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121 consider
kən'sidə1) (to think about (carefully): He considered their comments.) considerar2) (to feel inclined towards: I'm considering leaving this job.) considerar3) (to take into account: You must consider other people's feelings.) considerar, tener en cuenta4) (to regard as being: They consider him unfit for that job.) considerar•- considerably
consider vb considerartr[kən'sɪdəSMALLr/SMALL]1 (think about, examine, contemplate) considerar2 (regard as) considerar■ do you consider it likely? ¿crees que es posible?■ she is considered to be the finest soprano in the world está considerada la mejor soprano del mundo■ consider it done! ¡dalo por hecho!3 (take into account) tener en cuenta, considerar■ if you consider that... teniendo en cuenta que...\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLall things considered pensándolo bien, bien miradoit is my considered opinion that... después de pensarlo mucho, opino que...consider [kən'sɪdər] vt1) contemplate: considerar, pensar enwe'd considered attending: habíamos pensado en asistir2) : considerar, tener en cuentaconsider the consequences: considera las consecuencias3) judge, regard: considerar, estimarv.• considerar v.• enfocar v.• mirar v.• pesar v.• tener en cuenta v.• ver v.(§pres: veo, ves...) imp. ve-•)kən'sɪdər, kən'sɪdə(r)a) ( examine) \<\<advantages/offer\>\> considerarit is my considered opinion that... — lo he pensado mucho y considero or opino que...
b) ( contemplate) \<\<possibility\>\> considerar, plantearse, contemplarto consider + -ING: we're considering moving house estamos pensando en mudarnos; would you consider selling it if... ? — ¿le interesaría venderlo si... ?
c) ( take into account) tener* en cuenta, considerarall things considered, I think that... — bien considerado or bien mirado, creo que...
d) ( regard as) considerarthey consider themselves (to be) above such things — consideran que están por encima de ese tipo de cosas
what do you consider a lot of money? — ¿tú qué entiendes por mucho dinero?
it's considered to be the best of its class — está considerado como el mejor de su clase; see also considering
[kǝn'sɪdǝ(r)]VT1) (=think about) [+ problem, possibility] considerar, pensar enconsider how much you owe him — piensa en or considera lo que le debes
to consider doing sth: have you ever considered going by train? — ¿has pensado alguna vez (en) ir en tren?, ¿has considerado alguna vez ir en tren?
would you consider buying it? — ¿te interesa comprarlo?
I'm considering resigning — estoy pensando en dimitir, estoy considerando la posibilidad de dimitir
•
he is being considered for the post — lo están considerando para el puesto•
it is my considered opinion that... — después de haberlo pensado or considerado detenidamente, creo que...•
to consider one's position — euph (=consider resigning) pensar en dimitir, estudiar la conveniencia de dimitir•
he refused even to consider it — se negó a pensarlo or considerarlo siquiera•
I wouldn't consider it for a moment — yo ni me lo plantearía siquiera2) (=take into account) tomar or tener en cuentawhen one considers that... — cuando uno toma or tiene en cuenta que...
you must consider other people's feelings — hay que tomar or tener en cuenta los sentimientos de los demás
•
all things considered — pensándolo bien3) (=be of the opinion) considerarI consider that... — considero que...
4) (=regard as) considerar•
I consider the matter closed — para mí el tema está cerrado•
to consider o.s., I consider myself happy — me considero feliz•
to consider sb to be intelligent — considerar a algn inteligente•
he considers it a waste of time — lo considera una pérdida de tiempo•
consider yourself lucky! — ¡date por satisfecho!* * *[kən'sɪdər, kən'sɪdə(r)]a) ( examine) \<\<advantages/offer\>\> considerarit is my considered opinion that... — lo he pensado mucho y considero or opino que...
b) ( contemplate) \<\<possibility\>\> considerar, plantearse, contemplarto consider + -ING: we're considering moving house estamos pensando en mudarnos; would you consider selling it if... ? — ¿le interesaría venderlo si... ?
c) ( take into account) tener* en cuenta, considerarall things considered, I think that... — bien considerado or bien mirado, creo que...
d) ( regard as) considerarthey consider themselves (to be) above such things — consideran que están por encima de ese tipo de cosas
what do you consider a lot of money? — ¿tú qué entiendes por mucho dinero?
it's considered to be the best of its class — está considerado como el mejor de su clase; see also considering
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122 conspicuous
kən'spikjuəs(very noticeable: Her blond hair made her conspicuous in the crowd.) llamativo- conspicuousness
tr[kəns'pɪkjʊəs]1 (clothes) llamativo,-a; (mistake, difference, lack) evidente, obvio,-a■ in a conspicuous position en un lugar visible, a la vista\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be conspicuous by one's absence brillar por su ausenciato be conspicuous for something destacar por algoto make oneself conspicuous llamar la atenciónconspicuous consumption consumo ostentosoconspicuous [kən'spɪkjʊəs] adj1) obvious: visible, evidente2) striking: llamativoadj.• conspicuo, -a adj.• eminente adj.• notable adj.• que llama la atención adj.• visible adj.kən'spɪkjuəsadjective <hat/badge> llamativo; <differences/omissions> manifiesto, evidenteto be conspicuous by one's absence — brillar por su (or mi etc) ausencia
[kǝn'spɪkjʊǝs]to be conspicuous FOR something — \<\<for bravery/loyalty\>\> destacar(se)* por algo
1. ADJ1) (=attracting attention) [clothes] llamativo; [person, behaviour] que llama la atención; [notice, attempt] visibleto be conspicuous by one's/its absence — brillar por su ausencia
I felt conspicuous in that ridiculous outfit — vestido de aquella manera tan ridícula tenía la impresión de que todo el mundo me miraba or tenía la impresión de ser el objeto de atención
to make o.s. conspicuous — llamar la atención
2) (=noticeable) [bravery] destacado, manifiesto; [difference] manifiesto, notoriothe film was a conspicuous failure/success — la película fue un fracaso/éxito rotundo
2.CPDconspicuous consumption N — (Econ) consumo m ostentoso
* * *[kən'spɪkjuəs]adjective <hat/badge> llamativo; <differences/omissions> manifiesto, evidenteto be conspicuous by one's absence — brillar por su (or mi etc) ausencia
to be conspicuous FOR something — \<\<for bravery/loyalty\>\> destacar(se)* por algo
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123 contend
kən'tend1) ((usually with with) to struggle against.) competir2) ((with that) to say or maintain (that).) sostener, afirmar•- contention
- contentious
tr[kən'tend]1 (compete) contender, competir2 (deal with, struggle against) enfrentarse a, lidiar con1 (claim, state) sostener, afirmarcontend [kən'tɛnd] vi1) struggle: luchar, lidiar, contenderto contend with a problem: lidiar con un problema2) compete: competirto contend for a position: competir por un puestocontend vt1) argue, maintain: argüir, sostener, afirmarhe contended that he was right: afirmó que tenía razón2) contest: protestar contra (una decisión, etc.), disputarv.• afirmar v.• concursar v.• contender v.• forcejear v.• sostener v.(§pres: -tengo, -tienes...-tenemos) pret: -tuv-fut/c: -tendr-•)kən'tend
1.
a) ( compete)to contend (WITH somebody) (FOR something) — competir* (con alguien) (por algo)
b) ( face)to contend WITH something — lidiar con or enfrentarse a algo
c) contending pres p < teams> contrario, rival; < interests> en pugna, antagónico, opuesto
2.
vt argüir*, sostener*[kǝn'tend]1.VTto contend that — afirmar que, sostener que
2.VI* * *[kən'tend]
1.
a) ( compete)to contend (WITH somebody) (FOR something) — competir* (con alguien) (por algo)
b) ( face)to contend WITH something — lidiar con or enfrentarse a algo
c) contending pres p < teams> contrario, rival; < interests> en pugna, antagónico, opuesto
2.
vt argüir*, sostener* -
124 descend
di'send1) (to go or climb down from a higher place or position: He descended the staircase.) descender, bajar2) (to slope downwards: The hills descend to the sea.) descender3) ((with on) to make a sudden attack on: The soldiers descended on the helpless villagers.) atacar, caer sobre, lanzarse sobre•- descent
- be descended from
descend vb descender / bajartr[dɪ'send]1 (road, sun, plane, etc) descender, bajar2 (in importance) descender4 (of properties, qualities, rights, etc) provenir1 descender, bajar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be descended from somebody ser descendiente de alguien, descender de alguiendescend [di'sɛnd] vt: descender, bajardescend vi1) : descender, bajarhe descended from the platform: descendió del estrado2) derive: descender, provenir3) stoop: rebajarseI descended to his level: me rebajé a su nivel4)to descend upon : caer sobre, invadirv.• bajar v.• descender v.• descolgar v.dɪ'send
1.
1) ( move downwards) descender* (frml), bajar2) descending pres p descendentein descending order of importance — en orden decreciente or descendente de importancia
3) ( set in) \<\<mist\>\> descender* (frml); \<\<rain\>\> caer*; \<\<silence/gloom\>\> abatirse (liter)4) ( stoop)to descend TO something/-ING — rebajarse a algo/+ inf
5) ( be descended)to descend FROM somebody — descender* de alguien, ser* descendiente de alguien
2.
vt descender* (frml), bajarPhrasal Verbs:[dɪ'send]1. VT2) (=originate)2. VIdescending2) (=invade, take over)to descend (up)on — [fog, silence] caer sobre; [army, reporters] invadir; hum [visitors] invadir
we've got the whole family descending on us this weekend — nos va a invadir toda la familia este fin de semana
3) (=sink)4) (=be inherited) [property, custom] pasar (to a)5) (=originate)to descend from — [+ ancestors] descender de
* * *[dɪ'send]
1.
1) ( move downwards) descender* (frml), bajar2) descending pres p descendentein descending order of importance — en orden decreciente or descendente de importancia
3) ( set in) \<\<mist\>\> descender* (frml); \<\<rain\>\> caer*; \<\<silence/gloom\>\> abatirse (liter)4) ( stoop)to descend TO something/-ING — rebajarse a algo/+ inf
5) ( be descended)to descend FROM somebody — descender* de alguien, ser* descendiente de alguien
2.
vt descender* (frml), bajarPhrasal Verbs: -
125 hopeless
1) (not likely to be successful: It's hopeless to try to persuade him; a hopeless attempt; The future looks hopeless.) inútil2) ((with at) not good: I'm a hopeless housewife; He's hopeless at French.) negado3) (unable to be stopped, cured etc: The doctors considered the patient's case hopeless; He's a hopeless liar/idiot.) caso perdido, imposible, irremediablehopeless adj1. inútil / desesperado / imposibleit has disappeared, it's hopeless to go on looking ha desaparecido, es inútil seguir buscando2. negadotr['həʊpləs]1 desesperado,-a\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLit's hopeless es imposiblea hopeless case un caso perdidohopeless ['ho:pləs] adj1) despairing: desesperado2) impossible: imposiblea hopeless case: un caso perdidoadj.• desahuciado, -a adj.• desesperado, -a adj.• desesperanzado, -a adj.• imposible adj.• incurable adj.• rematado, -a adj.• sin remedio expr.'həʊpləs, 'həʊplɪs1) ( allowing no hope) < situation> desesperado; < love> sin esperanzas, imposible; < task> imposiblehe's a hopeless case — \<\<pupil\>\> no tiene remedio; \<\<patient\>\> está desahuciado
2) (incompetent, inadequate) (colloq)as an interviewer, she's absolutely hopeless — como entrevistadora, es una nulidad
the train service on this line is hopeless — el servicio de trenes en esta línea es desastroso or es un desastre
to be hopeless AT something — ser* negado para algo
['hǝʊplɪs]ADJ1) (=impossible) [task] imposible; [attempt] vano; [cause] perdido; [situation, position] desesperado; [love] imposiblehis attempt to swim the river was hopeless from the beginning — su tentativa de cruzar el río a nado estaba condenada al fracaso desde el principio
it's hopeless! — ¡es inútil!
he's a hopeless case! — es un caso perdido, no tiene remedio
the doctor says it is a hopeless case — el médico dice que no tiene salvación, el médico lo ha desahuciado
•
to be (in) a hopeless mess or muddle — [room] estar hecho un desastre; [plans] estar muy embrollado; [person] estar hecho un lío2) (=despairing) [cry] de desesperación; [grief] desesperado3) * (=not competent)she's a hopeless manager — como jefa es una nulidad or es penosa *
to be hopeless at (doing) sth: he's hopeless at football — es un desastre jugando al fútbol, es una nulidad para el fútbol *
I was hopeless at school — era un negado or una nulidad para los estudios *
I'm hopeless at maths/cooking — soy un negado para las matemáticas/la cocina
* * *['həʊpləs, 'həʊplɪs]1) ( allowing no hope) < situation> desesperado; < love> sin esperanzas, imposible; < task> imposiblehe's a hopeless case — \<\<pupil\>\> no tiene remedio; \<\<patient\>\> está desahuciado
2) (incompetent, inadequate) (colloq)as an interviewer, she's absolutely hopeless — como entrevistadora, es una nulidad
the train service on this line is hopeless — el servicio de trenes en esta línea es desastroso or es un desastre
to be hopeless AT something — ser* negado para algo
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126 inferior
in'fiəriə1) (of poor, or poorer, quality etc: This carpet is inferior to that.) inferior, peor2) (lower in rank: Is a colonel inferior to a brigadier?) inferior•inferior adj inferior
inferior adjetivo 1 ( en el espacio) ‹piso/planta› lower 2 ( en jerarquía) ‹especie/rango› inferior 3 ( en comparaciones) lower;◊ temperaturas inferiores a los 10° temperatures lower than o below 10°;un número inferior al 20 a number below twenty
inferior
I adjetivo
1 (en posición) lower
2 (en calidad) inferior
3 (en cantidad) lower, less
un volumen de ventas inferior a la media, below average turnover
4 (en rango) inferior
II mf (persona) subordinate, inferior ' inferior' also found in these entries: Spanish: señor - base English: average - below - bottom - down-market - downgrade - downstairs - inferior - lower - par - relegate - second - second-best - second-class - subaltern - substandard - third-rate - underneath - underside - beneath - jowls - less - mean - third - under - waytr[ɪn'fɪərɪəSMALLr/SMALL]1 inferior (to, a)1 inferior nombre masulino o femenino\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto make somebody feel inferior hacer que alguien se sienta inferiorinferior [ɪn'fɪriər] adj: inferior, maloinferior n: inferior mfadj.• inferior adj.n.• inferior s.m.
I ɪn'fɪriər, ɪn'fɪəriə(r)inferior TO something/somebody — inferior a algo/alguien
II
count noun inferior mf[ɪn'fɪǝrɪǝ(r)]1. ADJ1) (in quality, rank) [person, status, position] inferior; [product, work, service] de calidad inferiorto be inferior to sth/sb — ser inferior a algo/algn
2) (Anat, Bot) (=lower) inferior2. N1) (=inferior person) inferior mf2) (=person lower in rank) inferior mf, subalterno(-a) m / f* * *
I [ɪn'fɪriər, ɪn'fɪəriə(r)]inferior TO something/somebody — inferior a algo/alguien
II
count noun inferior mf -
127 invest
I in'vest verb((with in) to put (money) into (a firm or business) usually by buying shares in it, in order to make a profit: He invested (two hundred dollars) in a building firm.) invertir- investor
II in'vest verb(to establish (a person) officially in a position of authority etc: The governor will be invested next week.)invest vb invertirtr[ɪn'vest]1 (money) invertir (in, en)2 (time, effort, etc) emplear (in, en), invertir (in, en)3 formal use (right, rank, power, etc) investir ( with, con), conferir ( with, -), otorgar ( with, -)5 SMALLMILITARY/SMALL dated sitiar, cercar1 hacer una inversión (in, en), invertir dinero (in, en)invest [ɪn'vɛst] vt1) authorize: investir, autorizar2) confer: conferir3) : invertir, dedicarhe invested his savings in stocks: invirtió sus ahorros en accionesto invest one's time: dedicar uno su tiempov.• invertir v.• investir v.• revestir v.• sitiar v.• situar v.ɪn'vest
1.
1)to invest something (IN something) — \<\<money/time\>\> invertir* algo (en algo)
2) ( endow) (frml)to invest something WITH something — conferirle* or otorgarle* algo a algo (frml)
3) (frml)a) ( empower)to invest somebody WITH something — investir* a alguien de or con algo (frml)
b) ( put in office) investir* (frml)
2.
vi[ɪn'vest]to invest (IN something) — invertir* (en algo)
1. VT1) [+ money, capital, funds] invertir (in en); [+ person] (in office) investir; (fig) [+ time, effort] dedicarinvested capital — capital m invertido
2)to invest sb with sth — investir a algn de or con algo
3) (Mil) † sitiar, cercar2.VIto invest in — [+ company, project] invertir dinero en; hum (=buy) comprarse
to invest with — [+ bank, building society] invertir dinero en
* * *[ɪn'vest]
1.
1)to invest something (IN something) — \<\<money/time\>\> invertir* algo (en algo)
2) ( endow) (frml)to invest something WITH something — conferirle* or otorgarle* algo a algo (frml)
3) (frml)a) ( empower)to invest somebody WITH something — investir* a alguien de or con algo (frml)
b) ( put in office) investir* (frml)
2.
vito invest (IN something) — invertir* (en algo)
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128 lever
'li:və, ]( American) 'levər
1. noun1) (a bar of wood, metal etc used to lift heavy weights: A crowbar is a kind of lever; You must use a coin as a lever to get the lid of that tin off.) palanca2) (a bar or handle for operating a machine etc: This is the lever that switches on the power.) palanca
2. verb(to move with or as if with a lever: He levered the lid off with a coin.) sacar/quitar con una palanca- leveragelever n palancatr['liːvəSMALLr/SMALL]1 palanca2 (in lock) guarda1 apalancarlever ['lɛvər, 'li:-] n: palanca fn.• alzaprima s.f.• barra s.f.• leva s.f.• palanca s.f.v.• apalancar v.
I 'levər, 'liːvə(r)noun palanca f
II
transitive verb (+ adv compl)['liːvǝ(r)]to lever something open — abrir* algo haciendo palanca
1.N (also fig) palanca f2.VTto lever sth up/out/off — levantar/sacar/quitar algo con palanca
* * *
I ['levər, 'liːvə(r)]noun palanca f
II
transitive verb (+ adv compl)to lever something open — abrir* algo haciendo palanca
См. также в других словарях:
be in a position to do sth — ► to be able to do something, usually because you have the necessary experience, authority, or money: »Nine months ago, we were not in a position to announce the expansion plan. Main Entry: ↑position … Financial and business terms
Position — A market commitment; the number of contracts bought or sold for which no offsetting transaction has been entered into. The buyer of a commodity is said to have a long position and the seller of a commodity is said to have a short position .… … Financial and business terms
position — A market commitment. A buyer of a futures contract is said to have a long position and, conversely, a seller of futures contracts is said to have a short position. Chicago Board of Trade glossary Open contracts indicating an interest in the… … Financial and business terms
position — po|si|tion1 W1S3 [pəˈzıʃən] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(way of standing/sitting etc)¦ 2¦(situation)¦ 3¦(place where somebody/something is)¦ 4¦(correct place)¦ 5¦(direction)¦ 6¦(opinion)¦ 7¦(job)¦ 8¦(level/rank)¦ 9 be in a position to do something … Dictionary of contemporary English
position — 1 noun 1 STANDING/SITTING/POINTING ETC (C) the way someone stands or sits, or the direction in which an object, switch etc is pointing: I had to work in an uncomfortable position, lying under the car. | a sitting/kneeling/standing position: The… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
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strip sb/sth of sth — UK US strip sb/sth of sth Phrasal Verb with strip({{}}/strɪp/ verb [T] ( pp ) ► to take something away from someone, sometimes in a way that seems unfair or dishonest: be stripped of sth »About 40,000 people may be stripped of their pensions… … Financial and business terms
strip sth of sth — UK US strip sb/sth of sth Phrasal Verb with strip({{}}/strɪp/ verb [T] ( pp ) ► to take something away from someone, sometimes in a way that seems unfair or dishonest: be stripped of sth »About 40,000 people may be stripped of their pensions… … Financial and business terms
strip sb of sth — UK US strip sb/sth of sth Phrasal Verb with strip({{}}/strɪp/ verb [T] ( pp ) ► to take something away from someone, sometimes in a way that seems unfair or dishonest: be stripped of sth »About 40,000 people may be stripped of their pensions… … Financial and business terms
go long on sth — go long (on sth) ► FINANCE, STOCK MARKET to buy or keep shares, etc. because you expect their price to rise, so that you can make a profit: »The prospects for domestic demand growth in the eurozone are not great, so why not go long on sterling,… … Financial and business terms
relieve sb of sth — UK US relieve sb of sth Phrasal Verb with relieve({{}}/rɪˈliːv/ verb [T] ► to help someone by taking a problem or difficult task from them so that they no longer have to deal with it: »Japanese lawyer Mika Matsumoto says relieving hard working… … Financial and business terms