Inválido in english

Invalid

pronunciation: ɪnvələd part of speech: adjective, noun
In gestures

invalidar = negate ; override ; overturn ; render + Nombre + redundant ; render + Nombre + suspect ; render + Nombre + wrong ; rule out ; rule out ; short-circuit [shortcircuit] ; stultify ; eviscerate ; deflate ; invalidate ; preempt [pre-empt] ; pull + the plug on ; overrule ; void ; make + Nombre + redundant ; disallow ; annul. 

Example: Thus excessive delays in the availability of cataloguing records from the central agency will negate much of the value of a central service.Example: On the final screen in the sequence, the default values for today's closing time and tomorrow's opening time may be overridden.Example: However, any refinement involves greater human intervention, and this in turn can easily overturn the arguments in favour of subject indexes based upon titles.Example: We need to replace those aspects of traditional public library service which have been taken over by other media or rendered redundant by social change.Example: Poor standards of cataloguing in the past render many examples of retrospective music bibliography suspect.Example: Further, changes in the external world serve to render judgments, valid at the moment, wrong at best, and detrimental to the effectiveness of the catalog at worst.Example: If, however, we index documents about primary schools under the term primary school, we can immediately rule out a lot of irrelevant documents in our search.Example: If, however, we index documents about primary schools under the term primary school, we can immediately rule out a lot of irrelevant documents in our search.Example: There is little modulation, whole steps of division being short-circuited and an odd assembly of terms being frequently found: e.g.: LAW see also JURY, JUDGES.Example: Excessive standardisation also tends to stultify development and improvement of IT products.Example: Also, to become emotionally wedded to a particular view is to eviscerate one's effectiveness in achieving a workable solution.Example: These developments deflate some traditional assumptions about and privileges associated with scientific and technical knowledge.Example: However, in November 1976, with the eighth edition still hot from the press, the decision to revert wholly to indirect subdivision was implemented, thus invalidating a substantial part of the Introduction to the eighth edition.Example: This article concludes that the main value of the indicators is as a management tool, as a means of preempting problems.Example: However, the effects of media conglomeration on Times Mirror for bottom line results would pull the plug on the New York venture that was nearing its provisional term and beginning to show positive results.Example: President Eisenhower overruled some of his military commanders in summer 1958, ordering them not to use nuclear weapons against China.Example: However, in the case when the user's input fails, we would like to void the reserved funds.Example: In one breath you say it's not very valuable and technologies will soon be here to make it redundant and in the next breath boast of its capabilities - you just can't have it both ways!.Example: Publishers still hoped to establish monopolies on individual books that were out of copyright, but this was eventually disallowed by a legal ruling in 1774.Example: In 2009 the court annulled the decision and remanded the case to the authority for further investigation.

more:

» invalidar las críticasdisarm + criticism .

Example: Most commentators on the subject protect themselves by employing the term 'printed ephemera' to describe the field and thus hope to disarm the potential criticism that a manuscript item can also be ephemeral.

» invalidar las quejasdisarm + complaints .

Example: The belief that health professionals were 'doing everything they could' in conditions of constraint also tended to exonerate them from blame for the suffering that carers or ill people experienced, and thus to disarm complaints about health care.

» invalidar un argumentoinvalidate + an argument .

Example: Although in the past it has been said that readers have a psychological aversion to computers, its present widespread use in offices and business and industry invalidates this argument.

inválido1 = invalid ; null. 

Example: If an invalid borrower has been given permission to charge materials out, the documents are charged out with the dates due calculated.Example: Null is a symbol used to indicate the absence of an expression or a result.

inválido2 = invalid. 

Example: One of the questions that a reference librarian might be asked is, 'Is there some organization that could find a sitter for my invalid brother so I could get out sometimes? I can't afford a nurse'.

Inválido synonyms

spurious in spanish: espurio, pronunciation: spjʊriəs part of speech: adjective specious in spanish: especioso, pronunciation: spiʃəs part of speech: adjective void in spanish: vacío, pronunciation: vɔɪd part of speech: noun, adjective bad in spanish: malo, pronunciation: bæd part of speech: adjective null in spanish: nulo, pronunciation: nʌl part of speech: adjective, noun false in spanish: falso, pronunciation: fɔls part of speech: adjective nugatory in spanish: ineficaz, pronunciation: nugɑtɔri part of speech: adjective fallacious in spanish: erróneo, pronunciation: fəleɪʃəs part of speech: adjective handicap in spanish: Desventaja, pronunciation: hændikæp part of speech: noun disable in spanish: inhabilitar, pronunciation: dɪseɪbəl part of speech: verb incapacitate in spanish: incapacitar, pronunciation: ɪnkəpæsɪteɪt part of speech: verb expired in spanish: muerto, pronunciation: ɪkspaɪrd part of speech: adjective unsound in spanish: defectuoso, pronunciation: ənsaʊnd part of speech: adjective sophistic in spanish: sofístico, pronunciation: səfɪstɪk part of speech: adjective nullified in spanish: anulado, pronunciation: nʌləfaɪd part of speech: adjective shut-in in spanish: encerrar, pronunciation: ʃʌtɪn part of speech: noun, adjective uncollectible in spanish: incobrable, pronunciation: ənkəlektɪbəl part of speech: adjective sophistical in spanish: sofístico, pronunciation: səfɪstɪkəl part of speech: adjective invalidated in spanish: invalidado, pronunciation: ɪnvælədeɪtəd part of speech: adjective
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