English to Spanish Dictionary inaugurate

inaugurate

inaugurar
definition
verb
he inaugurated a new policy of trade and exploration
begin or introduce (a system, policy, or period).
translation of 'inaugurate'
verb
inaugurar
example
‘Although we may 'inaugurate' the project on June 22, we are still uncertain about the amount of money that will be disbursed by the central government this year,’ he said.
Flavius Julius Constantius was appointed as Maximian's junior to help 'inaugurate' the new system of government in the West.
Keynes' General Theory of 1936 did not 'inaugurate' a new age of economic policies; rather it marked the end of a period.
The Mayor, J. Chandra, herself was there to 'inaugurate' the camp.
In one promising sign, the government last week announced that it will 'inaugurate' a new trade policy in May that will lower tariffs for a wide range of products over the next five years.
She was in Kochi on Monday to 'inaugurate' an exhibition of diamonds.
That seemingly casual remark 'inaugurated' a six-week period during which I played the most consistently good golf I've ever played.
Following the presidential election results, on January 2002, he was 'inaugurated' President of the Republic of Zambia.
So by the time I was actually 'inaugurated' , I had a list of about 10 major items that I wanted to accomplish in foreign policy.
To be 'inaugurated' on Friday, the exhibition will remain open for a week.
Still, this was one exhibition that drew dozens of people even before it was formally 'inaugurated' .
I could not believe it when I was told that the president had not been 'inaugurated' into office.
They did not tell Ambonwari people what they were doing at Arkwas but asked the ritual 'inaugurator' from the clan to go with them to perform the opening ritual, a kind of traditional ‘blessing’ ceremony.
He was formally 'inaugurated' on June 23 in Beijing, replacing the former chief executive Tung-Chee Hwa, who resigned in March.
The monastery was formally 'inaugurated' by His Holiness on March 31, 1985.
Peter the Great's notorious visit to London in 1698 'inaugurated' the new century in a diplomatic, economic and cultural manner.
He was 'inaugurated' as vice president on 4 March 1901.
The end of the cold war 'inaugurated' a new period, where non-Westerners were no longer the helpless recipients of Western power, but now counted amongst the movers of history.
They 'inaugurated' the festival in 1993 and continued to hold it every two years.
The Military Governor tried to prevent the Front's 'inauguratory' meeting, which was due to take place in Acre, by imposing movement restrictions on 37 of the leading public figures.
The classic period of the first cold war runs from 1947 through the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962, which finally 'inaugurated' an era of detente.
An actor 'inaugurated' the event by releasing a poster to mark the occasion.
The firm also recently 'inaugurated' a technology and development center at its plant in Anaheim, CA.
He was 'inaugurated' on April 27, 1999 for a 5-year term.
In the case of Christ as Lamb, it allows John to interpret Jesus' death as a means of redemption and liberation from the forces of evil while also acclaiming the resurrected Christ as cosmic ruler and 'inaugurator' of a new age.
I suspect I've already 'inaugurated' this new era with my previous post.
The Russian president was officially 'inaugurated' into office on Sunday.
The African American Civil Rights movement inspired and 'inaugurated' a new era of ethnic pride and political consciousness.
On 6 September 1991, less than six months after the meeting in the men's house and only three months after he acted as ritual 'inaugurator' at the opening of the Kabriman men's house, Murimari suddenly died.
Chosen as president by the Confederate provisional government established at Montgomery, Alabama, Davis was 'inaugurated' in February 1861.
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