Explotar in english
pronunciation: eksplɔɪt part of speech: verb







explotar1 = burst ; blow up ; detonate ; blow + a fuse ; go off ; blow.
Example: The article 'Will the CD bubble burst: conflicting messages on the future of electronic publishing' considers the future of the CD-ROM market.Example: The article 'The library has blown up!' relates the short circuit in the main electrical circuit board of Porstmouth Public Library caused by electricians who were carrying out routine work.Example: There has been an explosion in terminology detonated by developments related to XML (eXtensible Markup Language).Example: He simply blew a fuse and decided to go out on the road, spitefully apologizing again and again, until he got it right.Example: My hand looks like a hand grenade went off near it -- all cut up, bruised and with perforations by small bits of flying glass.Example: Then the car engine blew in an explosion that made the hood bunch up from the impact of thrown pistons.more:
» hacer explotar = blow up ; blow .
Example: The article 'The library has blown up!' relates the short circuit in the main electrical circuit board of Porstmouth Public Library caused by electricians who were carrying out routine work. Example: Then the car engine blew in an explosion that made the hood bunch up from the impact of thrown pistons.» sin explotar = untapped ; unexploded ; unexploited .
Example: Archivists who do have such material in their charge are the keepers of a largely untapped source of historical material which offers a different and balancing perspective on history. Example: Although national parks are perceived as pristine areas, many are dumping grounds for hazardous materials - everything from industrial toxins to unexploded munitions. Example: Kenya and other African states are sitting on a fortune in the form of unexploited natural cures.explotar2 = deploy ; explode ; exploit ; harness ; tap ; cash in on ; prey on/upon ; milk ; mine ; ride (on) + Posesivo + coattails ; hang on + Posesivo + coattails ; ride on + the back(s) of ; tap into.
Example: The article presents the results of trials in which the model was deployed to classify aspects of the construction industry, such as construction norms and regulations.Example: Other systems also employ a thesaurus in offering the facility to explode search profiles.Example: The Library of Congress List of Subject Headings (LCSH) can be exploited as a general index, since it shows LCC numbers for many of the headings listed.Example: When computers were first harnessed for information retrieval and cataloguing applications, the information retrieval systems, and some of the cataloguing systems developed in different environments.Example: It must be pointed out, however, that the potential for online catalogs to increase library staff productivity has hardly been tapped.Example: At the same time, veteran fiction writers and new authors cashing in on fame from other media continued to rule the lists.Example: From being a predator, England was becoming a major commercial power on whose ships others preyed.Example: A satisfactory balance between public and private involvement has not yet been reached and the companies involved are milking public funds.Example: For instance, if children are doing a project work on dogs, they will hunt out anything and everything that so much as mentions them and the bits thus mined are assiduously transcribed into project folders.Example: Riding the coattails of Barack Obama, Democrats picked up seven seats held by Republicans in Tuesday's election to match the seven it gained two years ago.Example: This little lady isn't going to make it either, so it's not like I can hang on her coattails and ride the gravy train to millionairesville.Example: The first few (unpatriotic) corporations to outsource production were cutting a fat hog, riding on the backs of third-world laborers.Example: It is clear that a powerful and mysterious force is pushing seniors toward greater volunteer involvement, and nonprofit groups should tap into this particularly civic age group before the Indian summer of volunteering reaches its end.more:
» explotar al máximo = realise + to its full potential ; realise + the potential ; work + Nombre + to death ; work + Nombre + to the bone .
Example: There is still a great deal to be learned about information, its use by people and the way people interact with machines before information technology can realize its full potential as an aid to human communication and decision-making. Example: What do we have to do to realize the potential of digital libraries? = ¿Qué debemos hacer para aprovechar al máximo las posibilidades que nos ofrecen las bibliotecas digitales?. Example: When the point is reached at which the instructor begins to fade into the background, individual students can select cases to analyze and solve on their own before the class period, literally pulling them apart and putting them together again -- 'working them to death'. Example: Typically, these movies find a formula and just work them to the bone.» explotar con éxito = parlay .
Example: In today's instant reaction culture, celebrities are finding more and more ways to parlay their fame into fortunes.» explotar los beneficios de = exploit + the benefits of .
Example: The 'freezer model' for change in libraries has three phases -- freezing for stability, unfreezing to introduce change, and refreezing to achieve control of the change and exploit its benefits fully.» explotar los sentidos = exploit + the senses .
Example: The whole media industry exploits the senses and entices the imagination with an unreal world.» por explotar = untapped ; unexploited .
Example: Archivists who do have such material in their charge are the keepers of a largely untapped source of historical material which offers a different and balancing perspective on history. Example: Kenya and other African states are sitting on a fortune in the form of unexploited natural cures.» sin explotar = untapped ; unexploded ; unexploited .
Example: Archivists who do have such material in their charge are the keepers of a largely untapped source of historical material which offers a different and balancing perspective on history. Example: Although national parks are perceived as pristine areas, many are dumping grounds for hazardous materials - everything from industrial toxins to unexploded munitions. Example: Kenya and other African states are sitting on a fortune in the form of unexploited natural cures.