-
81 sólido
adj.1 solid, firm, strong, brick-and-mortar.2 solid, punchy, sound, convincing.3 solid, honest, irreproachable.m.1 solid, solid object, trimensional.2 solid, non-liquid.* * *► adjetivo3 figurado (principios etc) sound1 solid————————1 solid* * *1. (f. - sólida)adj.1) solid2) firm3) sound2. noun m.* * *1. ADJ1) [objeto] (=compacto) solid; (=duro) hard2) (Téc) (=firme) solidly made; (=bien construido) well built; [zapatos] stout, strong; [color] fast3) (=seguro) [argumento] solid, sound; [base, principio] sound2.SM solid* * *I- da adjetivo1)a) <estado/alimentos> solidb) <muro/edificio> solid; < base> solid, firm; <mueble/zapatos> solid, sturdyc) < terreno> solid, hardd) < color> fast2)a) <argumento/razonamiento> solid, sound; <preparación/principios> soundIIa) (Fís, Mat) solidb) sólidos masculino plural (Med) solids (pl)* * *= robust, firm [firmer -comp., firmest -sup.], solid, sound [sounder -comp., soundest -sup.], strong [stronger -comp., strongest -sup.], stalwart, rock solid, well-founded, articulated.Ex. Although microcomputers are relatively robust, they do not take kindly to frequent moves from one location to another, particularly on wheeled trollies.Ex. Full consideration of the above factors should form a firm basis for the design of an effective thesaurus or list of subject headings.Ex. The genesis of this brave new world of solid state logic, in which bibliographic data are reduced to phantasmagoria on the faces of cathode-ray tubes (CRT), extends at most only three-quarters of a decade into the dim past.Ex. Thus the scheme has a sound organisational backing.Ex. In fact, the 1979 index figures show a strong contrast between the hardback and paperback turnovers, with the hardback market being down and the paperback market up.Ex. In the past decade or so, much stalwart work has been done in order to provide non-textbook reading material for primary school children.Ex. The numbers in the ad, which are quite eye-opening, are rock-solid.Ex. No citation order, no matter how well-founded, will prove suitable for every searcher.Ex. The institutional impact of public libraries on social capital has been studied without a basis in an articulated theory on the creation of social capital = Hasta ahora, el impacto institucional de las bibliotecas públicas sobre el capital social se han estudiado en su mayoría sin partir de una base teórica sólida sobre la creación del capital social.----* alimentos sólidos = solid food.* combustible sólido = solid fuel.* de construcción sólida = solidly-built.* física del estado sólido = solid state physics.* partícula sólida = solid particle.* poco sólido = insubstantial.* residuos sólidos = solid waste.* sólido como una piedra = rock solid.* sólido lácteo = milk solid.* * *I- da adjetivo1)a) <estado/alimentos> solidb) <muro/edificio> solid; < base> solid, firm; <mueble/zapatos> solid, sturdyc) < terreno> solid, hardd) < color> fast2)a) <argumento/razonamiento> solid, sound; <preparación/principios> soundIIa) (Fís, Mat) solidb) sólidos masculino plural (Med) solids (pl)* * *= robust, firm [firmer -comp., firmest -sup.], solid, sound [sounder -comp., soundest -sup.], strong [stronger -comp., strongest -sup.], stalwart, rock solid, well-founded, articulated.Ex: Although microcomputers are relatively robust, they do not take kindly to frequent moves from one location to another, particularly on wheeled trollies.
Ex: Full consideration of the above factors should form a firm basis for the design of an effective thesaurus or list of subject headings.Ex: The genesis of this brave new world of solid state logic, in which bibliographic data are reduced to phantasmagoria on the faces of cathode-ray tubes (CRT), extends at most only three-quarters of a decade into the dim past.Ex: Thus the scheme has a sound organisational backing.Ex: In fact, the 1979 index figures show a strong contrast between the hardback and paperback turnovers, with the hardback market being down and the paperback market up.Ex: In the past decade or so, much stalwart work has been done in order to provide non-textbook reading material for primary school children.Ex: The numbers in the ad, which are quite eye-opening, are rock-solid.Ex: No citation order, no matter how well-founded, will prove suitable for every searcher.Ex: The institutional impact of public libraries on social capital has been studied without a basis in an articulated theory on the creation of social capital = Hasta ahora, el impacto institucional de las bibliotecas públicas sobre el capital social se han estudiado en su mayoría sin partir de una base teórica sólida sobre la creación del capital social.* alimentos sólidos = solid food.* combustible sólido = solid fuel.* de construcción sólida = solidly-built.* física del estado sólido = solid state physics.* partícula sólida = solid particle.* poco sólido = insubstantial.* residuos sólidos = solid waste.* sólido como una piedra = rock solid.* sólido lácteo = milk solid.* * *A1 ‹estado/alimentos› solid2 ‹muro/edificio› solid; ‹base› solid, firm, secure; ‹mueble/zapatos› solid, solidly made, sturdy3 ‹terreno› solid, hard4 ‹color› fastB1 ‹argumento/razonamiento› solid, sound; ‹conocimientos/preparación/principios› sound2 ‹empresa› sound; ‹relación› steady, strongun empresario de sólido prestigio a businessman with a solid reputationuna sólida experiencia profesional sound professional experience* * *
Del verbo soler: ( conjugate soler)
solido es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
soler
sólido
soler ( conjugate soler) verbo intransitivo:
no suele retrasarse he's not usually late;
solía correr todos los días he used to go for a run every day
sólido 1 -da adjetivo
1 ( en sentido físico) solid
2
‹preparación/principios› sound
‹ relación› steady, strong
sólido 2 sustantivo masculinoa) (Fís, Mat) solidb)
soler vi defect
1 (en presente) to be in the habit of: solemos ir en coche, we usually go by car
sueles equivocarte, you are usually wrong
2 (en pasado) solía pasear por aquí, he used to walk round here
En el presente, la traducción más común de soler es el verbo principal más usually: Suele volver a las diez. He usually comes back at ten.
Para referirnos a costumbres en el pasado hay que usar to use to o would. Would expresa acciones repetidas, mientras que to use to describe también estados o situaciones: Antes íbamos/solíamos ir a la playa en tren. We used to/would go to the beach by train.
No confundas to use to (do sthg) con to be used to (doing sthg), que significa estar acostumbrado y, al contrario que to use to, puede usarse también en presente: Estoy acostumbrado a coger el metro. I'm used to taking the metro. ➣ Ver nota en accustom
sólido,-a
I adjetivo
1 Fís Quím solid
2 (material) strong
II sustantivo masculino solid
' sólido' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
diente
- sólida
- diluir
- macizo
- pulverizar
English:
clash
- established
- filling station
- firm
- massive
- solid
- sound
- stable
- strong
- sturdy
- substantial
- unsound
- well-established
- cast
- flimsy
- robust
- rocky
- secure
- stout
- weak
* * *sólido, -a♦ adj1. [cuerpo] solid;un cuerpo sólido a solid2. [relación] strong3. [fundamento] firm;[argumento, conocimiento, idea] sound, solid4. [color] fast♦ nmsolid* * *I adj solid; fig: conclusion soundII m FÍS solid* * *sólido, -da adj1) : solid, firm2) : sturdy, well-made3) : sound, well-founded♦ sólidamente advsólido nm: solid* * *sólido adj solid -
82 tilde
f.1 accent.2 written accent, diacritical accent, stress mark, accent.pres.subj.1st person singular (yo) Present Subjunctive of Spanish verb: tildar.* * ** * *noun f.* * *SF1) [ortográfica] (=acento) [gen] accent; [sobre la n] tilde2) (=mancha) blemish; (=defecto) defect, flaw3) (=bagatela) triviality; (=pizca) jot, bit* * ** * *= tilde.Ex. The printers of these languages continued the fifteenth-century practice of using conventional contractions (especially ' tildes' over vowels to mark omitted letters).* * ** * *= tilde.Ex: The printers of these languages continued the fifteenth-century practice of using conventional contractions (especially ' tildes' over vowels to mark omitted letters).
* * *1 (acento) accent2 (sobre la ñ) tilde, swung dash* * *
Del verbo tildar: ( conjugate tildar)
tildé es:
1ª persona singular (yo) pretérito indicativo
tilde es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) imperativo
Multiple Entries:
tildar
tilde
tilde sustantivo femenino ( acento) accent;
( sobre la ñ) tilde, swung dash
tildar vtr (tachar) to brand: lo tildó de cobarde, he branded him a coward
tilde mf Ling
1 written accent
2 (de la letra ñ) tilde
' tilde' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
acento
* * *tilde nf1. [acento gráfico] accent2. [de la ñ] tilde* * *f1 accent2 en ñ tilde* * *tilde nf1) : accent mark2) : tilde (accent over ñ) -
83 balbucir
v.1 to babble.2 to stammer, to stutter.* * *1→ link=balbucear balbucear* * *verb1) to stammer2) babble* * ** * ** * ** * *balbucir [I1 ]vt* * *
balbucir verbo intransitivo & vt defect ➣ balbucear
' balbucir' also found in these entries:
English:
gurgle
* * ** * *<defective> v/t & v/i → balbucear* * * -
84 defecto físico
-
85 descompostura
f.1 lack of respect, rudeness (falta de mesura).2 unpleasant or nasty turn. ( Latin American Spanish)3 breakdown (avería). (Mexican Spanish, River Plate)4 discomposure, carelessness, slovenliness, untidiness.5 queasiness, distress.6 diarrhea, the runs, enterorrhea, loose bowels.7 fault, defect, imperfection, deficiency.* * *1 (desaliño) untidiness, slovenliness* * *SF1) [de cara] discomposure2) (=descaro) brazenness3) (=fallo) LAm (Téc) breakdown, fault; (Elec) fault, failure4) esp Méx (=desaliño) untidiness5) And (=dislocación) dislocation* * ** * ** * ** * *1. [falta de mesura] lack of respect, rudeness2. Am [malestar] unpleasant o nasty turn3. Am [diarrea] diarrhoea4. Méx, RP [avería] breakdown* * *f L.Am. ( avería) breakdown, fault -
86 disidir
v.1 to dissent, to separate from a (religious) belief before held.María diside con su hermano Mary dissents with her brother.2 to be of a distinct opinion, especially in matters of belief.3 to defect, to split.Disidieron de la milicia They defected from the military service.* * *1 to dissent* * *VI to dissent* * *disidir [I1 ]vi( frml); to dissent* * *disidir vito dissent -
87 manquedad SF
1) (=incapacidad) disablement2) (=defecto) defect -
88 manquera SF
1) (=incapacidad) disablement2) (=defecto) defect -
89 transfuguismo
1 PLÍTICA tendency to change political colours (US colors)* * ** * *transfuguismo, trasfuguismo nmPol defection [to another party] -
90 trapajoso
adj.1 ragged, tattered.2 shabby, patch-covered, ragged, tattered.* * *► adjetivo1 (ropa) tattered, ragged2 (persona) shabby, dowdy3 (habla) badly articulated\hablar trapajoso to slur one's speech* * *ADJ1) (=andrajoso) shabby, ragged2) [pronunciación] defective, incorrect; [persona] [que habla mal] who talks incorrectly; [con defecto] who has a speech defect* * *trapajoso, -a adj1. [lengua] clumsy, stumbling;[pronunciación] stumbling, halting2. [aspecto] ragged -
91 defecto de fabricación
-
92 defecto de pronunciación
speech defect -
93 displasia
f.dysplasia, defect, abnormal development and growth of cells or body organs.* * *1 dysplasia* * *( Med) dysplasia -
94 defeccionar
-
95 gagueo
-
96 tara
-
97 apostatar
• abandon one's cause• apostatize• change sides• defect one's beliefs• forswear• renegade from God• renounce a former belief• renounce God• terete• tergiversation -
98 con algún defecto
• blemished• with defect -
99 defecto crítico
• critical defect -
100 defecto de construcción
• construction defectDiccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > defecto de construcción
См. также в других словарях:
defect — de·fect / dē ˌfekt, di fekt/ n: something or a lack of something that results in incompleteness, inadequacy, or imperfection: as a: a flaw in something (as a product) esp. that creates an unreasonable risk of harm in its normal use see also… … Law dictionary
defect — DEFÉCT, Ă, defecţi, te, s.n., adj. 1. s.n. Lipsă, scădere, imperfecţiune materială, fizică sau morală; cusur, meteahnă, neajuns, beteşug, hibă. ♦ Deranjament, stricăciune care împiedică funcţionarea unei maşini, a unui aparat. ♦ Ceea ce nu este… … Dicționar Român
Defect — Defect, defects, or defected may refer to: Geometry and physical sciences Defect (geometry), a characteristic of a polyhedron Topological defect Isoperimetric defect Crystallographic defect, a structural imperfection in a crystal Biology and… … Wikipedia
Defect Designer — Origin Novosibirsk, Russia Genres Technical Death Metal Years active 2006 Labels My Kingdom Music, Italy Forces Of Satan, Norway … Wikipedia
Defect — De*fect , n. [L. defectus, fr. deficere, defectum, to desert, fail, be wanting; de + facere to make, do. See {Fact}, {Feat}, and cf. {Deficit}.] 1. Want or absence of something necessary for completeness or perfection; deficiency; opposed to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Defect of Birth — was, under former Roman Catholic canon law, a canonical impediment to ordination, stemming from illegitimacy. Under the current 1983 Code of Canon Law, illegitimacy no longer has any canonical implications or consequences. Defect of birth was an… … Wikipedia
defect — Ⅰ. defect [1] ► NOUN ▪ a shortcoming, imperfection, or lack. ORIGIN Latin defectus, from deficere desert or fail . Ⅱ. defect [2] ► VERB ▪ abandon one s country or cause in favour of an opposing one … English terms dictionary
defect — [dē′fekt΄; ] also, and for v. always [, dē fekt′, difekt′] n. [ME < L defectus < deficere, to undo, fail < de , from + facere, to DO1] 1. lack of something necessary for completeness; deficiency; shortcoming 2. an imperfection or… … English World dictionary
Defect — De*fect , v. t. To injure; to damage. None can my life defect. [R.] Troubles of Q. Elizabeth (1639). [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Defect of illumination — Defect of illumination, is the maximum angular width of the unilluminated part of a celestial body, seen by a given observer. For example, if an object is 40 seconds of arc across and is 75% illuminated, the defect of illumination is 10 seconds… … Wikipedia
Defect — Defect, lat., mangelhaft; als Hauptwort D., Mangel, Gebrechen; defectiren, eine Rechnung untersuchen in Beziehung auf Rechnungsfehler; defectiv, was defect. – Defectbogen, im Buchhandel ein nachverlangter Bogen. – Defecte, in der Buchdruckerei… … Herders Conversations-Lexikon