Penetrar in english

Penetrate

pronunciation: penətreɪt part of speech: verb
In gestures

penetrar = cut through ; go into ; penetrate ; go in ; permeate ; break through ; tread into ; seep into ; seep through ; seep ; pervade ; see through ; insinuate + Reflexivo + (into) ; insinuate + Posesivo + way through ; insinuate into ; pierce ; intromit. 

Example: Publishers attempting to cut through this nomenclature morass can check with the library's administration.Example: As something you may or may not know, every item going into the processing stream is assigned a priority, and our judgment will in many cases be different from yours, as our needs will be different from yours.Example: But the leaven of the principles, promulgated by the International Federation, has not yet penetrated into more than half the lump of documentary material.Example: But in the country the processes of printing always provoke such lively curiosity that the customers preferred to go in by a glazed door set in the shop-front and giving onto the street.Example: This concept permeates all bibliothecal activities from start to finish, especially indexing and abstracting.Example: Is there a glass ceiling for librarians? If so, what's the best way to break through it?.Example: This seems to suggest that Schopenhauer may have trodden much further into the mystics' domain than he is willing to admit.Example: Rampant commercialism is seeping into every crevice of American culture.Example: The consequences were beginning to seep through to respondents at the time of the visits made to them and were creating a great deal of concern.Example: The outer edges of the sheet -- the deckle edges -- are rough and uneven where the stuff seeped between the deckle and the mould.Example: I strongly believe that we must cultivate a more positive attitude towards change in the field of library work, and that this attitude must pervade all levels of librarianship.Example: Books can seldom be disbound for the benefit of bibliographers (although it is worth remembering that they sometimes have to be rebound, when they are completely dismembered), but we can now see through printing ink by means of betaradiography.Example: But self-concern can insinuate itself into every corner of the emotional life.Example: As they insinuated their way through the stack area, the secretary responded that all she knew was that the director had just returned from a meeting.Example: While endorsing the thought that language is insinuated into brains, I also identify what I believe is the theory's Achilles heel.Example: She waited like Saint Sebastian for the arrows to begin piercing her.Example: During copulation, hamster females maintain lordosis for hundreds of seconds, while the male mounts and intromits repeatedly.

more:

» osar penetrarventure into .

Example: All these factors have deterred women from venturing into politics.

» palabras + penetrarwords + sink .

Example: The words sank like a depth-charge into Jeanne Leforte's consciousness -- she was mortally pierced and her brain was in anarchy.

» penetrar de un modo inclinadoslant into .

Example: All was quiescent, languorous, beautiful in the glow of the sunshine slanting into the room through the open window.

» penetrar una barrerabreak through + barrier .

Example: There are technological as well as social or cultural barriers for the library manager to break through.

Penetrar synonyms

dawn in spanish: amanecer, pronunciation: dɔn part of speech: noun bottom in spanish: fondo, pronunciation: bɑtəm part of speech: noun, adjective fathom in spanish: braza, pronunciation: fæðəm part of speech: verb, noun click in spanish: hacer clic, pronunciation: klɪk part of speech: verb, noun get through in spanish: pasar, pronunciation: getθru part of speech: verb get across in spanish: atravesar, pronunciation: getəkrɔs part of speech: verb sink in in spanish: hundirse en, pronunciation: sɪŋkɪn part of speech: verb come home in spanish: ven a casa, pronunciation: kʌmhoʊm part of speech: verb fall into place in spanish: caer en su lugar, pronunciation: fɔlɪntupleɪs part of speech: verb
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