Agote in english

Exhaust

pronunciation: ɪgzɔst part of speech: noun, verb
In gestures

agotar = exhaust ; deplete ; wear + Nombre + down. 

Example: The potential areas of application of PRECIS are far from being exhausted.Example: This intermediate grade would equate with the senior library assistant, a category much depleted in UK academic librarianship.Example: The trials of raising her teenage children and caring for her sick father have worn her down.

more:

» agotar el espaciorun out of + space .

Example: Many university and state libraries are running out of space and research libraries have a serious conservation problem.

» agotar el presupuestodrain + budget .

Example: By accentuating administrative strengths, archivists can facilitate preservation implementation without draining their budget.

» agotar + Posesivo + vida útilrun towards + the end of + Posesivo + useful life .

Example: Blair is accused of presiding over a 'fag-end' government, one that is rapidly running towards the end of its useful life.

» agotarserun downpeter outrun + short (of)go out of + printsell outrun out (of)run + drybe all gone .

Example: A closed system will be subject to entropy -- the tendency for a system to run down through the loss of differentiation.

Example: Press demands for information soon petered out but enquiries from the general public continued for many months.

Example: The arguments are well known but we must realise that there was a very real fear that society would run short of manual labour = Los argumentos son bien conocidos pero debemos darnos cuenta de que había existía un miedo real de que la sociedad se quedase sin mano de obra.

Example: Zilg claims that his book 'Du Pont: Behind the nylon Curtain', which is highly critical of Du Pont, was allowed to go out of print prematurely as a direct result of pressure being brought to bear on the publisher by Du Pont.

Example: The first edition was quickly sold out, and I decided to revise it in the light of comments by colleagues and reviewers, and of developments in my own thinking.

Example: The philosophy of science lacks a time dimension and seems to have run out of language to cope with all the abstractions needed.

Example: So stop fretting that UK unemployment is rising as the tax burden soars, consumers stop spending and North Sea oil runs dry.

Example: The hall is quiet, the band has packed up, and the munchies are all gone.

» agotarse el dinerorun out of + moneyrun out of + cash .

Example: All doom and gloom aside, the federal government is unlikely to run out of money.

Example: But some analysts wonder whether the domestic automakers can hang on until then without running out of cash.

» agotarse el dinero en metálicorun out of + cash .

Example: But some analysts wonder whether the domestic automakers can hang on until then without running out of cash.

» agotarse el saldorun out of + credit .

Example: If you run out of credit before the end of the offer period, your services will be suspended.

» agotarse el tiempotime + run outrun out of + timebe out of time .

Example: If time is running out, do not feel obliged to read them from cover to cover.

Example: I realised for the first time that I was in my early 30s and I was running out of time to do what I wanted with my life.

Example: She didn't need a medical degree to know that his life was fading fast, and she was out of time to really get to know her father.

» agotarse la pacienciarun out of + patience .

Example: When you run out of patience, you tend to blurt out words that you don't mean.

» dinero + agotarsemoney + dry up .

Example: The money dried up, but at least Dubai's celebrity investors are not left out of pocket.

» financiación + agotarsefunding + dry up .

Example: The article 'Slim chance for ethnic funding' explains how funding for library projects to provide assistance to ethnic minorities has almost dried up.

Agote synonyms

beat in spanish: golpear, pronunciation: bit part of speech: verb, noun eat in spanish: comer, pronunciation: it part of speech: verb sap in spanish: savia, pronunciation: sæp part of speech: noun tire in spanish: neumático, pronunciation: taɪɜr part of speech: noun consume in spanish: consumir, pronunciation: kənsum part of speech: verb deplete in spanish: agotar, pronunciation: dɪplit part of speech: verb evacuate in spanish: evacuar, pronunciation: ɪvækjəeɪt part of speech: verb tucker in spanish: fatigar, pronunciation: tʌkɜr part of speech: noun run down in spanish: atropellar, pronunciation: rʌndaʊn part of speech: verb fumes in spanish: vapores, pronunciation: fjumz part of speech: noun wipe out in spanish: limpiar, pronunciation: waɪpaʊt part of speech: verb run through in spanish: ejecutar a través de, pronunciation: rʌnθru part of speech: verb use up in spanish: úsalo, pronunciation: jusʌp part of speech: verb eat up in spanish: comer hasta, pronunciation: itʌp part of speech: verb exhaust fumes in spanish: humos de escape, pronunciation: ɪgzɔstfjumz part of speech: noun tucker out in spanish: tucker fuera, pronunciation: tʌkɜraʊt part of speech: verb exhaust system in spanish: Sistema de escape, pronunciation: ɪgzɔstsɪstəm part of speech: noun
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