-
101 get into a state
(to become very upset or anxious.) se mettre dans tous ses états -
102 get steamed up
(to get very upset or angry.) se mettre dans tous ses états -
103 get into a state
(to become very upset or anxious.) ficar enervado -
104 get steamed up
(to get very upset or angry.) ficar nervoso -
105 emotional
1) (of the emotions: Emotional problems are affecting her work.) emocional2) ((negative unemotional) causing or showing emotion: an emotional farewell.) emotivo3) ((negative unemotional) (of a person) easily affected by joy, anger, grief etc: She is a very emotional person; She is very emotional.) emotivo, sentimentalemotional adj emotivo / emocionaltr[ɪ'məʊʃənəl]1 (connected with feelings) emocional, afectivo,-a2 (moving) conmovedor,-ra, emotivo,-a3 (sensitive) emotivo,-a, sentimental, muy sensible4 (upset) emocionado,-a, exaltado,-a\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto get emotional emocionarse, exaltarseemotional [i'mo:ʃənəl] adj1) : emocional, afectivoan emotional reaction: una reacción emocional2) moving: emocionante, emotivo, conmovedoradj.• de mucha emoción adj.• emocional adj.• impresionable adj.ɪ'məʊʃṇəl, ɪ'məʊʃənḷa) < disorder> emocional, afectivoemotional blackmail — chantaje m afectivo
b) ( sensitive) <person/nature> emotivoc) ( upset) emocionadod) ( moving) <speech/experience/scene> emotivo, conmovedor[ɪ'mǝʊʃǝnl]1. ADJ1) (=concerning the emotions) [well-being, problem, tension, development] emocional; [abuse, need, relationship] afectivo; [support, disorder] emocional, afectivo2) (=emotive, moving) [scene, farewell, welcome, subject] emotivo; [experience, situation, appeal, speech] emotivo, conmovedor3) (=excitable) [outburst] impulsivo; [response] emotivoto become or get emotional — reaccionar de una forma emocional
there's no need to get all emotional! — ¡no te pongas así!
4) (=sentimental) [person, behaviour] sentimental, emotivo; [decision] impulsivoI got very emotional when the time came to say goodbye — a la hora de despedirnos me puse muy sentimental
to become or get emotional — emocionarse
he became or got very emotional at the farewell party — se emocionó mucho en la fiesta de despedida
2.CPDemotional baggage N — (fig) bagaje m emocional
emotional blackmail N — chantaje m emocional
* * *[ɪ'məʊʃṇəl, ɪ'məʊʃənḷ]a) < disorder> emocional, afectivoemotional blackmail — chantaje m afectivo
b) ( sensitive) <person/nature> emotivoc) ( upset) emocionadod) ( moving) <speech/experience/scene> emotivo, conmovedor -
106 put out
1) (to extend (a hand etc): He put out his hand to steady her.) tender (la mano a alguien)2) ((of plants etc) to produce (shoots, leaves etc).) echar3) (to extinguish (a fire, light etc): The fire brigade soon put out the fire.) apagar4) (to issue, give out: They put out a distress call.) emitir, lanzar5) (to cause bother or trouble to: Don't put yourself out for my sake!) molestarse (por)6) (to annoy: I was put out by his decision.) molestarseput out vb apagarput out vtinconvenience: importunar, incomodarv.• sofocar v.
1.
1) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( put outside) \<\<washing/cat\>\> sacar*b) ( set out) disponer*, colocar*c) ( extend) \<\<arm/tongue\>\> sacar*she put out her hand — tendió or alargó la mano
d) ( dislocate) dislocarse*, zafarse (Chi, Méx)2)a) ( extinguish) \<\<fire/light/cigarette\>\> apagar*b) ( anesthetize) (colloq) dormir*, anestesiarc) ( distort)the new prices have put all our estimates out — los nuevos precios significan que nuestros cálculos son ahora erróneos
d) ( in baseball) \<\<hitter/runner\>\> sacar*, poner* `out'3)a) (offend, upset) molestar, ofendershe was most put out — se molestó or se ofendió mucho
b) ( inconvenience) molestar4)a) (issue, publish) \<\<photograph/statement\>\> publicar*b) ( broadcast) transmitir5) ( pass on)the contract is being put out to tender — van a llamar a concurso or a licitación para el contrato
6) ( sprout) \<\<shoots/buds\>\> echar7) v + o + adv, v + adv + o ( expel) \<\<troublemaker\>\> echar8) v + adv ( Naut) salir*, zarparto put out to sea — hacerse* a la mar
2. adjective (pred)to be put out — estar* molesto
1. VT + ADV1) (=place outside) [+ rubbish] sacar; [+ cat] sacar fuera, dejar afuerapasture 1.he put the cat out for the night — sacó al gato a que pasara la noche fuera, dejó al gato fuera para que pasara la noche
2) (=eject) [+ squatter, tenant, troublemaker] echar, expulsar3) (=stretch out, push out) [+ hand] alargar, tender; [+ arm] alargar, extender; [+ tongue, claws, horns] sacar; [+ leaves, shoots] echarfeelerhe put out his arm to protect himself — se protegió con el brazo, puso el brazo para protegerse
4) (=lay out in order) [+ cards, chessmen, chairs] disponer, colocar; [+ clothes, best china] sacar, poner5) (=publish) [+ book] publicar, sacar; [+ record] sacar; [+ appeal, statement, propaganda] hacer; [+ warning] dar; (=broadcast) [+ programme] transmitir; (=circulate) [+ rumour] hacer circular, hacer correrthey have put out a press release denying the allegations — han desmentido las alegaciones en un comunicado de prensa, han emitido un comunicado de prensa negando las alegaciones
6) (=extinguish) [+ light, cigarette, fire] apagar7) (=annoy, upset) enfadar, enojar (LAm)8) (=disconcert) desconcertarhe didn't seem at all put out by the news — no parecía estar en absoluto desconcertado por las noticias
9) (=inconvenience) molestar•
to put o.s. out, she really put herself out for us — se tomó muchas molestias por nosotrosdon't put yourself out, will you! — iro ¡tú, sobre todo, no hagas nada!
•
I don't want to put you out — no quiero molestarleare you sure I'm not putting you out? — ¿está seguro de que no le causo ningún inconveniente?
10) (=render incorrect) [+ calculations] desbaratar, echar por tierra11) (Sport) (=eliminate) [+ team, contestant] eliminar (of de)a knee injury put him out of the first two games — una lesión de rodilla lo eliminó de los primeros dos partidos
12) (=dislocate) [+ shoulder, knee] dislocar•
I put my back out lifting that box — me he hecho polvo la espalda levantando esa caja13) (=give anaesthetic to) anestesiar, dormir14) (=lend) [+ money] prestar15) (=subcontract)•
to put sth out to tender — sacar algo a concurso or a licitación16) (Naut) [+ boat] echar al mar2. VI + ADV1) (Naut) salir, zarpar ( from de)2) (US) ** (=agree to sex) acceder, consentir* * *
1.
1) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( put outside) \<\<washing/cat\>\> sacar*b) ( set out) disponer*, colocar*c) ( extend) \<\<arm/tongue\>\> sacar*she put out her hand — tendió or alargó la mano
d) ( dislocate) dislocarse*, zafarse (Chi, Méx)2)a) ( extinguish) \<\<fire/light/cigarette\>\> apagar*b) ( anesthetize) (colloq) dormir*, anestesiarc) ( distort)the new prices have put all our estimates out — los nuevos precios significan que nuestros cálculos son ahora erróneos
d) ( in baseball) \<\<hitter/runner\>\> sacar*, poner* `out'3)a) (offend, upset) molestar, ofendershe was most put out — se molestó or se ofendió mucho
b) ( inconvenience) molestar4)a) (issue, publish) \<\<photograph/statement\>\> publicar*b) ( broadcast) transmitir5) ( pass on)the contract is being put out to tender — van a llamar a concurso or a licitación para el contrato
6) ( sprout) \<\<shoots/buds\>\> echar7) v + o + adv, v + adv + o ( expel) \<\<troublemaker\>\> echar8) v + adv ( Naut) salir*, zarparto put out to sea — hacerse* a la mar
2. adjective (pred)to be put out — estar* molesto
-
107 highly-strung
-
108 jittery
['‹itəri](very nervous and easily upset: She has become very jittery since her accident.) nervøs; anspændt* * *['‹itəri](very nervous and easily upset: She has become very jittery since her accident.) nervøs; anspændt -
109 dreadfully
adverb (extremely: dreadfully ill; dreadfully clever.) terriblementedreadfully adv1. muy mal / fatal2. muytr['dredfʊlɪ]adv.• horrorosamente adv.'dredfəliadverb <upset/late> terriblemente, enormemente; <write/sing> espantosamente (mal)I'm dreadfully sorry — lo siento muchísimo or en el alma
['dredfǝlɪ]ADV1) (=very) [boring] mortalmente; [late, difficult] increíblemente, muy2) (=very much) [suffer] muchísimo, lo indecible; [hurt] a rabiar3) (=badly) [behave, treat, sing] muy mal, espantosamente, fatal (Sp) ** * *['dredfəli]adverb <upset/late> terriblemente, enormemente; <write/sing> espantosamente (mal)I'm dreadfully sorry — lo siento muchísimo or en el alma
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110 sentido
Del verbo sentir: ( conjugate sentir) \ \
sentido es: \ \el participioMultiple Entries: sentido sentir
sentido 1
◊ -da adjetivo1 ‹palabras/carta› heartfelt; ‹anhelo/dolor› deep; 2 [ESTAR] (AmL) ( ofendido) hurt, offended
sentido 2 sustantivo masculino 1a) (Fisiol) senseb) (noción, idea) sentido DE algo sense of sth;sentido común common sense; sentido del humor sense of humor( conjugate humor) 2 ( conocimiento) consciousness; el golpe lo dejó sin sentido he was knocked unconscious by the blow 3 ( significado) sense; en sentido literal in a literal sense; lo dijo con doble sentido he was intentionally ambiguous; el sentido de la vida the meaning of life; en cierto sentido … in a sense …; no le encuentro sentido a lo que haces I can't see any sense o point in what you're doing; esa política ya no tiene sentido that policy doesn't make sense anymore o is meaningless now; palabras sin sentido meaningless words 4 ( dirección) direction;◊ gírese en sentido contrario al de las agujas del reloj turn (round) in a counterclockwise (AmE) o (BrE) an anticlockwise direction;venían en sentido contrario al nuestro they were coming in the opposite direction to us; calle de sentido único or (Méx) de un solo sentido one-way street
sentir ( conjugate sentir) verbo transitivo 1◊ sentido hambre/frío/sed to feel hungry/cold/thirstysentido celos to feel jealous 2b) (esp AmL) ( percibir):le siento gusto a vainilla I can taste vanilla 3 ( lamentar): sentí mucho no poder ayudarla I was very sorry not to be able to help her; ha sentido mucho la pérdida de su madre she has been very affected by her mother's death sentirse verbo pronominal 1 (+ compl) to feel; no me siento con ánimos I don't feel up to it 2 (Chi, Méx) ( ofenderse) to be offended o hurt; sentidose CON algn to be offended o upset with sb
sentido,-a
I adjetivo
1 deeply felt: su muerte ha sido muy sentida, his death has been deeply felt
2 (susceptible) sensitive
es un chico muy sentido y a la mínima se ofende, he gets upset over the slightest things o he's a very sensitive child
II sustantivo masculino
1 sense
sentido del gusto/olfato, sense of taste/smell
2 (conocimiento, consciencia) recobrar/ perder el sentido, to regain/lose consciousness
3 (lógica, razón) sense: no tiene sentido que te despidas, it makes no sense to leave the job
4 (apreciación, capacidad) no tiene sentido de la medida, he has no sense of moderation
sentido común, common sense
sentido del humor, sense of humour
sexto sentido, sixth sense
5 (significado) meaning: la frase carece de sentido, the sentence has no meaning
6 Auto direction
de doble sentido, two-way
(de) sentido único, one-way
sentir
I sustantivo masculino
1 (juicio, opinion) opinion, view
2 (sentimiento) feeling
II verbo transitivo
1 to feel
sentir alegría/frío, to feel happy/cold
te lo digo como lo siento, I speak my mind ➣ Ver nota en feel
2 (oír, percibir) to hear: la sentí llegar de madrugada, I heard her come home in the small hours
3 (lamentar) to regret, be sorry about: siento haberte enfadado, I'm sorry I made you angry ' sentido' also found in these entries: Spanish: ácida - ácido - acusada - acusado - apelar - cabeza - cazar - coger - contraria - contrario - despertarse - dirección - dotada - dotado - economía - educar - encarar - esperar - figurada - figurado - fina - fino - hogareña - hogareño - inversa - inverso - juicio - nariz - olfato - paladar - penetrar - perder - pésame - rara - raro - realista - recobrar - recta - recto - recuperar - sentida - tacto - tener - trancazo - visión - vista - agudeza - agudizar - agudo - alto English: add up - advantage - anticlockwise - appeal - arguable - babble - break - civic - clockwise - common sense - counterclockwise - derogatory - direction - ear - feel - few - figurative - figuratively - flail - gumption - hearing - high - humour - iota - literally - little - make - meaning - meaningless - mindless - modicum - obscure - one-way - pointless - practicality - quite - reason - respect - scent - sense - senseless - sight - smell - strictly - taste - three-point turn - touch - two-way - U-turn - unconscious -
111 sensitive
adjective1) (responsive) empfindlich (to gegen)2) (easily upset) empfindlich; sensibelbe sensitive to something — empfindlich auf etwas (Akk.) reagieren
3) heikel [Thema, Diskussion]4) (perceptive) einfühlsam* * *['sensitiv]1) ((usually with to) strongly or easily affected (by something): sensitive skin; sensitive to light.) empfindlich2) ((usually with about or to) easily hurt or offended: She is very sensitive to criticism.) sensibel3) (having or showing artistic good taste: a sensitive writer; a sensitive performance.) feinfühlig•- academic.ru/91401/sensitively">sensitively- sensitiveness
- sensitivity* * *sen·si·tive[ˈsen(t)sɪtɪv, AM -sət̬-]1. (kind) verständnisvollthe plan will be \sensitive to special needs der Plan wird besondere Bedürfnisse berücksichtigenwe are \sensitive to the needs and expectations of our customers wir sind aufgeschlossen für die Bedürfnisse und Erwartungen unserer Kunden2. (precarious) heikel\sensitive subject [or issue] heikles Thema, Reizthema nt\sensitive time kritischer Zeitpunkt3. (touchy) empfindlichhe was very \sensitive about his scar er war sehr empfindlich im Hinblick auf seine Narbe4. (secret) vertraulich\sensitive documents vertrauliche [o geheime] Unterlagento be \sensitive to cold kälteempfindlich sein; teeth empfindlich auf Kälte reagieren\sensitive chord sanfter Akkord\sensitive feelings verletzliche Gefühle\sensitive skin empfindliche Haut7. PHOT empfindlich* * *['sensItɪv]adj1) (emotionally) person sensibel, empfindsam; (= easily hurt) empfindlich; (= understanding) einfühlsam; novel, film, remark einfühlendto be sensitive about sth — in Bezug auf etw (acc) empfindlich sein
she is very sensitive to criticism/these things — sie reagiert sehr empfindlich auf Kritik/diese Dinge
2) (physically) instruments, part of body, leaves, plants empfindlich; (PHOT) emulsion, film lichtempfindlich; (= delicate) balance, adjustment fein; (fig) topic, issue heikel, prekärsensitive to heat/light — wärme-/lichtempfindlich
his wound is sensitive to touch — seine Wunde tut weh, wenn man sie berührt
he has access to some highly sensitive information — er hat Zugang zu streng vertraulichen Informationen
his visit comes at a sensitive time —
just how sensitive are these figures? — inwiefern sind diese Zahlen als vertraulich zu behandeln?
* * *sensitive [ˈsensıtıv]A adj (adv sensitively)1. fühlend (Wesen etc)2. Empfindungs…:3. sensitiv, (über)empfindlich (to gegen):be sensitive to empfindlich reagieren auf (akk)4. sensibel, empfindsam, feinfühlig5. veränderlich, schwankend:sensitive market WIRTSCH schwankender Markt6. figa) empfindlichsensitive spot empfindliche Stelle, neuralgischer Punkt;a sensitive subject ein heikles oder kitzliges Themasensitive plant Sinnpflanze f8. ELEK, PHYS, TECH empfindlich (Instrument etc):sensitive to shock stoßempfindlich9. FOTO lichtempfindlich10. PHYSIOL sensorisch, Sinnes…B s1. sensitiver oder sensibler Mensch* * *adjective1) (responsive) empfindlich (to gegen)2) (easily upset) empfindlich; sensibelbe sensitive to something — empfindlich auf etwas (Akk.) reagieren
3) heikel [Thema, Diskussion]4) (perceptive) einfühlsam* * *adj.empfindlich adj.empfindsam adj.fühlend adj.hellhörig adj.sensibel adj.spürbar adj. -
112 slight
1) (small; not great; not serious or severe: a slight breeze; We have a slight problem.) pequeño, ligero2) ((of a person) slim and delicate-looking: It seemed too heavy a load for such a slight woman.) delicado•- slighting
- slightingly
- slightly
- in the slightest
slight adj ligero / pequeñotr[slaɪt]1 (small in degree) pequeño,-a, ligero,-a; (not serious, unimportant) leve, insignificante1 (affront) desaire nombre masculino, desprecio1 (scorn) despreciar, menospreciar2 (snub, insult) desairar, ofender, insultar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLnot in the slightest en absolutoslight ['slaɪt] vt: desairar, despreciarslight adj1) slender: esbelto, delgado2) flimsy: endeble3) trifling: leve, insignificantea slight pain: un leve dolor4) small: pequeño, ligeronot in the slightest: en absolutoslight nsnub: desaire madj.• baladí adj.• corto, -a adj.• delgado, -a adj.• desaire adj.• insignificante adj.• leve adj.• ligero, -a adj.• menudo, -a adj.• sencillo, -a adj.n.• desaire s.m.• desatención s.f.• descuerno s.m.• feo s.m.v.• desairar v.• desatender v.• despreciar v.• menospreciar v.
I slaɪtadjective -er, -est1)a) <improvement/accent> ligero, levehe gets upset at the slightest thing — se molesta por la menor tontería or por cualquier nimiedad
I haven't the slightest idea — no tengo (ni) la menor or (ni) la más remota idea
do you mind? - not in the slightest — ¿te importa? - en absoluto or para nada
he's not the slightest bit interested — no le interesa en lo más mínimo or en absoluto
b) ( minimal) escaso2) ( slim) delgado, menudo
II
transitive verb (frml)a) (offend, ignore) desairar, hacerle* un desaire or un desprecio ab) ( belittle) \<\<work/contribution\>\> hablar con desdén de
III
noun (frml) desaire m, desprecio m[slaɪt]1. ADJ(compar slighter) (superl slightest)1) (=small, minor)a) [difference, change, increase, improvement] ligero, pequeño; [injury, problem, exaggeration] pequeño; [accent, movement] ligero; [breeze] suave; [smile, pain] leveafter a slight hesitation, he agreed — después de vacilar ligeramente, accedió
second I, 3., 5), a)•
to have a slight cold — tener un pequeño resfriado, estar un poco resfriadob)• the slightest: it doesn't make the slightest bit of difference — no importa en lo más mínimo
•
not in the slightest — en absoluto2) (=slim) [figure, person] delgado, menudo2.N frm desaire m3.he felt that he had been slighted — sintió que le habían desairado, sintió que le habían hecho un desaire
* * *
I [slaɪt]adjective -er, -est1)a) <improvement/accent> ligero, levehe gets upset at the slightest thing — se molesta por la menor tontería or por cualquier nimiedad
I haven't the slightest idea — no tengo (ni) la menor or (ni) la más remota idea
do you mind? - not in the slightest — ¿te importa? - en absoluto or para nada
he's not the slightest bit interested — no le interesa en lo más mínimo or en absoluto
b) ( minimal) escaso2) ( slim) delgado, menudo
II
transitive verb (frml)a) (offend, ignore) desairar, hacerle* un desaire or un desprecio ab) ( belittle) \<\<work/contribution\>\> hablar con desdén de
III
noun (frml) desaire m, desprecio m -
113 distraught
[di'stro:t](very worried and upset.) oprørt* * *[di'stro:t](very worried and upset.) oprørt -
114 ghastly
1) (very bad, ugly etc: a ghastly mistake.) forfærdelig2) (horrible; terrible: a ghastly murder; a ghastly experience.) grufuld3) (ill; upset: I felt ghastly when I had flu.) rædselsfuld; forfærdelig•* * *1) (very bad, ugly etc: a ghastly mistake.) forfærdelig2) (horrible; terrible: a ghastly murder; a ghastly experience.) grufuld3) (ill; upset: I felt ghastly when I had flu.) rædselsfuld; forfærdelig• -
115 jumpy
-
116 make (someone) sick
(to make (someone) feel very annoyed, upset etc: It makes me sick to see him waste money like that.) gøre én syg* * *(to make (someone) feel very annoyed, upset etc: It makes me sick to see him waste money like that.) gøre én syg -
117 make (someone) sick
(to make (someone) feel very annoyed, upset etc: It makes me sick to see him waste money like that.) gøre én syg* * *(to make (someone) feel very annoyed, upset etc: It makes me sick to see him waste money like that.) gøre én syg -
118 stable
I ['steibl] adjective1) (firm and steady or well-balanced: This chair isn't very stable.) stabil2) (firmly established and likely to last: a stable government.) stabil3) ((of a person or his character) unlikely to become unreasonably upset or hysterical: She's the only stable person in the whole family.) rolig4) ((of a substance) not easily decomposed.) stabil•- stabilize
- stabilise
- stabilization
- stabilisation II ['steibl] noun1) (a building in which horses are kept.) stald2) ((in plural) a horse-keeping establishment: He runs the riding stables.) stutteri* * *I ['steibl] adjective1) (firm and steady or well-balanced: This chair isn't very stable.) stabil2) (firmly established and likely to last: a stable government.) stabil3) ((of a person or his character) unlikely to become unreasonably upset or hysterical: She's the only stable person in the whole family.) rolig4) ((of a substance) not easily decomposed.) stabil•- stabilize
- stabilise
- stabilization
- stabilisation II ['steibl] noun1) (a building in which horses are kept.) stald2) ((in plural) a horse-keeping establishment: He runs the riding stables.) stutteri -
119 take to heart
1) (to be made very sad or upset by: You mustn't take his unkind remarks to heart.) tage sig nær2) (to pay attention to: He's taken my criticism to heart - his work has improved.) være opmærksom på* * *1) (to be made very sad or upset by: You mustn't take his unkind remarks to heart.) tage sig nær2) (to pay attention to: He's taken my criticism to heart - his work has improved.) være opmærksom på -
120 thick-skinned
См. также в других словарях:
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upset — v., n., & adj. v. (upsetting; past and past part. upset) 1 tr. & intr. overturn or be overturned. 2 tr. disturb the composure or digestion of (was very upset by the news; ate something that upset me). 3 tr. disrupt. 4 tr. shorten and thicken… … Useful english dictionary
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