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121 comienzo
Del verbo comenzar: ( conjugate comenzar) \ \
comienzo es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativoMultiple Entries: comenzar comienzo
comenzar ( conjugate comenzar) verbo transitivo to begin, commence (frml) verbo intransitivo to begin; comienzo haciendo algo/por hacer algo to begin by doing sth; comienzo a hacer algo to start doing o to do sth; comienzoon a disparar they started firing o to fire; comienzo por algo to begin with sth
comienzo sustantivo masculino beginning; al comienzo at first, in the beginning; dar comienzo to begin; dar comienzo a algo [ persona] to begin sth; [ceremonia/acto] to mark the beginning of sth;
comenzar verbo transitivo & verbo intransitivo to begin, start (a realizar una acción) comenzó a decir barbaridades, he started talking nonsense (una serie de acciones) comenzamos por mostrar nuestro desacuerdo, we started by showing our disagreement ➣ Ver nota en begin y start
comienzo sustantivo masculino beginning, start Locuciones: a comienzos de, at the beginning of
dar comienzo, to begin o start ' comienzo' also found in these entries: Spanish: apertura - iniciar - origen - principio - iniciación English: beginning - conception - off - onset - opening - outbreak - outset - start - turn - commence - home - out - usher -
122 incominciare
start, begin (a to)* * *incominciare v.tr. e intr. to begin*, to start, to commence: incomincia a piovere, it is beginning (o starting) to rain; lasciatemi incominciare dall'inizio, let me begin at the beginning; il romanzo incomincia con una descrizione, the novel begins (o opens) with a description; il film è già incominciato, the film has already begun; ''Hai finito il libro?'' ''Non l'ho neanche incominciato!'', ''Have you finished the book?'' ''I haven't even begun it!''; incominciare a fare qlco., to begin (o to start) to do sthg. (o doing sthg.); e non incominciare a lamentarti!, and don't start complaining!; incominciare bene, to have a good start; incominciare un'impresa, to embark on an undertaking; incominciare un lavoro, to begin (o to start on) a job // a incominciare da oggi, da qui, starting from today, from here // tanto per incominciare devo dirvi..., to begin with (o first of all) I have to tell you... // chi ben incomincia è a metà dell'opera, (prov.) well begun is half done.* * *[inkomin'tʃare]1. vtto begin, startincominciare a fare qc — to begin o start doing sth
2. vi* * *[inkomin'tʃare]* * *incominciare/inkomin't∫are/→ cominciare. -
123 übergehen
v/i (unreg., trennb., ist -ge-)1. go ( oder pass) over (zu to); übergehen auf (+ Akk) (einen Nachfolger, Stellvertreter) pass to, devolve upon geh.2. übergehen in (+ Akk) pass into; sich wandelnd: turn into; Farbe, Ton, Stimmung etc.: blend ( oder merge) into; der Regen wird in Schnee übergehen the rain will turn to snow; ineinander übergehen Farben: blend; in jemandes Besitz übergehen pass into s.o.’s possession ( oder hands); in andere Hände übergehen change hands3. zum nächsten Punkt etc. übergehen pass on ( oder move on, proceed förm.) to the next item etc.; zum Feind, zu einer anderen Partei übergehen go over to, defect to—v/t (unreg., untr., hat) (hinweggehen über) pass s.th. over ( mit Stillschweigen in silence); (missachten) disregard; (nicht beachten, ignorieren) ignore; (auslassen) leave out, omit, skip umg.; (nicht berücksichtigen) pass s.o. over, leave s.o. out; sich übergangen fühlen feel snubbed ( oder left out)* * *to omit* * *über|ge|hen ['yːbɐgeːən]vi sep irreg aux sein1)ǘbergehen (in einen anderen Zustand) — to turn or change into sth; (Farben) to merge into sth
ǘbergehen — to become sb's property
in andere Hände/in Volkseigentum ǘbergehen — to pass into other hands/into public ownership
2)zu etw ǘbergehen — to go over to sth
wir sind dazu übergegangen, Computer zu benutzen — we went over to (using) computers (esp Brit), we went to using computers (esp US)
* * *1) (to ignore in an unfriendly way: I think we'll give all his stupid suggestions the go-by.) give the go-by2) (to ignore or overlook: They passed him over for promotion.) pass over* * *über|ge·hen1[ˈy:bɐge:ən]vi irreg Hilfsverb: sein▪ dazu \übergehen, etw zu tun to go over to doing sthin anderen Besitz [o in das Eigentum eines anderen] \übergehen to become sb else's propertyin Fäulnis/Gärung/Verwesung \übergehen to begin to rot [or decay]/ferment/decayüber·ge·hen *2[y:bɐˈge:ən]▪ etw \übergehen to ignore sth3. (auslassen)▪ etw \übergehen to skip [over] sth* * *Iunregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; mit sein1) passan jemanden/in jemandes Besitz übergehen — become somebody's property
2)zu etwas übergehen/ dazu übergehen, etwas zu tun — go over to something/to doing something
3)in etwas (Akk.) übergehen — (zu etwas werden) turn into something
in Gärung/Verwesung übergehen — begin to ferment/decompose
4)IIunregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) (nicht beachten) ignore; (nicht eingehen auf)etwas [mit Stillschweigen] übergehen — pass something over in silence
2) (auslassen, überspringen) skip [over]3) (nicht berücksichtigen) pass over* * *'übergehen v/i (irr, trennb, ist -ge-)1. go ( oder pass) over (zu to);2.übergehen in (+akk) pass into; sich wandelnd: turn into; Farbe, Ton, Stimmung etc: blend ( oder merge) into;der Regen wird in Schnee übergehen the rain will turn to snow;ineinander übergehen Farben: blend;in jemandes Besitz übergehen pass into sb’s possession ( oder hands);in andere Hände übergehen change hands3.übergehen go over to, defect to4.die Augen gingen ihm über umg vor Staunen: his eyes nearly popped out of his headmit Stillschweigen in silence); (missachten) disregard; (nicht beachten, ignorieren) ignore; (aus) leave out, omit, skip umg; (nicht berücksichtigen) pass sb over, leave sb out;sich übergangen fühlen feel snubbed ( oder left out)* * *Iunregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; mit sein1) passan jemanden/in jemandes Besitz übergehen — become somebody's property
2)zu etwas übergehen/ dazu übergehen, etwas zu tun — go over to something/to doing something
3)in etwas (Akk.) übergehen — (zu etwas werden) turn into something
in Gärung/Verwesung übergehen — begin to ferment/decompose
4)IIunregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) (nicht beachten) ignore; (nicht eingehen auf)etwas [mit Stillschweigen] übergehen — pass something over in silence
2) (auslassen, überspringen) skip [over]3) (nicht berücksichtigen) pass over* * *(in) v.to merge (into) v. v.to migrate v. -
124 entrer
entrer [ɑ̃tʀe]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━➭ TABLE 1━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. <━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► entrer se traduira par to come in ou par to go in suivant que le locuteur se trouve ou non à l'endroit en question.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━a. to go (or to come) in• entrez ! come in!• entrer chez qn to come (or go) into sb's houseb. [marchandises, devises] to enter• entrer dans un fichier/système (légalement) to enter a file/system ; (illégalement) to hack into a file/systemc. (Theatre) « entrent trois gardes » "enter three guards"d. ( = tenir) to go in• il faut que je perde 3 kg pour entrer dans cette robe I'll have to lose 3 kilos if I want to get into this dresse. ( = devenir membre de) entrer dans [+ club, parti, entreprise] to joinf. ( = heurter) entrer dans [+ arbre, poteau] to crash intoh. ( = commencer à être) entrer dans [+ phase, période] to enter• entrer dans la vie active or dans le monde du travail to begin one's working lifei. (locutions)• laisser entrer qn dans to let sb into► faire entrer [+ pièce, objet à emballer] to fit in ; (en fraude) [+ marchandises, immigrants] to smuggle in ; [+ accusé, témoin] to bring in ; [+ invité, visiteur] to show in2. <a. ( = faire entrer) comment allez-vous entrer cette armoire dans la chambre ? how are you going to get that wardrobe into the bedroom?b. [+ données] to key in* * *ɑ̃tʀe
1.
verbe transitif (+ v avoir)1) ( transporter) ( vu de l'intérieur) to bring [something] in; ( vu de l'extérieur) to take [something] in3) Informatique to enter4) Sport to score [but]
2.
verbe intransitif (+ v être)1) ( pénétrer) gén to get in, to enter; ( en allant) to go in; ( en venant) to come in; ( en roulant) to drive inl'eau est entrée par une fissure — the water came in ou got in through a crack
je suis entré dans Paris par le sud — ( en voiture) I drove into Paris from the south
‘défense d'entrer’ — ( sur une porte) ‘no entry’; ( sur une barrière) ‘no trespassing’
faire entrer la table par la fenêtre — ( vu de l'intérieur) to bring the table in through the window; ( vu de l'extérieur) to take the table in through the window
2) (tenir, s'adapter) to fitfaire entrer quelque chose dans quelque chose — to fit ou get something into a something
3) (s'intégrer, commencer)entrer dans — to enter [débat, période]; to join [opposition, gouvernement, armée]
entrer en — to enter into [pourparlers, négociations]
il entre dans la catégorie des... — he comes into the category of...
entrer dans la légende — [personne] to become a legend; [fait] to become legendary
j'ai fait entrer tes dépenses dans les frais généraux — I've included your expenses in the overheads
4) ( être un élément de)
3.
verbe impersonnel* * *ɑ̃tʀe1. vi1) (dans un lieu) (en allant) to go in, to enter, (en venant) to come in, to enterentrer dans [pièce, immeuble] (en allant) — to go into, to enter, (en venant) to come into, to enter
Ils sont tous entrés dans la maison. — They all went into the house.
2) [objet, meuble, pièce]Le piano a pu entrer par la fenêtre. — They managed to get the piano in through the window.
On l'a fait entrer par la fenêtre. — We got it in through the window.
3) (comme membre, patient)entrer dans [club, institution] — to join
entrer dans le système INFORMATIQUE — to log in, to log on
4) (= heurter)entrer dans [mélange] — to go into, [responsabilités] to form part of
6) (= se joindre)entrer dans [vues, craintes de qn] — to share
2. vt1) INFORMATIQUE to input, to enterentrer des données — to input data, to enter data
J'ai entré toutes les adresses de mon agenda sur mon ordinateur. — I've entered all the addresses in my diary onto my computer., I've put all the addresses in my diary onto my computer.
2) [marchandises] (en allant) to take in, (en venant) to bring in3) [meuble] to get inOn l'a entré par la fenêtre. — We got it in through the window.
4) [griffes] to sink inLe chat lui entrait ses griffes dans le bras. — The cat sank its claws into his arm.
* * *entrer verb table: aimerA vtr (+ v avoir)1 ( transporter) ( vu de l'intérieur) to bring [sth] in [objet, marchandise]; ( vu de l'extérieur) to take [sth] in [objet, marchandise]; entrer qch en fraude dans un pays to smuggle sth into a country;2 ( enfoncer) to stick [ongles, épée] (dans into);4 Sport to score [but].B vi (+ v être)1 ( pénétrer) gén to get in, to enter; ( en allant) to go in; ( en venant) to come in; ( en roulant) to drive in; je l'ai vu entrer dans la maison par la fenêtre/par la porte de derrière I saw him get into ou enter the house through the window/by the back door; la balle est entrée au-dessus de l'oreille the bullet entered above the ear; l'eau est entrée par une fissure the water came in ou got in through a crack; ils sont entrés en France par l'Italie they came into France via Italy; je suis entré dans Paris par le sud ( en voiture) I drove into Paris from the south; ils sont entrés sur le court/notre territoire/la scène politique they came onto the court/our territory/the political scene; nous sommes entrés dans l'eau/la boue jusqu'aux chevilles we sank up to our ankles in water/mud; les marchandises entrent et sortent sans aucun contrôle goods come and go without being checked at all; entrez! come in!; ‘défense d'entrer’ ( sur une porte) ‘no entry’; ( sur une barrière) ‘no trespassing’; je ne fais qu'entrer et sortir I can only stay a minute; laisse-moi entrer! let me in!; ne laisse pas/j'ai laissé le chat entrer dans la cuisine don't let/I let the cat into the kitchen; fais entrer le chat dans la cuisine let the cat into the kitchen; je vous ferai entrer par la cuisine I'll let you in through the kitchen; faire entrer la table par la fenêtre ( vu de l'intérieur) to bring the table in through the window; ( vu de l'extérieur) to take the table in through the window; fais-la entrer show her in; faites entrer show him/her/them etc in;2 (tenir, s'adapter) c'est trop gros, ça n'entrera jamais it's too big, it'll never fit; ça n'entre pas dans la valise it doesn't fit in the suitcase; la clé n'entre pas dans la serrure the key doesn't fit ou won't go in the lock; faire entrer qch dans une valise to fit ou get sth into a suitcase; je n'arrive pas à faire entrer la pièce dans la fente I can't get the coin into the slot; on peut faire entrer trente personnes dans la pièce you can fit ou get thirty people in the room; nous sommes entrés à dix dans la voiture we got ten of us into the car;3 (s'intégrer, commencer) entrer dans to enter [débat, période]; to join [opposition, entreprise]; entrer à to enter [école, hit-parade]; to join [gouvernement, parti, armée]; to get into [université]; entrer en to enter into [pourparlers, négociations]; il entre en deuxième année he's going into his second year; il entre dans sa quarantième année he's turned thirty-nine; il entre dans la quarantaine he's pushing forty; entrer dans la vie de qn to come into sb's life; le doute est entré dans mon esprit I'm beginning to have doubts; entrer dans l'hiver to enter the winter; entrer en convalescence to start to convalesce; n'entrons pas dans ces considérations/les détails let's not go into those matters/the details; faire entrer qn dans une organisation/qch dans un système to get sb into an organization/sth into a system; il m'a fait entrer au ministère he got me into the ministry; je ne sais pas comment cette idée lui est entrée dans la tête I don't know how he/she got that idea into his/her head; il entre dans la catégorie des… he comes into the category of…; expression entrée dans l'usage expression which has come into use; entrer dans l'histoire to go down in history; entrer dans la légende [personne] to become a legend; [fait] to become legendary; entrer dans le capital de… Fin to take a stake in…; acteur qui entre dans son personnage actor who gets into his/her character; mesure qui entre mal dans le cadre d'une politique libérale measure which does not fit the framework of a liberal policy; faire entrer un mot nouveau dans le dictionnaire to put a new word in the dictionary; cela n'entre pas dans mes attributions it's not part of my duties; la question n'entre pour rien dans ma décision the question has no bearing on my decision; j'ai fait entrer tes dépenses dans les frais généraux I've included your expenses in the overheads; entrer en mouvement/fusion to begin to move/to melt; entrer dans une colère noire or une rage folle to fly into a blind rage;4 ( être un élément de) les ingrédients qui entrent dans la recette the ingredients which go into ou make up the recipe; le carbone entre pour moitié dans ce composé carbon makes up half (of) this compound; leurs parts entrent pour 20% dans le capital their shares make up 20% of the capital.C v impers il entre une part de chance dans tout a certain amount of luck goes into everything; il n'entre pas dans mes intentions de faire I have no intention of doing; il n'entre pas dans mes habitudes de faire I am not in the habit of doing.[ɑ̃tre] verbe intransitif (auxiliaire être)A.[PÉNÉTRER]1. [personne - généralement] to enter ; [ - vu de l'intérieur] to come in ; [ - vu de l'extérieur] to go in ; [ - à pied] to walk in ; [ - à cheval, à bicyclette] to ride in[véhicule] to drive intoc, toc! — entrez! knock, knock! — come in!entrez, entrez! do come in!, come on in!empêche-les d'entrer keep them out, don't let them inentrer au port to come into ou to enter harbouret voici les joueurs qui entrent sur le terrain/court here are the players coming onto the field/courta. [en lui montrant le chemin] show her inb. [en l'appelant] call her in[vent, eau]par où entre l'eau? how does the water penetrate ou get in?laisser entrer: ce genre de fenêtre laisse entrer plus de lumière this kind of window lets more light in2. [adhérer]elle entre à la maternelle/en troisième année she's going to nursery school/moving up into the third yeara. [généralement] to get goods inb. [en fraude] to smuggle goods in4. [tenir, trouver sa place]a. [généralement] I can fit another bag under the seatb. [en serrant] I can squeeze another bag under the seat5. (familier) [connaissances, explication] to sink inl'informatique, ça entre tout seul avec elle learning about computers is very easy with her as a teacher6. RELIGIONB.[DÉBUTER] [une action]entrer en ébullition to reach boiling point, to begin to boil————————[ɑ̃tre] verbe transitif (auxiliaire avoir)1. [produits - généralement] to take in (separable), to bring in (separable), to import ; [ - en fraude] to smuggle in (separable)2. [enfoncer] to dig3. [passer]————————entrer dans verbe plus préposition[à pied] to walk intoil ne les laisse jamais entrer dans la chambre noire he never lets ou allows them into the black room2. [adhérer à - obj: club, association, parti] to join, to become a member of ; [ - obj: entreprise] to joinentrer dans une famille [par mariage] to marry into a family4. [constituant]l'eau entre pour moitié dans cette boisson water makes up 50% of this drink5. [se mêler de] to enter intoje ne veux pas entrer dans vos histoires I don't want to have anything to do with ou to be involved in your little schemes[se lancer dans]6. [être inclus dans]entrer dans l'usage [terme] to come into common use, to become part of everyday language7. [s'enfoncer, pénétrer dans]la balle/flèche est entrée dans son bras the bullet/arrow lodged itself in her arm8. [tenir dans] to get in, to go in, to fit intout n'entrera pas dans la valise we won't get everything in the suitcase, everything won't fit in the suitcasefaire entrer [en poussant]: faire entrer des vêtements dans une valise to press clothes in ou down in a suitcase9. [obj: période] to enterj'espère ne pas entrer dans cette catégorie de personnes I hope I don't belong to that category of people11. (familier) [obj: connaissances, explication]b. [à force de répéter] to drum ou to hammer something into somebody's headtu ne lui feras jamais entrer dans la tête que c'est impossible you'll never get it into his head ou convince him that it's impossible -
125 process
I ['prəʊses] [AE 'prɒ-]1) processo m. (of di)in the process of doing this, he... — mentre faceva questo, lui...
2) (method) processo m., procedimento m.II ['prəʊses] [AE 'prɒ-]1) portare avanti [ application]2) inform. elaborare, processare [ data]3) ind. trasformare [raw materials, food product]; trattare [chemical, waste]4) fot. sviluppare [ film]III [prə'ses]1) relig. stor. andare in processione2) form. (move)to process down, along — sfialre in, lungo [ road]
* * *['prəuses, ]( American[) 'pro-] 1. noun1) (a method or way of manufacturing things: We are using a new process to make glass.) processo, metodo2) (a series of events that produce change or development: The process of growing up can be difficult for a child; the digestive processes.) processo3) (a course of action undertaken: Carrying him down the mountain was a slow process.) operazione2. verb(to deal with (something) by the appropriate process: Have your photographs been processed?; The information is being processed by computer.) sviluppare; trattare- in the process of* * *I ['prəʊses] [AE 'prɒ-]1) processo m. (of di)in the process of doing this, he... — mentre faceva questo, lui...
2) (method) processo m., procedimento m.II ['prəʊses] [AE 'prɒ-]1) portare avanti [ application]2) inform. elaborare, processare [ data]3) ind. trasformare [raw materials, food product]; trattare [chemical, waste]4) fot. sviluppare [ film]III [prə'ses]1) relig. stor. andare in processione2) form. (move)to process down, along — sfialre in, lungo [ road]
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126 Vergnügen
v/refl enjoy o.s.; zurzeit vergnügt er sich mit seiner Sekretärin in Florida at the moment he’s enjoying himself with his secretary in Florida* * *das Vergnügentreat; fun; pleasure; delight; delectableness* * *Ver|gnü|gen [fɛɐ'gnyːgn]nt -s, -das macht or bereitet mir Vergnǘgen — I enjoy it, it gives me pleasure
ein Vergnǘgen aus etw machen — to get pleasure from (doing) sth
für ihn ist es ein Vergnǘgen, nachts durch die menschenleeren Straßen zu wandern — he enjoys wandering around the empty streets at night
ich laufe jeden Tag eine halbe Stunde nur zum Vergnǘgen — I run for half an hour each day just for pleasure or for the fun of it
das war ein teures Vergnǘgen (inf) — that was an expensive bit of fun
ich höre ihn mit großem Vergnǘgen singen — it gives me great pleasure to hear him sing
mit Vergnǘgen — with pleasure
mit großem Vergnǘgen — with great pleasure
mit größtem or dem größten Vergnǘgen — with the greatest of pleasure
(na dann) viel Vergnǘgen! (auch iro) — enjoy yourself/yourselves!
hinein ins Vergnǘgen! — let the fun begin!
er hat mir viel Vergnǘgen gewünscht — he said he hoped I would enjoy myself
wir wünschen Ihnen bei der Show viel Vergnǘgen — we hope you enjoy the show
mit wem habe ich das Vergnǘgen? (form) — with whom do I have the pleasure of speaking? (form)
es ist mir ein Vergnǘgen — it is a pleasure for me
2) (dated Veranstaltung) entertainment* * *das1) (the state of being amused or of finding something funny: a smile of amusement.) amusement2) ((something which causes) great pleasure: Peacefulness is one of the delights of country life.) delight3) (something that gives one enjoyment; joy or delight: the pleasures of country life; I get a lot of pleasure from listening to music.) pleasure4) (fun; amusement: I only did it for sport.) sport* * *Ver·gnü·gen<-s, ->[fɛɐ̯ˈgny:gn̩]ein teures [o kein billiges] \Vergnügen sein (fam) to be an expensive [or not a cheap] way of enjoying oneself [or form of entertainment] [or bit of fun]ein zweifelhaftes \Vergnügen a dubious pleasure\Vergnügen daran finden, etw zu tun to find pleasure in doing sth[jdm] ein \Vergnügen sein, etw zu tun to be a pleasure [for sb] to do sthkein [reines] [o nicht gerade ein] \Vergnügen sein, etw zu tun to not be exactly a pleasure doing sthmit [bestimmtem] \Vergnügen with [a certain] pleasuremit großem \Vergnügen with great pleasuremit größtem \Vergnügen with the greatest of pleasure▶ viel \Vergnügen! have a good time!* * *das; Vergnügens, Vergnügen: pleasure; (Spaß) funein teueres Vergnügen — (ugs.) an expensive bit of fun (coll.)
etwas macht jemandem [großes] Vergnügen — something gives somebody [great] pleasure; somebody enjoys something [very much]
viel Vergnügen! — (auch iron.) have fun!
mit [dem größten] Vergnügen — with [the greatest of] pleasure
* * *finden find pleasure in, enjoy;ein kindliches Vergnügen an etwas haben take childish pleasure in sth;bereiten give sb (great) pleasure;sich (dat)ein Vergnügen daraus machen, etwas zu tun derive pleasure from ( oder enjoy) doing sth;es war mir ein Vergnügen it was a pleasure;mit wem hatte ich das Vergnügen? obs with whom do I have the pleasure of speaking?;es war kein (reines) Vergnügen umg it was no picnic ( oder fun and games), it wasn’t exactly (great) fun;es ist wahrlich kein Vergnügen, mit ihm zu verhandeln negotiating with him really is no fun;mit (größtem) Vergnügen with (the greatest) pleasure;(nur) zum Vergnügen (just) for fun;aus reinem Vergnügen just for the fun of it;vor Vergnügen quietschen etc: with pleasure;ein teures Vergnügen an expensive business ( oder affair);also stürzen wir uns ins Vergnügen! umg so let’s enjoy ourselves!; iron (fangen wir an!) so let the fun begin!* * *das; Vergnügens, Vergnügen: pleasure; (Spaß) funein teueres Vergnügen — (ugs.) an expensive bit of fun (coll.)
etwas macht jemandem [großes] Vergnügen — something gives somebody [great] pleasure; somebody enjoys something [very much]
viel Vergnügen! — (auch iron.) have fun!
mit [dem größten] Vergnügen — with [the greatest of] pleasure
* * *n.delectableness n.delight n.pleasure n.treat n. -
127 arrancar
v.1 to uproot (sacar de su sitio) (árbol).2 to start (poner en marcha) (coche, máquina).El carro no arranca The car won't start.3 to set off.4 to pull out, to break off, to break away, to pluck.Juana arrancó las hierbas Johanna pulled out the weeds.5 to start up, to boot up, to boot, to get started.Ricardo arrancó el auto sin problemas Richard started the car up without trouble6 to begin, to start.Arrancamos el año con optimismo We began the year with optimism.7 to blow off.El huracán arrancó las plantas The hurricane blew off the plants.8 to avulse, to pull off forcibly.* * *3 (arrebatar) to snatch, grab4 (obtener - aplausos, sonrisa) to get; (- confesión, información) to extract5 (rescatar) to rescue, save6 (coche) to start1 (partir) to begin, start2 (salir) to go, leave4 figurado (provenir) to stem (de, from)\arrancar a correr to break into a run* * *verb1) to pull out, tear out2) pluck3) snatch4) start* * *1. VT1) (=sacar de raíz)a) [+ planta, pelo] to pull up; [+ clavo, diente] to pull out; [+ pluma] to pluck; [+ ojos] to gouge out; [+ botón, esparadrapo, etiqueta] to pull off, tear off; [+ página] to tear out, rip out; [+ cartel] to pull down, tear downazulejos arrancados de las paredes de una iglesia — tiles that have been pulled off the walls of a church
b) [explosión, viento] to blow offcuajo, raízc) (Med) [+ flema] to bring up2) (=arrebatar) to snatch (a, de from)[con violencia] to wrench (a, de from)no podían arrancarle el cuchillo — they were unable to get the knife off him, they were unable to wrest o wrench the knife from him
el viento me lo arrancó de las manos — the wind blew it out of my hands, the wind snatched it from my hands más frm
3) (=provocar) [+ aplausos] to draw; [+ risas] to provoke, causeel beso arrancó algunos suspiros entre el público — when they kissed part of the audience let out a sigh
•
arrancar las lágrimas a algn — to bring tears to sb's eyes4) (=separar)•
arrancar a algn de — [+ lugar] to drag sb away from; [+ éxtasis, trance] to drag sb out of; [+ vicio] to wean sb off a bad habit5) (=obtener) [+ apoyo] to gain, win; [+ victoria] to snatch; [+ confesión, promesa] to extract; [+ sonido, nota] to produce•
arrancar información a algn — to extract information from sb, get information out of sb6) (Aut) [+ vehículo, motor] to start7) (Inform) [+ ordenador] to boot, boot up, start uptengo problemas para arrancar el ordenador — I have problems starting up o booting the computer
2. VI1) [vehículo, motor] to startel coche no arranca — the car won't start o isn't starting
2) (=moverse) to get going, get moving¡venga, arranca! — * come on, get going o get moving!, come on, get a move on! *
3) (=comenzar) to start¿desde dónde arranca el camino? — where does the road start?
•
arrancar a hacer algo — to start doing sth, start to do stharrancó a hablar a los dos años — she started talking o to talk when she was two
arrancó a cantar/llorar — he broke o burst into song/tears
•
arrancar de — to go back to, date back toesta celebración arranca del siglo XV — this celebration dates o goes back to the 15th century
4) (Náut) to set sail5) (Arquit) [arco] to spring (de from)6) Chile* (=escapar)3.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1) < hoja de papel> to tear out; < etiqueta> to tear o rip off; < botón> to tear o pull off; < planta> to pull up; < flor> to pick; <diente/pelo> to pull out; < esparadrapo> to pull offhubo un forcejeo y le arrancó la pistola — there was a struggle and he wrenched the pistol away from her
2) <confesión/declaración> to extract3) <motor/coche> to start2.arrancar vi1)a) motor/vehículo to startb) (moverse, decidirse) (fam) to get goingc) ( empezar)arrancar a + inf — to start to + inf, to start -ing
2) (provenir, proceder)a) costumbre to originateb) carretera to start3) (Chi fam) ( huir) to run off o away3.arrancar de algo/alguien — to get away from something/somebody
arrancarse v pron1) (refl) <pelo/diente> to pull out; <piel/botón> to pull off2) (Taur) to charge3) (Chi fam) ( huir) to run awayarrancarse de algo/alguien — to run away from something/somebody
* * *1.verbo transitivo1) < hoja de papel> to tear out; < etiqueta> to tear o rip off; < botón> to tear o pull off; < planta> to pull up; < flor> to pick; <diente/pelo> to pull out; < esparadrapo> to pull offhubo un forcejeo y le arrancó la pistola — there was a struggle and he wrenched the pistol away from her
2) <confesión/declaración> to extract3) <motor/coche> to start2.arrancar vi1)a) motor/vehículo to startb) (moverse, decidirse) (fam) to get goingc) ( empezar)arrancar a + inf — to start to + inf, to start -ing
2) (provenir, proceder)a) costumbre to originateb) carretera to start3) (Chi fam) ( huir) to run off o away3.arrancar de algo/alguien — to get away from something/somebody
arrancarse v pron1) (refl) <pelo/diente> to pull out; <piel/botón> to pull off2) (Taur) to charge3) (Chi fam) ( huir) to run awayarrancarse de algo/alguien — to run away from something/somebody
* * *arrancar11 = rip off, wrench, pluck up, rip + open, pluck out, strip off, winkle out, pull up, rip.Ex: Within the social sciences psychology journals are the most ripped off.
Ex: The first thing that's worrying me is that things are getting wrenched out of context.Ex: The article is entitled 'To everything there is a season...a time to plant and a time to pluck up that which is planted: a life-cycle analysis of education for librarianship'.Ex: The tidal wave ripped open the steel security shutters of the shops.Ex: According to a myth about the phases of the moon, the wicked god Seth plucked out the eye of Horus and tore it to bits.Ex: They gathered a whole sackful, stripped off the husks, and filled the sack again.Ex: Small business operators can be easy prey for scamsters trying to winkle out money for unsolicited - and unneeded - 'services'.Ex: Hundreds of pounds worth of damage was caused when youths pulled up and smashed two floodlights and kicked roof tiles from the chapel of rest.Ex: He punched her in the head and forced her to another room where he pinned her to the floor and ripped her shirt trying to remove it.* abrir arrancando = rip + open.* arrancar a la fuerza = prise + Nombre + away.* arrancar con los dientes = bite off.* arrancar de = wretch from.* arrancar de un mordisco = bite off.* arrancar el cuero cabelludo a Alguien = scalp.* arrancar haciendo palanca = pry.* arrancar la cabellera a Alguien = scalp.* arrancar + Nombre + de = wring + Nombre + out of/from.* arrancarse el pelo a manojos = tear + Posesivo + hair out.* arrancar una página = tear out + page.arrancar22 = boot, boot up, crank up.Ex: In computer science to boot means to start up a computer system.
Ex: Since then, the computer has started to make a whirring noise everytime it is booted up.Ex: As the sun begins to move toward the horizon, you want to crank up the engine again and head back home.* al arrancar = at startup.* arrancar con cables = jump-start [jump start].* arrancar + Sistema Operativo = start + Sistema Operativo.* * *arrancar [A2 ]vtA ‹hoja de papel/página› to tear out; ‹etiqueta› to tear o rip off; ‹esparadrapo› to pull off; ‹botón› to tear o rip o pull off; ‹planta› to pull up; ‹flor› to pick; ‹diente› to pull outarrancó la planta de raíz she pulled the plant up by the roots, she uprooted the plantle arrancó un mechón de pelo he pulled out a clump of her hairno le arranques hojas al libro don't tear pages out of the bookarrancó la venda he tore off the bandageme arrancó la carta de las manos she snatched the letter out of my handshubo un forcejeo y le arrancó la pistola there was a struggle and he wrenched the pistol away from herle arrancó el bolso he snatched her bag, he grabbed her bag from hercuando se apoltrona no hay quien consiga arrancarlo de casa when he gets into one of his stay-at-home moods it's impossible to drag him outel teléfono lo arrancó de sus pensamientos the sound of the telephone brought him back to reality with a joltB ‹confesión/declaración› to extractconsiguieron arrancarle una confesión they managed to extract a confession from o get a confession out of herno hay quien le arranque una palabra de lo ocurrido no one can get a word out of him about what happenedpor fin consiguió arrancarle una sonrisa she finally managed to get a smile out of him■ arrancarviAel coche no arranca the car won't startel tren está a punto de arrancar the train is about to leave¡no arranques en segunda! don't try and move off o pull away in second gear!2 (moverse, decidirse) ( fam):no hay quien lo haga arrancar it's impossible to get him moving o to get him off his backside ( colloq)tarda horas en arrancar it takes him hours to get started o to get down to doing anything ( colloq)3 (empezar) arrancar A + INF to start to + INF, to start -INGarrancó a llorar he burst into tears, he started crying o to cryB (provenir, proceder)1 «problema/crisis/creencia»: arrancar DE algo; to stem FROM sthesta tradición arranca del siglo XIV this tradition dates from o back to the 14th centuryde allí arrancan todas sus desgracias that's where all his misfortunes stem from2 «carretera» to startla senda que arranca de or en este punto the path that starts from this point3 ( Const):el punto del cual arranca el arco the point from which the arch springs o stemsde la pared arrancaba un largo mostrador a long counter came out from o jutted out from the wallC ( Inf) to boot upvolver* a arrancar to rebootD «toro» to chargefueron los primeros en arrancar del país they were the first to get out of o skip the country ( colloq)A ( refl) ‹pelo/diente› to pull out; ‹piel› to pull off; ‹botón› to pull offB1 ( Taur) to charge2 ( Mús):arrancarse por sevillanas to break into dance o into a sevillana ; sevillanasCse les arrancó el prisionero the prisoner got away from them o ran away ( colloq)arrancarse DE algo/algn to run away FROM sth/sb* * *
arrancar ( conjugate arrancar) verbo transitivo
1 ‹ hoja de papel› to tear out;
‹ etiqueta› to tear off;
‹botón/venda› to pull off;
‹ planta› to pull up;
‹ flor› to pick;
‹diente/pelo› to pull out;
2 ‹confesión/declaración› to extract
3 ‹motor/coche› to start
verbo intransitivo [motor/vehículo] to start
arrancarse verbo pronominal
1 ( refl) ‹pelo/diente› to pull out;
‹piel/botón› to pull off
2 (Chi fam) ( huir) to run away
arrancar
I verbo transitivo
1 (una planta) to uproot, pull up
arrancar de raíz, to uproot
2 (una página) to tear out
(un diente) to pull out
3 fig (una confesión) to extract
4 (mover) no había manera de arrancar a Rodrigo de allí, it was impossible to pull Rodrigo away
5 Auto Téc to start
II verbo intransitivo
1 Auto Téc to start
2 (empezar) to begin: estábamos tan tranquilos y de repente arrancó a llorar, everything was quiet when he suddenly started crying
' arrancar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
arrebatar
- mala
- malo
- calentar
- cuajo
- raíz
English:
boot
- crank
- dig up
- extract
- get
- light
- pick off
- pluck
- pull away
- pull off
- pull up
- rip off
- root out
- root up
- scalp
- start
- start up
- tear
- tear away
- tear off
- tear out
- tear up
- wrench
- yank
- dig
- draw
- exact
- jump
- kick
- move
- pull
- push
- rip
- root
- strip
- up
* * *♦ vt1. [sacar de su sitio] [árbol] to uproot;[malas hierbas, flor] to pull up; [cable, página, pelo] to tear out; [cartel, cortinas] to tear down; [muela] to pull out, to extract; [ojos] to gouge out; [botón, etiqueta] to tear o rip off;arranqué el póster de la pared I tore the poster off the wall;arrancar la cabellera a alguien to scalp sb;[brazo, pierna] to tear right off; Figarrancar a alguien de un sitio to shift sb from somewhere;Figarrancar a alguien de las drogas/del alcohol to get sb off drugs/alcoholarrancar algo de las manos de alguien to snatch sth out of sb's hands;tenía el bolso muy bien agarrado y no se lo pudieron arrancar she was holding on very tight to her handbag and they couldn't get it off her;el vigilante consiguió arrancarle el arma al atracador the security guard managed to grab the robber's gun;el Barcelona consiguió arrancar un punto en su visita a Madrid Barcelona managed to take a point from their visit to Madrid;la oposición arrancó varias concesiones al gobierno the opposition managed to win several concessions from the government3. [poner en marcha] [coche, máquina] to start;Informát to start up, to boot (up) [sonrisa, dinero, ovación] to get sth out of sb; [suspiro, carcajada] to bring sth from sb;no consiguieron arrancarle ninguna declaración they failed to get a statement out of him♦ vi1. [partir] to leave;¡corre, que el autobús está arrancando! quick, the bus is about to leave;el Tour ha arrancado finalmente the Tour has finally got o is finally under way2. [máquina, coche] to start;no intentes arrancar en segunda you shouldn't try to start the car in second gear3. [empezar] to get under way, to kick off;ya arrancó la campaña electoral the election campaign is already under way;el festival arrancó con un concierto de música clásica the festival got under way o kicked off with a classical music concert;empataron al poco de arrancar la segunda mitad they equalized shortly after the second half had got under way o kicked offarrancó a llorar de repente she suddenly started crying, she suddenly burst into tearsel río arranca de los Andes the river has its source in the Andes;todos los problemas arrancan de una nefasta planificación all the problems stem from poor planning* * *I v/t2 vehículo start (up)3 ( quitar) snatch;le arrancaron el bolso they snatched her purseII v/i2 INFOR boot (up)3:arrancar a hacer algo start to do sth, start doing sth* * *arrancar {72} vt1) : to pull out, to tear out2) : to pick, to pluck (a flower)3) : to start (an engine)4) : to boot (a computer)arrancar vi1) : to start an engine2) : to get going* * *arrancar vb1. (sacar) to pull out3. (planta) to pull up4. (arrebatar) to snatch5. (motor, coche) to start -
128 comenzar
comenzar ( conjugate comenzar) verbo transitivo to begin, commence (frml) verbo intransitivo to begin; comenzar haciendo algo/por hacer algo to begin by doing sth; comenzar a hacer algo to start doing o to do sth; comenzaron a disparar they started firing o to fire; comenzar por algo to begin with sth
comenzar verbo transitivo & verbo intransitivo to begin, start (a realizar una acción) comenzó a decir barbaridades, he started talking nonsense (una serie de acciones) comenzamos por mostrar nuestro desacuerdo, we started by showing our disagreement ➣ Ver nota en begin y start
' comenzar' also found in these entries: Spanish: balbucear - desencadenarse - despuntar - entrar - iniciarse - comience English: afresh - begin - come on - commence - dawn - emigrate - foot - go-ahead - open - set in - start - start off
См. также в других словарях:
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