-
1 nip
nip
1. past tense, past participle - nipped; verb1) (to press between the thumb and a finger, or between claws or teeth, causing pain; to pinch or bite: A crab nipped her toe; The dog nipped her ankle.) pellizcar2) (to cut with such an action: He nipped the wire with the pliers; He nipped off the heads of the flowers.) cortar3) (to sting: Iodine nips when it is put on a cut.) picar4) (to move quickly; to make a quick, usually short, journey: I'll just nip into this shop for cigarettes; He nipped over to Paris for the week-end.) entrar en un momento, ir5) (to stop the growth of (plants etc): The frost has nipped the roses.) helar, marchitar
2. noun1) (the act of pinching or biting: His dog gave her a nip on the ankle.) pellizco2) (a sharp stinging quality, or coldness in the weather: a nip in the air.) frío3) (a small drink, especially of spirits.) trago•- nippy- nip something in the bud
- nip in the bud
nip vb1. morderbe careful, the dog sometimes nips you ten cuidado, a veces el perro muerde2. pellizcartr[nɪp]1 (pinch) pellizco2 (bite) mordisco, mordedura3 (drink) trago1 (pinch) pellizcar2 (bite) morder (con poca fuerza)1 (pinch) pellizcar2 (bite) morder3 (go quickly) ir (en un momento)\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto nip in the bud cortar de raízthere's a nip in the air hace fresquillo1) pinch: pellizcar2) bite: morder, mordisquear3)to nip in the bud : cortar de raíznip n1) tang: sabor m fuerte2) pinch: pellizco m3) nibble: mordisco m4) swallow: trago m, traguito m5)there's a nip in the air : hace frescon.• dentellada s.f.• helada s.f.• mordisco s.m.• pellizco s.m.• pizco s.m.• sorbito s.m.• trago s.m.• viento frío s.m.v.• abrasar v.• morder v.• pellizcar v.• picar v.nɪp
I
1)b) ( chill)c) ( tang) (AmE) sabor m fuerte2) ( drink) traguito m (fam), dedal m (fam)
II
1.
- pp- transitive verbb) ( damage) \<\<frost\>\> \<\<plants\>\> quemar
2.
vi1) (bite, snap)to nip AT something — \<\<dog\>\> mordisquear algo
2) ( go quickly) (BrE colloq)to nip out — salir* un momento
I [nɪp]1.N (=pinch) pellizco m ; (=bite) mordisco mit was nip and tuck throughout the match — (=neck and neck) el encuentro estuvo muy reñido or igualado
2.VT (=pinch) pellizcar, pinchar; (=bite) mordiscar, mordisquear; [frost] [+ plant] quemar; [wind] [+ one's face] cortar; (also: nip off) [+ flowers, buds] cortar- nip sth in the bud3.VI(Brit) *to nip off/out/down — irse/salir/bajar un momento
- nip at- nip down- nip into- nip out- nip to- nip up
II
[nɪp]N [of drink] trago m, traguito * m* * *[nɪp]
I
1)b) ( chill)c) ( tang) (AmE) sabor m fuerte2) ( drink) traguito m (fam), dedal m (fam)
II
1.
- pp- transitive verbb) ( damage) \<\<frost\>\> \<\<plants\>\> quemar
2.
vi1) (bite, snap)to nip AT something — \<\<dog\>\> mordisquear algo
2) ( go quickly) (BrE colloq)to nip out — salir* un momento
-
2 Nip
nip
1. past tense, past participle - nipped; verb1) (to press between the thumb and a finger, or between claws or teeth, causing pain; to pinch or bite: A crab nipped her toe; The dog nipped her ankle.) pellizcar2) (to cut with such an action: He nipped the wire with the pliers; He nipped off the heads of the flowers.) cortar3) (to sting: Iodine nips when it is put on a cut.) picar4) (to move quickly; to make a quick, usually short, journey: I'll just nip into this shop for cigarettes; He nipped over to Paris for the week-end.) entrar en un momento, ir5) (to stop the growth of (plants etc): The frost has nipped the roses.) helar, marchitar
2. noun1) (the act of pinching or biting: His dog gave her a nip on the ankle.) pellizco2) (a sharp stinging quality, or coldness in the weather: a nip in the air.) frío3) (a small drink, especially of spirits.) trago•- nippy- nip something in the bud
- nip in the bud
nip vb1. morderbe careful, the dog sometimes nips you ten cuidado, a veces el perro muerde2. pellizcartr[nɪp]1 (pinch) pellizco2 (bite) mordisco, mordedura3 (drink) trago1 (pinch) pellizcar2 (bite) morder (con poca fuerza)1 (pinch) pellizcar2 (bite) morder3 (go quickly) ir (en un momento)\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto nip in the bud cortar de raízthere's a nip in the air hace fresquillo1) pinch: pellizcar2) bite: morder, mordisquear3)to nip in the bud : cortar de raíznip n1) tang: sabor m fuerte2) pinch: pellizco m3) nibble: mordisco m4) swallow: trago m, traguito m5)there's a nip in the air : hace frescon.• dentellada s.f.• helada s.f.• mordisco s.m.• pellizco s.m.• pizco s.m.• sorbito s.m.• trago s.m.• viento frío s.m.v.• abrasar v.• morder v.• pellizcar v.• picar v.nɪp
I
1)b) ( chill)c) ( tang) (AmE) sabor m fuerte2) ( drink) traguito m (fam), dedal m (fam)
II
1.
- pp- transitive verbb) ( damage) \<\<frost\>\> \<\<plants\>\> quemar
2.
vi1) (bite, snap)to nip AT something — \<\<dog\>\> mordisquear algo
2) ( go quickly) (BrE colloq)to nip out — salir* un momento
[nɪp]N pej japonés(-esa) m / f* * *[nɪp]
I
1)b) ( chill)c) ( tang) (AmE) sabor m fuerte2) ( drink) traguito m (fam), dedal m (fam)
II
1.
- pp- transitive verbb) ( damage) \<\<frost\>\> \<\<plants\>\> quemar
2.
vi1) (bite, snap)to nip AT something — \<\<dog\>\> mordisquear algo
2) ( go quickly) (BrE colloq)to nip out — salir* un momento
-
3 severe
sə'viə1) ((of something unpleasant) serious; extreme: severe shortages of food; a severe illness; Our team suffered a severe defeat.) grave, serio2) (strict or harsh: a severe mother; severe criticism.) severo3) ((of style in dress etc) very plain: a severe hairstyle.) austero•- severely- severity
severe adj1. severo2. intenso / fuerte3. grave4. durotr[sɪ'vɪəSMALLr/SMALL]1 (person, punishment, treatment) severo,-a2 (pain) agudo,-a; (injury, illness, damage) grave, serio,-a3 (climate, winter) duro,-a, severo,-a; (shortage) grave; (setback, blow) severo,-a, duro,-a; (criticism) severo,-a4 (competition, test) duro,-a, difícil5 (architecture) austero,-a1) strict: severo2) austere: sobrio, austero3) serious: gravea severe wound: una herida gravesevere aches: dolores fuertes4) difficult: duro, difícil♦ severely advadj.• acerbo, -a adj.• acre adj.• adusto, -a adj.• austero, -a adj.• desatentado, -a adj.• grave adj.• intenso, -a adj.• riguroso, -a adj.• rudo, -a adj.• serio, -a adj.• severo, -a adj.• violento, -a adj.sə'vɪr, sɪ'vɪə(r)adjective severer, severest1)a) (strict, harsh) <punishment/judge> severo; < discipline> riguroso, estrictob) ( austere) <style/colors> austero2)a) (serious, bad) <illness/injury> grave; < pain> fuerte, grande; < problem> serio, grave; < winter> severo, duro; < weather> inclementeb) (difficult, rigorous) < test> duro, difícil; < conditions> estricto, riguroso[sɪ'vɪǝ(r)]ADJ (compar severer) (superl severest)1) (=serious) [problem, consequence, damage] grave, serio; [injury, illness] grave; [defeat, setback, shortage] serio; [blow, reprimand] fuerte, duro; [pain, headache] fuerteI suffered from severe bouts of depression — padecía profundas or serias depresiones
many families suffered severe hardship as a consequence — muchas familias sufrieron enormes penurias a consecuencia de ello
severe losses — (Econ) enormes or cuantiosas pérdidas fpl
2) (=harsh) [weather, conditions, winter] duro, riguroso; [cold] extremo; [storm, flooding, frost] fuerte3) (=strict) [person, penalty] severo; [discipline] estricto4) (=austere) [person, appearance, expression] severo, adusto; [clothes, style] austero; [hairstyle] (de corte) serio; [architecture] sobrio* * *[sə'vɪr, sɪ'vɪə(r)]adjective severer, severest1)a) (strict, harsh) <punishment/judge> severo; < discipline> riguroso, estrictob) ( austere) <style/colors> austero2)a) (serious, bad) <illness/injury> grave; < pain> fuerte, grande; < problem> serio, grave; < winter> severo, duro; < weather> inclementeb) (difficult, rigorous) < test> duro, difícil; < conditions> estricto, riguroso -
4 harm
1. noun(damage; injury; distress: I'll make sure you come to no harm; He meant no harm; It'll do you no harm to go.) daño, mal, perjuicio
2. verb(to cause (a person) harm: There's no need to be frightened - he won't harm you.) hacer daño, lastimar- harmful- harmless
- harmlessly
- harmlessness
- out of harm's way
harm1 n daño / malif I am with you, you will come to no harm si estoy contigo, no te pasará nadato do somebody harm hacerle daño a alguien / perjudicar a alguienthere's no harm in... no se pierde nada... / no es malo...there's no harm in the occasional chocolate biscuit una galleta de chocolate de vez en cuando no es maloharm2 vb hacer dañotr[hɑːm]1 mal nombre masculino, daño, perjuicio1 dañar, perjudicar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be out of harm's way estar a salvohe/she wouldn't harm a fly es inofensivo,-aharm ['hɑrm] vt: hacerle daño a, perjudicarharm n: daño m, perjuicio mn.• daño s.m.• detrimento s.m.• extorsión s.f.• injuria s.f.• mal s.m.• mella s.f.• perjuicio s.m.v.• dañar v.• hacer daño a v.• hacer mal a v.• injuriar v.• lacerar v.• maleficiar v.• maliciar v.• perjudicar v.
I hɑːrm, hɑːmmass noun daño mto do harm to somebody/something — hacerle* daño a alguien/algo
to do more harm than good — hacer* más mal or daño que bien
don't worry, there's no harm done — no se preocupe, no es nada
where's/what's the harm in that? — ¿y qué tiene (eso) de malo?
he'll come to no harm, he won't come to any harm — no le va a pasar nada
to be out of harm's way — estar* a salvo
to get somebody out of harm's way — poner* a alguien a salvo
II
transitive verb \<\<person/object\>\> hacerle* daño a; \<\<reputation/career\>\> perjudicar*[hɑːm]1.N daño m, mal m, perjuicio m•
to do sb harm — hacer daño a algn; (fig) perjudicar a algnthe harm is done now — el daño or mal ya está hecho
•
don't worry, no harm done — no te preocupes, no ha sido nada•
out of harm's way — a salvo, fuera de peligrowe moved the car out of harm's way — quitamos el coche de en medio, movimos el coche a un lugar seguro
2.VT [+ person] hacer daño a, hacer mal a; [+ health, reputation, interests] perjudicar; [+ crops] dañar, estropear3.VI sufrir dañoswill it harm in the rain? — ¿lo estropeará la lluvia?
* * *
I [hɑːrm, hɑːm]mass noun daño mto do harm to somebody/something — hacerle* daño a alguien/algo
to do more harm than good — hacer* más mal or daño que bien
don't worry, there's no harm done — no se preocupe, no es nada
where's/what's the harm in that? — ¿y qué tiene (eso) de malo?
he'll come to no harm, he won't come to any harm — no le va a pasar nada
to be out of harm's way — estar* a salvo
to get somebody out of harm's way — poner* a alguien a salvo
II
transitive verb \<\<person/object\>\> hacerle* daño a; \<\<reputation/career\>\> perjudicar*
См. также в других словарях:
frost damage — sėklų pašalimas statusas T sritis augalininkystė apibrėžtis Nenukultų sėklų pažeidimas, sukeltas rudens šalnų. atitikmenys: angl. frost damage rus. морозобойность cемян … Žemės ūkio augalų selekcijos ir sėklininkystės terminų žodynas
frost damage — Injury by freezing … Ballentine's law dictionary
Frost — is the solid deposition of water vapor from saturated air. It is formed when solid surfaces are cooled to below the dew point of the adjacent air. [cite web |url=http://www.weatherquestions.com/What causes frost.htm |title=What causes frost?… … Wikipedia
Damage over time — In computer games and wargames, damage over time (DoT) is a type of effect that causes damage in regular increments (or at a steady rate) for a limited amount of time. This damage can be equal at all increments, or it may build up or diminish in… … Wikipedia
frost — frost1 [frɔst US fro:st] n [: Old English; Origin:; related to freeze] 1.) [U and C] very cold weather, when water freezes late/early/first frost ▪ Even in May we can sometimes get a late frost. hard/heavy/sharp/severe frost (=extremely cold… … Dictionary of contemporary English
Frost heaving — (or frost heave) occurs when soil expands and contracts due to freezing and thawing. This process can damage plant roots through breaking or desiccation, cause cracks in pavement, and damage the foundations of buildings, even below the frost line … Wikipedia
Frost law — Frost laws are seasonal restrictions on road traffic weight limits and speeds.In climates that experience below freezing temperatures, frost heaving damage to roads have led to many U.S. states to enact laws.Michigan, for example, during the… … Wikipedia
frost — [frôst, fräst] n. [ME < OE forst, frost (akin to Ger frost) < pp. base of freosan (see FREEZE) + t (Gmc * ta), nominal suffix] 1. a freezing or state of being frozen 2. a temperature low enough to cause freezing 3. the icy crystals that… … English World dictionary
Frost line — The frost line also known as frost depth or freezing depth is most commonly the depth that the groundwater in soil is expected to freeze. The frost depth depends on the climatic conditions of an area, the heat transfer properties of the soil and… … Wikipedia
frost — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ hard, heavy, killing (AmE), severe (BrE), sharp (BrE) ▪ white ▪ hoar … Collocations dictionary
Operation Burnt Frost — Break up of USA 193 following interception Objective Destruction of non functioning satellite USA 193 Date 4 January – 20 February 20 … Wikipedia