Salvado in english

Saved

pronunciation: seɪvd part of speech: adjective
In gestures

salvado = bran. 

Example: Consuming bran helps reduce adverse bacteria in the digestive system and therefore can help improve your overall health.

more:

» copo de salvadobran flake .

Example: I also know eating bran flakes is good for my heart, but I daren't touch them.

» salvado de trigowheat bran .

Example: Wheat bran constitutes 15% of most whole-grain wheat kernels but is virtually non-existent in refined wheat flour.

salvar1 = redeem ; salvage ; hold together ; rescue ; bring + Nombre + to safety. 

Example: Eliot somehow suggests that a mix of blood and electricity might yet redeem the petty materialism of the modern world that he had previously seen only as a wasteland.Example: It details steps to be taken to salvage discs which have been damaged by spilled substances such as coffee with cream and sugar, Classic Coke, hamburger and french fries, and hand cream.Example: The organization was trembling on the brink of financial disaster, and only the journal, American Documentation, was holding it together.Example: Ill with pneumonia, he is rescued by a subway trainman and taken to Bellevue Hospital.Example: A parachutist has had a lucky escape after his chute failed to open during an air show -- leaving a teammate to catch him in midair and bring him to safety.

more:

» salvado por la campanasaved by the bell .

Example: The article 'Saved by the Bell?' considers the role of call centers in the economic development of less-favored regions.

» salvado por los pelossaved by the bell .

Example: The article 'Saved by the Bell?' considers the role of call centers in the economic development of less-favored regions.

» salvar el cuellosave + Posesivo + neck .

Example: She is rescued by Geralt and is in his debt for saving her neck.

» salvar el mundosave + the world .

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.

» salvar el pellejosave + Posesivo + baconsave + Posesivo + skinsave + Posesivo + hide .

Example: Shecame out of the kitchen with a mixed drink and thanked him again for saving her bacon, and he downplayed the whole thing and said that anyone would've done the same.

Example: I stopped and just stared at her, I knew her cry was fake and she was putting up an act to save her skin, that really made me angry.

Example: I am shocked and disgusted with her apparent lack of gratitude or appreciation of the efforts of those who saved her hide.

» salvar la vidasave + Posesivo + life .

Example: In this play Isabella, the heroine, refuses Angelo's dishonorable proposal to her though it would save Claudio her brother's life if she yielded; and she does this in spite of the fact that Claudio beseeches her to yield = En esta obra de teatro Isabella, la heroína, rechaza la proposición deshonrosa de Angelo aunque con ello salvaría la vida de su hermano Claudio; y lo hace a pesar de que Claudio le suplica que ceda.

» salvar la vida de milagrohave + a close shave with deathhave + a (close) brush with deathstare + death in the facehave + a close encounter with death .

Example: She had a close shave with death recently when she was on her way to a friend's place to attend a small get-together.

Example: People who have close brushes with death, or recover from clinical death, have strikingly similar 'death experiences'.

Example: British holidaymaker has told how she stared death in the face during a horror boating accident in Ibiza.

Example: You may hear once in a while where someone had a close encounter with death, but they never made it six feet under -- death is something we can escape easily.

» salvarseget offmake it to + safety .

Example: She managed to get off with just a year's probation but her hectic life will not be put on hold.

Example: When their canoes capsized in the rushing water after downpours raised the river to dangerous levels, three canoeists managed to make it to safety but one was swept away.

» salvarse de milagrohave + a narrow escapehave + a lucky escapehave + a close callhave + a close shaveescape by + the skin of + Posesivo + teethhave + a narrow shave .

Example: I and all friends, thankfully, are safe -- although one or two had narrow escapes.

Example: A US woman had a lucky escape when a burglar's bullet bounced off the metal underwire in her bra.

Example: Most people have had a close call with another car, a person walking, or an object while driving.

Example: A woman on board a roller-coaster ride had a close shave yesterday when the wooden train derailed as it reached the platform.

Example: Zelda has since had numerous adventures, escaping by the skin of her teeth at times.

Example: Vincent, another of the sailors, also had a narrow shave, he did not fall in but his bag did.

» salvarse por los peloshave + a narrow escapehave + a lucky escapehave + a close callhave + a close shaveescape by + the skin of + Posesivo + teethhave + a narrow shave .

Example: I and all friends, thankfully, are safe -- although one or two had narrow escapes.

Example: A US woman had a lucky escape when a burglar's bullet bounced off the metal underwire in her bra.

Example: Most people have had a close call with another car, a person walking, or an object while driving.

Example: A woman on board a roller-coaster ride had a close shave yesterday when the wooden train derailed as it reached the platform.

Example: Zelda has since had numerous adventures, escaping by the skin of her teeth at times.

Example: Vincent, another of the sailors, also had a narrow shave, he did not fall in but his bag did.

» ¡sálvese quien pueda!the devil take the hindmostrun for your lives! .

Example: Many people have been made redundant in the takeover and those who joined last were the first to go -- the principle of devil take the hindmost applied.

Example: Run for your lives! It seems that some normally angelic children from the neighbouhood have been replaced by some ghostly and ghoulish characters and are coming to get YOU!.

» sálvese quien puedafree-for-allevery man for himselflet battle commenceeach man for himself .

Example: In the time it takes to flick a switch, the party can disintegrate into a free-for-all of petty bickering.

Example: If more and more of us begin to see life purely as 'every man for himself,' what other unintended consequences may come with such a shift.

Example: To start a garden is to let battle commence since there is a list of pests and diseases that will line up to attack your babies.

Example: Once the community works together and stops seeing each other as the enemy, or each man for himself, then things will change.

» ¡sálvese quien pueda!the devil take the hindmostrun for your lives! .

Example: Many people have been made redundant in the takeover and those who joined last were the first to go -- the principle of devil take the hindmost applied.

Example: Run for your lives! It seems that some normally angelic children from the neighbouhood have been replaced by some ghostly and ghoulish characters and are coming to get YOU!.

salvar2 = circumvent ; cross ; get over ; overcome. 

Example: Plainly, the familiarization stage is circumvented in a computer-based indexing system with machine-assigned terms.Example: Some of the cases presented in this book are concerned with broad policy issues, while others are less encompassing and present some of the narrower problems that cross the library manager's desk.Example: They couldn't get over the river by building anything, so they stopped at that point.Example: Analytical cataloguing seeks to overcome physical packaging.

more:

» salvar la divisiónbridge + the divide .

Example: The theme of this round table is 'bridging the digital divide in Asia and Oceania'.

» salvar las aparienciassave + facepaper over + the cracks .

Example: He'll be able to save face by showing that he gave his everything, but he won't have to suffer the consequences of actually implementing that horrible legislation.

Example: There are fears that the recent encouraging economic data papers over the cracks of some of the real issues at the heart of China's economy.

» salvar las distanciasbridge + the gapbridge + the dividebridge + the chasmbridge + the gulf .

Example: This project aims to bridge the gap between academics and practitioners through the sharing of their experiences.

Example: The theme of this round table is 'bridging the digital divide in Asia and Oceania'.

Example: I believe that the reality is that the chasm between these two interests can't be bridged simply by including an alternative rule as a footnote at the bottom of a page in a code.

Example: The language of poetry bridges the gulf of cultural conflict.

» salvar una barreraovercome + a barrier .

Example: In each case, library managers can take steps to overcome the barriers and help ensure successful collaboration.

» salvar un obstáculoovercome + an obstacle .

Example: However, what American libraries mean by advocacy is 'Work to overcome obstacles that the enquirer encounters in trying to secure help from outside resource agencies'.

» salvar un problemacircumvent + a problemnegotiate + a problem .

Example: These circumvent many of the problems that must be tackled in subject indexing such as the emergence of new terms and new meanings for old words.

Example: Such a list seeks to negotiate the problems of the alphabetical subject approach as outlined in the previous chapter.

salvar3 = save. 

Example: Whenever this code is entered, the system saves the document or list of documents being displayed and displays a summary of the documents saved up to that point.

more:

» salvar registrosdownload + records [En la recuperación de información, operación por la cual ciertos registros de una base de datos se copian a un fichero para su posterior utilización] .

Example: Records for the stock of a specific library are downloaded from the national data bases and added to the data base of catalogue records for the individual library.

Salvado synonyms

blessed in spanish: bendito, pronunciation: blest part of speech: adjective redeemed in spanish: redimido, pronunciation: rɪdimd part of speech: adjective preserved in spanish: Preservado, pronunciation: prəzɜrvd part of speech: adjective protected in spanish: protegido, pronunciation: prətektəd part of speech: adjective reclaimed in spanish: regenerado, pronunciation: rikleɪmd part of speech: adjective salvageable in spanish: rescatable, pronunciation: sælvɪdʒəbəl part of speech: adjective rescued in spanish: rescatados, pronunciation: reskjud part of speech: adjective ransomed in spanish: rescatado, pronunciation: rænsəmd part of speech: adjective
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