sufficient

sufficient
adjective (enough: We haven't sufficient food to feed all these people; Will $10 be sufficient for your needs?) suficiente, bastante
sufficient adj suficiente / bastante
we do not have sufficient information no tenemos suficiente información
sufficient
tr[sə'fɪʃənt]
adjective
1 suficiente, bastante
we don't have sufficient information no tenemos suficiente información
\
SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALL
to be sufficient bastar
sufficient [sə'fɪʃənt] adj
: suficiente
sufficient
adj.
bastante adj.
harto, -a adj.
suficiente adj.
sə'fɪʃənt
adjective suficiente, bastante

two are sufficient for my purposes — con dos me basta, con dos tengo suficiente

my income is hardly sufficient to live on — mis ingresos apenas (si) me alcanzan para vivir

[sǝ'fɪʃǝnt]
ADJ
1) (before noun) suficiente

given sufficient time — con suficiente tiempo

if the matter is of sufficient importance — si el asunto es lo bastante importante or lo suficientemente importante

2)

to be sufficient — bastar, ser suficiente

ten minutes is quite sufficient — con diez minutos basta or es suficiente

it is sufficient to say that ... — basta decir or es suficiente decir que ...

- sufficient unto the day
* * *
[sə'fɪʃənt]
adjective suficiente, bastante

two are sufficient for my purposes — con dos me basta, con dos tengo suficiente

my income is hardly sufficient to live on — mis ingresos apenas (si) me alcanzan para vivir


English-spanish dictionary. 2013.

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Mira otros diccionarios:

  • Sufficient — Suf*fi cient, a. [L. sufficiens, entis, p. pr. of sufficere: cf. F. suffisant. See {Suffice}.] 1. Equal to the end proposed; adequate to wants; enough; ample; competent; as, provision sufficient for the family; an army sufficient to defend the… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • sufficient — suf·fi·cient adj: enough to meet the needs under the law of a situation or a proposed end suf·fi·cient·ly adv Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. sufficient …   Law dictionary

  • sufficient — [sə fish′ənt] adj. [ME < L sufficiens, prp. of sufficere: see SUFFICE] 1. as much as is needed; equal to what is specified or required; enough 2. competent; well qualified; able sufficiently adv. SYN. SUFFICIENT and ENOUGH agree in describing… …   English World dictionary

  • sufficient — early 14c., from O.Fr. sufficient, from L. sufficiens, prp. of sufficere (see SUFFICE (Cf. suffice)) …   Etymology dictionary

  • sufficient — [adj] enough, adequate acceptable, agreeable, all right*, ample, aplenty, appreciate, comfortable, commensurable, commensurate, common, competent, copious, decent, due, galore, pleasing, plenteous, plentiful, plenty, proportionate, satisfactory,… …   New thesaurus

  • sufficient — ► ADJECTIVE & DETERMINER ▪ enough; adequate. DERIVATIVES sufficiently adverb …   English terms dictionary

  • sufficient — 01. Two hours should be [sufficient] time to finish the work. 02. Mark hadn t [sufficiently] cleaned the carpet, so we could still see the wine stains. 03. I question the [sufficiency] of a single one quart bottle of water for a half day hike on… …   Grammatical examples in English

  • sufficient — adj. 1) sufficient for 2) sufficient unto oneself ( independent ) 3) sufficient to + inf. (it would have been sufficient to send a brief note) * * * [sə fɪʃ(ə)nt] sufficient for sufficient unto oneself ( independent ) sufficient to + inf. (it… …   Combinatory dictionary

  • sufficient — adjective Etymology: Middle English, from Latin sufficient , sufficiens, from present participle of sufficere Date: 14th century 1. a. enough to meet the needs of a situation or a proposed end < sufficient provisions for a month > b. being a… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • sufficient — suf|fi|cient W2S2 [səˈfıʃənt] adj formal [Date: 1300 1400; : Latin; Origin: , present participle of sufficere; SUFFICE] as much as is needed for a particular purpose = ↑enough ≠ ↑insufficient ▪ We can only prosecute if there is sufficient… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • sufficient — enough, sufficient, sufficiently 1. Enough functions as both an adjective and an adverb, whereas sufficient requires modification as sufficiently. As an adjective (or modifier), enough will normally serve, but sufficient is more idiomatic when a… …   Modern English usage

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