Normalidad in english

Normal

pronunciation: nɔrməl part of speech: adjective
In gestures

normalidad = normality ; normalcy. 

Example: It also provides a natural preference ordering on explanations, defined in terms of normality or plausibility.Example: America's present need is not heroics, but healing; not nostrums, but normalcy; not experiment, but equipoise; not submergence in internationality, but sustainment in triumphant nationality.

more:

» ayudar a volver a la normalidadget + Nombre + back up and running .

Example: Her recovery was a long and slow one but she had the support of all her wonderful friends and family to get her back up and running.

» hacer volver a la normalidadbring + Nombre + back to earth .

Example: Australian house prices are massively out of whack and will be brought back to earth, an expert says.

» restablecer la normalidadrestore + normalcy .

Example: UNICEF (United Nation's International Children's Emergency Fund) is looking to restore normalcy to the lives of children in the disaster area.

» restaurar la normalidadrestore + normalcy .

Example: UNICEF (United Nation's International Children's Emergency Fund) is looking to restore normalcy to the lives of children in the disaster area.

» situación + volver a la normalidadsituation + go back to normal .

Example: He believes that once the situation goes back to normal the negative effects of oil price hikes will vanish.

» volver a la normalidadget back to + normalreturn to + normalcyget back in(to) + the swing (of things)be back to normalgo back to + normalcome back to + earthget back up to + speedget back up to + snuffcome to + normalcyreturn to + normalreturn to + normality .

Example: Since we can't pay you overtime the way we do the clerks, I'll try to arrange some compensatory time when things get back to normal.

Example: Everybody wants the nation to return to normalcy with peace and order.

Example: It was hard to start with as I got tired easily and had also lost a lot of confidence, but I soon got back into the swing of things.

Example: Flights were back to normal yesterday after the Icelandic volcanic ash cloud returned to ground further flights from Exeter Airport.

Example: Nobody told me that after the initial excitement everyone would go back to normal except me.

Example: Ironically, just as we were discussing how Jive's prices will have to come back to earth, news of Jive's dramatic layoff came in.

Example: He is slowly getting back up to speed following emergency surgery on his knee.

Example: It normally takes one to two weeks for the acute symptoms to pass and several more for you to get back up to snuff and feel like yourself again.

Example: The schools and markets will open today and the city will start coming to normalcy after three days of curfew.

Example: Farmers are expected to lift the blockades later today on the remaining meat plants as the rest of the food processing industry returns to normal following the dispute which began last Tuesday week.

Example: After four months of life on the run, I was glad to return to normality, to life in New York.

» vuelta a la normalidadreturn to normalcyreturn to normality .

Example: Harding decided he liked the sound of the word and made 'Return to Normalcy' a recurring theme.

Example: It's a modest start, but for children like Hamed, who lost his father and his own leg in a mortar attack, it's the beginning of a return to normality after years of conflict.

Normalidad synonyms

rule in spanish: regla, pronunciation: rul part of speech: noun pattern in spanish: modelo, pronunciation: pætɜrn part of speech: noun natural in spanish: natural, pronunciation: nætʃɜrəl part of speech: adjective average in spanish: promedio, pronunciation: ævɜrɪdʒ part of speech: adjective, noun convention in spanish: convención, pronunciation: kənvenʃən part of speech: noun formula in spanish: fórmula, pronunciation: fɔrmjələ part of speech: noun regular in spanish: regular, pronunciation: regjəlɜr part of speech: adjective typical in spanish: típico, pronunciation: tɪpəkəl part of speech: adjective perpendicular in spanish: perpendicular, pronunciation: pɜrpəndɪkjəlɜr part of speech: adjective
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