English to Spanish Dictionary capitalize

capitalize

capitalizar
definition
verb
an attempt by the opposition to capitalize on the government's embarrassment
take the chance to gain advantage from.
a highly capitalized industry
provide (a company or industry) with capital.
translation of 'capitalize'
verb
escribir con mayúscula,
capitalizar,
aprovecharse de
example
Members of cooperatives at all levels - local and regional - need to remind themselves that it is their responsibility to properly 'capitalize' their cooperative businesses.
a trader will want to 'capitalize' repairs expenditure
While any newspaper could set a style to 'capitalize' the word ‘black,’ McIntyre said he doesn't know how much influence it would have outside the newspaper itself.
The present study examined the role of the convention in German to 'capitalize' the initial letters of nouns.
In this chapter I have chosen to 'capitalize' words designating a race or a people.
I 'capitalize' the word because Miller, in speaking of Jane Austen, does so, calling her the epitome of Style or Austen Style or Absolute Style.
The convention to 'capitalize' the first letter of a meaning-laden noun may therefore be particularly useful in aiding structural analysis, allowing easy assignment of some words to their proper grammatical class.
an attempt by the opposition to 'capitalize' on the government's embarrassment
Members have to invest a set percentage of their annual sales to 'capitalize' this business.
And for GOD'S sakes, Hilary, 'capitalize' every first letter of every proper noun, like the name of your title ‘Venus’.
One adjustment is to 'capitalize' R&D expenditures and amortize them over five years instead of expensing these investments in the year they are made.
Another disadvantage is that, of course, you have to adequately 'capitalize' the business yourself.
If you need to sell off a piece of land in order to better 'capitalize' the business, indicate this in the plan.
We should 'capitalize' the word, as this is how we are taught to refer to God.
His tone spoke of his importance, he seemed to 'capitalize' every significant word.
He also loves to 'capitalize' words or put them in quotes for no real reason, as in this sentence from his legal disclaimer.
a trader will want to 'capitalize' repairs expenditure
I also learned how to correctly identify the beginning of a sentence, target the first word, and 'capitalize' the first letter (make the letter bigger than the rest).
Assuming that the missing-letter effect is diagnostic of the extraction of text structure, we exploited a special feature of German - the convention to 'capitalize' the initial letter of nouns.
I don't 'capitalize' the words because middle westerners don't call that much attention to themselves.
There are those who decide to eschew this, though, and 'capitalize' every other letter.
As I noted briefly, it generally is an accepted accounting practice to 'capitalize' assets.
It's likely that some of this ill-gotten gain has been used to 'capitalize' businesses or endow universities.
people should have the right to 'capitalize' part of the value of these benefits
To 'capitalize' the income stream without considering the repayment of corporate debt, but then to assume that repayment when doing a residual value of the company, artificially increased the value of the income stream.
There is a certain market in English that refuses to 'capitalize' words or use punctuation.
If Microsoft Word's spelling checker's autocorrection feature is switched on, it 'capitalises' the word for you.
You would prefer it if I 'capitalized' the first letter after the colon?
Recall that control words were always 'capitalized' correctly regardless of whether they were embedded in normal or in distorted text passages.
Instead of 'capitalizing' the first letter, type it in lowercase, as most people type in all lowercase letters when searching.
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