Author: Uwe Dost
Publisher: TIKAL
ISBN: 9788430565405
Category : Pets
Languages : es
Pages : 213
Book Description
El gran libro del terrario
Author: Uwe Dost
Publisher: TIKAL
ISBN: 9788430565405
Category : Pets
Languages : es
Pages : 213
Book Description
Publisher: TIKAL
ISBN: 9788430565405
Category : Pets
Languages : es
Pages : 213
Book Description
El gran libro de reptiles
El terrario
Author: Ludwig Trutnau
Publisher: OMEGA
ISBN: 9788428210638
Category : Pets
Languages : es
Pages : 304
Book Description
Publisher: OMEGA
ISBN: 9788428210638
Category : Pets
Languages : es
Pages : 304
Book Description
Terrario
Author: Werner Ullrich
Publisher: TIKAL
ISBN: 9788430589401
Category : Pets
Languages : es
Pages : 144
Book Description
Publisher: TIKAL
ISBN: 9788430589401
Category : Pets
Languages : es
Pages : 144
Book Description
El gran libro de reptiles
Author: Tom McGowen
Publisher:
ISBN: 9789684166080
Category : Reptiles
Languages : es
Pages : 0
Book Description
Discusses the characteristics of reptiles including snakes, turtles and lizards.
Publisher:
ISBN: 9789684166080
Category : Reptiles
Languages : es
Pages : 0
Book Description
Discusses the characteristics of reptiles including snakes, turtles and lizards.
El gran libro de reptiles
Author: Tom McGowen
Publisher:
ISBN: 9789684166080
Category : Reptiles
Languages : es
Pages : 60
Book Description
Discusses the characteristics of reptiles including snakes, turtles and lizards.
Publisher:
ISBN: 9789684166080
Category : Reptiles
Languages : es
Pages : 60
Book Description
Discusses the characteristics of reptiles including snakes, turtles and lizards.
Mi primer gran libro de reptiles y anfibios
Bilingual Educational Publications in Print
Author:
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Audio-visual materials
Languages : en
Pages : 586
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Audio-visual materials
Languages : en
Pages : 586
Book Description
Gran Diccionario Oxford
Author: Beatriz Galimberti Jarman
Publisher: Oxford University
ISBN: 9780198604754
Category : Foreign Language Study
Languages : es
Pages : 2356
Book Description
The Oxford Spanish Dictionary comes with the ultimate pronunciation guide: a FREE, state-of-the-art CD-ROM (UK and Europe only) that enables you to type in a word or phrase, or paste in text from the web, and hear it spoken back to you in perfect Spanish.Now in colour, with an ultra-clear layout for maximum accessibility, this major new edition provides the richest coverage of Spanish from around the world, covering over 300,000 words and phrases, and more than 500,000 translations. Oxford's expert teams of lexicographers have used the latest technology to search millions of words of web-based text and identify all the most recent additions to both Spanish and English. Over 20,000 new entries have been added to the dictionary from all aspects of life today - business, IT,science, the media, the environment, the internet, and social life. Hundreds of special entries now give information on life and culture in the Spanish-speaking world, and in-text notes give extra help with grammar and usage. The dictionary also includes an extended guide to effectivecommunication, including a wealth of example letters, offering help with a wide range of topics, from writing a job application or a CV to booking a hotel room. With a new, easy-access colour design to make consultation even quicker, this is the most complete and up-to-date reference tool foranyone studying Spanish in senior school or at university, or for translators and other language professionals. This title replaces ISBN 0-19-860367-3. It is also available on CD-ROM with full text search and innovative Spanish pronunciation functionality.
Publisher: Oxford University
ISBN: 9780198604754
Category : Foreign Language Study
Languages : es
Pages : 2356
Book Description
The Oxford Spanish Dictionary comes with the ultimate pronunciation guide: a FREE, state-of-the-art CD-ROM (UK and Europe only) that enables you to type in a word or phrase, or paste in text from the web, and hear it spoken back to you in perfect Spanish.Now in colour, with an ultra-clear layout for maximum accessibility, this major new edition provides the richest coverage of Spanish from around the world, covering over 300,000 words and phrases, and more than 500,000 translations. Oxford's expert teams of lexicographers have used the latest technology to search millions of words of web-based text and identify all the most recent additions to both Spanish and English. Over 20,000 new entries have been added to the dictionary from all aspects of life today - business, IT,science, the media, the environment, the internet, and social life. Hundreds of special entries now give information on life and culture in the Spanish-speaking world, and in-text notes give extra help with grammar and usage. The dictionary also includes an extended guide to effectivecommunication, including a wealth of example letters, offering help with a wide range of topics, from writing a job application or a CV to booking a hotel room. With a new, easy-access colour design to make consultation even quicker, this is the most complete and up-to-date reference tool foranyone studying Spanish in senior school or at university, or for translators and other language professionals. This title replaces ISBN 0-19-860367-3. It is also available on CD-ROM with full text search and innovative Spanish pronunciation functionality.
Jóvenes arquitectos españoles
Author: Anna Puyuelo
Publisher:
ISBN: 9788425223433
Category : Architects
Languages : en
Pages : 146
Book Description
In recent years there has been a constant stream of publications and exhibitions about new Spanish architecture. In them, the totality of current practice has not always been reflected. Instead a certain type of attitude has been privileged in a biased sort of way. The support that has been offered to a particular new model of emerging architecture, more inclined to go beyond the limits of the discipline and to explore fields closer to other disciplines to do with art or participatory action, has overlooked other more traditional architectural practices and has not paid attention to magnificent architects who, despite their trajectory, have been deemed to be not very novel from an exclusively media point of view.The whirl of this desire for the new, along with the lack of other opportunities and the search for a redefinition of the role of the architect in society have led many studios to orientate their speculative practices towards the ephemeral, which, seen from a certain angle, has on occasions turned out to be somewhat unproductive. Instead of 'adding' new fields of action, people have tended at times to 'subtract' those they already had at their disposal. After years of speculative practices, young architects have renounced direct intervention and action on the constructing of the city and the evolving of traditionally more architectonic practices, as if building in itself were a retrograde practice.In this new instalment in the 2G Dossier series we wish to present a panorama (doubtless incomplete) of young Spanish architecture. To do so, it seemed appropriate to take a look at those studios that, without ceasing to think about the actual practice of architecture, have focused their attention on building things. Fleeing precisely from what had been exhibited in the past, we set forth a number of conditions the projects were to fulfil: all were to have been built, and we deliberately did not include alterations, installations or ephemeral constructions. To this we added a generational stricture: on the whole the architects of each office ought to have been born after 1970, and this not in order to discover what was most up-to-date but to ascertain what those other architects who didn’t monopolise the media were up to.The selection presented in this new 2G Dossier volume highlights, in short, those works capable of positioning themselves within the architectural discipline in a pragmatic, and at the same time personal, way, by grasping that architectural practice must never lose sight of the conditions of the status quo; ways of doing things that do not seek after the spectacular or novel form, but which are steps in the direction of constructing discourses that respond to an essential function of architecture: generating spaces for human wellbeing.
Publisher:
ISBN: 9788425223433
Category : Architects
Languages : en
Pages : 146
Book Description
In recent years there has been a constant stream of publications and exhibitions about new Spanish architecture. In them, the totality of current practice has not always been reflected. Instead a certain type of attitude has been privileged in a biased sort of way. The support that has been offered to a particular new model of emerging architecture, more inclined to go beyond the limits of the discipline and to explore fields closer to other disciplines to do with art or participatory action, has overlooked other more traditional architectural practices and has not paid attention to magnificent architects who, despite their trajectory, have been deemed to be not very novel from an exclusively media point of view.The whirl of this desire for the new, along with the lack of other opportunities and the search for a redefinition of the role of the architect in society have led many studios to orientate their speculative practices towards the ephemeral, which, seen from a certain angle, has on occasions turned out to be somewhat unproductive. Instead of 'adding' new fields of action, people have tended at times to 'subtract' those they already had at their disposal. After years of speculative practices, young architects have renounced direct intervention and action on the constructing of the city and the evolving of traditionally more architectonic practices, as if building in itself were a retrograde practice.In this new instalment in the 2G Dossier series we wish to present a panorama (doubtless incomplete) of young Spanish architecture. To do so, it seemed appropriate to take a look at those studios that, without ceasing to think about the actual practice of architecture, have focused their attention on building things. Fleeing precisely from what had been exhibited in the past, we set forth a number of conditions the projects were to fulfil: all were to have been built, and we deliberately did not include alterations, installations or ephemeral constructions. To this we added a generational stricture: on the whole the architects of each office ought to have been born after 1970, and this not in order to discover what was most up-to-date but to ascertain what those other architects who didn’t monopolise the media were up to.The selection presented in this new 2G Dossier volume highlights, in short, those works capable of positioning themselves within the architectural discipline in a pragmatic, and at the same time personal, way, by grasping that architectural practice must never lose sight of the conditions of the status quo; ways of doing things that do not seek after the spectacular or novel form, but which are steps in the direction of constructing discourses that respond to an essential function of architecture: generating spaces for human wellbeing.