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1 creep
I [kriːp] past tense, past participle crept [krept] verb1) to move slowly, quietly or secretly:يَزحفُ داخلا إلىHe crept into the bedroom.
2) to move on hands or knees or with the body close to the ground:يَزحَفُThe cat crept towards the bird.
3) (of plants) to grow along the ground, up a wall etc.يَتَعَرَّش II [kriːp] noun(slang) a disgusting person:شَخْص مُقْرِفLeave her alone, you creep.
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2 creep, (crept)
اِنْسَلَّ \ creep, (crept): to move with the body close to the ground; move along slowly, quietly or secretly. slip: to move quickly and smoothly (usu. so as to escape notice): I slipped away from the party. sneak: (with an adv. or prep.) to go quietly and secretly: He sneaked into my office while no one was there. steal: to move quietly and secretly: He stole past the guards without being noticed. -
3 bracket creep
Finthe way in which a gradual increase in income moves somebody into a higher tax bracket -
4 подкрадываться
creep глагол: -
5 втираться в доверие
Русско-английский синонимический словарь > втираться в доверие
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6 втираться в толпу
Русско-английский синонимический словарь > втираться в толпу
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7 colarse
1 (escabullirse) to slip in, gatecrash2 (en una cola) to push in, jump the queue, US jump the line3 familiar (equivocarse) to slip up, make a mistake4 (enamorarse) to fall ( por, for)* * *VPR1) (=filtrarse)el agua se cuela por las rendijas — the water seeps (in) through o gets in through the cracks
2) [personas] [sin pagar] to get in without paying; [en lugar prohibido] to sneak in; [en fiesta] to gatecrashun equipo de segunda división se había colado en las semifinales — a second division team had slipped through to the semifinals
3) [error]se le colaron varias faltas al revisar el texto — he overlooked several mistakes when revising the text
4) [en una cola] to jump the queue, cut in line (EEUU)¡oiga, no se cuele! — excuse me, there's a queue!
5) Esp * (=equivocarse) to get it wrong *¡huy! ¡me colé! — oops! I got it wrong! *
ahí te has colado porque yo no dije nada de eso — you got it wrong there, because I didn't say anything about that
6) Esp (=enamorarse)* * *= creep + past, sneak + past, sneak through, slither + Posesivo + way into, seep, creep (up) (in/into), sneak, weasel + Posesivo + way into, sneak into, worm + Posesivo + way through.Ex. Too frequently absurd errors creep past the abstractor who does not know the field.Ex. The more expensive media such as kits, models, and games are too large for someone to sneak past a vigilant charge out system = Los conjuntos documentales multimedia, las maquetas y los juegos son demasiado grandes para que alguien los pase sin ser visto por el sistema de préstamo.Ex. I think I am probably 99.9% effective at catching these spams but this was one of the.1% that snuck through.Ex. That's despite grumpy comments like those of William Hartston who said it was 'surely one of the ugliest words ever to slither its way into our dictionaries'.Ex. The outer edges of the sheet -- the deckle edges -- are rough and uneven where the stuff seeped between the deckle and the mould.Ex. Abstracting may not always be accorded a high priority by volunteer abstractors and undesirable delays may creep into the preparation of abstracts.Ex. With a no fine policy there'll no longer be a need for patrons to sneak books back on the shelves after they're due and then pretend they were there all the time = Sin una política de sanciones los usuarios ya no tendrán la necesidad de devolver los libros a los estantes sin ser vistos después de haber vencido su préstamo y luego fingir que estaban allí desde hace tiempo.Ex. He then rented a hidden camera and weaseled his way into the private ceremony to take a shot of the singer.Ex. The police said that he had sneaked into a her house and raped her nearly 200 times over a 13-month period.Ex. Corruption wormed its way through their ranks, as it did through the ranks of their kinfolk.----* colarse en = slip into.* colarse inadvertidamente = slip through.* * *= creep + past, sneak + past, sneak through, slither + Posesivo + way into, seep, creep (up) (in/into), sneak, weasel + Posesivo + way into, sneak into, worm + Posesivo + way through.Ex: Too frequently absurd errors creep past the abstractor who does not know the field.
Ex: The more expensive media such as kits, models, and games are too large for someone to sneak past a vigilant charge out system = Los conjuntos documentales multimedia, las maquetas y los juegos son demasiado grandes para que alguien los pase sin ser visto por el sistema de préstamo.Ex: I think I am probably 99.9% effective at catching these spams but this was one of the.1% that snuck through.Ex: That's despite grumpy comments like those of William Hartston who said it was 'surely one of the ugliest words ever to slither its way into our dictionaries'.Ex: The outer edges of the sheet -- the deckle edges -- are rough and uneven where the stuff seeped between the deckle and the mould.Ex: Abstracting may not always be accorded a high priority by volunteer abstractors and undesirable delays may creep into the preparation of abstracts.Ex: With a no fine policy there'll no longer be a need for patrons to sneak books back on the shelves after they're due and then pretend they were there all the time = Sin una política de sanciones los usuarios ya no tendrán la necesidad de devolver los libros a los estantes sin ser vistos después de haber vencido su préstamo y luego fingir que estaban allí desde hace tiempo.Ex: He then rented a hidden camera and weaseled his way into the private ceremony to take a shot of the singer.Ex: The police said that he had sneaked into a her house and raped her nearly 200 times over a 13-month period.Ex: Corruption wormed its way through their ranks, as it did through the ranks of their kinfolk.* colarse en = slip into.* colarse inadvertidamente = slip through.* * *
■colarse verbo reflexivo
1 (entrar sin ser visto) to slip in
(sin ser invitado) to gatecrash
(sin pagar) se coló en el autobús, he got onto the bus without paying
2 (saltarse el turno) to jump the queue, US to cut in the line
3 fam (meter la pata) to slip up, go too far
' colarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
colar
English:
cut in
- gatecrash
- jump
- push in
- queue
- thread
- worm
- crash
- gate
- line
- push
* * *vprel aire se cuela por esta rendija air passes through this crack;las llaves se colaron por la alcantarilla the keys dropped down the drain;el balón se coló por la portería sin que ningún jugador pudiera detenerlo the ball just slipped into the goal and no one could stop it2. [en cola] to Br jump the queue o US cut in line;¡eh, no te cueles! Br oi, don't jump the queue!, US hey, don't cut in line!3. [en sitio] to slip, to sneak (en into);se colaron en el tren they slipped o sneaked onto the train without paying;colarse en una fiesta to gatecrash a party;nos colamos por la puerta de atrás we sneaked in (by) the back doorte has colado, no es mi hermana you've got it wrong, she's not my sister* * *v/r fampush in3:colarse por alguien fam fall for s.o.* * *vr1) : to sneak in, to cut in line, to gate-crash2) : to slip up, to make a mistake* * *colarse vb1. (meterse en un lugar) to sneak inse coló en el concierto he sneaked into the concert / he got into the concert without paying2. (meterse en una cola) to push in3. (equivocarse en general) to slip up / to be wrong4. (equivocarse hablando) to put your foot in itte has colado, no debías decirle eso you've put your foot in it you shouldn't have said that -
8 einschleichen
v/refl (unreg., trennb., hat -ge-): sich einschleichen (in + Akk) creep in(to) (auch fig. Fehler); sich in jemandes Vertrauen einschleichen fig. worm one’s way into s.o.’s confidence* * *ein|schlei|chenvr sep(in +acc -to) to creep in; (lit auch) to steal or sneak (inf) in; (fig Fehler auch) to slip insich in jds Vertrauen éínschleichen (fig) — to worm one's way into sb's confidence
* * *ein|schlei·chen1. (in etw schleichen)▪ sich akk [in etw akk] \einschleichen to creep [or slip] [or sneak] in[to sth], to steal in[to sth] form2. (unbemerkt auftreten)der Verdacht schleicht sich ein, dass... one has a sneaking suspicion that...* * *unregelmäßiges reflexives Verb steal or sneak or creep in; (fig.) creep insich in etwas (Akk.) einschleichen — steal or sneak or creep into something
* * *einschleichen v/r (irr, trennb, hat -ge-):in +akk) creep in(to) (auch fig Fehler);sich in jemandes Vertrauen einschleichen fig worm one’s way into sb’s confidence* * *unregelmäßiges reflexives Verb steal or sneak or creep in; (fig.) creep insich in etwas (Akk.) einschleichen — steal or sneak or creep into something
* * *v.to creep in v. -
9 прониквам
penetrate ( през through, в into); permeate, pervademake o.'s way (в into); infiltrate; percolate(за мъгла и пр.) creep inпрониквам в печата creep into the newsпрониквам под повърхността get below the surfaceпрониквам се be imbued/filled (с with), be penetrated (by); imbue o.'s mind (with); be/become pervaded (with)прониквам се от съзнанието за дълг be imbued/pervaded/filled with a sense of duty* * *пронѝквам,гл. penetrate ( през through, в into); permeate, pervade; make o.’s way (в into); infiltrate; percolate; (за мъгла и пр.) creep in;\прониквам се be imbued/filled (c with), be penetrated (by); imbue o.’s mind (with); be/become pervaded (with).* * *penetrate: He прониквамd their thoughts. - Той проникна в мислите им., The sun rays прониквамd into the room. - Лъчите на слънцето проникнаха в стаята.; break through; come through; perforate (into, through); pierce{`pixs}; sweep in (за вятър и пр.); transfuse* * *1. (за мъгла и пр.) creep in 2. make o.'s way (в into);infiltrate;percolate 3. penetrate (през through, в into);permeate, pervade 4. ПРОНИКВАМ ce be imbued/filled (c with), be penetrated (by);imbue o.'s mind (with);be/become pervaded (with) 5. ПРОНИКВАМ в печата creep into the news 6. ПРОНИКВАМ под повърхността get below the surface 7. ПРОНИКВАМ се от съзнанието за дълг be imbued/pervaded/filled with a sense of duty -
10 introducirse
1 (entrar) to go in, get in, enter* * *VPR1) (=meterse) [astilla, cristal] to lodgeintroducirse en algo — to get into sth, enter sth
cuando el virus se introduce en el organismo — when the virus gets into o enters the organism
hemos logrado introducirnos en el mercado europeo — we've managed to break o get into the European market
muchas palabras se introducen en nuestro idioma procedentes del inglés — many words pass into our language from English
2) (=entrometerse) to interfere, meddle* * *(v.) = creep (up) (in/into), enter into, make + Posesivo + way (into/onto)Ex. Abstracting may not always be accorded a high priority by volunteer abstractors and undesirable delays may creep into the preparation of abstracts.Ex. Information in machine-readable form can be entered into and extracted from the DOBIS/Leuven files.Ex. Although electronic books (eBooks) are beginning to make their way into libraries collections, the question remains as to why it has taken so long for this to happen.* * *(v.) = creep (up) (in/into), enter into, make + Posesivo + way (into/onto)Ex: Abstracting may not always be accorded a high priority by volunteer abstractors and undesirable delays may creep into the preparation of abstracts.
Ex: Information in machine-readable form can be entered into and extracted from the DOBIS/Leuven files.Ex: Although electronic books (eBooks) are beginning to make their way into libraries collections, the question remains as to why it has taken so long for this to happen.* * *vprintroducirse en to get into;los ladrones se introdujeron en la casa por la ventana the burglars got into the house through the window;el balón se introdujo lentamente en la portería the ball trickled into the goal;se ha introducido un mosquito en la habitación a mosquito has got into the room;se está introduciendo agua en la mochila water is getting into the rucksack;se introdujo en la organización a los veinte años she joined the organization at twenty;poco a poco se ha introducido en el mundo del teatro she has gradually established a footing in the world of theatre;una costumbre que se introdujo el siglo pasado a custom introduced during the last century* * *v/r:introducirse en get into;introducirse en un mercado gain access to o break into a market* * *vr: to penetrate, to get into* * *introducirse vb to get in -
11 infiltrarse
pron.v.to infiltrate, to insinuate by filtration.* * *1 to infiltrate (en, -)* * *VPR1) [espía, agente] to infiltrateconsiguieron infiltrarse en territorio rumano — they succeeded in infiltrating into Romanian territory
2) [ideas, costumbres] to permeateel liberalismo se fue infiltrando entre los intelectuales — liberalism gradually permeated the intelligentsia
3) [líquido] to seep; [luz] to filter* * *(v.) = creep (up) (in/into), infiltrate, make + Posesivo + way (into/onto), weasel + Posesivo + way into, worm + Posesivo + way throughEx. Abstracting may not always be accorded a high priority by volunteer abstractors and undesirable delays may creep into the preparation of abstracts.Ex. Black librarians in the UK were urged to join the Association, get themselves organized, and ' infiltrate' to change things from the inside.Ex. Although electronic books (eBooks) are beginning to make their way into libraries collections, the question remains as to why it has taken so long for this to happen.Ex. He then rented a hidden camera and weaseled his way into the private ceremony to take a shot of the singer.Ex. Corruption wormed its way through their ranks, as it did through the ranks of their kinfolk.* * *(v.) = creep (up) (in/into), infiltrate, make + Posesivo + way (into/onto), weasel + Posesivo + way into, worm + Posesivo + way throughEx: Abstracting may not always be accorded a high priority by volunteer abstractors and undesirable delays may creep into the preparation of abstracts.
Ex: Black librarians in the UK were urged to join the Association, get themselves organized, and ' infiltrate' to change things from the inside.Ex: Although electronic books (eBooks) are beginning to make their way into libraries collections, the question remains as to why it has taken so long for this to happen.Ex: He then rented a hidden camera and weaseled his way into the private ceremony to take a shot of the singer.Ex: Corruption wormed its way through their ranks, as it did through the ranks of their kinfolk.* * *
■infiltrarse verbo reflexivo to infiltrate [en, into]
' infiltrarse' also found in these entries:
English:
infiltrate
- penetrate
* * *vpr1.infiltrarse en algo [espía] to infiltrate sth;se infiltró en el grupo terrorista he infiltrated the terrorist organization;se infiltraron en la red de la CIA they hacked into the CIA's computer network2. [líquido] to seep;la humedad se infiltró en la pared the damp seeped through the wall3. [ideas]sus ideas se infiltraron en el país rápidamente her ideas quickly spread through the country* * *v/r:* * *vr♦ infiltración nf -
12 insinuare
insertfig dubbio, sospetto sow the seeds ofinsinuare che insinuate that* * *insinuare v.tr.1 (introdurre) to slip, to insert, to introduce: insinuò la mano nella fenditura, he slipped his hand into the crack2 (suggerire) to insinuate, to hint at (sthg.), to suggest; (instillare) to instil: vorresti insinuare che sono stato io?, are you insinuating that it was me?; c'era chi insinuava che egli fosse colpevole, it was insinuated (o there were those who hinted) that he was guilty; insinuare un dubbio nella mente di qlcu., to insinuate (o instil) a doubt in s.o.'s mind; insinuò strane idee nella sua mente, he instilled strange ideas into his mind3 (dir.) to prove, to tender a proof of (sthg.), to claim: insinuare un credito, to tender a proof of credit; insinuare un credito in un fallimento, to prove (o to claim) a credit in a bankruptcy.◘ insinuarsi v.rifl. o intr.pron.1 to insinuate oneself (anche fig.); (infilarsi) to slip (in), to worm one's way in: riesce a insinuare ovunque, he manages to worm his way in everywhere; insinuare tra la folla, to slip into the crowd2 (penetrare, introdursi) to seep, to creep*, to penetrate; to work one's way in: l'acqua si era insinuata nel muro, the water seeped into (o penetrated) the wall; a poco a poco la disperazione si insinuava nel suo animo, little by little desperation crept into his mind.* * *[insinu'are]1. vt1)insinuare qc in — to slip o slide sth into2) (alludere) to insinuate, implyfu lei ad insinuargli il sospetto che... — she was the one who created the suspicion in his mind o made him suspect that...
2. vip (insinuarsi)(umidità, acqua)insinuarsi (in qc) — to seep in(to sth), penetrate (sth), (dubbio)
3. vr (insinuarsi)insinuarsi in — to worm one's way into, insinuate o.s. into
* * *[insinu'are] 1.verbo transitivo1) (infilare) to insert, to slip in2) (far nascere) to insinuate, to instil BE, to instill AE [dubbio, sospetto]3) (accusare) to imply, to insinuate2.* * *insinuare/insinu'are/ [1]1 (infilare) to insert, to slip in3 (accusare) to imply, to insinuate; come osi insinuare che how dare you suggest thatII insinuarsi verbo pronominale[ persona] to insinuate oneself; [sentimento, idea] to creep* into. -
13 подкрадываться
1) General subject: crawl, creep (creep into somebody's favour - втираться к кому-либо в доверие), creep (over, upon), creep up on (Don't yell - let's creep up on them and scare them. (Не вопи ты так, давай подкрадемся и напугаем их) The feeling she had for Malcolm had crept up on her and taken her by surprise. (Чувства к Малькольму проснулись в ней вн), sneak, stalk (к дичи), steal sneak up, steal up, skulk2) Biology: stalk (к добыче)3) Makarov: creep in, creep into, creep up4) Scuba diving: lurk -
14 загнездвам
загнездя tuck, insertembed, wedge, drive, force (в into)загнездвам се 1. establish o.s. firmly, settle, creep into2. (натиквам се) wedge (in, into), embed/lodge o.s. (in, into), be/become firmly fixed/rootedкуршумът се бе загнездил в костта the bullet was embedded/had stuck in the bone3. (за чувство и под.) grip. obsess; implant o.s.тази мисъл се загнезди в душата му the idea began to obsess him, he was obsessed by this ideaсъмнението се бе загнездило в душата му doubt was implanted in his mind, doubt had implanted itself in his mind* * *загнѐздвам,гл. tuck, insert; embed, wedge, drive, force (в into); entrench;\загнездвам се 1. plant o.s.;2. establish o.s. firmly, settle, creep into;3. ( натиквам се) wedge (in, into), embed/lodge o.s. (in, into), be/become firmly fixed/rooted; куршумът се бе загнездил в костта the bullet was embedded/had stuck in the bone;4. (за чувство и пр.) grip, obsess; embed o.s., implant o.s.; съмнението се бе загнездило в душата му doubt was implanted in his mind, doubt had implanted itself in his mind.* * *1. (за чувство и под.) grip. obsess;implant o.s. 2. (натиквам се) wedge (in, into), embed/ lodge o. s. (in, into), be/become firmly fixed/ rooted 3. embed, wedge, drive, force (в into) 4. ЗАГНЕЗДВАМ ce establish o. s. firmly, settle, creep into 5. загнездя tuck, insert 6. куршумът се бе загнездил в костта the bullet was embedded/had stuck in the bone 7. съмнението се бе загнездило в душата му doubt was implanted in his mind, doubt had implanted itself in his mind 8. тази мисъл се загнезди в душата му the idea began to obsess him, he was obsessed by this idea -
15 wkra|ść się
pf — wkra|dać się impf (wkradnę się, wkradniesz się, wkradł się, wkradła się, wkradli się — wkradam się) v refl. 1. (wejść niepostrzeżenie) [osoba, zwierzę] to sneak (do czegoś into sth); to steal (do czegoś into sth)- wkraść się do spiżarni/gabinetu to sneak a. steal into a pantry/study- złodziej wkradł się do domu przez drzwi do kuchni/przez balkon a thief stole into the house through the kitchen door/the balcony2. przen. (przedostać się) [niepokój, wątpliwości, błąd, nieścisłości] to creep in; to creep (do czegoś into sth)- wkrada się niepewność/poczucie zagrożenia uncertainty/insecurity is creeping in- do jej serca/w jej życie wkradło się zwątpienie doubt crept into her heart/life- zbyt wiele błędów/literówek wkrada się w pańskie teksty too many errors/spelling mistakes creep into your textsThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > wkra|ść się
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16 glisser
glisser [glise]➭ TABLE 11. intransitive verba. ( = avancer) to slide along ; [voilier, nuages, patineurs] to glide alongb. ( = tomber) to slidec. ( = déraper) [personne, objet] to slip ; [véhicule, pneus] to skidd. ( = être glissant) [parquet] to be slippery• attention, ça glisse be careful, it's slipperye. ( = coulisser) [tiroir, rideau, curseur, anneau] to slidef. ( = s'échapper) glisser des mains to slip out of one's handsg. ( = effleurer) glisser sur [+ sujet] to skate over• glissons ! let's not dwell on that!2. transitive verb( = introduire) glisser qch sous/dans qch to slip sth under/into sth3. reflexive verb► se glisser [personne, animal]* * *glise
1.
2) ( introduire) to slip in [remarque]
2.
verbe intransitif1) ( être glissant) [route, savon] to be slippery2) ( être déstabilisé) [personne] to slip; [chapeau, écharpe] to slip (down); [outil] to slip; [véhicule] to skidglisser des mains de quelqu'un — [savon, bouteille] to slip out of somebody's hands
3) ( se déplacer) gén to slide; ( avec grâce) to glide4) ( ne pas accrocher) [ski, tiroir, cloison] to slideglisser sur — fig ( ne pas affecter) [critique] to have no effect on [personne]; ( ne pas approfondir) [personne] to skate over [sujet]
5) ( passer)
3.
se glisser verbe pronominal1) ( s'introduire) to slipse glisser dans — gén to slip into; ( furtivement) to sneak into
2) ( s'insinuer) [sentiment, erreur] to creep into [personne, texte]* * *ɡlise1. vi1) (= avancer) to glidefaire glisser qch sur — to slide sth over, INFORMATIQUE, [icône] to drag sth onto
2) (= déraper) [personne] to slipIl a glissé et il est tombé. — He slipped and fell.
Il a glissé sur une peau de banane. — He slipped on a banana skin.
3) (= être glissant) [trottoir] to be slipperyAttention, ça glisse! — Watch out, it's slippery!
4) figglisser sur [détail] — to skate over
2. vt1) (= mettre)2) (= dire)3) (= donner)* * *glisser verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( mettre) to slip [objet] (dans into); j'ai glissé la lettre dans ma poche/sous la porte I slipped the letter into my pocket/under the door; il a glissé l'anneau à mon doigt he slipped the ring onto my finger; glisser un oreiller sous la tête d'un malade to slide a pillow under a patient's head; elle a glissé la main dans mes cheveux she ran her fingers through my hair;2 ( introduire) to slip in [remarque, commentaire, critique]; glisser une anecdote dans la conversation to slip an anecdote into the conversation;3 ( dire furtivement) glisser qch à l'oreille de qn to whisper sth in sb's ear;4 ( en tricot) to slip [maille].B vi1 ( être glissant) [route, trottoir, savon] to be slippery; ça glisse it's slippery;2 ( être déstabilisé) [personne] to slip; [chapeau, robe, écharpe] to slip (down); [outil, couteau] to slip; [véhicule] to skid; glisser de to slip out of; glisser des mains de qn [savon, bouteille] to slip out of sb's hands; une tuile/le ramoneur a glissé du toit a tile/the chimney sweep fell off the roof;3 ( se déplacer) gén to slide; ( avec grâce) to glide; descendre les escaliers en glissant sur la rampe to slide down the bannisters; se laisser glisser le long d'une corde/d'un mur to slide down a rope/a wall; un cygne/canoë glissait sur le lac a swan/canoe was gliding over the lake;4 ( ne pas accrocher) [piston, ski, tiroir, cloison] to slide; mes skis ne glissent pas my skis are sticking; la neige glisse bien/ne glisse pas the snow is nice and smooth/is sticking; leur regard glissait d'un tableau à l'autre their gaze wandered from one picture to another; leur regard glissait sur l'assistance they surveyed the people present;5 ( passer insensiblement) glisser dans l'ennui to become bored; glisser dans le pessimisme to sink into gloom; l'électorat glisse à droite there's a swing to the right among the electorate; le parti a glissé vers le terrorisme there has been a swing toward(s) terrorism in the party; le roman glisse de la comédie au drame the novel moves imperceptibly from comedy to drama;6 ( ne pas affecter) glisser sur [injure, critique] to have no effect on;C se glisser vpr1 ( pénétrer) se glisser dans gén to slip into; ( furtivement) to sneak into; se glisser dans son lit to slip into bed; se glisser dans les draps to slip between the sheets; le voleur s'est glissé dans la chambre the thief sneaked into the room;2 ( se faufiler) to slip; se glisser derrière un rideau to slip behind a curtain; se glisser dans la foule to slip through the crowd; se glisser parmi les invités to slip in among the guests; se glisser parmi les badauds to edge through the onlookers; je me suis glissé vers la sortie/au premier rang I slid toward(s) the exit/into the front row; le chat s'est glissé sous la voiture the cat crept under the car;3 ( s'insinuer) [sentiment, erreur] to creep into [personne, texte]; l'ennui se glissa entre nous boredom crept into our relationship.glisser entre les mains or doigts de qn [criminel] to slip through sb's fingers.[glise] verbe intransitifattention, ça glisse par terre watch out, it's slippery underfoot ou the ground's slippery2. [s'échapper accidentellement] to slip3. [tomber] to slide4. [avancer sans heurt - skieur, patineur] to glide along ; [ - péniche, ski] to glide5. [passer]sur toi, tout glisse comme l'eau sur les plumes d'un canard it's like water off a duck's back with you6. (figuré) [s'orienter]glisser à ou vers to shift to ou towardsune partie de l'électorat a glissé à gauche part of the electorate has shifted ou moved to the left7. DANSE to glissade————————[glise] verbe transitif1. [introduire] to slip[dire furtivement]j'ai glissé ton nom dans la conversation I managed to slip ou to drop your name into the conversation2. [confier]glisser un petit mot/une lettre à quelqu'un to slip somebody a note/a letter3. (locution)glisser un œil dans une pièce to peep ou to peek into a room————————se glisser verbe pronominal intransitif1. [se faufiler]se glisser au premier rang [rapidement] to slip into the front rowglisse-toi là [sans prendre de place] squeeze (yourself) in there2. [erreur]des fautes ont pu se glisser dans l'article some mistakes may have slipped ou crept into the article3. [sentiment] -
17 deslizarse
1 (gen) to slide; (sobre agua) to glide3 (fluir) to flow, run4 (transcurrir) to go by, fly* * *VPR1) (=resbalarse) to slideel coche se deslizó unos metros — the car slid o slipped forward a few metres
gotas de sudor se deslizaban por su frente — beads of sweat ran o slid down his forehead
el esquiador se desliza por la pista — the skier slips o skis down the slope
2) (=avanzar) [serpiente] to slither; [barco] to glide, slipel tren se desliza a 300km/h — the train glides along at 300km/h
* * *(v.) = slither, drift, skid, glideEx. 'Trouble slithering underfoot in the Garden of Eden?', the librarian shook his head sheepishly.Ex. Now that libraries have been catapulted out of the ice age by the online catalogue, they cannot afford to drift through the strong, variable winds of technological change.Ex. As a result of the snow they skidded across the road into a lorry.Ex. 'Ciao!' I shouted to the gondoliers as they glided past, their passengers waving up to me as I stood on the balcony of my room.* * *(v.) = slither, drift, skid, glideEx: 'Trouble slithering underfoot in the Garden of Eden?', the librarian shook his head sheepishly.
Ex: Now that libraries have been catapulted out of the ice age by the online catalogue, they cannot afford to drift through the strong, variable winds of technological change.Ex: As a result of the snow they skidded across the road into a lorry.Ex: 'Ciao!' I shouted to the gondoliers as they glided past, their passengers waving up to me as I stood on the balcony of my room.* * *
■deslizarse verbo reflexivo
1 (sobre una superficie) to slide
2 (un río, una corriente) to flow: las lágrimas se deslizaban por su mejilla, tears flowed down her cheeks
3 (en un lugar, silenciosamente) to glide: se deslizó en la oficina y consultó los informes reservados, she slipped into the office and went through the confidential reports
' deslizarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
escabullirse
- deslizar
- escurrir
English:
glide
- slide
- slip in
- slip into
- slither
- coast
- roll
- skid
* * *vpr1. [resbalar] to slide;deslizarse por to slide along;el barco se deslizaba por la superficie the boat glided along the surface;los esquiadores se deslizaban por la nieve the skiers slid across the snow;los niños se deslizaron por el tobogán the children slid down the chute;las lágrimas se deslizaban por sus mejillas tears ran down his cheeks;el agua se desliza mansamente río abajo the water flows gently downriver2. [escabullirse] to slip;una lagartija se deslizó entre las rocas a lizard slipped in between the rocks;para entrar/salir tuvo que deslizarse sin que lo viera el portero to get in/out he had to slip past the porter without being seen4. [sujeto: tiempo, vida] to slip away o by* * *v/r1 slide;deslizarse sobre el hielo slide over the ice2:se me ha deslizado un error I’ve slipped up* * *vr1) : to slide, to glide2) : to slip away* * *deslizarse vb -
18 втираться в доверие
1) General subject: (кому-л.) creep into favour, (к кому-л.) worm oneself into favour, wriggle into favour, cozy up to, worm one's way into confidence, ingratiate oneself with2) Makarov: (кому-л.) creep into favourУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > втираться в доверие
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19 вкрадываться
несов. - вкра́дываться, сов. - вкра́стьсяsteal in, creep in, slip in; (в вн.) steal (into), creep (into), slip (into)в текст вкра́лась опеча́тка — a misprint has crept into the text
••вкра́сться в дове́рие к кому́-л — insinuate / worm oneself into smb's confidence
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20 залезть
сов1) ( взобраться) climb [klaim] on(to)зале́зть на де́рево — climb on a tree
2) ( спрятаться) creep (into)зале́зть в кана́ву — creep into a ditch
3) (проникнуть куда-л.) get (into); ( забраться рукой) put one's hand intoво́ры зале́зли в дом но́чью — the burglars got into the house during the night
См. также в других словарях:
creep into — phrasal verb creep in or creep into [intransitive] Word forms creep in : present tense I/you/we/they creep in he/she/it creeps in present participle creeping in past tense crept in past participle crept in 1) to gradually start to affect or… … English dictionary
creep into something — ˌcreep ˈin/ˈinto sth derived to begin to happen or affect sth • As she became more tired, errors began to creep into her work. Main entry: ↑creepderived … Useful english dictionary
creep in/creep into sth — UK US creep in/creep into sth Phrasal Verb with creep({{}}/kriːp/ verb [I] ► to gradually start to be noticeable: »If delays are allowed to creep in, then job losses will be just around the corner. ► if mistakes creep in or creep into data or… … Financial and business terms
creep into sth — UK US creep in/creep into sth Phrasal Verb with creep({{}}/kriːp/ verb [I] ► to gradually start to be noticeable: »If delays are allowed to creep in, then job losses will be just around the corner. ► if mistakes creep in or creep into data or… … Financial and business terms
creep into — verb a) To enter something or somewhere by creeping. b) To enter surreptitiously. See Also: creep in … Wiktionary
creep into — … Useful english dictionary
Creep — (kr[=e]p), v. t. [imp. {Crept} (kr[e^]pt) ({Crope} (kr[=o]p), Obs.); p. p. {Crept}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Creeping}.] [OE. crepen, creopen, AS. cre[ o]pan; akin to D. kruipen, G. kriechen, Icel. krjupa, Sw. krypa, Dan. krybe. Cf. {Cripple}, {Crouch}.] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
creep in something — ˌcreep ˈin/ˈinto sth derived to begin to happen or affect sth • As she became more tired, errors began to creep into her work. Main entry: ↑creepderived … Useful english dictionary
creep — creep1 [ krip ] (past tense and past participle crept [ krept ] ) verb intransitive * 1. ) if someone creeps somewhere, they move there quietly and slowly: I crept downstairs when everyone was asleep. She crept quietly into bed. a ) if a vehicle… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
creep — creep1 [kri:p] v past tense and past participle crept [krept] [I always + adverb/preposition] [: Old English; Origin: creopan] 1.) to move in a quiet, careful way, especially to avoid attracting attention creep into/over/around etc ▪ Johann would … Dictionary of contemporary English
creep — I UK [kriːp] / US [krɪp] verb [intransitive] Word forms creep : present tense I/you/we/they creep he/she/it creeps present participle creeping past tense crept UK [krept] / US past participle crept * 1) if someone creeps somewhere, they move… … English dictionary