-
41 curar
curar ( conjugate curar) verbo transitivo 1 ‹ herida› to heal ‹ herida› ( desinfectar) to clean; ( vendar) to dress 2 ‹jamón/pescado› to cure; ‹cuero/piel› to tan curarse verbo pronominal [ enfermo] to recover, get better; [ herida] to heal up; curarse de algo to get over sth
curar
I verbo transitivo
1 (a un enfermo) to cure
2 (vendar, desinfectar) to dress
3 (carne, pescado) to cure
II verbo intransitivo & verbo reflexivo curar(se) (hacerse una cura) to heal (up) (recuperarse) to recover, get well ' curar' also found in these entries: Spanish: prevenir - sanar - adobar - herida - panceta English: cure - heal - safe - season -
42 recuperarse
■recuperarse verbo reflexivo to recover, get over ' recuperarse' also found in these entries: Spanish: curar - recuperar - sobreponerse English: bounce back - come through - foot - get over - pull through - rally - better - convalesce - recover - recuperate -
43 reponerse
■reponerse verbo reflexivo to recover from ' reponerse' also found in these entries: Spanish: reponer English: recover - recuperate - well - get - pull - rally -
44 repuntar
-
45 rescate
Del verbo rescatar: ( conjugate rescatar) \ \
rescaté es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) pretérito indicativo
rescate es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) imperativoMultiple Entries: rescatar rescate
rescatar ( conjugate rescatar) verbo transitivo
rescate sustantivo masculino
rescatar verbo transitivo
1 (de un secuestrador, peligro) to rescue
2 (del olvido) to recover
rescate sustantivo masculino
1 (liberación) rescue
2 (pago exigido por un secuestrador) ransom
3 (de un derecho, un bien, una tradición) recovery ' rescate' also found in these entries: Spanish: patrulla - operación English: lifeboat - ransom - rescue - salvage - dash - recovery - search -
46 restablecerse
■restablecerse vr Med to recover ' restablecerse' also found in these entries: Spanish: restablecer English: recover -
47 sobreponerse
sobreponerse ( conjugate sobreponerse) verbo pronominal ( recuperarse) to pull oneself together; sobreponersese A algo to get over sth, recover from sth
■sobreponerse verbo reflexivo
1 (a un sentimiento) to overcome: se sobrepuso a su timidez, she overcame her shyness
2 (recobrarse, superar) to recover: aún no se ha sobrepuesto de la muerte de su padre, he still hasn't recovered from his father's death
tienes que sobreponerte, you have to pull yourself together ' sobreponerse' also found in these entries: Spanish: superar English: rise -
48 recovered
adj.recuperado, repuesto.pp.participio pasado del verbo RECOVER.pt.pretérito del verbo RECOVER. -
49 buoyantly
['bɔɪǝntlɪ]ADV [walk] con paso ligero; [recover, return] con optimismo -
50 come through
1) v + adva) (into room, office etc) (BrE) pasarb) ( be received) \<\<message/news/supplies\>\> llegar*you're coming through loud and clear — te recibimos or oímos muy bien
c) ( not fail) (AmE)when the chips were down, you came through for me — a la hora de la verdad, tú no me fallaste
2) v + adv ( penetrate) \<\<water/light\>\> penetrar, entrar; \<\<sound/noise\>\> oírse*3) v + prep + o ( survive) \<\<ordeal/illness\>\> salir* de; \<\<war\>\> sobrevivir1. VI + ADV1) (=survive) sobrevivir; (=recover) recuperarsehe's badly injured, but he'll come through all right — está malherido, pero se recuperará or se pondrá bien
2) [telephone call] llegarthe call came through from France at 10p.m. — a las 10 de la noche lograron comunicar desde Francia
2. VI + PREP1) (=survive) [+ war, danger] sobrevivir; (uninjured) salir ileso(-a) de; [+ illness] recuperarse de2) (=pass) [+ test] superar* * *1) v + adva) (into room, office etc) (BrE) pasarb) ( be received) \<\<message/news/supplies\>\> llegar*you're coming through loud and clear — te recibimos or oímos muy bien
c) ( not fail) (AmE)when the chips were down, you came through for me — a la hora de la verdad, tú no me fallaste
2) v + adv ( penetrate) \<\<water/light\>\> penetrar, entrar; \<\<sound/noise\>\> oírse*3) v + prep + o ( survive) \<\<ordeal/illness\>\> salir* de; \<\<war\>\> sobrevivir -
51 composure
- ʒənoun (calmness: I admired her composure.) calma, composturatr[kəm'pəʊʒəSMALLr/SMALL]1 calma, serenidad nombre femenino, composturacomposure [kəm'po:ʒər] n: compostura f, serenidad fn.• calma s.f.• compostura s.f.• serenidad s.f.kəm'pəʊʒər, kəm'pəʊʒə(r)mass noun compostura f, calma f, serenidad fto lose/regain one's composure — perder*/recobrar la compostura (or la calma etc)
[kǝm'pǝʊʒǝ(r)]N calma f, serenidad fto recover or regain one's composure — recobrar la calma
* * *[kəm'pəʊʒər, kəm'pəʊʒə(r)]mass noun compostura f, calma f, serenidad fto lose/regain one's composure — perder*/recobrar la compostura (or la calma etc)
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52 convalesce
konvə'les
1. verb(to recover health and strength after an illness: He is convalescing in the country.) convalecer, recuperarse
2. adjective1) (recovering health and strength after illness.) convaleciente2) (for convalescents: a convalescent home.) de convalecencia•tr[kɒnvə'les]1 convalecer, recuperarsev.• alear v.• convalecer v.'kɑːnvə'les, ˌkɒnvə'lesintransitive verb recuperarse, convalecer*to convalesce AFTER o FROM something — convalecer* or recuperarse de algo
[ˌkɒnvǝ'les]VI convalecer* * *['kɑːnvə'les, ˌkɒnvə'les]intransitive verb recuperarse, convalecer*to convalesce AFTER o FROM something — convalecer* or recuperarse de algo
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53 damage
'dæmi‹
1. noun1) (injury or hurt, especially to a thing: The storm did/caused a lot of damage; She suffered brain-damage as a result of the accident.) daño2) ((in plural) payment for loss or injury suffered: The court awarded him $5,000 damages.) daños y perjuicios
2. verb(to make less effective or less usable etc; to spoil: The bomb damaged several buildings; The book was damaged in the post.) dañar, hacer daño a- damageddamage1 n daño / dañosdamage2 vb dañar / estropear / perjudicartr['dæmɪʤ]1 (gen) daño; (to reputation, cause, health) perjuicio, daños nombre masculino plural; (destruction) destrozos nombre masculino plural, daños nombre masculino plural, estragos nombre masculino plural■ the scandal did a great deal of damage to his reputation el escándalo causó grave perjuicio a su reputación■ the storm caused serious damage to several buildings la tormenta produjo daños importantes en varios edificios1 (gen) dañar, hacer daño a; (health, reputation, cause) dañar, perjudicar1 SMALLLAW/SMALL daños nombre masculino plural y perjuicios\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be damaged / get damaged dañarsewhat's the damage? (asking for bill) tráeme la dolorosa, ¿cuánto se debe?brain damage lesión nombre femenino cerebraldamage ['dæmɪʤ] vt, - aged ; - aging : dañar (un objeto o una máquina), perjudicar (la salud o una reputación)damage n1) : daño m, perjuicio m2) damages npl: daños y perjuicios mpln.• avería s.f.• daño s.m.• descalabro s.m.• injuria s.f.• lesión s.f.• mal s.m.• perjuicio s.m.• quebranto s.m.• quiebra s.f.v.• averiar v.• damnificar v.• dañar v.• descabalar v.• descalabrar v.• estropear v.• lacrar v.• lastimar v.• malear v.• malparar v.• perjudicar v.
I 'dæmɪdʒ1) u ( to object) daño m; (to reputation, cause) daño m, perjuicio mstorm/fire damage — daños ocasionados por una tormenta/un incendio
what's the damage? — (sl) ¿cuánto se debe?
II
a) \<\<building/vehicle\>\> dañar; \<\<health\>\> perjudicar*, ser* perjudicial para; \<\<reputation/cause\>\> perjudicar*, dañar['dæmɪdʒ]1. Nto do or cause damage to — [+ building] causar daños a; [+ machine] causar desperfectos en
2) (fig) (to chances, reputation etc) perjuicio m, daño mto do or cause damage to sth/sb — causar perjuicio a algo/algn, perjudicar algo/a algn
2.VT (=harm) dañar; [+ machine] averiar, causar desperfectos en; [+ health, chances, reputation] perjudicar3.CPDdamage control N — = damage limitation
damage control operation (US) N — campaña f para minimizar los daños
•
an exercise in damage limitation — una campaña para minimizar los daños•
to be engaged in damage limitation — esforzarse en minimizar los dañosdamage limitation exercise N — campaña f para minimizar los daños
* * *
I ['dæmɪdʒ]1) u ( to object) daño m; (to reputation, cause) daño m, perjuicio mstorm/fire damage — daños ocasionados por una tormenta/un incendio
what's the damage? — (sl) ¿cuánto se debe?
II
a) \<\<building/vehicle\>\> dañar; \<\<health\>\> perjudicar*, ser* perjudicial para; \<\<reputation/cause\>\> perjudicar*, dañar -
54 get back
1) (to move away: The policeman told the crowd to get back.) retroceder2) (to retrieve: She eventually got back the book she had lent him.) recuperarget back vb volverwhen will you get back? ¿cuándo volverás?1) v + adva) ( return) volver*, regresar; ( arrive home) llegar* (a casa)OK, get back to work everybody — bueno, todo el mundo a trabajar otra vez
to get back to what I was saying,... — volviendo a lo que decía,...
b) ( retreat)get back! — atrás!, retrocedan!
2) v + o + adv, v + adv + o ( regain possession of) \<\<property\>\> recuperar; \<\<health\>\> recobrar, recuperar3) v + o + adva) ( return) \<\<borrowed item\>\> devolver*can you get the children back here by eleven? — ¿puedes traer a los niños de vuelta antes de las once?
b) ( put back)to get something back in/out — volver* a poner/a sacar algo
1. VT + ADV1) (=recover) [+ possessions, money, spouse] recuperar; [+ strength] recobrarhe resigned but we want to try and get him back — dimitió, pero queremos intentar que vuelva
2) (=return) [+ object, person] devolverown2. VI + ADV1) (=return) volverget back into bed/the car — vuelve a la cama/al coche
•
get back to what you were doing — sigue con lo que estabas haciendo•
let's get back to why you didn't come yesterday — volvamos a la cuestión de por qué no viniste ayer2) (=talk)•
I'll get back to you on that — te daré una respuestacan you get back to Harry about the flat? — ¿puedes volver a llamar a Harry para lo del piso?
3) (=move back)get back! — ¡atrás!
* * *1) v + adva) ( return) volver*, regresar; ( arrive home) llegar* (a casa)OK, get back to work everybody — bueno, todo el mundo a trabajar otra vez
to get back to what I was saying,... — volviendo a lo que decía,...
b) ( retreat)get back! — atrás!, retrocedan!
2) v + o + adv, v + adv + o ( regain possession of) \<\<property\>\> recuperar; \<\<health\>\> recobrar, recuperar3) v + o + adva) ( return) \<\<borrowed item\>\> devolver*can you get the children back here by eleven? — ¿puedes traer a los niños de vuelta antes de las once?
b) ( put back)to get something back in/out — volver* a poner/a sacar algo
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55 knock out
1) (to make unconscious by a blow, or (in boxing) unable to recover within the required time: The boxer knocked his opponent out in the third round.) dejar sin conocimiento2) (to defeat and cause to retire from a competition: That team knocked us out in the semi-finals (noun knock-out).) eliminarknock out vb dejar sin sentido / dejar inconscienteknock out vt: dejar sin sentido, poner fuera de combate (en el boxeo)v.• descabalgar v.• noquear v.1) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( make unconscious) dejar sin sentido, hacer* perder el conocimiento, noquearhe was knocked out in the fourth round — lo dejó K.O. or lo noqueó en el cuarto asalto
b) (destroy, damage) (colloq) \<\<target\>\> destruir*2) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( remove by hitting) \<\<contents\>\> vaciar*b) ( of competition) eliminarVT + ADV1) (=stun) dejar sin sentido, hacer perder el conocimiento; (Boxing) poner fuera de combate, dejar K.O.3) (in competition) eliminar4) * (=make) [+ product] producir, fabricar; [+ garment] hacer; [+ novel] escribir5) (=destroy) [+ enemy target] destruir; (=stop) [+ electricity supply, telephone lines] cortar6) * (=exhaust) agotar, dejar para el arrastre *7) * (shock) dejar pasmado ** * *1) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( make unconscious) dejar sin sentido, hacer* perder el conocimiento, noquearhe was knocked out in the fourth round — lo dejó K.O. or lo noqueó en el cuarto asalto
b) (destroy, damage) (colloq) \<\<target\>\> destruir*2) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( remove by hitting) \<\<contents\>\> vaciar*b) ( of competition) eliminar -
56 perk up
(to recover one's energy or cheerfulness: I gave her a cup of tea and she soon perked up.) reanimarse1) v + adv \<\<person\>\> animarse, reanimarse; \<\<business/weather\>\> mejorar2) v + o + adv ( enliven) animar, reanimar1.VT + ADV [+ person] animarthis will perk you up! — ¡esto te animará!
it perks up the flavour of frozen vegetables — da vida a or anima las verduras congeladas
2.VI + ADV [person] reanimarse; (in health) sentirse mejorears perked up when his name was mentioned — todo el mundo aguzó el oído cuando se mencionó su nombre
share prices perked up as a result of the deal — la cotización de las acciones aumentó como resultado del trato
* * *1) v + adv \<\<person\>\> animarse, reanimarse; \<\<business/weather\>\> mejorar2) v + o + adv ( enliven) animar, reanimar -
57 pull
pul
1. verb1) (to (try to) move something especially towards oneself usually by using force: He pulled the chair towards the fire; She pulled at the door but couldn't open it; He kept pulling the girls' hair for fun; Help me to pull my boots off; This railway engine can pull twelve carriages.) arrastrar, tirar de2) ((with at or on) in eg smoking, to suck at: He pulled at his cigarette.) chupar3) (to row: He pulled towards the shore.) remar4) ((of a driver or vehicle) to steer or move in a certain direction: The car pulled in at the garage; I pulled into the side of the road; The train pulled out of the station; The motorbike pulled out to overtake; He pulled off the road.) tirar, ir hacia
2. noun1) (an act of pulling: I felt a pull at my sleeve; He took a pull at his beer/pipe.) tirón; calada, chupada (tabaco); sorbo (bebida)2) (a pulling or attracting force: magnetic pull; the pull (=attraction) of the sea.) atracción3) (influence: He thinks he has some pull with the headmaster.) enchufe•- pull down
- pull a face / faces at
- pull a face / faces
- pull a gun on
- pull off
- pull on
- pull oneself together
- pull through
- pull up
- pull one's weight
- pull someone's leg
pull1 n tirónpull2 vb1. tirarit's heavy, but if you pull and I push, we'll move it pesa mucho, pero si tú tiras y yo empujo lo moveremos2. tirar / dar un tirón3. arrastrartr[pʊl]1 (tug) tirón nombre masculino2 (of moon, current) fuerza4 (on bottle) sorbo; (on cigarette) calada, chupada5 (prolonged effort) paliza6 (single impression, proof) prueba2 (tug forcefully) tirar de, dar un tirón a■ don't pull my hair! ¡no me tires del pelo!■ have you pulled the chain? ¿has tirado de la cadena?3 (remove, draw out) sacar4 (damage - muscle) sufrir un tirón5 (operate - trigger) apretar1 (tug) tirar (at/on, de)2 (on pipe, cigarette) chupar, dar caladas a3 (of vehicle - veer) tirarpull ['pʊl, 'pʌl] vt1) draw, tug: tirar de, jalar2) extract: sacar, extraerto pull teeth: sacar muelasto pull a gun on: amenazar a (alguien) con pistola3) tear: desgarrarse (un músculo, etc.)4)to pull down : bajar, echar abajo, derribar (un edificio)5)to pull in attract: atraer (una muchedumbre, etc.)to pull in votes: conseguir votos6)to pull off remove: sacar, quitar7)to pull oneself together : calmarse, tranquilizarse8)to pull up raise: levantar, subirpull vi1) draw, tug: tirar, jalarthey pulled in front of us: se nos metieron delanteto pull to a stop: pararse3)to pull through recover: recobrarse, reponerse4)to pull together cooperate: trabajar juntos, cooperarpull n1) tug: tirón m, jalón mhe gave it a pull: le dio un tirón2) attraction: atracción f, fuerza fthe pull of gravity: la fuerza de la gravedad3) influence: influencia f4) handle: tirador m (de un cajón, etc.)5)bell pull : cuerda fn.• chupada s.f.• estirón s.m.• primeras pruebas s.f.pl.• tirador s.m.• tirón s.m.v.• arrastrar v.• halar v.• jalar v.• tirar v.• tirar de v.
I
1. pʊl1)b) ( in specified direction) (+ adv compl)pull your chair closer to the fire — acerca or arrima la silla al fuego
could you pull the door to/the curtains, please? — por favor, cierra la puerta/corre las cortinas
the current pulled him under — la corriente lo arrastró or se lo llevó al fondo
to pull the carpet o rug (out) from under somebody o somebody's feet — fastidiarle los planes a alguien, moverle* el tapete a alguien (Méx fam)
2)a) ( tug) tirar de, jalar (AmL exc CS)pull the other one! — (BrE colloq) me estás tomando el pelo (fam)
to pull strings o wires — ( use influence) tocar* todos los resortes or muchas teclas, mover* hilos
to pull the strings o wires — ( be in control) tener* la sartén por el mango
b) (tear, detach)he pulled the toy to bits — rompió or destrozó el juguete
c) ( snag)3)a) \<\<weeds/nail\>\> arrancar*; \<\<tooth\>\> sacar*b) ( take out) sacar*he pulled a gun on them — sacó una pistola y los amenazó; see also pull out
4) (colloq) \<\<crowd/audience\>\> atraer*; \<\<votes\>\> conseguir*5) ( perform) (colloq)don't you ever pull a stunt like that on me again — no me vuelvas a hacer una faena así or una cosa semejante
to pull a fast one on somebody — hacerle* una jugarreta a alguien (fam)
6) ( Med) \<\<muscle/tendon\>\> desgarrarse
2.
vi1)a) (drag, tug) tirar, jalar (AmL exc CS)to pull AT/ON something — tirar de or (AmL exc CS) jalar algo
b) ( suck)to pull ON o AT something — \<\<on pipe\>\> darle* una chupada or (AmL tb) una pitada or (Esp tb) una calada a algo
2)a) \<\<vehicle\>\> ( move) (+ adv compl)to pull off the road — salir* de la carretera
to pull into the station — entrar en la estación; see also pull in, pull up
b) ( row) remar•Phrasal Verbs:- pull in- pull off- pull on- pull out- pull up
II
1) c ( tug) tirón m, jalón m (AmL exc CS)2) ua) ( pulling force) fuerza fb) ( influence) influencia f4) c ( difficult journey)[pʊl]1. N2) [of moon, magnet, sea etc] (fuerza f de) atracción f; [of current] fuerza f, ímpetu m; (fig) (=attraction) atracción fthe pull of the south — la atracción del Sur, lo atractivo del Sur
3) * (=influence) enchufe * m, palanca f (LAm) *; (=advantage) ventaja fhe took a pull from the bottle — tomó un trago de la botella, dio un tiento a la botella (Sp)
5) (=journey, drive etc)it was a long pull — fue mucho camino or trecho
6) (=handle of drawer etc) tirador m; [of bell] cuerda f7) (Typ) primeras pruebas fpl8) (Brit)*to be on the pull — estar de ligue (Sp) *, estar chequeando (LAm) *
2. VT1) (=draw, drag) tirar de, jalar (LAm)punch I, 1., 2), weight 1., 1)to pull a door shut/open — cerrar/abrir una puerta de un tirón or (LAm) jalón
2) (=tug) tirar de, jalar (LAm); [+ trigger] apretar; [+ oar] tirar de; [+ boat] remar; (Naut) [+ rope] halar, jalar; [+ tooth] sacar; [+ weeds] arrancarto pull sb's hair — tirar or (LAm) jalar de los pelos a algn
- pull the other oneleg 1., 1)3) (=extract, draw out) sacar, arrancar; [+ beer] servirrank I, 1., 1)4) (=injure)5) [+ ball] (at golf etc) golpear oblicuamente (a la izquierda)6) (Typ) imprimir7) * (=cancel) [+ TV programme] suspender8) * (=carry out, do)what are you trying to pull? — ¿qué quieres conseguir?, ¿qué es lo que pretendes con esto?
to pull a fast one or a trick on sb — jugar una mala pasada a algn
9) * (=attract)he knows how to pull the birds — (Brit) sabe ligar con las chicas *
3. VI1) tirar, jalar (LAm)to pull at or on a rope — tirar de una cuerda
2)to pull at or on one's pipe — dar chupadas a la pipa
to pull at a bottle — tomar un trago or (Sp) dar un tiento a una botella
3) (=move) [vehicle] ir; [oarsmen etc] remarhe pulled sharply to one side to avoid the lorry — torció bruscamente a un lado para no chocar con el camión
4) (Brit) * ligar *, pillar (cacho) (Sp) **4.CPDpull ring, pull tab N — anilla f
- pull in- pull off- pull on- pull out- pull up* * *
I
1. [pʊl]1)b) ( in specified direction) (+ adv compl)pull your chair closer to the fire — acerca or arrima la silla al fuego
could you pull the door to/the curtains, please? — por favor, cierra la puerta/corre las cortinas
the current pulled him under — la corriente lo arrastró or se lo llevó al fondo
to pull the carpet o rug (out) from under somebody o somebody's feet — fastidiarle los planes a alguien, moverle* el tapete a alguien (Méx fam)
2)a) ( tug) tirar de, jalar (AmL exc CS)pull the other one! — (BrE colloq) me estás tomando el pelo (fam)
to pull strings o wires — ( use influence) tocar* todos los resortes or muchas teclas, mover* hilos
to pull the strings o wires — ( be in control) tener* la sartén por el mango
b) (tear, detach)he pulled the toy to bits — rompió or destrozó el juguete
c) ( snag)3)a) \<\<weeds/nail\>\> arrancar*; \<\<tooth\>\> sacar*b) ( take out) sacar*he pulled a gun on them — sacó una pistola y los amenazó; see also pull out
4) (colloq) \<\<crowd/audience\>\> atraer*; \<\<votes\>\> conseguir*5) ( perform) (colloq)don't you ever pull a stunt like that on me again — no me vuelvas a hacer una faena así or una cosa semejante
to pull a fast one on somebody — hacerle* una jugarreta a alguien (fam)
6) ( Med) \<\<muscle/tendon\>\> desgarrarse
2.
vi1)a) (drag, tug) tirar, jalar (AmL exc CS)to pull AT/ON something — tirar de or (AmL exc CS) jalar algo
b) ( suck)to pull ON o AT something — \<\<on pipe\>\> darle* una chupada or (AmL tb) una pitada or (Esp tb) una calada a algo
2)a) \<\<vehicle\>\> ( move) (+ adv compl)to pull off the road — salir* de la carretera
to pull into the station — entrar en la estación; see also pull in, pull up
b) ( row) remar•Phrasal Verbs:- pull in- pull off- pull on- pull out- pull up
II
1) c ( tug) tirón m, jalón m (AmL exc CS)2) ua) ( pulling force) fuerza fb) ( influence) influencia f4) c ( difficult journey) -
58 recuperate
rə'kju:pəreit(to recover, eg after an illness.) recuperarse, restablecersetr[rɪk'ʊːpəreɪt]1 (get back) recuperar1 (from illness) recuperarse, reponerse: recuperarrecuperate vi: recuperarse, restablecersev.• cobrar v.• recuperar v.• recuperarse v.• restablecerse v.rɪ'kuːpəreɪt[rɪ'kuːpǝreɪt]to recuperate (FROM something) — recuperarse or reponerse* (de algo)
1.VI recuperarse, reponerse, restablecerseto recuperate after an illness — recuperarse or reponerse de una enfermedad
2.VT [+ losses] recuperar* * *[rɪ'kuːpəreɪt]to recuperate (FROM something) — recuperarse or reponerse* (de algo)
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59 sleep off
(to recover from (something) by sleeping: She's in bed sleeping off the effects of the party.) dormir la monav.• dormir v.v + o + adv, v + adv + ohe's still sleeping it off — (colloq) todavía está durmiendo la mona (fam)
they had a huge meal and went to bed to sleep it off — se atiborraron de comida y se fueron a dormir para reponerse
VT + ADVto sleep it off * —
sleep off a hangover — dormir la mona *, dormir la curda *
* * *v + o + adv, v + adv + ohe's still sleeping it off — (colloq) todavía está durmiendo la mona (fam)
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60 speech
spi:1) ((the act of) saying words, or the ability to say words: Speech is one method of communication between people.) habla2) (the words said: His speech is full of colloquialisms.) palabras3) (manner or way of speaking: His speech is very slow.) lenguaje, forma de hablar4) (a formal talk given to a meeting etc: parliamentary speeches.) discurso•- speechlessly
- speechlessness
speech n1. habla2. discursotr[spiːʧ]1 (faculty, act) habla2 (spoken language, way of speaking) habla, manera de hablar3 (formal talk) discurso, alocución nombre femenino; (informal talk) charla; (lectura) conferencia; (lines in play) diálogo■ he gave a speech on/about bird-watching dio una charla sobre ornitología\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto give/make a speech pronunciar un discursofreedom of speech libertad nombre femenino de expresióndirect speech estilo directoindirect speech estilo indirectopart of speech parte de la oraciónspeech day día nombre masculino del reparto de premiosspeech defect defecto del hablaspeech impediment impedimento del hablaspeech therapy logopedia, foniatríaspeech ['spi:ʧ] n1) : habla f, modo m de hablar, expresión f2) address: discurso mn.(§ pl.: speeches) = conferencia s.f.• discurso s.m.• habla s.f.• idioma s.m.• lenguaje s.m.• manera de hablar s.f.• oración s.f.• palabra s.f.• parlamento s.m.spiːtʃ1)a) u (act, faculty) habla f‡freedom of speech — libertad f de expresión or de palabra; (before n)
speech defect — defecto m del habla or de pronunciación
speech impediment — impedimento m del habla
b) u ( manner of speaking) forma f de hablarc) u c (language, dialect) habla f‡2) ca) ( oration) discurso m, alocución f (frml)speech! speech! — (hum) que hable! que hable!
to make o (frml) deliver a speech (on o about something) — dar* or (frml) pronunciar un discurso (sobre or acerca de algo)
b) ( Theat) parlamento m3) u ( Ling)[spiːtʃ]direct/indirect o reported speech — estilo m or discurso m directo/indirecto
1. N1) (=faculty) habla f ; (=words) palabras fpl ; (=language) lenguaje m ; (=manner of speaking) lenguaje m, forma f de hablarto recover one's speech — recobrar el habla, recobrar la palabra
his speech was slurred — arrastraba las palabras, farfullaba al hablar
he expresses himself better in speech than in writing — se expresa mejor hablando or de palabra que por escrito
freedom of speech — libertad f de expresión
to be slow of speech — hablar lentamente, ser torpe de palabra
2) (=address) discurso mspeech, speech! — ¡que hable! ¡que hable!
3) (Brit)(Gram)part 1., 8)direct/indirect speech — estilo m directo/indirecto
2.CPDspeech act N — acto m de habla
speech analysis N — análisis m de la voz
speech bubble N — bocadillo m (de historieta)
speech command N — comando m vocal
speech community N — comunidad f lingüística
speech day N — (Brit) reparto m de premios
speech defect, speech impediment N — defecto m del habla
speech organ N — órgano m del habla
speech recognition N — (Comput) reconocimiento m de voz
speech synthesizer N — sintetizador m de la voz humana
speech therapist N — logopeda mf
speech therapy N — terapia f de la palabra
speech training N — lecciones fpl de elocución
speech writer N — escritor(a) m / f de discursos, redactor(a) m / f de discursos
* * *[spiːtʃ]1)a) u (act, faculty) habla f‡freedom of speech — libertad f de expresión or de palabra; (before n)
speech defect — defecto m del habla or de pronunciación
speech impediment — impedimento m del habla
b) u ( manner of speaking) forma f de hablarc) u c (language, dialect) habla f‡2) ca) ( oration) discurso m, alocución f (frml)speech! speech! — (hum) que hable! que hable!
to make o (frml) deliver a speech (on o about something) — dar* or (frml) pronunciar un discurso (sobre or acerca de algo)
b) ( Theat) parlamento m3) u ( Ling)direct/indirect o reported speech — estilo m or discurso m directo/indirecto
См. также в других словарях:
recover — re‧cov‧er [rɪˈkʌvə ǁ ər] verb 1. [intransitive] to increase or improve after falling in value or getting worse: • Its shares plunged at the start of trading, but recovered to close only slightly down. 2. [transitive] FINANCE to get back money… … Financial and business terms
Recover — Re*cov er (r?*k?v ?r), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Recovered} ( ?rd); p. pr. & vb. n. {Recovering}. ] [OE. recoveren, OF. recovrer, F. recouvrer, from L. recuperare; pref. re re + a word of unknown origin. Cf.{Recuperate}.] [1913 Webster] 1. To get or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
recover — re·cov·er /ri kə vər/ vt 1: to get back or get back an equivalent for recover costs through higher prices 2 a: to obtain or get back (as damages, satisfaction for a debt, or property) through a judgment or decree recover damages in a tort action… … Law dictionary
recover — 1 Recover, regain, retrieve, recoup, recruit can mean to get back something that has been let go or lost. Recover, the most comprehensive of these terms, may imply a finding or obtaining something material or immaterial that has been lost… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
recover — [ri kuv′ər] vt. [ME recoveren < OFr recovrer < L recuperare: see RECUPERATE] 1. a) to get back (something lost or stolen) b) to regain (health, consciousness, etc.) 2. to compensate for; make up for [to recover losses] 3 … English World dictionary
Recover — Re*cov er (r?*k?v ?r), v. i. 1. To regain health after sickness; to grow well; to be restored or cured; hence, to regain a former state or condition after misfortune, alarm, etc.; often followed by of or from; as, to recover from a state of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
recover — c.1300, to regain consciousness, from Anglo Fr. rekeverer (late 13c.), O.Fr. recovrer, from L. recuperare to recover (see RECUPERATION (Cf. recuperation)). Meaning to regain health or strength is from early 14c.; sense of to get (anything) back… … Etymology dictionary
recover — [v1] find again balance, bring back, catch up, compensate, get back, make good, obtain again, offset, reacquire, recapture, reclaim, recoup, recruit, redeem, rediscover, regain, reoccupy, repair, replevin, replevy, repossess, rescue, restore,… … New thesaurus
Recover — Re*cov er, n. Recovery. Sir T. Malory. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Recover — Re*cov er (r?*k?v ?r), v. t. [Pref. re + cover: cf. F. recouvrir.] To cover again. Sir W. Scott. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
recover — recover, Synonym für restore … Universal-Lexikon