Jubilado in english
Retired
pronunciation: rɪtaɪrd part of speech: adjective
pronunciation: rɪtaɪrd part of speech: adjective
In gestures
jubilado1 = senior citizen ; senior ; retiree ; pensioner ; retired person.
Example: Senior citizens' income tax problems were met by organizing a free service of help in filling in tax returns.Example: The small art gallery, which often features local crafts, doubles as a room for seniors to play euchre, the local shoe repair man to teach chess, community leaders to plan special action, and so on.Example: And to make matters worse, retirees on fixed incomes have recently presented the mayor with a petition deploring the soaring property taxes.Example: The core of readers and borrowers of agricultural literature are pensioners wanting to improve cultivation of their small private plots of land.Example: It's normal for a retired person to feel a sense of loss and displacement when a significant portion of your identity goes away.more:
» ciudad donde viven principalmente jubilados = retirement town [Ciudad que debido a sus condiciones principalmente climáticas o económicas atrae a un gran número de jubilados] .
Example: The study showed that seaside resorts, spas, retirement towns and administrative centres were more likely to have good bookshop than industrial towns.» hogar del jubilado = retirement centre .
Example: Nursing homes, retirement centers, Veterans' centers, women's shelters, Head Start programs, prisons, and psychiatric hospitals were often the beneficiaries of weeded books.» jubilados, los = retired, the [Expresión usualmente acompañada del artículo] .
Example: The Stockholm Public Library provides library services in 32 hospitals, 1 gaol, 3 leisure centres for the handicapped and retired, and an institution for social rehabilitation.jubilado2 = retired.
Example: Naturally, there are always a few retired librarians who constitute the exception to the rule.more:
» persona jubilada = retired person .
Example: It's normal for a retired person to feel a sense of loss and displacement when a significant portion of your identity goes away.jubilar = put out to + grass ; put out to + pasture.
Example: The article 'Should the computer be put out to grass?' argues that successful transfer of information relies more on quality than quantity.Example: Let the free market decide whether it wants to support Prince's way of doing business or it wants to put him out to pasture.more:
» jubilarse = retire .
Example: Staff leaving for other jobs, retiring or simply dying (the age profile is inexorably rising in most SLIS) are nor replaced.