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1 mano
Del verbo manar: ( conjugate manar) \ \
mano es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
manó es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativoMultiple Entries: manar mano
manar ( conjugate manar) verbo intransitivo to pour
mano 1 sustantivo femenino 1a) (Anat) hand;levantar la mano to raise one's hands, put one's hand up; ¡manos arriba! or ¡arriba las manos! hands up!; con la mano en el corazón hand on heart; le hizo adiós con la mano he waved goodbye to her; su carta pasó de mano en mano her letter was passed around; darle la mano a algn ( para saludar) to shake hands with sb, to shake sb's hand; (para ayudar, ser ayudado) to give sb one's hand; me tendió la mano he held out his hand to me; me tomó de la mano she took me by the hand; ir (tomados) de la mano to walk hand in hand; mano de obra labor ( de mono) hand; (Equ) forefoot, front foot 2 (control, posesión) gen ha cambiado de manos it has changed hands; cayó en manos del enemigo it fell into the hands of the enemy; haré todo lo que esté en mis manos I will do everything in my power; la oportunidad se nos fue de las manos we let the opportunity slip through our fingers; se tomó la justicia por su propia mano he took the law into his own hands 3 ( en fútbol) handball 4 ( del mortero) pestle 5 (de pintura, barniz) coat 6 (Jueg) (vuelta, juego) hand; ( conjunto de cartas) hand; ( jugador):◊ soy/eres mano it's my/your lead7 ( en locs) hecho a mano handmade; escrito a mano handwritten; tejido a mano handwoven; las tiendas me quedan muy a mano the shops are very close by o near; siempre tengo un diccionario a mano I always keep a dictionary by me; a la mano (AmL) close at hand; de mano hand ( before n); en mano ‹lápiz/copa› in hand; agarrar or (esp Esp) coger a algn con las manos en la masa to catch sb red-handed; agarrarle or tomarle la mano a algo (CS fam) to get the hang of sth (colloq); bajo mano on the quiet, on the sly (colloq); con las manos vacías empty-handed; darse la mano ( para saludar) to shake hands; (para cruzar, jugar, etc) to hold hands; echar or dar una mano to give o lend a hand; echar mano a algo (fam) to grab sth; estar/quedar a mano (AmL fam) to be even o quits (colloq); lavarse las manos to wash one's hands; levantarle la mano a algn to raise one's hand to sb; llegar or pasar a las manos to come to blows; pedir la mano de algn to ask for sb's hand in marriage; ser la mano derecha de algn to be sb's right-hand man/woman; tenderle una mano a algn to offer sb a (helping) hand; tener mano dura to have a firm hand; tener mano para algo to be good at sth; traerse algo entre manos to be up to sth (colloq) 8 a mano derecha on the rightb) (Auto) side of the road
mano 2
manar
I verbo intransitivo to flow [de, from]
II verbo transitivo to flow with: la cañería está manando agua, the pipe is pouring with water
mano sustantivo femenino
1 hand (de animal) forefoot (de perro, gato) paw (de cerdo) trotter
2 (autoría, estilo) influence: se ve su mano en el asunto, he obviously has a hand in this business
3 (maña) skill: tiene mucha mano con los niños, he's very good with children
4 (capa) coat
dos manos de pintura, two coats of paint
5 (lado) a mano derecha/izquierda, on the right/left (hand side)
6 (poder) (usu pl) hand: dejo todo en tus manos, I leave everything in your hands
está en su mano, it's in his power
7 (del almirez) pestle
8 mano de obra, labour (force) Locuciones: a mano, (sin máquina) by hand (asequible) at hand
a mano alzada, by a show of hands
a mano armada, armed
de mano, hand: bolso de mano, hand luggage
de primera mano, fist-hand
de segunda mano, second-hand
echar una mano a alguien, to give sb a hand
estrechar la mano a alguien, to shake hands with sb
¡manos a la obra!, shoulders to the wheel!
¡manos arriba!, hands up!
meter mano, (a un problema) to tackle vulgar to touch up
pillar a alguien con las manos en la masa, to catch sb red-handed ' mano' also found in these entries: Spanish: A - alzada - alzado - anda - antes - armada - armado - artesanía - atraco - azotar - azote - barrena - caligrafía - canto - chocar - cogerse - cuenco - dar - dedo - dejada - dejado - derecha - echar - esconder - escrita - escrito - estrechar - estrecharse - extender - fastidiarse - freno - fuego - holgazanear - imputar - izquierda - izquierdo - justicia - levantar - literalmente - manca - mancha - manco - motricidad - ortopédica - ortopédico - palma - pañuelo - peldaño - picar - proyectar English: add on - armed robbery - back - bird - bite - blow-dry - brake - brush - by - cart - catapult - chronic - circle - clammy - coat - colour - dip - dip into - extend - finger - first-hand - fit into - gash - give - godforsaken - govern - grip - grope - guitar - hand - hand-held - hand-luggage - handbrake - handmade - handwritten - handy - hankie - hanky - have - heavy-handed - hold - hold on - hold out - hold up - impression - imprint - inch - join - jumble - junk shop
См. также в других словарях:
took the law into his own hands — took his own revenge, sought individual justice rather judicial justice … English contemporary dictionary
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take the law into one's own hands — {v. phr.} To protect one s supposed rights or punish a suspected wrongdoer without reference to a court. An overused expression. * /When the men of the settlement caught the suspected murderer, they took the law into their own hands and hanged… … Dictionary of American idioms
take the law into one's own hands — {v. phr.} To protect one s supposed rights or punish a suspected wrongdoer without reference to a court. An overused expression. * /When the men of the settlement caught the suspected murderer, they took the law into their own hands and hanged… … Dictionary of American idioms
take\ the\ law\ into\ one's\ own\ hands — v. phr. To protect one s supposed rights or punish a suspected wrongdoer without reference to a court. An overused expression. When the men of the settlement caught the suspected murderer, they took the law into their own hands and hanged him to… … Словарь американских идиом
take (something) into (your) own hands — to deal with something yourself. Many people are starting to take privacy protection into their own hands. Mike s mother wouldn t call the doctor, so Mike took matters into his own hands and did it for her. Related vocabulary: take the law into… … New idioms dictionary
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Lynch law — The act or practice by private persons of inflicting punishment for crimes or offenses, without due process of law. [1913 Webster] Note: The term Lynch law is said to be derived from a Virginian named Lynch, who took the law into his own hands … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English