part in the Oxford Spanish Dictionary

Translations for part in the English»Spanish Dictionary

I.part [Am pɑrt, Brit pɑːt] N

II.part [Am pɑrt, Brit pɑːt] VB trans

III.part [Am pɑrt, Brit pɑːt] VB intr

IV.part [Am pɑrt, Brit pɑːt] ADJ attr

V.part [Am pɑrt, Brit pɑːt] ADV

See also part exchange, part of speech

part-timer [Am ˌpɑrtˈtaɪmər, Brit ˌpɑːtˈtʌɪmə] N

I.part-time [Am ˈpɑrt ˈˌtaɪm, Brit pɑːtˈtʌɪm] ADJ

II.part-time [Am ˈpɑrt ˈˌtaɪm, Brit pɑːtˈtʌɪm] ADV

part work N esp Brit (of book, journal)

part-own [ˈpɑːrtˈəʊn, ˌpɑːtˈəʊn] VB trans

part with VB [Am pɑrt -, Brit pɑːt -] (v + prep + o)

part in the PONS Dictionary

Translations for part in the English»Spanish Dictionary

II.part [pɑ:t, Am pɑ:rt] ADV

part Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

to take part in a course
American English

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
It is an event which reeks out the hidden talents of students but not in technical aspect rather the arty part comes to the fore.
en.wikipedia.org
The hundredth part of a dollar is called a cent (reactivity).
en.wikipedia.org
For most countries, the national economy is now part of the global economy.
en.wikipedia.org
In 1975, there was held cleansing works in underground part of the mausoleum in the result of which a sepulcher was found out.
en.wikipedia.org
The pair of whio in the centre's free flight aviary have seven eggs, which were being incubated as part of the whio nest egg programme.
times-age.co.nz
The male bodybuilder introduced her to a female bodybuilder and suggested we start training five days a week and work one body part a day.
en.wikipedia.org
Then wear a wrist-band stating they want no part of it.
www.thesudburystar.com
It is often served cold as part of an appetizer or snack tray.
en.wikipedia.org
As a result, support services provided to carers are regarded as part of the overall package of care to the person being looked after.
en.wikipedia.org
If the drawings, spoof ads, in-jokes and poems smack of puerility then isn't that part of the poignancy?
www.telegraph.co.uk

Would you like to add some words, phrases or translations?

Submit a new entry.

Choose your language Deutsch | Ελληνικά | English | Español | Français | Italiano | Polski | Português | Русский | Slovenščina | Srpski | 中文