aquí
around here ; here ; herein ; round here ; over here.
And how in heaven's name will we get any work done around here if we have to worry about grievance hearings, to say nothing of the grievant being in the same building.
Instead, the place of AACR in the historical development of cataloguing codes will be examined here.
The ideas contained herein will be central issues for consideration in the foreseeable future.
It was interesting, in view of the received opinion that 'We don't have many problems round here'.
Eventually the situation should improve over here.
andar de aquí para allá
go about
The police thought he was mental and arrested him when he was going about in his birthday suit.
aparecer aquí y allá en
intersperse
Visits to school and public libraries as well as centres of cultural interest interspersed the program.
a partir de aquí
hereupon
Hereupon proposals are made in order to determine which index types are the most appropriate tools for the analysis and retrieval in the various document collections.
aquí hay gato encerrado
there's more to it than meets the eye
there's more to the picture than meets the eye
So don't be too hasty to write it off - there's more to it than meets the eye.
Despite this common sense observation, most economists have failed to see that 'there's more to the picture than meets the eye', as Neil Young once sang.
aquí mismo
right here
He got whipped by policemen right here in Montgomery.
aquí tiene(s)
here is/are
Here is an example of entering an LCCN.
aquí y allá
here and there
odd
For, methinks, the present condition of man is like a field, where battle hath been lately fought, where we may see many legs, and arms, and eyes lying here and there, which, for want of a union, and a soul to quicken and enliven them, are good for nothing, but to feed ravens, and infect the air.
For example, review articles are expected to be supported by extensive bibliographies, whilst it is unusual for a letter to carry more than the odd citation.
correr de aquí para allá
rush around
run + here and there
Perhaps instead of arguing, and rushing around in the dark, the time has come to follow our Danish and American friends and begin to find out what we are doing.
The wedding day morning is usually a whirr of activity - everybody running here and there.
de aquí para allá
back and forth
He informed me last spring that he was dedicating 30% of his budget to bussing all his staff back and forth each day.
de aquí te espero [Compuesto formado por la síntesis de huge y enormous] [Formado por la combinación de giant y enormous]
tremendous
humongous [humungous]
massive
enormous
gianormous
There has been tremendous growth in libraries since then, but, fundamentally, it has been possible to build on the foundation that nineteenth-century heroes constructed.
The word 'humongous' first darted onto the linguistic stage only about 1968 but hit the big time almost immediately and has been with us ever since.
When the use of all synonymous terms would result in a massive duplication of A/Z subject index entries 'see references' are employed.
In coventional libraries, such searches usually involve an enormous amount of time and energy.
The upside, and its a gianormous upside, is that there is so much variety.
estar aquí ya
be upon us
The knowledge society, then, is upon us.
haber pasado por aquí antes
have been down this road before
Because your uterus has already been down this road before, and your abdominal muscles might not be as taut as they were the first time around, your second pregnancy will start showing sooner.
hacer + Nombre + llegar hasta aquí
get + Nombre + this far
And getting children this far is the first aim of all the work we do with children and books.
hasta aquí
up to + Posesivo + eyeballs in
thus far
so far
this far
Some of these countries are already up to their eyeballs in debt repayment.
Thus far the results are very encouraging and we definitely will be proceeding along this way.
The classification schemes that have been considered so far are general bibliographic classification schemes in that they attempt to encompass all of knowledge.
If you've come this far, the rest is a breeze.
hasta aquí de trabajo
up to + Posesivo + eyeballs in work
Around this time of year, professors are up to their eyeballs in work and. are likely handling lots of requests for reference letters.
ir de aquí a allá
go out and about
Thursday 22 August is your opportunity to go out and about - seeing at first hand the great variety of library and information centres located in the Central Belt of Scotland.
ir de aquí para allá
jump
live out of + a suitcase
run + here and there
go about
Field lengths are indicated as explained above and the cursor can be made to 'jump' from field to field for entry or amendment.
In those days, he was a fancy-free young American, living out of a suitcase with a red and green camera always under his arm.
The wedding day morning is usually a whirr of activity - everybody running here and there.
The police thought he was mental and arrested him when he was going about in his birthday suit.
ir de aquí para allá sin rumbo fijo
freewheel
Prior to his imprisonment He just freewheeled around the country.
leer de aquí y allí
dip into
Most borrowers, seventeen in all, had read the blurb on the jacket and twelve had dipped into the text before deciding to borrow.
llegar aquí
get over here
I've been told to get over here again and show my face!.
llevar aquí + Expresión Temporal
have been around + Expresión Temporal
Those of us who have been around longer know that you can only increase your budget by about the same percent as previous years.
mover de aquí para allá
move around
It is now up to captains on each flight to decide whether passengers can have blankets and other items on their laps or can move around.
moverse de aquí para allá
move about
move around
As the scientist of the future moves about the laboratory or the field, every time he looks at something worthy of the record, he trips the shutter and in it goes.
It is now up to captains on each flight to decide whether passengers can have blankets and other items on their laps or can move around.
pasar por aquí
come by
She came by to see me yesterday and I told her not to hold out any hope.
por aquí
around here
nearby [near-by]
round here
hereabout(s)
And how in heaven's name will we get any work done around here if we have to worry about grievance hearings, to say nothing of the grievant being in the same building.
An earlier leakage had prompted library staff to make arrangements with a nearby firm of book conservation specialists in the event of a further disaster.
It was interesting, in view of the received opinion that 'We don't have many problems round here'.
I agree yet there are still those hereabouts who think he would be a great NYC mayor.
por aquí cerca
hereabout(s)
I agree yet there are still those hereabouts who think he would be a great NYC mayor.
por aquí y por allí
hanging about
Many of us still have some of those big, old floppy disks hanging about with data we can no longer read because we no longer have the hardware to read them.
que toca aquí y allá
wandering
I've tolerated his remarks and his wandering hands because, frankly, I need the job.
ven aquí
come over here
And simultaneously he curled his index finger up and down that in the vocabulary of his gesture was meant to signify 'come over here'.
venir aquí
come over
get over here
'We were lucky you happened to be sitting in your dean's office when I called about the position, and that you could come over for an interview right away'.
I've been told to get over here again and show my face!.