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riotous

  • 1 desórdenes

    • riotous
    • riotously
    • riots
    • riots and civil commotions

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > desórdenes

  • 2 disturbios

    • riotous
    • riotously
    • riots
    • riots and civil commotions

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > disturbios

  • 3 motines y perturbaciones civiles

    • riotous success
    • riots
    • riots and civil commotions
    • rip

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > motines y perturbaciones civiles

  • 4 alborotado

    adj.
    excited, disorderly, agitated, restless.
    past part.
    past participle of spanish verb: alborotar.
    * * *
    1→ link=alborotar alborotar
    1 (agitado) agitated, excited
    2 (ruidoso) noisy, rowdy
    3 (desordenado) untidy, messy
    4 (irreflexivo) reckless, rash
    * * *
    ADJ
    1) [persona] (=excitado) agitated, excited; (=ruidoso) noisy; (=precipitado) hasty; (=impetuoso) reckless; (=amotinado) riotous
    2) [período] troubled, eventful
    3) [mar] rough
    * * *
    - da adjetivo
    1)
    a) ( nervioso) agitated; (animado, excitado) excited
    b) ( ruidoso) noisy, rowdy; ( amotinado) riotous
    2) < mar> rough; < pelo> untidy, disheveled*
    3) ( precipitado) hasty, rash
    * * *
    = disorderly, abuzz, hurly-burly.
    Ex. As expected, students in disorderly schools tend to have higher misbehavior and lower achievement.
    Ex. She is keeping New York abuzz by shrouding the launch of 'Talk,' her new magazine, in mystery.
    Ex. Its principles of living close to the natural world and striving for balance in all that we do provide an antidote to our hurly-burly existence.
    * * *
    - da adjetivo
    1)
    a) ( nervioso) agitated; (animado, excitado) excited
    b) ( ruidoso) noisy, rowdy; ( amotinado) riotous
    2) < mar> rough; < pelo> untidy, disheveled*
    3) ( precipitado) hasty, rash
    * * *
    = disorderly, abuzz, hurly-burly.

    Ex: As expected, students in disorderly schools tend to have higher misbehavior and lower achievement.

    Ex: She is keeping New York abuzz by shrouding the launch of 'Talk,' her new magazine, in mystery.
    Ex: Its principles of living close to the natural world and striving for balance in all that we do provide an antidote to our hurly-burly existence.

    * * *
    A
    1 (nervioso) agitated; (animado, excitado) excited
    2 ‹grupo/muchedumbre› (ruidoso) noisy, rowdy; (amotinado) riotous
    B
    1 ‹mar› rough, choppy
    2 ‹pelo› untidy, disheveled*
    C (precipitado) hasty, reckless, rash
    * * *

    Del verbo alborotar: ( conjugate alborotar)

    alborotado es:

    el participio

    Multiple Entries:
    alborotado    
    alborotar
    alborotado
    ◊ -da adjetivo

    1

    (animado, excitado) excited

    ( amotinado) riotous
    2 mar rough;
    pelo untidy, disheveled( conjugate disheveled)
    alborotar ( conjugate alborotar) verbo intransitivo
    to make a racket
    verbo transitivo
    a) ( agitar) to agitate, get … agitated;

    ( excitar) to get … excited

    alborotarse verbo pronominal
    a) ( agitarse) to get agitated o upset;

    ( excitarse) to get excited

    alborotado,-a adjetivo
    1 worked up, agitated
    2 (desordenado) untidy, messy
    3 (mar) rough
    (tiempo) stormy
    alborotar
    I verbo transitivo
    1 (causar agitación) to agitate, work up
    2 (revolver, desordenar) to make untidy, turn upside down
    II vi (causar jaleo) to kick up a racket
    ' alborotado' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    alborotada
    - desordenada
    - desordenado
    English:
    ruffled
    - disorderly
    - excited
    - tousled
    - wind
    * * *
    alborotado, -a adj
    1. [agitado] rowdy;
    los niños están alborotados con la excursión the children are all excited about the trip;
    los ánimos están alborotados feelings are running high
    2. [pelo] dishevelled
    3. [mar] rough
    4. Cuba [sexualmente] sex-starved
    * * *
    I adj
    1 rowdy
    2 ( imprudente) reckless
    II partalborotar
    * * *
    alborotado, -da adj
    1) : excited, agitated
    2) : rowdy, unruly

    Spanish-English dictionary > alborotado

  • 5 desaforado

    adj.
    1 excessive, desperate, out of control.
    2 lawless.
    past part.
    past participle of spanish verb: desaforar.
    * * *
    1 (exagerado) huge, enormous, terrible
    2 (escandaloso) outrageous
    * * *
    ADJ [comportamiento] outrageous; [persona] lawless, disorderly; [grito] ear-splitting

    es un desaforado — he's a violent sort, he's dangerously excitable

    * * *
    I
    - da adjetivo < ambición> unbridled, boundless; < grito> terrible
    II
    - da masculino, femenino

    como un desaforado< correr> hell for leather; < gritar> at the top of one's voice

    * * *
    = raging, intemperate, riotous, outrageous, excessive, desperate, out-of-control, wild [wilder -comp., wildest -sup.], ardent.
    Ex. This problem is unlikely to be solved during a period of raging inflation and cutbacks in education spending = Es poco probable que este problema se resuelva durante un período de inflación disparada y recortes en los gastos en la educación.
    Ex. From hermeneutics to the most intemperate positivism, the real challenge is that of conceiving a general methodology.
    Ex. I'd like to see the full force of the law brought down on these people who are involved in this riotous behaviour.
    Ex. There must be few other ways of leaving oneself so vulnerable to the slings and arrows of outrageous (or outraged) critics.
    Ex. Excessive emphasis on the need to exact payment will stifle the flow of information.
    Ex. Compassion shadowed the trustee's face -- she could see he was desperate -- and compassion was in her voice as she answered: 'All right, I'll go over this afternoon'.
    Ex. This article discusses the out-of-control situation of federal paperwork and the consequent burdens it places on the US public and business sector.
    Ex. The letter sent Tomas Hernandez into a frenzy of conflicting reactions: ecstatic jubilation and ego-tripping, wild speculation and outrageous fantasy, compounded by confusion and indirection.
    Ex. Significantly, however, Panizzi's rules did not prove as viable as did his ideology, and they were promptly and materially changed and recast by his most ardent admirers and followers.
    * * *
    I
    - da adjetivo < ambición> unbridled, boundless; < grito> terrible
    II
    - da masculino, femenino

    como un desaforado< correr> hell for leather; < gritar> at the top of one's voice

    * * *
    = raging, intemperate, riotous, outrageous, excessive, desperate, out-of-control, wild [wilder -comp., wildest -sup.], ardent.

    Ex: This problem is unlikely to be solved during a period of raging inflation and cutbacks in education spending = Es poco probable que este problema se resuelva durante un período de inflación disparada y recortes en los gastos en la educación.

    Ex: From hermeneutics to the most intemperate positivism, the real challenge is that of conceiving a general methodology.
    Ex: I'd like to see the full force of the law brought down on these people who are involved in this riotous behaviour.
    Ex: There must be few other ways of leaving oneself so vulnerable to the slings and arrows of outrageous (or outraged) critics.
    Ex: Excessive emphasis on the need to exact payment will stifle the flow of information.
    Ex: Compassion shadowed the trustee's face -- she could see he was desperate -- and compassion was in her voice as she answered: 'All right, I'll go over this afternoon'.
    Ex: This article discusses the out-of-control situation of federal paperwork and the consequent burdens it places on the US public and business sector.
    Ex: The letter sent Tomas Hernandez into a frenzy of conflicting reactions: ecstatic jubilation and ego-tripping, wild speculation and outrageous fantasy, compounded by confusion and indirection.
    Ex: Significantly, however, Panizzi's rules did not prove as viable as did his ideology, and they were promptly and materially changed and recast by his most ardent admirers and followers.

    * * *
    1 ‹fiesta› riotous, wild; ‹ambición› unbridled, boundless; ‹grito› terrible
    2 ‹partidario/nacionalista› ardent, fervent
    masculine, feminine
    se puso a comer como un desaforado he started eating as if he hadn't eaten in a week
    corrieron como desaforados they ran hell for leather o like crazy ( colloq)
    gritaba como un desaforado he was shouting at the top of his voice o like a madman, he was shouting his head off ( colloq)
    * * *

    Del verbo desaforar: ( conjugate desaforar)

    desaforado es:

    el participio

    desaforado
    ◊ -da sustantivo masculino, femenino: como un desaforado ‹ correr hell for leather;


    gritar at the top of one's voice
    ' desaforado' also found in these entries:
    English:
    wild
    * * *
    desaforado, -a
    adj
    [gritos, baile, carrera] wild; [ambición, codicia, deseo] unbridled, wild; [celebración, fiesta] wild; [comilona, borrachera] enormous, gargantuan
    nm,f
    los hinchas gritaban como desaforados the fans screamed wildly;
    bailaba/comía como un desaforado he danced/ate like a man possessed
    * * *
    adj
    1 ambición boundless
    2 grito ear-splitting

    Spanish-English dictionary > desaforado

  • 6 descontrolado

    adj.
    uncontrolled, compulsive, out of bounds, out of hand.
    past part.
    past participle of spanish verb: descontrolarse.
    * * *
    1→ link=descontrolarse descontrolarse
    1 uncontrolled, out of control
    2 familiar figurado out of control, wild
    * * *
    ADJ
    1) (=sin control) uncontrolled

    elementos descontrolados — wild elements; (Pol) rebellious factions

    2) LAm (=perturbado) upset, irritated
    * * *
    - da adjetivo to be out of control

    una multitud descontrolada invadió el campo — a crowd, out of control, invaded the pitch

    * * *
    = untethered, freewheeling [free-wheeling], unchecked, uncontrolled, unbridled, runaway, unmonitored, unrestricted, riotous.
    Ex. 'Out of the secretarial world it comes, the prime example of the untethered query, bobbing uselessly about till one can tell what caused it to be launched'.
    Ex. Yet it is argued that these fluctuations do not justify either precipitous journal cancellations or free-wheeling additions to the collection.
    Ex. The volume of published material tends to grow unchecked, and academic libraries are expected to provide a ready market for it.
    Ex. Publishers are right to be concerned about uncontrolled republication.
    Ex. Unbridled photocopying will lead to the imminent demise of the communications skein.
    Ex. The article is entitled 'How to control a runaway state documents collection'.
    Ex. The causes were an unmonitored rise in heat and humidity from an air cooling system that continuously circulated hot moist air from the outside.
    Ex. Although the library community advocates unrestricted access to resources for all, professional practices illustrate that librarians restrict access for youth.
    Ex. I'd like to see the full force of the law brought down on these people who are involved in this riotous behaviour.
    ----
    * crecimiento urbano descontrolado = suburban sprawl.
    * de un modo descontrolado = uncontrollably.
    * expansión urbana descontrolada = urban sprawl, suburban sprawl.
    * gasto descontrolado = runaway spending.
    * * *
    - da adjetivo to be out of control

    una multitud descontrolada invadió el campo — a crowd, out of control, invaded the pitch

    * * *
    = untethered, freewheeling [free-wheeling], unchecked, uncontrolled, unbridled, runaway, unmonitored, unrestricted, riotous.

    Ex: 'Out of the secretarial world it comes, the prime example of the untethered query, bobbing uselessly about till one can tell what caused it to be launched'.

    Ex: Yet it is argued that these fluctuations do not justify either precipitous journal cancellations or free-wheeling additions to the collection.
    Ex: The volume of published material tends to grow unchecked, and academic libraries are expected to provide a ready market for it.
    Ex: Publishers are right to be concerned about uncontrolled republication.
    Ex: Unbridled photocopying will lead to the imminent demise of the communications skein.
    Ex: The article is entitled 'How to control a runaway state documents collection'.
    Ex: The causes were an unmonitored rise in heat and humidity from an air cooling system that continuously circulated hot moist air from the outside.
    Ex: Although the library community advocates unrestricted access to resources for all, professional practices illustrate that librarians restrict access for youth.
    Ex: I'd like to see the full force of the law brought down on these people who are involved in this riotous behaviour.
    * crecimiento urbano descontrolado = suburban sprawl.
    * de un modo descontrolado = uncontrollably.
    * expansión urbana descontrolada = urban sprawl, suburban sprawl.
    * gasto descontrolado = runaway spending.

    * * *
    1 ‹crecimiento/uso› uncontrolled
    el descontrolado mercado de la propiedad the uncontrolled property market
    el fuego descontrolado arrasó bosques enteros the fire got out of control and swept through whole forests
    2 ‹emoción/sentimiento› uncontrolled
    3 ‹persona› out of control
    elements descontrolados uncontrolled elements
    el marido descontrolado mató a la esposa the husband lost control and killed his wife
    totalmente descontrolado por los nervios se puso a gritar totally overcome by nerves, he began to shout
    * * *

    Del verbo descontrolarse: ( conjugate descontrolarse)

    descontrolado es:

    el participio

    Multiple Entries:
    descontrolado    
    descontrolarse
    descontrolado
    ◊ -da adjetivo

    out of control
    descontrolarse ( conjugate descontrolarse) verbo pronominal
    to get out of control
    ■descontrolarse verbo reflexivo to lose control

    ' descontrolado' also found in these entries:
    English:
    control
    - riotous
    * * *
    descontrolado, -a
    adj
    [automóvil, inflación] runaway; [persona] out of control;
    tengo a la clase descontrolada I can't keep order in my class;
    el tren circulaba descontrolado the train was running out of control;
    estar descontrolado to be out of control
    nm,f
    un grupo de descontrolados interrumpió la reunión a rowdy group disrupted the meeting
    * * *
    adj out of control

    Spanish-English dictionary > descontrolado

  • 7 revoltoso

    adj.
    unruly, rebellious, disorderly, mischievous.
    m.
    rowdy, mischief-maker, rebel, firebrand.
    * * *
    1 (rebelde) rebellious, unruly
    2 (travieso) mischievous, naughty
    nombre masculino,nombre femenino
    1 (rebelde) rebel
    2 (travieso) mischievous child
    3 (sedicioso) troublemaker
    * * *
    revoltoso, -a
    1.
    ADJ (=rebelde) rebellious, unruly; [niño] naughty, unruly
    2.
    SM / F (=alborotador) troublemaker, agitator
    * * *
    - sa adjetivo < niño> naughty; <soldados/estudiantes> rebellious
    * * *
    = unruly, disorderly, riotous.
    Ex. 'Sometimes the kids get a little unruly!' she announced in that easy familiar style of hers as she sat down.
    Ex. As expected, students in disorderly schools tend to have higher misbehavior and lower achievement.
    Ex. I'd like to see the full force of the law brought down on these people who are involved in this riotous behaviour.
    * * *
    - sa adjetivo < niño> naughty; <soldados/estudiantes> rebellious
    * * *
    = unruly, disorderly, riotous.

    Ex: 'Sometimes the kids get a little unruly!' she announced in that easy familiar style of hers as she sat down.

    Ex: As expected, students in disorderly schools tend to have higher misbehavior and lower achievement.
    Ex: I'd like to see the full force of the law brought down on these people who are involved in this riotous behaviour.

    * * *
    1 ‹niño› naughty
    2 ‹soldados/estudiantes› rebellious
    * * *

    revoltoso
    ◊ -sa adjetivo ‹ niño naughty;


    soldados/estudiantes rebellious
    revoltoso,-a adjetivo & sustantivo masculino y femenino naughty
    ' revoltoso' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    revoltosa
    English:
    disruptive
    - mischief-maker
    - mischievous
    - unruly
    - disorderly
    * * *
    revoltoso, -a
    adj
    1. [soldado, estudiante] rebellious
    2. [niño] naughty
    nm,f
    1. [soldado, estudiante] troublemaker
    2. [niño] rascal
    * * *
    I adj niño naughty
    II m, revoltosa f naughty child
    * * *
    revoltoso, -sa adj
    : unruly, rebellious
    * * *
    revoltoso adj naughty [comp. naughtier; superl. naughtiest]

    Spanish-English dictionary > revoltoso

  • 8 subversivo

    adj.
    1 subversive, rebellious, revolutionary.
    2 subversive, seditious.
    m.
    rebel.
    * * *
    1 subversive
    * * *
    * * *
    - va adjetivo subversive
    * * *
    = subversive, riotous.
    Ex. Denmark has no history of charities or voluntary bodies, so such groups are seen by the authorities as being subversive.
    Ex. I'd like to see the full force of the law brought down on these people who are involved in this riotous behaviour.
    * * *
    - va adjetivo subversive
    * * *
    = subversive, riotous.

    Ex: Denmark has no history of charities or voluntary bodies, so such groups are seen by the authorities as being subversive.

    Ex: I'd like to see the full force of the law brought down on these people who are involved in this riotous behaviour.

    * * *
    subversive
    * * *

    subversivo
    ◊ -va adjetivo

    subversive
    subversivo,-a adjetivo subversive

    ' subversivo' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    subversiva
    English:
    subversive
    * * *
    subversivo, -a adj
    subversive
    * * *
    adj subversive
    * * *
    subversivo, -va adj & n
    : subversive

    Spanish-English dictionary > subversivo

  • 9 todo el peso de la ley

    = full force of the law, the, full force of the law, the
    Ex. I'd like to see the full force of the law brought down on these people who are involved in this riotous behaviour.
    Ex. I'd like to see the full force of the law brought down on these people who are involved in this riotous behaviour.
    * * *
    = full force of the law, the, full force of the law, the

    Ex: I'd like to see the full force of the law brought down on these people who are involved in this riotous behaviour.

    Ex: I'd like to see the full force of the law brought down on these people who are involved in this riotous behaviour.

    Spanish-English dictionary > todo el peso de la ley

  • 10 turbulento

    adj.
    turbulent, tumultuous, agitated.
    * * *
    1 turbulent, troubled
    * * *
    (f. - turbulenta)
    adj.
    * * *
    ADJ
    1) [río, aguas] turbulent
    2) [período] troubled, turbulent; [reunión] stormy
    3) [carácter] restless
    * * *
    - ta adjetivo <río/atmósfera> turbulent; <reunión/romance> stormy, turbulent; < época> turbulent, troubled
    * * *
    = troubled, turbulent, stormy [stormier -comp., stormiest -sup.], tumultuous, roiling, blustery, riotous, chequered [checkered, -USA].
    Ex. These thoughts and many more like them flitted to and fro ceaselessly over the troubled surface of his mind.
    Ex. The vocabulary used in conjunction with PRECIS is split in two sections, one part for Entities (or things) and the other for Attributes (properties of things, for example colour, weight; activities of things, for example flow, and properties of activities, for example, slow, turbulent).
    Ex. The stormy period of the 50s and 60s are considered to have seriously damaged the cause of improving the salaries of librarians.
    Ex. Surely these innovations already have and will continue to bring deep and wide-sweeping change to our profession - and because of their rapidity, these changes will be sudden and often tumultuous.
    Ex. He stood on the muddy bank of the river just after dawn, staring dispiritedly at the roiling current separating him from Mexico.
    Ex. This is probably because the north's more blustery weather spring-cleans the streets.
    Ex. I'd like to see the full force of the law brought down on these people who are involved in this riotous behaviour.
    Ex. An appraisal of the reforms following the report suggests that local councillors' workload has increased, and community councils have had a chequered career, although local authorities generally are stronger.
    ----
    * pasado turbulento = chequered history, chequered past.
    * tiempos turbulentos = embattled time(s).
    * * *
    - ta adjetivo <río/atmósfera> turbulent; <reunión/romance> stormy, turbulent; < época> turbulent, troubled
    * * *
    = troubled, turbulent, stormy [stormier -comp., stormiest -sup.], tumultuous, roiling, blustery, riotous, chequered [checkered, -USA].

    Ex: These thoughts and many more like them flitted to and fro ceaselessly over the troubled surface of his mind.

    Ex: The vocabulary used in conjunction with PRECIS is split in two sections, one part for Entities (or things) and the other for Attributes (properties of things, for example colour, weight; activities of things, for example flow, and properties of activities, for example, slow, turbulent).
    Ex: The stormy period of the 50s and 60s are considered to have seriously damaged the cause of improving the salaries of librarians.
    Ex: Surely these innovations already have and will continue to bring deep and wide-sweeping change to our profession - and because of their rapidity, these changes will be sudden and often tumultuous.
    Ex: He stood on the muddy bank of the river just after dawn, staring dispiritedly at the roiling current separating him from Mexico.
    Ex: This is probably because the north's more blustery weather spring-cleans the streets.
    Ex: I'd like to see the full force of the law brought down on these people who are involved in this riotous behaviour.
    Ex: An appraisal of the reforms following the report suggests that local councillors' workload has increased, and community councils have had a chequered career, although local authorities generally are stronger.
    * pasado turbulento = chequered history, chequered past.
    * tiempos turbulentos = embattled time(s).

    * * *
    ‹río/aguas/atmósfera› turbulent; ‹reunión/romance› stormy, turbulent; ‹época› turbulent, troubled
    * * *

    turbulento
    ◊ -ta adjetivo

    turbulent
    turbulento,-a adjetivo
    1 Meteor turbulent
    2 (pasión, actividad) stormy
    3 (persona, carárcter) turbulent

    ' turbulento' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    conflictiva
    - conflictivo
    - turbulenta
    English:
    disorderly
    - turbulent
    * * *
    turbulento, -a adj
    1. [aguas] turbulent
    2. [época, situación] turbulent, troubled;
    * * *
    adj turbulent
    * * *
    turbulento, -ta adj
    : turbulent

    Spanish-English dictionary > turbulento

  • 11 amotinado

    adj.
    mutinous, riotous.
    m.
    mutineer, rioter.
    past part.
    past participle of spanish verb: amotinar.
    * * *
    1→ link=amotinar amotinar
    1 rebel, riotous, insurgent
    2 MILITAR mutinous
    nombre masculino,nombre femenino
    1 rioter, insurgent
    2 MILITAR mutineer
    * * *
    amotinado, -a
    1.
    ADJ (=rebelde) riotous; (Mil, Náut) mutinous
    2.
    SM / F [civil] rioter; (Pol) rebel; (Mil, Náut) rebel, mutineer
    * * *
    I
    - da adjetivo <soldado/ejército> rebel (before n), insurgent (before n); <pueblo/ciudadanos> rebellious, insurgent (before n)
    II
    - da masculino, femenino insurgent
    * * *
    I
    - da adjetivo <soldado/ejército> rebel (before n), insurgent (before n); <pueblo/ciudadanos> rebellious, insurgent (before n)
    II
    - da masculino, femenino insurgent
    * * *
    amotinado1 -da
    ‹soldado/ejército› rebel ( before n), insurgent ( before n); ‹pueblo/ciudadanos› rebellious, insurgent ( before n)
    amotinado2 -da
    masculine, feminine
    (militar) insurgent, rebel; (civil) insurgent
    * * *

    Del verbo amotinar: ( conjugate amotinar)

    amotinado es:

    el participio

    Multiple Entries:
    amotinado    
    amotinar
    amotinado
    ◊ -da adjetivo ‹soldado/ejército rebel ( before n), insurgent ( before n);


    pueblo/ciudadanos rebellious, insurgent ( before n)
    ■ sustantivo masculino, femenino
    insurgent
    amotinar ( conjugate amotinar) verbo transitivo tropa› to incite … to mutiny o rebellion;
    población/puebloto incite … to rebellion
    amotinarse verbo pronominal [soldados/oficiales] to mutiny, rebel;
    [ población civil] to rise up
    amotinar verbo transitivo to incite to riot
    Mil to incite to mutiny
    ' amotinado' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    alborotado
    * * *
    amotinado, -a
    adj
    rebel, insurgent
    nm,f
    rebel, insurgent
    * * *
    I adj rebel atr, insurgent atr
    II m, amotinada f rebel, insurgent
    * * *
    amotinado, -da adj
    : rebellious, insurgent, mutinous
    amotinado, -da n
    : rebel, insurgent, mutineer

    Spanish-English dictionary > amotinado

  • 12 bullanguero

    adj.
    riotous, uproarious, rowdy, noisy.
    m.
    noisy person, rowdy.
    * * *
    1 (alborotador) noisy, rowdy
    2 (juerguista) fun-loving
    nombre masculino,nombre femenino
    2 (juerguista) fun-lover
    * * *
    bullanguero, -a
    1.
    ADJ riotous, rowdy
    2. SM / F
    1) (=persona ruidosa) noisy person
    2) (=alborotador) troublemaker
    * * *
    - ra adjetivo (fam) < persona> fun-loving; <música/ambiente> lively
    * * *
    = rumbustious, boisterous.
    Ex. One by one, he wiped the floor with opponents who had spoken in the debate -- with a ferocious blend of rant, rhetoric and rumbustious counterattack.
    Ex. These comedies, especially the seven he created in his glory years, lurch breathlessly in every direction, simultaneously sophisticated and boisterous, urbane and philistine.
    * * *
    - ra adjetivo (fam) < persona> fun-loving; <música/ambiente> lively
    * * *
    = rumbustious, boisterous.

    Ex: One by one, he wiped the floor with opponents who had spoken in the debate -- with a ferocious blend of rant, rhetoric and rumbustious counterattack.

    Ex: These comedies, especially the seven he created in his glory years, lurch breathlessly in every direction, simultaneously sophisticated and boisterous, urbane and philistine.

    * * *
    ( fam); ‹persona› fun-loving; ‹música/ambiente› lively
    * * *

    bullanguero
    ◊ -ra adjetivo (fam) ‹ persona fun-loving;


    música/ambiente lively
    * * *
    bullanguero, -a
    adj
    ser muy bullanguero to love a good time, to love partying
    nm,f
    es un bullanguero he loves a good time o loves partying
    * * *
    fam
    I adj rowdy
    II m, bullanguera f troublemaker

    Spanish-English dictionary > bullanguero

  • 13 bullicioso

    adj.
    1 noisy, bustling, boisterous, riotous.
    2 lively, riproaring.
    * * *
    1 (ruidoso) noisy
    2 (animado) lively; (con ajetreo) busy
    * * *
    ADJ
    1) (=ruidoso) [lugar] noisy; [niño] boisterous
    2) (=con actividad) busy, bustling
    * * *
    - sa adjetivo <calle/barrio> busy, noisy; < niño> boisterous
    * * *
    = lively [livelier -comp., liveliest -sup.], hard-driving, roaring, bustling, boisterous, abuzz, rumbustious, hurly-burly.
    Ex. But in the country the processes of printing always provoke such lively curiosity that the customers preferred to go in by a glazed door set in the shop-front and giving onto the street.
    Ex. Dexter Basil Rundle is a vice-president of the Garrett National Bank in Garrett, a practical, progressive, hard-driving city of 122,680 in the Midwest.
    Ex. Today, with its population of almost 80,000, Wexler bears little resemblance to the roaring lumber center it became in the middle decades of the nineteenth century.
    Ex. The article 'A bustling New York ALA show' describes the vendor exhibits at the American Library Association Annual Conference in New York.
    Ex. These comedies, especially the seven he created in his glory years, lurch breathlessly in every direction, simultaneously sophisticated and boisterous, urbane and philistine.
    Ex. She is keeping New York abuzz by shrouding the launch of 'Talk,' her new magazine, in mystery.
    Ex. One by one, he wiped the floor with opponents who had spoken in the debate -- with a ferocious blend of rant, rhetoric and rumbustious counterattack.
    Ex. Its principles of living close to the natural world and striving for balance in all that we do provide an antidote to our hurly-burly existence.
    * * *
    - sa adjetivo <calle/barrio> busy, noisy; < niño> boisterous
    * * *
    = lively [livelier -comp., liveliest -sup.], hard-driving, roaring, bustling, boisterous, abuzz, rumbustious, hurly-burly.

    Ex: But in the country the processes of printing always provoke such lively curiosity that the customers preferred to go in by a glazed door set in the shop-front and giving onto the street.

    Ex: Dexter Basil Rundle is a vice-president of the Garrett National Bank in Garrett, a practical, progressive, hard-driving city of 122,680 in the Midwest.
    Ex: Today, with its population of almost 80,000, Wexler bears little resemblance to the roaring lumber center it became in the middle decades of the nineteenth century.
    Ex: The article 'A bustling New York ALA show' describes the vendor exhibits at the American Library Association Annual Conference in New York.
    Ex: These comedies, especially the seven he created in his glory years, lurch breathlessly in every direction, simultaneously sophisticated and boisterous, urbane and philistine.
    Ex: She is keeping New York abuzz by shrouding the launch of 'Talk,' her new magazine, in mystery.
    Ex: One by one, he wiped the floor with opponents who had spoken in the debate -- with a ferocious blend of rant, rhetoric and rumbustious counterattack.
    Ex: Its principles of living close to the natural world and striving for balance in all that we do provide an antidote to our hurly-burly existence.

    * * *
    ‹calle/barrio› busy, noisy; ‹niño› boisterous
    * * *

    bullicioso
    ◊ -sa adjetivo

    noisy

    ' bullicioso' also found in these entries:
    English:
    boisterous
    - bustling
    - noisy
    - riotous
    - rip-roaring
    * * *
    bullicioso, -a
    adj
    1. [agitado] [reunión, multitud] noisy;
    [calle, mercado] busy, bustling
    2. [inquieto] rowdy, boisterous
    nm,f
    boisterous person
    * * *
    adj bustling
    * * *
    bullicioso, -sa adj
    : noisy, busy, turbulent

    Spanish-English dictionary > bullicioso

  • 14 desenfrenado

    adj.
    wild, unchecked, uncontrolled, unrestrained.
    past part.
    past participle of spanish verb: desenfrenar.
    * * *
    1→ link=desenfrenar desenfrenar
    1 (gen) frantic, uncontrolled, wild
    2 (pasiones, vicios) unbridled, uncontrolled
    * * *
    ADJ [persona] wild, uncontrolled; [apetito, pasiones] unbridled
    * * *
    - da adjetivo < pasión> unbridled; <baile/ritmo> frenzied

    sus ansias desenfrenadas de éxitohis intense o burning desire to succeed

    * * *
    = headlong, unrestrained, rampant, wild [wilder -comp., wildest -sup.], raging, unbridled, on the loose, runaway, roistering, frenzied, fast and furious.
    Ex. Neither was there doubt that SLIS should adapt their programmes accordingly but, equally, too headlong a rush into the unknown posed dangers.
    Ex. 'Hello, Tom!' said the director, greeting him enthusiastically, as he rounded his desk to shake hands, which he did with unrestrained ardor.
    Ex. And so, the public library was conceived as a deterrent to irresponsibility, intemperance, and rampant democracy.
    Ex. The letter sent Tomas Hernandez into a frenzy of conflicting reactions: ecstatic jubilation and ego-tripping, wild speculation and outrageous fantasy, compounded by confusion and indirection.
    Ex. This problem is unlikely to be solved during a period of raging inflation and cutbacks in education spending = Es poco probable que este problema se resuelva durante un período de inflación disparada y recortes en los gastos en la educación.
    Ex. Unbridled photocopying will lead to the imminent demise of the communications skein.
    Ex. The article 'Librarians on the loose' reports on visits to foreign libraries by several Zimbabwe librarians.
    Ex. The article is entitled 'How to control a runaway state documents collection'.
    Ex. Morris writes rhapsodically about celebrity-studded parties, roistering interludes with major writers and artists, as well as gossip-column habitues.
    Ex. There was a frenzied last-minute rush by Indians to do their bit to see the Taj Mahal through to the elite list of the new Seven Wonders of the World.
    Ex. The pace was fast and furious and the noise was non-stop.
    * * *
    - da adjetivo < pasión> unbridled; <baile/ritmo> frenzied

    sus ansias desenfrenadas de éxitohis intense o burning desire to succeed

    * * *
    = headlong, unrestrained, rampant, wild [wilder -comp., wildest -sup.], raging, unbridled, on the loose, runaway, roistering, frenzied, fast and furious.

    Ex: Neither was there doubt that SLIS should adapt their programmes accordingly but, equally, too headlong a rush into the unknown posed dangers.

    Ex: 'Hello, Tom!' said the director, greeting him enthusiastically, as he rounded his desk to shake hands, which he did with unrestrained ardor.
    Ex: And so, the public library was conceived as a deterrent to irresponsibility, intemperance, and rampant democracy.
    Ex: The letter sent Tomas Hernandez into a frenzy of conflicting reactions: ecstatic jubilation and ego-tripping, wild speculation and outrageous fantasy, compounded by confusion and indirection.
    Ex: This problem is unlikely to be solved during a period of raging inflation and cutbacks in education spending = Es poco probable que este problema se resuelva durante un período de inflación disparada y recortes en los gastos en la educación.
    Ex: Unbridled photocopying will lead to the imminent demise of the communications skein.
    Ex: The article 'Librarians on the loose' reports on visits to foreign libraries by several Zimbabwe librarians.
    Ex: The article is entitled 'How to control a runaway state documents collection'.
    Ex: Morris writes rhapsodically about celebrity-studded parties, roistering interludes with major writers and artists, as well as gossip-column habitues.
    Ex: There was a frenzied last-minute rush by Indians to do their bit to see the Taj Mahal through to the elite list of the new Seven Wonders of the World.
    Ex: The pace was fast and furious and the noise was non-stop.

    * * *
    ‹apetito› insatiable; ‹pasión› unbridled; ‹baile/ritmo› frenzied; ‹odio› violent, intense
    viven a un ritmo desenfrenado they live at a hectic o frenzied pace
    sus ansias desenfrenadas de éxito his intense o burning desire to succeed
    * * *

    Del verbo desenfrenar: ( conjugate desenfrenar)

    desenfrenado es:

    el participio

    desenfrenado,-a adj (ritmo, etc) frantic, uncontrolled
    (vicio, pasión) unbridled
    ' desenfrenado' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    desenfrenada
    English:
    mad
    - rampant
    - riotous
    - unrestrained
    - wild
    - unbridled
    * * *
    desenfrenado, -a adj
    [ritmo, baile, carrera] frantic, frenzied; [fiesta, juerga, diversión] wild; [vida] wild, riotous; [comportamiento] uncontrolled; [deseo, pasión, entusiasmo] unbridled; [apetito] insatiable;
    el público bailaba desenfrenado the audience were dancing in a frenzy
    * * *
    adj frenzied, hectic
    * * *
    desenfrenado, -da adj
    : unbridled, unrestrained

    Spanish-English dictionary > desenfrenado

  • 15 rebelde2

    2 = unruly, rebellious, insurgent, fractious, wayward, resistive, disorderly, riotous, insurrectionary.
    Ex. 'Sometimes the kids get a little unruly!' she announced in that easy familiar style of hers as she sat down.
    Ex. The urge to mechanize paper-making came at first as much from the papermakers' desire to free themselves from dependence upon their skilled but rebellious workmen as from the pursuit of production economies.
    Ex. This growth accompanied an insurgent professionalism.
    Ex. Thus was Christianity codified into a Bible that still today is the central element in the faith of the two billion adherents of the largest, if most fractious, of the world's religions.
    Ex. The article 'The wayward scholar: resources and research in popular culture' defends popular culture as a legitimate and important library resource.
    Ex. This game was developed in order to facilitate the therapeutic process for those children who are `inhibited, constrained or resistive'.
    Ex. As expected, students in disorderly schools tend to have higher misbehavior and lower achievement.
    Ex. I'd like to see the full force of the law brought down on these people who are involved in this riotous behaviour.
    Ex. Most obviously, the insurrectionary movements of the late-eighteenth and nineteenth centuries were informed by notions of nationality.
    ----
    * ángel rebelde = rebel angel.

    Spanish-English dictionary > rebelde2

  • 16 tumultuoso

    adj.
    1 tumultuous, turbulent, hurly-burly.
    2 overcrowded.
    * * *
    1 tumultuous, riotous
    * * *
    ADJ tumultuous; pey riotous, disorderly
    * * *
    - sa adjetivo tumultuous
    * * *
    = tumultuous, hurly-burly.
    Ex. Surely these innovations already have and will continue to bring deep and wide-sweeping change to our profession - and because of their rapidity, these changes will be sudden and often tumultuous.
    Ex. Its principles of living close to the natural world and striving for balance in all that we do provide an antidote to our hurly-burly existence.
    * * *
    - sa adjetivo tumultuous
    * * *
    = tumultuous, hurly-burly.

    Ex: Surely these innovations already have and will continue to bring deep and wide-sweeping change to our profession - and because of their rapidity, these changes will be sudden and often tumultuous.

    Ex: Its principles of living close to the natural world and striving for balance in all that we do provide an antidote to our hurly-burly existence.

    * * *
    tumultuous
    * * *

    tumultuoso
    ◊ -sa adjetivo

    tumultuous
    tumultuoso,-a adjetivo tumultuous, uproarious

    ' tumultuoso' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    tumultuosa
    English:
    tumultuous
    * * *
    tumultuoso, -a adj
    1. [calle] crowded, teeming;
    [espectáculo, reunión] rowdy, tumultuous
    2. [mar, aguas] rough, stormy
    * * *
    adj uproarious
    * * *
    tumultuoso, -sa adj
    : tumultuous

    Spanish-English dictionary > tumultuoso

  • 17 rebelde

    adj.
    1 rebel (sublevado).
    ejército rebelde rebel army
    2 rebellious (desobediente).
    ese niño es muy rebelde that child is very disobedient
    4 defaulting (law).
    5 stubbornly disobedient, rebel, fractious, froward.
    6 not responding to treatment, intractable, refractory.
    f. & m.
    1 rebel (sublevado, desobediente).
    2 defaulter (law).
    * * *
    1 rebellious
    2 figurado (tos etc) persistent
    1 rebel
    * * *
    noun mf.
    * * *
    1. ADJ
    1) (=que se rebela) rebellious
    2) [niño] unruly; [resfriado] persistent; [mancha] stubborn; [pelo] wild; [problema] difficult; [sustancia] difficult to work with
    3) (Jur) defaulting
    2. SMF
    1) (Mil, Pol) rebel
    2) (Jur) defaulter
    * * *
    I
    a) <tropas/ejército> rebel (before n)
    b) <niño/carácter> unruly, rebellious
    c) < tos> persistent; < mancha> stubborn
    d) (Der) defaulting (before n)
    II
    masculino y femenino (Mil, Pol) rebel; (Der) defaulter
    * * *
    I
    a) <tropas/ejército> rebel (before n)
    b) <niño/carácter> unruly, rebellious
    c) < tos> persistent; < mancha> stubborn
    d) (Der) defaulting (before n)
    II
    masculino y femenino (Mil, Pol) rebel; (Der) defaulter
    * * *
    rebelde1
    1 = punk, enfant terrible, insurgent, rebel.

    Ex: Cyberpunk is a cultural label encompassing many different kinds of punk attitudes, including clothing and lifestyle choices.

    Ex: Vesalius, considered in his time a scientific ' enfant terrible,' revolutionized medicine and science by insisting that truth could be established only by direct observation.
    Ex: While the drug smugglers are said to be stronger than the states in which they live, Marxist insurgents have been fighting with them for several years.
    Ex: The article is entitled 'The Luddites and their war on the Industrial Revolution: rebels against the future: lessons for the computer age'.

    rebelde2
    2 = unruly, rebellious, insurgent, fractious, wayward, resistive, disorderly, riotous, insurrectionary.

    Ex: 'Sometimes the kids get a little unruly!' she announced in that easy familiar style of hers as she sat down.

    Ex: The urge to mechanize paper-making came at first as much from the papermakers' desire to free themselves from dependence upon their skilled but rebellious workmen as from the pursuit of production economies.
    Ex: This growth accompanied an insurgent professionalism.
    Ex: Thus was Christianity codified into a Bible that still today is the central element in the faith of the two billion adherents of the largest, if most fractious, of the world's religions.
    Ex: The article 'The wayward scholar: resources and research in popular culture' defends popular culture as a legitimate and important library resource.
    Ex: This game was developed in order to facilitate the therapeutic process for those children who are `inhibited, constrained or resistive'.
    Ex: As expected, students in disorderly schools tend to have higher misbehavior and lower achievement.
    Ex: I'd like to see the full force of the law brought down on these people who are involved in this riotous behaviour.
    Ex: Most obviously, the insurrectionary movements of the late-eighteenth and nineteenth centuries were informed by notions of nationality.
    * ángel rebelde = rebel angel.

    * * *
    1 ‹tropas/ejército› rebel ( before n)
    2 ‹niño/carácter› unruly, rebellious
    3 ‹tos› persistent; ‹mancha› stubborn
    4 ( Der) defaulting ( before n)
    1 ( Mil, Pol) rebel
    2 ( Der) defaulter
    * * *

     

    rebelde adjetivo
    a)tropas/ejército rebel ( before n)

    b)niño/carácter unruly, rebellious

    c) tos persistent;

    mancha stubborn
    ■ sustantivo masculino y femenino (Mil, Pol) rebel
    rebelde
    I adjetivo
    1 (carácter, actitud) rebellious: es un niño muy rebelde, he's a very unruly child
    2 familiar tiene un pelo muy rebelde, her hair is quite unmanageable
    3 (persistente) stubborn
    una mancha rebelde, a stubborn stain
    una tos rebelde, a persistent cough
    4 Mil rebel
    II mf rebel
    ' rebelde' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    indómita
    - indómito
    - respondón
    - respondona
    - espíritu
    English:
    rebel
    - rebellious
    - stubborn
    - unmanageable
    - unruly
    - defiant
    * * *
    adj
    1. [sublevado] rebel;
    ejército rebelde rebel army
    2. [desobediente] rebellious
    3. [difícil de dominar] [pelo] unmanageable;
    [tos] persistent; [mancha] stubborn; [pasiones] unruly
    4. Der defaulting
    nmf
    1. [sublevado, desobediente] rebel
    2. Der defaulter
    * * *
    I adj rebel atr
    II m/f rebel
    * * *
    rebelde adj
    : rebellious, unruly
    rebelde nmf
    1) : rebel
    2) : defaulter
    * * *
    rebelde1 adj
    1. (niño, etc) rebellious
    2. (tropas, etc) rebel
    rebelde2 n rebel

    Spanish-English dictionary > rebelde

  • 18 alborotoso

    adj.
    1 troublesome, riotous. (Andes & Caribbean)
    2 trouble-making, troublesome, noisy, rowdy.
    * * *
    alborotoso, -a And, Caribe
    1.
    ADJ troublesome, riotous
    2.

    Spanish-English dictionary > alborotoso

  • 19 alborotado

    • agitated
    • disorderly
    • excited
    • heedfully
    • heedlessness
    • restless
    • riot policeman
    • rioting
    • riotous
    • riotous success
    • thoughtless

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > alborotado

  • 20 barullero

    • riot policeman
    • rioting
    • riotous
    • riotous success

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > barullero

См. также в других словарях:

  • riotous — ri·ot·ous / rī ə təs/ adj 1: of the nature of a riot riotous conduct 2: participating in a riot a riotous assemblage ri·ot·ous·ly adv ri·ot·ous·ness n …   Law dictionary

  • Riotous — Ri ot*ous, a. [OF. rioteux.] 1. Involving, or engaging in, riot; wanton; unrestrained; luxurious. [1913 Webster] The younger son . . . took his journey into a far country, and there wasted his substance with riotous living. Luke xv. 13. [1913… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • riotous — late 14c., from O.Fr. riotous, from riote (see RIOT (Cf. riot)). Related: Riotously; riotousness …   Etymology dictionary

  • riotous — [rī′ət əs] adj. [ME < OFr rioteus] 1. a) having the nature of a riot b) engaging in rioting or inciting to riot 2. without restraint; disorderly; boisterous 3. dissolute; profligate [riotous living] …   English World dictionary

  • riotous — [adj] chaotic, wild anarchic, deranged, disordered, disorderly, disorganized, helterskelter*, insurrectionary, lawless, mutinous, out of control, rampageous, rebellious, rowdy, tumultuous, turbid, turbulent, uncontrolled, unruly, violent; concept …   New thesaurus

  • riotous — ► ADJECTIVE 1) marked by or involving public disorder. 2) involving wild and uncontrolled behaviour. 3) having a vivid, varied appearance. DERIVATIVES riotously adverb riotousness noun …   English terms dictionary

  • riotous — [[t]ra͟ɪ͟ətəs[/t]] 1) ADJ GRADED: usu ADJ n If you say that someone has a riotous lifestyle, you mean that they frequently behave in a excessive and uncontrolled way, for example by eating or drinking too much. [FORMAL] ...aristocrats who wasted… …   English dictionary

  • riotous — adjective 1 wild, exciting, and uncontrolled: riotous drinking and singing 2 uncontrolled, noisy, and perhaps dangerous: riotous behaviour BrE: Steve was arrested for riotous behaviour the night before his wedding. riotously adverb riotousness… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • riotous — riotously, adv. riotousness, n. /ruy euh teuhs/, adj. 1. (of an act) characterized by or of the nature of rioting or a disturbance of the peace. 2. (of a person) inciting or taking part in a riot. 3. given to or marked by unrestrained revelry;… …   Universalium

  • riotous — ri|ot|ous [ˈraıətəs] adj [usually before noun] formal 1.) noisy, exciting, and enjoyable in an uncontrolled way = ↑wild ▪ a riotous party 2.) noisy or violent, especially in a public place ▪ Their riotous behaviour led to their arrest.… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • riotous — ri|ot|ous [ raıətəs ] adjective 1. ) very lively and noisy: She burst into riotous laughter. 2. ) behaving in a noisy and violent way: The crowd of protestors was becoming riotous. ╾ ri|ot|ous|ly adverb ╾ ri|ot|ous|ness noun uncount …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

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