Plagar in english
Plague
pronunciation: pleɪg part of speech: noun
pronunciation: pleɪg part of speech: noun
In gestures
plagar = litter ; plague ; besiege ; infest.
Example: There are plenty of omission failures of this sort, and they litter most of the Hennepin County Library Cataloging Bulletins.Example: Title indexes have always been plagued by the absence of terminology control.Example: Concurrently, libraries are besieged with greater demands from the academic community for access to and instruction in electronic information resources such as the Internet.Example: The wizard then cursed the underground shrine, infesting it with swarms of nasty vermin.more:
» el camino hacia + Nombre + está plagado de + Nombre = the road (to/towards) + Nombre + is paved with + Nombre .
Example: The road towards the electronic library is paved with challenges.» estar plagado de = be rife with ; be plagued with .
Example: Educational terminology is rife with concepts that are best described with pre-coordinated terms. Example: Contemporary library and information science discourse is plagued with tunnel vision and blind spots that seriously affect the profession's efforts to plan the library's future = La biblioteca contemporánea y el discurso de las ciencias de la información están plagados de visiones subjetivas y de puntos débiles que seriamente afectan a los esfuerzos de la profesión para planificar el futuro de la biblioteca.» plagar de errores = litter with + failure ; litter with + error .
Example: Only as his experience grew did this young man see that what he did was littered as much, if not more, with failure as it was crowned with success of a lasting kind. Example: Many errors in Watt's 'Bibliotheca Britannica' are repeated by Allibone -- and 'Bibliotheca Britannica' was littered with error!.» plagar de problemas = bedevil .
Example: The article has the title 'Piracy, crooked printers, inflation bedevil Russian publishing'.