Forzado in english

Forced

pronunciation: fɔrst part of speech: adjective
In gestures

forzado1 = enforced ; strained ; forced ; forcible. 

Example: Cost cutting by government has resulted in enforced staff reductions.Example: An ugly voice, one that is monotonous or grating, weak in power, incomprehensible or strained, is never likely to receive and retain anyone's attention for long.Example: The Great War of 1914-18 was a heavy blow for the Bulletin, from which it never really recovered, and in the 1920s it gradually sank under its own weight, helped by a forced move from its previous quarters to make room for a trade fair.Example: The author reveals the close links between African ideas about the forcible extraction of vital fluids and European views about sleeping sickness, insect vectors, and deforestation.

more:

» a marchas forzadasin a rushagainst the clockin a hurry .

Example: In a rush to computerize records, records managers may overlook the need to establish a sound basis for manual filing systems.

Example: Health care workers working against the clock want and need better information faster and for this they need training.

Example: Unfortunately, the basic problem was to get the file cleaned up in a hurry, and nobody was particularly concerned with research.

» campo de trabajos forzadoslabour campforced labour camp .

Example: He spent more than a decade in prison and labour camps in Siberia.

Example: Arabs who played a role in the Holocaust included those who personally took part in the persecution of Jews, and patrolmen who tracked down Jewish escapees from forced labor camps.

» entrada forzadaforced entry .

Example: Insurers will not cover loss of vehicle contents without forced entry.

» ir a marchas forzadasbe in a rush .

Example: Today, I was in a rush and forgot to flush the toilet after taking a huge dump.

» levar a marchas forzadasstruggle behind .

Example: She struggled behind him, trying to make her legs work when her throat was gasping for oxygen.

» situación forzadaProcrustean bed .

Example: Dewey claims: 'we have not sacrificed utility in order to force subjects on the decimal Procrustean bed'.

» trabajos forzadosforced labourhard labourpenal servitude .

Example: the gulag was an atrocious system of incarceration and forced labor that had little to do with correction, that poisoned society, and that besmirched Soviet communism.

Example: With scorching heat from above and hard labour in the fields, Mirza Kak felt pangs of hunger.

Example: The defendant was found guilty, with a recommendation to mercy, and she was sentenced to three years' penal servitude.

» verse forzado abe pitchforked into .

Example: But Mr Dixit died suddenly and Mr Narayanan, then in charge of internal security, was pitchforked into the job.

forzado2 = stilted ; hokey. 

Example: His eccentricity was stilted and contrived.Example: This may seem like a rather hokey example, but it illustrates very well the principles of divide-and-conquer.

forzar = compel ; constrain ; force ; oblige ; force + Nombre + open ; strain ; extrude ; enforce ; shoehorn ; pry + Nombre + open ; push + Nombre + into a corner. 

Example: It was apparent that the majority of respondents did not feel the need to react as if they were confronting forces compelling the adoption of totally new roles.Example: Model II sees the process in terms of the system forcing or constraining the user to deviate from the 'real' problem.Example: If the library wants all users to have passwords, an authorization level of 1 can be assigned in the search function to force the system to require a password.Example: The user interested in children's sports, therefore, is obliged, when looking under the general heading, to differentiate between those works which are general and those which are on men's sports.Example: Do not force a book open, especially when it is new.Example: His small foreign-made car strained with the added burden of an interior packed to capacity with personal belongings and a heavily laden U-Haul trailor attached to the rear.Example: In theory, at least, information provision has always been seen as an integral part of the library service, but in practice this had tended to become extruded to the point of non-existence by the time it reaches the smaller rural branches and mobile libraries = In theory, at least, information provision has always been seen as an integral part of the library service, but in practice this had tended to become extruded to the point of non-existence by the time it reaches the smaller rural branches and mobile libraries.Example: Economic necessity will enforce an improvement in the provision of patent information in Hungary.Example: We should not expect faculty to shoehorn their approaches into a technical developer's ideas of what is valuable or the correct pedagogical approach.Example: If the paper clip has not rusted and the paper is sturdy, a paper clip can be removed by gently prying it open.Example: You never know what a person will do until you push him into a corner.

more:

» abrir forzandoforce + Nombre + open .

Example: Do not force a book open, especially when it is new.

» abrir forzando con palancaprise + Nombre + open [Sinónimo de pry + Nombre + open] .

Example: No harm was done to staff or bookstock but computer monitors and virtually all other equipment were smashed, desks prised open and contents scattered.

» forzar (a)coerce (into) .

Example: Because of this human characteristic of dislike of work, most people must be coerced, controlled, directed, threatened with punishment to get them to put forth adequate effort.

» forzar apress intodragoon + Nombre + into .

Example: 'Lower town,' along the water's edge, is a district of crowded brick and frame structures of varied heights, an occasional old residence having had its ground floor pressed into commercial service.

Example: Winston Churchill said that the Americans dragooned him into the landings in southern France.

» forzar a Alguienbludgeon + Nombre + into .

Example: In his official biography, Charles would later portray Philip as a bully and moan that his father had bludgeoned him into marrying her.

» forzar a cerrar un Negociodrive out of + business .

Example: However, those who do not imitate superior solution are driven out of business.

» forzar el ritmopick up + Posesivo + pacequicken + Posesivo + pacesmarten + Posesivo + pace .

Example: I'm not sure what thoughts Mikayla was having, but she picked up her pace and vanished ahead of us into the woods.

Example: Make a note of the story's climax in your mind, so that you can indicate to the children by pause, by quickening of the pace, the peak of the tale.

Example: He pulled his collar close to his neck, shoved his icy hands into his pockets and smartened his pace.

» forzar la entradabreak inforce + Posesivo + entry intoforce + Posesivo + way into .

Example: He had one foot over the window sill of his Paris flat when police broke in and collared him.

Example: A woman forced her entry into a bank in Tully and walked off with a bag containing $1 million in checks, state police said.

Example: A tanked-up mob forced their way into the football grounds and started up the fight.

» forzar la retiradadrive back .

Example: Foch continued to believe that only renewed offensives could dislodge the Germans and drive them back.

» forzar la separación decoerce + Nombre + away from .

Example: They were helpful in imparting the literacy and knowledge needed by modern technology without coercing the work-force away from its duty.

» forzar una respuestacoerce + a response .

Example: Any attempt to coerce a response without good reason based on that child's present predicament is to place in jeopardy the child's willing engagement now and in the future.

» que fuerza los músculosmuscle-straining .

Example: Principal ergonomic issues identified were screen glare, furniture promoting muscle-straining work postures, and insufficient work surfaces.

Forzado synonyms

affected in spanish: afectado, pronunciation: əfektəd part of speech: adjective unexpected in spanish: inesperado, pronunciation: ənɪkspektɪd part of speech: adjective strained in spanish: tenso, pronunciation: streɪnd part of speech: adjective constrained in spanish: constreñido, pronunciation: kənstreɪnd part of speech: adjective involuntary in spanish: involuntario, pronunciation: ɪnvɑlənteri part of speech: adjective unnatural in spanish: antinatural, pronunciation: ənnætʃɜrəl part of speech: adjective unscheduled in spanish: no programado, pronunciation: ənskedʒuld part of speech: adjective nonvoluntary in spanish: no voluntario, pronunciation: nɑnvɑlənteri part of speech: adjective unvoluntary in spanish: involuntario, pronunciation: ənvəlʌntɜri part of speech: adjective
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