Paste in spanish
Pegar
pronunciation: pegɑɹ̩ part of speech: noun
pronunciation: pegɑɹ̩ part of speech: noun
In gestures
paste1 = pasta.
Example: N-methyl 2 pyrrolidone (NM2P) is a non-aqueous solvent for starch and flour paste.more:
» garlic paste = pasta de ajo, alioli, ajoaceite, ajiaceite.
Example: In another small bowl, combine garlic paste, lemon juice and cumin and whisk to blend.» paper paste-down = guarda. [Hoja doblada que pegada a la cara interna de las pastas y al libro sirve para mantenerlos unidos]
Example: A strip of paper or vellum was pasted on to the spine to reinforce it, and a skin of the right size was stuck down over the spine and the outside of both boards, the overlapping edges being turned in and secured inside the boards under a paper paste-down.» paste-down = guarda, forro. [Hoja doblada que pegada a la cara interna de las pastas y al libro sirve para mantenerlos unidos]
Example: Their purpose was, as paste-downs, to reinforce the joints of the covers and, as flyleaves, to give additional protection to the end pages of the book.» paste paper = papel de pasta.
Example: Paste paper is a decorative paper, often used as cover papers or endsheets in books, produced by pressing or sliding objects into a wet paste or starch mixture that has been spread on paper.» toothpaste = pasta de dientes, dentífrico.
Example: In Experiment 1, 108 undergraduates were presented with information about risks associated with different brands of tires and toothpaste.paste onto2 = pegar sobre.
Example: The guard (book) catalogue is a book form catalogue with several entries on each page, but each entry inserted by pasting slips on to the stout pages of the book.more:
» copy and paste = copiar y pegar.
Example: Users browse the weekly new books Web page, and copy and paste citations into e-mail messages to the library with recommendations for purchases.» cut-and-paste = cortar y pegar.
Example: Obviously, the work-around is to cut-and-paste this into the end of the document, but why did this happen in the first place?.» paste together = pegar.
Example: The boards were generally made of wood up to the later fifteenth century; then of sheets of paper pasted together ('pasteboard'); and then, from the early eighteenth century in good-quality binding but later in cheap work, of rope-fibre millboard.