Popularidad in english

Popularity

pronunciation: pɑpjəlerəti part of speech: noun
In gestures

popularidad = popularity ; mass appeal ; vogue. 

Example: The reason for its popularity was largely that it was based upon a principle of conformity in essentials, and freedom in details.Example: Few have achieved the success of the video cassette recorder (VCR) in terms of mass appeal.Example: Although presently seen as an exclusive possession of white tradition, square dancing has also had its vogue among blacks.

more:

» alcanzar popularidadcatch on .

Example: These new technologies are advancing rapidly in Japan and are likely to catch on quickly in other countries.

» concurso de popularidadpopularity contest .

Example: Shock as boofy blokes beat weedy intellectual in popularity contest.

» cota de popularidadpopularity rating .

Example: His popularity ratings have halved since he was elected to a new record low of 31 per cent in the wake of multiple legal and sex scandals.

» ganar popularidadgrow in + popularitygain (in) + popularityincrease in + popularitygrow in + popularity .

Example: More than 1,500 years after the game was invented, chess is still growing in popularity.

Example: This technique is sure to gain popularity as more libraries become involved in the long-range planning process.

Example: CD drives are now cheap enough for CD-ROMs to increase in popularity.

Example: More than 1,500 years after the game was invented, chess is still growing in popularity.

» impopularidadunpopularity .

Example: In the tide of criticism which finally engulfed this edition of the classification scheme, it was these relocations which were often blamed for its unpopularity.

» perder popularidadfade from + popularityoutlive + Posesivo + popularitygo out of + favourlose + favourfall out of + favourthe bloom + be + off the rose .

Example: Variety shows began to fade from popularity in the early 1970s, when research began to show that variety shows appealed to an older audience that was less appealing to advertisers.

Example: Library materials may be discarded when they are in poor physical condition, beyond repair and unfit for binding, or when the text is out-of-date or superseded by a new edition, or when they have outlived their popularity.

Example: The author follows the history through to the point, in the latter part of the nineteenth century, when mirror-image monograms went out of favour and were replaced by straightforward monograms.

Example: However, and despite its popular currency, this perspective has largely lost favour in academic circles.

Example: At first he was a close political advisor to Charles II, although he later fell out of favour and was forced into exile.

Example: Is the bloom off the rose for retail market? = ¿Está perdiendo popularidad el mercado de venta al por menor?.

» popularidad cada vez mayorgrowing popularity .

Example: The growing popularity of cycling is leading to an increased share in the area of physical education.

» volver a la popularidadreturn to + favour .

Example: Despite the incompetence of most eighteenth-century block-makers, woodcuts never quite disappeared, and they returned to favour in the delicate form called 'wood-engraving' at the end of the hand-press period.
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