- fusión
- f.1 fusion, merging, conflation, corporate merging.2 union, fusion.* * *fusión► nombre femenino1 (de metales) fusion, melting; (de hielo) thawing, melting2 (de intereses, partidos, ideas) fusion3 (de empresas) merger, amalgamation* * *noun f.1) fusion2) merger* * *SF1) (=unión) joining, uniting; (Com) merger, amalgamation2) (Inform) merge3) [de metal] melting4) (Fís) fusion
fusión nuclear — nuclear fusion
5) (Mús) crossover* * *femenino1) (de empresas, partidos, organizaciones) merger; (de intereses) fusion2)a) (de un metal) melting; (de metales, piezas) fusion, fusing togetherb) (Fís) fusion•* * *= amalgamation, coming together, fusion, joining together, merger, merging, confounding, piecing together, blurring, interweaving, bringing together, meld.Ex. The examples cited to date have used right hand truncation, which results in the amalgamation of words with different suffixes.Ex. Knowledge generally evolves from an identifiable base, and often new subjects arise from the coming together of two previously separate subjects.Ex. New topics develop not merely by fission -- the splitting up of established subjects -- but also by fusion -- the merging of previously distinct subjects.Ex. Such schemes are essentially analytical in nature, but do not permit any synthesis or joining together of concepts that have been divided from one another.Ex. Qualifiers function as an integral part of the index terms, so that terms of the form 'Moving (House)', 'Mergers (Industrial)' are created and used.Ex. The merging of synonyms carries implications for the effectiveness of the index in terms of precision and recall.Ex. The confounding of opposites is also common though, again, care has to be taken to see that we do not confound two subjects on which extensive literature exists.Ex. Progress in research is dependent on the piecing together of items of information from many sources.Ex. Read from the perspective of Bakhtin, this blurring of genres is also a blurring of idealogies.Ex. This paper illustrates the possible future interweaving of information retrieval and entertainment.Ex. I have already mentioned that the bringing together of the various editions is the real problem.Ex. The article is entitled 'Scholars and media: an unmixable mess of oil and water or a perfect meld of oil and vinegar?'.----* fusión de empresas = consolidation.* fusión nuclear = nuclear fusion.* punto de fusión = melting point, fusion point.* * *femenino1) (de empresas, partidos, organizaciones) merger; (de intereses) fusion2)a) (de un metal) melting; (de metales, piezas) fusion, fusing togetherb) (Fís) fusion•* * *= amalgamation, coming together, fusion, joining together, merger, merging, confounding, piecing together, blurring, interweaving, bringing together, meld.Ex: The examples cited to date have used right hand truncation, which results in the amalgamation of words with different suffixes.
Ex: Knowledge generally evolves from an identifiable base, and often new subjects arise from the coming together of two previously separate subjects.Ex: New topics develop not merely by fission -- the splitting up of established subjects -- but also by fusion -- the merging of previously distinct subjects.Ex: Such schemes are essentially analytical in nature, but do not permit any synthesis or joining together of concepts that have been divided from one another.Ex: Qualifiers function as an integral part of the index terms, so that terms of the form 'Moving (House)', 'Mergers (Industrial)' are created and used.Ex: The merging of synonyms carries implications for the effectiveness of the index in terms of precision and recall.Ex: The confounding of opposites is also common though, again, care has to be taken to see that we do not confound two subjects on which extensive literature exists.Ex: Progress in research is dependent on the piecing together of items of information from many sources.Ex: Read from the perspective of Bakhtin, this blurring of genres is also a blurring of idealogies.Ex: This paper illustrates the possible future interweaving of information retrieval and entertainment.Ex: I have already mentioned that the bringing together of the various editions is the real problem.Ex: The article is entitled 'Scholars and media: an unmixable mess of oil and water or a perfect meld of oil and vinegar?'.* fusión de empresas = consolidation.* fusión nuclear = nuclear fusion.* punto de fusión = melting point, fusion point.* * *fusiónfeminineA1 (de empresas) merger; (de partidos, organizaciones) merger, amalgamationuna fusión amistosa or pactada an agreed merger2 (de ideas, intereses) combination, amalgamationB1 (de un metal) melting; (de metales, piezas) fusion, fusing together2 (Fís) fusionCompuestos:● fusión fríacold fusion● fusión nuclearnuclear fusion* * *
fusión sustantivo femenino
1 (de empresas, partidos) merger
2a) (de un metal) melting;
(de metales, piezas) fusion, fusing togetherb) (Fís) fusion
fusión sustantivo femenino
1 Com merger
2 Fís (de un metal, fundición) fusion
(del hielo, licuefacción) thawing, melting
'fusión' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
acentuar
- estructuración
- oponerse
English:
fusion
- meltdown
- melting point
- merger
* * *fusión nf1. [unión] [de empresas, bancos] merger;[de partidos] merger, amalgamation2. Informát mergeCompfusión de archivos file merging3. [de metal, hielo] melting4. [nuclear] fusionCompfusión fría, fusión en frío cold fusion;fusión nuclear nuclear fusion;fusión termonuclear thermonuclear fusion5. [estilo musical] fusion* * *fusiónf1 FÍS fusion2 COM merger* * *fusión nf, pl fusiones1) : fusion2) : union, merger
Spanish-English dictionary. 2013.