Rechazo in english

Rejection

pronunciation: rɪdʒekʃən part of speech: noun
In gestures

rechazar = condemn ; decline ; discard ; eschew ; reject ; set + Nombre + aside ; flinch at/from ; refuse ; negative ; discountenance ; repulse ; shun ; be hostile to ; ditch ; renounce ; snub ; nix ; defeat ; disavow ; deselect ; turn down ; spurn ; repudiate ; fight off ; hold off ; dismiss + Nombre + with the wave of the hand ; fend off ; overrule ; push + Nombre + aside ; turn + Nombre + away ; give + Nombre + the thumbs down ; jilt ; disallow ; shut + the door on ; push back ; repel ; say + no to ; meet with + refusal ; cast + Nombre + aside. 

Example: It must, however, also be considered as a major source of the 'subject index illusion' so trenchantly condemned by Bliss, as mentioned below.Example: The title 'Unsolicited marginal gift collections: saying no or coping with the unwanted' deals with the problem of how to cope with collections which should have been declined, but were not.Example: The dates should be checked regularly and updated so that old dates are discarded and new ones entered.Example: However, most contributors to the debate about the future of SLIS have eschewed practicalities in favour of sweeping and dramatic generalizations.Example: Any reliance on principles alone is rejected, and an attempt is made to codify experience.Example: Such championship cannot be lightly set aside, nevertheless it is now quiet certain that 'bibliography', incorrect and unfortunate as it may be, is here to stay and the situation must be accepted.Example: It is increasingly obvious that we are as a nation one and indivisible, that divisive tendencies are a thing of the past, but there are still too many inheritors of the old indifference, and who flinch at co-operation as at an evil.Example: In this novel, if you remember, Henry Crawford, having been refused by the heroine Fanny, goes off and elopes with an old flame, Mrs Rushworth.Example: Bough negatived the suggestion instantly.Example: Balzac discountenanced virtually every idea Hernandez and children's librarian, Kate Lespran, had the courage to suggest.Example: Leforte blew forth a long breath, as if trying to repulse the oppressive heat of the September morning.Example: Traditionally these books have been shunned because of their fragile nature, but librarians are finding that a small collection can enliven story times.Example: Although he recognized the need for some forms of synthesis, Bliss was hostile to the idea of complete analysis and synthesis put forward by Ranganathan.Example: It is time that higher education institutions accepted the wisdom of collaboration and ditched, once and for all, the rhetoric of competition = It is time that higher education institutions accepted the wisdom of collaboration and ditched, once and for all, the rhetoric of competition.Example: 'Classification by attraction', i.e. the placing of a subject as the most concrete element represented in it, without regard to the basic discipline concerned, is renounced = 'Classification by attraction', i.e. the placing of a subject as the most concrete element represented in it, without regard to the basic discipline concerned, is renounced.Example: Some black librarian see little progress towards race-neutral attitudes and finds themselves either directly or indirectly snubbed, patronised or completely ignored by users as well as staff members.Example: This play was nixed by school officials on the grounds that the subject of sweatshops was not appropriate for that age group.Example: The author focuses on the campaign of the Idaho Library Association to defeat this initiative.Example: Feminists disavow biology & biologists who reduce human biology to anatomy.Example: There is a need to provide public access to the Internet and to develop guidelines for selecting and deselecting appropriate resources.Example: Public school, strapped for cash, find offers from advertising revenue hard to turn down.Example: The government seems to spurns the architecture profession and there is a growing rift between architects who assert their utility and those who cleave to artistic prerogatives.Example: The author attempts to repudiate Cherniavsky's argument to show that machine intelligence cannot equal human intelligence.Example: These pillboxes were originally built to help fight off a Nazi invasion.Example: A dam at the Strait of Gibraltar could be constructed to limit the outflow and reverse the climate deterioration, thus holding off the next ice age.Example: International 'rules' are often dismissed with the wave of the hand or a snort of contempt one week, and gilded and placed on a pedestal the next.Example: During the rutting season, they are used to fend off other males in an attempt to gather a harem of females to breed with.Example: President Eisenhower overruled some of his military commanders in summer 1958, ordering them not to use nuclear weapons against China.Example: She's just an airheaded bimbo, with an endless capacity to push aside unpleasant realities in favor of her more satisfying interests: young men and jewels.Example: They will be patrolling in plain clothes to spot doormen who turn away people apparently on the basis of their ethnicity.Example: Ultimately these guys are professionals and can tell you whether the property as a whole should be given the thumbs up or down.Example: To find yourself jilted is a blow to your pride -- do your best to forget it and if you don't succeed, at least pretend to.Example: Publishers still hoped to establish monopolies on individual books that were out of copyright, but this was eventually disallowed by a legal ruling in 1774.Example: America's reputation as a land of welcome for immigrants has often been compromised by periodic calls to shut the door on immigration.Example: Police have formed a line guarding the front door of the hotel to push back protestors.Example: Some grease had been transferred to the surface of the stone and the grease was repelling the rain water.Example: I nearly bit her hand off, who in their right mind would say no to a selection of underwear from one of the most luxurious knicker brands in the marketplace.Example: In 1899, the organized dock workers of Glasgow, Scotland, demanded a 10% increase in wages, but met with refusal by the bosses and went on strike.Example: The poor thing had been cast aside and her paramour had not even endeavoured to fight for her = The poor thing had been cast aside and her paramour had not even endeavoured to fight for her.

more:

» cheque + ser rechazadocheque + bounce .

Example: In situations where a person owes money to a creditor, and the creditor is not prepared to accept a personal cheque because he thinks it might bounce, a banker's draft made out by the debtor's bank can provide a solution.

» difícil rechazarhard to say no .

Example: Reality star Kris Jenner has revealed that her son-in-law is hard to please and even harder to say no to.

» rechazar a Alguien sin más (explicaciones)reject + Nombre + out of hand .

Example: In this instance, she worked successfully for years while taking her prescription medication, but they simply rejected her out of hand.

» rechazar Algo/Alguienturn + Nombre + down .

Example: If we turn Albert down, the union could make the roof fall in on us and you, as a member of the union, may become something of a pariah.

» rechazar la responsabilidaddisclaim + responsibility .

Example: On occasions, I have begun my talk by issuing a caveat emptor, a legalistic phrase which one dictionary defines as 'sentence disclaiming responsibility for buyer's disappointment'.

» rechazar por votaciónvote down .

Example: Following that vote, the Government put in train an analysis of the reasons the document was voted down.

» rechazarsego by + the board .

Example: If the principle of a free service goes by the board, every idea of an equal service to all will go by the board with it, with the consequent bad effect on publishing houses, bookshops and authors = Si se rechaza el principio de los servicios gratuitos, también se rechazará toda idea sobre un servicio igualitario para todos, con el consiguiente efecto negativo sobre las casas editoriales, las librerías y los autores.

» rechazar sin másdismiss + Nombre + out of hand .

Example: It is easy to sympathise with the critics but the contents cannot now be simply dismissed out of hand.

» rechazar una hipótesisreject + a hypothesisnegate + hypothesis .

Example: The analysis of the research data resulted in a mixed bag of results which neither supported nor rejected the hypothesis.

Example: To the best of our knowledge, there has been no large, multicenter prospective study to either validate or negate this hypothesis.

» rechazar una ideaturn + an idea + down .

Example: He turned the idea down because he thought that too many travel books had been published already.

» rechazar una invitacióndecline + Posesivo + invitation .

Example: Unfortunately, he came down with a fever forcing him to decline her invitation on Saturday after he initially accepted.

» rechazar una leydefeat + legislation .

Example: Such restraint creates a ridiculous and pathetic situation in which librarians refuse to speak out against, or work to defeat legislation destructive to libraries such as California's Propositions.

» rechazar una mocióndefeat + a motion .

Example: The motion was narrowly defeated by the SLA and passed by the ALA.

» rechazar una ofertadecline + an offerturn down + an offerreject + an offer .

Example: She firmly declined his offer, and stuck to her words all the way = Ella rechazó con firmeza la oferta que él le hizo y mantuvo su palabra hasta el final.

Example: Todd, being a bit proud, asked if he could have time to think before he either accepted or turn down her offer.

Example: Margene wanted to join the army after graduation, but they rejected her offer to enlist because she has flat feet and a sleeping disorder.

» rechazar una sugerenciaturn + an idea + down .

Example: He turned the idea down because he thought that too many travel books had been published already.

rechazo = rejection ; dismissal ; condemnation ; denial ; disapproval ; renunciation ; revulsion ; defeat ; disavowal ; move away from ; repudiation ; block ; thumbs down ; deprecation ; denouncement ; denunciation ; push factor ; pushback. 

Example: Informative abstracts both aid in the assessment of document relevance and selection or rejection.Example: One possible result may be the dismissal of reference books, perhaps even libraries, as legitimate sources of information.Example: This article critically examines Blaise Cronin's condemnation of social responsibility in librarianship.Example: The obvious alternative would be denial of access to scholarly literature.Example: A reference librarian must maintain a pleasant expression (rather than a scowl that is easily read as disapproval of present company).Example: This approach is characterised by the renunciation of attempts to generate the wording of index entries algorithmically.Example: As part of the worldwide revulsion against the fierce crackdown of peaceful dissidents now occurring in Cuba, the U.S. Congress has voted 414-0 to condemn the Cuban government for raiding 22 libraries.Example: Indeed, in larger libraries, there are those who regard a referral as tantamount to an admission of defeat.Example: Nevertheless, it is suggested that Marx's disavowal of religion as a force for instituting a universal class was premature.Example: This is a radical move away from the accepted principle of using the actual item as the primary source of cataloguing data.Example: These elite books are distinguished by their visible repudiation of mass culture and commercialism.Example: Emotional blocks to reading can be formed by an unsatisfactory relationship with a teacher.Example: The article 'Apple Macintosh: thumbs up? thumbs down?' considers whether online searchers should use Apple Macintosh machines.Example: It uses humor rather than witticisms, and self-deprecation rather than deprecation of the professional field.Example: The second document is a denouncement of slavery by Greenwich, who mobilizes the best tradition of scriptural exegesis to make his case.Example: These denunciations make libraries look both sanctimonious and hypocritical for trying to save the world when they have failed to put ther own house in order.Example: Unsurprisingly such misuse is triggered by push factors, such as fear of failure, and also pull factors, such as ease of use and the ubiquitous cut and paste.Example: The public pushback about the new policy is astounding due to the fact folks were previously so apathetic about the old policy.

more:

» Algo que produce rechazoturn-off .

Example: Dr. James Houran discusses the different ways men and women show affection and addresses the top turn-ons and turn-offs with men and women.

» comportamiento de rechazoavoidance behaviour [Comportamiento que adopta el profesional para evitar situaciones conflictivas de tal modo que su trabajo sea más fácil de realizar] .

Example: Drawing largely on investigative work done on other professions, they have suggested that reference librarians too exhibit symptoms of what has been called 'avoidance behaviour'.

» factor de rechazopush factor .

Example: Unsurprisingly such misuse is triggered by push factors, such as fear of failure, and also pull factors, such as ease of use and the ubiquitous cut and paste.

» rechazo a la lecturaaliteracy .

Example: This article urges children's librarians to attack 'aliteracy' (lack of a desire to read) as well as illiteracy by taking programmes, e.g. story hours, to children who do not come to libraries.

» rechazo de injertograft rejection .

Example: The host's immune system regards the graft as foreign and launches an effective immune response called a graft rejection.

» rechazo totalbold statement against .

Example: Vivid and even poetic at times, this text has a profound pathos and a rich story in addition to being a bold statement against literary elitism.

» recibir rechazoget + the thumbs down .

Example: Would-be inventors get four to five minutes to present their product's concept and business plan before getting the thumbs up or down for funding.
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