Analizar in english

Analyze

pronunciation: ænəlaɪz part of speech: verb
In gestures

analizar = analyse [analyze, -USA] ; assess ; break + Nombre + down ; discuss ; explore ; look at ; look into ; present + a discussion ; study ; think out ; weigh ; offer + an account of ; undergo + analysis ; observe ; check out ; break out ; dig + deep ; dig + deep beneath the surface ; weigh up ; review ; work through ; put + Nombre + under the spotlight ; bring + Nombre + under the spotlight ; question ; probe ; quarry for ; speak to. 

Example: With a clear objective, the next step is to analyse the concepts that are present in a search.Example: Without such guidelines each document would need to be assessed individually, and inconsistencies would be inevitable.Example: The holdings are broken down into several volumes, shown as the next level of the pyramid.Example: This review also illustrates some of the issues which cataloguers have discussed over the years, and demonstrates other solutions to standards in cataloguing than those embodied in modern cataloguing codes.Example: Next I will illustrate a simple search profile which does not explore all possible synonyms, but does serve to illustrate weighted term logic.Example: This article looks at three interrelated issues regarding on-line services based on the recent literature.Example: The main concern is to look into current use of, and interest in, electronic information services, and also to gauge opinion on setting up a data base concerned solely with development issues.Example: This article presents a detailed discussion of the use of Hypermedia for authoring, organisation and presentation of information.Example: Each of the binders is portable and can be separately studied.Example: A recitation of the best thought out principles for a cataloging code is easily drowned out by the clatter of a bank of direct access devices vainly searching for misplaced records.Example: Examines the advantages and disadvantages of approval plans suggesting that each library must carefully weigh them in order to determine its own best course of action.Example: This article offers an account of the processes shaping the professionalisation of college and research librarianship within the framework of 4 contemporary sociological theories.Example: Syntactic relationships arise from the syntax of the document which is undergoing analysis, and derive solely from literary warrant.Example: 141 data bases were observed, most of them had been developed in the life sciences as well as in the earth, ocean and space sciences.Example: Where problems do arise it is sensible to check out the training programme before blaming the assistant for poor performance of duties.Example: Turnaround managers want current financial and working capital analyses broken out by cost/profit centres.Example: Are we prepared to dig deep into our well of humanity & humility in order to uplift ourselves?.Example: Her central themes are still love and sex, but she digs deeper beneath the surface to examine the gray areas of moral responsibility and gender relations.Example: The author weighs up whether a dumbing down has taken place in the UK tabloid and broadsheet press.Example: There is only space to review briefly the special problems associated with the descriptive cataloguing of nonbook materials.Example: Some theorists hold that one stage must be completely worked through before the next stage can be entered.Example: It is paramount to put designers themselves under the spotlight for investigative purposes.Example: When the profession once more brought censorship under the spotlight in the 70s, it was less critical and more loath to take a stand.Example: If this appears to be excessively difficult, maybe it is time to question whether the tool is too complex.Example: The librarian sometimes must probe to discover the context of the question and to be able to discuss various possible approaches and explore their merits.Example: The surviging chronicles, annals, and histories have been extensively quarried for the information they reveal about the events of their time.Example: Numerous articles in the library literature speak to this phenomenon but most deal with the experience of larger libraries.

more:

» al analizar Algo más detenidamenteon closer examinationon closer inspection .

Example: The 1st impression of cosiness is dispelled on closer examination, which reveals gross overcrowding in staff working areas.

Example: However, this area is visible on closer inspection, ensuring that the repair is detectable.

» analizar a fondodelve intodig into .

Example: The objective is to enable the reader to eliminate possibly relevant documents, which, in fact, prove to be of little interest without delving into the body of the abstract.

Example: A 10-year-old boy by the name of Thailan died last week and investigators are now digging into the death of the boy.

» analizar brevementetake + a look at .

Example: It seems appropriate to take a retrospective look at the evolution of our catalog and the ideology which has shaped it.

» analizar con lupago ove/through + Nombre + with a fine-tooth(ed) comb .

Example: They are reading the agreement line by line and going over it with a fine-toothed comb.

» analizar críticamentepull + Nombre + to bits .

Example: Microscopists think very little about plucking an innocent and unsuspecting insect from the garden, killing it, and pulling it to bits for study under a microscope.

» analizar de nuevoreexamine [re-examine]  .

Example: This paper discusses factors which led to the need to reexamine the use of UK dealers, the major difference between UK and US dealers being their variance in pricing policies.

» analizar desde una perspectivasee through .

Example: This is an examination of attitudes towards the reference interview by librarians over the past 100 years as seen through the literature.

» analizar desde un punto de vista críticocast + a critical eye over .

Example: The author casts a critical eye over technical progress in libraries and different levels of development in English- and French-speaking regions of Africa.

» analizar detenidamentebe carefully consideredthink + Nombre + through .

Example: Of course, this very broad analysis contains a number of problems which must be carefully considered.

Example: The survey did not provide much evidence that ethical issues relating to the Internet are being thought through in any depth.

» analizar de un modo imparcialtake + a cool look at .

Example: In recent years some of the more outspoken librarians have been taking a very cool look at their colleagues.

» analizar enbreak down into .

Example: Sometimes these broad elements are broken down into sub-elements.

» analizar en detalleconsider + in detail .

Example: This article considers in detail the major applications of speech technology with particular reference to its present and potential applications in libraries and information services.

» analizar la posibilidad de (que)examine + the possibility that/of .

Example: The author examines the possibility that increased traffic load may bring the information superhighway to a grinding halt.

» analizar las cosastake + things apart .

Example: Knowledge comes by taking things apart -- analysis -- but wisdom comes by putting things together.

» analizar las posibilidades delook at + the prospects for .

Example: The author looks at the prospects for this version being accepted as an official standard.

» analizar los pormenores de una situaciónlook behind + the scene .

Example: This article looks behind the scenes at how InfoNet developed.

» analizar minuciosamentecome under + scrutiny [Uso pasivo del verbo]porebe under scrutinylook under + the hood .

Example: Research policy at the European Community level has itself come under scrutiny.

Example: It uses computer power to pore through document text, to find and extract segments of relevant text information.

Example: Self-plagiarism may seem a smaller infraction than stealing another author's work, but the practice is under increasing scrutiny.

Example: If we look under the hood of this policy, we find the philosophy that as an employee, it's important for you to have a life outside of work.

» analizar pormenorizadamentelook under + the hoodpore .

Example: If we look under the hood of this policy, we find the philosophy that as an employee, it's important for you to have a life outside of work.

Example: It uses computer power to pore through document text, to find and extract segments of relevant text information.

» analizar por separadodissect .

Example: GMMA has developed a layered approach to visual indexing that dissects the objects, style and implication of each image, so that the indexing system can accommodate all potential approaches to the material.

» analizar sintácticamenteparse .

Example: This is only possible if the incoming message has an identifiable structure that can be parsed and converted to resemble a protocol message.

» analizar técnicamentelook under + the hood .

Example: If we look under the hood of this policy, we find the philosophy that as an employee, it's important for you to have a life outside of work.

» analizar una cuestiónexplore + a questionexplore + an issue .

Example: Which is a more effective location is a question that can be explored, but we do need to avoid the situation faced by other in situations developed in past ages, like the Church of England, whose physical plant (the church buildings) is over-provided for the denuded rural areas and under-provided for the city.

Example: The objective of the study is to explore the issue of budgeting for public library services.

» analizar una posibilidadexplore + an idea .

Example: Cosmologists have begun exploring the idea that the evolution of the universe is cyclic = Los cosmólogos han comenzado a analizar la posibilidad de que la evolución del universo es cíclica.

» analizar un temaexplore + a theme .

Example: In comparison with adult literature, South African children's literature presents issues more bluntly and also explores themes barely touched on in adult fiction.

» reanalizarreexamine [re-examine]  .

Example: This paper discusses factors which led to the need to reexamine the use of UK dealers, the major difference between UK and US dealers being their variance in pricing policies.

» ser analizado como una frasebe phrase parsed .

Example: Refer to the database-specific documentation for more information on which fields are phrase parsed.

» sin analizarunexaminedunanalysed .

Example: Traditional measures of retrieval effectiveness, of which the recall ratio is an outstanding example, are strongly influence by the relevance properties of unexamined documents -- documents with which the system user has no direct contact.

Example: The reasons for this failure are as yet unanalysed in the literature.

» volver a analizarreexamine [re-examine]  ; reanalyse [reanalyze, -USA] .

Example: This paper discusses factors which led to the need to reexamine the use of UK dealers, the major difference between UK and US dealers being their variance in pricing policies.

Example: The author reanalyses George Zipf's data on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of his premature death in Rome from legionella.

Analizar synonyms

analyse in spanish: analizar, pronunciation: ænəlaɪz part of speech: verb study in spanish: estudiar, pronunciation: stʌdi part of speech: noun examine in spanish: examinar, pronunciation: ɪgzæmɪn part of speech: verb dissect in spanish: disecar, pronunciation: daɪsekt part of speech: verb break down in spanish: Descompostura, pronunciation: breɪkdaʊn part of speech: verb take apart in spanish: desmontar, pronunciation: teɪkəpɑrt part of speech: verb psychoanalyze in spanish: psicoanalizar, pronunciation: saɪkoʊnəlaɪz part of speech: verb psychoanalyse in spanish: psicoanalizar, pronunciation: saɪkoʊænəlaɪs part of speech: verb
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