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1 deadpan humour
humor nombre masculino socarrón -
2 deadpan humour
Общая лексика: бесстрастный юмор -
3 deadpan
tr['dedpæn]1 (face, look) de póquer, de palo, sin expresión; (tone) inexpresivo,-a1 de manera inexpresiva\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLdeadpan humour humor nombre masculino socarróndeadpan ['dɛd.pæn] adv: de manera inexpresiva, sin expresióndeadpan adj: inexpresivo, impasibleadjective < expression> de póquer or (fam) de palo; <voice/delivery> deliberadamente inexpresivo['dedˌpæn]ADJ [face, humour] inexpresivo* * *adjective < expression> de póquer or (fam) de palo; <voice/delivery> deliberadamente inexpresivo -
4 deadpan
['dedpæn] 1. 2.avverbio con faccia impassibile, impassibilmente* * *deadpan /ˈdɛdpæn/ (fam.)A a.impassibile, imperturbabile: His face was deadpan, aveva una faccia impassibile; Her deadpan expression did not change during the whole debate, la sua espressione imperturbabile non è cambiata per tutto il dibattito; deadpan humour, umorismo impassibile; deadpan delivery, tono impassibile (nel dire qc., nel raccontare una barzelletta, ecc.)B avv.impassibilmente, con aria imperturbabile.(to) deadpan /ˈdɛdpæn/ (fam.)v. i.dire con aria impassibile: «That was a campaign promise» the president deadpanned to much laughter, «quella era una promessa elettorale» ha replicato il presidente con aria impassibile suscitando grandi risa.* * *['dedpæn] 1. 2.avverbio con faccia impassibile, impassibilmente -
5 deadpan
I n infml1)I tried some comical stuff but all I got was a deadpan — Я попробовал изобразить что-то смешное, но его лицо осталось непроницаемым
Remember the deadpan she used to put on? — Ты помнишь, как она напускала на себя безучастный вид?
2)II vi infml esp AmEIII adj infml IV adv infmlWith kids packing his audiences he deadpanned, "I promise to lower the voting age to ten" — Когда к нему на встречу набивалось много подростков, он заявлял с невозмутимым видом: "Я обещаю предоставить избирательное право лицам, достигшим десятилетнего возраста"
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6 deadpan
adjective* * *ˈdead·panI. adj of expression, face ausdrucksloshe says the funniest things in the most \deadpan tone er erzählt die witzigsten Sachen in todernstem Ton\deadpan humour trockener Humor▪ to \deadpan sth etw trocken sagen* * *deadpan adj umg1. unbewegt, ausdruckslos (Gesicht)2. mit ausdruckslosem Gesicht (Person)3. trocken (Humor)* * *adjective* * *n.Schafsgesicht m. -
7 deadpan
'dead·pan adjof expression, face ausdruckslos;he says the funniest things in the most \deadpan tone er erzählt die witzigsten Sachen in todernstem Ton;to \deadpan sth etw trocken sagen -
8 deadpan
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9 deadpan
B adv d'un air pince-sans-rire. -
10 deadpan
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11 humour
['hjuːmə] 1. сущ.; брит.; амер. humor1)а) юмор; что-л. смешное, забавноеdash / trace / vein of humour — веселье
bitter / caustic humour — горький юмор
black / deadpan / dry / straight / gallows humour — чёрный юмор
cracker-barrel humour — амер. доморощенный юмор
earthy humour — житейский, грубый юмор
sly / wry / subtle humour — скрытый юмор
б) комизм, комичностьв) = sense of humour остроумие, чувство юмора; склонность к шутливостиSyn:wit I2)а) черты характера; склонности, наклонности; темперамент, нравperson in the humour for smth. — человек со склонностью к чему-л.
Syn:б) настроение, расположение духаin bad / ill humour — в плохом настроении
He was in no humour to listen. — Он был не в настроении слушать.
Syn:в) прихоть, каприз; причудаSyn:3) ист.; филос. влага, жидкость ( как основное начало в живом теле)cardinal humours — основные "соки" в организме человека
4) мед. телесная жидкость2. гл.; брит.; амер. humor1) потакать; ублажать; баловатьSyn:2) приспосабливать, подгонять, приводить в соответствие чему-л.In reading this poem we ought to humour it with a corresponding tone of voice. — Читая это стихотворение, мы должны найти подходящий тон голоса.
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12 deadpan
dead-pan
1> _разг. невыразительное лицо
2> _разг. невыразительный, бесчувственный; бесстрастный,
непроницаемый
_Ex:
dead-pan face каменное лицо, лицо как у истукана
_Ex:
a dead-pan account of a child's death бесстрастный рассказ
о смерти ребенка
_Ex:
to answer in one's dead-pan manner отвечать бесстрастным тоном
3> совершаемый с притворной серьезностью
_Ex:
dead-pan humour юмор под простачка
_Ex:
dead-pan teasing поддразнивание с серьезной миной
4> _разг. без выражения, бесстрастно; непроницаемо, с
каменным лицом
5> _разг. на полном серьезе, с серьезной миной
(обыкн. притворно) -
13 deadpan dead·pan
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14 humor
m.1 mood.estar de buen/mal humor to be in a good/bad moodestar de un humor de perros to be in a filthy mood2 humor (gracia).un programa de humor a comedy programno tiene sentido del humor she doesn't have a sense of humoren vez de enfadarme, me lo tomé con humor rather than get upset, I just laughed it offhumor negro black humor3 mood (ganas).no estoy de humor I'm not in the moodno está de humor para ponerse a cocinar she doesn't feel like cooking4 humor (anatomy).5 pus.6 merry disposition.7 humour, normal body fluid.* * *1 (ánimo) mood2 (carácter) temper3 (gracia) humour (US humor)4 (líquido) humour (US humor)\estar de buen humor / estar de mal humor to be in a good mood / to be in a bad moodestar de humor para algo / tener humor para algo to feel like (doing) something, feel in the mood for (doing) somethingtener un humor de perros familiar to be in a foul moodhumor acuoso aqueous humour (US humor)humor negro black comedyhumor vítreo vitreous humour (US humor)* * *noun m.1) humor2) mood3) temper* * *ISM1) (=estado de ánimo) mood, humour, humor (EEUU), temperbuen humor — good humour, good mood
estar de buen/mal humor — to be in a good/bad mood, be in a good/bad temper
seguir el humor a algn — to humour sb, go along with sb's mood
2) (=gracia) humour, humor (EEUU), humorousness frmIISM (Med, Bio) humour, humor (EEUU)* * *1)a) ( estado de ánimo) moodestar de buen/mal humor — to be in a good/bad mood
hay que tener humor para... — you have to be really enthusiastic o (BrE) keen to...
estar de un humor de perros — (fam) to be in a filthy o foul mood (colloq)
b) ( gracia) humor*2) (Biol, Fisiol) humor** * *= humour [humor, -USA], temper.Ex. If you are looking for books about humor in orchestral music, you can combine these two lists.Ex. A society without a literature has that much less chance of embodying within its temper and so within its organizations something of the fullness of human experience.----* buen humor = cheerfulness, good humour.* comedia de humor negro = black comedy.* con buen humor = good-humouredly.* con humor = humorously.* con un humor de perros = like a bear with a sore head, in a foul mood.* de buen humor = good-humouredly, in good humour.* decir con mal humor = spit out.* de humor = funny [funnier -comp., funniest -sup.].* de mal humor = crotchety.* esquech de humor = comedy sketch.* estar de buen humor = be high.* humor acuoso = aqueous humour.* humor barato = cheap laughs.* humor corporal = body fluid.* humor de perros = vicious temper.* humor serio = deadpan humour.* humor visual = slapstick.* humor vítreo = vitreous humour.* perder el sentido del humor = lose + sense of humour.* programa de humor = comedy programme.* sentido del humor = sense of humour.* sin humor = humourless [humorless, -USA].* sketch de humor = comedy sketch.* tomarse Algo con humor = take + Nombre + in good humour.* ver Algo con humor = a funny eye for.* * *1)a) ( estado de ánimo) moodestar de buen/mal humor — to be in a good/bad mood
hay que tener humor para... — you have to be really enthusiastic o (BrE) keen to...
estar de un humor de perros — (fam) to be in a filthy o foul mood (colloq)
b) ( gracia) humor*2) (Biol, Fisiol) humor** * *= humour [humor, -USA], temper.Ex: If you are looking for books about humor in orchestral music, you can combine these two lists.
Ex: A society without a literature has that much less chance of embodying within its temper and so within its organizations something of the fullness of human experience.* buen humor = cheerfulness, good humour.* comedia de humor negro = black comedy.* con buen humor = good-humouredly.* con humor = humorously.* con un humor de perros = like a bear with a sore head, in a foul mood.* de buen humor = good-humouredly, in good humour.* decir con mal humor = spit out.* de humor = funny [funnier -comp., funniest -sup.].* de mal humor = crotchety.* esquech de humor = comedy sketch.* estar de buen humor = be high.* humor acuoso = aqueous humour.* humor barato = cheap laughs.* humor corporal = body fluid.* humor de perros = vicious temper.* humor serio = deadpan humour.* humor visual = slapstick.* humor vítreo = vitreous humour.* perder el sentido del humor = lose + sense of humour.* programa de humor = comedy programme.* sentido del humor = sense of humour.* sin humor = humourless [humorless, -USA].* sketch de humor = comedy sketch.* tomarse Algo con humor = take + Nombre + in good humour.* ver Algo con humor = a funny eye for.* * *A1 (estado de ánimo) moodestá de buen humor she's in a good moodestá de mal humor she's in a bad mood, she's in a mood ( colloq)no estoy de humor para aguantar tus bromas I'm in no mood to put up with your jokesestá de un humor que no hay quien lo aguante he's in such a foul mood that he's quite unbearable, he's in an unbearable moodhay que tener humor para irse a correr a las seis de la mañana you have to be really keen to go running at six in the morningestar de un humor de perros ( fam); to be in a filthy o foul mood ( colloq), to be like a bear with a sore head ( colloq)2 (gracia) humor*Compuesto:black humor*Compuestos:aqueous humor*vitreous humor** * *
humor sustantivo masculino
no estoy de humor para salir I'm not in the mood to go out
humor sustantivo masculino
1 (talante, ánimo) mood: hoy estoy de buen humor, today I'm in a good mood
2 (alegría, ingenio) humour, US humor
un chiste de humor negro, a black joke
' humor' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
ácida
- ácido
- aprovecharse
- café
- cambiante
- depender
- dotada
- dotado
- encarar
- festiva
- festivo
- fina
- fino
- humorismo
- levantarse
- proverbial
- rara
- raro
- restituir
- sentida
- sentido
- variable
- chinche
- chusco
- corriente
- de
- diablo
- endemoniado
- leche
- malo
- mufa
- nota
- peculiar
- perro
- talante
English:
bad-tempered
- clean
- dark
- dry
- foul
- good
- good-humoured
- grumpy
- huff
- humor
- humour
- ill-humour
- mood
- moody
- petulantly
- put
- reminiscent
- sense
- sick
- spirit
- temper
- wicked
- zany
- bad
- dryness
- grace
- humorless
- in
- inclined
- raunchy
- ribald
- touch
- warped
- wit
* * *humor nm1. [estado de ánimo] mood;[carácter] temperament;estar de buen/mal humor to be in a good/bad mood;Famestar de un humor de perros to be in a filthy mood2. [gracia] humour;un programa de humor a comedy programme;no tiene sentido del humor she doesn't have a sense of humour;en vez de enfadarme, me lo tomé con humor rather than get upset, I just laughed it offhumor negro black humour3. [ganas] mood;no estoy de humor I'm not in the mood;no está de humor para ponerse a cocinar she doesn't feel like cooking4. Anat humourhumor ácueo aqueous humour;humor acuoso aqueous humour;humor vítreo vitreous humour* * *m1 humor, Brhumour;sentido del humor sense of humor o Br humourestar de buen/mal humor be in a good/bad mood;estar de humor para hacer algo be in the mood to do sth3 ( genio):tener un humor de perros fam be bad-tempered* * *humor nm1) : humor2) : mood, temperestá de buen humor: she's in a good mood* * *humor n1. (estado de ánimo) mood2. (comicidad) humourestar de buen/mal humor to be in a good/bad mood -
15 humor serio
(n.) = deadpan humourEx. Never sentimental, the movie has moments of droll, deadpan humor.* * *(n.) = deadpan humourEx: Never sentimental, the movie has moments of droll, deadpan humor.
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16 serio
adj.1 serious, grave, humorless, unsmiling.2 serious, intense, grave, heavy.3 serious, responsible, reliable, businesslike.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: seriar.* * *► adjetivo1 (importante) serious, grave2 (severo) serious3 (formal) reliable, responsible, dependable4 (color) sober; (traje etc) formal\en serio seriously■ lo digo en serio I'm quite serious, I mean it¿en serio? are you serious?, do you really mean that?, really?ir en serio to be true, be serioustomar en serio to take seriously* * *(f. - seria)adj.1) serious, earnest2) important* * *ADJ1) [expresión, tono] serious¿por qué estás hoy tan serio? — why are you (looking) so serious today?
se quedó mirándome muy serio — he looked at me very seriously, he stared gravely at me
ponerse serio: se puso seria al ver la foto — she went o became serious when she saw the photo
me voy a poner seria contigo si no estudias — I'm going to get cross with you if you don't do some studying
2)¿lo dices en serio? — are you serious?, do you really mean it?
3) [problema, enfermedad, pérdida] serious4) (=fiable) [persona] reliable; [trato] straight, honest5) (=severo)el negro es un color demasiado serio para una niña — black is too serious o severe a colour for a young girl
6) [estudio, libro] serious* * *- ria adjetivo1) ( poco sonriente) seriousqué cara más seria ¿qué te ha pasado? — what a long face, what's the matter? (colloq)
voy a tener que ponerme serio con este niño — I'm going to have to start getting strict with this child
no confío en él, es muy poco serio — I don't trust him, he's very unreliable
3)a) <cine/tema> seriousb) ( grave) <enfermedad/problema> seriousc)¿lo dices en serio? — are you (being) serious?, do you really mean it?
esto es serio, está muriéndose — this is serious, he's dying
* * *= authoritative, conscientious, gross [grosser -comp., grossest -sup.], serious, thoughtful, earnest, grave [graver -comp., gravest -sup.], business-like, solemn, dire, staid, serious minded, straight-faced.Ex. Some authoritative texts on the subject are listed at the end of this chapter.Ex. Then the conscientious manager can help solve his problems without engaging in original laborious research or the risky practice of trial and error.Ex. She notes some gross inadequacies of these schemes in classifying African subjects, especially in the social sciences and humanities.Ex. DC is certainly not regarded as the perfect classification scheme even in sectors where there is no serious alternative.Ex. Production quotas, I believe, are antithetical to careful, thoughtful cataloging.Ex. She spied Asadorian in earnest converse with McSpadden.Ex. I believe that literature is certainly in one sense 'play' -- grave and absorbed play.Ex. It was generally felt that US libraries are organised on more business-like lines than those in the Netherlands.Ex. The infants sat solemn as the Supreme Court pronounced judgment = Los niños se sentaron solemnes mientras que el Tribunal Supremo dictaba sentencia.Ex. Throughout the process of development, debate and enactment of the Digital Millennium Act in the USA, many dire forebodings were envisaged for the library profession.Ex. As many of the responding librarians pointed out, ' staid, adult-looking pages are not attractive to a teenage audience' = Como muchos de los bibliotecarios encuestados indicaron las "páginas con aspecto serio como si estuviesen dirigidas a adultos no resultan atractivas a un público joven".Ex. From his description one gets the impression that the inhabitants of Utopia are serious minded and that they read for instruction or for improving their own mind.Ex. Satire and comedy can be better vehicles for social commentary than straight-faced, serious drama.----* en serio = wholeheartedly [whole-heartedly], for real.* en un serio aprieto = in dire straits.* en un serio apuro = in dire straits.* humor serio = deadpan humour.* mejor sería que + Subjuntivo = might + as well + Verbo.* poco serio = flippant.* ponerse a hacer Algo en serio = buckle down to.* ponerse a trabajar en serio = get on with + Posesivo + work, buckle down to, pull up + Posesivo + socks, pull + (a/Posesivo) finger out.* sería mejor que + Imperfecto de Subjuntivo = had better + Infinitivo.* serio en apariencia = deadpan.* serios, los = serious, the.* tomarse Algo en serio = take to + heart.* tomarse en serio = take + seriously, get + serious.* * *- ria adjetivo1) ( poco sonriente) seriousqué cara más seria ¿qué te ha pasado? — what a long face, what's the matter? (colloq)
voy a tener que ponerme serio con este niño — I'm going to have to start getting strict with this child
no confío en él, es muy poco serio — I don't trust him, he's very unreliable
3)a) <cine/tema> seriousb) ( grave) <enfermedad/problema> seriousc)¿lo dices en serio? — are you (being) serious?, do you really mean it?
esto es serio, está muriéndose — this is serious, he's dying
* * *= authoritative, conscientious, gross [grosser -comp., grossest -sup.], serious, thoughtful, earnest, grave [graver -comp., gravest -sup.], business-like, solemn, dire, staid, serious minded, straight-faced.Ex: Some authoritative texts on the subject are listed at the end of this chapter.
Ex: Then the conscientious manager can help solve his problems without engaging in original laborious research or the risky practice of trial and error.Ex: She notes some gross inadequacies of these schemes in classifying African subjects, especially in the social sciences and humanities.Ex: DC is certainly not regarded as the perfect classification scheme even in sectors where there is no serious alternative.Ex: Production quotas, I believe, are antithetical to careful, thoughtful cataloging.Ex: She spied Asadorian in earnest converse with McSpadden.Ex: I believe that literature is certainly in one sense 'play' -- grave and absorbed play.Ex: It was generally felt that US libraries are organised on more business-like lines than those in the Netherlands.Ex: The infants sat solemn as the Supreme Court pronounced judgment = Los niños se sentaron solemnes mientras que el Tribunal Supremo dictaba sentencia.Ex: Throughout the process of development, debate and enactment of the Digital Millennium Act in the USA, many dire forebodings were envisaged for the library profession.Ex: As many of the responding librarians pointed out, ' staid, adult-looking pages are not attractive to a teenage audience' = Como muchos de los bibliotecarios encuestados indicaron las "páginas con aspecto serio como si estuviesen dirigidas a adultos no resultan atractivas a un público joven".Ex: From his description one gets the impression that the inhabitants of Utopia are serious minded and that they read for instruction or for improving their own mind.Ex: Satire and comedy can be better vehicles for social commentary than straight-faced, serious drama.* en serio = wholeheartedly [whole-heartedly], for real.* en un serio aprieto = in dire straits.* en un serio apuro = in dire straits.* humor serio = deadpan humour.* mejor sería que + Subjuntivo = might + as well + Verbo.* poco serio = flippant.* ponerse a hacer Algo en serio = buckle down to.* ponerse a trabajar en serio = get on with + Posesivo + work, buckle down to, pull up + Posesivo + socks, pull + (a/Posesivo) finger out.* sería mejor que + Imperfecto de Subjuntivo = had better + Infinitivo.* serio en apariencia = deadpan.* serios, los = serious, the.* tomarse Algo en serio = take to + heart.* tomarse en serio = take + seriously, get + serious.* * *A (poco sonriente) seriouscon pinta de intelectual, seriecito y callado with an intellectual, rather serious o solemn and quiet airqué cara más seria ¿qué te ha pasado? what a long face, what's the matter? ( colloq)al oír la noticia se puso muy serio his expression became very serious o grave when he heard the newsqué serio estás hoy ¿estás preocupado? you're looking very serious today, are you worried about something?como no obedezcas voy a tener que ponerme serio contigo if you don't do as I say I'm going to get annoyed with youB(sensato, responsable): un empleado serio y trabajador a responsible o reliable, hardworking employeeno es serio que nos digan una cosa y luego hagan otra it's no way to treat people ( o to conduct business etc) saying one thing and then doing anotherno confío en él, es muy poco serio I don't trust him, he is very unreliableson todos profesionales muy serios they are all dedicated professionalsC1 (no frívolo, importante) seriousha hecho cine serio y también comedias tontas y frívolas he's made serious movies as well as silly, lighthearted comedieses un serio aspirante al título he's a serious contender for the title2en serio ‹hablar› seriously, in earnestbueno, vamos a ponernos a trabajar en serio right (then), let's get down to some serious work¿lo dices en serio? are you (being) serious? o seriously? o do you really mean it?se toma muy en serio su carrera she takes her career very seriouslyesto va en serio, está muriéndose this is serious, he's dyingy esto va en serio and I really mean it o and I'm serious about thisno se toma nada en serio he doesn't take anything seriouslymira que te lo digo en serio I mean it, you know* * *
Del verbo seriar: ( conjugate seriar)
serio es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
serió es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo
serio◊ - ria adjetivo
1 ( poco sonriente) serious
2 ‹ empleado› responsible, reliable;
‹ empresa› reputable
3
c)
¿lo dices en serio? are you (being) serious?, do you really mean it?;
tomarse algo en serio to take sth seriously
serio,-a adjetivo
1 (taciturno, de consideración, grave) serious
2 (comprometido, de confianza) reliable
♦ Locuciones: en serio, seriously: hablaba en serio, she was serious
ponte a trabajar en serio, you must start to work hard
' serio' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
callada
- callado
- coña
- en
- formal
- gorda
- gordo
- jugar
- ligera
- ligero
- risa
- seria
- tiesa
- tieso
- tomarse
- verdad
- asustar
- decir
- enfado
- enojo
English:
apart
- assert
- businesslike
- deep
- dignified
- earnest
- face value
- flippant
- half-serious
- intense
- joke
- kid
- knuckle down
- laugh off
- major
- mean
- quality newspaper
- reputable
- responsible
- serious
- seriously
- settle down
- severe
- sober
- sober-minded
- staid
- steady
- straight
- weighty
- business
- dire
- genuine
- honestly
- knuckle
- nasty
- pride
- seriousness
- solemn
- surely
* * *serio, -a♦ adj1. [grave] serious;es una persona muy seria he's a very serious person;estar serio to look serious;me lanzó una mirada seria she gave me a serious look;me tuve que poner muy seria con mis alumnos I had to get very serious with my pupils2. [importante] serious;es una enfermedad muy seria it's a very serious illness;me dio un susto muy serio I got a very nasty shock;una seria amenaza para la paz mundial a serious threat to world peace3. [responsable] responsible;[cumplidor, formal] reliable;son muy serios, cumplirán los plazos they're very reliable, they'll meet the deadlines;no son gente seria they're very unreliable;¡esto no es serio! this is ridiculous!;lo que no es serio es que ahora digan que necesitan dos meses más what's really unacceptable is that now they're saying they need another two months4. [sobrio] sober;un traje serio a formal suit;sólo ve programas serios she only watches serious programmes♦ en serio loc advseriously;lo digo en serio I'm serious;en serio, me ha tocado la lotería seriously, I've won the lottery;¿vas en serio? are you (being) serious?;tomarse algo/a alguien en serio to take sth/sb seriously;ponte a estudiar en serio get down to some serious study* * *adj1 serious;ésto va en serio this is serious;tomarse algo en serio take sth seriously2 ( responsable) reliable* * *1) : serious, earnest2) : reliable, responsible3) : important4)en serio : seriously, in earnest♦ seriamente adv* * *serio adj1. (en general) serious2. (responsable) reliable -
17 бесстрастный юмор
General subject: deadpan humour -
18 trockener Humor
mdeadpan humour -
19 pince-sans-rire
pince-sans-rire [pɛ̃ssɑ̃ʀiʀ]invariable adjective* * *pɛ̃ssɑ̃ʀiʀnom masculin et féminin invariablec'est un pince-sans-rire — he has a deadpan sense of humour [BrE]
* * *pɛ̃ssɑ̃ʀiʀ adj inv* * *A adj inv [personne, ton] deadpan; être pince-sans-rire to be deadpan, to have a deadpan sense of humourGB.B nmf inv c'est un pince-sans-rire he has a deadpan sense of humourGB.[pɛ̃ssɑ̃rir] nom masculin et fémininperson with a deadpan ou dry sense of humour -
20 divertido
adj.amusing, cool, entertaining, fun.past part.past participle of spanish verb: divertir.* * *1→ link=divertir divertir► adjetivo1 (gracioso) funny, amusing2 (entretenido) fun, entertaining, enjoyable* * *(f. - divertida)adj.1) amusing, funny2) entertaining* * *ADJ1) (=entretenido) [libro, película] entertaining; [chiste, persona] funny, amusingla fiesta fue muy divertida — the party was great fun o very enjoyable
¡qué divertido! ¿ahora me dices que no puedes ir? — iró that's just great! now you tell me you can't go?
2)DIVERTIDO ¿"Funny o fun"? ► Divertido solo se puede traducir por funny si nos hace reír: Acabo de ver una obra muy divertida I've just seen a very funny play ► Cuando hablamos de una actividad o situación divertida (en el sentido de entretenida y agradable), a menudo se la puede describir en inglés como fun: Me gusta jugar al escondite. Es muy divertido I like playing hide and seek. It's great fun NOTA: Fun es un sustantivo incontable y por lo tanto, al contrario que funny, no puede ir acompañado de adverbios como very. Se suele acompañar de great, good y a lot of. Para otros usos y ejemplos ver la entradaestar divertido — LAm * to be tight *
* * *- da adjetivoa) (que interesa, divierte) <espectáculo/fiesta> fun, enjoyable; <momento/situación> entertaininges un tipo muy divertido — he's a really fun guy, he's really fun to be with
b) ( gracioso) funny* * *= amused, enjoyable, facetious, laughable, hilarious, fun, amusing, funny [funnier -comp., funniest -sup.], playful, cheery [cheerier -comp., cheeriest -sup.], comedic, droll.Ex. After the wait, her first words emerged with an amused laugh.Ex. Having made this prefatory warning, it has also to be said that many teachers successfully contrive to make reviewing an enjoyable and useful ingredient in their book and reading programs.Ex. This might, perhaps, be considered a facetious example; however, consider the effect of the indiscriminate use of LATIN AMERICA and SPANISH AMERICA.Ex. It's laughable when Archie Bunker says that, because we know he's an uneducated slob.Ex. In studying the structure of bibliographic control it is not difficult to discover strange, and even hilarious, examples of specialist bibliographic sources.Ex. To make the reading more fun for the children we'll include a squib about the garbage dog from 'The Eighteenth Emergency' by Betsy Byars to put alongside a passage about mongrels from the 'World Book Encyclopedia'.Ex. In the proceedings of the pioneer 1876 Conference of Librarians we can read that 'Mr Edmands gave some amusing illustrations to show that readers often had only the most vague idea of what they really wanted'.Ex. This article reviews on-line data bases that may be used to search for references to humour (cartoons, funny articles and books, and medical aspects of humour).Ex. The article is a playful attempt to describe the historical determinations of the subject.Ex. The novel is a cheery social satire about geeky middle-aged men and their freakishly attractive, younger spouses.Ex. In the year 2000, news and entertainment programs dedicated a great deal of comedic attention to the presidential election.Ex. Never sentimental, the movie has moments of droll, deadpan humor.----* algo diverto que hacer = fun thing to do.* de forma divertida = funnily.* de manera divertida = funnily.* de modo divertido = comically, funnily.* lo divertido = the fun part.* resultar divertido = tickle + Posesivo + fancy.* * *- da adjetivoa) (que interesa, divierte) <espectáculo/fiesta> fun, enjoyable; <momento/situación> entertaininges un tipo muy divertido — he's a really fun guy, he's really fun to be with
b) ( gracioso) funny* * *= amused, enjoyable, facetious, laughable, hilarious, fun, amusing, funny [funnier -comp., funniest -sup.], playful, cheery [cheerier -comp., cheeriest -sup.], comedic, droll.Ex: After the wait, her first words emerged with an amused laugh.
Ex: Having made this prefatory warning, it has also to be said that many teachers successfully contrive to make reviewing an enjoyable and useful ingredient in their book and reading programs.Ex: This might, perhaps, be considered a facetious example; however, consider the effect of the indiscriminate use of LATIN AMERICA and SPANISH AMERICA.Ex: It's laughable when Archie Bunker says that, because we know he's an uneducated slob.Ex: In studying the structure of bibliographic control it is not difficult to discover strange, and even hilarious, examples of specialist bibliographic sources.Ex: To make the reading more fun for the children we'll include a squib about the garbage dog from 'The Eighteenth Emergency' by Betsy Byars to put alongside a passage about mongrels from the 'World Book Encyclopedia'.Ex: In the proceedings of the pioneer 1876 Conference of Librarians we can read that 'Mr Edmands gave some amusing illustrations to show that readers often had only the most vague idea of what they really wanted'.Ex: This article reviews on-line data bases that may be used to search for references to humour (cartoons, funny articles and books, and medical aspects of humour).Ex: The article is a playful attempt to describe the historical determinations of the subject.Ex: The novel is a cheery social satire about geeky middle-aged men and their freakishly attractive, younger spouses.Ex: In the year 2000, news and entertainment programs dedicated a great deal of comedic attention to the presidential election.Ex: Never sentimental, the movie has moments of droll, deadpan humor.* algo diverto que hacer = fun thing to do.* de forma divertida = funnily.* de manera divertida = funnily.* de modo divertido = comically, funnily.* lo divertido = the fun part.* resultar divertido = tickle + Posesivo + fancy.* * *divertido -da1 (que interesa, recrea, divierte) ‹espectáculo/fiesta› fun, enjoyable; ‹momento/situación› entertainingfue una fiesta muy divertida it was a very enjoyable o ( colloq) a fun party, the party was a lot of fun o was great funel baile estuvo muy divertido the dance was very entertaining o great fun¡qué divertido! ahora va y se pone a llover ( iró); (that's) wonderful o great! now it's started raining ( iro)es un tipo muy divertido he's a really fun guy o a very entertaining guy, he's really fun to be with2 (gracioso) funnyestuvo de lo más divertido it was so funny* * *
Del verbo divertir: ( conjugate divertir)
divertido es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
divertido
divertir
divertido◊ -da adjetivo
‹momento/situación› entertaining;
divertir ( conjugate divertir) verbo transitivo
to amuse
divertirse verbo pronominal ( entretenerse) to amuse oneself;
( pasarlo bien) to have fun, enjoy oneself;◊ ¡que te diviertas! have fun!, enjoy yourself!;
nos divertimos mucho en la fiesta we had a really good time at the party
divertido,-a adjetivo funny, amusing: son una pareja muy divertida, they are a very amusing couple
un libro divertido, a funny book ➣ Ver nota en funny
divertir verbo transitivo to amuse, entertain
' divertido' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
amén
- divertida
- lance
- monda
- salada
- salado
- simpática
- simpático
- tío
- cachondo
- gracioso
- más
- piola
English:
amusing
- comic
- enjoyable
- entertaining
- fun
- funny
- humorous
- hysterical
- riotously
- amused
- company
* * *divertido, -a adj1. [entretenido] [película, libro] entertaining;[fiesta] enjoyable;la fiesta fue de lo más divertido it was such an enjoyable party2. [gracioso] [persona, chiste] funny, amusing;es un chico muy divertido he's a very funny o amusing boy;encontraba divertido aquel entusiasmo pueril I found this childish enthusiasm amusing3. Andes, Arg, Guat [achispado] tipsy* * *adj1 funny2 ( entretenido) entertaining* * *divertido, -da adj1) : amusing, funny2) : entertaining, enjoyable* * *divertido adj2. (entretenido) enjoyable¡qué divertido! what fun!
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См. также в других словарях:
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deadpan — adj. Deadpan is used with these nouns: ↑expression, ↑humour … Collocations dictionary