Resulta in english

Result

pronunciation: rɪzʌlt part of speech: noun, verb
In gestures

resultar = ensue ; transpire ; come off as ; turn out ; pan out ; prove. 

Example: Often this will be the type of search that ensues when a user has retrieved an interesting reference.Example: The 2nd is the fact that most information seeking transpires with little help from librarians, who have consistently failed to establish themselves as primary information professionals.Example: I love the content of this discussion, and hope that my comments don't come off as negative.Example: It may be no use crying over spilt milk but had the original constitution been more people-driven, perhaps things could have turned out different.Example: It took some time, but his strategy is finally starting to pan out.Example: One must be able to prove that a new staff member was selected with due process and with clearly delineated criteria.

more:

» al final resultó quein the event .

Example: In the event the term was taken to comprehend programmes of education which treated of the generation, storage, manipulation, transmission, retrieval, use and management of data and information.

» cambiar tanto que resulta irreconociblechange + beyond (all) recognition .

Example: The Internet is likely to result in education and libraries changing beyond recognition.

» cuando + Pronombre + resultar mejorat + Posesivo + (own) convenience .

Example: The staff in the Dean's Office are also here to assist you and we look forward to talking with you at your convenience.

» de forma que resulta más fácil de entenderin digestible form .

Example: 'Systematic review' is the process whereby similar studies, identified from a comprehensive trawl of numerous databases, are summarized in digestible form.

» no resultar fácilbe not easy .

Example: It would not be easy to find in the history of philosophy and the sciences a situation more confused than our own.

» que resulta irreconocibleout of all recognition .

Example: Even so, school library provision has been improved and increased out of all recognition since the days when only the long established grammar schools and public schools had libraries of their own.

» resulta queas it turns out .

Example: As it turns out, the secret of life is blissfully simple.

» resultar adecuadoprove + suitable .

Example: No citation order, no matter how well founded, will prove suitable for every searcher.

» resultar atractivoprove + attractive .

Example: If different libraries have very different requirements of catalogues then centralised cataloguing will not prove attractive.

» resultar caroprove + expensiveprove + costly .

Example: Ad hoc attempts to impose a rigorous structure will prove either impossible, or so expensive as to render the exercise impossible.

Example: The future of this type of music is uncertain since use of special rules can prove costly.

» resultar cómodobe easy .

Example: It can be easy if you think about what is recyclable before you throw it away.

» resultar confusoprove + confusing .

Example: A fully comparative account of recommendations for filing orders is likely to prove confusing until the reader has attained some familiarity with the general problems, and the solutions offered by one code.

» resultar defollow on from .

Example: Following on from my last question, did the pilot who dropped the atomic bomb on Horishima survive or was he killed in the explosion?.

» resultar difícilfind + problems .

Example: Most people find problems in travelling any distance for information.

» resultar difícil de conseguirprove + elusive .

Example: When future use is also taken into consideration firm decisions will prove yet more elusive.

» resultar difícil de entenderbe above + Posesivo + head .

Example: There is so much happening in the world today that I want to talk about with my children, but they are still young and some of it is above their heads = Hay tantas cosas que están pasando en el mundo hoy día y que me gustaría comentar con mis hijos, pero son pequeños todavía y algunas cosas les resultan difícl de entender.

» resultar divertidotickle + Posesivo + fancy .

Example: Come on in and browse around -- hopefully you will find something that tickles your fancy.

» resultar enlead to/towards [Verbo irregular: pasado y participio lead] .

Example: At each of these levels, entry of a 'd' for detail and a line number leads to display of the information about the item chosen.

» resultar (en)result (in) .

Example: Objective 1 results in what is known as a direct catalogue, because it gives direct access to a specific document.

» resultar en empateresult in + a draw .

Example: They prefer a slow, reflective kind of game that, like chess, may quite often may result in a draw.

» resultar en vanoprove + unavailing .

Example: Every effort to renew her strength proved unavailing, and she died in 1867, greatly beloved and lamented.

» resultar extrañobe unfamiliar with .

Example: The narrative may be unfamiliar in its structure so that they are unsure about the way different elements of the story fit together.

» resultar fácilbe easy .

Example: It can be easy if you think about what is recyclable before you throw it away.

» resultar fallidonothing + come of .

Example: Nothing came of it, but the episode is a reminder that information is not intrinsically valuable but becomes so only when someone wants it.

» resultar falsoprove + false .

Example: 17 answers (44% ) proved satisfactory up to a point whereas 9 answers (23% ) proved false or inadequate.

» resultar idealprove + ideal .

Example: Overall, neither system proved ideal: LEXINET was deficient as regards lack of accessibility and excessive ambiguity; while the manual system gave rise to an over-wide variation of terms.

» resultar imposibleprove + impossible .

Example: Ad hoc attempts to impose a rigorous structure will prove either impossible, or so expensive as to render the exercise impossible.

» resultar inadecuadoprove + inadequate .

Example: 17 answers (44% ) proved satisfactory up to a point whereas 9 answers (23% ) proved false or inadequate.

» resultar inapreciableprove + invaluable .

Example: Its main value, however, was in forging close links with the community workers, which proved invaluable when it came to compiling the local information file.

» resultar increíblebeggar + beliefdefy + belief .

Example: It beggars belief that the liberals view the golly as a racist artefact of unenlightened times.

Example: The bigoted attitude adopted by the author defies belief and his hatred of drug users is so deep that he wishes them dead.

» resultar indescriptiblebeggar + descriptiondefy + description .

Example: Barkly declared that the contention between coloureds and whites was so intense in some instances as to beggar description.

Example: This is a work that often defies description, but I'll have a go anyway.

» resultar intratable porprove + inhospitable to .

Example: What happened in that case is that some of our filing rules proved rather inhospitable to the computer.

» resultar inútilprove + unavailingprove + fruitless .

Example: Every effort to renew her strength proved unavailing, and she died in 1867, greatly beloved and lamented.

Example: At the same time, he began several diplomatic initiatives to free the hostages, all of which proved fruitless.

» resultar malheridobe seriously woundedbe badly hurtbe badly injuredbe badly woundedbe seriously hurtbe seriously injured .

Example: Last Tuesday a priest in India was seriously wounded when two young men assaulted him at a school in southern Delhi.

Example: The son of my brother's ex-wife was badly hurt in Iraq.

Example: The stuntman missed the safety net and was badly injured.

Example: His attack was defeated and he was badly wounded, losing his right arm.

Example: Thankfully nobody was seriously hurt in the collision.

Example: One woman died and another woman was seriously injured in a vehicle crash that occurred early Sunday morning.

» resultar (muy) útilcome in + handybe handy .

Example: Past experiences do come in handy when people have to make complex decisions based on uncertain or confusing information.

Example: A pair of tweezers may be handy for extracting splinters.

» resultar muy útilcome in + handiest .

Example: This blender is fabulous -- I've used it for milkshakes but where it comes in handiest is when I use it to puree soups, which I do often.

» resultar (muy) útilcome in + handybe handy .

Example: Past experiences do come in handy when people have to make complex decisions based on uncertain or confusing information.

Example: A pair of tweezers may be handy for extracting splinters.

» resultar negativonot stand the test of .

Example: Sidney Ditzion's assessment of Ticknor as a man who 'loved and trusted the great majority of his fellow citizens' just will not stand the test when compared with the testimony of Ticknor's contemporaries.

» resultar peligrosopose + a danger .

Example: Neither was there doubt that SLIS should adapt their programmes accordingly but, equally, too headlong a rush into the unknown posed dangers.

» resultar pertinenteprove + relevant .

Example: We said that 20 documents were retrieved, but only some of these proved relevant.

» resultar poco fructíferoprove + unfruitful .

Example: Several approaches proved unfruitful before the answer began to emerge.

» resultar poco provechosoprove + fruitless .

Example: At the same time, he began several diplomatic initiatives to free the hostages, all of which proved fruitless.

» resultar que + Indicativohappen to + Infinitivochance to + Infinitivo .

Example: So far we have only provided for the user who happens to consult the A/Z subject index under the term 'Conservative'.

Example: During a trip to Italy, he chanced to see a production of Cavalleria = Durante un viaje que hizo a Italia, de casualidad vió una producción de Cavalleria.

» resultar queturn out that .

Example: But when the other approaches were examined and analyzed with care, it turned out that another 16 percent were disguised subject searches.

» resultar que + Indicativohappen to + Infinitivochance to + Infinitivo .

Example: So far we have only provided for the user who happens to consult the A/Z subject index under the term 'Conservative'.

Example: During a trip to Italy, he chanced to see a production of Cavalleria = Durante un viaje que hizo a Italia, de casualidad vió una producción de Cavalleria.

» resultar satisfactorioprove + satisfactory .

Example: 17 answers (44% ) proved satisfactory up to a point whereas 9 answers (23% ) proved false or inadequate.

» resultar serprove + to beturn out to behappen + to be .

Example: This fear was expressed by publishers and booksellers when the first lending libraries were established and by and large it has proved to be unfounded.

Example: In some cases the real question that needs to be answered may indeed turn out to be, as Winston Churchill once said of Russia, 'a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma'.

Example: What is our responsibility to a fellow human being, who in this case happens to be a respected library director who is also our boss?.

» resultar ser demoledorprove + crushing .

Example: The reference librarian deficient in these virtues labours under a constant burden which will prove so crushing that he will be unable to rise to meet his enquirers' needs.

» resultar ser ficticioprove + illusory .

Example: The hoped for panaceas are either not materialising or proving illusory = Las panaceas tan esperadas no se materializaron o resultaron ser ficticias.

» resultar ser necesarioprove + necessary .

Example: Readiness to alter the approach flexibly in the light of commercial impacts has proved necessary.

» resultar ser un éxitoprove + to be a success .

Example: The idea of having several indexes has not proved to be a success and has been dropped.

» resultar útilprove + fruitfulhold + Nombre + in good steadstand + Nombre + in good stead .

Example: The sheer bulk of the headings and the complexity of references structures is sufficient to confirm that a more systematic approach might prove fruitful.

Example: The communications and leadership skills common in those librarians who work with young people hold them in good stead when they move to other positions.

Example: The management of Britannica failed to perceive the true threat of electronic publishing, thinking that their history would stand them in good stead.

» resultar valiosoprove + valuable .

Example: This study yielded mixed results but has proven valuable in reshaping the freshman bibliographic instruction programme.

» resulta (ser) queit turns out that .

Example: This may be what we have to do if it turns out that the situation is as you suggested.

» resultó queas it turned out .

Example: As it turned out these people were policemen in civilian clothes.

» resultó (ser) queit turned out that .

Example: I found myself next to a red-headed gal who, it turned out, wanted nothing to do with me but make eyes at my pal.

Resulta synonyms

effect in spanish: efecto, pronunciation: ɪfekt part of speech: noun lead in spanish: dirigir, pronunciation: led part of speech: verb, noun leave in spanish: salir, pronunciation: liv part of speech: verb issue in spanish: problema, pronunciation: ɪʃu part of speech: noun solution in spanish: solución, pronunciation: səluʃən part of speech: noun resolution in spanish: resolución, pronunciation: rezəluʃən part of speech: noun consequence in spanish: consecuencia, pronunciation: kɑnsəkwəns part of speech: noun answer in spanish: responder, pronunciation: ænsɜr part of speech: noun, verb ensue in spanish: sobrevenir, pronunciation: ɪnsu part of speech: verb outcome in spanish: Salir, pronunciation: aʊtkəm part of speech: noun upshot in spanish: resultado, pronunciation: ʌpʃɑt part of speech: noun
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