Reforzado in english

Reinforced

pronunciation: riɪnfɔrst part of speech: adjective
In gestures

reforzado = reinforced ; armoured [armored, -USA]. 

Example: For example, a document on 'the cutting of glass-fibre-reinforced plastics for use in the hulls of yachts' draws together the concepts: cutting, glass-fibre-reinforced plastics, hulls and yachts.Example: The use of clear armoured glass walls gives excellent visual supervision in the Rare Book Room and in the Manuscript and Local History Reading Room.

reforzar = cement ; lend + force ; reinforce ; strengthen ; undergird ; bolster ; add + Posesivo + weight to ; beef up ; place + Nombre + on a firmer footing ; boost ; buttress ; re-enforce [reenforce] ; make + Nombre + strong. 

Example: An in-house bulletin may serve to cement firm relationships with the library's personnel.Example: The scale of computerization lends new force to the arguments in favour of centralized cataloguing.Example: As information-retrieval software becomes available in more user friendly packages, the trend towards local computerized information-retrieval systems is likely to be reinforced.Example: He proposes a research agenda that could strengthen archival appraisal and the profession's ability to document society.Example: Both libraries sought to undergird their partnership essential to a central role in collegiate education.Example: Bibliometric studies used to bolster the subjective opinions of librarians are not always useful for specialized areas.Example: But the unions were able to add their weight to the authority of the parliamentary investigators in bringing the worst excesses of unregulated apprenticeship and of working conditions under control = But the unions were able to add their weight to the authority of the parliamentary investigators in bringing the worst excesses of unregulated apprenticeship and of working conditions under control.Example: The author advocates that the Canadian LA needs rehashing and beefing up = The author advocates that the Canadian LA needs rehashing and beefing up.Example: Information security management has been placed on a firmer footing with the publication of standards by national bodies.Example: If the title is selected by a book club this helps boost the print-run and overall sales.Example: Authors were often buttressed in their novel writing by other pieces of freelance writing.Example: This interpretation turns Dewey's social critique on its head by re-enforcing the political status-quo.Example: These products are born from technologically advanced materials to not only make them strong, but light weight and heat resistant.

more:

» reforzar aún másmake + Nombre + stronger .

Example: World's first hybrid shark is found off Australia -- and interbreeding could make them stronger.

» reforzar + Posesivo + sistema inmunológicoboost + Posesivo + immune system .

Example: Lucie would also benefit from some herbs and antioxidants to boost her immune system.

» reforzar una ideareinforce + ideareinforce + notionstrengthen + the view .

Example: He goes on to show that a similar percentage of people are 'relatively ill-educated' and that this might 'reinforce the idea that the majority will not be in the market for new technology information systems'.

Example: This fact further reinforces the notion that Western Europeans 'civilized' the world in the best interests of us -- the majority -- all.

Example: The results strengthen the view that suffering from recurrent major depression confers per se an important biological risk for suicide.

» reforzar un prejuicioreinforce + prejudice .

Example: Moreover, they very often perpetuate preconceptions that reinforce prejudice.

Reforzado synonyms

strong in spanish: fuerte, pronunciation: strɔŋ part of speech: adjective built in spanish: construido, pronunciation: bɪlt part of speech: adjective improved in spanish: mejorado, pronunciation: ɪmpruvd part of speech: adjective strengthened in spanish: fortificado, pronunciation: streŋθənd part of speech: adjective
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