English to Spanish Dictionary dubious

dubious

dudoso
definition
adjective
Alex looked dubious, but complied
hesitating or doubting.
extremely dubious assumptions
not to be relied upon; suspect.
translation of 'dubious'
adjective
sospechoso,
dudoso
example
However, thanks to 'dubious' sales techniques, it is widely mis-sold.
But here, as elsewhere, Smith's philosophical assumptions are highly 'dubious' .
It shows him as morally 'dubious' - he wants the men to die so he can finish his book, but he pretends otherwise - and intellectually cold.
I'm not objecting to the Food Museum, of course, but I am somewhat 'dubious' about the prospect of a hundred thousand visitors per year.
However, those often rely on 'dubious' assumptions.
For some of these reports, Miller appears to have relied on highly 'dubious' sources.
Is it perhaps yet another organisation designed to make money by providing endorsements of 'dubious' value?
Instead, a 'dubious' logic pervades, upon which we base entire networks of conclusions and imperatives.
They are engaged in tax avoidance, which is entirely legal, though you might argue it's morally 'dubious' .
I shrugged, probably 'dubious' about the opportunity myself.
Matters come to a head when the star is expelled from the team, leading to a climax at once disturbingly intense and morally 'dubious' .
As I elucidated in the last section, misleading assumptions and 'dubious' claims about western alienation abound.
Ray is not a good father, as evidenced by his empty fridge and 'dubious' methods of interacting with his kids.
It's all in a good cause, people used to say, but Elizabeth felt that almost any action she took at this point would be of 'dubious' value.
Red-hot rage may seem in order when the country's values have been trampled upon by a government with a 'dubious' claim to legitimacy.
One direct result of this vicious circle was that many parents remained 'dubious' about the quality of non-government education.
Such claims, he contends, rely on slippery language and 'dubious' assumptions.
He may have been 'dubious' about some of the more outlandish changes that had occurred in journalism but it was always in a good-humoured way.
I listed at the beginning the most usual procedures used to provide assistance in conception, but deferred discussion of the two methods that are most morally 'dubious' .
Reading the script beforehand, I had been 'dubious' about anyone performing it as a one-person show.
Philosophy aims only at the truth, not at mere persuasion regardless of truth, which is a 'dubious' enterprise in both its intentions and its methods.
However, councillors were 'dubious' about visiting the site.
And it is that part that, I think, we are a little 'dubious' about.
‘People who might be 'dubious' about standing somewhere waiting for a bus may be more encouraged to do so if they know exactly when the bus is due,’ he said.
An important part of the answer, I think, lies in exposing a number of 'dubious' assumptions about human psychology.
His democratic credentials are highly 'dubious' and suspect.
The knee-jerk reaction is to dismiss such training as faddish and of 'dubious' value.
Aurillac, a lovely city at the foot of the Cantal mountains, has the 'dubious' distinction of being the prefecture in France furthest from a motorway.
‘I am very 'dubious' about this sort of thing,’ added Dr Fitzpatrick.
You are asking us to be careful about adopting assumptions which are founded on rather 'dubious' ground and would subvert our intentions, good as they may be.
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