derivar-1
derive ; spin off.
The scheme was designed for the Library of Congress and many of the features of the scheme derived from this fact.
A computerized search facility has been spun off from the basic work.
derivar conclusiones
derive + conclusions
Qualitative models are useful because they provide a logical framework for asking specific questions and deriving conclusions systematically.
derivar de
strip from
be born of
proceed from
Alternatively, the librarian may wish to purchase one of the wide range of products that other processors or generators may be stripping from the tape.
According to Tolstoy, one's sadness is born of despair (sadness over the apparent meaninglessness of life or of life as one has lived it) = Según Tolstoi, la tristeza de un individuo surge de la desesperación (tristeza por la falta de sentido aparente de la vida o de la vida tal como se ha vivido).
Although nepotism is considered selfish, it proceeds from the generous impulse to pass something on to one's children, and this we think of as entirely praiseworth.
derivar placer de
obtain + pleasure from
For me a picture of myself in a dentist's waiting room is a perfect metaphor for set and setting very much in play against the easily obtained pleasures I usually get from reading.
derivarse [Verbo irregular: pasado came, participio come]
accrue
come
A large proportion of the earth's population has not yet recognized the enormous advantages that would accrue if only everybody spoke English.
If all of these costs are to render returns to the library, the returns come only in terms of the use of the collection.
derivarse de
come out of
flow from
cascade from
Perhaps the most outstanding model to come out of the NIC project was that of Detroit's community information service, which was given the name 'The Information Place', TIP.
Apart from well-known things like light and heat, what else flows from the Sun?.
Everything that happens after this should cascade naturally from the stage you have set and the characters you've put on it.