Experimentar in english

To experience

pronunciation: tuɪkspɪriəns part of speech: none
In gestures

experimentar1 = experience ; pass through ; suffer ; undergo ; mess (about/around) with ; feel ; go through ; register. 

Example: If facilities like these are not supported by the data base design, the users of the system will experience slow response times.Example: The scheme has passed through nineteen editions.Example: Since the introduction of computer-based indexing systems alphabetical indexing languages have become more prevalent, and UDC has suffered a reduction in use.Example: Syntactic relationships arise from the syntax of the document which is undergoing analysis, and derive solely from literary warrant.Example: Once music is digitized you can filter it, bend it, archive it, rearrange it, remix it, mess with it.Example: Public libraries, especially in New York City, are feeling severe budget crunches, because we really haven't been relevant to people and, therefore, nobody uses us = Public libraries, especially in New York City, are feeling severe budget crunches, because we really haven't been relevant to people and, therefore, nobody uses us.Example: A shock of resistance and antagonism went through Zachary Ponder.Example: The existence of an economic dividend of the global devolutionary trend registered over the past three decades is still ambiguous.

more:

» algo que hay que experimentarmust-experience .

Example: Home to a large trail network for all levels, Stowe is a must-experience destination for biking enthusiasts.

» experimentar de primera manoexperience + first-handhave + a first-hand experience .

Example: As students, we experience first-hand how drastic budget cuts directly affect the quality of public education.

Example: Having been raised in East Africa, I have a first-hand experience of gender inequalities and the plight of poor young women in Africa.

» experimentar recortessuffer + cuts .

Example: Over the past 6 years 37% of industrial libraries have suffered cuts in operating budgets and that a further 36% have only had increases sufficient to combat inflation.

» experimentar una revoluciónenter + a revolution .

Example: And yet, over the last twenty-five years, other fields of librarianship have entered upon a veritable revolution in theory and practice.

» experimentar una subidaexperience + a rise .

Example: This article discusses the serious implications of published research on price comparisons, especially when periodical prices are experiencing a meteoric rise.

» experimentar una transformaciónundergo + transformation .

Example: This is because names of women authors frequently undergo transformations as a result of marriage and divorce; political jurisdictions also are annexed or gain independence and sometimes a new name; etc.

» experimentar un aumentoexperience + a rise .

Example: This article discusses the serious implications of published research on price comparisons, especially when periodical prices are experiencing a meteoric rise.

» experimentar un aumento vertiginosoexperience + an explosion .

Example: Contemporary society has experienced an extraordinary explosion in knowledge which has resulted in a corresponding increase in the publication of books and other materials which act as information carriers.

» experimentar un cambiobring about + changeundergo + modificationundergo + changeundergo + transition .

Example: The moment we compromise among ourselves to adopt rules that are incompatible with ideology then I think we are merely providing the necessity before very long to have these changes brought about.

Example: In this laboratory situation, students' analyses and programs of action may undergo some modification as collectively the class debates alternatives.

Example: The Department of Trade and Industry has undergone many changes over the years; it has been split into two separate departments and welded together again.

Example: Mexico is undergoing an intense epidemiological transition characterised by a decline in the incidence of infectious diseases and a rapid increase in the importance of chronic illnesses and accidents.

» experimentar un cambio + Adjetivotake + a + Adjetivo + turn .

Example: He wrote an article titled 'The New Library project takes a favourable turn: a progress report'.

» experimentar un crecimientoexperience + growth .

Example: Biotechnology has experienced rapid growth in recent years.

» experimentar un descensoexperience + a drop .

Example: The library has experienced a drop in the number of persons visiting it but a sharp rise in the number of volumes lent on interlibrary loan.

» experimentar un renacimientoexperience + a renaissance .

Example: In the last few years contrastive linguistics has experienced a renaissance.

experimentar2 = experiment ; institute + experiments ; prototype ; try out ; test. 

Example: We need not abandon our professional library studies programs, but we must also be willing to experiment with future oriented programs and structures at the same time.Example: In an open-planned building designed flexibly to cater for adaptations, the librarian is not inhibited for making changes or instituting experiments.Example: The electronic book (e-book) is already available commercially in Japan, and a British company is currently prototyping a handwriting recognition notepad.Example: All they need is a willingness to experiment a bit and to try out a pedagogical method others testify to being of some value.Example: Inmate library workers often test a new librarian, but once he or she has passed the test, they usually become very protective and staunch promoters of the library.
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