Enciclopedia in english
Encyclopedia
pronunciation: ɪnsaɪkləpidiə part of speech: noun
pronunciation: ɪnsaɪkləpidiə part of speech: noun
In gestures
enciclopedia = encyclopaedia [encyclopedia, -USA].
Example: This is true of many directories, encyclopedias, and other reference works that need periodically to be brought up to date.more:
» artículo de enciclopedia = encyclopaedia article .
Example: Whether the item of information is in an encyclopaedia article, a textbook, a patent specification, an autograph letter, a citation in a bibliographic data-base, a trade catalogue, a newspaper article, an audio-cassette, or any possible alternative, it can only be traced by employing the access language of the collection.» autor de enciclopedias = encyclopaedist [encyclopedist, -USA] .
Example: The article 'Encyclopedists head for cyberspace' discusses changes in the publishing of encyclopaedias in the USA, tracing the rise of CD-ROM encyclopaedias to the detriment of print sets.» Enciclopedia Británica, la = Encyclopaedia Britannica, the ; Britannica, the .
Example: Like the young reader who complained to the reference librarian that the Encyclopaedia Britannica told her more about crocodiles than she wanted to know, most enquirers have a pretty good idea when they have got enough for their needs. Example: On the negative side, the Britannica's complicated arrangement will continue to disconcert some users.» enciclopedia especializada = specialised encyclopaedia .
Example: The knowledge base includes a whole range of widely varied knowledge representation techniques from permuted keyword lists, and universal classification schemes to alphabetical indexes and specialised encyclopedias.» enciclopedia multimedia = multimedia encyclopaedia .
Example: Multimedia encyclopedias on CD-ROM are a nearly perfect marriage of technology and content.» escritor de enciclopedias = encyclopaedist [encyclopedist, -USA] .
Example: The article 'Encyclopedists head for cyberspace' discusses changes in the publishing of encyclopaedias in the USA, tracing the rise of CD-ROM encyclopaedias to the detriment of print sets.