Glossary entry (derived from question below)
inglés term or phrase:
... and usually contrived on ice and basketball considerations
español translation:
y normalmente surgen de la observación del baloncesto o del hockey sobre hielo.
Added to glossary by
Rebecca Hendry
May 17, 2005 20:26
19 yrs ago
inglés term
... and usually contrived on ice and basketball considerations
inglés al español
Otros
Deportes / Ejercitación / Recreo
ice hockey
Although attempts have been made to use other means of occluding vision during an actual sport situation, these have been done with great technical difficulty and usually contrived on ice and basketball considerations.
Más arriba se habló sobre el hockey sobre hielo
Más arriba se habló sobre el hockey sobre hielo
Proposed translations
(español)
3 | y normalmente surgen de la observación del baloncesto o del hockey sobre hielo. | Rebecca Hendry |
Proposed translations
1 hora
Selected
y normalmente surgen de la observación del baloncesto o del hockey sobre hielo.
Es una idea.
con·trive (kən-trîv')
v., -trived, -triv·ing, -trives.
v.tr.
To plan with cleverness or ingenuity; devise: contrive ways to amuse the children.
To invent or fabricate, especially by improvisation: contrived a swing from hanging vines.
To plan with evil intent; scheme: contrived a plot to seize power.
To bring about, as by scheming; manage: somehow contrived to get past the guards unnoticed.
v.intr.
To form plans or schemes.
[Middle English contreven, from Old French controver, contreuv-, from Medieval Latin contropâre, to compare : Latin com-, com- + Latin tropus, turn, manner, style (from Greek tropos).]
con·triv'er n.
con·trive (kən-trîv')
v., -trived, -triv·ing, -trives.
v.tr.
To plan with cleverness or ingenuity; devise: contrive ways to amuse the children.
To invent or fabricate, especially by improvisation: contrived a swing from hanging vines.
To plan with evil intent; scheme: contrived a plot to seize power.
To bring about, as by scheming; manage: somehow contrived to get past the guards unnoticed.
v.intr.
To form plans or schemes.
[Middle English contreven, from Old French controver, contreuv-, from Medieval Latin contropâre, to compare : Latin com-, com- + Latin tropus, turn, manner, style (from Greek tropos).]
con·triv'er n.
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Comment: "gracias again"
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