- provenir
- v.to originate, to proceed, to come, to derive.Ella desciende de guerreros She descends from warriors.* * *provenir► verbo intransitivo1 to come (de, from)* * *VI
provenir de — to come from
la palabra "ruleta" proviene del francés — the word "roulette" comes from (the) French
esto proviene de no haberlo curado antes — this stems from o comes from o is a result of not having treated it earlier
* * *verbo intransitivoprovenir DE algo/alguien — to come from something/somebody
* * *= come, source.Ex. If all of these costs are to render returns to the library, the returns come only in terms of the use of the collection.Ex. What this has meant is that in the 20th century, ideas are being sourced from all over the globe; and at the speed oflight, so to speak.----* provenir de = emanate from, originate (from), come from.* * *verbo intransitivoprovenir DE algo/alguien — to come from something/somebody
* * *= come, source.Ex: If all of these costs are to render returns to the library, the returns come only in terms of the use of the collection.
Ex: What this has meant is that in the 20th century, ideas are being sourced from all over the globe; and at the speed oflight, so to speak.* provenir de = emanate from, originate (from), come from.* * *provenir [I31 ]viprovenir DE algo/algn to come FROM sth/sbla idea provino de los alumnos it was the students' idea, the idea came from o originated with the students* * *
provenir (conjugate provenir) verbo intransitivo provenir DE algo/algn to come from sth/sb
provenir verbo intransitivo provenir de algo/alguien, to come from sthg/sb
'provenir' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
descender
- proceder
English:
derive
- emanate
- stem
- spring
* * *provenir viprovenir de to come from;sus problemas económicos provienen de su afición al juego his financial problems all have their roots in his fondness for gambling* * *provenirv/i come (de from)* * *provenir {87} viprovenir de : to come from
Spanish-English dictionary. 2013.