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1 stroke
strəuk
I noun1) (an act of hitting, or the blow given: He felled the tree with one stroke of the axe; the stroke of a whip.) golpe2) (a sudden occurrence of something: a stroke of lightning; an unfortunate stroke of fate; What a stroke of luck to find that money!) ocurrencia; golpe (de suerte)3) (the sound made by a clock striking the hour: She arrived on the stroke of (= punctually at) ten.) campanada4) (a movement or mark made in one direction by a pen, pencil, paintbrush etc: short, even pencil strokes.) (lápiz, bolígrafo) trazo; (pincel) pincelada5) (a single pull of an oar in rowing, or a hit with the bat in playing cricket.) (cricket) golpe, jugada; (remo) palada6) (a movement of the arms and legs in swimming, or a particular method of swimming: He swam with slow, strong strokes; Can you do breaststroke/backstroke?) brazada7) (an effort or action: I haven't done a stroke (of work) all day.) golpe (no dar ni golpe en el trabajo); esfuerzo8) (a sudden attack of illness which damages the brain, causing paralysis, loss of feeling in the body etc.) ataque•
II
1. verb(to rub (eg a furry animal) gently and repeatedly in one direction, especially as a sign of affection: He stroked the cat / her hair; The dog loves being stroked.) acariciar
2. noun(an act of stroking: He gave the dog a stroke.)stroke1 n1. caricia2. ataque de apoplejía3. brazadastroke2 vb acariciartr[strəʊk]1 (blow) golpe nombre masculino2 (caress) caricia3 SMALLSPORT/SMALL (in tennis, cricket, golf) golpe nombre masculino, jugada; (in billiards) tacada; (in rowing) palada; (in swimming - movement) brazada; (- style) estilo4 SMALLSPORT/SMALL (oarsman) cabo5 (of pen) trazo; (of brush) pincelada6 (of bell) campanada7 (of engine) tiempo; (of piston) carrera9 (oblique) barra (oblicua)1 (caress) acariciar2 (ball) dar un golpe a\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLat a/one stroke de (un) golpe, de un plumazoto not do a stroke of work no dar golpe, no pegar golpeto put somebody off their stroke distraer a alguiena stroke of genius una genialidad nombre femeninostroke of luck golpe nombre masculino de suertestroke n: golpe ma stroke of luck: un golpe de suerten.• brazada s.f.• caricia s.f.• estilo s.m.• golpazo s.m.• golpe s.m.• jugada s.f.• palada s.f.• plumado s.m.• rasgo s.m.• raya s.f.• recorrido s.m.• trazo s.m.v.• acariciar v.• pasar la mano sobre v.
I strəʊk1) ( Sport)a) ( in ball games) golpe mb) ( in swimming - movement) brazada f; (- style) estilo mc) ( in rowing - movement) palada f, remada fto put somebody off her/his stroke — hacerle* perder el ritmo (a alguien)
2)a) ( blow) golpe mb) ( of piston - motion) tiempo m; (- distance) carrera fc) ( of clock) campanada f3)a) ( of thin brush) pincelada f; ( of thick brush) brochazo m; (of pen, pencil) trazo mapply using light, quick strokes — aplicar dando ligeros toques
b) (oblique, slash) barra f, diagonal f4)a) (action, feat) golpe mat a stroke — de (un) golpe
not to do a stroke of work — no hacer* absolutamente nada, no dar* or pegar* golpe (fam)
b) ( instance)5) ( Med) ataque m de apoplejía, derrame m cerebral6) ( caress) caricia f
II
transitive verb ( caress) acariciar[strǝʊk]1. N1) (=blow) golpe m•
at a or one stroke — de un solo golpe2) (fig)his greatest stroke was to... — su golpe maestro fue...
•
he hasn't done a stroke (of work) — no ha dado golpe3) (=caress) caricia f4) [of pen] trazo m, plumada f ; [of brush] pincelada f ; (Typ) barra f oblicuaat a stroke of the pen, with one stroke of the pen — de un plumazo
5) (Cricket, Golf) golpe m, jugada f ; (Billiards) tacada fgood stroke! — ¡buen golpe!, ¡muy bien!
to put sb off his/her stroke — (=distract) hacer perder la concentración a algn, distraer a algn
he tried to put me off my stroke — (Sport) trató de hacerme errar el golpe
6) (Swimming) (=single movement) brazada f ; (=type of stroke) estilo m7) (Rowing) remada f ; (=person) primer(a) remero(-a) m / fto row stroke — ser el primer remero, remar en el primer puesto
8) [of bell, clock] campanada f, toque m•
on the stroke of 12 — al dar las 129) [of piston] carrera f10) (Med) derrame m cerebral, apoplejía f•
to have a stroke — tener un derrame cerebral, tener un ataque de apoplejía2. VT1) [+ cat, sb's hair] acariciar; [+ chin] pasar la mano sobre, pasar la mano por2) (Rowing)* * *
I [strəʊk]1) ( Sport)a) ( in ball games) golpe mb) ( in swimming - movement) brazada f; (- style) estilo mc) ( in rowing - movement) palada f, remada fto put somebody off her/his stroke — hacerle* perder el ritmo (a alguien)
2)a) ( blow) golpe mb) ( of piston - motion) tiempo m; (- distance) carrera fc) ( of clock) campanada f3)a) ( of thin brush) pincelada f; ( of thick brush) brochazo m; (of pen, pencil) trazo mapply using light, quick strokes — aplicar dando ligeros toques
b) (oblique, slash) barra f, diagonal f4)a) (action, feat) golpe mat a stroke — de (un) golpe
not to do a stroke of work — no hacer* absolutamente nada, no dar* or pegar* golpe (fam)
b) ( instance)5) ( Med) ataque m de apoplejía, derrame m cerebral6) ( caress) caricia f
II
transitive verb ( caress) acariciar -
2 Blanchard, Helen Augusta
[br]b. 25 October 1840 Portland, Maine, USAd. 1922 USA[br]American inventor who made improvements in the sewing machine.[br]Blanchard was the daughter of a wealthy ship owner. She was said to have had inventive talents but seems to have had no technical training. She patented nothing until she was over 30, although that may have been due to shortage of funds. Inheriting the family wealth after the death of her father brought her talents out into the open. She moved to Boston, Massachusetts, and made and patented a number of mechanical devices to improve the sewing machine: these included the "over seaming" machine, a crochet attachment and methods of making knitwear. In 1881, with an unmarried sister, she founded the Blanchard Overseam Machine Company to exploit her sewing machine inventions. Her company seems to have prospered, for in 1891 she was said to own "great estates", a factory and many patent rights, the returns from which made her a wealthy woman. Patents for sewing machine improvements and attachments continued to flow until 1915. She suffered a stroke in 1916, and died six years later; no will was ever probated, so the fate of her wealth can only be surmised.[br]Further ReadingA.Stanley, 1993, Mothers and Daughters of Invention, Meruchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press, pp. 518–21.LRDBiographical history of technology > Blanchard, Helen Augusta
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3 suffer
A vtr1 ( undergo) subir [punishment, defeat, loss, delay, consequences] ; souffrir de [hunger] ; she suffered a great deal of pain elle a beaucoup souffert ; he suffered a severe neck injury il a été gravement blessé au cou ; to suffer a heart attack/a stroke avoir une crise cardiaque/une attaque ; the roof suffered storm damage le toit a été endommagé par la tempête ; ports have suffered a drop in trade les ports ont enregistré un ralentissement de l'activité commerciale ; the region has suffered severe job losses la région a enregistré d'importantes pertes d'emplois ;2 sout ( tolerate) supporter ; I won't suffer this a moment more je ne supporterai pas cela plus longtemps.B vi1 ( with illness) to suffer from souffrir de [malnutrition, rheumatism, heat, cold] ; avoir [headache, blood pressure] ; she was suffering from a cold elle avait un rhume ; to suffer from agoraphobia/depression être agoraphobique/dépressif/-ive ;2 ( experience pain) souffrir ; I hate to see him suffer like that j'ai horreur de le voir souffrir comme cela ; they suffered a lot in the war ils ont beaucoup souffert pendant la guerre ; to suffer for one's beliefs souffrir à cause de ses convictions ; to suffer for one's sins expier ses péchés ; you'll suffer for it later vous le regretterez plus tard ; you'll suffer for this! tu t'en repentiras! ;3 ( do badly) [company, profits, popularity] souffrir ; [health, quality, work] s'en ressentir ; the country suffers from its isolation le pays souffre de son isolement ; she keeps late hours and her work is beginning to suffer elle veille tard la nuit et son travail s'en ressent or en pâtit ; the project suffers from a lack of funds le problème du projet, c'est qu'il est insuffisamment financé. -
4 fate
nounSchicksal, das* * *[feit]1) ((sometimes with capital) the supposed power that controls events: Who knows what fate has in store (= waiting for us in the future)?) das Schicksal2) (a destiny or doom, eg death: A terrible fate awaited her.) das Schicksal•- academic.ru/26570/fatalism">fatalism- fatalist
- fatalistic
- fated
- fateful* * *[feɪt]nto decide sb's \fate über jds Schicksal entscheidento decide one's own \fate sein Schicksal selbst bestimmen [o in die Hand nehmen]to leave sb to his/her \fate jdn seinem Schicksal überlassento meet one's \fate den Tod findento seal sb's \fate jds Schicksal besiegelnit must be \fate das muss Schicksal sein\fate ordained [or decreed] that... das Schicksal wollte es, dass...; see also tempt 3, twist III. 43.▶ a \fate worse than death (unpleasantness) Unerfreulichkeit f; ( old: pregnancy) illegitime Schwangerschaft* * *[feɪt]nSchicksal ntthe Fates (Myth) — die Parzen pl
the examiners meet to decide our fate next week — die Prüfer kommen nächste Woche zusammen, um über unser Schicksal zu entscheiden
to leave sth to fate — etw dem Schicksal überlassen
to leave sb to his fate —
to meet one's fate — vom Schicksal heimgesucht or ereilt (geh) werden
as sure as fate it went wrong — das ist natürlich prompt schiefgegangen
* * *fate [feıt] sfate decided otherwise das Schicksal wollte es anders2. Geschick n, Los n, Schicksal n:he met his fate das Schicksal ereilte ihn;he met his fate calmly er sah seinem Schicksal ruhig entgegen;(as) sure as fate garantiert, mit Sicherheit;be a fate worse than death das Allerschlimmste sein;3. Verhängnis n, Verderben n, Untergang m:go to one’s fatea) untergehen,b) den Tod findenthe (three) Fates die Parzen* * *nounSchicksal, dasan accident or stroke of fate — eine Fügung des Schicksals
* * *n.Geschick n.Schicksal n.Verhängnis n. -
5 blow
I bləu noun1) (a stroke or knock: a blow on the head.) golpe2) (a sudden misfortune: Her husband's death was a real blow.) golpe (duro)
II bləu past tense - blew; verb1) ((of a current of air) to be moving: The wind blew more strongly.) soplar2) ((of eg wind) to cause (something) to move in a given way: The explosion blew off the lid.) llevarse3) (to be moved by the wind etc: The door must have blown shut.) salir volando/despedido, moverse con el aire, viento, i2etc/i2.4) (to drive air (upon or into): Please blow into this tube!) soplar5) (to make a sound by means of (a musical instrument etc): He blew the horn loudly.) tocar, hacer sonar•- blowhole- blow-lamp
- blow-torch
- blowout
- blowpipe
- blow one's top
- blow out
- blow over
- blow up
blow1 n golpeblow2 vb1. soplar2. volar / llevar3. tocar / sonar / pitartr[bləʊ]1 (wind) soplar3 (fuse) fundirse4 (tyre) reventarse5 (puff, pant) jadear\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLblow you! familiar ¡vete a hacer puñetas!I'll be blowed! architecture ¡válgame Dios!to blow one's nose sonarse las naricesto blow one's top perder los estribosto blow the lid off something desvelar algoto blow hot and cold vacilar, no saber qué hacerto blow somebody's mind familiar flipar a alguiento blow it familiar pifiarla, cagarla■ now you've blown it! ¡ahora la has cagado!to be blown up with pride ser un,-a engreído,-a, estar henchido,-a de orgullo————————tr[bləʊ]1 golpe nombre masculino\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto strike somebody a blow asestar un golpe a alguiento come to blows llegar a las manos1) : soplar, volarthe wind is blowing hard: el viento está soplando con fuerzait blew out the door: voló por la puertathe window blew shut: se cerró la ventana2) sound: sonarthe whistle blew: sonó el silbato3)to blow out : fundirse (dícese de un fusible eléctrico), reventarse (dícese de una llanta)blow vt1) : soplar, echarto blow smoke: echar humo2) sound: tocar, sonar3) shape: soplar, dar forma ato blow glass: soplar vidrio4) bungle: echar a perderblow n1) puff: soplo m, soplido m2) gale: vendaval f3) hit, stroke: golpe m4) calamity: golpe m, desastre m5)to come to blows : llegar a las manosn.• revés (Suerte) s.m.n.• bofetada s.f.• choque s.m.• estocada s.f.• golpazo s.m.• golpe s.m.• golpecito s.m.• mandoble s.m.• porrada s.f.• porrazo s.m.• ramalazo s.m.• sopapo s.m.• sopetón s.m.• soplo s.m.• tarja s.f.• trancazo s.m.• trastazo s.m.• trompada s.f.v.(§ p.,p.p.: blew, blown) = aventar v.• sonar v.• soplar v.• ventear v.bləʊ
I
1)a) ( stroke) golpe mto come to blows — llegar* a las manos
at a (single) blow — de un golpe, a la vez
b) (shock, setback) golpe m2) ( action) soplo m, soplido mto give one's nose a blow — sonarse* la nariz
II
1.
1) ( propel) soplarthe plane was blown off course — el viento sacó el avión de su curso; wind I 1)
2)a) ( make by blowing)to blow bubbles — hacer* pompas de jabón
b) ( clear)to blow one's nose — sonarse* la nariz
c) ( play) \<\<note\>\> tocar*; \<\<signal\>\> dar*the referee blew the whistle — el árbitro tocó or hizo sonar el silbato or pito
to blow one's own trumpet o (AmE) horn — darse* bombo, tirarse flores
3)a) ( smash) \<\<bridge/safe\>\> volar*, hacer* saltarto blow somebody's head off — volarle* la tapa de los sesos a algn
to blow something sky high: this blows his theory sky high esto echa por tierra su teoría; if this goes off, we'll be blown sky high — como explote, saltamos por los aires
b) ( burn out) \<\<fuse\>\> fundir, hacer* saltar, quemarc) ( burst) \<\<gasket\>\> reventar*to blow one's top o lid — (colloq) explotar, ponerse* hecho una furia
4) (colloq)a) ( squander) \<\<money\>\> despilfarrar, tirarb) ( spoil)they were getting on well, but he blew it by starting to... — se estaban llevando bien, pero él lo echó todo a perder cuando empezó a...
I blew the oral test — la pifié en el oral (fam), la regué en el oral (Méx fam)
5) (past p blowed) (BrE colloq)blow me if she didn't make the same mistake! — ¿y no va y se equivoca otra vez?
2.
blow vi1)a) \<\<wind\>\> soplarto blow hot and cold — dar* una de cal y otra de arena
b) \<\<person\>\> soplarshe came up the stairs, puffing and blowing — subió las escaleras bufando y resoplando
2) ( be driven by wind)3) ( produce sound) \<\<whistle\>\> sonar*4) ( burn out) \<\<fuse\>\> fundirse, saltar, quemarse•Phrasal Verbs:- blow in- blow out- blow up
I
[blǝʊ]N1) (=hit) golpe m ; (=slap) bofetada fa blow with a hammer/fist/elbow — un martillazo/un puñetazo/un codazo
to cushion or soften the blow — (lit) amortiguar el golpe; (fig) disminuir los efectos (de un desastre etc)
to deal or strike sb a blow — dar or asestar un golpe a algn
to strike a blow for freedom — (fig) dar un paso más hacia la libertad
to come to blows — (lit, fig) llegar a las manos
2) (fig) (=setback) golpe mthat's a blow! — ¡qué lástima!
II [blǝʊ] (pt blew) (pp blown)1. VT1) (=move by blowing) [wind etc] [+ leaves papers] hacer volarthe wind blew the ship towards the coast — el viento llevó or empujó el barco hacia la costa
2) [+ trumpet, whistle] tocar, sonar; [+ glass] soplar; [+ egg] vaciar (soplando)•
to blow smoke in sb's face or eyes — (lit) echar el humo en la cara or los ojos a algn; (US) (fig) engañar a algn- blow smoke up sb's ass- blow one's own trumpet- blow the whistle on sth/sb3) (=burn out, explode) [+ fuse] fundir, quemar; [+ tyre] reventar; [+ safe etc] volar•
to blow a matter wide open — destapar un asunto- blow the lid off sth- blow sb's mind- blow one's top- blow sth out of the water4) (=spoil, ruin)•
to blow it * — pifiarla *gaff IIInow you've blown it! * — ¡ahora sí que la has pifiado! *
5)• to blow money on sth * — malgastar dinero en algo
6) (esp US) *** (=fellate) mamársela a ***, hacer una mamada a ***7) (Drugs)8) * (in exclamations)blow me!, blow it!, well I'm blowed! — ¡caramba!
blow this rain! — ¡dichosa lluvia! *
I'll be blowed if... — que me cuelguen si... *
blow the expense! — ¡al cuerno el gasto! *
2. VIhot 2., wind I, 1., 1)2) [leaves etc] (with wind) volarthe door blew open/shut — se abrió/cerró la puerta con el viento
3) (=make sound) [trumpet, siren] sonar4) [fuse etc] fundirse, quemarse; [tyre] reventar5) ** (=leave) largarse *, pirarla (Sp) *3. N1) [of breath] soplo m2) (Brit) ** (=marijuana) maría ** f ; (US) (=cocaine) coca ** f, perico ** m4.CPDblow drier, blow dryer N — secador m de pelo
to give sb a blow job — mamársela or chupársela a algn ***
- blow in- blow off- blow out- blow up* * *[bləʊ]
I
1)a) ( stroke) golpe mto come to blows — llegar* a las manos
at a (single) blow — de un golpe, a la vez
b) (shock, setback) golpe m2) ( action) soplo m, soplido mto give one's nose a blow — sonarse* la nariz
II
1.
1) ( propel) soplarthe plane was blown off course — el viento sacó el avión de su curso; wind I 1)
2)a) ( make by blowing)to blow bubbles — hacer* pompas de jabón
b) ( clear)to blow one's nose — sonarse* la nariz
c) ( play) \<\<note\>\> tocar*; \<\<signal\>\> dar*the referee blew the whistle — el árbitro tocó or hizo sonar el silbato or pito
to blow one's own trumpet o (AmE) horn — darse* bombo, tirarse flores
3)a) ( smash) \<\<bridge/safe\>\> volar*, hacer* saltarto blow somebody's head off — volarle* la tapa de los sesos a algn
to blow something sky high: this blows his theory sky high esto echa por tierra su teoría; if this goes off, we'll be blown sky high — como explote, saltamos por los aires
b) ( burn out) \<\<fuse\>\> fundir, hacer* saltar, quemarc) ( burst) \<\<gasket\>\> reventar*to blow one's top o lid — (colloq) explotar, ponerse* hecho una furia
4) (colloq)a) ( squander) \<\<money\>\> despilfarrar, tirarb) ( spoil)they were getting on well, but he blew it by starting to... — se estaban llevando bien, pero él lo echó todo a perder cuando empezó a...
I blew the oral test — la pifié en el oral (fam), la regué en el oral (Méx fam)
5) (past p blowed) (BrE colloq)blow me if she didn't make the same mistake! — ¿y no va y se equivoca otra vez?
2.
blow vi1)a) \<\<wind\>\> soplarto blow hot and cold — dar* una de cal y otra de arena
b) \<\<person\>\> soplarshe came up the stairs, puffing and blowing — subió las escaleras bufando y resoplando
2) ( be driven by wind)3) ( produce sound) \<\<whistle\>\> sonar*4) ( burn out) \<\<fuse\>\> fundirse, saltar, quemarse•Phrasal Verbs:- blow in- blow out- blow up
См. также в других словарях:
stroke — stroke1 [ strouk ] noun count ** ▸ 1 medical condition ▸ 2 unexpected event ▸ 3 a hit with hand/object ▸ 4 in swimming/rowing ▸ 5 when lightning hits something ▸ 6 hour sound of clocks ▸ 7 single pen/brush mark ▸ 8 hand movement ▸ 9 slash mark… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
Stroke — For other uses, see Stroke (disambiguation). Stroke Classification and external resources CT scan slice of the brain showing a right hemispheric ischemic stroke (left side of image). ICD 10 … Wikipedia
stroke */*/ — I UK [strəʊk] / US [stroʊk] noun Word forms stroke : singular stroke plural strokes 1) a medical condition in which blood is suddenly blocked and cannot reach the brain, or in which a blood vessel in the brain breaks, often causing a loss of the… … English dictionary
stroke — 1. noun 1) five strokes of the ax Syn: blow, hit, thump, punch, slap, smack, cuff, knock; informal wallop, clout, whack, thwack, bash, swipe; archaic smite 2) she hit the green in three strokes … Thesaurus of popular words
stroke — [strəʊk] noun [C] I 1) a serious medical condition that can make someone suddenly unable to speak or move Leni suffered a stroke and died at the age of 89.[/ex] 2) an unexpected but important event or action a stroke of luck/good fortune[/ex] It… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
stroke — 1. noun 1) five hammer strokes Syn: blow, hit 2) light upward strokes Syn: movement, action, motion 3) broad brush strokes Syn … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary
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