Caos in english

Chaos

pronunciation: keɪɑs part of speech: noun
In gestures

cao = knockout. 

Example: Boxing fans love nothing more than a knockout, and the same goes for boxers themselves, so long as they are on the winning end.

more:

» cao técnicotechnical knockout .

Example: His final fight ended ignominiously, with him on the losing end of an eighth-round technical knockout.

caos = mass confusion ; chaos ; mayhem ; shambles ; lawlessness ; havoc ; disorder. 

Example: Finally, add the mass confusion wrought by the sudden appearance of a new technology in the library, with its practitioners chanting acronymic prayers, seemingly derived from a mushroom ritual.Example: Shera has reminded us that 'man abhors chaos as nature is said to abhor a vacuum'.Example: Ten days after the mayhem in Detroit, a riot rocked Harlem, triggered by a rumor that a white policeman had shot and killed a black soldier.Example: The article is entitled 'From shambles to showplace'.Example: So the Marxists will have to pull up their socks if they are to prevent the state from sliding back to the lawlessness one had seen prior to 1977.Example: However, protests are happening all over the world, especially after the havoc in the Gulf of Mexico.Example: The long-last-ing incapacity of the government has maintained the country in such a disorder that made it become a hub of various armed groups.

more:

» crear caoscause + chaoscause + mayhem .

Example: We can see that this may cause chaos.

Example: It is the individual citer who causes most mayhem by attaching citations to his writings which are inconsistent and idiosyncratic.

» imponer orden en donde hay caosbring + order out of chaos .

Example: O'Donnell summarizes the process of organizing as 'a process by which the manager brings order out of chaos'.

» ocasionar caoscause + chaos .

Example: We can see that this may cause chaos.

» ocasionar casoscause + mayhem .

Example: It is the individual citer who causes most mayhem by attaching citations to his writings which are inconsistent and idiosyncratic.

» poner orden en el caoscreate + order out of chaos .

Example: Different responsibilities will be thrust upon librarians as their work becomes an increasingly vital complement to academic work, in particular assisting academics and students alike in creating order out of the chaos that is the Internet.

» producir caoscause + chaoscause + mayhem .

Example: We can see that this may cause chaos.

Example: It is the individual citer who causes most mayhem by attaching citations to his writings which are inconsistent and idiosyncratic.

» producirse caoschaos + resultchaos + arise .

Example: Obviously, once a choice of citation order has been made it must be kept to, otherwise, chaos will result.

Example: It is not difficult to picture the chaos which could arise if users were free to amend catalogue entries or issue system records.

» ser un caosbe (in) a (real) mess .

Example: The economy is in a real mess now, and we need to create as many jobs as possible.

» ser un (verdadero) caosbe a (complete) shambles .

Example: While the economy is a 'shambles' and likely to stay that way for some time, he remains optimistic there will eventually be a recovery over a period of years.

» ser un verdadero caosbe in complete chaosbe (in) a (real) messbe a complete meltdown .

Example: The world would be in complete chaos if there was no Internet anymore.

Example: The economy is in a real mess now, and we need to create as many jobs as possible.

Example: I don't think this is a money problem -- I think this is a complete meltdown in your marriage because your husband is a liar and you've lost respect for him.

Caos synonyms

bedlam in spanish: algarabía, pronunciation: bedləm part of speech: noun pandemonium in spanish: pandemonio, pronunciation: pændɪmoʊniəm part of speech: noun topsy-turvydom in spanish: al revés, pronunciation: tɑpsitɜrvaɪdəm part of speech: noun topsy-turvyness in spanish: alboroto, pronunciation: tɑpsitɜrvinəs part of speech: noun
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