insignificant, itsy bitsy*, ittybitty*, Lilliputian, little, microscopic, midget, mini*, miniature, minikin, minimum, minuscular, minuscule, minute, negligible, pee wee*, petite, pint… … New thesaurus
tiny — ► ADJECTIVE (tinier, tiniest) ▪ very small. ► NOUN (pl. tinies) informal ▪ a very young child. DERIVATIVES tinily adverb tininess noun. ORIGIN … English terms dictionary
tiny — [tī′nē] adj. tinier, tiniest [< ME n. tine, a little (something)] very small; diminutive SYN. SMALL … English World dictionary
tiny — 01. Their new Chihuahua puppy is really [tiny]. 02. Monaco is a [tiny] country, probably the smallest in the world. 03. Gordie has a [tiny] brain in his pointed head. 04. Junko s apartment in Tokyo was [tiny], but it cost her almost $1,000 a… … Grammatical examples in English