Suceso in english
Event
pronunciation: ɪvent part of speech: noun
pronunciation: ɪvent part of speech: noun
In gestures
suceso1 = event ; happening ; accident.
Example: The concept of corporate body includes named occasional groups and events, such as meetings, conferences, congresses, expeditions, exhibitions, festivals, and fairs.Example: These cases are drawn from actual happenings.Example: Entries are created merely according to the accident of the appearance of words in titles.more:
» desencadenar una serie de sucesos = set in + motion a train of events .
Example: He embarked on a secret quest to find his double and set in motion a train of events that he couldn't control.» ser un suceso cotidiano = be an everyday occurrence ; be nothing out of the ordinary .
Example: People gawp at anything that is not an everyday occurence. Example: Language confusion is nothing out of the ordinary in Switzerland, which has four official languages.» suceso cotidiano = everyday event ; everyday occurrence .
Example: Investing in the foreign currency market without acknowledging the importance of everyday events is certainly not a recipe for success. Example: An everyday occurrence, yet each birth is the culmination of one of nature's most complex, mysterious, and seemingly miraculous processes.» suceso curioso = curious event .
Example: She wonders whether curious events are merely coincidences or indications of a deeper mystery.» suceso importante = critical incident .
Example: Each respondent was asked to relate 2 critical incidents of information use.» suceso trágico = tragic event .
Example: People cope with tragic events, like the Boston Marathon bombing, in different ways.» una serie de sucesos = a train of events .
Example: Most people, if you describe a train of events to them, will tell you what the result would be.suceso2 = crime.
Example: Some headings are vague and without scope notes to define them: ROBBERS AND OUTLAWS; crime AND CRIMINALS; ROGUES AND VAGABONDS.