Dicţionar englez-român |
LITERATURE
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Traducere în limba română
literature substantiv
1. literatură;
English literature literatură engleză.
2. litere (carieră, studiu).
3. bibliografie, literatură;
the literature of a subject bibliografia unui subiect.
Exemple de propoziții și/sau fraze:
There was no career for him in literature.
(Martin Eden, de Jack London)
The only person who offered enough to make it worth her while to try juvenile literature was a worthy gentleman who felt it his mission to convert all the world to his particular belief.
(Little Women, de Louisa May Alcott)
A logarithmic-scale (base 10) unit for measuring concentration and/or reactivity of a test substance (an antigen or antibody of interest) as defined in the literature reference for the particular quantitative enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay method.
(Log10 Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay Unit, NCI Thesaurus)
The results of these studies, and of some others currently under development, demonstrate how important it is to pay attention to individuals’ gaze when attempting to explain how we form our impressions of others, as well as to other marked effects shown in the scientific literature on perceptions and impressions of people from other groups.
(White people’s perceptions of the emotions on black people’s faces are less accurate than their perceptions among other white people, University of Granada)
Although several candidate O2-sensing molecules have emerged in the literature, the molecular basis of how cells sense O2 levels is poorly characterized. pVHL, the protein product of a tumor-suppressor gene responsible for von Hippel Lindau disease, is implicated in this O2-sensing system by its association with HIF-1, targeting it for ubiquitin-mediated degradation.
(Hypoxia-Inducible Factor Pathway, NCI Thesaurus/BIOCARTA)
He had come into the Transcontinental to learn magazine-literature, instead of which he had principally learned finance.
(Martin Eden, de Jack London)
"There is nothing like it in literature," Martin said, when at last he was able to speak.
(Martin Eden, de Jack London)
"I don't think you were made to write. Forgive me, dear. You compel me to say it; and you know I know more about literature than you do."
(Martin Eden, de Jack London)
To real literature, real painting, real music, the Morses and their kind, were dead.
(Martin Eden, de Jack London)
Why, on the outside cover were printed every month the words of one of the world's great writers, words proclaiming the inspired mission of the Transcontinental by a star of literature whose first coruscations had appeared inside those self-same covers.
(Martin Eden, de Jack London)