virtud
virtue ; gift ; glory ; righteousness ; claim to fame.
Murra described a number of these enterprises, their virtues and weaknesses and the possible explanations for their demise.
The writer's gift is to orchestrate words in print better than the rest of us.
One of the great glories of books is that there are plenty to suit everybody, no matter what our taste, our mood, our intellectual ability, age or living experience.
Some of themes depict the diverse possibilities available to those who 'tread the path of righteousness and enter the gates of salvation'.
Not one, but five towns use albino squirrels as their claims to fame, and none is particularly happy about the others.
en virtud de
by virtue of
For example, the set of documents about 'programmed instruction' forms a class by virtue of sharing the common characteristic of subject content.
en virtud del cargo que ocupa
ex officio
While deputy administrators are frequently involved ex officio as chairpersons of these groups, the chief librarian usually will reserve the final decision-making authority on major issues to him or herself.
en virtud de su cargo
ex officio
While deputy administrators are frequently involved ex officio as chairpersons of these groups, the chief librarian usually will reserve the final decision-making authority on major issues to him or herself.
la paciencia es una virtud
patience is a virtue
everything comes to those who wait
I learned that patience is a virtue, but waiting too long for something is commonly referred to as laziness.
She will undoubtedly prove that everything comes to those who wait and her time is definitely here.
virtud moral
moral virtue
The author explores some of the relationships of these two moral virtues to the traditional theological virtues of faith, hope, and love, and to heroism and saintliness.