Agravar in english

Aggravate

pronunciation: ægrəveɪt part of speech: verb
In gestures

agravarse = see + at their worst ; flare up ; flame up. 

Example: The problems of retrospective bibliography, as indeed of national library development, are usually seen at their worst in former colonial territories which have evolved late into nationhood.Example: There will always be conflicts that flare up suddenly and call for a rapid response.Example: She looked into the distance, and the old terror flamed up for an instant, then sank again.

agravar = aggravate ; exacerbate. 

Example: This situation has been severely aggravated by the sudden withdrawal of nearly a decade of federal largesse toward education and education-related activities.Example: They exist in manual systems, and as we have already pointed out, they are only exacerbated by automated systems.

more:

» agravarsesee + at their worstflare upflame up .

Example: The problems of retrospective bibliography, as indeed of national library development, are usually seen at their worst in former colonial territories which have evolved late into nationhood.

Example: There will always be conflicts that flare up suddenly and call for a rapid response.

Example: She looked into the distance, and the old terror flamed up for an instant, then sank again.

» agravar una crisisexacerbate + crisis .

Example: The lack of a theoretical underpinning to provide a unified vision of librarianship, it is suggested, exacerbates this crisis.

» agravar una situaciónexacerbate + a situationaggravate + a situation .

Example: The situation has been exacerbated by falling book sales.

Example: The incapacity of the industrial sector to gainfully employ the surplus labour from agriculture have aggravated the situation of poverty, unemployment, and landlessness in the countryside.

» agravar un conflictoexacerbate + conflict .

Example: Australia risks blundering into a human rights mess that will exacerbate the conflict.

» agravar un problemacompound + a problem .

Example: Such solutions after repeated application cause the catalog to become a clumsy, inefficient tool, and serve only to compound future problems.

» dificultades + agravarsedifficulties + exacerbate .

Example: The report concluded that the problems of rural populations 'do not differ greatly from those of the urban population though the difficulties in obtaining help and relief can be exacerbated by isolation'.

» problema + agravarproblem + exacerbate .

Example: Moreover, the problem of physical access is exacerbated by the fact that neither the collections made available to European Documentation Centres (see below), nor those available on public subscription, are complete.

» situación + agravarsesituation + exacerbatesituation + worsensituation + get worse .

Example: The situation is further exacerbated by the ease with which such information may be copied or manipulated = La situación se agrava aún más por la facilidad con la que se puede copiar o manipular la información.

Example: Britain already had a serious unemployment problem in the 1920s, but the situation worsened markedly after 1929.

Example: The situation got worse in 2002 because of political violence during presidential elections that year which targeted farmers and their workers.

Agravar synonyms

exacerbate in spanish: exacerbar, pronunciation: ɪgzæsɜrbeɪt part of speech: verb exasperate in spanish: exasperar, pronunciation: ɪgzæspɜreɪt part of speech: verb worsen in spanish: empeorar, pronunciation: wɜrsən part of speech: verb
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