Caduco in english
Deciduous
pronunciation: dɪsɪdʒuəs part of speech: adjective
pronunciation: dɪsɪdʒuəs part of speech: adjective
In gestures
caducar = lapse ; become + due ; expire ; go out of + date ; become + obsolete.
Example: The Act was finally allowed to lapse in 1695 and the Stationers' Company was unable to protect its members' rights against those who chose to infringe them.Example: A list of all subscriptions about to become due may be made by using this subfunction.Example: 'That's not realistic,' he said and looked at her, as if to indicate that the balloon of her argument had suddenly had a pin stuck in it, and was expiring with a hiss.Example: Information in the humanities does not readily go out of date.Example: Academic libraries may become obsolete as the commercial market takes over control of information.more:
» sin caducar = unexpired .
Example: This study was aimed at determining the microbiological quality of unexpired and expired syrups.caduco = obsolete ; defunct.
Example: To remove obsolete fine records from the online system, there is a programm to find all fines paid before a particular date and to remove them.Example: The now defunct ultra-fiche could carry up to 3000 images on the same area of film, at the reduction ratio of 150.more:
» árbol de hoja caduca = deciduous tree .
Example: Deciduous trees are those that loose their leaves each fall, go dormant for the winter, and leaf out again in spring.» bosque de árboles de hoja caduca = deciduous forest .
Example: This liana has an old stem twining around a tree branch in the tropical deciduous forest of Michoacan, Mexico.