poles in the Oxford Spanish Dictionary

Translations for poles in the English»Spanish Dictionary

I.pole1 [Am poʊl, Brit pəʊl] N

II.pole1 [Am poʊl, Brit pəʊl] VB trans

pole2 [Am poʊl, Brit pəʊl] N

I.pole vault [Am ˈpoʊl vɔlt, Brit] N

pole-vaulting [Am ˈpoʊlˌvɔltɪŋ, Brit ˈpəʊlvɒltɪŋ, ˈpəʊlvɔːltɪŋ] N U

poles in the PONS Dictionary

Translations for poles in the English»Spanish Dictionary

Pole1 [pəʊl, Am poʊl] N (person)

poles Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

to be up the pole Brit
the magnetic poles GEO
to be poles apart
political poles

poles Glossary of Refrigeration Technology courtesy of GEA Bock GmbH

American English

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Strengthening storm systems within the troposphere can act to intensify the polar vortex by significantly cooling the poles.
en.wikipedia.org
First they place vertical poles, then fill between the poles with a crisscross of horizontally placed branches.
en.wikipedia.org
Some of the other members of the group entered, armed with beach umbrella poles they had taken from the side of the house.
www.theage.com.au
Long and straight bamboo poles are polished and greased, after which a small bag containing the prize is tied to the top.
en.wikipedia.org
In reality, around the equinoxes the day is almost 14 minutes longer than the night at the equator, and even more towards the poles.
en.wikipedia.org
No ice pick, poles, shelter - any of the things that are appropriate for climbing a mountain.
www.dailyrecord.co.uk
The rotor consists of soft magnetic material, such as laminated silicon steel, which has multiple projections acting as salient magnetic poles through magnetic reluctance.
en.wikipedia.org
Global groundwater storage is roughly equal to the total amount of freshwater stored in the snow and ice pack, including the north and south poles.
en.wikipedia.org
An electric service wire to a commercial customer was hit two days prior to the pole-line collapse, likely inducing tension pull on the poles. 2.
www.kingstonregion.com
It is flattened at the poles and pulses eerily, no doubt because of its tremendous rotational speed -- perhaps as fast as 80,000 kilometers per hour.
en.wikipedia.org

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