Amarrar in english
Tie up
pronunciation: taɪʌp part of speech: verb
pronunciation: taɪʌp part of speech: verb
In gestures
amarrar = fasten ; tether ; strap ; secure ; tie (to) ; lash ; moor ; rope.
Example: The original is clamped around the left hand cylinder and a special stencil fastened around the other cylinder.Example: The book reached the limits of its potential as an information carrier long ago and libraries unfortunately allowed themselves to become tethered by those limitations.Example: Microfilm is said to have been invented during the Franco-Prussian War, to send reduced diagrams of troop positions by strapping these to the legs of carrier pigeons.Example: Many books were still large and solid, their blind-tooled covers secured with clasps or ties.Example: Chain indexing is closely tied to the structure (but not necessarily the terminology) of the classification scheme.Example: Gather the eight garden stakes together teepee-style around the center stake and lash them in place securely with garden wire.Example: This procedure when mooring a vessel can be hazardous, especially in heavy seas, since a person must walk forward on deck.Example: His thighs and knees were then roped to the arm rests.more:
» amarrar a = lash (up) to .
Example: The platen was lashed up tight to the toe of the spindle by cords which connected hooks at its four corners to another set of hooks at the four lower corners of the hose.