tête-bêche - Übersetzung nach Englisch
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tête-bêche - Übersetzung nach Englisch

Tete-beche; Tete beche; Tête bêche; Tête beche

tête-bêche         
= compaginación invertida

Def: En imprenta, edición generalmente de un texto bilingüe en el que cada versión empieza por un extremo diferente del libro y ambas terminan en el medio por lo que el lector debe girar el libro para pasar de una versión a otra.
Ex: A tête-bêche or inverted pages publication is normally used to present in one volume two bilingual editions of a work in such a way that each starts at a different end of the book and both end in the middle so that the reader has to turn it over to change from one version to the other.
tete         
PÁGINA DE DESAMBIGUACIÓN DE WIKIMEDIA
Tete (desambiguación); Teté; Tete (desambiguacion)
n. mess, disorder, trouble
tête-à-tête         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Tete a tete; Tete-a-tete; Tête-à-tête; Tete a Tete; Tête à tête; Tête à Tête (disambiguation); Tête à Tête; Tet-a-tet; Tête-à-Tête (disambiguation); Tête-à-Tête (album); Tête à Tête (album); Tête-à-tête (album); Tête à tête (album); Tete-a-Tete
(n.) = tête-a-tête, conversación íntima entre dos personas
Ex: Each activity is grouped under one of three subheadings: tête-à-tête conversations, small group interactions, whole class activities.

Definition

tete
tete
1 ("El") m. En lenguaje infantil, hermano mayor.
2 (Cuba) *Tetina.

Wikipedia

Tête-bêche

In philately, tête-bêche (French for "head-to-tail", lit. "head-to-head") is a joined pair of stamps in which one is upside-down in relation to the other, produced intentionally or accidentally. Like any pair of stamps, a pair of tête-bêches can be a vertical or a horizontal pair. In the case of a pair of triangular stamps, they cannot help but be linked "head-to-tail".

Mechanical errors during the process of production can result in tête-bêches. During the printing of stamps for booklets, the pages of stamps are usually printed in multiples from a larger printing plate. This can result in tête-bêche pairs. Most booklet stamps are printed in sheets, each containing 4 booklets. Looking at such a sheet 2 booklets, one above the other, come in from the left with the other 2 sheets coming from the right which appear to be upside down. Where the columns of stamps from each side meet there is therefore a row of tete-beche pars. It is unusual for these pairs to find their way into the postal system, as the sheets are cut into individual booklet pages before binding into the distributed booklet. A block of 24 5d Machin stamps, which should have been guillotined into four booklet pages, includes four tête-bêche pairs. This was sold in 1970, in the normal course of business, by the British Post Office and is exhibited by a member of the Royal Mail Stamp Advisory Committee.