qualifier$66020$ - traducción al español
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qualifier$66020$ - traducción al español

ONE-DAY INTERNATIONAL (ODI) CRICKET TOURNAMENT
Cricket World Cup Qualifier; ICC Trophy; ICC World Cup qualifier; Cricket World Cup qualifier; ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier

qualifier      
n. calificador; habilitador
pole position         
FIRST POSITION ON A MOTOR-RACING STARTING GRID
Pole positions; Pole-position; Superpole; Polesitter; Top Qualifier; FIA Pole Trophy; Pole winner; Pole-sitter
(n.) = primera posición, primera posición de salida
Ex: The article "Europe in the pole position of global patent information" reports on a new initiative to put Europe ahead in global patent information provision.
carcinoma         
CELL TYPE CANCER THAT HAS MATERIAL BASIS IN ABNORMALLY PROLIFERATING CELLS DERIVES FROM EPITHELIAL CELLS
Heptocellular carcinoma; Carcinomas; Carcinomatous; Carcinom; Intraepidermal carcinoma; Carcinoma of penis
carcinoma

Definición

pole position
¦ noun the most favourable position at the start of a motor race.
Origin
1950s: from a 19th-cent. use of pole in horse racing, denoting the starting position next to the inside boundary fence.

Wikipedia

ICC World Cup Qualifier

The ICC World Cup Qualifier (previously called the ICC Trophy and officially known as the ICC Men's Cricket World Cup Qualifier) is a One-Day International (ODI) cricket tournament that serves as the culmination of the qualification process for the Cricket World Cup. It is usually played in the year before the World Cup. Although the tournament has used a variety of different formats, a final qualification event has been a feature of every World Cup since 1979.

From 1979 to 2001, all associate members of the International Cricket Council (ICC) were eligible to participate in the ICC Trophy. Regional qualification was introduced for the 2005 ICC Trophy – the final tournament to bear that name – with the World Cricket League (WCL) introduced in 2007. Until 2015, automatic qualification was granted to all full members of the ICC. However, for the 2019 Cricket World Cup, only the top eight teams in the ICC ODI Championship were given automatic qualification, meaning ICC full members played in the Qualifier for the first time. The WCL was discontinued in 2019, with qualification for the World Cup Qualifier instead determined by a series of leagues including the Super League, League 2 and Challenge League.

The number of qualifying berths available from the World Cup Qualifier currently stands at two for the 2023 event, but has varied from a minimum of one (1982, 1986, 1990) to a maximum of five (2005). Zimbabwe is the most successful team, having won three consecutive titles between 1982 and 1990, while Scotland is the only team to have one multiple titles. Historically performance at the World Cup Qualifier has been a key determinant for elevation to full membership of the ICC and Test status, with Sri Lanka (1981), Zimbabwe (1992) and Bangladesh (2000) being awarded full membership after ICC Trophy wins.

In September 2018, the ICC confirmed that all matches in the ICC World Cup Qualifier will have ODI status, regardless if a team does not have ODI status prior to the start of an individual tournament event.