Encadenado in english

Chained

pronunciation: tʃeɪnd part of speech: adjective
In gestures

encadenado = concatenated ; catenated. 

Example: More than one field might also comprise the key, either concatenated or used separately = More than one field might also comprise the key, either concatenated or used separately.Example: One of the methods described sorts in order of the catenated key formed from the attibutes = One of the methods described sorts in order of the catenated key formed from the attibutes.

more:

» una serie de pensamientos encadenadosa chain of thought(s)a train of thought(s) .

Example: By a curious chain of thoughts she soon found herself reconstituting in detail her association with the Deuxville Public Library.

Example: In general, I think of this as a train of thought, since the metaphor is so very apt.

encadenar = chain ; shackle ; fetter. 

Example: Some institutional libraries were chained (when the books were necessarily shelved fore-edge outwards), the chains being attached to a staple riveted to an edge of one of the boards.Example: Tom Sutherland, a professor at the American University of Beirut, was kidnapped in 1985 and held prisoner for six and a half years, for much of the time shackled to his prisoner Terry Anderson.Example: Christ bears the cross on his shoulder at the head of a long shaft supported by a male prisoner fettered at the legs and a mendicant friar.

Encadenado synonyms

bound in spanish: Unido, pronunciation: baʊnd part of speech: verb, adjective enchained in spanish: encadenado, pronunciation: ɪntʃeɪnd part of speech: adjective in chains in spanish: esposado, pronunciation: ɪntʃeɪnz
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