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121 relate
rə'leit
1. verb1) (to tell (a story etc): He related all that had happened to him.) relatar2) ((with to) to be about, concerned or connected with: Have you any information relating to the effect of penicillin on mice?) relacionar con, con relación a3) ((with to) to behave towards: He finds it difficult to relate normally to his mother.) relacionarse (con)•- related- relation
- relationship
- relative
2. adjective1) (compared with something else, or with each other, or with a situation in the past etc: the relative speeds of a car and a train; She used to be rich but now lives in relative poverty.) relativo2) ((of a pronoun, adjective or clause) referring back to something previously mentioned: the girl who sang the song; the girl who sang the song.) relativo•relate vb1. estar relacionado2. relatar / contartr[rɪ'leɪt]1 (tell) relatar, contar2 (connect) relacionar (to, con)1 (connect) relacionarse, estar relacionado■ how does this relate to your work? ¿esto, cómo está relacionado con tu trabajo?1) tell: relatar, contar2) associate: relacionar, asociarto relate crime to poverty: relacionar la delincuencia a la pobrezarelate vi1) connect: conectar, estar relacionado (con)2) interact: relacionarse (con), llevarse bien (con)3)to relate to understand: identificarse con, simpatizar conv.• contar v.• narrar v.• recontar v.• relacionar v.• relatar v.rɪ'leɪt
1.
1) ( link)2) ( tell) (frml) \<\<story\>\> relatar, contar*, referir* (liter)
2.
vi1)a) ( be connected with)to relate TO something — estar* relacionado con algo
b)relating to — (as prep) relativo a, relacionado con
2) (understand, sympathise with)to relate TO somebody — sintonizar* con alguien, tener* una buena relación con alguien
[rɪ'leɪt]to relate TO something — identificarse* con algo
1. VT1) (=tell) [+ story] contar, relatar; [+ conversation] relatar, referirshe related details of the meeting to her boss — le relató or refirió a su jefe detalles de la reunión
history relates that he landed here in AD 470 — la historia cuenta or relata que desembarcó aquí en el año 470 AD
strange to relate — aunque parezca mentira, por extraño que parezca
2) (=establish relation between)they relate what they read to their own experiences — relacionan lo que leen con sus propias experiencias
2. VI1) (=communicate) relacionarse, comunicarsehow you relate depends on the kind of person you are — cómo te relacionas or te comunicas depende del tipo de persona que eres
2)to relate to (sth/sb) —
a) (=form a relationship with)b) (=understand, identify with)to relate to sth/sb — identificarse con algo/algn
I can relate to that * — yo eso lo entiendo *, yo me identifico con eso
it's important for children to have brothers and sisters they can relate to — es importante que los niños tengan hermanos y hermanas con los que puedan identificarse
c) (=connect with)the way that words in a sentence relate to each other — la manera en la que las palabras de una frase se relacionan las unas con las otras
d) (=appertain to)to relate to sth — referirse a algo, estar relacionado con algo, tener que ver con algo
most of the enquiries relate to debt — la mayoría de las preguntas se refieren a deudas or tienen que ver con deudas
relatingthis relates to what I said yesterday — esto se refiere a or está relacionado con lo que dije ayer
* * *[rɪ'leɪt]
1.
1) ( link)2) ( tell) (frml) \<\<story\>\> relatar, contar*, referir* (liter)
2.
vi1)a) ( be connected with)to relate TO something — estar* relacionado con algo
b)relating to — (as prep) relativo a, relacionado con
2) (understand, sympathise with)to relate TO somebody — sintonizar* con alguien, tener* una buena relación con alguien
to relate TO something — identificarse* con algo
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122 romance
1) (the relationship, actions etc of people who are in love: It was a beautiful romance, but it didn't last.) amorío, idilio2) (a story about such a relationship etc, especially one in which the people, events etc are more exciting etc than in normal life: She writes romances.) novela sentimental3) (this kind of excitement: She felt her life was lacking in romance.) romance•- romantic- romantically
romance n historia de amor
romance sustantivo masculino romance
romance
I sustantivo masculino
1 Lit ballad
2 (idilio) romance
3 Ling Romance language
II adj Ling Romance ' romance' also found in these entries: Spanish: fotonovela - idilio - lío - revista - románica - románico English: romance - Romanic - ballad - Romance - whirltr[rəʊ'mæns]1 románico,-aromance n1) : romance m, novela f de caballerías2) : novela f de amor, novela f romántica3) affair: romance m, amorío madj.• romance adj.• románico, -a adj.• romántico, -a adj.n.• cuento de amor s.m.• cuento de aventuras s.m.• novela s.f.• romance s.m.v.• soñar v.rə'mænsˌ 'rəʊmæns, rəʊ'mæns [rǝʊ'mæns]1. Ntheir romance lasted exactly six months — su romance or idilio duró exactamente seis meses, sus amores duraron exactamente seis meses
2) (=romantic character) lo romántico, lo poético; (=picturesqueness) lo pintorescothe romance of history — lo atractivo or lo poético de la historia
3) (=tale) novela f (sentimental), cuento m (de amor); (medieval) libro m de caballerías, poema m caballeresco; (Mus) romanza f4) (Ling)2.ADJ [language] romance3.VI soñar, fantasear* * *[rə'mænsˌ 'rəʊmæns, rəʊ'mæns] -
123 sisterhood
tr['sɪstəhʊd]1 hermandad nombre femeninosisterhood ['sɪstər.hʊd] n1) : condición f de ser hermana2) : sociedad f de mujeresn.• cofradía s.f.• cofradía de mujeres s.f.• hermandad s.f.'sɪstərhʊd, 'sɪstəhʊda) c ( association of women) asociación f de mujeresb) c ( Relig) congregación f['sɪstǝhʊd]N hermandad f* * *['sɪstərhʊd, 'sɪstəhʊd]a) c ( association of women) asociación f de mujeresb) c ( Relig) congregación f -
124 solid
'solid
1. adjective1) (not easily changing shape; not in the form of liquid or gas: Water becomes solid when it freezes; solid substances.) sólido2) (not hollow: The tyres of the earliest cars were solid.) macizo3) (firm and strongly made (and therefore sound and reliable): That's a solid piece of furniture; His argument is based on good solid facts/reasoning.) sólido4) (completely made of one substance: This bracelet is made of solid gold; We dug till we reached solid rock.) macizo5) (without breaks, gaps or flaws: The policemen formed themselves into a solid line; They are solid in their determination to strike.) de una sola pieza6) (having height, breadth and width: A cube is a solid figure.) sólido7) (consecutive; without a pause: I've been working for six solid hours.) seguido, ininterrumpido
2. adverb(without interruption; continuously: She was working for six hours solid.) ininterrumpidamente
3. noun1) (a substance that is solid: Butter is a solid but milk is a liquid.) sólido2) (a shape that has length, breadth and height.) sólido•- solidify
- solidification
- solidity
- solidness
- solidly
- solid fuel
solid adj1. sólido2. macizotr['sɒlɪd]1 (not liquid or gas) sólido,-a2 (not hollow) macizo,-a3 (dense, compact) compacto,-a4 (unmixed) puro,-a, macizo,-a5 (strong) sólido,-a, fuerte6 (reliable) sólido,-a, de confianza, de fiar7 (unanimous) unánime8 (continuous) seguido,-a, entero,-a; (unbroken) continuo,-a9 SMALLTECHNICAL/SMALL (three-dimensional) tridimensional1 (substance) sólido■ solids, liquids and gasses sólidos, líquidos y gases\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLas solid as a rock firme como una rocato become solid solidificarsesolid figure cuerpo sólidosolid geometry geometría del espaciosolid ['sɑləd] adj1) : macizoa solid rubber ball: una bola maciza de caucho2) cubic: tridimensional3) compact: compacto, denso4) sturdy: sólido5) continuous: seguido, continuotwo solid hours: dos horas seguidasa solid line: una línea continua6) unanimous: unánime7) dependable: serio, fiable8) pure: macizo, purosolid gold: oro macizosolid n: sólido madj.• compacto, -a adj.• consistente adj.• denso, -a adj.• duro, -a adj.• enterizo, -a adj.• fijo, -a adj.• firme adj.• macizo, -a adj.• sólido, -a adj.• unánime adj.n.• macizo s.m.• sólido s.m.
I 'sɑːləd, 'sɒlɪd1)a) ( not liquid or gaseous) sólidosolid food — alimentos mpl sólidos
to become solid — solidificarse*
b) ( not hollow) <rubber ball/tire> macizoc) ( Math) tridimensional2)a) ( unbroken) <line/row> continuo, ininterrumpidob) ( continuous) (colloq) <month/year> seguido3)a) ( physically sturdy) <furniture/house> sólido; < meal> consistenteb) (substantial, valuable) <knowledge/reason> sólidoc) (firm, definite) < offer> en firme4)b) ( unanimous) <support/agreement> unánime
II
1)a) (Chem, Phys) sólido mb) ( Math) sólido m2) solids pla) (in, from liquid) sólidos mpl, sustancias fpl sólidasb) ( food) alimentos mpl sólidos
III
adverb (colloq)['sɒlɪd]to be packed/jammed solid — estar* lleno hasta el tope or hasta los topes
1. ADJ1) (=not liquid) sólido•
to become solid — solidificarse•
to freeze solid — congelarse por completo•
to be frozen solid — estar completamente congelado•
to go solid — solidificarse2) (=firm) [masonry, building, understanding, basis] sólido; [argument] sólido, bien fundamentado; [relationship] sólido, firme•
get a good solid grip on the handle — agarra bien el mangoto have solid grounds for thinking that... — tener bases sólidas para creer que...
3) (=not hollow) [rock] sólido; [wood, steel] macizo, puro; [tyre, ball, block] macizo4) (=compact, dense) [layer, crowd] compacto•
flights to Israel are booked solid — los vuelos a Israel están completamente llenos•
a solid mass of colour — una masa sólida de color•
the streets were packed solid with people — las calles estaban abarrotadas de gente•
the bolts have rusted solid — los tornillos están tan oxidados que es imposible girarlos•
the traffic was solid going into town — había una caravana tremenda en dirección a la ciudad *5) (=continuous) [line, rain] ininterrumpidoI've been working on this for eight hours solid — he estado trabajando sobre esto durante ocho horas ininterrumpidas, llevo trabajando sobre esto ocho horas sin parar
6) (=reliable) [person, relationship] serio; [evidence, reason, values] sólido; [information] fiable; [work] concienzudo; [citizen] responsable; [advice] útil7) (=substantial)8) (=unanimous)9) (Geom) [figure] tridimensional2. N1) (Phys, Chem) sólido m2) (Geom) sólido mis he on solids yet? — ¿come ya alimentos sólidos?
3.CPDsolid angle N — (Geom) ángulo m sólido
solid compound N — (Ling) compuesto que se escribe como una sola palabra
solid fuel N — combustible m sólido
solid geometry N — geometría f de los cuerpos sólidos
* * *
I ['sɑːləd, 'sɒlɪd]1)a) ( not liquid or gaseous) sólidosolid food — alimentos mpl sólidos
to become solid — solidificarse*
b) ( not hollow) <rubber ball/tire> macizoc) ( Math) tridimensional2)a) ( unbroken) <line/row> continuo, ininterrumpidob) ( continuous) (colloq) <month/year> seguido3)a) ( physically sturdy) <furniture/house> sólido; < meal> consistenteb) (substantial, valuable) <knowledge/reason> sólidoc) (firm, definite) < offer> en firme4)b) ( unanimous) <support/agreement> unánime
II
1)a) (Chem, Phys) sólido mb) ( Math) sólido m2) solids pla) (in, from liquid) sólidos mpl, sustancias fpl sólidasb) ( food) alimentos mpl sólidos
III
adverb (colloq)to be packed/jammed solid — estar* lleno hasta el tope or hasta los topes
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125 stale
steil1) ((of food etc) not fresh and therefore dry and tasteless: stale bread.)2) (no longer interesting: His ideas are stale and dull.)3) (no longer able to work etc well because of too much study etc: If she practises the piano for more than two hours a day, she will grow stale.)stale adj duro / pasadotr[steɪl]1 (food - gen) no fresco,-a, pasado,-a; (- bread, cake) duro,-a; (tobacco) rancio,-a; (wine, beer) picado,-a4 (person) quemado,-a, cansado,-a, harto,-astale bread: pan durostale news: viejas noticiasadj.• añejo, -a adj.• duro, -a adj.• fiambre adj.• manido, -a adj.• mohoso, -a adj.• pasado, -a adj.• rancio, -a adj.• trasnochado, -a adj.• viciado, -a adj.steɪladjective staler, stalesta) < bread> no fresco, añejo (fam); ( hard) duro; <butter/cheese> rancio; < beer> pasado; < air> viciado[steɪl]1. ADJ(compar staler) (superl stalest)1) (=not fresh) [cheese, butter, sweat, cigarette smoke] rancio; [breath] maloliente; [air] viciado; [biscuit, beer] pasado; [cake] seco; [bread] correoso; (=hard) duroto go stale — [biscuit, beer] pasarse; [cake] secarse; [bread] ponerse correoso; (=become hard) ponerse duro
to have gone stale — (lit) estar pasado
2) (fig) [news, joke] viejo; [idea] marchitotheir relationship had become stale — la relación se había estancado or anquilosado
to get or become stale — [person] estancarse, anquilosarse
I'm getting stale — me estoy estancando or anquilosando
2.VI liter [relationship, author, writing] quedarse estancado or anquilosado; [pleasures] perder la frescura liter* * *[steɪl]adjective staler, stalest -
126 strain
I
1. strein verb1) (to exert oneself or a part of the body to the greatest possible extent: They strained at the door, trying to pull it open; He strained to reach the rope.) estirar, tensar2) (to injure (a muscle etc) through too much use, exertion etc: He has strained a muscle in his leg; You'll strain your eyes by reading in such a poor light.) torcerse, hacerse un esguince, hacerse daño (en), forzar3) (to force or stretch (too far): The constant interruptions were straining his patience.) poner a prueba, abusar4) (to put (eg a mixture) through a sieve etc in order to separate solid matter from liquid: She strained the coffee.) colar, escurrir
2. noun1) (force exerted; Can nylon ropes take more strain than the old kind of rope?) tensión, presión2) ((something, eg too much work etc, that causes) a state of anxiety and fatigue: The strain of nursing her dying husband was too much for her; to suffer from strain.) tensión, estrés3) ((an) injury especially to a muscle caused by too much exertion: muscular strain.) torcedura, esguince4) (too great a demand: These constant delays are a strain on our patience.) presión•- strained- strainer
- strain off
II strein noun1) (a kind or breed (of animals, plants etc): a new strain of cattle.)2) (a tendency in a person's character: I'm sure there's a strain of madness in her.)3) ((often in plural) (the sound of) a tune: I heard the strains of a hymn coming from the church.)strain1 n tensiónstrain2 vb1. forzar2. lesionarse / torcer3. filtrar / colartr[streɪn]1 SMALLPHYSICS/SMALL (tension) tensión nombre femenino; (pressure) presión nombre femenino; (weight) peso2 (stress, pressure) tensión nombre femenino, estrés nombre masculino; (effort) esfuerzo; (exhaustion) agotamiento■ the latest crisis has put more strain on Franco-Spanish relations la última crisis ha aumentado la tirantez en las relaciones francoespañolas4 SMALLMEDICINE/SMALL torcedura, esguince nombre masculino1 (stretch) estirar, tensar2 (damage, weaken - muscle) torcer(se), hacerse un esguince en; (- back) hacerse daño en; (- voice, eyes) forzar; (ears) aguzar; (- heart) cansar3 (stretch - patience, nerves, credulity) poner a prueba; (- resources) estirar al máximo; (- relations) someter a demasiada tensión, crear tirantez en4 (filter - liquid) colar; (- vegetables, rice) escurrir1 (make great efforts) esforzarse, hacer un gran esfuerzo\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto strain at the leash tirar de la correato strain oneself esforzarse■ don't strain yourself! ¡no te esfuerces!————————tr[streɪn]2 (streak) venastrain ['streɪn] vt1) exert: forzar (la vista, la voz)to strain oneself: hacer un gran esfuerzo2) filter: colar, filtrar3) injure: lastimarse, hacerse daño ento strain a muscle: sufrir un esguincestrain n1) lineage: linaje m, abolengo m2) streak, trace: veta f3) variety: tipo m, variedad f4) stress: tensión f, presión f5) sprain: esguince m, torcedura f (del tobillo, etc.)6) strains npltune: melodía f, acordes mpl, compases fpln.• agotamiento nervioso s.m.• deformación s.f.• duelo s.m.• esfuerzo muy grande s.m.• linaje s.m.• raza s.f.• ribete s.m.• tensión s.f.• tirantez s.f.v.• cerner v.• colar v.• estirar v.• fatigar v.• forzar v.• pujar v.• torcer v.• trascolar v.streɪn
I
the rope snapped under the strain — la cuerda se rompió debido a la tensión a la que estaba sometida
the incident put a strain on Franco-German relations — las relaciones franco-alemanas se volvieron tirantes a raíz del incidente
she's been under great o a lot of strain — ha estado pasando una época de mucha tensión or de mucho estrés
4)b) ( streak) (no pl) veta f
II
1.
1) ( exert)to strain one's eyes/voice — forzar* la vista/voz
to strain one's ears — aguzar* el oído
2)a) ( overburden) \<\<beam/support\>\> ejercer* demasiada presión sobreb) ( injure)to strain one's back — hacerse* daño en la espalda
to strain a muscle — hacerse* un esguince
c) (overtax, stretch) \<\<relations\>\> someter a demasiada tensión, volver* tenso or tirante; \<\<credulity/patience\>\> poner* a prueba
2.
v reflto strain oneself — hacerse* daño
3.
vito strain to + INF — hacer* un gran esfuerzo para + inf
I [streɪn]1. N1) (=physical pressure) (on rope, cable) tensión f ; (on beam, bridge, structure) presión f•
this puts a strain on the cable — esto tensa el cable•
to take the strain — (lit) aguantar el peso•
to take the strain off — [+ rope, cable] disminuir la tensión de; [+ beam, bridge, structure] disminuir la presión sobreto collapse under the strain — [bridge, ceiling] venirse abajo debido a la presión
2) (fig) (=burden) carga f ; (=pressure) presión f ; (=stress) tensión fI found it a strain being totally responsible for the child — me suponía una carga llevar toda la responsabilidad del niño yo solo
it was a strain on the economy/his purse — suponía una carga para la economía/su bolsillo
•
to put a strain on — [+ resources] suponer una carga para; [+ system] forzar al límite; [+ relationship] crear tirantez or tensiones enhis illness has put a terrible strain on the family — su enfermedad ha creado mucha tensión or estrés para la familia
stress•
he has been under a great deal of strain — ha estado sometido a mucha presión3) (=effort) esfuerzo m4) (Physiol)b) (=wear) (on eyes, heart) esfuerzo meyestrain, repetitive•
he knew tennis put a strain on his heart — sabía que el tenis le sometía el corazón a un esfuerzo or le forzaba el corazónwe could hear the gentle strains of a Haydn quartet — oíamos los suaves compases de un cuarteto de Haydn
the bride came in to the strains of the wedding march — la novia entró al son or a los compases de la marcha nupcial
2. VT1) (=stretch) (beyond reasonable limits) [+ system] forzar al límite; [+ friendship, relationship, marriage] crear tensiones en, crear tirantez en; [+ resources, budget] suponer una carga para; [+ patience] poner a prueba•
the demands of the welfare state are straining public finances to the limit — las exigencias del estado de bienestar están resultando una carga excesiva para las arcas públicas•
to strain relations with sb — tensar las relaciones con algn2) (=damage, tire) [+ back] dañar(se), hacerse daño en; [+ eyes] cansarto strain o.s.: you shouldn't strain yourself — no deberías hacer mucha fuerza
don't strain yourself! — iro ¡no te vayas a quebrar or herniar!
3) (=make an effort with) [+ voice, eyes] forzarto strain every nerve or sinew to do sth — esforzarse mucho por hacer algo, hacer grandes esfuerzos por hacer algo
4) (=filter) (Chem) filtrar; (Culin) [+ gravy, soup, custard] colar; [+ vegetables] escurrir•
to strain sth into a bowl — colar algo en un cuenco•
strain the mixture through a sieve — pase la mezcla por un tamiz3.VI (=make an effort)•
he strained against the bonds that held him — liter hacía esfuerzos para soltarse de las cadenas que lo retenían•
to strain at sth — tirar de algoto strain at the leash — [dog] tirar de la correa; (fig) saltar de impaciencia
•
to strain under a weight — ir agobiado por un peso
II
[streɪn]N2) (=streak, element) vena f* * *[streɪn]
I
the rope snapped under the strain — la cuerda se rompió debido a la tensión a la que estaba sometida
the incident put a strain on Franco-German relations — las relaciones franco-alemanas se volvieron tirantes a raíz del incidente
she's been under great o a lot of strain — ha estado pasando una época de mucha tensión or de mucho estrés
4)b) ( streak) (no pl) veta f
II
1.
1) ( exert)to strain one's eyes/voice — forzar* la vista/voz
to strain one's ears — aguzar* el oído
2)a) ( overburden) \<\<beam/support\>\> ejercer* demasiada presión sobreb) ( injure)to strain one's back — hacerse* daño en la espalda
to strain a muscle — hacerse* un esguince
c) (overtax, stretch) \<\<relations\>\> someter a demasiada tensión, volver* tenso or tirante; \<\<credulity/patience\>\> poner* a prueba
2.
v reflto strain oneself — hacerse* daño
3.
vito strain to + INF — hacer* un gran esfuerzo para + inf
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127 suffer
1) (to undergo, endure or bear pain, misery etc: He suffered terrible pain from his injuries; The crash killed him instantly - he didn't suffer at all; I'll make you suffer for this insolence.) sufrir, padecer2) (to undergo or experience: The army suffered enormous losses.) sufrir3) (to be neglected: I like to see you enjoying yourself, but you mustn't let your work suffer.) resentirse, verse afectado; salir perjudicado4) ((with from) to have or to have often (a particular illness etc): She suffers from stomach-aches.) sufrir de, padecer de•suffer vb padecer / sufrirtr['sʌfəSMALLr/SMALL]2 (bear, tolerate) aguantar, soportar, tolerar1 (gen) sufrir2 (be affected - work, studies, etc) verse afectado,-a; (- health) resentirse■ if you smoke, your health will suffer si fumas, perjudicará tu salud\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLnot to suffer fools gladly no aguantar a los imbécilesto suffer for something sufrir las consecuencias de algoto suffer from (illness) sufrir de, padecer 2 (shock) sufrir los efectos de 3 (effects) resentirse desuffer ['sʌfər] vi: sufrirsuffer vt1) : sufrir, padecer (dolores, etc.)2) permit: permitir, dejarv.• aguantar v.• comportar v.• conllevar v.• desolar v.• padecer v.• penar v.• perecer v.• permitir v.• soportar v.• sufrir v.• tocar v.'sʌfər, 'sʌfə(r)
1.
a) ( undergo) \<\<injury/damage/loss\>\> sufrir; \<\<pain\>\> padecer*, sufrirb) ( endure) aguantar, tolerarc) ( permit) (liter)to suffer somebody to + INF — dejar que alguien (+ subj)
2.
via) (experience pain, difficulty) sufrirb) (be affected, deteriorate) \<\<health/eyesight\>\> resentirse*; \<\<business/performance/relationship\>\> verse* afectado, resentirse*c) ( be afflicted)to suffer FROM something — sufrir or (frml) padecer* de algo
['sʌfǝ(r)]he suffers from asthma — sufre or (frml) padece de asma
1. VT1) (=experience) [+ pain, hardship] sufrir, padecer; [+ loss, decline, setback] sufrir, experimentarthe peace process has suffered a serious blow — el proceso de paz ha sufrido or experimentado un serio contratiempo
2) (=tolerate) [+ opposition, rudeness] soportar, aguantarI can't suffer it a moment longer — no lo soporto or aguanto un minuto más
to suffer sb to do sth — (Literat) permitir que algn haga algo
2. VI1) (=experience pain) sufrir•
to suffer for sth — sufrir las consecuencias de algoyou'll suffer for this! — ¡me las pagarás!
I'll make him suffer for it! — ¡me las pagará!
•
to make sb suffer — hacer sufrir a algn2)• to suffer from sth (=experience) —
3) (=worsen) [studies, business, eyesight, health] verse afectado, resentirse* * *['sʌfər, 'sʌfə(r)]
1.
a) ( undergo) \<\<injury/damage/loss\>\> sufrir; \<\<pain\>\> padecer*, sufrirb) ( endure) aguantar, tolerarc) ( permit) (liter)to suffer somebody to + INF — dejar que alguien (+ subj)
2.
via) (experience pain, difficulty) sufrirb) (be affected, deteriorate) \<\<health/eyesight\>\> resentirse*; \<\<business/performance/relationship\>\> verse* afectado, resentirse*c) ( be afflicted)to suffer FROM something — sufrir or (frml) padecer* de algo
he suffers from asthma — sufre or (frml) padece de asma
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128 torrid
'torid1) (very hot: the torrid zone (= the area of the world on either side of the equator).) tórrido2) (passionate: a torrid love affair.) apasionado, ardientetr['tɒrɪd]1 (hot, dry) tórrido,-a2 (passionate) apasionado,-atorrid ['tɔrɪd] adj: tórridoadj.• tórrido, -a adj.'tɔːrəd, 'tɒrɪdadjective <climate/heat> tórrido; <affair/relationship> apasionado, tempestuoso['tɒrɪd]ADJ1) (=hot and dry) [climate, heat, sun] tórrido2) (=passionate) [love affair, romance] tórrido, apasionado3) (=very difficult)to have a torrid time — (Brit) pasar las de Caín, sufrir lo indecible
* * *['tɔːrəd, 'tɒrɪd]adjective <climate/heat> tórrido; <affair/relationship> apasionado, tempestuoso
См. также в других словарях:
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