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dingéniosité
Bakterienzellwand
en el diccionario PONS
en el diccionario PONS
bac·te·rial [bækˈtɪəriəl, ingl. am. -ˈtɪr-] ADJ. inv.
I. wall [wɔ:l] SUST.
1. wall:
Mauer f <-, -n>
Wand f <-, Wände>
Mauer f <-, -n>
Einfriedung f <-, -en>
Stadtmauer f <-, -n>
2. wall MED., ANAT.:
Wand f <-, Wände>
3. wall (of a tyre):
Mantel m <-s, Män·tel>
4. wall (barrier):
Mauer f <-, -n>
locuciones, giros idiomáticos:
to climb the walls in anger
to climb the walls due to worry
to drive [or send] sb up the wall
jdn zur Weißglut treiben coloq.
ausrasten coloq.
walls have ears saying
to hit the wall athlete, marathon runner
II. wall [wɔ:l] V. trans.
1. wall usu passive (enclose):
2. wall usu passive (separate):
3. wall (imprison):
to wall sb up
4. wall (fill in):
to wall sth up
cell [sel] SUST.
1. cell (room):
Zelle f <-, -n>
2. cell (space):
Feld nt <-(e)s, -er>
3. cell BIOL., ELECTR., POL.:
Zelle f <-, -n>
Brennstoffzelle f <-, -n>
4. cell TEL. (local area):
Entrada de OpenDict
wall SUST.
to hit the wall fig.
Glosario especializado de biología Klett
bacterial cell wall SUST.
Glosario especializado de biología Klett
Present
Iwall
youwall
he/she/itwalls
wewall
youwall
theywall
Past
Iwalled
youwalled
he/she/itwalled
wewalled
youwalled
theywalled
Present Perfect
Ihavewalled
youhavewalled
he/she/ithaswalled
wehavewalled
youhavewalled
theyhavewalled
Past Perfect
Ihadwalled
youhadwalled
he/she/ithadwalled
wehadwalled
youhadwalled
theyhadwalled
PONS OpenDict

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Ejemplos monolingües (no verificados por la redacción de PONS)
Bacterial flora is endogenous bacteria, which is defined as bacteria that naturally reside in a closed system.
en.wikipedia.org
This domain possesses numerous fundamental traits distinct from both the bacterial and the eukaryotic domains.
en.wikipedia.org
Sodium nitrite is used because it prevents bacterial growth and, in a reaction with the meat's myoglobin, gives the product a desirable dark red color.
en.wikipedia.org
Secondary bacterial infection is more common in children.
en.wikipedia.org
Some poisons are also toxins, usually referring to naturally produced substances, such as the bacterial proteins that cause tetanus and botulism.
en.wikipedia.org