English to Spanish Dictionary penetrate

penetrate

penetrar
definition
verb
the shrapnel had penetrated his head and chest
succeed in forcing a way into or through (a thing).
translation of 'penetrate'
verb
descubrir,
penetrar,
extenderse por,
penetrar en,
clavarse,
calar
example
You can no longer expect to 'penetrate' these high-rise markets exclusively from an exporting factory in the UK, for example.
Obviously, these are very difficult groups to 'penetrate' .
He said there was need to certify the forests in Zambia if the forest products were to 'penetrate' the European market.
I will do my best to 'penetrate' the Senegalese market with this new product.
In the final analysis, the one place not even the most modern and sophisticated intelligence systems can 'penetrate' is the human mind.
But it's beginning to 'penetrate' the housing market; I have solar panels on my roof now for example.
Everything seems fine, until sales suddenly hit a ceiling that the company cannot 'penetrate' .
It occurred to me then that he was almost completely sober, and his eyes seemed to almost 'penetrate' me.
There was no way any force could 'penetrate' the base, none whatsoever.
She's pretty, he thinks unexpectedly, but the thought is lost as her words 'penetrate' .
Each part tends to operate independently, making the organization difficult to 'penetrate' .
Comprehension and parallel understanding can and do 'penetrate' from one means of communication to another.
Only when his teenage children and his siblings used precisely the same words to describe him did the message 'penetrate' .
When they try to 'penetrate' a new market or introduce a new product, they often take members of the media on expensive trips so that they can get their stories into the papers and onto the airwaves.
Firewall is a software which blocks suspicious potentially dangerous connections to preventing viruses from network to 'penetrate' into your system.
Some of his friends made a strenuous effort to 'penetrate' the barrier he was erecting and found that underneath was still the friendly, deep thinking, brilliant mathematician.
The idea was to use armoured force to 'penetrate' deep into the enemy rear in order to destroy its command and control systems.
If deployed along a certain small strip, Soviet armored forces could 'penetrate' the West and unleash apocalypse.
This said, these are poems that more than adequately repay the effort given to 'penetrate' their meaning.
I assume most mothers there use cloth nappies, but perhaps disposables are beginning to 'penetrate' that market.
Arthur's eyes fixed onto the paper, finding an understanding there while Gawaine's words would not 'penetrate' .
tunnels that 'penetrate' deep into the earth's core
If there wasn't such reporting, do we need to do more to beef up our intelligence so that we can 'penetrate' whatever organization was responsible for this outrage.
So true was he to his own little light that many dismissed him as a crank and made little effort to 'penetrate' his prose or make sense of his ideas.
Unfortunately, he did not have full access, nor ability, to 'penetrate' the more remote regions of the country.
The security goal is to stop them before they 'penetrate' the security zone with the intent to blow up the city's waterfront.
She paused as the words made a valiant effort to 'penetrate' her mind.
Those of us who have tried to 'penetrate' the often baffling complexities of modern music have often had cause to be grateful to him for unravelling its mysteries.
However, that scenario is slowly changing as artistic works are now beginning to 'penetrate' the international market.
They have an ability to 'penetrate' some of these organizations much better, more easily than we do.
Credits: Google Translate
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