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1 mixed
mixed [mɪkst]1. adjectivea. [school, bathing] mixte ; [neighbourhood] mélangéb. ( = varying) [reviews, emotions, signals] contradictoire ; [results, reaction] inégal ; [success, reception] mitigé2. compounds* * *[mɪkst]1) ( varied) [collection, programme, diet] varié; [nuts, sweets] assorti; [salad] composé; [group, community] (socially, in age) mélangé; ( racially) d'origines diverses2) ( for both sexes) [school, team, sauna] mixte3) ( contrasting) [reaction, feelings, reception] mitigé -
2 mixed
adjective1) (diverse) unterschiedlich [Reaktionen, Kritiken]2) gemischt [Gesellschaft]a mixed bunch — ein bunt gemischter Haufen
3) (for both sexes) gemischt* * *1) (consisting of different kinds: I have mixed feelings about leaving home; mixed races; a mixed population.) gemischt2) (done, used etc by people of different sexes: mixed tennis.) gemischt* * *[mɪkst]adj inv1. (mingled) gemischt\mixed salad/vegetables gemischter Salat/gemischtes Gemüsechildren of \mixed race gemischtrassige Kinder2. (for both sexes) gemischt\mixed bathing gemischtes Baden\mixed company ( dated) gemischte Gesellschaft3. (positive and negative) gemischt, unterschiedlich\mixed blessing nicht nur Segen\mixed feelings gemischte Gefühle* * *[mɪkst]adj1) (= assorted) gemischtmixed nuts/biscuits — Nuss-/Keksmischung f
2) (= of both sexes) choir, bathing, school gemischtin mixed company — in gemischter Gesellschaft
a class of mixed ability — eine Klasse mit Schülern unterschiedlicher Leistungsstärke
with mixed results — mit wechselndem or geteiltem Erfolg
* * *mixed [mıkst] adj1. gemischt (auch fig Gesellschaft, Kommission, Konto etc):with mixed feelings mit gemischten Gefühlen;a) einer Sache mit gemischten Gefühlen gegenüberstehen,b) bei einer Sache hin und her gerissen sein2. vermischt3. Misch…4. umg verwirrt, konfus5. BOT gemischt, Misch…6. MATH gemischt (Bruch etc)7. unterschiedlich:* * *adjective1) (diverse) unterschiedlich [Reaktionen, Kritiken]2) gemischt [Gesellschaft]3) (for both sexes) gemischt* * *adj.gemischt adj. -
3 mixed
1) (consisting of different kinds: I have mixed feelings about leaving home; mixed races; a mixed population.) variado2) (done, used etc by people of different sexes: mixed tennis.) mixtomixed adj mixtotr[mɪkst]1 (of different kinds) variado,-a■ mixed salad ensalada mixta, ensalada variada2 (ambivalent) desigual3 (for both sexes) mixto,-a\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be mixed up in something estar metido,-a en algo, estar involucrado,-a en algoto be/get mixed up with somebody liarse con alguien, estar liado,-a con alguiento be/get all mixed up hacerse un lío, confundirseto get mixed up in something meterse en algomixed bag batiburrillo, mezcolanza, popurrí nombre masculinomixed doubles dobles nombre masculino plural mixtosmixed economy economía mixtamixed grill parrilladamixed marriage (different races) matrimonio interracial 2 (different religions) matrimonio interconfesionaladj.• genízaro, -a adj.• mestizo, -a adj.• mezclado, -a adj.• mixto, -a adj.• surtido, -a adj.• variado, -a adj.mɪksta) ( various) mezclado, variadomixed fruit — frutas fpl surtidas
mixed grill — parrillada f mixta
mixed spice — mezcla f de especias
person of mixed race — mestizo, -za m,f; ( of black and white descent) mulato, -ta m,f
she invited quite a mixed crowd — invitó a gente de todo tipo or a un grupo muy variopinto
b) ( male and female) <sauna/bathing> mixtoc) ( ambivalent) < fortunes> desigual; < reception> tibio, poco entusiasta[mɪkst]1. ADJ1) (=varied) [selection] variado; (=assorted) [biscuits, sweets, vegetables] surtido, variadoa mixed crowd turned up — apareció un grupo muy variopinto, apareció un grupo con gente de todo tipo
2) (=both good and bad) [reviews, reactions] diversoto have mixed feelings about sth — no tener muy claro algo, tener sus dudas acerca de algo
•
the government's proposals have had a mixed reception — las propuestas del gobierno han sido recibidas con reservas or han tenido una acogida desigual3) (=of different races) [parentage, marriage] mixto4) (=for both sexes) [school, education, bathing] mixto2.CPDmixed ability class N — clase f con niveles de aptitud distintos
mixed doubles NPL — (Sport) (dobles mpl) mixtos mpl
mixed economy N — economía f mixta
mixed farming N — agricultura f mixta
mixed forest N — bosque m mixto
mixed fruit N — frutas fpl surtidas
mixed grill N — (Brit) parrillada f mixta
mixed herbs NPL — surtido m de hierbas
mixed marriage N — matrimonio m mixto (de esposos de religión o raza distintas)
mixed martial arts N — artes fpl marciales mixtas
mixed metaphor N — metáfora f disparada
mixed salad N — ensalada f mixta
mixed spice N — mezcla f de especias
* * *[mɪkst]a) ( various) mezclado, variadomixed fruit — frutas fpl surtidas
mixed grill — parrillada f mixta
mixed spice — mezcla f de especias
person of mixed race — mestizo, -za m,f; ( of black and white descent) mulato, -ta m,f
she invited quite a mixed crowd — invitó a gente de todo tipo or a un grupo muy variopinto
b) ( male and female) <sauna/bathing> mixtoc) ( ambivalent) < fortunes> desigual; < reception> tibio, poco entusiasta -
4 mixed
مَخْلُوط \ mixed: of different kinds: Mixed farming includes both keeping animals and growing crops. mixture: mixing; sth. that has mixed contents: Motor engines burn a mixture of air and petrol. -
5 mezclar
v.1 to mix.mezcló la pintura roja con la amarilla she mixed the red and yellow paint togetherElla mezcla medicamentos She mixes drugs.Ella mezcla las piezas del juego She mixes the game pieces.2 to mix up.3 to confuse.Ella mezcla las ideas She confuses ideas.* * *1 (incorporar, unir) to mix, blend2 (desordenar) to mix up3 (persona) to involve (en, in)1 (personas) to mix ( con, with)2 (cosas) to get mixed up3 (entremeterse) to interfere (en, in)* * *verb1) to mix, blend2) involve•* * *1. VT1) (=combinar) [+ ingredientes, colores] to mix, mix together; [+ estilos] to mix, combine; [+ personas] to mixun artista que mezcla estilos diferentes en su obra — an artist who mixes o combines different styles in his work
han mezclado a niños de distintos niveles en la misma clase — they have mixed children of different abilities in the same class
he mezclado el agua caliente con la fría — I've mixed the hot and cold water together, I've mixed the hot water with the cold
la banda sonora mezcla la música tradicional con el rock — the soundtrack is a mixture of traditional and rock music
la harina y el azúcar se mezclan por partes iguales — equal quantities of flour and sugar are mixed (together)
la comida china mezcla sabores salados y dulces — Chinese food combines o mixes savoury and sweet flavours
2) (=confundir, desordenar) [+ fotos, papeles] to mix up, mess up; [+ idiomas] to mix up, muddle up; [+ naipes] to shuffle¿quién me ha mezclado todos los papeles? — who's mixed o messed up all my papers?
cuando habla mezcla los dos idiomas — when he talks he mixes o muddles up the two languages
3) [+ café, tabaco, whisky] to blend4) (Mús) [+ sonido] to mix5) (=implicar)mezclar a algn en algo — to involve sb in sth, get sb involved in sth
no quiero que me mezcles en ese asunto — I don't want you to involve me o get me involved in that business
2.VI * [con bebidas alcohólicas] to mix (one's) drinks3.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) ( combinar) to mixb) <café/vino/tabaco> to blend2) <documentos/ropa> to mix up, get... mixed up3) ( involucrar)2.mezclar a alguien en algo — to get somebody mixed up o involved in something
mezclarse v pron1) personaa) (con un fondo, una multitud) to mergeb) ( involucrarse)mezclarse en algo — to get mixed up o involved in something
mezclarse en cuestiones políticas — to get mixed up o involved in politics
c) ( tener trato con)2) razas/culturas to mix* * *= collate, interfile, merge, mix, blend, fuse, mingle (with), cross + the line, remix, mix up, admix, knot into, weave together, mash up, commingle.Ex. Contents page bulletins which comprise copies of contents pages of periodicals collated and dispatched to users are also reliant upon titles.Ex. File boxes can be used and filed on shelves, if appropriate, interfiled with the books.Ex. During the construction of a thesaurus, the computer can be enlisted to sort, merge, edit and compare terms.Ex. Plaster was mixed with water and poured over the type, and allowed to set; when it had hardened it was lifted off the page (the oil preventing it from sticking to the type), and baked hard in an oven.Ex. In her last appraisal they had observed how she blended many attractive personal qualities with intelligence, energy, and determination.Ex. The experiment is financed externally and aims to fuse the functions of the 2 library types.Ex. Not so long ago, the far off lands existed, to most people, in their imagination where they mingled with fairy tales and imaginary stories.Ex. This is a critical distinction, and the line between policy and operations should not be crossed.Ex. Once music is digitized you can filter it, bend it, archive it, rearrange it, remix it, mess with it.Ex. This recipe will teach kids the basics of mixing up a flaky crust -- the first and most important step in baking an apple pie.Ex. This ready-to-eat nutritious food is made by admixing condensed milk with rolled oats, honey, dates, wheat germ, coconuts, and walnuts.Ex. The issues entangled in Van Gogh's work - issues of the market, gender, and class - were also knotted into the work of many avant-garde artists of the late 19th c.Ex. She does this by weaving together, in a highly structured pattern, pieces from a variety of texts.Ex. The name comes from pop music, where DJs have made a hobby out of mashing up multiple, disparate songs to create new sounds.Ex. By mixing the marital property (your paycheck) with the separate property (your inheritance), you have ' commingled' them, and they cannot be considered separate property anymore.----* cuenco para mezclar = mixing bowl.* imposible de mezclar = unmixable.* mezclarse = socialise [socialize, -USA], run together.* mezclarse con = blend into, blend in with.* sin mezclar = unmixed.* volver a mezclar = remix.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) ( combinar) to mixb) <café/vino/tabaco> to blend2) <documentos/ropa> to mix up, get... mixed up3) ( involucrar)2.mezclar a alguien en algo — to get somebody mixed up o involved in something
mezclarse v pron1) personaa) (con un fondo, una multitud) to mergeb) ( involucrarse)mezclarse en algo — to get mixed up o involved in something
mezclarse en cuestiones políticas — to get mixed up o involved in politics
c) ( tener trato con)2) razas/culturas to mix* * *= collate, interfile, merge, mix, blend, fuse, mingle (with), cross + the line, remix, mix up, admix, knot into, weave together, mash up, commingle.Ex: Contents page bulletins which comprise copies of contents pages of periodicals collated and dispatched to users are also reliant upon titles.
Ex: File boxes can be used and filed on shelves, if appropriate, interfiled with the books.Ex: During the construction of a thesaurus, the computer can be enlisted to sort, merge, edit and compare terms.Ex: Plaster was mixed with water and poured over the type, and allowed to set; when it had hardened it was lifted off the page (the oil preventing it from sticking to the type), and baked hard in an oven.Ex: In her last appraisal they had observed how she blended many attractive personal qualities with intelligence, energy, and determination.Ex: The experiment is financed externally and aims to fuse the functions of the 2 library types.Ex: Not so long ago, the far off lands existed, to most people, in their imagination where they mingled with fairy tales and imaginary stories.Ex: This is a critical distinction, and the line between policy and operations should not be crossed.Ex: Once music is digitized you can filter it, bend it, archive it, rearrange it, remix it, mess with it.Ex: This recipe will teach kids the basics of mixing up a flaky crust -- the first and most important step in baking an apple pie.Ex: This ready-to-eat nutritious food is made by admixing condensed milk with rolled oats, honey, dates, wheat germ, coconuts, and walnuts.Ex: The issues entangled in Van Gogh's work - issues of the market, gender, and class - were also knotted into the work of many avant-garde artists of the late 19th c.Ex: She does this by weaving together, in a highly structured pattern, pieces from a variety of texts.Ex: The name comes from pop music, where DJs have made a hobby out of mashing up multiple, disparate songs to create new sounds.Ex: By mixing the marital property (your paycheck) with the separate property (your inheritance), you have ' commingled' them, and they cannot be considered separate property anymore.* cuenco para mezclar = mixing bowl.* imposible de mezclar = unmixable.* mezclarse = socialise [socialize, -USA], run together.* mezclarse con = blend into, blend in with.* sin mezclar = unmixed.* volver a mezclar = remix.* * *mezclar [A1 ]vtA1 (combinar) to mixmezclar todo hasta formar una pasta mix all the ingredients into a paste, mix all the ingredients together to form a pastemezclando diferentes estilos se obtiene esta decoración this kind of decoration is achieved by mixing o combining different stylesmezclar la harina y la mantequilla con los dedos rub the butter into the flour with your fingertipsmezclar algo CON algo to mix sth WITH sthesta pintura se puede mezclar con agua this paint can be mixed with watermezclar los huevos con el azúcar mix the eggs and the sugar together2 ‹café/vino/tabaco› to blendB ‹papeles/documentos/ropa› to mix up, get … mixed uphas mezclado todas las fotos you've got(ten) the photographs all mixed o muddled upmezcla los dos idiomas she gets the two languages mixed o muddled upmezclar algo CON algo to get sth mixed up WITH sthmezcló estos recibos con los del mes pasado she got these receipts muddled o mixed up with last month'sC (involucrar) mezclar a algn EN algo to get sb mixed up o involved IN sth, involve sb IN sthno la mezcles en esto don't get her involved in this, don't involve her in thisA «persona»1 (con un fondo, una multitud) to merge2 (involucrarse) mezclarse EN algo to get mixed up o involved IN sthevita mezclarse en cuestiones políticas she avoids getting mixed up o involved in politics3 (tener trato con) mezclarse CON algn to mix WITH sbse mezcla con toda clase de gente she mixes with all kinds of peopleno te mezcles con ese tipo de gente don't associate o mix with people like thatB «razas/culturas» to mix* * *
mezclar ( conjugate mezclar) verbo transitivo
1
mezclar algo con algo to mix sth with sth
2 ‹documentos/ropa› to mix up, get … mixed up;
mezclar algo con algo to get sth mixed up with sth
3 ( involucrar) mezclar a algn en algo to get sb mixed up o involved in sth
mezclarse verbo pronominal
1
b) ( tener trato con) mezclarse con algn to mix with sb
2 [razas/culturas] to mix
mezclar verbo transitivo
1 (combinar, amalgamar) to mix, blend: no me gusta mezclar a los amigos, I don't like to mix my friends
2 (algo ordenado antes) to mix up: mezcló sus cosas con las tuyas, he got his things mixed up with yours
3 (involucrar) to involve, mix up
' mezclar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
batir
- combinarse
English:
blend
- merge
- mix
- scramble
- toss
- combine
- dub
- jumble
- mingle
- mixer
- mixing bowl
* * *♦ vt1. [combinar, unir] to mix;[tabaco, whisky] to blend;mezclar algo con algo to mix sth with sth;mezcló la pintura roja con la amarilla she mixed the red and yellow paint together, she mixed the red paint with the yellow2. [culturas, pueblos] to mix3. [confundir, desordenar] to mix up;no mezcles las piezas don't mix the pieces up;creo que estás mezclando los países I think you're mixing up o muddling up the countriesno me mezcles en tus asuntos don't involve me in your affairs, don't get me mixed up in your affairs* * *mezclar a alguien en algo get s.o. mixed up o involved in sth* * *mezclar vt1) : to mix, to blend2) : to mix up, to muddle3) involucrar: to involve* * *mezclar vb1. (en general) to mix2. (desordenar) to mix up -
6 verwickeln
I v/t1. (Wolle etc.) tangle (up), get s.th. tangled2. jemanden in etw. verwickeln fig. involve s.o. in s.th., get s.o. involved ( oder embroiled oder caught up) in s.th., drag s.o. into s.th.; in etw. verwickelt werden become ( oder get) involved ( oder caught up oder embroiled) in s.th., get mixed up in s.th. umg.II v/refl: sich verwickeln in (+ Akk) get (o.s.) involved in; sich in Widersprüche verwickeln get tangled up in a web of contradictions* * *(hineinziehen) to entangle; to implicate; to involve;(verwirren) to ravel; to tangle; to embroil* * *ver|wị|ckeln ptp verwi\#ckelt1. vtFäden etc to tangle (up), to get tangled upverwickeln — to involve sb in sth; in Kampf, in dunkle Geschäfte auch to get sb mixed up in sth; in Skandal auch to get sb mixed up in sth, to embroil sb in sth
in etw verwickelt sein — to be involved/mixed up/embroiled in sth
2. vr(Fäden etc) to tangle (up), to become tangledverwickeln (lit) — to become entangled in sth, to get caught up in sth; (fig) in Widersprüche to get oneself tangled up in sth; in Skandal to get mixed up or involved or embroiled in sth
* * *1) (to involve (a person) in a quarrel or in a difficult situation: I do not wish to become embroiled in their family quarrels.) embroil2) (to cause (something) to become twisted or tangled with something else: Her long scarf entangled itself in the bicycle wheel; entangled in an unhappy love affair.) entangle3) ((often with in or with) to cause to take part in or to be mixed up in: He has always been involved in/with the theatre; Don't ask my advice - I don't want to be/get involved.) involve* * *ver·wi·ckeln *I. vtjdn in ein Gespräch \verwickeln to engage sb in conversationjdn in einen Skandal \verwickeln to get sb mixed up [or embroiled] in a scandalin eine Affäre verwickelt sein to be entangled [or tangled up] in an affairin einen Skandal verwickelt sein to be embroiled in [a] scandalII. vr* * *1.reflexives Verb1) get tangled up or entangledsich in etwas (Akk. od. Dat.) verwickeln — get caught [up] in something
2.sich in Widersprüche verwickeln — (fig.) tie oneself up in contradictions
transitives Verb involvein etwas (Akk.) verwickelt werden/sein — get/be mixed up or involved in something
* * *A. v/t1. (Wolle etc) tangle (up), get sth tangled2.jemanden in etwas verwickeln fig involve sb in sth, get sb involved ( oder embroiled oder caught up) in sth, drag sb into sth;in etwas verwickelt werden become ( oder get) involved ( oder caught up oder embroiled) in sth, get mixed up in sth umgB. v/r:sich verwickeln in (+akk) get (o.s.) involved in;sich in Widersprüche verwickeln get tangled up in a web of contradictions* * *1.reflexives Verb1) get tangled up or entangledsich in etwas (Akk. od. Dat.) verwickeln — get caught [up] in something
2.sich in Widersprüche verwickeln — (fig.) tie oneself up in contradictions
transitives Verb involvein etwas (Akk.) verwickelt werden/sein — get/be mixed up or involved in something
* * *v.to embroil v.to entangle v.to implicate v.to involve v.to involve in v.to mesh v. -
7 enredar
v.1 to tangle up (madeja, pelo).El gato enreda las lanas The cat tangles up the yarns.2 to bother, to annoy.3 to get up to mischief (informal).enredar con algo to fiddle with o mess about with something4 to mix up, to entangle, to fuzz up, to louse up.El chico enredó las historias The boy mixed up the stories.5 to snag, to hook, to get hooked.La caña enredó al pez The fishing rod snagged the fish.* * *1 (prender con red) to catch in a net, net2 (para cazar) to set3 (engatusar) to involve, implicate4 (meter cizaña) to sow discord, cause trouble5 (enmarañar) to tangle up, entangle6 (entretener) to hold up, delay1 (travesear) to be mischievous1 (hacerse un lío) to get tangled up, get entangled, get into a tangle2 (complicarse) to get complicated, get confused3 (en discusión) to become involved, get caught up4 (amancebarse) to have an affair* * *verb1) to confuse2) tangle* * *1. VT1) [+ hilos, cuerda] to tangle upeste viento te enreda el pelo — your hair gets tangled up in this wind, this wind tangles your hair up
2) [+ situación, asunto] to make complicated, complicatecon tanta mentira enredó las cosas aún más — with all his lies he made matters even more complicated, with all his lies he complicated matters even more
3) * (=desordenar) to get into a mess, mess upestos niños lo han enredado todo — these children have got everything into a mess, these children have messed everything up
4) * (=involucrar) to get mixed o caught up (en in)la han enredado en un asunto turbio — they've got her mixed o caught up in some shady deal
5) * (=entretener)no me enredes, que llego tarde — don't hold me back, or I'll be late
6) * (=engañar) to trick7) (=enemistar) to cause trouble among o between8) (Caza) [+ animal] to net; [+ trampa] to set2.VI * (=juguetear) to play around, monkey around *¡no enredes! — stop playing around!
¡deja ya de enredar con los lápices! — stop fiddling (around) with the pencils, will you?
3.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) <cuerdas/cables> to get... tangled up, tangle upb) ( embarullar) < persona> to muddle... up, confuse; <asunto/situación> to complicatec) (fam) ( involucrar)2.enredar a alguien en algo — to get somebody mixed up o caught up in something
enredar vi (fam)a) ( intrigar) to make trouble, stir up troubleb) (Esp) ( molestar) to fidget3.enredar con algo — to fiddle around with something, fiddle with something
enredarse v pron1) lana/cuerda to get tangled, become entangled; pelo to get tangled o knotted; planta to twist itself around2)a) (fam) ( en lío amoroso)b) (fam) ( involucrarse)enredarse en algo — to get mixed up o involved in something
c) (fam) ( enfrascarse)enredarse en algo — to get into something (colloq)
d) (fam) ( embarullarse) to get mixed up get muddled up* * *= bog down, muddy, bamboozle, snarl up, entangle, knot into, coil, tangle, ensnare, snare, make + trouble.Ex. There is increased evidence that we are being bogged down today as specialization extends.Ex. The concept of such a center remained nebulous at best, and we later learned that communication problems early on had muddied the message about what was really needed.Ex. Benny Morris claims that Karsh is attempting to hoodwink and bamboozle readers.Ex. If all goes as usual, it will snow approximately one inch and completely snarl up traffic until melted.Ex. The issues entangled in Van Gogh's work - issues of the market, gender, and class - were also knotted into the work of many avant-garde artists of the late 19th c.Ex. The issues entangled in Van Gogh's work - issues of the market, gender, and class - were also knotted into the work of many avant-garde artists of the late 19th c.Ex. This booklet is intended to provide general information on coiling of brain aneurysms.Ex. The more unsuccessful she was the more bitter she became, and the more tangled in the web drawn about her by her husband and children.Ex. The novel has many trappings that will ensnare the average reader but skulking at the bottom of its well of intrigue is a timeless terror more attuned to the mature sensibilities of an adult audience.Ex. In fact, the Indians had been snaring animals long before the white man came to North America.Ex. As President Bush's second term winds down, this is no time for him to be making trouble for his successor.----* enredar a Alguien para que haga Algo = talk + Nombre + into.* enredar las cosas = muddy + the waters.* enredarse = kink.* enredarse con = get + involved with/in.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) <cuerdas/cables> to get... tangled up, tangle upb) ( embarullar) < persona> to muddle... up, confuse; <asunto/situación> to complicatec) (fam) ( involucrar)2.enredar a alguien en algo — to get somebody mixed up o caught up in something
enredar vi (fam)a) ( intrigar) to make trouble, stir up troubleb) (Esp) ( molestar) to fidget3.enredar con algo — to fiddle around with something, fiddle with something
enredarse v pron1) lana/cuerda to get tangled, become entangled; pelo to get tangled o knotted; planta to twist itself around2)a) (fam) ( en lío amoroso)b) (fam) ( involucrarse)enredarse en algo — to get mixed up o involved in something
c) (fam) ( enfrascarse)enredarse en algo — to get into something (colloq)
d) (fam) ( embarullarse) to get mixed up get muddled up* * *= bog down, muddy, bamboozle, snarl up, entangle, knot into, coil, tangle, ensnare, snare, make + trouble.Ex: There is increased evidence that we are being bogged down today as specialization extends.
Ex: The concept of such a center remained nebulous at best, and we later learned that communication problems early on had muddied the message about what was really needed.Ex: Benny Morris claims that Karsh is attempting to hoodwink and bamboozle readers.Ex: If all goes as usual, it will snow approximately one inch and completely snarl up traffic until melted.Ex: The issues entangled in Van Gogh's work - issues of the market, gender, and class - were also knotted into the work of many avant-garde artists of the late 19th c.Ex: The issues entangled in Van Gogh's work - issues of the market, gender, and class - were also knotted into the work of many avant-garde artists of the late 19th c.Ex: This booklet is intended to provide general information on coiling of brain aneurysms.Ex: The more unsuccessful she was the more bitter she became, and the more tangled in the web drawn about her by her husband and children.Ex: The novel has many trappings that will ensnare the average reader but skulking at the bottom of its well of intrigue is a timeless terror more attuned to the mature sensibilities of an adult audience.Ex: In fact, the Indians had been snaring animals long before the white man came to North America.Ex: As President Bush's second term winds down, this is no time for him to be making trouble for his successor.* enredar a Alguien para que haga Algo = talk + Nombre + into.* enredar las cosas = muddy + the waters.* enredarse = kink.* enredarse con = get + involved with/in.* * *enredar [A1 ]vt1 ‹cuerdas/cables› to get … tangled up, tangle up2 ‹asunto/situación› to complicate, make … complicatedno enredes más las cosas don't complicate things any further3 ( fam) (involucrar) enredar a algn EN algo to get sb mixed up o caught up o embroiled o involved IN sthlo enredaron en la compra de las acciones they got him involved o caught up in buying shares■ enredarvi( fam)1 (intrigar) to make trouble, stir up trouble, stir ( colloq)A1 «lana/cuerda» to get tangled, become entangled; «pelo» to get tangled o knotted o ( AmE) snarledla cuerda se enredó en las patas de la silla the rope got tangled around o entangled in the chair legs2 «planta» to twist itself aroundBse ha enredado en un negocio sucio he's got mixed up in some funny businessse enredaron en una acalorada discusión they got into a heated discussion* * *
enredar ( conjugate enredar) verbo transitivo
‹asunto/situación› to complicate
verbo intransitivo (fam)
enredar con algo to fiddle (around) with sth
enredarse verbo pronominal
1 [lana/cuerda] to get tangled, become entangled;
[ pelo] to get tangled o knotted;
[ planta] to twist itself around
2 (fam)a) ( en lío amoroso) enredarse con algn to get involved with sb
enredar verbo transitivo
1 (cables, cuerdas, pelo) to entangle, tangle up
2 (un asunto, situación) to confuse, complicate
3 fig (implicar en algo ilegal, turbio) to involve [en, in], to mix up [en, in]
4 (convencer, liar) lo enredaron para presentarse a las elecciones, they talked him into being a candidate in the election
' enredar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
envolver
- trastear
- implicar
English:
embroil
- entangle
- tangle
- tangle up
- foul
- snarl
* * *♦ vt1. [cuerdas, madeja, pelo] to tangle (up)2. [situación, asunto] to complicate;será mejor no enredar más las cosas it's best not to make matters more complicatedme enredaron en sus sucios negocios they got me mixed up in their dirty dealings4. [entretener] to bother, to annoy♦ viFam1. [hacer travesuras] to get up to mischief* * *I v/t1 tangle, get tangled2 figcomplicate, make complicatedII v/i make trouble* * *enredar vt1) : to tangle up, to entangle2) : to confuse, to complicate3) : to involve, to implicate* * *enredar vb1. (involucrar) to involve2. (complicar) to complicate3. (confundir) to muddle / to confuseel fiscal intentó enredar al testigo con sus preguntas the prosecutor tried to confuse the witness with his questions4. (tocar) to mess about -
8 confundir
v.1 to confuse.me confundes con tanta información you're confusing me with all that informationMaría los confundió sonriendo Mary confused them by smiling.Ella confundió las razones She confused the reasons.María confundió la razón real Mary confused=muddled the real reason.2 to mix up.3 to confound.4 to scramble, to put in disorder, to confuse, to mess up.María confundió los papeles Mary scrambled the papers.* * *1 (mezclar) to mix up3 (no reconocer) to mistake ( con, for)4 (turbar) to confound, embarrass1 (mezclarse) to mingle; (colores, formas) to blend2 (equivocarse) to get mixed up, make a mistake3 (turbarse) to be confused, be embarrassed* * *verb* * *1. VT1) (=equivocar) to confuseen este planteamiento se están confundiendo causa y efecto — this approach confuses cause and effect
no confundamos las cosas, por favor — let's not confuse things, please
•
confundir algo/a algn con algo/algn — to get sth/sb mixed up with sth/sb, mistake sth/sb for sth/sbla confundí con su hermana gemela — I got her mixed up with her twin sister, I mistook her for her twin sister
culo 1), velocidad 1)no se debe confundir a Richard Strauss con Johann Strauss — Richard Strauss should not be confused with Johann Strauss
2) (=mezclar) [+ papeles] to mix up3) (=desconcertar) to confuseme confunde con tanta palabrería — he confuses me o gets me confused with all that talk of his, I find all that talk of his confusing
4) (=turbar) to overwhelmme confundía con tantas atenciones — her kindness was overwhelming, I was overwhelmed by all her kindness
2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( por error) <fechas/datos> to confuse, get... mixed o muddled up; < personas> to confuse, mix upconfundir algo/alguien con algo/a alguien — to mistake something/somebody for something/somebody
b) ( desconcertar) to confusec) ( turbar) to embarrass2.confundirse v prona) ( equivocarse)confundirse de algo: me confundí de calle/casa — I got the wrong street/house
b) (mezclarse, fundirse)* * *= confound, puzzle, baffle, perplex, cloud, muddle, obfuscate, snarl up, nonplus, obnubilate.Ex. To treat these reports differently only because some are serial and the others are monographic in form is to play havoc with the integrity of the catalog and to confound its users.Ex. The repetition of the author's name introduces new esoteric punctuation which is bound to puzzle the catalog user.Ex. As the domain expands, the problem of rule formalisation may even baffle a human expert.Ex. If when you are working you come across a problem which perplexes you, you should write to someone in the field who may be able to help you.Ex. Whilst library schools should continue to concentrate upon traditional priorities and the obsession with machines and techniques should not cloud those priorities.Ex. But even when valid averages and unit costs are examined, Simpson's Paradox can arise to muddle expectations.Ex. Just because the facts don't support his views, he threatens, slanders, lies, obfuscates and charges 'lies, hypocrisy and cruelty'.Ex. If all goes as usual, it will snow approximately one inch and completely snarl up traffic until melted.Ex. The spectacle in front of Bertie was enough to nonplus anyone -- Gussie in scarlet tights and a pretty frightful false beard.Ex. Fourniret is a dangerous man obnubilated by the phantasm of virginity.----* confundir (con) = confuse (with).* confundir las diferencias entre = blur + the boundaries between.* confundir la situación = cloud + the view, cloud + the picture.* confundir la velocidad con el tocino = one thing + have + nothing to do with the other.* confundir los límites entre = blur + the boundaries between.* confundir los medios con el fin = confuse + the means with the ends.* confundir los papeles = blur + roles.* confundir + Nombre + por + Nombre = mistake + Nombre + for + Nombre.* para confundir aun más las cosas = to add to the confusion.* que confunde = confounding.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( por error) <fechas/datos> to confuse, get... mixed o muddled up; < personas> to confuse, mix upconfundir algo/alguien con algo/a alguien — to mistake something/somebody for something/somebody
b) ( desconcertar) to confusec) ( turbar) to embarrass2.confundirse v prona) ( equivocarse)confundirse de algo: me confundí de calle/casa — I got the wrong street/house
b) (mezclarse, fundirse)* * *confundir (con)(v.) = confuse (with)Ex: The genus/species relationship must not be confused with other types of relationship such as those between a thing and its properties or between a thing and an operation.
= confound, puzzle, baffle, perplex, cloud, muddle, obfuscate, snarl up, nonplus, obnubilate.Ex: To treat these reports differently only because some are serial and the others are monographic in form is to play havoc with the integrity of the catalog and to confound its users.
Ex: The repetition of the author's name introduces new esoteric punctuation which is bound to puzzle the catalog user.Ex: As the domain expands, the problem of rule formalisation may even baffle a human expert.Ex: If when you are working you come across a problem which perplexes you, you should write to someone in the field who may be able to help you.Ex: Whilst library schools should continue to concentrate upon traditional priorities and the obsession with machines and techniques should not cloud those priorities.Ex: But even when valid averages and unit costs are examined, Simpson's Paradox can arise to muddle expectations.Ex: Just because the facts don't support his views, he threatens, slanders, lies, obfuscates and charges 'lies, hypocrisy and cruelty'.Ex: If all goes as usual, it will snow approximately one inch and completely snarl up traffic until melted.Ex: The spectacle in front of Bertie was enough to nonplus anyone -- Gussie in scarlet tights and a pretty frightful false beard.Ex: Fourniret is a dangerous man obnubilated by the phantasm of virginity.* confundir (con) = confuse (with).* confundir las diferencias entre = blur + the boundaries between.* confundir la situación = cloud + the view, cloud + the picture.* confundir la velocidad con el tocino = one thing + have + nothing to do with the other.* confundir los límites entre = blur + the boundaries between.* confundir los medios con el fin = confuse + the means with the ends.* confundir los papeles = blur + roles.* confundir + Nombre + por + Nombre = mistake + Nombre + for + Nombre.* para confundir aun más las cosas = to add to the confusion.* que confunde = confounding.* * *confundir [I1 ]vt1 (por error) ‹fechas/datos› to confuse, get … mixed o muddled up; ‹personas› to confuse, mix upnos confunden la voz por teléfono people get our voices mixed up o confused on the phoneno confundas los dos términos don't confuse the two termsconfundir algo CON algo to mistake sth FOR sthconfundió el pimentón dulce con el picante she mistook the sweet paprika for the hotconfundir a algn CON algn to mistake sb FOR sbla gente siempre me confunde con mi hermano gemelo people always take o mistake me for my twin brothercreo que me confunde con otra persona I think you are getting me mixed up o confused with somebody else2 (desconcertar) to confuseno confundas al pobre chico con tantos detalles don't confuse the poor boy with so many detailstantas cifras confunden a cualquiera all these numbers are enough to confuse anyoneel interés que demuestra por ella me confunde I'm baffled by his interest in her3 (turbar) to embarrassse sintió confundida por tanta amabilidad she was embarrassed o overwhelmed by so much kindness1(equivocarse): siempre se confunde en las cuentas he always makes mistakes in the accounts o gets the accounts wrongconfundirse DE algo:me confundí de calle/casa I got the wrong street/housese ha confundido de número you have o you've got the wrong number2(mezclarse, fundirse): se confundió entre la multitud he melted into o disappeared into the crowduna gran variedad de colores se confunden en el cuadro the painting is a fusion of many different colors, many different colors are blended together in the paintingunos policías de civil se confundían con la multitud plainclothes police mingled with the crowd* * *
confundir ( conjugate confundir) verbo transitivo
‹ personas› to confuse, mix up;
confundir algo/a algn con algo/algn to mistake sth/sb for sth/sb;
confundirse verbo pronominal
confundir verbo transitivo
1 to confuse [con, with]: lo confundo con tu hermano, I am confusing him with your brother
2 (embarullar a alguien) to mislead
3 (turbar) to confound
' confundir' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
equivocar
- trastocar
- turbar
- atolondrar
- despistar
- embrollar
- enrollar
- liar
- marear
English:
advise
- alone
- confound
- confuse
- everyday
- let
- mistake
- mix up
- practice
- practise
- stump
- fox
- mix
- muddle
* * *♦ vtconfundir dos cosas to get two things mixed up;siempre lo confundo con su hermano gemelo I always mistake him for his twin brother;creo que me está confundiendo con otro I think you're confusing me with someone else;Fam Humconfundir la velocidad con el tocino to mix up two completely different things2. [desconcertar] to confuse;me confundes con tanta información you're confusing me with all that information3. [mezclar] to mix up4. [abrumar] to overwhelm;tanta simpatía me confunde I'm overwhelmed by all this friendliness, all this friendliness is overwhelming* * *v/t1 confuse* * *confundir vt: to confuse, to mix up* * *confundir vb1. (mezclar) to get mixed up2. (equivocar) to mix up / to mistakesiempre me confunden con mi hermano people are always mixing me up with my brother / people always mistake me for my brother3. (dejar perplejo) to confuse -
9 einlassen
(unreg., trennb., hat -ge-)I v/t2. (Wasser) run (in + Akk into), let in(to); (Wanne) fill; sich (Dat) ein Bad einlassen run (o.s.) a bath3. (Edelstein etc.) set (in + Akk in)II v/refl1. sich einlassen auf (+ Akk) let o.s. in for; auf ein Gespräch, einen Streit etc.: get involved in; auf eine Frage: go into; auf einen Vorschlag: agree to; lass dich nicht darauf ein! don’t get involved, keep out of it, engS. don’t let them talk you into it; da hab ich mich auf was Schönes eingelassen! I’ve really let myself in for something there2. sich mit jemandem einlassen get involved ( oder mixed up) with s.o.; sexuell: auch have an affair with s.o.; Mädchen: auch go with s.o.; (streiten mit) get into an argument ( oder a fight) with s.o.3. JUR. testify* * *to admit* * *ein|las|sen sep1. vt1) (= eintreten lassen) to let in, to admit2) (= einlaufen lassen) Wasser to run (in +acc into)in +acc -to); (in Holz, Metall auch) to set in ( in +acc -to)ein Bad ein — he ran himself a bath
ein eingelassener Schrank — a built-in cupboard, a cupboard built into the wall
4) (Aus) Boden, Möbel to varnish2. vr1)éínlassen (auf Angelegenheit, Abenteuer, Diskussion, Liebschaft) — to get involved in sth; auf Streit, zwielichtiges Unternehmen auch to get mixed up in sth, to get into sth
sich auf einen Kompromiss éínlassen — to agree to a compromise
sich in ein Gespräch éínlassen — to get into (a) or get involved in a conversation
ich lasse mich auf keine Diskussion ein — I'm not having any discussion about it
darauf lasse ich mich nicht ein! (bei Geschäft, Angelegenheit) — I don't want anything to do with it; (bei Kompromiss, Handel etc) I'm not agreeing to that
lasse dich in keine Schlägerei ein! — don't you go getting mixed up in any rough stuff
2)er ließ sich mit diesem Flittchen ein — he was carrying on with this floozy (pej inf) or tarty little bit (Brit pej inf)
sie lässt sich mit jedem ein! — she'll go with anyone
3) (JUR = sich äußern) to testify (zu on)* * *ein|las·senI. vt1. (eintreten lassen)▪ jdn \einlassen to let sb in, to admit sb2. (einströmen lassen)▪ etw \einlassen to let sth in4. (einfügen)II. vr1. (auf etw eingehen)sich akk auf ein Gespräch/eine Diskussion \einlassen to get involved in [or enter into] a conversation/discussion3. JUR* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) admit; let in3) (einpassen)2.etwas in etwas (Akk.) einlassen — set something into something
1) (meist abwertend)sich mit jemandem einlassen — get mixed up or involved with somebody
2)sich auf etwas (Akk.) einlassen — get involved in something
* * *einlassen (irr, trennb, hat -ge-)A. v/t1.2. (Wasser) run (sich (dat)ein Bad einlassen run (o.s.) a bath3. (Edelstein etc) set (in +akk in)4. TECH:B. v/r1.sich einlassen auf (+akk) let o.s. in for; auf ein Gespräch, einen Streit etc: get involved in; auf eine Frage: go into; auf einen Vorschlag: agree to;lass dich nicht darauf ein! don’t get involved, keep out of it, engS. don’t let them talk you into it;da hab ich mich auf was Schönes eingelassen! I’ve really let myself in for something there2.sich mit jemandem einlassen get involved ( oder mixed up) with sb; sexuell: auch have an affair with sb; Mädchen: auch go with sb; (streiten mit) get into an argument ( oder a fight) with sb3. JUR testify* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) admit; let in2) (einfüllen) run < water>3) (einpassen)2.etwas in etwas (Akk.) einlassen — set something into something
sich mit jemandem einlassen — get mixed up or involved with somebody
2)sich auf etwas (Akk.) einlassen — get involved in something
* * *v.to admit v. -
10 enredado
adj.1 entangled, matted.2 foul (cables y cuerdas). (Nautical)3 confused, tangled, messed, messed-up.4 complicated, intricate, mixed-up, entangled.5 ruffled, enmeshed, matted, tangled.past part.past participle of spanish verb: enredar.* * *ADJ [hilos, cuerdas] tangled (up)* * *- da adjetivo1) <lana/cuerda> tangled; < pelo> tangled, knotted; <asunto/idea> complicated2)a) ( involucrado) involvedenredado en algo — mixed up o caught up in something
se vio enredado en el escándalo — he found himself mixed o caught up in the scandal
b) (fam) ( en lío amoroso)* * *= entangled, garbled, tangled, afoul.Ex. The rapid spreading of electronic mail, bulletin boards, and newsletters give rise to an entangled pattern of standards.Ex. The client phoned in the afternoon to tell me that there was garbled data again in the large text field they use for notes.Ex. Now, let me express to you, you have, in a manner of speaking, created quite a tangled ball of yarn in this situation.Ex. Dan, who had known from the start that things were afoul, demanded that officer show him their IDs.----* enredado en = enmeshed in, caught up in.* * *- da adjetivo1) <lana/cuerda> tangled; < pelo> tangled, knotted; <asunto/idea> complicated2)a) ( involucrado) involvedenredado en algo — mixed up o caught up in something
se vio enredado en el escándalo — he found himself mixed o caught up in the scandal
b) (fam) ( en lío amoroso)* * *= entangled, garbled, tangled, afoul.Ex: The rapid spreading of electronic mail, bulletin boards, and newsletters give rise to an entangled pattern of standards.
Ex: The client phoned in the afternoon to tell me that there was garbled data again in the large text field they use for notes.Ex: Now, let me express to you, you have, in a manner of speaking, created quite a tangled ball of yarn in this situation.Ex: Dan, who had known from the start that things were afoul, demanded that officer show him their IDs.* enredado en = enmeshed in, caught up in.* * *enredado -daA1 ‹lana/cuerda› tangled; ‹pelo› tangled, knottedla lana está toda enredada the wool is all tangled o tangled up2 ‹asunto/idea› complicatedla situación está muy enredada the situation is very complicated o involvedB1 (involucrado) involved enredado EN algo mixed up o caught up o embroiled o involved IN sthse vio enredado en el escándalo he found himself mixed o caught up in the scandalterminaron enredados en una pelea they ended up getting (themselves) into a fightanduvo enredada con un hombre casado she was involved with a married man* * *
Del verbo enredar: ( conjugate enredar)
enredado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
enredado
enredar
enredado◊ -da adjetivo
1 ‹lana/cuerda› tangled;
‹ pelo› tangled, knotted;
‹asunto/idea› complicated
2a) ( involucrado) enredado en algo mixed up in sthb) (fam) ( en lío amoroso) enredado con algn involved with sb
enredar ( conjugate enredar) verbo transitivo
‹asunto/situación› to complicate
verbo intransitivo (fam)
enredado con algo to fiddle (around) with sth
enredarse verbo pronominal
1 [lana/cuerda] to get tangled, become entangled;
[ pelo] to get tangled o knotted;
[ planta] to twist itself around
2 (fam)a) ( en lío amoroso) enredadose con algn to get involved with sb
enredar verbo transitivo
1 (cables, cuerdas, pelo) to entangle, tangle up
2 (un asunto, situación) to confuse, complicate
3 fig (implicar en algo ilegal, turbio) to involve [en, in], to mix up [en, in]
4 (convencer, liar) lo enredaron para presentarse a las elecciones, they talked him into being a candidate in the election
' enredado' also found in these entries:
English:
knotty
- tangled
* * *enredado, -a adj1. [cuerdas, madeja, pelo] tangled2. [asunto, situación] complicated, involvedse vio enredado en un asunto de tráfico de drogas he found himself caught up in a case of drug-trafficking* * *enredado adj tangled -
11 mezcla
f.1 mixture.una mezcla explosiva an explosive combination (de personalidades, factores)una mezcla de tabacos a blend of tobaccos2 mixing.3 mix (Music).4 dough, kneading.5 mortar, plaster.6 crossbreed, mixing.pres.indicat.3rd person singular (él/ella/ello) present indicative of spanish verb: mezclar.* * *1 (acción) mixing, blending2 (producto) mixture, blend3 (de película etc) mixing4 (textil) mixed fibres5 (argamasa) mortar\mezcla de razas mixture of races* * *noun f.mix, mixture, blend* * *SF1) (=acción) [de ingredientes, colores] mixing; [de razas, culturas] mixing; [de sonidos] mixing; [de cafés, tabacos, whiskies] blendingmesa 1)2) (=resultado) [de ingredientes, colores] mixture; [de razas, culturas] mix; [de cafés, tabacos, whiskies] blendsin mezcla — [sustancia] pure; [gasolina] unadulterated
costumbres transmitidas sin mezcla de influencias externas — customs passed on without any external influence
mezcla explosiva — (lit) explosive mixture; (fig) lethal combination
3) (Mús) mix4) (Constr) mortar5) (Cos) blend, mix* * *1) ( proceso)a) ( de productos) mixing; (de vinos, tabacos, cafés) blendingb) (de razas, culturas) mixingc) (Audio) mixing2)a) ( combinación de - productos) mixture; (- vinos, tabacos, cafés) blend; (- tejidos) mixuna mezcla de distintos colores — a combination o mixture of different colors
b) (de razas, culturas) mixc) (Audio) mix•* * *= admixture, amalgam, blend, mix, mixing, mixture, alchemy, concoction, combination, potpourri, conflation, cocktail, recombination, bringing together, meld, mishmash, melange.Ex. No 'bona fide' author will wish to exhibit reduced output efficiency due to admixture with false authorship.Ex. Nevertheless, modern cataloguing practices often represent some amalgam of the collocative and the direct approaches.Ex. Thus in index or catalogue or data base design the indexer must choose an appropriate blend of recall and precision for each individual application.Ex. There are important employment opportunities available to people equipped with the right mix of skills and experience.Ex. This article describes the architecture and the main features of DOMINO, a multimedia information retrieval system whose data base is a collection of multimedia documents (MDs) constituted of a mixing of texts and images.Ex. When used by skilled abstractors this mixture of styles can achieve the maximum transmission of information, within a minimum length.Ex. This is a specialist service calling for a unique alchemy of librarian and computing skills.Ex. Statistics show black family life to be an appalling concoction of poverty, shooting and rampant teenage pregnancy.Ex. The software can search each field or a combination of fields.Ex. This center holds one of the most significant collections (dare we call it potpourri?) of science, natural history, art, history, and culture in the world = Este centre posee uno de las colecciones (¿o quizás popurrí?) más significativas de la ciencia, historia natural, arte, historia y cultura del mundo.Ex. It found differences in the abbreviations used and other stylistic matters (mainly due to language differences) but was able to propose a conflation of the descriptions that formed the basis of what became the SBD and later the ISBD.Ex. He rightly characterizes his book as a ' cocktail of personal and public observations.Ex. These genomes are inherited in strictly lineal fashion, without recombination.Ex. I have already mentioned that the bringing together of the various editions is the real problem.Ex. The article is entitled 'Scholars and media: an unmixable mess of oil and water or a perfect meld of oil and vinegar?'.Ex. We follow a mishmash of characters as they move through their unfortunate life without felicity.Ex. There were space cadets, aimless women -- the melange was incredible.----* hacer mezcla = mix + cement.* mezcla de lluvia helada y aguanieve = wint(e)ry mix, wint(e)ry shower.* mezcla heterogénea = mixed bag.* que mezcla sensaciones = synesthetic, cross-sensory.* sin mezcla = unmixed.* una mezcla de = a mixture of, a blend of, a mix of, a rollup of.* * *1) ( proceso)a) ( de productos) mixing; (de vinos, tabacos, cafés) blendingb) (de razas, culturas) mixingc) (Audio) mixing2)a) ( combinación de - productos) mixture; (- vinos, tabacos, cafés) blend; (- tejidos) mixuna mezcla de distintos colores — a combination o mixture of different colors
b) (de razas, culturas) mixc) (Audio) mix•* * *= admixture, amalgam, blend, mix, mixing, mixture, alchemy, concoction, combination, potpourri, conflation, cocktail, recombination, bringing together, meld, mishmash, melange.Ex: No 'bona fide' author will wish to exhibit reduced output efficiency due to admixture with false authorship.
Ex: Nevertheless, modern cataloguing practices often represent some amalgam of the collocative and the direct approaches.Ex: Thus in index or catalogue or data base design the indexer must choose an appropriate blend of recall and precision for each individual application.Ex: There are important employment opportunities available to people equipped with the right mix of skills and experience.Ex: This article describes the architecture and the main features of DOMINO, a multimedia information retrieval system whose data base is a collection of multimedia documents (MDs) constituted of a mixing of texts and images.Ex: When used by skilled abstractors this mixture of styles can achieve the maximum transmission of information, within a minimum length.Ex: This is a specialist service calling for a unique alchemy of librarian and computing skills.Ex: Statistics show black family life to be an appalling concoction of poverty, shooting and rampant teenage pregnancy.Ex: The software can search each field or a combination of fields.Ex: This center holds one of the most significant collections (dare we call it potpourri?) of science, natural history, art, history, and culture in the world = Este centre posee uno de las colecciones (¿o quizás popurrí?) más significativas de la ciencia, historia natural, arte, historia y cultura del mundo.Ex: It found differences in the abbreviations used and other stylistic matters (mainly due to language differences) but was able to propose a conflation of the descriptions that formed the basis of what became the SBD and later the ISBD.Ex: He rightly characterizes his book as a ' cocktail of personal and public observations.Ex: These genomes are inherited in strictly lineal fashion, without recombination.Ex: I have already mentioned that the bringing together of the various editions is the real problem.Ex: The article is entitled 'Scholars and media: an unmixable mess of oil and water or a perfect meld of oil and vinegar?'.Ex: We follow a mishmash of characters as they move through their unfortunate life without felicity.Ex: There were space cadets, aimless women -- the melange was incredible.* hacer mezcla = mix + cement.* mezcla de lluvia helada y aguanieve = wint(e)ry mix, wint(e)ry shower.* mezcla heterogénea = mixed bag.* que mezcla sensaciones = synesthetic, cross-sensory.* sin mezcla = unmixed.* una mezcla de = a mixture of, a blend of, a mix of, a rollup of.* * *1 (de productos) mixing; (de vinos, tabacos, cafés) blending2 (de razas, culturas) mixingestos perros son producto de una mezcla these dogs are crossbreeds3 ( Audio) mixingañadir cuatro cucharadas de azúcar a la mezcla add four spoonfuls of sugar to the mixturees una mezcla de distintos colores it is a combination o mixture of different colorsno me gusta la mezcla de dulce y salado I don't like mixing sweet and savory thingshabla una mezcla de inglés y francés he speaks a mixture of English and French2 (de razas, culturas) mix3 ( Audio) mix4 ( Const) mortarCompuesto:( Arm) explosive mixture* * *
Del verbo mezclar: ( conjugate mezclar)
mezcla es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativo
Multiple Entries:
mezcla
mezclar
mezcla sustantivo femenino
1 ( proceso)
2 ( combinación )
(de vinos, tabacos, cafés) blend;
( de tejidos) mix;
c) (Audio) mix
mezclar ( conjugate mezclar) verbo transitivo
1
mezcla algo con algo to mix sth with sth
2 ‹documentos/ropa› to mix up, get … mixed up;
mezcla algo con algo to get sth mixed up with sth
3 ( involucrar) mezcla a algn en algo to get sb mixed up o involved in sth
mezclarse verbo pronominal
1
b) ( tener trato con) mezclase con algn to mix with sb
2 [razas/culturas] to mix
mezcla sustantivo femenino
1 (acción) mixing, blending
Rad Cine mixing
2 (producto) mixture, blend: me gusta esta mezcla de cafés, I like this blend of coffee
Audio mix
Text mix
una mezcla de seda y lino, a silk/linen mix
mezclar verbo transitivo
1 (combinar, amalgamar) to mix, blend: no me gusta mezclar a los amigos, I don't like to mix my friends
2 (algo ordenado antes) to mix up: mezcló sus cosas con las tuyas, he got his things mixed up with yours
3 (involucrar) to involve, mix up
' mezcla' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
barro
- consistente
- expandirse
- homogeneizar
- spanglish
- consistencia
- contenido
- homogéneo
- mezclilla
- puro
English:
add in
- blend
- cross
- mix
- mixture
- Spanglish
- stand
- medley
- mixed
* * *mezcla nf1. [de materiales, productos] [resultado] mixture, combination;[acción] mixing;una mezcla de tabacos/whiskys a blend of tobaccos/whiskies;el verde es resultado de la mezcla del azul y del amarillo green is the result of mixing blue and yellow;cuando hierva la leche, añádala a la mezcla when the milk boils, add it to the mixture;es una mezcla de comedia y tragedia it's a mixture of comedy and tragedy2. [de culturas, pueblos] [resultado] mixture;[acción] mixing3. [tejido] mix4. Mús & TV [resultado] mix;[acción] mixing;mesa de mezclas mixing desk, mixer5. mezcla explosiva explosive mixture;Figla mezcla explosiva de alcohol y drogas the explosive combination of alcohol and drugs* * *f* * *mezcla nf1) : mixing2) : mixture, blend3) : mortar (masonry material)* * *mezcla n1. (en general) mixture2. (de tabaco) blend3. (de personas) mix -
12 mix up
transitive verb1) vermischen; verrühren [Zutaten]be/get mixed up in something — in etwas (Akk.) verwickelt sein/werden
* * *1) (to blend together: I need to mix up another tin of paint.) zusammenmischen2) (to confuse or muddle: I'm always mixing the twins up.) verwechseln3) (to confuse or upset: You've mixed me up completely with all this information.) völlig durcheinanderbringen* * *◆ mix upvt1. (mistake for another)▪ to \mix up up ⇆ sb/sth jdn/etw verwechseln▪ to \mix up up ⇆ sb/sth with sb/sth jdn/etw mit jdm/etw verwechseln2. (put in wrong order)▪ to \mix up up ⇆ sth etw durcheinanderbringen, etw in Unordnung bringen3. (bewilder)▪ to \mix up up ⇆ sb jdn durcheinanderbringen [o konfus machen4. (combine ingredients)▪ to \mix up up ⇆ sth etw vermischen, verrührento \mix up up dough Teig anrührento \mix up up oil with vinegar Öl mit Essig mischen▪ to be \mix uped up with sb mit jdm Umgang haben [o verkehren]6.▶ to \mix up it up with sb AM (sl: fight) sich akk mit jdm prügeln; (quarrel) mit jdm aneinandergeraten* * *vt sep3)(= involve)
to mix sb up in sth — jdn in etw (acc) hineinziehen; in crime etc also jdn in etw (acc) verwickelnto be mixed up in sth — in etw (acc) verwickelt sein
he's got himself mixed up with the police — er hat Scherereien mit der Polizei bekommen
4)to mix it up ( US inf ) — sich prügeln (with mit); (non-physically) sich anlegen (with mit)
* * *transitive verb1) vermischen; verrühren [Zutaten]2) (make a muddle of) durcheinander bringen; (confuse one with another) verwechseln3) in pass. (involve)be/get mixed up in something — in etwas (Akk.) verwickelt sein/werden
* * *v.vermengen v. -
13 pringar
v.1 to make greasy.2 to dip.3 to involve (informal) (comprometer).4 to get stuck in (informal).5 to splash with grease, to stain with fat.* * *1 (ensuciar) to make greasy2 (untar) to soak in oil1 familiar (trabajar) to work hard\* * *1. VT1) (Culin) [+ pan] to dip, dunk; [+ asado] to baste2) (=ensuciar) to dirty, soil (with grease); esp LAm to splash3) * (=implicar)4) * (=herir)pringar a algn — to wound sb, make sb bleed
5) * (=denigrar) to blacken, run down *6) Cono Sur [+ enfermedad] to give7) Cono Sur * [+ mujer] to put in the family way8)pringarla — ** (=meter la pata) to drop a brick *, make a boob *; (Med) to get a dose of the clap **
pringarla(s) — ** (=morir) to kick the bucket *, snuff it *
2. VI1) * (=perder) to come a cropper *, take a beating2) (=trabajar) to sweat one's guts out *, slog away *3)pringar en algo — [superficialmente] to dabble in sth; [implicándose] to take a hand in sth, get mixed up in sth
4) * (=morir) to kick the bucket *, snuff it *3.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) (fam) ( ensuciar) to get... dirty (with grease, oil etc)la he/hemos pringado! — (fam) now I've/we've done it! (colloq)
b) < pan> to dip2) (fam)2.pringar a alguien EN algo — ( comprometer) to get somebody mixed up in something
pringarse v pron (fam)a) ( ensuciarse)pringarse de algo — de grasa/mermelada to get covered in something
b) ( comprometerse)pringarse en algo — en negocio to get mixed up in something
* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) (fam) ( ensuciar) to get... dirty (with grease, oil etc)la he/hemos pringado! — (fam) now I've/we've done it! (colloq)
b) < pan> to dip2) (fam)2.pringar a alguien EN algo — ( comprometer) to get somebody mixed up in something
pringarse v pron (fam)a) ( ensuciarse)pringarse de algo — de grasa/mermelada to get covered in something
b) ( comprometerse)pringarse en algo — en negocio to get mixed up in something
* * *pringar [A3 ]vtA1 ( fam)(ensuciar): cada vez que cocina lo deja todo pringado every time she cooks she leaves everything all greasy o covered in grease2 ‹pan› to dip(comprometer): si queremos pringarlo en el negocio, habrá que ofrecerle algo importante if we want (to get) him in on the deal, we'll have to make him an attractive offer ( colloq)está pringado hasta el cuello en esto del contrabando he's in up to his neck in this smuggling business ( colloq)C2( Andes fam) ‹persona› (con una enfermedad venérea): me pringó una puta de Cartagena I got the clap o I got a dose of VD off a prostitute in Cartagena (sl)( fam)1(mancharse, ensuciarse): se pringó con el aceite del coche he got himself covered in oil from the car2(comprometerse): se pringó en el negocio y luego se arrepintió she got mixed up in the deal and then regretted it ( colloq)* * *
pringar ( conjugate pringar) verbo transitivo (fam) ( ensuciar) to get … dirty (with grease, oil etc)
pringarse verbo pronominal (fam) ( ensuciarse) pringarse de algo ‹de grasa/mermelada› to get covered in sth
pringar
I verbo transitivo
1 (manchar) to cover in grease, dirty
2 fam (involucrar a alguien) to get sb mixed up
II vi fam (en el trabajo) to work hard
* * *♦ vt1. [ensuciar] to make greasy2. [mojar] to dipa mí no me pringues en tus asuntos don't get me mixed up in your affairs♦ vial final he pringado yo por todos I've ended up carrying the can for everyone♦ v impersonalCAm, Méx, Ven to drizzle* * *v/t1 ( ensuciar) get greasy2 fig famget involved (en in);* * *pringar {52} vt1) : to dip (in grease)2) : to soil, to spatter (with grease) -
14 mix up
mix [sth.] up, mix up [sth.]1) (confuse) confondere, scambiare [dates, names]2) (jumble up) mettere sottosopra [papers, photos]3) (involve)to mix sb. up in — coinvolgere qcn. in
* * *1) (to blend together: I need to mix up another tin of paint.) mescolare2) (to confuse or muddle: I'm always mixing the twins up.) confondere3) (to confuse or upset: You've mixed me up completely with all this information.) confondere* * *vt + adv1) (prepare: drink, medicine) preparare2) (get in a muddle: documents) confondere, mescolareto mix sb/sth up (with) — scambiare qn/qc (per)3)to mix sb up in sth — (involve) coinvolgere or immischiare qn in qc
* * *mix [sth.] up, mix up [sth.]1) (confuse) confondere, scambiare [dates, names]2) (jumble up) mettere sottosopra [papers, photos]3) (involve)to mix sb. up in — coinvolgere qcn. in
-
15 meterse
1 (introducirse en) to get in■ se metió en el coche rápidamente he got quickly into the car, he jumped into the car2 (tomar parte - negocio) to go into (en, -); (involucrarse en) to get involved (en, in/with), get mixed up (en, in/with)3 (introducirse) to get involved (en, in)■ siempre te estás metiendo donde no te llaman you're always sticking your nose in where you're not wanted4 (ir) to go■ ¿dónde se habrá metido? where can he have got to?5 (provocar) to pick ( con, on)■ no te metas con él que es más fuerte que tú don't pick on him, he's stronger than you6 (dedicarse) to go (en, into)* * *1) to enter, get into2) meddle* * *VPR1) (=introducirse)¿dónde se habrá metido el lápiz? — where can the pencil have got to?
no sabía dónde meterse de pura vergüenza — she was so ashamed, she didn't know where to hide
•
meterse en algo, después de comer siempre se mete en el despacho — after lunch she always goes into her study o shuts herself away in her study2) (=introducir)meterse una buena cena — * to have a good dinner
meterse un pico — ** to give o.s. a fix **
3) (=involucrarse)•
meterse en algo, se metió en un negocio turbio — he got involved in a shady affairme metí mucho en la película — I really got into o got involved in the film
4) (=entrometerse)•
meterse en algo — to interfere in sth, meddle in sth¿por qué te metes (en esto)? — why are you interfering (in this matter)?
¡no te metas en lo que no te importa!, ¡no te metas donde no te llaman! — mind your own business!
5) [de profesión]•
meterse a algo, meterse a monja — to become a nun•
meterse de algo, meterse de aprendiz en un oficio — to go into trade as an apprentice6)• meterse a hacer algo — (=emprender) to start doing sth, start to do sth
se metió a pintar todas las paredes de la casa — he started painting o to paint the whole house
7)• meterse con algn — * (=provocar) to pick on sb *; (=burlarse de) to tease sb
* * *(v.) = meddle (in/with), lodge, get + Posesivo + feet wetEx. It also can give the impression that Finland is meddling in the internal affairs of other nations.Ex. A bullet had passed through her cheek and nose and lodged in the back of her head at the base of her spine.Ex. Coming clean to voters is something she's gonna have to get used to if she is really serious about getting her feet wet in elected politics.* * *(v.) = meddle (in/with), lodge, get + Posesivo + feet wetEx: It also can give the impression that Finland is meddling in the internal affairs of other nations.
Ex: A bullet had passed through her cheek and nose and lodged in the back of her head at the base of her spine.Ex: Coming clean to voters is something she's gonna have to get used to if she is really serious about getting her feet wet in elected politics.* * *
■meterse verbo reflexivo
1 (entrar) to go o come, get [in/into, en]: se metieron en la iglesia, they went into the church
se metió en una secta, he joined a sect
2 (involucrarse) to get into, get mixed up: se metió en asuntos de drogas, he got mixed up in drugs
se metió en un lío, he got into a mess
3 (entrometerse) to meddle
4 (tomar el pelo) no te metas con María, don't pick on Maria ♦ LOC familiar: meterse en faena, to set to, to roll up one's sleeves
' meterse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
boca
- ceja
- hondura
- lío
- tarambana
- bolsillo
- dificultad
- entrar
- importar
- introducir
- meter
- monja
English:
butt out
- chip in
- difficulty
- fight
- get at
- get into
- go
- horn
- hot
- jump in
- mess with
- pick
- pick on
- tangle with
- trouble
- water
- dig
- get
- keep
- meddle
- mix
- muscle
- pile
- pocket
- squirm
- stay
- throw
- turn
* * *vprse metió debajo de un árbol para protegerse de la lluvia she took refuge from the rain under a tree;se metió dentro del bosque she entered the forest;meterse en to get into;meterse en la cama to get into bed;dos semanas más y nos metemos en marzo another two weeks and we'll be into March already;se me ha metido agua en los oídos I've got water in my ears;se metió las manos en los bolsillos she put her hands in her pockets;meterse el dedo en la nariz to pick one's nose;Figmeterse mucho en algo [un papel, un trabajo, una película] to get very involved in sth;Famse le ha metido en la cabeza (que…) he's got it into his head (that…);muchos jóvenes se meten en sí mismos a lot of young people go into their shell;muy Fam¡métetelo donde te quepa! stick it where the sun don't shine!2. (en frase interrogativa) [estar] to get to;¿dónde se ha metido ese chico? where has that boy got to?meterse a torero to become a bullfighter;se ha metido de dependiente en unos grandes almacenes he's got a job as a shop assistant in a department store;me metí a vender seguros I became an insurance salesman, I got a job selling insurance4. [involucrarse] to get involved (en in);5. [entrometerse] to meddle, to interfere;se mete en todo he's always sticking his nose into other people's business;meterse por medio to interfere¡no te metas con mi novia! leave my girlfriend alone!* * *v/r:meterse en algo get into sth; ( involucrarse) get involved in sth, get mixed up in sth;meterse donde no le llaman stick one’s nose in where it doesn’t belong;no saber dónde meterse fig not know what to do with o.s.;meterse a hacer algo start doing sth, start to do sth;meterse con alguien pick on s.o.;meterse de administrativo get a job in admin;se metió a bailar he became a dancer;¿dónde se ha metido? where has he got to?* * *vr1) : to get into, to enterno te metas en lo que no te importa: mind your own business3)no te metas conmigo: don't mess with me* * *meterse vb1. (introducirse) to get in / to go in2. (entrometerse) to interfere4. (estar) to be¿dónde se habrá metido Juan? where can Juan be? -
16 mêler
mêler [mele]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verba. ( = unir) to mix• mêler à or avec to mix withb. ( = impliquer) mêler qn à to involve sb in2. reflexive verb► se mêler à ( = se joindre à) to join ; ( = s'associer à) to mix with ; [cris, sentiments] to mingle with ; ( = s'impliquer dans) to get involved in ; ( = s'ingérer dans) to interfere with• mêle-toi de ce qui te regarde ! mind your own business!• mêle-toi de tes oignons ! (inf) mind your own business!• de quoi je me mêle ! (inf) what business is it of yours?* * *mele
1.
1) ( mélanger) to mix [produits, couleurs]; to blend [ingrédients, cultures]; to combine [thèmes, influences]2) ( allier en soi)3) ( impliquer)mêler quelqu'un à — ( à un scandale) to get somebody involved in; ( à des négociations) to involve somebody in; ( à une conversation) to bring somebody into
être mêlé à — (à un scandale, des négociations) to be involved in; ( à une conversation) to be included in
2.
se mêler verbe pronominal1) ( s'unir) [cultures, religions] to mix; [odeurs, voix, eaux] to mingle2)se mêler à — ( se joindre à) to mingle with; ( être sociable) to mix with; ( participer à) to join in
3) ( s'occuper)mêle-toi de tes affaires (colloq) or oignons — (sl)mind your own business
de quoi je me mêle! — (colloq) what's it got to do with you?
* * *mele vt1) (= mélanger) to mixmêler qch et qch; mêler qch avec qch — to mix sth with sth
2) (= embrouiller) [idées, souvenirs] to muddle up, to mix up3) (= impliquer)* * *mêler verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( mélanger) to mix [produits, couleurs]; to blend [ingrédients, essences]; to blend [cultures, peuples]; to combine [thèmes, influences]; servis seuls ou mêlés à d'autres fruits served on their own or mixed with other fruits; mêler le vrai et le faux to mix truth and falsehood; mêler ses souvenirs de considérations générales to mix personal memories with general observations; mêler le narratif de brèves descriptions to intersperse the narrative with short descriptions; mêler ironie et tendresse to combine irony and tenderness;2 ( allier en soi) mêler l'utile à l'agréable [séjour, activité] to be both useful and pleasurable; mêler l'ironie à la colère to be ironic and angry at the same time; elle mêla ses larmes aux miennes her tears mingled with mine;3 ( impliquer) mêler qn à ( à un scandale) to get sb involved ou mixed up in; ( à des négociations) to involve sb in; ( à une conversation) to bring sb into; être mêlé à ( à un scandale) to be mixed up ou involved in; ( à des négociations) to be involved in; ( à une conversation) to be included in.B se mêler vpr1 ( s'unir) [ethnies, cultures, religions] to mix; [odeurs, parfums, voix, eaux] to mingle; jazz et reggae se mêlent dans leur musique their music is a mixture of jazz and reggae; intelligence et naïveté se mêlent chez cet acteur he's both intelligent and naive as an actor; un magazine où se mêlent littérature et sciences a magazine that covers both literature and science;2 se mêler à ( se joindre à) to mingle with; ( être sociable) to mix with; ( participer à) to join in; se mêler à la foule to mingle with the crowd; ils ne se mêlent pas aux gens du village they don't mix with the villagers; se mêler à la conversation to join in the conversation; il s'est mêlé à une affaire douteuse he got mixed up in some shady business;3 ( s'occuper) se mêler de to meddle in; il se mêle de tout he interferes ou meddles in everything; mêle-toi de tes affaires○ or oignons◑ mind your own business; de quoi je me mêle○! what's it got to do with you?; se mêler de faire to take it upon oneself to do; quand il se mêle de préparer le repas when he takes it upon himself to prepare the meal; s'il se mêle de pleuvoir if it goes and rains (now); il n'avait pas à se mêler de faire ça he had no business doing that; quand l'amour s'en mêle! when love comes into it![mele] verbe transitif1. [mélanger] to mixelle mêle la rigueur à la fantaisie she combines ou mixes seriousness with light-heartedness3. [embrouiller - documents, papiers] to mix ou to muddle ou to jumble up (separable) ; [ - cartes, dominos] to shuffle4. [impliquer]mêler quelqu'un à to involve somebody in, to get somebody involved in————————se mêler verbe pronominal intransitif2. [s'unir]se mêler à ou avec to mix ou to mingle with3. [participer]se mêler à la conversation to take part ou to join in the conversation————————se mêler de verbe pronominal plus prépositionsi le mauvais temps s'en mêle, la récolte est perdue if the weather decides to turn nasty, the crop will be ruined -
17 Gefühl
n; -s, -e1. nur Sg.; körperlich: feeling; (Wahrnehmung) sensation; (Tastsinn) touch; weitS. feel; Gefühl der oder von Kälte cold sensation; ich hab kein Gefühl im Arm I can’t feel anything in my arm, my arm’s gone numb ( oder dead); dem Gefühl nach ist es Plastik judging by the feel it’s plastic2. psychisch: feeling, sense; bes. kurze Wahrnehmung: sensation; emotional: sentiment, emotion; ein beängstigendes / beruhigendes Gefühl a worrying / reassuring feeling; widerstreitende Gefühle conflicting feelings; ich habe dabei ein ungutes Gefühl I’ve got a funny feeling about it; mit gemischten Gefühlen with mixed feelings; einer Sache mit gemischten Gefühlen gegenüberstehen have mixed feelings about s.th.; mit viel Gefühl singen sing with great feeling ( oder emotion); für mein Gefühl oder meinem Gefühl nach my feeling is that; I think (that); von seinen Gefühlen überwältigt overcome with emotion; seine Gefühle zur Schau tragen wear one’s heart on one’s sleeve; das ist das höchste der Gefühle umg. (ist das Äußerste) that’s the (absolute) limit3. einer Person gegenüber: feeling; freundliche Gefühle für jemanden hegen feel friendly toward(s) s.o.; jemandes Gefühle erwidern return s.o.’s feelings ( oder affection); sich (Dat) über seine Gefühle klar werden be(come) clear about how one feels4. (Ahnung) feeling; (Vorahnung) presentiment; das ( dumpfe) Gefühl haben, dass oder als ob... have a (vague) feeling that...5. (Gespür) sense ( für of); (Instinkt) instinct, intuition, feel(ing); (besondere Begabung) flair; Gefühl für Anstand / Proportionen etc. sense of propriety / proportion etc.; nach Gefühl Zutaten dosieren by guess and by God, by rule of thumb; das muss man mit Gefühl machen you’ve got to have the right touch; etw. im Gefühl haben have a feeling ( oder instinct) for s.th.; (ahnen, wissen) feel it in one’s bones* * *das Gefühlsense; emotion; sensation; hunch; sentiment; feeling* * *Ge|fühl [gə'fyːl]nt -(e)s, -e1) (= Sinneswahrnehmung) feelingetw im Gefǘhl haben — to have a feel for sth
sie hat mehr Gefǘhl in den Fingern als ich — she has a better sense of touch than I do
2) (= seelische Empfindung, Ahnung) feeling; (= Emotionalität) sentimentich habe das Gefǘhl, dass... — I have the feeling that...
ich habe ein Gefǘhl, als ob... — I feel as though...
es geht gegen mein Gefǘhl... — I don't like...
mein Gefǘhl täuscht mich nie — my instinct is never wrong
jds Gefǘhle erwidern — to return sb's affection
jds Gefǘhle verletzen — to hurt sb's feelings
er ist zu keinem menschlichen Gefǘhl fähig — he is incapable of (feeling) any human emotion
Gefǘhl und Verstand — emotion and reason, sense and sensibility
die Romantik war das Zeitalter des Gefǘhls — romanticism was the age of sensibility
das höchste der Gefǘhle (inf) — the ultimate
3) (= Verständnis) feeling; (= Sinn) senseein Gefǘhl für Zahlen/Musik — a feeling for figures/music
ein Gefǘhl für Gerechtigkeit/Anstand/Proportionen/Rhythmus — a sense of justice/decency/proportion/rhythm
Tiere haben ein Gefǘhl dafür, wer sie mag — animals can sense who likes them
einen Apparat mit Gefǘhl behandeln — to treat an appliance sensitively
* * *das1) (the moving or upsetting of the mind or feelings: He was overcome by/with emotion.) emotion2) (power and ability to feel: I have no feeling in my little finger.) feeling3) (something that one feels physically: a feeling of great pain.) feeling4) ((usually in plural) something that one feels in one's mind: His angry words hurt my feelings; a feeling of happiness.) feeling5) (an impression or belief: I have a feeling that the work is too hard.) feeling6) (affection: He has no feeling for her now.) feeling7) (emotion: He spoke with great feeling.) feeling8) (a feeling: a sensation of faintness.) sensation9) (a feeling: He has an exaggerated sense of his own importance.) sense* * *Ge·fühl<-[e]s, -e>[gəˈfy:l]nt1. (Sinneswahrnehmung) feeling2. (seelische Empfindung, Instinkt) feelingdas [...] \Gefühl haben, dass/als ob to have the [...] feeling that/as thoughdas \Gefühl nicht loswerden, dass to not get rid of the feeling thatich werde das \Gefühl nicht los, dass I cannot help feeling thatmit \Gefühl with feeling [or sensitivity], carefullymit gemischten \Gefühlen with mixed feelingsmit widerstrebenden \Gefühlen with [some] reluctancejds \Gefühle erwidern to reciprocate sb's feelings, to return sb's affectionsjds \Gefühle verletzen to hurt sb's feelings\Gefühl[e] in jdn/etw investieren (fam) to become emotionally involved with sb/sthetw im \Gefühl haben to feel sth instinctivelymein \Gefühl täuscht mich nie my instinct is never wrong3. (Sinn) senseein \Gefühl für Zahlen/Kunst/Musik a feeling for figures/art/musicein \Gefühl für Gerechtigkeit a sense of justiceTiere haben ein \Gefühl dafür, wer sie mag animals can sense who likes them4.* * *das; Gefühls, Gefühle1) sensation; feeling2) (Gemütsregung) feelingein Gefühl der Einsamkeit — a sense or feeling of loneliness
das ist das höchste der Gefühle — (ugs.) that's the absolute limit
3) (Ahnung) feelingetwas im Gefühl haben — have a feeling or a premonition of something
4) (Verständnis, Gespür) sense; instinctsich auf sein Gefühl verlassen — trust one's feelings or instinct
etwas nach Gefühl tun — do something by instinct
* * *von Kälte cold sensation;dem Gefühl nach ist es Plastik judging by the feel it’s plastic2. psychisch: feeling, sense; besonders kurze Wahrnehmung: sensation; emotional: sentiment, emotion;ein beängstigendes/beruhigendes Gefühl a worrying/reassuring feeling;widerstreitende Gefühle conflicting feelings;ich habe dabei ein ungutes Gefühl I’ve got a funny feeling about it;mit gemischten Gefühlen with mixed feelings;einer Sache mit gemischten Gefühlen gegenüberstehen have mixed feelings about sth;mit viel Gefühl singen sing with great feeling ( oder emotion);meinem Gefühl nach my feeling is that; I think (that);von seinen Gefühlen überwältigt overcome with emotion;seine Gefühle zur Schau tragen wear one’s heart on one’s sleeve;das ist das höchste der Gefühle umg (ist das Äußerste) that’s the (absolute) limit3. einer Person gegenüber: feeling;freundliche Gefühle für jemanden hegen feel friendly toward(s) sb;jemandes Gefühle erwidern return sb’s feelings ( oder affection);sich (dat)über seine Gefühle klar werden be(come) clear about how one feelsdas (dumpfe) Gefühl haben, dass oderals ob … have a (vague) feeling that …5. (Gespür) sense (Gefühl für Anstand/Proportionen etc sense of propriety/proportion etc;nach Gefühl Zutaten dosieren by guess and by God, by rule of thumb;das muss man mit Gefühl machen you’ve got to have the right touch;etwas im Gefühl haben have a feeling ( oder instinct) for sth; (ahnen, wissen) feel it in one’s bones* * *das; Gefühls, Gefühle1) sensation; feeling2) (Gemütsregung) feelingein Gefühl der Einsamkeit — a sense or feeling of loneliness
das ist das höchste der Gefühle — (ugs.) that's the absolute limit
3) (Ahnung) feelingetwas im Gefühl haben — have a feeling or a premonition of something
4) (Verständnis, Gespür) sense; instinctsich auf sein Gefühl verlassen — trust one's feelings or instinct
* * *-e n.emotion n.feeling n.sense n.sentiment n. -
18 mezcla
Del verbo mezclar: ( conjugate mezclar) \ \
mezcla es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativoMultiple Entries: mezcla mezclar
mezcla sustantivo femenino 1 ( proceso) 2 ( combinación ) (de vinos, tabacos, cafés) blend; ( de tejidos) mix;c) (Audio) mix
mezclar ( conjugate mezclar) verbo transitivo 1 mezcla algo con algo to mix sth with sth 2 ‹documentos/ropa› to mix up, get … mixed up; mezcla algo con algo to get sth mixed up with sth 3 ( involucrar) mezcla a algn en algo to get sb mixed up o involved in sth mezclarse verbo pronominal 1b) ( tener trato con) mezclase con algn to mix with sb2 [razas/culturas] to mix
mezcla sustantivo femenino
1 (acción) mixing, blending Rad Cine mixing
2 (producto) mixture, blend: me gusta esta mezcla de cafés, I like this blend of coffee Audio mix Text mix
una mezcla de seda y lino, a silk/linen mix
mezclar verbo transitivo
1 (combinar, amalgamar) to mix, blend: no me gusta mezclar a los amigos, I don't like to mix my friends
2 (algo ordenado antes) to mix up: mezcló sus cosas con las tuyas, he got his things mixed up with yours
3 (involucrar) to involve, mix up ' mezcla' also found in these entries: Spanish: barro - consistente - expandirse - homogeneizar - spanglish - consistencia - contenido - homogéneo - mezclilla - puro English: add in - blend - cross - mix - mixture - Spanglish - stand - medley - mixed -
19 mezclar
mezclar ( conjugate mezclar) verbo transitivo 1 mezclar algo con algo to mix sth with sth 2 ‹documentos/ropa› to mix up, get … mixed up; mezclar algo con algo to get sth mixed up with sth 3 ( involucrar) mezclar a algn en algo to get sb mixed up o involved in sth mezclarse verbo pronominal 1b) ( tener trato con) mezclarse con algn to mix with sb2 [razas/culturas] to mix
mezclar verbo transitivo
1 (combinar, amalgamar) to mix, blend: no me gusta mezclar a los amigos, I don't like to mix my friends
2 (algo ordenado antes) to mix up: mezcló sus cosas con las tuyas, he got his things mixed up with yours
3 (involucrar) to involve, mix up ' mezclar' also found in these entries: Spanish: batir - combinarse English: blend - merge - mix - scramble - toss - combine - dub - jumble - mingle - mixer - mixing bowl -
20 mix up
1) (to blend together: I need to mix up another tin of paint.) mezclar2) (to confuse or muddle: I'm always mixing the twins up.) confundir3) (to confuse or upset: You've mixed me up completely with all this information.) confundirmix up1 n confusiónmix up2 vb confundirv.• confundir (Combinar) v.• embarullar v.• revolver v.• trabucar v.• triscar v.• zambucar v.1) v + o + adv, v + adv + o( throw into confusion) desordenar, revolver*2)a) ( confuse) \<\<names/dates\>\> confundirto mix it up — (AmE colloq) pelearse, sacarse* la mugre (CS fam)
b) ( bewilder) \<\<person\>\> confundir3) (usu pass)a) ( involve)to be/get mixed up in something — estar* metido or enredado/meterse en algo
to be/get mixed up with somebody — andar* liado/liarse* con alguien
b) ( confuse)to get mixed up — confundirse, hacerse* un lío (fam)
VT + ADV1) (=prepare) [+ paint, paste] preparar2) (=combine) [+ ingredients] mezclar3) (=jumble up) mezclar4) (=confuse) [+ person] confundiryou've got me all mixed up — me has confundido, me has hecho un lío *
5) (=mistake) [+ names, dates, person] confundir6) (=involve)to be/get mixed up in sth — estar metido/meterse en algo
are you mixed up in this? — ¿tú andas metido en esto?, ¿tú tienes que ver con esto?
how could David be mixed up in a murder? — ¿cómo puede David estar involucrado en un asesinato?
he's got mixed up with a bad crowd — se ha mezclado con mala gente, anda con malas compañías
why did I ever get mixed up with you? — ¿cómo acabé relacionándome contigo?, ¿cómo acabé liada contigo? *
to mix sb up in sth — meter or mezclar a algn en algo
7)- mix it up* * *1) v + o + adv, v + adv + o( throw into confusion) desordenar, revolver*2)a) ( confuse) \<\<names/dates\>\> confundirto mix it up — (AmE colloq) pelearse, sacarse* la mugre (CS fam)
b) ( bewilder) \<\<person\>\> confundir3) (usu pass)a) ( involve)to be/get mixed up in something — estar* metido or enredado/meterse en algo
to be/get mixed up with somebody — andar* liado/liarse* con alguien
b) ( confuse)to get mixed up — confundirse, hacerse* un lío (fam)
См. также в других словарях:
mixed up — adj 1.) be/get mixed up in sth to be involved in an illegal or dishonest activity ▪ He s the last person I d expect to be mixed up in something like this. ▪ I d have to be crazy to get mixed up in that kind of thing. 2.) be/get mixed up with sb… … Dictionary of contemporary English
ˌmixed ˈup — adj 1) confused I got mixed up with the dates and went on the wrong day.[/ex] 2) informal someone who is mixed up has a lot of emotional problems • be/get mixed up in sth informal to be or become involved in something bad or embarrassing[/ex]… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
be mixed up in something — be/get/mixed up in something informal phrase to be or become involved in something bad or embarrassing a government official mixed up in illegal activities Thesaurus: to take part, or to become involvedsynonym Main entry … Useful english dictionary
get mixed up in something — be/get/mixed up in something informal phrase to be or become involved in something bad or embarrassing a government official mixed up in illegal activities Thesaurus: to take part, or to become involvedsynonym Main entry … Useful english dictionary
meet with sth — UK US UK UK meet with sth Phrasal Verb with meet({{}}/miːt/ verb (met //, met /met/) ► to come together with someone in a place and have a conversation or meeting with them: »I m going to meet with my boss tomorrow morning. ► to cause a… … Financial and business terms
ˌmix sth ˈup — phrasal verb to put things together without any order I sorted all the papers and you ve mixed them up again.[/ex] … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
mix — 1 /mIks/ verb 1 (I, T) if you mix two or more substances or if they mix, they combine to become a single substance, and they cannot be easily separated: Mix the blue and yellow paint to make green. | Oil and water don t mix. | mix sth together/in … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
mix — mix1 W3S2 [mıks] v [Date: 1400 1500; Origin: mixte mixed (13 17 centuries), from Latin mixtus, past participle of miscere to mix ] 1.) [I and T] if you mix two or more substances or if they mix, they combine to become a single substance, and they … Dictionary of contemporary English
result — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 outcome/effect ADJECTIVE ▪ beneficial, encouraging, favourable/favorable, good, positive ▪ the beneficial results of the reforms to the economy ▪ For best … Collocations dictionary
review — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 considering sth again ADJECTIVE ▪ careful, complete, comprehensive, detailed, extensive, full, full scale (esp. BrE), fundamental (esp. BrE), in dept … Collocations dictionary
success — noun 1 good results ADJECTIVE ▪ enormous, great, immense, massive ▪ considerable, real, tremendous ▪ conspicuous … Collocations dictionary