English to Portuguese Dictionary wristwatch

wristwatch

relógio de pulso
definition
noun
The physician uses a stopwatch or a wristwatch with a second hand to time this activity.
a watch worn on a strap around the wrist.
translation of 'wristwatch'
noun
relógio de pulso
example
Casio wants to go one better by putting an MP3 player and a digital camera in a 'wristwatch' .
When it came time for the sermon, he watched the minister take off his 'wristwatch' and place it on the pulpit.
Remember, your digital 'wristwatch' probably has more computing power than those of the space explorers combined!
If you are unable to see the clocks due to poor vision, use a digital 'wristwatch' or a smaller pace clock that can be placed at the end of your lane.
The physician uses a stopwatch or a 'wristwatch' with a second hand to time this activity.
Missy glanced at her 'wristwatch' with diamonds outlining the round, white gold face and the snakeskin band.
She touched a button on her 'wristwatch' starting a countdown timer.
He was using a 'wristwatch' with a digital camera function.
For one thing, there are 'wristwatches' , cell phones, digital diaries and calculators that most people carry with them, that have to be protected from rainwater.
For example, an organized group counterfeiting high-end 'wristwatches' often has the knockoff faces manufactured in one country, the bands in another and the moving parts in a third.
I started collecting vintage watches ever since my grandfather gave me one of his Hamilton vintage 'wristwatches' for my 18th birthday.
Since humans are quite good at telling time, the numbers are often missing from commercial wristwatches, and some 'wristwatches' do not even have markings for each hour.
Driving the route at a steady speed and recording the time on a digital stopwatch (as most digital 'wristwatches' have) leaves a simple calculation to get the speed.
They corrected deviations of internal clocks by comparison with radio controlled 'wristwatches' .
Until electronics went high-tech, recreational divers had to calculate their dive and decompression times with 'wristwatches' and universal charts usually designed for military divers.
Paul tells me all times recorded for the brewing process are taken from the clock, not our 'wristwatches' .
Their quartz clock was a very large device as compared with today's quartz 'wristwatches' which also use microchip and liquid crystal display technology.
Timepieces tracked included staff 'wristwatches' and beepers, wall clocks, bedside and central patient monitors, workstation computers, and clocks on videocassette recorders.
In our personal lives, timings are crucial also: our lives are run by 'wristwatches' , alarm clocks, the beep-beep-beep of reminders on mobile phones.
Physicians favored 'wristwatches' over wall clocks for routine situations, but reversed their preference for emergencies.
Credits: Google Translate
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