Consciente in english
pronunciation: əwer part of speech: adjective





consciente = conscientious ; conscious ; deliberate ; knowing ; sentient ; conscient.
Example: Then the conscientious manager can help solve his problems without engaging in original laborious research or the risky practice of trial and error.Example: Unless a conscious decision has been made to the contrary, the abstractor should not introduce any new biases or emphases.Example: Deliberate mnemonics are devices which help the user to remember and recall the notation for given subjects.Example: 'Much as I hate to admit it,' she added, her face creasing in a knowing smile, 'some of my best friends are librarians, and I can't get over how they tear their colleagues to shreds when they're together' = 'Much as I hate to admit it,' she added, her face creasing in a knowing smile, 'some of my best friends are librarians, and I can't get over how they tear their colleagues to shreds when they're together'.Example: He lives in a world in which machines become sentient and begin to demand rights.Example: Experience and research alike prove that the encephalon of man is the seat of all his conscient activities.more:
» consciente a medias = halfway conscious ; half conscious .
Example: Some people may argue that writing a to-do list seems like an activity that only requires halfway conscious thought; I beg to differ. Example: This movie is not good to watch when youre only half conscious -- it just sparks panic atacks.» consciente de = cognisant of .
Example: A well-considered ideology cognizant of the nature of the materials cataloged is prerequisite and fundamental to the design of any viable cataloging system, and particularly one that is to command universal acceptance.» consciente de la importancia de la información = information conscious ; information conscious .
Example: The main findings are that civil engineers are, relatively speaking, not information conscious. Example: The main findings are that civil engineers are, relatively speaking, not information conscious.» consciente de los deberes de Uno = dutiful .
Example: This struck me, in my prejudiced, dutiful mood, as somewhat high-flown.» consciente de uno mismo = self-conscious .
Example: Information science must become both theoretically self-conscious and self-consciously based on a social ideology.» decisión consciente = conscious decision .
Example: Most everything that they do is done by force of habit rather than by instinct (as animals do) or by conscious decision or by whim.» hacer más consciente de Algo = heighten + awareness .
Example: There is no doubt that IT has transformed attitudes and heightened the awareness of academics towards the significance of inculcating information skills = No hay duda de que la TI ha transformado las actitudes y ha hecho que los académicos sean más consciente de la importancia de inculcar las destrezas relacionadas con la información.» medio consciente = halfway conscious ; half conscious .
Example: Some people may argue that writing a to-do list seems like an activity that only requires halfway conscious thought; I beg to differ. Example: This movie is not good to watch when youre only half conscious -- it just sparks panic atacks.» no ser consciente de = remain + unaware of .
Example: Unfortunately, the majority of the public, and in particular those most in need of information -- the disadvantaged -- remain largely unaware of an 'information gap' in their lives.» ser consciente = sentient being .
Example: The knowledge that has been passed down from generation to generation by sentient beings on this planet for aeons and aeons is quite impossible to fully comprehend.» ser consciente de = be alive to ; be aware of ; be cognisant of ; be mindful of/that ; become + cognisant of ; be aware of ; realise [realize, -USA] .
Example: To anyone who is alive to the trends today it is evident that we are moving into the planned society in all spheres. Example: Although this may seem an obvious statement, there are many instances when the searcher is not fully aware of what can or might be retrieved. Example: The second aspect of institutional behavior we need to be cognizant of involves the notion the further institutions move into their life-cycles, the more they demonstrate the characteristics of a closed system. Example: She examines the features that make it attractive while also being mindful of its minor flaws. Example: Becoming cognizant of these retail promotional tools is the first step -- the fun part is adopting successful ones!. Example: Although this may seem an obvious statement, there are many instances when the searcher is not fully aware of what can or might be retrieved. Example: It should be realized, in addition, that the question involves not only serials but other works that are generally intended to be issued indefinitely in successive editions.» ser consciente de + Posesivo + valía = be alive to + Posesivo + worth .
Example: Of course, suspicion always arises that both are weak; for where the library is a vital force, the public is usually pretty much alive to its worth.» ser consciente + desafortunadamente = be painfully aware of .
Example: School library media specialists are painfully aware of the negative reactions of librarians in other types of libraries to their circulation and catalogue systems.» ser muy consciente de = be sharply aware of ; be fully aware of ; be well aware of .
Example: Those who pay attention to history are sharply aware of the link between historic famines, global cooling, vulcanism, and earthquakes. Example: Librarians are fully aware of and sympathetic toward the monetary problems of journals because libraries have the same problems. Example: As a fitness professional, you are well aware of many of the benefits of exercise in preventing chronic disease.» sin ser consciente de ello = unbeknownst to ; unbeknown to .
Example: A honeypot is a decoy computer system designed to look like a legitimate system an intruder will want to break into while, unbeknownst to the intruder, they are being covertly observed. Example: Unbeknown to the users who accessed the system, the knowledge-base included two human experts, communicating with them from a different building, via the computer screen.