-
21 identified
adj.identificado.pp.participio pasado del verbo IDENTIFY.pt.pretérito del verbo IDENTIFY. -
22 armband
noun (a strip of cloth etc worn round the arm: The people all wore black armbands as a sign of mourning.) brazal, brazaletearmband n1. manguito2. brazaltr['ɑːmbænd]1 SMALLMILITARY/SMALL brazal nombre masculino2 (for swimming) manguiton.• brazal s.m.noun (to denote rank, as sign of mourning etc) brazalete m; ( for swimming) flotador m ( que se coloca en el brazo), alita f (AmS)['ɑːmbænd]N brazalete m* * *noun (to denote rank, as sign of mourning etc) brazalete m; ( for swimming) flotador m ( que se coloca en el brazo), alita f (AmS) -
23 designate
'deziɡneit
1. verb1) (to call or name: It was designated a conservation area.) designar, nombrar2) (to point out or identify: He has been designated our next Prime Minister.) designar, nombrar
2. adjective((placed immediately after noun) appointed to an office etc but not yet having begun it: the ambassador designate.) designado, nombrado- designated driver
1 formal use (indicate, mark, show) indicar, señalar2 (appoint) designar, nombrar1 formal use designado,-a, nombrado,-a1) indicate, specify: indicar, especificar2) appoint: nombrar, designaradj.• designado, -a adj.v.• designar v.• marcar v.• nombrar v.• señalar v.
I 'dezɪgneɪt1) ( name officially) nombrar, designar2) ( call) (frml) designar3) ( indicate) (frml) indicar*
II 'dezɪgneɪt, -nət, 'dezɪgnətadjective (after n)1.VT ['dezɪɡneɪt](=name) denominar; (=appoint) nombrar, designar; (=indicate) señalar, indicarto designate sb to do sth — nombrar or designar a algn para hacer algo
I was designated as their representative — me nombraron or designaron representante de su grupo
the woodland has been designated (as) a bird sanctuary — el bosque ha sido declarado reserva ornitológica
2.ADJ ['dezɪɡnɪt]designado, nombrado* * *
I ['dezɪgneɪt]1) ( name officially) nombrar, designar2) ( call) (frml) designar3) ( indicate) (frml) indicar*
II ['dezɪgneɪt, -nət, 'dezɪgnət]adjective (after n) -
24 diagnose
(to say what is wrong (with a sick person etc) after making an examination; to identify (an illness etc): The doctor diagnosed her illness as flu.) diagnosticardiagnose vb diagnosticartr['daɪəgnəʊz]1 SMALLMEDICINE/SMALL diagnosticar2 (fault) descubrir1 SMALLMEDICINE/SMALL diagnosticarv.• diagnosticar v.'daɪəgnəʊs, -əʊz, 'daɪəgnəʊza) ( Med) \<\<illness\>\> diagnosticar*b) \<\<cause/fault\>\> determinar, establecer*['daɪǝɡnǝʊz]VT (Med) (also fig) diagnosticar* * *['daɪəgnəʊs, -əʊz, 'daɪəgnəʊz]a) ( Med) \<\<illness\>\> diagnosticar*b) \<\<cause/fault\>\> determinar, establecer* -
25 distinguish
di'stiŋɡwiʃ1) ((often with from) to mark as different: What distinguishes this café from all the others?) distinguir (de), diferenciar (de)2) (to identify or make out: He could just distinguish the figure of a man running away.) distinguir, vislumbrar3) ((sometimes with between) to recognize a difference: I can't distinguish (between) the two types - they both look the same to me.) distinguir (entre)4) (to make (oneself) noticed through one's achievements: He distinguished himself at school by winning a prize in every subject.) destacarse•- distinguished
distinguish vb distinguirtr[dɪ'stɪŋgwɪʃ]■ can children distinguish right from wrong? ¿los niños saben distinguir el bien del mal?2 (manage to see, make out) distinguir1 distinguir ( between, entre)\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto distinguish oneself distinguirse, destacarsedistinguish [dɪs'tɪŋgwɪʃ] vt1) differentiate: distinguir, diferenciar2) discern: distinguirhe distinguished the sound of the piano: distinguió el sonido del piano3)to distinguish oneself : señalarse, distinguirsedistinguish vidiscriminate: distinguirv.• calificar v.• discernir v.• distinguir v.dɪ'stɪŋgwɪʃ
1.
1)a) ( differentiate) distinguir*, diferenciarto distinguish something/somebody FROM something/somebody — distinguir* or diferenciar algo/a alguien de algo/alguien
b) distinguishing pres p <feature/mark> distintivo, característico2) ( make out) distinguir*
2.
vi distinguir*he can't distinguish between green and blue — no distingue entre el verde y el azul, no distingue el verde del azul
3.
v refl[dɪs'tɪŋɡwɪʃ]to distinguish oneself — distinguirse*, destacarse*
1. VT1) (=differentiate) distinguirthey are so alike, it's hard to distinguish them — son tan parecidos que es difícil distinguirlos
he is unable to distinguish brown from green or brown and green — no es capaz de distinguir el marrón del verde or el marrón y el verde
2) (=make different) distinguir ( from de)it is his professionalism that distinguishes him from his rivals — su profesionalismo es lo que le distingue de sus rivales
to distinguish o.s. — destacarse (as como)
he distinguished himself during his career in the army — se destacó durante su carrera en el ejército
you've really distinguished yourself! — iro ¡te has lucido! iro
3) (=characterize) caracterizarher work is distinguished by its excellent presentation — su trabajo se caracteriza por una excelente presentación
4) (=discern) [+ landmark] distinguir, vislumbrar; [+ voice] distinguir; [+ change] distinguir, reconocer2.VI distinguir ( between entre)* * *[dɪ'stɪŋgwɪʃ]
1.
1)a) ( differentiate) distinguir*, diferenciarto distinguish something/somebody FROM something/somebody — distinguir* or diferenciar algo/a alguien de algo/alguien
b) distinguishing pres p <feature/mark> distintivo, característico2) ( make out) distinguir*
2.
vi distinguir*he can't distinguish between green and blue — no distingue entre el verde y el azul, no distingue el verde del azul
3.
v reflto distinguish oneself — distinguirse*, destacarse*
-
26 mark down
v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( Busn) \<\<goods\>\> rebajarb) (BrE Educ) \<\<person/work\>\> bajarle la nota aVT + ADV1) (=note down) apuntar, anotar2) (Comm) [+ prices, goods] rebajar3) [+ student] bajar la nota a4) (=identify)I had him marked down as a friend of hers — pensé que era un amigo suyo, lo tomé por un amigo suyo
* * *v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( Busn) \<\<goods\>\> rebajarb) (BrE Educ) \<\<person/work\>\> bajarle la nota a -
27 pin down
(to make (someone) give a definite answer, statement, opinion or promise: I can't pin him down to a definite date for his arrival.) abligar a uno a que concrete; hacer que se comprometaexpr.• inmobilizar v.v + o + adv, v + adv + o1) ( prevent from moving)2)a) ( define) \<\<cause/identity\>\> definir, precisarsomething's wrong with me, but I can't pin it down — algo tengo, pero no sabría decir exactamente qué
b) ( force to state position)I managed to pin him down to a definite date — conseguí que se comprometiera para una fecha concreta
VT + ADV1) (=fasten or hold down) sujetar2) (fig)a) (=oblige to be specific)the minister refused to be pinned down on the timing of the reforms — el ministro no quiso comprometerse a dar fechas específicas para las reformas
b) (=identify) [+ problem] identificar; [+ concept] precisar, definir; [+ reason] dar con; [+ date] precisar3) (Mil) [+ troops] atraparour men were pinned down by artillery fire — nuestros hombres se vieron atrapados por fuego de artillería
* * *v + o + adv, v + adv + o1) ( prevent from moving)2)a) ( define) \<\<cause/identity\>\> definir, precisarsomething's wrong with me, but I can't pin it down — algo tengo, pero no sabría decir exactamente qué
b) ( force to state position) -
28 pinpoint
verb (to place or show very exactly: He pinpointed the position on the map.) indicar con toda precisión, concretartr['pɪnpɔɪnt]1 (position) localizar; (cause, origin, time) establecer con exactitud, precisar exactamente; (fact) señalar1 puntito\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLpinpoint accuracy precisión nombre femenino milimétricapinpoint ['pɪn.pɔɪnt] vt: precisar, localizar con precisiónv.• indicar con precisión v.
I 'pɪnpɔɪnta) ( determine) \<\<position/aircraft\>\> localizar* or (AmL tb) ubicar* con exactitudto pinpoint the causes of the problem — establecer* con exactitud cuáles son las causas del problema
b) ( pick out) \<\<fact\>\> señalar
II
noun puntito m['pɪnpɔɪnt]1.N [of light] puntito m2.VT (=identify) [+ location, source, problem] identificar, determinar; [+ cause] precisar, señalar con precisiónit's difficult to pinpoint when it first started happening — resulta difícil precisar cuándo empezó a ocurrir por primera vez
we pinpointed the issues that need priority attention — determinamos qué cuestiones necesitan atención prioritaria
3.CPDpinpoint accuracy N — (=extreme accuracy) precisión f milimétrica
* * *
I ['pɪnpɔɪnt]a) ( determine) \<\<position/aircraft\>\> localizar* or (AmL tb) ubicar* con exactitudto pinpoint the causes of the problem — establecer* con exactitud cuáles son las causas del problema
b) ( pick out) \<\<fact\>\> señalar
II
noun puntito m -
29 relate
rə'leit
1. verb1) (to tell (a story etc): He related all that had happened to him.) relatar2) ((with to) to be about, concerned or connected with: Have you any information relating to the effect of penicillin on mice?) relacionar con, con relación a3) ((with to) to behave towards: He finds it difficult to relate normally to his mother.) relacionarse (con)•- related- relation
- relationship
- relative
2. adjective1) (compared with something else, or with each other, or with a situation in the past etc: the relative speeds of a car and a train; She used to be rich but now lives in relative poverty.) relativo2) ((of a pronoun, adjective or clause) referring back to something previously mentioned: the girl who sang the song; the girl who sang the song.) relativo•relate vb1. estar relacionado2. relatar / contartr[rɪ'leɪt]1 (tell) relatar, contar2 (connect) relacionar (to, con)1 (connect) relacionarse, estar relacionado■ how does this relate to your work? ¿esto, cómo está relacionado con tu trabajo?1) tell: relatar, contar2) associate: relacionar, asociarto relate crime to poverty: relacionar la delincuencia a la pobrezarelate vi1) connect: conectar, estar relacionado (con)2) interact: relacionarse (con), llevarse bien (con)3)to relate to understand: identificarse con, simpatizar conv.• contar v.• narrar v.• recontar v.• relacionar v.• relatar v.rɪ'leɪt
1.
1) ( link)2) ( tell) (frml) \<\<story\>\> relatar, contar*, referir* (liter)
2.
vi1)a) ( be connected with)to relate TO something — estar* relacionado con algo
b)relating to — (as prep) relativo a, relacionado con
2) (understand, sympathise with)to relate TO somebody — sintonizar* con alguien, tener* una buena relación con alguien
[rɪ'leɪt]to relate TO something — identificarse* con algo
1. VT1) (=tell) [+ story] contar, relatar; [+ conversation] relatar, referirshe related details of the meeting to her boss — le relató or refirió a su jefe detalles de la reunión
history relates that he landed here in AD 470 — la historia cuenta or relata que desembarcó aquí en el año 470 AD
strange to relate — aunque parezca mentira, por extraño que parezca
2) (=establish relation between)they relate what they read to their own experiences — relacionan lo que leen con sus propias experiencias
2. VI1) (=communicate) relacionarse, comunicarsehow you relate depends on the kind of person you are — cómo te relacionas or te comunicas depende del tipo de persona que eres
2)to relate to (sth/sb) —
a) (=form a relationship with)b) (=understand, identify with)to relate to sth/sb — identificarse con algo/algn
I can relate to that * — yo eso lo entiendo *, yo me identifico con eso
it's important for children to have brothers and sisters they can relate to — es importante que los niños tengan hermanos y hermanas con los que puedan identificarse
c) (=connect with)the way that words in a sentence relate to each other — la manera en la que las palabras de una frase se relacionan las unas con las otras
d) (=appertain to)to relate to sth — referirse a algo, estar relacionado con algo, tener que ver con algo
most of the enquiries relate to debt — la mayoría de las preguntas se refieren a deudas or tienen que ver con deudas
relatingthis relates to what I said yesterday — esto se refiere a or está relacionado con lo que dije ayer
* * *[rɪ'leɪt]
1.
1) ( link)2) ( tell) (frml) \<\<story\>\> relatar, contar*, referir* (liter)
2.
vi1)a) ( be connected with)to relate TO something — estar* relacionado con algo
b)relating to — (as prep) relativo a, relacionado con
2) (understand, sympathise with)to relate TO somebody — sintonizar* con alguien, tener* una buena relación con alguien
to relate TO something — identificarse* con algo
-
30 zero in on
v + adv + prep + o \<\<target\>\> apuntarle directamente a; \<\<issue/problem\>\> centrarse en, concentrar la atención en or sobreVI + PREP1) (Mil) (=aim at) [+ target] apuntar a; (=move in on) dirigirse de cabeza a2) (fig) (=identify) identificar; (=concentrate on) dirigir todos sus esfuerzos ahe raised the binoculars and zeroed in on an eleventh-floor room — elevó los prismáticos y los dirigió or enfocó hacia una habitación de la undécima planta
ZERO Existen varias palabras que pueden usarse en lugar de zero según el contexto. Zero es el término más general en inglés americano, que se usa en la mayoría de los casos. En inglés británico se usa normalmente en matemáticas y ciencias para referirse a temperaturas u otras escalas de valores, como por ejemplo en las frases zero population growth (crecimiento de población cero), o zero inflation (índice de inflación cero).he zeroed in on those who... — reservó sus críticas más acérrimas para los que...
Nought se usa en inglés británico para leer números decimales, como por ejemplo nought point nought seven: 0.07 (en inglés se usa el punto en vez de la coma como separador decimal) y en las calificaciones: nought out of ten (cero sobre diez).
O (pronunciado igual que la letra o) se usa en inglés británico en los números de teléfono: O one four one: 0141. También se usa en secuencias de dígitos que no representan cantidades numéricas, como por ejemplo en tarjetas de crédito o números de cuentas bancarias.
Nil se usa normalmente en el Reino Unido en los tanteos deportivos: Liverpool won five nil (Liverpool ganó cinco a cero).
Nothing es el equivalente americano de nil, aunque también se usa a veces en inglés británico.* * *v + adv + prep + o \<\<target\>\> apuntarle directamente a; \<\<issue/problem\>\> centrarse en, concentrar la atención en or sobre -
31 compenetrarse
compenetrarse ( conjugate compenetrarse) verbo pronominal compenetrarse con algo ‹con ideas/objetivos› to identify with sth; compenetrarse con algn to have a good relationship with sb; ( en trabajo) to work well with sb;
compenetrarse verbo reflexivo to understand each other: el equipo de vela se compenetra maravillosamente, the sailing team works together wonderfully ' compenetrarse' also found in these entries: Spanish: entenderse - identificar -
32 put one's finger on
(to point out or describe exactly; to identify: She put her finger on the cause of our financial trouble.) dar en el clavo -
33 define
vt.1 definir (give meaning of)2 delimitar, distinguir (delimit, identify)vi.decidir, juzgar. (pt & pp defined) -
34 identifying
adj.identificador.ger.gerundio del verbo: IDENTIFY -
35 name
adv.in name -> nominalmente.s.1 nombre (de persona)2 nombre, reputación (reputation)vt.1 poner nombre a, bautizar (give name to)2 nombrar (appoint)3 nombrar (designate, identify)4 intitular, titular. (pt & pp named) -
36 pin down
v.1 atrapar, sujetar (trap)2 identificar (identify)we tried to pin him down to a date intentamos que se comprometiera a dar una fecha4 fijar con alfileres.5 arrinconar, hacer decir la verdad, llevar al punto.6 mantener sujeto, sujetar, dejar sujeto, inmovilizar.7 localizar, encontrar.8 estaquillar.
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
identify — iden·ti·fy vt fied, fy·ing 1: to consider as united or associated (as in interests or principles) can ask leading questions of a witness who is identified with an adverse party 2: to establish the identity of identify ing the suspect … Law dictionary
identify — identify, incorporate, embody, assimilate are comparable when they mean to bring (one or more things) into union with another thing. Identify involves the idea of a union of things that are or are thought of as identical, or the same; it may… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
identify — UK US /aɪˈdentɪfaɪ/ verb [T] ► to find and be able to describe someone or something: identify what/which/who »To create an effective advertising campaign you must first identify who your target market is. »A good business recovery service should… … Financial and business terms
Identify — I*den ti*fy, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Identified}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Identifying}.] [Cf. F. identifier. See {Identity}, and { fy}.] 1. To make to be the same; to unite or combine in such a manner as to make one; to treat as being one or having the… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
identify — [ī den′tə fī΄] vt. identified, identifying [LL identificare: see IDENTITY & FY] 1. to make identical; consider or treat as the same [to identify one s interests with another s] 2. to recognize as being or show to be the very person or thing known … English World dictionary
identify — ► VERB (identifies, identified) 1) establish the identity of. 2) recognize or select by analysis. 3) (identify with) regard oneself as sharing the same characteristics or thinking as (someone else). 4) (identify with) associate (someone or… … English terms dictionary
identify yourself — to say who you are When the police asked his name, he refused to identify himself. • • • Main Entry: ↑identify … Useful english dictionary
Identify — I*den ti*fy, v. i. 1. To become the same; to coalesce in interest, purpose, use, effect, etc. [Obs. or R.] 2. To coalesce in interest, purpose, use, effect, etc.; to associate oneself in name, goals, or feelings; usually used with with; as, he… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
identify with someone — identify with (someone) to understand and feel sympathy for someone. Ordinary people can identify with him in many ways, mainly because he talks to voters like an ordinary person … New idioms dictionary
identify with — (someone) to understand and feel sympathy for someone. Ordinary people can identify with him in many ways, mainly because he talks to voters like an ordinary person … New idioms dictionary
identify with something — identify with (something) to feel that you understand a situation. So, they ve run out of money? I can identify with that! … New idioms dictionary