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1 hustle
1. verb1) (to push quickly and roughly: The man was hustled out of the office.) empujar, echar a empellones2) (to make (someone) act quickly: Don't try to hustle me into making a sudden decision.) empujar, meter prisa3) ((American) to swindle; to obtain something dishonestly or illegally: to hustle money from old ladies; the car dealer tried to hustle us.) estafar, timar4) ((American) to sell or earn one's living by illegal means: hustling on the streets; hustle drugs.) vivir al margen de la ley; traficar con5) ((American) (slang) to work as a prostitute; to solicit clients.) prostituirse, hacer la calle
2. noun(quick and busy activity.) ajetreo- hustlertr['hʌsəl]1 bullicio1 (hurry) dar prisa a2 (jostle) empujar, dar empujones a3 SMALLAMERICAN ENGLISH/SMALL familiar hacerse con1 apresurarse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLhustle and bustle ajetreo: darle prisa (a alguien), apurarthey hustled me in: me hicieron entrar a empujoneshustle vi: apurarse, ajetrearsehustle nbustle: ajetreo mn.• actividad febril s.f.• empuje s.m.• empujón s.m.• prisa s.f.v.• apresurar v.• atropellarse v.• bullir v.• empujar v.• meter prisa a v.• trajinar v.• trotar v.
I
1. 'hʌsəl1)a) ( move hurriedly) (+ adv compl)b) ( pressure) apremiar, meterle prisa a, apurar (AmL)to hustle somebody INTO something/-ING — empujar a alguien a algo/+ inf
2) (AmE colloq)a) ( obtain aggressively) hacerse* conto hustle something OUT OF somebody — sacarle* algo a alguien
to hustle somebody FOR something: he hustled them for cigarettes — les dio la lata para que le dieran cigarrillos (fam)
b) (hawk, sell) vender
2.
vi1)a) ( move quickly) darse* prisa, apurarse (AmL)b) ( jostle) empujar2) (AmE)a) ( work energetically) (colloq) trabajar (muy) duro, reventarse* (fam), darle* al callo (Esp fam), sobarse el lomo (Méx fam)b) ( swindle) (sl) hacer* chanchullos (fam), chanchullear (fam)c) ( solicit) (sl) \<\<prostitute\>\> hacer* la calle, talonear (Méx fam), patinar (Chi fam), yirar (RPl arg)
II
1) ua) ( hurry) ajetreo mb) (energy, initiative) (AmE) empuje m, garra f (fam)2) c (trick, swindle) (AmE colloq) chanchullo m (fam)['hʌsl]1. N1) (=activity) bullicio mhustle and bustle — ajetreo m, vaivén m
2) (US) * (=trick) timo m, chanchullo * m2. VT1) (=jostle) empujar, codear; (=hurry up) [+ person] dar prisa athey hustled him in/out — le hicieron entrar/salir a empujones or sin ceremonia
he was hustled into a car — lo metieron en un coche a empujones or sin ceremonia
2) (fig)3) (US)*they were paid to hustle drinks out of the customers — les pagaban para sacarles bebidas a los clientes
they were hustling him for payment of the debt — le apretaban las clavijas para que saldara la deuda
3. VI1) * (=hurry) darse prisa, apresurarse, apurarse (LAm)2) * (=work hard) trabajar duro, currar (Sp) *3) ** [prostitute] hacer la calle ** * *
I
1. ['hʌsəl]1)a) ( move hurriedly) (+ adv compl)b) ( pressure) apremiar, meterle prisa a, apurar (AmL)to hustle somebody INTO something/-ING — empujar a alguien a algo/+ inf
2) (AmE colloq)a) ( obtain aggressively) hacerse* conto hustle something OUT OF somebody — sacarle* algo a alguien
to hustle somebody FOR something: he hustled them for cigarettes — les dio la lata para que le dieran cigarrillos (fam)
b) (hawk, sell) vender
2.
vi1)a) ( move quickly) darse* prisa, apurarse (AmL)b) ( jostle) empujar2) (AmE)a) ( work energetically) (colloq) trabajar (muy) duro, reventarse* (fam), darle* al callo (Esp fam), sobarse el lomo (Méx fam)b) ( swindle) (sl) hacer* chanchullos (fam), chanchullear (fam)c) ( solicit) (sl) \<\<prostitute\>\> hacer* la calle, talonear (Méx fam), patinar (Chi fam), yirar (RPl arg)
II
1) ua) ( hurry) ajetreo mb) (energy, initiative) (AmE) empuje m, garra f (fam)2) c (trick, swindle) (AmE colloq) chanchullo m (fam) -
2 get on
1) (to make progress or be successful: How are you getting on in your new job?) progresar, avanzar2) (to work, live etc in a friendly way: We get on very well together; I get on well with him.) llevarse bien (con), avenirse, entenderse3) (to grow old: Our doctor is getting on a bit now.) envejecer, hacerse viejo/mayor4) (to put (clothes etc) on: Go and get your coat on.) ponerse5) (to continue doing something: I must get on, so please don't interrupt me; I must get on with my work.) continuar, seguir, proseguirget on vb subir / subirsedo you get on with your neighbours? ¿te llevas bien con tus vecinos?1) v + adva) (move on, make progress) seguir* adelanteI can't stand here talking, I must get on — no puedo quedarme aquí de charla, tengo mucho que hacer
to get on to something — pasar a algo; see also get onto
to get on with something: get on with what you're doing sigue con lo que estás haciendo; get on with it! — (colloq) ( hurry) dáte prisa (fam), apúrate (AmL fam)
2)a) ( fare)how's Joe getting on nowadays? — ¿qué tal anda Joe?
how did he get on at the interview? — ¿cómo le fue en la entrevista?
b) ( succeed) tener* éxito3) (be friends, agree)a) ( in time)it's getting on o time is getting on — se está haciendo tarde
b) ( in age)she's getting on (in years) — está vieja, ya no es joven; see also get on for
5) v + adv v + prep + o (climb on, board) subirse, montarseto get on the bus/a horse — subirse al autobús/subirse a or montarse en un caballo
6) v + o + adv v + o + prep + o (place, fix on) poner7) v + o + adv ( put on) \<\<clothes\>\> ponerse*I can't get it on — no me entra or no me cabe
1. VI + ADV1) (=mount) subir2) (=proceed) seguirwe must be getting on, Sue's waiting for us — tenemos que seguir, Sue nos está esperando
get on, man! — ¡sigue!, ¡adelante!
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to get on with sth — seguir con algoget on with it! — ¡venga!, ¡apúrese! (LAm)
get on toget on with your work, please — seguid trabajando, por favor
3) (=manage)•
I was getting on fine till he came along — me iba bien hasta que llegó élhow are you getting on with him/the new computer? — ¿qué tal or cómo te va con él/el ordenador nuevo?
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she's getting on very well with Russian — está haciendo muchos progresos con el ruso4) (=progress) progresar; (=succeed) tener éxitoif you want to get on in life, you must... — si quieres tener éxito en la vida, debes...
5)• to be getting on: it's getting on for nine — son casi las nueve
he's getting on for 70 — está rondando los 70, anda cerca de los 70
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her parents are getting on a bit — sus padres ya están un poco viejos•
time is getting on — se está haciendo tarde6) (=be on good terms) llevarse bienI'm afraid we just don't get on — me temo que no nos llevamos or entendemos bien
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to get on (well) with sb — llevarse bien con algnI can't get on with computers — no me aclaro con los ordenadores, los ordenadores y yo no hacemos migas
2. VI + PREP1) (=mount) [+ vehicle] subir(se) a; [+ horse, bicycle] subir(se) a, montar a2) (=be appointed/elected to) [+ committee] entrar en3.VT + ADV (=put on) [+ clothes] ponerse; [+ lid, cover, dinner] poner* * *1) v + adva) (move on, make progress) seguir* adelanteI can't stand here talking, I must get on — no puedo quedarme aquí de charla, tengo mucho que hacer
to get on to something — pasar a algo; see also get onto
to get on with something: get on with what you're doing sigue con lo que estás haciendo; get on with it! — (colloq) ( hurry) dáte prisa (fam), apúrate (AmL fam)
2)a) ( fare)how's Joe getting on nowadays? — ¿qué tal anda Joe?
how did he get on at the interview? — ¿cómo le fue en la entrevista?
b) ( succeed) tener* éxito3) (be friends, agree)a) ( in time)it's getting on o time is getting on — se está haciendo tarde
b) ( in age)she's getting on (in years) — está vieja, ya no es joven; see also get on for
5) v + adv v + prep + o (climb on, board) subirse, montarseto get on the bus/a horse — subirse al autobús/subirse a or montarse en un caballo
6) v + o + adv v + o + prep + o (place, fix on) poner7) v + o + adv ( put on) \<\<clothes\>\> ponerse*I can't get it on — no me entra or no me cabe
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3 step
step
1. noun1) (one movement of the foot in walking, running, dancing etc: He took a step forward; walking with hurried steps.)2) (the distance covered by this: He moved a step or two nearer; The restaurant is only a step (= a short distance) away.)3) (the sound made by someone walking etc: I heard (foot) steps.)4) (a particular movement with the feet, eg in dancing: The dance has some complicated steps.)5) (a flat surface, or one flat surface in a series, eg on a stair or stepladder, on which to place the feet or foot in moving up or down: A flight of steps led down to the cellar; Mind the step!; She was sitting on the doorstep.)6) (a stage in progress, development etc: Mankind made a big step forward with the invention of the wheel; His present job is a step up from his previous one.)7) (an action or move (towards accomplishing an aim etc): That would be a foolish/sensible step to take; I shall take steps to prevent this happening again.)
2. verb(to make a step, or to walk: He opened the door and stepped out; She stepped briskly along the road.)- steps- stepladder
- stepping-stones
- in
- out of step
- step aside
- step by step
- step in
- step out
- step up
- watch one's step
step1 n1. paso2. escalón / peldaño3. paso / medidastep2 vb1. dar un paso / andarstep this way, please pase por aquí, por favor2. pisartr[step]■ we're learning a new step at dancing classes estamos aprendiendo un nuevo paso en las clases de baile2 (distance) paso3 (move, act) paso■ what's the next step? ¿cuál es el próximo paso?5 (degree on scale, stage in process) peldaño, escalón nombre masculino, paso■ she's gone up another step on the career ladder ha ascendido otro peldaño en la escala profesional6 (stair) escalón nombre masculino, peldaño, grada; (of ladder) escalón nombre masculino, travesaño; (of vehicle) estribo1 (move, walk) dar un paso, andar2 (tread) pisar1 SMALLBRITISH ENGLISH/SMALL (stepladder) escalera de tijera\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLevery step of the way en todo momento, desde principio a finstep by step paso a paso, poco a pocostep on it!, step on the gas! ¡date prisa!, ¡pisa a fondo!to be one step ahead llevar la ventajato step into somebody's shoes pasar a ocupar el puesto de alguiento step into the breach llenar el huecoa step up un ascenso1) : dar un pasostep this way, please: pase por aquí, por favorhe stepped outside: salió2)to step on : pisarstep n1) : paso mstep by step: paso por paso2) stair: escalón m, peldaño m3) rung: escalón m, travesaño m4) measure, move: medida f, paso mto take steps: tomar medidas5) stride: paso mwith a quick step: con paso rápidon.• escalera s.f.• escalón s.m.• estribo s.m.• estribo de un coche s.m.• etapa s.f.• gestión s.f.• grada s.f.• grado s.m.• medida s.f.• paso s.m.• patada s.f.• peldaño s.m.• trámite s.m.v.• andar v.(§pret: anduv-)• escalonar v.• medir a pasos v.• pisar v.
I step1) c (footstep, pace) paso mto take a step forward — dar* un paso adelante
to follow in somebody's steps — seguir* los pasos de alguien
to be/keep one step ahead: they're one step ahead of us nos llevan cierta ventaja; he tries to keep one step ahead of his students trata de que sus alumnos no lo aventajen; to watch one's step (be cautious, behave well) andarse* con cuidado or con pie de plomo; watch your step — ( when walking) mira por dónde caminas
2)a) c ( of dance) paso mb) u (in marching, walking) paso mto be in/out of step — llevar/no llevar el paso; ( in dancing) llevar/no llevar el compás or el ritmo
to break step — romper* el paso
in/out of step with somebody/something: the leaders are out of step with the wishes of the majority — los líderes no sintonizan con los deseos de la mayoría
3) ( distance) (no pl)to take steps (to + inf) — tomar medidas (para + inf)
5)the museum steps — la escalinata or las escaleras del museo
a flight of steps — un tramo m de escalera
6) ca) ( degree in scale) peldaño m, escalón mb) (AmE Mus)whole step — tono m
II
would you step inside/outside for a moment? — ¿quiere pasar/salir un momento?
to step IN/ON something — pisar algo
sorry, I stepped on your toe — perdón, te pisé
to step on it o on the gas — (colloq) darse* prisa, apurarse (AmL), meterle (AmL fam)
Phrasal Verbs:- step in- step out- step up[step]1. N1) (=movement) (lit, fig) paso m; (=sound) paso m, pisada fhe heard steps outside — oyó pasos or pisadas fuera
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it's a big step for him — es un gran paso or salto para él•
step by step — (lit, fig) poco a poco•
to be a step closer to doing sth — estar más cerca de hacer algo•
at every step — (lit, fig) a cada paso•
the first step is to decide... — el primer paso es decidir...•
to follow in sb's steps — seguir los pasos de algn•
I would go one step further and make all guns illegal — yo iría aún más lejos y prohibiría todo tipo de armas de fuego•
what's the next step? — ¿cuál es el siguiente paso?•
a step towards peace — un paso hacia la paz•
to turn one's steps towards sth — dirigir los pasos hacia algo•
it's a step up in his career — es un ascenso en su carrera profesional•
to watch one's step — (lit, fig) ir con cuidado- be one step ahead of sbfalse 1., 1), spring 1., 4)2) (in dancing, marching) paso m•
to break step — romper el paso•
he quickly fell into step beside me — no tardó en ajustar su paso al mío•
to be in step with sb — (lit) llevar el paso de algnthe bright colours are perfectly in step with the current mood — los colores vivos reflejan perfectamente al clima actual
to be/keep in step (with) — (in marching) llevar el paso (de); (in dance) llevar el compás or ritmo (de)
to get out of step — (in march) perder el paso; (in dance) perder el ritmo or compás
- be out of step with sth/sb- fall or get out of step with sth/sb3) (=distance) paso mI'm just a step away if you need me — si me necesitas, solo estoy a un paso
it's a good step or quite a step to the village * — el pueblo queda bastante lejos
4) (=footprint) huella f5) (=measure) medida f•
to take steps — tomar medidas6) (=stair) peldaño m, escalón m; (on bus) peldaño m, estribo m; (also: doorstep) escalón m de la puertaI'll meet you on the library steps — quedamos en los escalones or la escalinata de la biblioteca
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a flight of stone steps — un tramo de escalera or de escalones de piedra7) steps (=stepladder) escalera f (de mano/de tijera)to get onto the next step in the salary scale — ascender un peldaño or subir de grado en la escala salarial
9) (also: step aerobics) step m10) (US) (Mus) tono m2. VI1) (=walk)•
won't you step inside? — ¿no quiere pasar?•
he stepped into the room — entró en la habitaciónhe stepped into his slippersousers — se puso las zapatillas/los pantalones
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to step off a bus/planeain — bajarse de un autobús/aviónen•
as he stepped onto the pavement... — al poner el pie en la acera...•
as she stepped out of the car — al bajar del coche•
I had to step outside for a breath of fresh air — tuve que salir fuera a tomar el aire•
to step over sth — pasar por encima de algo- step out of lineshoe2) (=tread)•
to step in/on sth — pisar algostep on it! * — (=hurry up) ¡date prisa!, ¡ponte las pilas! *, ¡apúrate! (LAm); (Aut) ¡acelera!
to step on the accelerator (Brit) —
toestep on the gas — (US) pisar el acelerador
3.CPDstep aerobics N — step m
step change N — cambio m radical
- step in- step out- step up* * *
I [step]1) c (footstep, pace) paso mto take a step forward — dar* un paso adelante
to follow in somebody's steps — seguir* los pasos de alguien
to be/keep one step ahead: they're one step ahead of us nos llevan cierta ventaja; he tries to keep one step ahead of his students trata de que sus alumnos no lo aventajen; to watch one's step (be cautious, behave well) andarse* con cuidado or con pie de plomo; watch your step — ( when walking) mira por dónde caminas
2)a) c ( of dance) paso mb) u (in marching, walking) paso mto be in/out of step — llevar/no llevar el paso; ( in dancing) llevar/no llevar el compás or el ritmo
to break step — romper* el paso
in/out of step with somebody/something: the leaders are out of step with the wishes of the majority — los líderes no sintonizan con los deseos de la mayoría
3) ( distance) (no pl)to take steps (to + inf) — tomar medidas (para + inf)
5)the museum steps — la escalinata or las escaleras del museo
a flight of steps — un tramo m de escalera
6) ca) ( degree in scale) peldaño m, escalón mb) (AmE Mus)whole step — tono m
II
would you step inside/outside for a moment? — ¿quiere pasar/salir un momento?
to step IN/ON something — pisar algo
sorry, I stepped on your toe — perdón, te pisé
to step on it o on the gas — (colloq) darse* prisa, apurarse (AmL), meterle (AmL fam)
Phrasal Verbs:- step in- step out- step up
См. также в других словарях:
hurry — hur|ry1 [ hʌri ] verb intransitive ** to do something or move somewhere very quickly: We must hurry or we shall be late back. Alec had to hurry home, but I stayed on. hurry along/through/into: She hurried along the corridor toward his office. He… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
hurry — I UK [ˈhʌrɪ] / US verb Word forms hurry : present tense I/you/we/they hurry he/she/it hurries present participle hurrying past tense hurried past participle hurried ** [intransitive] to do something or to move somewhere very quickly We must hurry … English dictionary
hurry — hur|ry1 [ˈhʌri US ˈhə:ri] v past tense and past participle hurried present participle hurrying third person singular hurries [Date: 1600 1700; Origin: Probably copying the action] 1.) [I and T] to do something or go somewhere more quickly than… … Dictionary of contemporary English
hurry — 1 verb 1 (I, T) to do something or go somewhere more quickly than usual, especially because there is not much time: The movie begins as six we ll have to hurry. | hurry through/along/down etc: She hurried down the corridor as fast as she could. | … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
hurry — [[t]hʌ̱ri, AM hɜ͟ːri[/t]] hurries, hurrying, hurried 1) VERB If you hurry somewhere, you go there as quickly as you can. [V prep/adv] Claire hurried along the road... [V prep/adv] When she finished work she had to hurry home and look after her… … English dictionary
hurry up — I PHRASAL VERB If you tell someone to hurry up, you are telling them do something more quickly than they were doing. [V P] Franklin told Howe to hurry up and take his bath; otherwise, they d miss their train... [V P with n] Hurry up with that… … English dictionary
hurry*/ — [ˈhʌri] verb [I/T] I to do something or to move somewhere very quickly, or to make someone do this We must hurry or we ll be late.[/ex] Alex had to hurry home, but I decided to stay.[/ex] She hurried along the corridor towards his office.[/ex]… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
hurry up — phrasal verb Word forms hurry up : present tense I/you/we/they hurry up he/she/it hurries up present participle hurrying up past tense hurried up past participle hurried up 1) [intransitive] mainly spoken used for telling someone to do something… … English dictionary
come along — 1) PHRASAL VERB You tell someone to come along to encourage them in a friendly way to do something, especially to attend something. [V P] There s a big press launch today and you re most welcome to come along. 2) CONVENTION You say come along to… … English dictionary
tekö'saia'táni — to hurry someone along … Mingo semantic fields
move — 1 verb 1 CHANGE PLACE (I, T) to change your place or position, or to make something do this: Don t move or I ll shoot. | You mustn t get off the train while it s still moving. | move sth: Can you move your car it s blocking the road. | We ll have … Longman dictionary of contemporary English