-
1 bury
'beri1) (to place (a dead body) in a grave, the sea etc.) enterrar2) (to hide (under the ground etc): My socks are buried somewhere in this drawer.) esconder•- burial- bury the hatchet
bury vb enterrartr['berɪ]1 enterrar2 (body) sepultar, enterrar3 figurative use (outlive) enterrar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be buried recibir sepulturato be buried at sea recibir sepultura en el marto be buried alive ser enterrado,-a vivo,-ato bury oneself in ones' work figurative use enfrascarse en el trabajoto bury one's face in one's hands figurative use taparse el rostro con las manosto be buried in thought figurative use estar ensimismado,-a1) inter: enterrar, sepultar2) hide: esconder, ocultar3)to bury oneself in : enfrascarse env.• enterrar v.• inhumar v.• ocultar v.• sepultar v.• soterrar v.'beri
1.
buries, burying, buried transitive verb1) enterrar*, sepultar (frml)to bury somebody at sea — dar* sepultura a alguien en el mar (frml)
2) (plunge, thrust)to bury something (in something): she buried the knife in his chest le enterró or le hundió or le clavó el cuchillo en el pecho; he buried his head in his hands — ocultó la cabeza entre las manos
2.
v refla) ( immerse oneself)to bury oneself in something — \<\<in one's work/one's books\>\> enfrascarse* en algo
b) ( become lodged) \<\<bullet\>\> alojarse['berɪ]VT1) [+ body, treasure] enterrar; (fig) [+ memory, matter] echar tierra sobre2) (=conceal)to bury o.s. in the country — perderse en la campiña
3) (=engross)buried in thought — ensimismado, absorto en sus pensamientos
she buried herself in her book — se ensimismó en la lectura, se enfrascó en el libro
4) (=plunge) [+ claws, knife] clavar (in en)5) (Sport) * (=defeat) aplastar ** * *['beri]
1.
buries, burying, buried transitive verb1) enterrar*, sepultar (frml)to bury somebody at sea — dar* sepultura a alguien en el mar (frml)
2) (plunge, thrust)to bury something (in something): she buried the knife in his chest le enterró or le hundió or le clavó el cuchillo en el pecho; he buried his head in his hands — ocultó la cabeza entre las manos
2.
v refla) ( immerse oneself)to bury oneself in something — \<\<in one's work/one's books\>\> enfrascarse* en algo
b) ( become lodged) \<\<bullet\>\> alojarse -
2 Laven, Arnold
1922Arnold Laven, Arthur Gardner y Jules V. Levy se conocen en las Fuerzas Aereas, en 1943. Al abandonar el ejercito se proponen producir peliculas. Hasta que puedan cumplir su proposito, trabajan en el cine, en cometidos varios. Laven, concretamente, lo hace para la Warner hasta que se incorpora de forma efectiva a tareas de direccion en 1952, ano en que los socios estrenan su primera pelicula, Without Warning, donde los otros dos ejercen como productores. Esta asociacion se mantendra en anos sucesivos y sera responsable de un punado de peliculas y, sobre todo, de series de television. En total, Laven dirige once peliculas, entre 1952 y 1969. Sus westerns no dejan de tener cierto interes por su correcta factura y sobre todo por su vision un tanto crepuscular del genero.Geronimo (Geronimo). 1962. 101 minutos. Technicolor. Panavision. UA. Chuck Connors, Pat Conway, Adam West, Kamala Devi.The Glory Guys (Gloriosos camaradas). 1965. 112 minutos. Technicolor. Panavision. Bristol Pictures (UA). Tom Tryon, Harve Presnell, Senta Ber ger, James Caan.Rough Night in Jericho (Noche de titanes). 1967. 104 minutos. Tech ni co lor. Techniscope. Martin Rackin Productions (Universal). George Peppard, Dean Martin, Jean Simmons, John McIntire.Sam Whiskey (Sam Whiskey). 1969. 97 minutos. Color DeLuxe. Brighton Pictures. Burt Reynolds, Angie Dickinson, Clint Walker, Ossie Davis.
См. также в других словарях:
Ber|ger rhythm — «BUR guhr», = alpha rhythm. (Cf. ↑alpha rhythm) ╂[< Hans Berger, 1873 1941, a German psychiatrist who first recorded it] … Useful english dictionary
ger — ag·ger; an·ger·ly; ar·mi·ger; as·trol·o·ger; au·ger; aus·trin·ger; bag·ger; bal·in·ger; bee·ger·ite; ber·ger; boot·leg·ger; bött·ger; bou·lan·ger·ite; brag·ger; braun·schwei·ger; brev·i·ger; brög·ger·ite; bud·ger·ee; bud·ger·i·gar; bud·ger·ow;… … English syllables
Ber.-Ger. — Berufungsgericht EN appellate court … Abkürzungen und Akronyme in der deutschsprachigen Presse Gebrauchtwagen
O|ber|bür|ger|meis|ter — «OH buhr booR guhr MYS tuhr», noun. German. lord mayor … Useful english dictionary
berlock dermatitis — ber·lock dermatitis bər .läk n a brownish discoloration of the skin that develops on exposure to sunlight after the use of perfume containing certain essential oils * * * berloque dermatitis (ber lokґ) [Fr. berloque, Ger. Berlocke pendant]… … Medical dictionary
§ 17. Orddeling uafhængigt af betydningen — Mange ord deles uafhængigt af betydningen. Det gælder fx to og flerstavelsesord der ikke består af stavelser med hver sin betydning: allike, billede, doven, huske, mandarin, peber, pige, stjerne. Og det kan gælde to og flerstavelsesord der ikke… … Dansk ordbog
Ballinger — This unusual and interesting name is of Norman, French origin, from the personal name Berengier, berenger introduced into England after the Conquest of 1066. It is ultimately of Germanic origin, composed of the elements ber(n), bear, with ger,… … Surnames reference
Bellanger — This unusual and interesting name is of Norman, French origin, from the personal name Berengier, berenger introduced into England after the Conquest of 1066. It is ultimately of Germanic origin, composed of the elements ber(n), bear, with ger,… … Surnames reference
Bellenger — This unusual and interesting name is of Norman, French origin, from the personal name Berengier, berenger introduced into England after the Conquest of 1066. It is ultimately of Germanic origin, composed of the elements ber(n), bear, with ger,… … Surnames reference
Bellhanger — This unusual and interesting name is of Norman, French origin, from the personal name Berengier, berenger introduced into England after the Conquest of 1066. It is ultimately of Germanic origin, composed of the elements ber(n), bear, with ger,… … Surnames reference
Bellinger — This unusual and interesting name is of Norman, French origin, from the personal name Berengier, berenger introduced into England after the Conquest of 1066. It is ultimately of Germanic origin, composed of the elements ber(n), bear, with ger,… … Surnames reference