Ejercido in english

Exercised

pronunciation: eksɜrsaɪzd part of speech: verb
In gestures

ejercer = exercise ; leverage ; practise [practice, -USA]. 

Example: In reading crazes a child is exercising at the very least his ability to read; his reading muscles are limbered = In reading crazes a child is exercising at the very least his ability to read; his reading muscles are limbered.Example: Information seeking in electronic environments will become a collaboration among end user and various electronic systems such that users leverage their heuristic power and machines leverage algorithmic power.Example: Analytical cataloguing is practised to varying extents in libraries.

more:

» acción de ejercer presiónlobbying .

Example: The network is fairly well developed and lobbying initiatives on policies affecting all or a group of local authorities have stemmed from this source.

» ejercer autoridadexercise + power .

Example: Broadly speaking, the former are framework regulations, such as the basic regulations for the common organization of markets and the annual CAP fixing, within which the Commission exercises delegated powers.

» ejercer autoridad de un modo excesivopush + authority .

Example: As an administrator he pushes authority as far down the hierarchy as possible and has little patience for foot-dragging and ignorance.

» ejercer controlexert + controlwield + control .

Example: Reference librarians must take steps to exert control over the CD-ROM situation.

Example: Influence and control is currently wielded by sterile professionals who are blind to the need to develop services beyond print.

» ejercer control sobreexercise + control overhave + a hold overhave + control over .

Example: Control is exercised over which terms are used, but otherwise the terms are ordinary words.

Example: 'What mystifies me -- ' she paused, searching for the proper words -- 'what mystifies me is the hold he seems to have over you and the staff'.

Example: You only have control over three things in your life -- the thoughts you think, the images you visualise, & the actions you take.

» ejercer deserve asact as .

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: Communication satellites act as relay stations, by capturing the signals which arrive from the earth and retransmitting them on a different carrier frequency.

» ejercer de juezofficiate .

Example: Umpires and referees officiate at sporting events, making sure the rules and regulations of the game are followed.

» ejercer demasiado presión sobre Algostretch + Nombre + to breaking point .

Example: The diversity of cookbooks available in the USA today is stretching the market to breaking point and specialist retailers are feeling the pinch.

» ejercer influenciaexert + influencewield + influencedeliver + clout .

Example: The subject analysis of a document exerts a controlling influence on all the subsequent steps involved in its subject content.

Example: No one needs to be told that children wield powerful persuasive influences upone each other.

Example: This article discusses how librarians can slay these dragons by banding together to deliver more clout.

» ejercer influencia en/sobrecome to + bear influence onbear + an influence on .

Example: Spreading out from the doorstep is a wider social group whose influence comes to bear on children, particularly after they are old enough to wander at large on their own.

Example: Though her oddball style is most certainly her own, California still bears an influence on her work.

» ejercer poderwield + powerexercise + power .

Example: He's chairman of the budget committee and he wields a lot of power.

Example: Broadly speaking, the former are framework regulations, such as the basic regulations for the common organization of markets and the annual CAP fixing, within which the Commission exercises delegated powers.

» ejercer + Posesivo + derecho al votoexercise + Posesivo + right to vote .

Example: In these situations, if the employer refuses to allow the employee leave in order to exercise her right to vote, then the employer has violated that right.

» ejercer + Posesivo + derechos cívicosexercise + Posesivo + civil rights .

Example: They slammed her in jail on a trumped-up charge because she exercised her civil rights and made them angry.

» ejercer + Posesivo + derechos civilesexercise + Posesivo + civil rights .

Example: They slammed her in jail on a trumped-up charge because she exercised her civil rights and made them angry.

» ejercer presiónbuild + pressurelobby [Defender ejerciendo presión sobre las personas que toman las decisiones]exert + leveragepile on + the pressure .

Example: Pressure for more open access to resources and better library services is building in the research community and academics are writing to Gorbachev urging open access to all kinds of information = La comunidad científica está demandando cada vez más enérgicamente mayor libre acceso a los recursos y mejores servicios bibliotecarios y los académicos le están pidiendo a Gorbachov por escrito el libre acceso a todo tipo de información.

Example: They should be in the best position to lobby all the key organizations so that their viewpoint can be taken into account when legislation is being drafted and discussed.

Example: I tried to say at the very outset of my remarks that there probably has not been sufficient consumer-like and assertive leverage exerted upon our chief suppliers.

Example: Brussels is piling on the pressure for the UK and Spain to strike a bilateral agreement over Gibraltar.

» ejercer presión para conseguir Algopush for .

Example: Library advocates and other proponents of educational reform need to push both for innovative teaching methods and the library resources to support them.

» ejercer presión sobreput + pressure onbear down (up)onpressurepressurise [pressurize, -USA]put + the screws to/oncrack + the whipput + Nombre + on the griddle .

Example: Yet, in its own way, the press was taking the lead in putting pressure on the Community to adopt a more practical outlook, and by so doing kept the subject alive in the minds of the public.

Example: This rickety thing is a disappointment: Its handle is so thin that if you bear down on it while scrubbing, it actually starts to bend.

Example: I know she has difficulty talking about their breakup and I didn't want to pressure her or put her in an awkward situation.

Example: Shearer also made an arse of himself by perpetuating the myth of the noble English sportsman who never dives or pressurises referees.

Example: If we continue to fear and judge others, we make life a never-ending competition -- a game of putting the screws to them before they put the screws to you.

Example: Having a manager who likes to crack the whip can be an unpleasant experience for many, whilst others don't mind a bit of decisive direction.

Example: Since I've already made my choice, and so have the others, now you have a chance to put us on the griddle.

» ejercer presión sobre Alguienbring + pressure + to bear on .

Example: Pressure is being brought to bear on the library to readdress its priorities in terms of services rendered and to scale down excesses in terms of funds and manpower.

» ejercer una gran influencia enplay + a strong hand in .

Example: Economic issues play a strong hand in suggesting its demise.

» ejercer una profesiónpractise + Posesivo + profession .

Example: There was a hard core of dedicated, British-trained librarians who practised their profession in tune with the social, economic and political situation of their time.

» ejercer un derechoexercise + Posesivo + right .

Example: Access to information and freedom of information are very important to them in exercising their rights as citizens = Para ellos, el acceso a información y la libertad de información son muy importantes para poder ejercer sus derechos como ciudadanos.

» ejercer un oficioply + Posesivo + trade [Pasado y participio plied, gerundio plying] .

Example: Perhaps too, since their skills are identical, the advice here might benefit the new frontier of free-lance librarians, private researchers, information brokers, librarians-without-a-library, and so on, plying their trade on the open market, for fees.
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