Conservador in english

Conservative

pronunciation: kənsɜrvətɪv part of speech: adjective
In gestures

conservador1 = conservator ; curator ; custodian ; standpatter ; preserver ; keeper ; Luddite ; laggard ; conservative ; safekeeper [sake-keeper] ; Tory. 

Example: The benefits of an on-site conservation laboratory and conservator are underlined.Example: In her previous vocation she served as curator of History at the Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences and later as Assistant to the Director of Johns Hopkins University, Institute of History and Medicine.Example: This article maintains that archivists as custodians of the records have an ethical obligation to support the freest possible access to public records.Example: The 'standpatters' have seen power shift away from themselves to the newcomers and other lifelong 'progressive' Junctionvillers, who were muted under previous administrations.Example: He also lumps himself and librarians together as 'devoted and in some instances veteran pursuers, preservers, and disseminators of truth'.Example: Vervliet's involvement with books began with his appointment in 1949 as keeper at the Plantin Moretus Museum in Antwerp, where he acquired a wide knowledge of the history of printing in the Low Countries.Example: Librarians who have reservations about the spread of electronically based services are not Luddites.Example: Individuals are distributed along a normal bell-shaped curve, with the majority in the large center and innovators and laggards a the the two extremes.Example: He ends his book with a discussion of the politicizing effects of the actions of conservatives and loyalists at the end of the century.Example: Libraries find themselves frustrated in their role as safekeepers of science: how can they ensure optimal access and availability if they do not control the access systems?.Example: The study does not deal with the massive growth of quangos which are overwhelmingly staffed by Tories.

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» conservador de documentosrecords custodian .

Example: This institution is well-known for fostering the care and preservation of archives and training archives and records custodians.

» conservador del archivoarchives custodian .

Example: This institution is well-known for fostering the care and preservation of archives and training archives and records custodians.

» conservadores, losTories, the .

Example: Floating voters are more likely to trust the Tories on the economy but are more supportive of Labour's approach to public services and believe the party is more likely to be on their side.

» neoconservadorneoconservative [neo-conservative] [Adjetivo]neoconservative [neo-conservative] [Nombre] .

Example: Paradoxically, a major step forward in the creation of a liberal 'society' has been the abandonment of significant elements of liberal ideology in favor of neoconservative ideas.

Example: The writer argues that there is no important difference between Catholic conservatives and Catholic neoconservatives.

conservador2 = conservative ; ingrown ; old-fashioned ; backward-looking ; custodial ; conservationist ; illiberal ; risk-averse ; tweedy ; dowdy ; straight-laced [strait-laced]. 

Example: There is a tendency to advance propositions premised upon the assumption that SLIS are staffed by inherently conservative, where they are not simply obtuse, individuals.Example: Book clubs need not be enclosed, much less ingrown = Book clubs need not be enclosed, much less ingrown.Example: One is tempted to say that the enthusiasts for postcoordinate systems, being forced to admit reluctantly that control was necessary, couldn't bear to use the old-fashioned term 'list of subject headings'.Example: The book is essentially backward-looking rather than forward-looking in content.Example: Broadly, one can distinguish, then, between what one might call the 'custodial' or 'warehouse' aspects of the librarian's task, and the 'communications' aspect.Example: The present conservationist approach to librarianship reflects Victorian priorities.Example: It is argued that Israel, in spite of its free elections, is an illiberal democracy.Example: This is typical of the old corporate forms of hierarchy-based processes and of the 'risk-averse systems that crush new ideas'.Example: No bright new digital firm can do without at least some of the supposedly decrepit bureaucracy it so abhors in the old tweedy institutions it wants to replace.Example: This article shows how the dowdy and boring image of the stereotypical librarian as presented in fiction, taints the portrayal of all who work in libraries.Example: Three years later, when he was fifteen, he slipped into Rachel's bedroom and her straitlaced mother caught them petting and giggling on the side of the bed.

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» de un modo conservadorconservatively .

Example: The audit report commented upon the inadequate storage facilities available to house the national collection, conservatively estimated at a value in excess of $200 million.

» gobierno conservadorTory government .

Example: It is obvious that a Tory government means cuts to this type of funding .

» neoconservadorneoconservative [neo-conservative] [Adjetivo]neoconservative [neo-conservative] [Nombre] .

Example: Paradoxically, a major step forward in the creation of a liberal 'society' has been the abandonment of significant elements of liberal ideology in favor of neoconservative ideas.

Example: The writer argues that there is no important difference between Catholic conservatives and Catholic neoconservatives.

» Partido Conservador, elConservative Party, theTory party, the [Partido político del Reino Unido]Tories, the .

Example: Surely the concept 'conservative party' appears last in the citation order of this class number.

Example: I think it is about time the Tory party stopped prevaricating about Europe.

Example: Floating voters are more likely to trust the Tories on the economy but are more supportive of Labour's approach to public services and believe the party is more likely to be on their side.

Conservador synonyms

right in spanish: Correcto, pronunciation: raɪt part of speech: adjective, noun, adverb moderate in spanish: moderar, pronunciation: mɑdɜrət part of speech: adjective conventional in spanish: convencional, pronunciation: kənvenʃənəl part of speech: adjective bourgeois in spanish: burgués, pronunciation: bʊrʒwɑ part of speech: adjective, noun cautious in spanish: cauteloso, pronunciation: kɔʃəs part of speech: adjective hidebound in spanish: rígido, pronunciation: haɪdbaʊnd part of speech: adjective fusty in spanish: rancio, pronunciation: fʌsti part of speech: adjective materialistic in spanish: materialista, pronunciation: mətɪriəlɪstɪk part of speech: adjective button-down in spanish: abotonar, pronunciation: bʌtəndaʊn part of speech: adjective traditionalist in spanish: tradicionalista, pronunciation: trədɪʃənəlɪst part of speech: adjective, noun middle-class in spanish: clase media, pronunciation: mɪdəlklæs part of speech: adjective blimpish in spanish: mancha, pronunciation: blɪmpɪʃ part of speech: adjective unprogressive in spanish: no progresivo, pronunciation: ənprəgresɪv part of speech: adjective ultraconservative in spanish: ultraconservador, pronunciation: əltrəkənsɜrvətɪv part of speech: adjective buttoned-up in spanish: Abotonado, pronunciation: bʌtəndʌp part of speech: adjective nonprogressive in spanish: no progresivo, pronunciation: nɑnprəgresɪv part of speech: adjective buttoned-down in spanish: abotonado, pronunciation: bʌtənddaʊn part of speech: adjective conservativist in spanish: conservador, pronunciation: kənsɜrvətɪvɪst part of speech: noun
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