Percatar in english

Perquisite

pronunciation: pɜrkwəzɪt part of speech: noun
In gestures

percatarse = become + aware ; make + Nombre + aware of ; twig ; sink in. 

Example: For the first time now he became aware that he was being watched.Example: Libraries need to be made aware of all possible networking options, the benefits of the lesser known OSI suite of protocols and the requirements for establishing an OSI environment.Example: Sometimes the police tolerated them for a bit but sometimes they came down on them like a ton of bricks as soon as they twigged what they were up to.Example: The personnel officer experienced an involuntary shiver as the lancinating reality of the board's decision sank in.

percatar = let + Nombre + know ; make + Nombre + aware of. 

Example: Then the secretary, having rallied herself, said forlornly 'I'll let him know you're here in a minute'.Example: Libraries need to be made aware of all possible networking options, the benefits of the lesser known OSI suite of protocols and the requirements for establishing an OSI environment.

more:

» dejar de percatarsebecome + blind to .

Example: This task requires that the robot's intelligent controller does not becoming blind to the wide variety of anomalies that may occur.

» hacer que Alguien se percate de quegive + Nombre + the vibe that .

Example: By always looking at people in the eye and keeping your head held high you'll start giving them the vibe that you are not to be walked all over .

» no percatarse debe blind to .

Example: Influence and control is currently wielded by sterile professionals who are blind to the need to develop services beyond print.

» no percatarse de la importancia de Algohave + no feeling for .

Example: It is when speakers have no feeling for pause that their speech seems to burble on without any arresting quality; the club bore is a burbler: he has not learnt the eloquence of silence.

» percatarsebecome + awaremake + Nombre + aware oftwigsink in [Verbo irregular: pasado sank, participio sunk] .

Example: For the first time now he became aware that he was being watched.

Example: Libraries need to be made aware of all possible networking options, the benefits of the lesser known OSI suite of protocols and the requirements for establishing an OSI environment.

Example: Sometimes the police tolerated them for a bit but sometimes they came down on them like a ton of bricks as soon as they twigged what they were up to.

Example: The personnel officer experienced an involuntary shiver as the lancinating reality of the board's decision sank in.

» percatarse con antelacióngain + early warning .

Example: These officers, by being on the spot, are able to gain early warning of impending developments and smooth the path of grant and loan applications.

» percatarse deappreciatewake up towise up tocatch + a whiff ofget + a whiff of .

Example: Some employers ignore this responsibility appreciating the accruing benefits of a professionally competent and motivated staff.

Example: A few libraries have woken up to this new demand and are doing something.

Example: Businesses are finally startiing to wise up to the power of the social network.

Example: If you can catch a whiff of your feet without bending over, you've got a problem.

Example: When the waitress leaned over to set the place for him he got a whiff of damp underclothes and armpits and talcum powder.

» percatarse (de)cotton on (to) .

Example: We failed to cotton on to the economic essential that owning stuff isn't productive, making stuff is.

» percatarse deappreciatewake up towise up tocatch + a whiff ofget + a whiff of .

Example: Some employers ignore this responsibility appreciating the accruing benefits of a professionally competent and motivated staff.

Example: A few libraries have woken up to this new demand and are doing something.

Example: Businesses are finally startiing to wise up to the power of the social network.

Example: If you can catch a whiff of your feet without bending over, you've got a problem.

Example: When the waitress leaned over to set the place for him he got a whiff of damp underclothes and armpits and talcum powder.

» percatarse de un problemaalight on + a problem .

Example: One problem on which Kaiser alighted was that many processes can be further analysed into a concrete and a process.

» sin percatarsewithout realisingwithout noticingunconsciouslyunknowinglyunwittingly .

Example: Similarly, an English woman visiting Italy who touches her earlobes a lot, without realising the cultural significance of this action, would be behaving flirtatiously in that context.

Example: They gradually soak up language, discovering the rules by which it works almost without noticing it.

Example: He often did this, almost unconsciously, to avert an immediate sign of reaction to an irksome confrontation.

Example: The ways in which library professionals -- knowingly and unknowingly -- undermine intellectual freedom are discussed = Se analizan las formas en las que los profesionales de las bibliotecas, consciente o inconscientemente, socavan la libertad intelectual.

Example: Wittingly or unwittingly, they mask other questions that users do not know how to ask or are uncertain that they want to divulge to someone else.

Percatar synonyms

privilege in spanish: privilegio, pronunciation: prɪvlədʒ part of speech: noun prerogative in spanish: prerrogativa, pronunciation: prɪrɑgətɪv part of speech: noun perk in spanish: gaje, pronunciation: pɜrk part of speech: noun, verb fringe benefit in spanish: Beneficio adicional, pronunciation: frɪndʒbenəfɪt part of speech: noun exclusive right in spanish: derecho exclusivo, pronunciation: ɪksklusɪvraɪt part of speech: noun
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