Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. WordReference English-Spanish Dictionary © 2022: Principal Translations. Inglés. Español. disambiguationnnoun: Refers to person, place, thing, quality, etc. (making [sth] clear) desambiguación nfnombre femenino: Sustantivo de género exclusivamente femenino, que lleva los artículos la o una en singular, y las o unas en plural. Exemplos: la ...

    • Disappearance

      disappearance - Translation to Spanish, pronunciation, and...

    • Disagreement

      Compound Forms: Inglés: Español: in disagreement adj (not...

    • Disappoint

      disappoint - Translation to Spanish, pronunciation, and...

    • Disaffiliation

      disaffiliation - Translation to Spanish, pronunciation, and...

    • Disagreeably

      disagreeably - Translation to Spanish, pronunciation, and...

    • Disambiguate

      disambiguate - Translation to Spanish, pronunciation, and...

    • Disaggregate

      disaggregate - Translation to Spanish, pronunciation, and...

    • Disagreeableness

      disagreeableness - Translation to Spanish, pronunciation,...

    • Disappointingly

      disappointingly - Translation to Spanish, pronunciation, and...

    • Disallow

      disallow - Translation to Spanish, pronunciation, and forum...

  2. Disambiguation is an operation that tries to resolve word sense ambiguity cases, particularly the ones ascribed to homographs, that is words with the same graphic form but different meanings.

  3. People also ask

  4. UK /ˌdɪsamˈbɪɡjʊeɪt/ verb (with object) remove uncertainty of meaning from (an ambiguous sentence, phrase, or other linguistic unit) word senses can be disambiguated by examining the context Examples Nonetheless, when text is read, the absence of a vowel is a cue to retrieve the semantic context so as to disambiguate opaque words that ...

    • Determining A Primary Topic
    • Redirecting to A Primary Topic
    • No Primary Topic
    • Primary Topic with only One Other Topic
    • Primary Topic with Two Or More Other Topics
    • Different Spelling Variants
    • Format
    • Usage Guidelines
    • Combining Terms on Disambiguation Pages
    • Naming The Disambiguation Page

    There are no absolute rules for determining whether a primary topic exists and what it is; decisions are made by discussion among editors, often as a result of a requested move. Tools that mayhelp to support the determination of a primary topic in a discussion (but are not considered absolute determining factors, due to unreliability, potential bia...

    The title of the primary topic article may be different from the ambiguous term. This may happen when the topic is primary for more than one term, when the article covers a wider topical scope, or when it is titled differently according to the naming conventions. When this is the case, the term should redirectto the article (or a section of it). Th...

    If there are multiple topics (even just two) to which a given title might refer, but there is no primary topic (per the criteria at § Is there a primary topic?), then the base name should lead the reader to the disambiguation page for the term. For example, John Questedis a disambiguation page for the two people by that name who can be found in the...

    If there is a primary topiclocated at the base name, then the question arises whether to create a disambiguation page, or merely to link to all the other meanings from a hatnote on the primary topic article. If there are only two topics to which a given title might refer, and one is the primary topic, then a disambiguation page is not needed—it is ...

    If there are two or three other topics, it is still possible to use a hatnote which lists the other topics explicitly, but if this would require too much text (roughly, if the hatnote would extend well over one line on a standard page), then it is better to create a disambiguation page and refer only to that.

    If the titles of two articles differ only in capitalization, pluralization, spacing, or punctuation (as per WP:DIFFCAPS or WP:PLURALPT), the articles each should contain a hatnote to link to each other: for example, Ice cube and Ice Cube. For disambiguating specific topic pages by using an unambiguous article title, several options are available: 1...

    To conform to the naming conventions, the phrase in parentheses should be treated just as any other word in a title: normally lowercase, unless it is a proper noun (like a book title) that would appear capitalized even in running text. For common disambiguation words, see User:Jarry1250/Findings. Users searching for what turns out to be an ambiguou...

    It is usually preferable not to add disambiguation hatnotes to a page whose name already clearly distinguishes itself from the generic term. However, for some topics this is a good idea. For exampl...
    As noted above, disambiguation hatnotes should be placed at the top of an article, where they are most visible. For alternatives that are related to the article but are not a source of ambiguity, t...
    Do not use piping to change the title of disambiguation entry links. Showing the actual linked entry title avoids confusion. (Piping may be used for formatting or technical reasons; see the Manual...
    Consolidate multiple disambiguation links into as few disambiguation hatnotes as possible.

    A single disambiguation page may be used to disambiguate a number of similar terms. Sets of terms which are commonly so combined include: 1. Terms that differ only in capitalization, punctuation and diacritic marks. These should almost always share a disambiguation page. For example, the terms Oe, Ōe, OE and O.E. are disambiguated on a single page ...

    The title of a disambiguation page is the ambiguous term itself, provided there is no primary topic for that term. If there is a primary topic, then the tag "(disambiguation)" is added to the name of the disambiguation page, as in Jupiter (disambiguation). When a disambiguation page combines several similar terms, one of them must be selected as th...

  5. disambiguation translation in English - Spanish Reverso dictionary, see also 'disambiguate, dissimulation, diminution, distribution', examples, definition, conjugation.

  6. Translate Disambigution. See Spanish-English translations with audio pronunciations, examples, and word-by-word explanations.

  7. Free English to Spanish to English Dictionary from SpanishDictionary.com. Accurate. Easy. Fast. Includes over 1 million translations.

  1. People also search for