asumir
assume ; assume ; come to + grips with ; take over ; get to + grips with ; take on/upon ; presume.
The foregoing discussion concerning analytical entries assumes implicitly a conventional catalogue format, that is, card, microform or other printed catalogue.
A pseudonym is the name assumed by an author to conceal or obscure his or her identity.
Right now the management team is beginning to come to grips with our annual budget process, as it does every year.
We need to replace those aspects of traditional public library service which have been taken over by other media or rendered redundant by social change.
The Treasure has made good use of a number of methodologies in getting to grips with the principles and applications of information management.
If we decide to take on making up a subject file there'd be a lot of footwork even if we use that list as a basis = If we decide to take on making up a subject file there'd be a lot of footwork even if we use that list as a basis.
We presumed this principle of organization in the case of searching the public library for a document about programmed instruction.
asumir Algo
take (+ Nombre) + on board (+ Nombre)
Library and information professionals need to take on board the recommendations of Roach and Morrison, translating them into policies and strategies to be acted upon.
asumir el cargo de
take + command (of)
When General Grant took command, the Union Army was still exchanging prisoners of war.
asumir el control de
take + control of
Five years after they took control of war-ravaged Afghanistan, reconstruction remains a job half done.
asumir el papel
dress + the part
look + the part
In any situation, Obama is not only willing to dress the part; rather, dressing the part is absolutely central to his thinking.
If I am to win the high ground in this battle then I absolutely must look the part.
asumir el papel de
step into + the role of
Sidel, who was raised by a single father, said the difference is that single fathers are lionized for stepping into the role while single mothers can be vilified as welfare queens or worse.
asumir el papel de Alguien
step into + Posesivo + shoes
stand in + Posesivo + shoes
If students find it impossible to step into the shoes of any character in the case, thereby becoming that person, they are advised to select a character for whom they would be willing to serve as a 'consultant'.
Making a positive effort now and then to stand in the enquirer's shoes is very good for a reference librarian's soul.
asumir la culpa
take + the heat
It seems a bit unfair, though, for Clausen to take all of the heat while her underlings escape unscathed.
asumir la dirección
take over + the leadership (from)
The author divides staff into 2 groups: 'baby boomers' (born 1946-1961) who grew up assuming full and secure employment but tend now to be technologically challenged; and 'baby busters' (born 1965-1975) who tend to be technological savants and are taking over the leadership from the older generation of librarians.
asumir la responsabilidad
assume + responsibilitiy (for)
take + the heat
In the keynote speech each nation was urged to assume responsibility for preserving its own imprint while working cooperatively through IFLA to develop international bibliographic control.
It seems a bit unfair, though, for Clausen to take all of the heat while her underlings escape unscathed.
asumir las consecuencias
take + the consequences
live with + the consequences
take + the heat
The article is entitled 'Assume the position, take the consequences'.
Others have not been so fortunate and have had to live with the consequences.
It seems a bit unfair, though, for Clausen to take all of the heat while her underlings escape unscathed.
asumir poder
assume + power
The newly elected Scottish Local Government Authorities assumed their powers in May 75 and are not yet fully into their stride.
asumir prioridad
assume + priority
There is increasing overlap between conservation and scientific interests as bioprospecting and gene-harvesting assumes greater priority.
asumir responsabilidad
take over
take + responsibility
Pergamon-INFOLINE came into being in its present form in 1980 when it was taken over by Pergamon.
In order to support these three elements, and to ensure that schemes are updated it is important to have some organisation which takes responsibility for revision and publication.
asumir una apariencia + Adjetivo
take on + Adjetivo + aspect
However, the pomp and ostentation of the annual meeting, first called Council, then General Conference (alias Congress), which attracts growing numbers of professionals, leads to IFLA taking on a mythical or ritualistic aspect where appearances replace content.
asumir una característica + Adjetivo
take on + Adjetivo + character
They took on the unusual character of a great and impassioned national debate of the relative merits of the existing finding catalog and the alternative proposed by Panizzi and his associates.
asumir una forma
assume + form
In the nineteenth century, with developments in the book trade and education, popular literature assumed a greater number of different physical forms.
asumir una función
take upon + Reflexivo + role
By so doing the public library might well take upon itself a distinctive role in the community's pattern of communication.
asumir una nueva faceta
take on + new dimension
Serials acquisition and management have become more demanding, with the traditional core task of providing prompt access to title taking on new dimensions.
asumir una tarea
assume + duty
He was a descriptive cataloger at Princeton and was promoted to Acting Head Cataloger, and subsequently Head Cataloger at Princeton, the position he left before assuming his present duties at LC.
asumir un papel
assume + role
By virtue of standing an easy first among the libraries of the region - first in size of collection, first in financial support, and first in that mysterious quality known as 'excellence' - Dorado was asked to assume the role.
asumir un riesgo
bear + a risk
take + risks
Syndicates tended to become smaller as their members gained in financial strength and in the ability to bear greater proportions of the risk.
Unfortunately, most librarians are unwilling to take limited risks to learn about new software.
asumir un significado
take on + meaning
Some words are useful only in particular circumstances because they take on a sufficiently precise meaning only in those contexts.