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out+of+sorts

  • 121 ogni

    every
    ogni tanto every so often
    ogni sei giorni every six days
    ad ogni modo anyway
    * * *
    ogni agg.indef.
    1 ( ciascuno) every, every single, each; ( tutti) all: ogni giorno, mese, anno, every day, month, year; ogni giorno della settimana, every day in the week; ogni lunedì, martedì ecc., every Monday, Tuesday etc.; mi telefonava ogni giorno, he phoned me every (single) day; in quell'emporio si vendono prodotti di ogni genere, all kinds of products are sold in that store; questo computer esegue ogni sorta di operazioni, this computer carries out all sorts of operations; il problema è stato considerato sotto ogni aspetto, the problem was studied from every angle; ogni documento dev'essere autenticato, each (o every) document must be authenticated; ogni villetta ha il suo giardino intorno, each house has a garden round it; ogni partecipante riceverà un premio di consolazione, each participant will receive a consolation prize; ogni uomo ha diritto alla propria libertà, every man has (o all men have) a right to freedom; ogni sua parola era un ordine per noi, every word he spoke was an order for us; sarà preso in esame ogni singolo dettaglio, each (o every single) detail will be taken into consideration; descrisse ogni singola fase dell'esperimento, he described each (o every single) stage of the experiment; ogni regione ha le proprie specialità, each region has its own specialities // ogni cosa, everything: mi ha riferito ogni cosa, he told me everything; l'incendio aveva distrutto ogni cosa, the fire had destroyed everything; rimettete ogni cosa al suo posto, put everything back in (its) place // con ogni cura, with all possible care // da ogni parte, everywhere // la vita di ogni giorno, everyday life // ti auguro ogni bene, I wish you all the best ∙ Come si nota dagli esempi, in questo significato si usa preferibilmente each con riferimento a un gruppo determinato di persone o cose
    2 ( qualsiasi) any, all: uomini di ogni età, men of any age (o of all ages); gente di ogni razza, people of any race (o of all races); ad ogni costo, at any cost (o at all costs); ad ogni modo, ( tuttavia) anyway; in ogni caso, ( comunque) anyhow // in, per ogni dove, (letter.) anywhere // fuor d'ogni dubbio, beyond all doubt // oltre ogni dire, beyond all description
    3 (con valore distr., spec. con numerali) every: c'è una stazione di servizio ogni 20 km, there is a service station every 20 km; ogni due, tre settimane, every two, three weeks (o every second, third week); in Inghilterra le elezioni hanno luogo ogni cinque anni, in England elections take place every five years; ci sarà una guida ogni venti persone, there will be a guide for every twenty persons; prenda queste capsule ogni sei ore, take these capsules every six hours // ogni tanto, every now and then (o every so often) // una volta ogni tanto, once in a while.
    * * *
    ['oɲɲi, 'ɔɲɲi]
    aggettivo indefinito
    2) (qualsiasi, tutti)

    a ogni costo — at any cost, at all costs

    ogni ora, ogni 10 metri — every hour, every ten metres

    ••
    Note:
    Ogni si può tradurre in inglese in tre modi diversi: si usa every quando si vuole sottolineare l'omogeneità di un insieme di fatti, avvenimenti, cose o persone ( andiamo a sciare ogni anno = we go skiing every year); quando invece si vuole sottolineare ciascuno dei fatti ecc. presi separatamente, si preferisce each ( la situazione peggiora ogni anno = each year the situation is getting worse), che è obbligatorio usare se il riferimento è a due fatti, ecc. (in una partita di pallavolo, ogni squadra è composta da sei giocatori = in a volleyball match, each team is made up of six players); infine, se ogni significa qualunque, tutti, si traduce con any ( in ogni caso = in any case). - Si veda anche la voce ciascuno
    * * *
    ogni
    /'oŋŋi, 'ɔŋŋi/
    Ogni si può tradurre in inglese in tre modi diversi: si usa every quando si vuole sottolineare l'omogeneità di un insieme di fatti, avvenimenti, cose o persone ( andiamo a sciare ogni anno = we go skiing every year); quando invece si vuole sottolineare ciascuno dei fatti ecc. presi separatamente, si preferisce each ( la situazione peggiora ogni anno = each year the situation is getting worse), che è obbligatorio usare se il riferimento è a due fatti, ecc. (in una partita di pallavolo, ogni squadra è composta da sei giocatori = in a volleyball match, each team is made up of six players); infine, se ogni significa qualunque, tutti, si traduce con any ( in ogni caso = in any case). - Si veda anche la voce  ciascuno.
    agg. indef.
     1 (ciascuno) (nell'insieme) every; (singolarmente) each; ogni giorno che passa with each passing day; ogni cosa che dico lo lascia del tutto indifferente everything I say just washes over him; la situazione si complica ogni giorno di più the situation is becoming more complicated by the day o each day o every day; prendiamo il giornale ogni giorno we buy a newspaper every day; ogni volta che whenever
     2 (qualsiasi, tutti) ogni scusa è buona per litigare any pretext will do to start a quarrel; di ogni sorta of any kind; in ogni momento at any time; a ogni modo at any rate; a ogni costo at any cost, at all costs; in ogni caso in any case; escludere ogni possibilità to rule out all possibilities; cose di ogni tipo all sorts of things
     3 (con funzione distributiva) every; ogni ora, ogni 10 metri every hour, every ten metres.

    Dizionario Italiano-Inglese > ogni

  • 122 sort

    [sɔ:t, Am sɔ:rt] n
    1) ( type) Sorte f, Art f;
    what \sort of day did you have? wie war dein Tag?;
    what \sort of person is he/she? was für ein Mensch ist er/sie?;
    is there any \sort of food which you don't like? gibt es irgendein Essen, das du nicht magst?;
    to be sb's \sort person jds Typ sein ( fam) thing [nach] jds Geschmack sein;
    I never thought he was her \sort ich hätte nie gedacht, dass er ihr Typ ist ( fam)
    all \sorts of people alle möglichen Leute;
    sb's favourite [or (Am) favorite] \sort jds Lieblingssorte f
    I had a \sort of feeling that... ich hatte so ein Gefühl, dass...;
    it's a \sort of machine for peeling vegetables and things es ist so eine Art Maschine, mit der man Gemüse und anderes schälen kann
    3) ( person)
    she's a very generous \sort really sie ist ein ausgesprochen großzügiger Mensch;
    I know your \sort! Typen wie euch kenne ich [zur Genüge]! ( fam)
    to be not the \sort to do sth nicht der Typ [Mensch] sein, etw zu tun
    PHRASES:
    nothing of the \sort nichts dergleichen;
    something of the \sort so etwas in der Art;
    it takes all \sorts to make a world ( esp Brit) ( prov) es gibt solche und solche ( fam)
    of \sorts [or of a \sort] eine Art von, so etw wie;
    he's an artist of \sorts er nennt sich Künstler;
    to be [or feel] out of \sorts (not well, sick) sich akk nicht fit fühlen, nicht ganz auf der Höhe [o auf dem Posten] sein ( fam) ( crotchety) nicht besonders gut gelaunt sein adv ( fam);
    \sort of
    1) ( rather) irgendwie;
    that's \sort of difficult to explain das ist nicht so einfach zu erklären;
    it's getting \sort of late es ist schon recht spät;
    the walls were painted \sort of pink die Wände waren in einem Rosaton gestrichen
    2) ( not exactly) mehr oder weniger, so ungefähr, sozusagen;
    is he inviting you? - well, \sort of lädt er dich ein? - mehr oder weniger vt
    1) ( classify)
    to \sort sth etw sortieren;
    I'm going to \sort these old books into those to be kept and those to be thrown away ich sortiere diese Bücher nach solchen, die ich behalte und solchen, die ich wegwerfe;
    to \sort the mail die Post sortieren
    to \sort sth etw in Ordnung bringen;
    can you \sort the car by tomorrow? können Sie das Auto bis morgen reparieren?
    PHRASES:
    sth \sorts the men from the boys an etw dat zeigt sich, wer ein ganzer Kerl ist ( fam) vi
    to \sort through sth etw sortieren [o durchsehen]

    English-German students dictionary > sort

  • 123 rosszkedvű

    (DE) brummig; grantig; hintersinnen; hintersinnig; indisponiert; miesepetrig; missgelaunt; missgestimmt; misslaunig; missmutig; mißgelaunt; mißgestimmt; mißmutig; muffelig; schlechtgelaunt; übelgelaunt; übellaunig; glupsch; gnatzig; hantig; maßleidig; unmutsvoll; (EN) be in low spirits; be in poor spirits; be in the blues; be off one's oats; be off one's rocker; be out of sorts; be out of spirits; be out of temper; be out of trim; be out of tune; broken-spirited; cross; disgruntled; dumpish; dumpy; fantod; feel blue; feel out of sorts; glum; grumpish; grumpy; have a fit of blues; have a liver; have the blues; have the hump; have the mumps; have the sullens; hipped; hippish; huffy; ill-humored; ill-humoured; liverish; low; moody; mumpish; off one's rocker; out of humour; out of spirits; pettish; pouting; seedy; shirty; sore; spleenful; spleenish; spleeny; splenetic; sulky

    Magyar-német-angol szótár > rosszkedvű

  • 124 Т-40

    HE В СВОЕЙ ТАРЕЛКЕ бытье, бывать, чувствовать себя coll PrepP Invar subj-compl with copula (subj: human or adv occas. used without negation to convey the opposite meaning fixed WO
    1. (to be) in an unpleasant, negative state of mind, (to feel) worse than one usu. does
    X не в своей тарелке - X is (feels) out of sorts
    X isn't (quite) himself X doesn't feel (quite) (like) himself (in limited contexts) X is in a foul (bad) mood.
    «Мне и его (Алёшу) жалко. Он с тех пор замкнулся, так и ходит весь черный. А между тем нас никуда не тянут. И я думаю: майор оказался лучше, чем мы ожидали. Через пару дней подхожу к Алексею. „Слушай, - говорю, - ты видишь, майор оказался лучше, чем мы думали. Раз до сих пор не капнул, значит, пронесло. Я же вижу, ты не в своей тарелке"» (Искандер 5). "I felt sorry for him (Alyosha), too. He had withdrawn into himself, he went around looking positively black. Meanwhile, they hadn't hauled us in. I thought, the major's turned out better than we expected. A couple of days later I went to Alyosha. 'Listen,' I said, 'you see the major's turned out better than we thought. If he hasn't squealed by now, then it's blown over. But I can see you're out of sorts'" (5a).
    2. (often in refer, to social situations) to feel anxious, not relaxed, and (in the case of social situations) as if one does not belong in the given milieu, company etc: X не в своей тарелке = X feels (is) ill at ease
    X feels uneasy (uncomfortable, out of place) X is out of his element
    X в своей тарелке - X is in his element
    X feels (perfectly) at home.
    ...Вдруг все взглянули на него, один господин в лорнет. «Кто это?» - тихо спросила Сонечка. «Илья Ильич Обломов!» - представила его Ольга. Все пошли до дома пешком. Обломов был не в своей тарелке... (Гончаров 1). Suddenly they all...looked at him, one gentleman peering through a lorgnette. "Who is that?" Sonya asked softly "Ilya Ilych Oblomov," Olga introduced him. They all walked to Olga's house. Oblomov felt uncomfortable... (1b).
    Там (на мысу Херсонес), в одной из крохотных бухточек, готовились к побегу четверо молодых людей... Впрочем, их было пятеро - в побеге участвовал и новорожденный Арсений... Энергии Бен-Ивана хватало на всех пятерых. Он чувствовал себя в своей тарелке, побег был его стихией (Аксёнов 7). There (, at Cape Kherson), in one of the many tiny bays, two couples... we re planning their escape. Actually there were five of them: the newborn Arseny was in on it as well....Ben-Ivan had enough energy for the five of them. He was in his element: escapes were his specialty.. (7a).
    Патрику Тандерджету чрезвычайно понравился «Мужской клуб», он сразу почувствовал себя здесь в своей тарелке (Аксёнов 6). Patrick Thunderjet greatly loved the Men's Club, he immediately felt at home there (6a).
    Translation of the French ne pas etre dans son assiette.

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > Т-40

  • 125 не в своей тарелке

    НЕ В СВОЕЙ ТАРЕЛКЕ быть, бывать, чувствовать себя coll
    [PrepP; Invar; subj-compl with copula (subj: human) or adv; occas. used without negation to convey the opposite meaning; fixed WO]
    =====
    1. (to be) in an unpleasant, negative state of mind, (to feel) worse than one usu. does:
    - X не в своей тарелке X is (feels) out of sorts;
    - [in limited contexts] X is in a foul (bad) mood.
         ♦ " Мне и его [Алёшу] жалко. Он с тех пор замкнулся, так и ходит весь черный. А между тем нас никуда не тянут. И я думаю: майор оказался лучше, чем мы ожидали. Через пару дней подхожу к Алексею. "Слушай, - говорю, - ты видишь, майор оказался лучше, чем мы думали. Раз до сих пор не капнул, значит, пронесло. Я же вижу, ты не в своей тарелке"" (Искандер 5). "I felt sorry for him [Alyosha], too. He had withdrawn into himself, he went around looking positively black. Meanwhile, they hadn't hauled us in. I thought, the major's turned out better than we expected. A couple of days later I went to Alyosha. 'Listen,' I said, 'you see the major's turned out better than we thought. If he hasn't squealed by now, then it's blown over. But I can see you're out of sorts'" (5a).
    2. (often in refer, to social situations) to feel anxious, not relaxed, and (in the case of social situations) as if one does not belong in the given milieu, company etc:
    - X не в своей тарелке X feels (is) ill at ease;
    - X feels uneasy (uncomfortable, out of place);
    - X feels (perfectly) at home.
         ♦...Вдруг все взглянули на него, один господин в лорнет. "Кто это?" - тихо спросила Сонечка. "Илья Ильич Обломов!" - представила его Ольга. Все пошли до дома пешком. Обломов был не в своей тарелке... (Гончаров 1). Suddenly they all...looked at him, one gentleman peering through a lorgnette. "Who is that?" Sonya asked softly. "Ilya Ilych Oblomov," Olga introduced him. They all walked to Olga's house. Oblomov felt uncomfortable... (1b).
         Там [на мысу Херсонес], в одной из крохотных бухточек, готовились к побегу четверо молодых людей... Впрочем, их было пятеро - в побеге участвовал и новорожденный Арсений... Энергии Бен-Ивана хватало на всех пятерых. Он чувствовал себя в своей тарелке, побег был его стихией (Аксёнов 7). There [, at Cape Kherson], in one of the many tiny bays, two coup les... we re planning their escape. Actually there were five of them: the newborn Arseny was in on it as well....Ben-Ivan had enough energy for the five of them. He was in his element: escapes were his specialty... (7a).
         ♦ Патрику Тандерджету чрезвычайно понравился "Мужской клуб", он сразу почувствовал себя здесь в своей тарелке (Аксёнов 6). Patrick Thunderjet greatly loved the Men's Club; he immediately felt at home there (6a).
    —————
    ← Translation of the French ne pas etre dans son assiette.

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > не в своей тарелке

  • 126 estrafalario

    adj.
    1 outlandish, eccentric.
    2 lurid, flashy, gaudy, garish.
    * * *
    2 familiar figurado (extravagante) eccentric, weird, outlandish
    * * *
    ADJ
    1) [persona, ideas] odd, eccentric
    2) [ropa] outlandish
    * * *
    I
    - ria adjetivo <persona/ideas/conducta> eccentric; < vestimenta> outlandish, bizarre
    II
    - ria masculino, femenino eccentric
    * * *
    = zany [zanier -comp., zaniest -sup.], bizarre, cranky [crankier -comp., crankiest -sup.], way out in left field, freakish.
    Ex. His zany humor, gawky production, and sexual exhibitionism have grown in this new film into a confident, ironic account of a world in which it pays to be rich and beautiful.
    Ex. Some of them will be sufficiently bizarre to suit the most fastidious connoisseur of the present artifacts of civilization.
    Ex. For example, you already know that living in a windowless room will make you cranky and out of sorts.
    Ex. From this chance observation, Kazantsev drew two conclusions: one dead on target, the other, way out in left field.
    Ex. 1816 was one of several years during the 1810s in which numerous crops failed during freakish summer cold snaps after volcanic eruptions that reduced incoming sunlight.
    ----
    * de un modo estrafalario = bizarrely, freakishly.
    * estrafalario, lo = bizarre, the.
    * idea estrafalaria = outlandish idea.
    * lo estrafalario = zaniness.
    * * *
    I
    - ria adjetivo <persona/ideas/conducta> eccentric; < vestimenta> outlandish, bizarre
    II
    - ria masculino, femenino eccentric
    * * *
    = zany [zanier -comp., zaniest -sup.], bizarre, cranky [crankier -comp., crankiest -sup.], way out in left field, freakish.

    Ex: His zany humor, gawky production, and sexual exhibitionism have grown in this new film into a confident, ironic account of a world in which it pays to be rich and beautiful.

    Ex: Some of them will be sufficiently bizarre to suit the most fastidious connoisseur of the present artifacts of civilization.
    Ex: For example, you already know that living in a windowless room will make you cranky and out of sorts.
    Ex: From this chance observation, Kazantsev drew two conclusions: one dead on target, the other, way out in left field.
    Ex: 1816 was one of several years during the 1810s in which numerous crops failed during freakish summer cold snaps after volcanic eruptions that reduced incoming sunlight.
    * de un modo estrafalario = bizarrely, freakishly.
    * estrafalario, lo = bizarre, the.
    * idea estrafalaria = outlandish idea.
    * lo estrafalario = zaniness.

    * * *
    ‹persona› eccentric; ‹ideas/conducta› weird, eccentric; ‹vestimenta› outlandish, bizarre
    masculine, feminine
    eccentric
    * * *

    estrafalario
    ◊ - ria adjetivo ‹persona/ideas/conducta eccentric;


    vestimenta outlandish, bizarre
    ■ sustantivo masculino, femenino
    eccentric
    estrafalario,-a adj fam outlandish, eccentric: tiene una forma de vestir un poco estrafalaria, she dresses a bit outlandishly
    ' estrafalario' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    estrafalaria
    English:
    bizarre
    - freak
    - outlandish
    - outrageous
    - quirky
    - zany
    * * *
    estrafalario, -a adj
    1. [extravagante] [persona, ropa, ideas] outlandish, eccentric
    2. [desaliñado] slovenly, sloppy
    * * *
    adj fam
    eccentric; ropa outlandish
    * * *
    estrambótico, excéntrico: eccentric, bizarre

    Spanish-English dictionary > estrafalario

  • 127 gruñón

    adj.
    grumpy, cranky, grouchy, gruff.
    m.
    grouch, grumbler, grump, snarler.
    * * *
    1 grumbling, grumpy
    nombre masculino,nombre femenino
    1 grumbler, grouch
    * * *
    gruñón, -ona
    1.
    ADJ grumpy, grumbling
    2.
    SM / F grumbler
    * * *
    I
    - ñona adjetivo (fam) grumpy (colloq)
    II
    - ñona masculino, femenino (fam) grump (colloq), grouse (colloq)
    * * *
    = grumpy [grumpier -comp., grumpiest -sup.], cranky [crankier -comp., crankiest -sup.], curmudgeon, curmudgeonly, cantankerous, bad-tempered, crusty [crustier -comp., crustiest -sup.], irascible, crabby [crabbier -comp., crabbiest, -sup.], ornery, misery guts, grouch, sour puss, testy [testier -comp., testiest -sup.].
    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. For example, you already know that living in a windowless room will make you cranky and out of sorts.
    Ex. The most common problem suffered by curmudgeons turns out to be their circumscribed social life.
    Ex. Offended by the idea of an addict selling sneakers to kids, he launched into a curmudgeonly rant.
    Ex. To attain this order within the structure of chaos, Eros divided himself into two parts: Eros as amicable, social love and Eros as cantankerous, divisive discord.
    Ex. He was a brave novelist but also bad-tempered, churlish and subject to fits of rage.
    Ex. For this crusty author as well as for that young one having fun being famous is what matters = Tanto para este autor hosco como para aquel autor joven, ser famoso es lo que importa.
    Ex. He was a rag-and-bone man living with his irascible father in a junkyard with only their horse for company.
    Ex. The normally perky and intrepid Cristina is flat out crabby these days.
    Ex. My mama says that alligators are ornery because they got all them teeth and no toothbrush.
    Ex. At the other end of the scale are misery guts, who are neither happy with their job role nor their employer.
    Ex. We all have a grouch in our lives and if we wake up on the wrong side of the bed or take our daily mean pill, at the very nicest, we have been described as a ' grouch'.
    Ex. It is no fun being around you when you are being such a sour puss.
    Ex. We're assailed by doubts, mortified by our own shortcomings, surrounded by freaks, testy over silly details.
    ----
    * vieja gruñona = grumpy old woman.
    * viejo gruñón = grumpy old man, grumpy old sod.
    * * *
    I
    - ñona adjetivo (fam) grumpy (colloq)
    II
    - ñona masculino, femenino (fam) grump (colloq), grouse (colloq)
    * * *
    = grumpy [grumpier -comp., grumpiest -sup.], cranky [crankier -comp., crankiest -sup.], curmudgeon, curmudgeonly, cantankerous, bad-tempered, crusty [crustier -comp., crustiest -sup.], irascible, crabby [crabbier -comp., crabbiest, -sup.], ornery, misery guts, grouch, sour puss, testy [testier -comp., testiest -sup.].

    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: For example, you already know that living in a windowless room will make you cranky and out of sorts.
    Ex: The most common problem suffered by curmudgeons turns out to be their circumscribed social life.
    Ex: Offended by the idea of an addict selling sneakers to kids, he launched into a curmudgeonly rant.
    Ex: To attain this order within the structure of chaos, Eros divided himself into two parts: Eros as amicable, social love and Eros as cantankerous, divisive discord.
    Ex: He was a brave novelist but also bad-tempered, churlish and subject to fits of rage.
    Ex: For this crusty author as well as for that young one having fun being famous is what matters = Tanto para este autor hosco como para aquel autor joven, ser famoso es lo que importa.
    Ex: He was a rag-and-bone man living with his irascible father in a junkyard with only their horse for company.
    Ex: The normally perky and intrepid Cristina is flat out crabby these days.
    Ex: My mama says that alligators are ornery because they got all them teeth and no toothbrush.
    Ex: At the other end of the scale are misery guts, who are neither happy with their job role nor their employer.
    Ex: We all have a grouch in our lives and if we wake up on the wrong side of the bed or take our daily mean pill, at the very nicest, we have been described as a ' grouch'.
    Ex: It is no fun being around you when you are being such a sour puss.
    Ex: We're assailed by doubts, mortified by our own shortcomings, surrounded by freaks, testy over silly details.
    * vieja gruñona = grumpy old woman.
    * viejo gruñón = grumpy old man, grumpy old sod.

    * * *
    ( fam); grumpy ( colloq)
    masculine, feminine
    ( fam); grump ( colloq), grouch ( colloq), misery ( BrE colloq), moaner ( BrE colloq)
    * * *

    gruñón
    ◊ - ñona adjetivo (fam) grumpy (colloq)

    gruñón,-ona adjetivo grumpy

    ' gruñón' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    gruñona
    English:
    grouch
    - grouchy
    - grump
    - grumpy
    - nag
    - nagging
    * * *
    gruñón, -ona Fam
    adj
    grumpy
    nm,f
    old grump
    * * *
    I adj fam
    grumpy
    II m, gruñona f fam
    grouch fam
    * * *
    gruñón, - ñona adj, mpl gruñones fam : grumpy, crabby
    gruñón, - ñona n, mpl gruñones fam : grumpy person, nag
    * * *
    gruñón1 adj grumpy [comp. grumpier; superl. grumpiest]
    gruñón2 n moaner

    Spanish-English dictionary > gruñón

  • 128 raro

    adj.
    1 unusual, curious, rare, out of the common.
    2 strange, odd, queer, far-out.
    3 unfamiliar.
    * * *
    2 (escaso) scarce, rare
    3 (peculiar) odd, strange, weird
    4 (excelente) excellent
    escribió un libro raro, una verdadera obra de arte she wrote a very good book, a real work of art
    \
    ¡qué raro! how odd!, that's strange!
    rara vez seldom
    * * *
    (f. - rara)
    adj.
    1) rare, uncommon, unusual, funny
    2) bizarre, weird
    3) odd
    * * *
    ADJ
    1) (=extraño) strange, odd

    es raro que no haya llamadoit's strange o odd that he hasn't called

    ¡qué raro!, ¡qué cosa más rara! — how (very) strange!, how (very) odd!

    2) (=poco común) rare

    con alguna rara excepciónwith few o rare exceptions

    de rara perfección — of rare perfection, of remarkable perfection

    rara vez nos visita, rara es la vez que nos visita — he rarely visits us

    3) (Fís) rare, rarefied
    * * *
    - ra adjetivo
    1)
    a) ( extraño) strange, odd, funny (colloq)

    es raro que... — it's strange o odd o funny that...

    qué cosa más rara! or qué raro! — how odd o strange!

    te noto muy raro hoy — you're acting very strangely today; ver bicho 2)

    b) ( poco frecuente) rare

    raro es el día que... — there's rarely o hardly a day when...

    aquí es raro que nieveit's very unusual o rare for it to snow here

    2) < gas> rare
    * * *
    = bizarre, queer, rare, unusual, eccentric, odd, uncommon, untoward, weird [weirder -comp., weirdest -sup.], awry, funny [funnier -comp., funniest -sup.], outlandish, freaky [freakier -comp., freakiest -sup.], uncanny, cranky [crankier -comp., crankiest -sup.], kinky [kinkier -comp., kinkiest -sup.], flaky [flakey], freakish, quirky [quirkier -comp., quirkiest -sup.].
    Ex. Some of them will be sufficiently bizarre to suit the most fastidious connoisseur of the present artifacts of civilization.
    Ex. Several years later, his talk with a friend turns to the queer ways in which a people resist innovations, even of vital interest.
    Ex. In practice critical abstracts are rare, and certainly do not usually feature in published secondary services.
    Ex. If the book has an unusual shape then both the height and the width of the book will be given.
    Ex. School classrooms are sometimes extraordinarily badly designed with poor acoustics, ineffective blackout facilities, and notoriously eccentric electrical outlets.
    Ex. There is little modulation, whole steps of division being short-circuited and an odd assembly of terms being frequently found: e.g.: LAW see also JURY, JUDGES.
    Ex. Early woodcut initials, coats of arms, etc., were sometimes made from wood cut across the grain, but the use of end-grain blocks remained uncommon until the later eighteenth century.
    Ex. Perhaps, he questioned himself, this is the way every principal operates, and there is nothing untoward in it.
    Ex. This paper surveys some of the more weird World Wide Web sites.
    Ex. Could she not have detected that something in his behavior was awry?.
    Ex. The article 'What's that funny noise? Videogames in the library' explains how videogames have attracted many young irregular library users who may, in time, extend their attention to other library facilities.
    Ex. This book discusses some of the most outlandish myths and fantastic realities of medical history.
    Ex. This film is really just a series of throwaway skits that the director and scriptwriter attempt to lard with parody and freaky fantasy.
    Ex. Surrealism is an art concerned not with love and liberation but with the uncanny, the compulsion to repeat, and the drive toward death.
    Ex. For example, you already know that living in a windowless room will make you cranky and out of sorts.
    Ex. However, those desiring something off-the-wall, borderline kinky, and just plain mad might appreciate the novel.
    Ex. Children who were in some way different were excused from family responsibilities in childhood because they were, for example, 'spoiled,' a 'problem child,' or ' flaky'.
    Ex. 1816 was one of several years during the 1810s in which numerous crops failed during freakish summer cold snaps after volcanic eruptions that reduced incoming sunlight.
    Ex. 'Why are barns frequently painted red?' -- These are the curious, slightly bizarre and somewhat quirky kinds of questions librarians deal with.
    ----
    * aunque parezca raro = strangely enough, oddly enough, strange though it may seem, strange as it may seem, although it may seem strange, funnily enough, funnily.
    * bicho raro = rare bird, odd bird, odd fish, freak of nature, rare breed, weirdo, nerdy [nerdier -comp., nerdiest -sup.], geek, nerd, geeky [geekier -comp., geekiest -sup.].
    * colección de libros raros = rare book collection.
    * de forma rara = oddly, funnily.
    * de manera rara = oddly, funnily.
    * demasiado raro = all too rare.
    * de modo raro = funnily.
    * de una manera rara = strangely.
    * de un modo raro = freakishly.
    * edición rara = rare edition.
    * en casos raros = in rare cases.
    * enfermedad rara = rare disease.
    * en raras ocasiones = in rare cases.
    * en raros casos = in rare cases.
    * especie rara = rare breed.
    * haber algo raro con = there + be + something fishy going on with.
    * Ley de los Medicamentos Raros, la = Orphan Drug Act, the.
    * libro raro = rare book.
    * muy rara vez = all too seldom, once in a blue moon.
    * parecer raro = sound + odd.
    * por muy raro que parezca = strangely enough, oddly enough, strange though it may seem, strange as it may seem, although it may seem strange.
    * ¡qué raro! = how strange!.
    * rara vez = infrequently, rarely, seldom, uncommonly, on rare occasions.
    * sala de libros raros = rare book room.
    * salvo raras excepciones = with rare exceptions.
    * ser algo muy raro = be a rare occurrence.
    * * *
    - ra adjetivo
    1)
    a) ( extraño) strange, odd, funny (colloq)

    es raro que... — it's strange o odd o funny that...

    qué cosa más rara! or qué raro! — how odd o strange!

    te noto muy raro hoy — you're acting very strangely today; ver bicho 2)

    b) ( poco frecuente) rare

    raro es el día que... — there's rarely o hardly a day when...

    aquí es raro que nieveit's very unusual o rare for it to snow here

    2) < gas> rare
    * * *
    = bizarre, queer, rare, unusual, eccentric, odd, uncommon, untoward, weird [weirder -comp., weirdest -sup.], awry, funny [funnier -comp., funniest -sup.], outlandish, freaky [freakier -comp., freakiest -sup.], uncanny, cranky [crankier -comp., crankiest -sup.], kinky [kinkier -comp., kinkiest -sup.], flaky [flakey], freakish, quirky [quirkier -comp., quirkiest -sup.].

    Ex: Some of them will be sufficiently bizarre to suit the most fastidious connoisseur of the present artifacts of civilization.

    Ex: Several years later, his talk with a friend turns to the queer ways in which a people resist innovations, even of vital interest.
    Ex: In practice critical abstracts are rare, and certainly do not usually feature in published secondary services.
    Ex: If the book has an unusual shape then both the height and the width of the book will be given.
    Ex: School classrooms are sometimes extraordinarily badly designed with poor acoustics, ineffective blackout facilities, and notoriously eccentric electrical outlets.
    Ex: There is little modulation, whole steps of division being short-circuited and an odd assembly of terms being frequently found: e.g.: LAW see also JURY, JUDGES.
    Ex: Early woodcut initials, coats of arms, etc., were sometimes made from wood cut across the grain, but the use of end-grain blocks remained uncommon until the later eighteenth century.
    Ex: Perhaps, he questioned himself, this is the way every principal operates, and there is nothing untoward in it.
    Ex: This paper surveys some of the more weird World Wide Web sites.
    Ex: Could she not have detected that something in his behavior was awry?.
    Ex: The article 'What's that funny noise? Videogames in the library' explains how videogames have attracted many young irregular library users who may, in time, extend their attention to other library facilities.
    Ex: This book discusses some of the most outlandish myths and fantastic realities of medical history.
    Ex: This film is really just a series of throwaway skits that the director and scriptwriter attempt to lard with parody and freaky fantasy.
    Ex: Surrealism is an art concerned not with love and liberation but with the uncanny, the compulsion to repeat, and the drive toward death.
    Ex: For example, you already know that living in a windowless room will make you cranky and out of sorts.
    Ex: However, those desiring something off-the-wall, borderline kinky, and just plain mad might appreciate the novel.
    Ex: Children who were in some way different were excused from family responsibilities in childhood because they were, for example, 'spoiled,' a 'problem child,' or ' flaky'.
    Ex: 1816 was one of several years during the 1810s in which numerous crops failed during freakish summer cold snaps after volcanic eruptions that reduced incoming sunlight.
    Ex: 'Why are barns frequently painted red?' -- These are the curious, slightly bizarre and somewhat quirky kinds of questions librarians deal with.
    * aunque parezca raro = strangely enough, oddly enough, strange though it may seem, strange as it may seem, although it may seem strange, funnily enough, funnily.
    * bicho raro = rare bird, odd bird, odd fish, freak of nature, rare breed, weirdo, nerdy [nerdier -comp., nerdiest -sup.], geek, nerd, geeky [geekier -comp., geekiest -sup.].
    * colección de libros raros = rare book collection.
    * de forma rara = oddly, funnily.
    * de manera rara = oddly, funnily.
    * demasiado raro = all too rare.
    * de modo raro = funnily.
    * de una manera rara = strangely.
    * de un modo raro = freakishly.
    * edición rara = rare edition.
    * en casos raros = in rare cases.
    * enfermedad rara = rare disease.
    * en raras ocasiones = in rare cases.
    * en raros casos = in rare cases.
    * especie rara = rare breed.
    * haber algo raro con = there + be + something fishy going on with.
    * Ley de los Medicamentos Raros, la = Orphan Drug Act, the.
    * libro raro = rare book.
    * muy rara vez = all too seldom, once in a blue moon.
    * parecer raro = sound + odd.
    * por muy raro que parezca = strangely enough, oddly enough, strange though it may seem, strange as it may seem, although it may seem strange.
    * ¡qué raro! = how strange!.
    * rara vez = infrequently, rarely, seldom, uncommonly, on rare occasions.
    * sala de libros raros = rare book room.
    * salvo raras excepciones = with rare exceptions.
    * ser algo muy raro = be a rare occurrence.

    * * *
    raro -ra
    A
    1 (extraño) strange, odd, funny ( colloq)
    es raro que aún no haya venido it's strange o odd o funny that he hasn't come yet
    ya me parecía raro que no salieras I thought it was a bit strange o odd you weren't going out
    ¡qué cosa más rara! or ¡qué raro! how odd o strange o funny o peculiar!
    me siento raro en este ambiente I feel strange o funny in these surroundings
    es un poco rarilla she's a bit odd o strange o funny o peculiar
    ¿qué te pasa hoy? te noto/estás muy raro what's up with you today? you're acting very strangely
    me miró como si fuera un bicho raro ( fam); he looked at me as if I was some kind of weirdo ( colloq)
    ¡qué tipo más raro! what a strange o peculiar o funny man!
    2 (poco frecuente, común) rare
    salvo raras excepciones with a few rare exceptions
    raro es el día que no sale there's rarely o hardly a day when she doesn't go out
    aquí es raro que nieve it rarely o seldom snows here, it's very unusual o rare for it to snow here
    B ‹gas› rare
    * * *

     

    raro
    ◊ -ra adjetivo

    a) ( extraño) strange, odd, funny (colloq);

    es raro que … it's strange o odd o funny that …;

    ¡qué raro! how odd o strange!;
    te noto muy raro hoy you're acting very strangely today


    aquí es raro que nieve it's very unusual o rare for it to snow here
    raro,-a adjetivo
    1 (no frecuente) rare: es raro que no llame, it's unusual for her not to telephone
    2 (poco común) odd, strange: ¡qué sombrero más raro!, what a weird hat!
    tiene un raro sentido del humor, he's got a warped sense of humour
    ♦ Locuciones: Paco es un bicho raro, Paco is a weirdo
    ' raro' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    bicho
    - chocante
    - disgustar
    - individuo
    - particular
    - peculiar
    - rara
    - singular
    - tipo
    - artefacto
    - extraño
    - gusto
    - olor
    - sonar
    English:
    flaky
    - funny
    - most
    - odd
    - odd-looking
    - oddbod
    - oddity
    - odor
    - odour
    - peculiar
    - queer
    - rare
    - set-up
    - should
    - strange
    - strangely
    - unlikely
    - unusual
    - weird
    - for
    - how
    - incongruous
    - like
    - oddball
    - seem
    - strike
    - uncanny
    * * *
    raro, -a adj
    1. [extraño] strange, odd;
    ¡qué raro! how strange o odd!;
    ¡qué raro que no haya llamado! it's very strange o odd that she hasn't called;
    es raro que no nos lo haya dicho it's odd o funny that she didn't tell us;
    ya me parecía raro que no hubiera dicho nada I thought it was strange o odd that he hadn't said anything;
    no sé qué le pasa últimamente, está o [m5] la noto muy rara I don't know what's up with her lately, she's been acting very strangely
    2. [excepcional] unusual, rare;
    [visita] infrequent;
    rara vez rarely;
    es raro el día que viene a comer she very rarely comes round for lunch;
    raro es el que no fuma very few of them don't smoke
    3. [extravagante] odd, eccentric
    4. [escaso] rare
    5. Quím rare
    * * *
    adj
    1 rare
    2 ( extraño) strange;
    ¡qué raro! how strange!
    * * *
    raro, -ra adj
    1) extraño: odd, strange, peculiar
    2) : unusual, rare
    3) : exceptional
    4)
    rara vez : seldom, rarely
    * * *
    raro adj
    1. (extraño) strange / odd

    Spanish-English dictionary > raro

См. также в других словарях:

  • out of sorts — {adj. phr.} In an angry or unhappy mood; in a bad temper; grouchy. * /Mary was out of sorts and wouldn t say good morning./ * /Bob was out of sorts because he didn t get a bicycle for his birthday./ …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • out of sorts — {adj. phr.} In an angry or unhappy mood; in a bad temper; grouchy. * /Mary was out of sorts and wouldn t say good morning./ * /Bob was out of sorts because he didn t get a bicycle for his birthday./ …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • Out of sorts — Out Out (out), adv. [OE. out, ut, oute, ute, AS. [=u]t, and [=u]te, [=u]tan, fr. [=u]t; akin to D. uit, OS. [=u]t, G. aus, OHG. [=u]z, Icel. [=u]t, Sw. ut, Dan. ud, Goth. ut, Skr. ud. [root]198. Cf. {About}, {But}, prep., {Carouse}, {Utter}, a.]… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • out of sorts — If you are feeling a bit upset and depressed, you are out of sorts …   The small dictionary of idiomes

  • out of sorts — index petulant Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • out-of-sorts — index restive Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • out of sorts — ► out of sorts slightly unwell or unhappy. Main Entry: ↑sort …   English terms dictionary

  • out of sorts — 1 I m feeling out of sorts: UNWELL, ill, poorly, sick, queasy, nauseous, peaky, run down, below par; Brit. off colour; …   Useful english dictionary

  • out of sorts —    If you are feeling a bit upset and depressed, you are out of sorts.   (Dorking School Dictionary)    ***    If someone is out of sorts, they are upset and irritable or not feeling well.     The baby is out of sorts today. Perhaps he s cutting… …   English Idioms & idiomatic expressions

  • Out of sorts — Sort Sort, n. [F. sorie (cf. It. sorta, sorte), from L. sors, sorti, a lot, part, probably akin to serere to connect. See {Series}, and cf. {Assort}, {Consort}, {Resort}, {Sorcery}, {Sort} lot.] 1. A kind or species; any number or collection of… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • out\ of\ sorts — adj. phr. In an angry or unhappy mood; in a bad temper; grouchy. Mary was out of sorts and wouldn t say good morning. Bob was out of sorts because he didn t get a bicycle for his birthday …   Словарь американских идиом

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