Ingeniar in english

Engineer

pronunciation: endʒənɪr part of speech: noun
In gestures

ingeniarse = contrive ; devise ; concoct ; dream up. 

Example: Examples would include deliberately contriving an authoritarian atmosphere, either institutional, by means of rules and regulations, or personal, by means of academic status, for instance.Example: Special classification schemes are generally devised for an application in which no major general scheme is suitable.Example: To top off the scrumptious meal, she had concocted a banana pudding, which was served with piping hot coffee.Example: Scientists have created a liquid goo that turns into a rubbery solid when shaken and they are inviting the public to help dream up uses for it.

ingeniar = engineer. 

Example: So, in telephone transmission the bandwidth of each speech circuit is engineered to be 4kHz.

more:

» cómo nos las ingeniamos parahow in the world... .

Example: How in the world do we teach our students the answers to questions that have not yet been asked?.

» ingeniarsecontrivedeviseconcoctdream up .

Example: Examples would include deliberately contriving an authoritarian atmosphere, either institutional, by means of rules and regulations, or personal, by means of academic status, for instance.

Example: Special classification schemes are generally devised for an application in which no major general scheme is suitable.

Example: To top off the scrumptious meal, she had concocted a banana pudding, which was served with piping hot coffee.

Example: Scientists have created a liquid goo that turns into a rubbery solid when shaken and they are inviting the public to help dream up uses for it.

» ingeniarse el modo dedream up + ways to .

Example: Users who experience these situations might get the idea that librarians stay awake nights dreaming up ways to frustrate their efforts to find material in the library.

» ingeniárselasmanage tofinesseget bycraft + a planscrape by .

Example: Tom Hernandez tried not to show how sad he felt about his friends' leaving, and managed to keep up a cheerful facade until the party broke up.

Example: The story of the postwar diner suggests some ways that purveyors of consumer commodities finessed and exploited emergent social dislocations in the drive to expand and diversify markets.

Example: A small book fair lasting only a day, such as might be held in a kindergarten or small elementary school, can get by with a couple of members of staff and a parent as the organizing committee.

Example: But now, it seems the 15 months spent crafting a plan to lessen pilots' flying hours, thus reducing the dangers of pilot fatigue, are about to become a reality.

Example: I am drowning in debt and barely scrape by every month.

» ingeniárselas parafigure out how .

Example: As she tried to figure out how to change her and the library's image, she made some interesting observations.

» ingeniárselas para escaparcontrive + an escape .

Example: As he recovers, he overhears a well-intentioned social worker murmuring soothingly about a juvenile facility, and contrives an escape.

» ingeniárselas para sobrevivirlive by + Posesivo + wits .

Example: During the months that followed she had lived by her wits and refused to doubt -- even fleetingly -- that she would find him.

» ingeniárselas solomanage on + Posesivo + ownfend for + Reflexivoget by on + Posesivo + own .

Example: Unfortunately, the arthritis was worsening to the point that she had trouble managing on her own at home.

Example: We who run libraries are equally for this kind of emancipation, so that we feel that leaving readers to fend for themselves is to sterilise the idea of libraries.

Example: Sickened by this parasitic femininity, she resolved to get by on her own and to see life for herself.

Ingeniar synonyms

direct in spanish: directo, pronunciation: dɜrekt part of speech: adjective organize in spanish: organizar, pronunciation: ɔrgənaɪz part of speech: verb mastermind in spanish: cerebro, pronunciation: mæstɜrmaɪnd part of speech: noun orchestrate in spanish: orquestar, pronunciation: ɔrkɪstreɪt part of speech: verb technologist in spanish: tecnólogo, pronunciation: teknɑlədʒɪst part of speech: noun engine driver in spanish: maquinista, pronunciation: endʒəndraɪvɜr part of speech: noun railroad engineer in spanish: ingeniero ferroviario, pronunciation: reɪlroʊdendʒənɪr part of speech: noun applied scientist in spanish: científico aplicado, pronunciation: əplaɪdsaɪəntɪst part of speech: noun
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