Proeza in english
Feat
pronunciation: fit part of speech: noun
pronunciation: fit part of speech: noun
In gestures
proeza = deed ; feat ; tour de force ; exploit ; prowess ; derring-do ; heroic story ; heroics.
Example: Books were kept for historical records of deeds done by the inhabitants: their worthy acts as well as their sins.Example: Even Hannibal's crossing of the Alps in 218 B.C., with his Carthaginian troops and equipment, was a remarkable organizational feat.Example: The subsequent report, a tour de force, recommended the restructuring of library authorities into larger units.Example: This book tells the exploits of a country carpenter who specializes in building privies.Example: The results endorse the need for continued application of marketing prowess, information science research, and library support systems.Example: The book is an old-fashioned tale of derring-do which reads somewhat stiltedly today.Example: The exhibition illustrates the tragic history of the concentration camps, but also the heroic stories of liberation and survival that marked their end.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:
» realizar una proeza = accomplish + a feat ; perform + a feat .
Example: This article describes briefly how this remarkable feat was accomplished. Example: As a result, systems have been developed that offer excellent services to their users and perform brilliant feats of data analysis and integration.» ser toda una proeza = be no mean feat .
Example: Fees aside, earning a place at any of the UK's top drama schools is no mean feat.