Desuso in english
Disuse
pronunciation: dɪsjus part of speech: noun
pronunciation: dɪsjus part of speech: noun
In gestures
desuso = disfavour ; disuse ; desuetude.
Example: It seems a pity that the notation of these headings remains in disfavour.Example: After a period of disuse at the beginning of the nineteenth century, Caslon roman was revived, and has been available ever since from Caslon's successors.Example: After many years of desuetude, manual typewriters are gaining in popularity among writers.more:
» caer en desuso = fall into + disuse ; fall out of + fashion ; go out of + use ; lapse ; fall into + disfavour ; die out ; drop from + sight ; go out of + favour ; pass away ; pass into + desuetude ; sink into + desuetude ; sink into + oblivion ; fall out of + favour .
Example: However, from the sixties, competition for the railway worker's leisure time from public libraries, service clubs and the humble television meant that many branch libraries fell into disuse. Example: Rotundas were widely used for all but the most formal texts in the fifteenth century, but fell out of fashion during the sixteenth century, surviving longest in Spain. Example: The English, French, and Dutch bastardas went out of use by the mid sixteenth century. 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 Example: The printed catalogue has fallen into disfavour, and been replaced by card catalogues, and, more recently, on-line catalogues. Example: These changes accelerated through much of the nineteenth century, with the older material such as the chivalric romance dying out about the 1960s. Example: The older material, such as the chivalric romances, dropped from sight. Example: The author follows the history through to the point, in the latter part of the nineteenth century, when mirror-image monograms went out of favour and were replaced by straightforward monograms. Example: These tools are useable for analytical studies of how technologies emerge, mature and pass away. Example: To make a very long story unacceptably short, espionage passed into desuetude after the Reagan years. Example: It is clear now that after a time, with her marriage sinking into desuetude, Vivien entered into a sexual relationship with Russell. Example: Our deliberate and passionate ambition is to avoid the traps of soulless, dead villages turned into museums, slowly sinking into oblivion. Example: At first he was a close political advisor to Charles II, although he later fell out of favour and was forced into exile.» en desuso = obsolete ; disused .
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: There is also a museum of mining which is partly housed in a disused mine shaft.» estar en desuso = be disused .
Example: The quarry is disused and most of the area is covered in spoil heaps which are now overgrown.dar un uso = put to + purpose.
Example: This can still be provided, but account must be taken of functions and qualities of the building and the purpose to which it will be put.dar uso = put to + use.
Example: Use to which the information system will be put impinges upon most of the earlier issues, but there are elements of the nature of use which can be considered in their own right.dar uso a = make + use of.
Example: The example search in figure 8.3 shows how the statements in an online search make use of Boolean logic operators.