-
121 altruista
adj.altruistic.f. & m.altruist.* * *► adjetivo1 altruistic1 altruist* * *1.ADJ altruistic2.SMF altruist* * *Iadjetivo altruisticIImasculino y femenino altruist* * *= unselfish, altruistic, high-minded, selfless.Ex. True, we do have our unselfish heroes, men who willingly have laid down their lives for others, the wholly unselfish mother, the man who will step aside for the benefit of others.Ex. This is not to say that scholarly authors are so altruistic that they are prepared to write books for nothing; indeed in my own researches I have come across situations where authors felt deeply about the way that publishers had treated them financially.Ex. The conference produced a high-minded, challenging agenda for the library community in the coming year = El congreso elaboró un programa lleno de retos y de principios muy elevados para la comunidad bibliotecaria en el año entrante.Ex. Information technology should be viewed as an enabler of a larger system which builds a sharing, selfless working community.* * *Iadjetivo altruisticIImasculino y femenino altruist* * *= unselfish, altruistic, high-minded, selfless.Ex: True, we do have our unselfish heroes, men who willingly have laid down their lives for others, the wholly unselfish mother, the man who will step aside for the benefit of others.
Ex: This is not to say that scholarly authors are so altruistic that they are prepared to write books for nothing; indeed in my own researches I have come across situations where authors felt deeply about the way that publishers had treated them financially.Ex: The conference produced a high-minded, challenging agenda for the library community in the coming year = El congreso elaboró un programa lleno de retos y de principios muy elevados para la comunidad bibliotecaria en el año entrante.Ex: Information technology should be viewed as an enabler of a larger system which builds a sharing, selfless working community.* * *altruisticaltruist* * *
altruista adjetivo
altruistic
■ sustantivo masculino y femenino
altruist
altruista
I adjetivo altruistic
II mf altruist
' altruista' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
elevada
- elevado
English:
altruist
* * *♦ adjaltruistic♦ nmfaltruist* * *I adj altruisticII m/f altruist* * *altruista adj: altruisticaltruista nmf: altruist -
122 cínico
adj.1 cynical, sneering, man-hating, brazen.2 Cynical, follower of the philosophy of the Cynics.m.1 cynic, man-hater, misanthrope, misanthropist.2 cynic, skeptic.3 Cynic, member of the Cynics or believer in their doctrines.* * *► adjetivo1 cynical► nombre masculino,nombre femenino1 cynic* * *1. (f. - cínica)adj.2. (f. - cínica)noun* * *cínico, -a1.ADJ cynical2.SM / F cynic* * *I- ca adjetivo cynicalII- ca masculino, femenino cynic* * *= cynical, sardonic, cynic.Nota: Nombre.Ex. It is among such populations that the cynical, evasive, or merely muddled schemes of economic development have produced the greatest social inequity and human suffering.Ex. 'That wouldn't be my problem,' Stanton said darting a sardonic glance at her antagonist.Ex. Cynics may say that the words 'information technology' simply represent an attempt to make respectable some commercially motivated developments in electronics.* * *I- ca adjetivo cynicalII- ca masculino, femenino cynic* * *= cynical, sardonic, cynic.Nota: Nombre.Ex: It is among such populations that the cynical, evasive, or merely muddled schemes of economic development have produced the greatest social inequity and human suffering.
Ex: 'That wouldn't be my problem,' Stanton said darting a sardonic glance at her antagonist.Ex: Cynics may say that the words 'information technology' simply represent an attempt to make respectable some commercially motivated developments in electronics.* * *cynicalmasculine, femininecynic* * *
cínico◊ -ca adjetivo
cynical
■ sustantivo masculino, femenino
cynic
cínico,-a
I adjetivo cynical
II sustantivo masculino y femenino cynic
' cínico' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
cínica
English:
cynic
- cynical
* * *cínico, -a♦ adj[desvergonzado] shameless♦ nm,f[desvergonzado] shameless person;es un cínico he's shameless, he has no shame* * *I adj cynicalII m, cínica f cynic* * *cínico, -ca adj1) : cynical2) : shameless, brazen♦ cínicamente advcínico, -ca n: cynic -
123 desnudo
adj.1 naked, nude, as naked as a jaybird, bare.2 blunt, unmasked.La verdad desnuda The blunt truth...pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: desnudar.* * *► adjetivo1 (persona) naked, nude; (parte del cuerpo) bare2 figurado (falto de lo que cubre o adorna) plain, bare3 figurado (falto de fortuna) destitute4 figurado (falto de algo no material) devoid5 figurado (patente, claro) plain1 ARTE nude\poner al desnudo to lay bare, expose————————1 ARTE nude* * *(f. - desnuda)adj.bare, naked* * *1. ADJ1) (=sin ropa) [persona] naked; [cuerpo] naked, bare2) (=sin adorno) [árbol] bare; [paisaje] bare, featureless3) (=arruinado) ruined, bankruptquedarse desnudo — to be ruined, be bankrupt
4) (=puro) [verdad] plain, naked; [estilo] unadorned2. SM1) (Arte) nude2)* * *I- da adjetivo1)b) ( descubierto) <hombros/brazos/torso> barec) (liter) < espada> naked (liter)2)a) (sin adornos, aditamentos) <pared/cuarto> barela verdad desnuda — the naked o plain truth
b) <árbol/paisaje> bare3)IIal desnudo: la verdad al desnudo the truth plain and simple; el cable quedó al desnudo — the wire was left bare o exposed
masculino (Art) nude* * *= bare, stripped, naked, nude, in the buff, unclothed, in the nod.Ex. One time he showed me a photograph in an art book of a woman's bare breasts and said 'Nice tits, uh?'.Ex. Other lumbermen remained and revived the stripped acres with hand-reared trees, or turned to dairying.Ex. The article 'Who dare say that the emperor is naked?' is a contribution to a thematic issue on literacy in Sweden and the contribution made by public library extension services.Ex. Books will often make visual appeals with the use of dramatic or sexual images that succeed in attracting buyers but are not so successful at representing the text: as, Thomas Hardy's novels presented with nudes on the covers.Ex. They have already posed in the buff for another photograph in which they use their bodies to spell out the word 'Peace' on a beach.Ex. In a matter of minutes, eight cameras coupled with computer software can generate three-dimensional images of the human body, both clothed and unclothed.Ex. By that logic anybody who has sex or masturbates or even wanders around in the nod in a hotel room is 'breaching the peace'.----* bañarse desnudo = skinny dip.* completamente desnudo = stark naked.* póster de mujer desnuda = pin-up.* semidesnudo = semi-nude.* totalmente desnudo = stark naked.* * *I- da adjetivo1)b) ( descubierto) <hombros/brazos/torso> barec) (liter) < espada> naked (liter)2)a) (sin adornos, aditamentos) <pared/cuarto> barela verdad desnuda — the naked o plain truth
b) <árbol/paisaje> bare3)IIal desnudo: la verdad al desnudo the truth plain and simple; el cable quedó al desnudo — the wire was left bare o exposed
masculino (Art) nude* * *= bare, stripped, naked, nude, in the buff, unclothed, in the nod.Ex: One time he showed me a photograph in an art book of a woman's bare breasts and said 'Nice tits, uh?'.
Ex: Other lumbermen remained and revived the stripped acres with hand-reared trees, or turned to dairying.Ex: The article 'Who dare say that the emperor is naked?' is a contribution to a thematic issue on literacy in Sweden and the contribution made by public library extension services.Ex: Books will often make visual appeals with the use of dramatic or sexual images that succeed in attracting buyers but are not so successful at representing the text: as, Thomas Hardy's novels presented with nudes on the covers.Ex: They have already posed in the buff for another photograph in which they use their bodies to spell out the word 'Peace' on a beach.Ex: In a matter of minutes, eight cameras coupled with computer software can generate three-dimensional images of the human body, both clothed and unclothed.Ex: By that logic anybody who has sex or masturbates or even wanders around in the nod in a hotel room is 'breaching the peace'.* bañarse desnudo = skinny dip.* completamente desnudo = stark naked.* póster de mujer desnuda = pin-up.* semidesnudo = semi-nude.* totalmente desnudo = stark naked.* * *A1 (sin ropa) ‹persona› nakednunca la había visto desnuda he had never seen her naked o in the nudele gusta nadar desnudo he likes swimming in the nudeapareció totalmente desnudo he appeared stark nakedsin maquillaje me siento desnuda I feel naked without makeup o without my makeup ondesnudo de la cintura para arriba naked to the waistpara este invierno estoy desnuda ( fam); I haven't a thing to wear this winter2 (descubierto) ‹hombros/brazos› barecon los pies desnudos barefootB1(sin adornos, sin aditamentos): una habitación de paredes desnudas a room with bare wallsla verdad desnuda the naked o plain truthno perceptible al ojo desnudo not visible to the naked eye2 ‹árbol/rama› bareCal desnudo: ésta es la verdad al desnudo this is the truth plain and simplele había mostrado su corazón al desnudo she had bared her soul to himel cable quedó al desnudo the wire was left bareA ( Art) nudeun desnudo de mujer a female nudeB (desnudez) nudityCompuesto:aparece en desnudo integral she appears (completely) nudela revista publica desnudos integrales the magazine publishes full-frontal nude pictures o full frontals* * *
Del verbo desnudar: ( conjugate desnudar)
desnudo es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
desnudó es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo
Multiple Entries:
desnudar
desnudo
desnudar ( conjugate desnudar) verbo transitivo ( desvestir) to undress
desnudarse verbo pronominal ( refl) ( desvestirse) to undress, take one's clothes off;
desnudo 1 -da adjetivo
totalmente desnudo stark naked;
desnudo de la cintura para arriba naked to the waist
desnudo 2 sustantivo masculino (Art) nude
desnudar verbo transitivo to undress, strip: le desnudó con la mirada, she undressed him with her eyes
desnudo,-a
I adj (una persona) naked, nude, (una parte del cuerpo, algo sin adornos) bare
la verdad desnuda, the bare/naked truth
II m Arte nude
♦ Locuciones: al desnudo, bare: mi corazón al desnudo, my heart laid bare
' desnudo' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
bola
- desnuda
- desnudar
- chingo
- cuero
- pudor
English:
altogether
- bare
- naked
- nude
- skinny-dipping
- streak
- unclad
- undressed
- clothes
- on
- stark
* * *desnudo, -a♦ adj1. [persona, cuerpo] naked;nadar desnudo to swim in the nude;posó desnudo para “Mate” he posed in the nude for “Mate”;me siento desnudo sin mis gafas I feel naked without my glasses;desnudo de cintura para arriba/abajo naked from the waist up/down;Fam Fignecesito ir de compras porque ando desnudo I need to go shopping because I haven't got a thing to wear2. [brazo, hombro] bare3. [salón, pared, árbol, ramas] bare;[paisaje] bare, barren; [verdad] plain, unvarnished♦ nm1. [pintura, imagen] nude;pintar un desnudo to paint a nude;un desnudo femenino/masculino a female/male nude;el desnudo en el cine nudity in the movies;desnudo frontal full-frontal nude;contiene desnudos integrales it has scenes of full-frontal nudity2.al desnudo [a la vista] for all to see;el reportaje deja al desnudo las intrigas en el seno del partido the article takes the lid off party in-fighting;ésta es la verdad al desnudo this is the plain, unadorned truth* * *I adj1 persona naked2 ( sin decoración) bareII m1 PINT nude2:poner al desnudo lay bare* * *desnudo, -da adj: nude, naked, baredesnudo nm: nude* * *desnudo adj1. (persona) naked / nude2. (parte del cuerpo, pared) bare -
124 en resumen
in short, to sum up* * *= in conclusion, in summary, simply put, the long and (the) short of, in sum, in all, to sum up, to sum it up, in essence, put simply, all in all, simply statedEx. In conclusion, it should not be necessary to say that instructions and guiding must be as brief as possible.Ex. There are in summary two important applications for classification theory.Ex. Simply put, it just doesn't pay to digitise information that few can use, and even fewer will pay for.Ex. The article ' The long and short of a new business model' reviews the application of CD-R on-demand publishing to fill the gap between producing a few copies and spending large sums on replicators to produce 1000 or more copies = El artículo "Un nuevo modelo económico en breve" analiza la aplicación de la publicación en CD-Grabable según la demanda para cubrir el vacío que existe entre producir unas cuentas copias o invertir grandes sumas de dinero en reproductores de CD-ROM para producir 1.000 o más copias.Ex. In sum, the librarian should have the knowledge, experience and sense to provide the right book to the right child at the right time = En suma, el bibliotecario debería tener el conocimiento, la experiencia y el sentido para ofrecer el libro correcto al niño adecuado en el momento oportuno.Ex. In all 20 per cent of visitors went out of the bookshop with a book they had intended to buy, 15 per cent went out with a book they had not intended to buy and 67 went out with both intended and unintended purchases.Ex. To sum up it may be said that overall annual energy costs can be reduced by as much as a third by careful planning.Ex. To sum it up, ISBD stands in sharp contrast to the ideal of concise and clear entries followed by the founders of Anglo-American cataloging.Ex. In essence these indexing languages are very similar to the lists of subject headings which are used in pre-coordinate indexing.Ex. Put simply, asymmetric threats are a version of not 'fighting fair,' which can include the use of surprise and weapons in ways unplanned by a nation.Ex. All in all, then, the book has plenty to attend to, plenty to enjoy, plenty to share.Ex. Simply stated, no, it is not improper to pour wine into your guest s wine glass if it still contains wine.* * *= in conclusion, in summary, simply put, the long and (the) short of, in sum, in all, to sum up, to sum it up, in essence, put simply, all in all, simply statedEx: In conclusion, it should not be necessary to say that instructions and guiding must be as brief as possible.
Ex: There are in summary two important applications for classification theory.Ex: Simply put, it just doesn't pay to digitise information that few can use, and even fewer will pay for.Ex: The article ' The long and short of a new business model' reviews the application of CD-R on-demand publishing to fill the gap between producing a few copies and spending large sums on replicators to produce 1000 or more copies = El artículo "Un nuevo modelo económico en breve" analiza la aplicación de la publicación en CD-Grabable según la demanda para cubrir el vacío que existe entre producir unas cuentas copias o invertir grandes sumas de dinero en reproductores de CD-ROM para producir 1.000 o más copias.Ex: In sum, the librarian should have the knowledge, experience and sense to provide the right book to the right child at the right time = En suma, el bibliotecario debería tener el conocimiento, la experiencia y el sentido para ofrecer el libro correcto al niño adecuado en el momento oportuno.Ex: In all 20 per cent of visitors went out of the bookshop with a book they had intended to buy, 15 per cent went out with a book they had not intended to buy and 67 went out with both intended and unintended purchases.Ex: To sum up it may be said that overall annual energy costs can be reduced by as much as a third by careful planning.Ex: To sum it up, ISBD stands in sharp contrast to the ideal of concise and clear entries followed by the founders of Anglo-American cataloging.Ex: In essence these indexing languages are very similar to the lists of subject headings which are used in pre-coordinate indexing.Ex: Put simply, asymmetric threats are a version of not 'fighting fair,' which can include the use of surprise and weapons in ways unplanned by a nation.Ex: All in all, then, the book has plenty to attend to, plenty to enjoy, plenty to share.Ex: Simply stated, no, it is not improper to pour wine into your guest s wine glass if it still contains wine. -
125 encontrarse con una situación
(v.) = come across + situation, meet + situationEx. This is not to say that scholarly authors are so altruistic that they are prepared to write books for nothing; indeed in my own researches I have come across situations where authors felt deeply about the way that publishers had treated them financially.Ex. In other words, to make sense of life-situations and to make intelligent decisions when we meet them, we need to have pondered the various possibilities either before the situations arise or with speed and sureness when they arise.* * *(v.) = come across + situation, meet + situationEx: This is not to say that scholarly authors are so altruistic that they are prepared to write books for nothing; indeed in my own researches I have come across situations where authors felt deeply about the way that publishers had treated them financially.
Ex: In other words, to make sense of life-situations and to make intelligent decisions when we meet them, we need to have pondered the various possibilities either before the situations arise or with speed and sureness when they arise. -
126 estar disgustado por
(v.) = feel deeply aboutEx. This is not to say that scholarly authors are so altruistic that they are prepared to write books for nothing; indeed in my own researches I have come across situations where authors felt deeply about the way that publishers had treated them financially.* * *(v.) = feel deeply aboutEx: This is not to say that scholarly authors are so altruistic that they are prepared to write books for nothing; indeed in my own researches I have come across situations where authors felt deeply about the way that publishers had treated them financially.
-
127 inocente
adj.1 innocent (no culpable).2 naive, innocent (ingenuo).3 harmless.intj.not guilty, innocent.f. & m.1 innocent person (no culpable).2 harmless person.* * *► adjetivo1 innocent2 (ingenuo) naive, innocent1 innocent person2 naive person, innocent person\hacerse el inocente / la inocente to play the innocentdía de los Inocentes 28th December, (≈ April Fools' Day)los Santos Inocentes the Holy Innocents* * *adj.* * *I1. ADJ1) (=sin culpa) innocent (de of)(Jur) not guilty, innocent2) (=ingenuo) naïve3) (=inofensivo) harmless2. SMF1) (=ingenuo) innocent person2) (=bobo) simpletonDÍA DE LOS (SANTOS) INOCENTES 28 December, el día de los (Santos) Inocentes, is when the Catholic Church in Spain commemorates the New Testament story of King Herod's slaughter of the innocent children of Judaea. On this day Spaniards play practical jokes or inocentadas on each other, much as we do on April Fools' Day. A typical example is sticking a monigote, a cut-out paper figure, on someone's back. Whenever someone falls for a trick, the practical joker cries out "¡Inocente!" Para otros nombres, ver el segundo elemento. IIel día de los (Santos) Inocentes — ≈ April Fools' Day, ≈ All Fools' Day
SM1) And, Cono Sur avocado pear2) And masquerade* * *Iadjetivo [SER]a) ( sin culpa) innocent; (Der) innocent, not guiltyb) < broma> harmlessc) ( ingenuo) naive, gullibleIImasculino y femenino innocent* * *= naive [naïve], innocent, born yesterday, April fool, blameless, guilt-free.Ex. At the risk of sounding trite and a bit naive, I'd like to remind this group that the ISBD was also called, not for the cataloger's benefit, but as an international tool of bibliographic description.Ex. This is highly embarrassing for the innocent reader and for the apologetic library staff.Ex. The article is entitled ' Born yesterday and other forms of original sin: two perspectives on library research'.Ex. The classic form of April fool hoax is to present an improbable situation in such a convincing way that people fall for it on the spur of the moment but later cannot understand why they did so.Ex. But he is completely wrong to say that he as a state employee is utterly blamelessfor the mess our pensions and state budgets are in.Ex. The article ' Guilt-free automated claiming' evaluates the impact of automation on serials claiming.----* declararse inocente = protest + Posesivo + innocence, plead + not guilty.* Día de los (Santos) Inocentes, el = April Fools' Day.* inocente hasta que se demuestre lo contrario = innocent until proven guilty.* inocentes, los = innocent, the.* presuntamente inocente, presunción de inocencia = presumed innocent.* tan inocente como un bebé = as innocent as a lamb.* * *Iadjetivo [SER]a) ( sin culpa) innocent; (Der) innocent, not guiltyb) < broma> harmlessc) ( ingenuo) naive, gullibleIImasculino y femenino innocent* * *= naive [naïve], innocent, born yesterday, April fool, blameless, guilt-free.Ex: At the risk of sounding trite and a bit naive, I'd like to remind this group that the ISBD was also called, not for the cataloger's benefit, but as an international tool of bibliographic description.
Ex: This is highly embarrassing for the innocent reader and for the apologetic library staff.Ex: The article is entitled ' Born yesterday and other forms of original sin: two perspectives on library research'.Ex: The classic form of April fool hoax is to present an improbable situation in such a convincing way that people fall for it on the spur of the moment but later cannot understand why they did so.Ex: But he is completely wrong to say that he as a state employee is utterly blamelessfor the mess our pensions and state budgets are in.Ex: The article ' Guilt-free automated claiming' evaluates the impact of automation on serials claiming.* declararse inocente = protest + Posesivo + innocence, plead + not guilty.* Día de los (Santos) Inocentes, el = April Fools' Day.* inocente hasta que se demuestre lo contrario = innocent until proven guilty.* inocentes, los = innocent, the.* presuntamente inocente, presunción de inocencia = presumed innocent.* tan inocente como un bebé = as innocent as a lamb.* * *[ SER]1 (sin culpa) innocent; ( Der) innocent, not guiltylo declararon inocente he was found not guilty, he was cleared2 ‹broma› harmless3 (ingenuo) naive, gullible, easily deceivedinnocentno te hagas el inocente don't play the innocent, don't come the innocent with me ( colloq)* * *
inocente adjetivo
(Der) innocent, not guilty;
■ sustantivo masculino y femenino
innocent;
inocente
I adjetivo
1 innocent
una acción inocente, a harmless deed
2 (ingenuo) gullible
II mf innocent
' inocente' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
acabose
- convicción
- declararse
- insistir
- simple
- declarar
- hacer
- matanza
- puro
English:
blameless
- bystander
- catch up
- clean
- find
- frame
- frame-up
- innocent
- play
- plead
- sap
- wash
- would
- harmless
- party
- plea
* * *♦ adj1. [no culpable] innocent;todo el mundo es inocente hasta que no se demuestre lo contrario everyone is innocent until proven guilty2. [ingenuo] naive, innocent3. [sin maldad] harmless♦ nmf1. [no culpable] innocent person2. [sin maldad] harmless person* * *adj innocent* * *inocente adj1) : innocent2) ingenuo: naïve♦ inocentemente advinocente nmf: innocent person* * *inocente adj1. (en general) innocent2. (ingenuo) naive3. (sin malicia) harmless -
128 loable
adj.praiseworthy.* * *► adjetivo1 laudable, praiseworthy* * *ADV praiseworthy, laudable, commendable* * *adjetivo commendable, praiseworthy* * *= commendable, laudable, praiseworthy, worthy, meritorious.Ex. Simply adding a few books on rights, commendable though this may be, will not work miracles unless all aspects of the library service are relevant to the needs of all the community.Ex. I would say that the general end of objectivity in the headings that Ms. Marshall talked about is a very laudable end and should be pursued.Ex. So to be able to read is praiseworthy in that it shows success in the early stages of primary education and, as books are used so much within the schools, the reading of books becomes a particular praiseworthy activity.Ex. Books were kept for historical records of deeds done by the inhabitants: their worthy acts as well as their sins.Ex. An employee will remain at the same step even if the scale changes, since otherwise his previous reward for meritorious or continuous service would be withdrawn.* * *adjetivo commendable, praiseworthy* * *= commendable, laudable, praiseworthy, worthy, meritorious.Ex: Simply adding a few books on rights, commendable though this may be, will not work miracles unless all aspects of the library service are relevant to the needs of all the community.
Ex: I would say that the general end of objectivity in the headings that Ms. Marshall talked about is a very laudable end and should be pursued.Ex: So to be able to read is praiseworthy in that it shows success in the early stages of primary education and, as books are used so much within the schools, the reading of books becomes a particular praiseworthy activity.Ex: Books were kept for historical records of deeds done by the inhabitants: their worthy acts as well as their sins.Ex: An employee will remain at the same step even if the scale changes, since otherwise his previous reward for meritorious or continuous service would be withdrawn.* * *commendable, praiseworthy, laudable* * *
loable adjetivo
commendable, praiseworthy
loable adjetivo praiseworthy
' loable' also found in these entries:
English:
laudable
- praiseworthy
- worthy
- commendable
* * *loable adjpraiseworthy* * *adj praiseworthy, laudable* * *loable adj: laudable, praiseworthy♦ loablemente adv
См. также в других словарях:
say that for someone — say this/that/for someone phrase used for admitting that someone who you do not approve of has a good quality I’ll say this for her: she’s never lied to me. He’s very clever: you have to say that for him. Thesaurus: words used to describe someone … Useful english dictionary
that's not to say (that) — that’s not to say (that) phrase used for adding a statement that corrects what you have just said or makes it less definite So far, no one’s been sacked, but that’s not to say it won’t happen. Thesaurus: ways of adding extra informationsynonym… … Useful english dictionary
say that black is white — pretend/say that black is white to say the opposite of what is really true. She ll say that black is white if she thinks it s to her advantage … New idioms dictionary
you can say that again — (informal) You are absolutely right, I agree entirely • • • Main Entry: ↑say * * * you can say that again spoken phrase used for expressing strong agreement with what someone has said ‘This is so boring!’ ‘You can say that again!’ Thesaurus: ways … Useful english dictionary
What Made You Say That — Single infobox Name = What Made You Say That Artist = Shania Twain from Album = Shania Twain Released = March 9 1993 Genre = Country Length = 2:59 Label = Mercury Nashville Writer = Tony Haselden, Stan Munsey, Jr. Producer = Harold Shedd, Norro… … Wikipedia
I must say (that) — I have to say (that) spoken phrase used for emphasizing a statement I’m not very impressed, I must say. I must say that the standard of play was abysmal. Thesaurus: ways of emphasizing what you are sayinghyponym … Useful english dictionary
What Made You Say That — Single par Shania Twain extrait de l’album Shania Twain Sortie 9 mars 1993 Enregistrement 1993 Durée 2:58 Genre Country … Wikipédia en Français
suffice (it) to say (that) … — suffice (it) to say (that)… idiom used to suggest that although you could say more, what you do say will be enough to explain what you mean • I won t go into all the details. Suffice it to say that the whole event was a complete disaster.… … Useful english dictionary
suffice (it) to say (that) — spoken formal phrase used for saying that the statement that you are making contains your main idea, although you could say more about it Suffice it to say that working with Kelvin was not a very pleasant experience. Thesaurus: expressions used… … Useful english dictionary
Just to Hear You Say That You Love Me — Single infobox Name = Just to Hear You Say That You Love Me Artist = Faith Hill featuring Tim McGraw from Album = Faith Released = 1998 Format = CD Single Writer = Diane Warren Genre = Country Length = 4:29 Label = Warner Bros. Certification =… … Wikipedia
She Can't Say That Anymore — Infobox Single Name = She Can t Say That Anymore Artist = John Conlee from Album = Friday Night Blues A side = B side = Released = 1980 Format = Recorded = Genre = Country Length = 2:39 Label = MCA Writer = Sonny Throckmorton Producer = Bud Logan … Wikipedia