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1 scare
skeə
1. verb(to startle or frighten: You'll scare the baby if you shout; His warning scared her into obeying him.) asustar
2. noun1) (a feeling of fear or alarm: The noise gave me a scare.) susto2) (a feeling of fear or panic among a large number of people: a smallpox scare.) pánico•- scared- scarecrow
- scaremonger
- scare away/off
scare1 n sustoscare2 vb1. asustardid I scare you? ¿te he asustado?2. dar miedotr[skeəSMALLr/SMALL]1 (fright) susto■ what a scare you gave me! ¡vaya susto me has dado!2 (widespread alarm) alarma, pánico1 asustar, espantar■ did I scare you? ¿te he asustado?1 asustarse, espantarse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto scare somebody to death / scare somebody out of their wits dar un susto de muerte a alguiento scare the living daylights out of somebody dar un susto de muerte a alguienscare story historia alarmistascare n1) fright: susto m, sobresalto m2) alarm: pánico mn.• alarma s.f.• alboroto s.m.• sobresalto s.m.• susto s.m.v.• amedrentar v.• asustar v.• atemorizar v.• espantar v.
I
1. sker, skeə(r)transitive verb \<\<person/animal\>\> asustar
2.
vi asustarsePhrasal Verbs:- scare up
II
a) (fright, shock) susto mto give somebody a scare — darle* un susto a alguien
bomb scare — amenaza f de bomba
the AIDS scare — el pánico del sida; (before n)
['skɛǝ(r)]scare story — historia f alarmista
1. N1) (=fright) susto m•
to cause a scare — sembrar el pánico•
to give sb a scare — dar un susto or asustar a algnwhat a scare you gave me! — ¡qué susto me diste!
•
we got a bit of a scare — nos pegamos un susto, tuvimos un sobresalto2) (=panic, threat)bomb scare — amenaza f de bomba
the invasion scare — (=panic) el pánico de la invasión; (=rumours) los rumores alarmistas de una invasión
2. VT1) (=frighten) asustaryou scared me! — ¡me has asustado!
2)to be scared — (=frightened) tener miedo, estar asustado
don't be scared — no tengas miedo, no te asustes
we were really scared — teníamos mucho miedo, estábamos muy asustados
she was too scared to talk — estaba demasiado asustada para poder hablar, no podía hablar del susto
•
to be scared of sb/sth, he's scared of women — tiene miedo a las mujeresare you scared of him? — ¿le tienes miedo?
I'm scared of spiders — les tengo miedo a or me dan miedo las arañas
3.VI4.CPDscare campaign N — campaña f alarmista, campaña f de intimidación
scare story N —
scare tactics NPL — tácticas fpl alarmistas
* * *
I
1. [sker, skeə(r)]transitive verb \<\<person/animal\>\> asustar
2.
vi asustarsePhrasal Verbs:- scare up
II
a) (fright, shock) susto mto give somebody a scare — darle* un susto a alguien
bomb scare — amenaza f de bomba
the AIDS scare — el pánico del sida; (before n)
scare story — historia f alarmista
См. также в других словарях:
scared — S3 [skeəd US skerd] adj frightened of something, or nervous about something = ↑afraid ▪ At first, he was really scared. scared of (doing) sth ▪ I ve always been scared of dogs. ▪ Don t be scared of asking for help. scared (that) ▪ I wanted to ask … Dictionary of contemporary English
scare somebody into doing something — ˈscare sb into doing sth derived to frighten sb in order to make them do sth • Local businesses were scared into paying protection money. Main entry: ↑scarederived … Useful english dictionary
mind — mind1 W1S1 [maınd] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(ability to think and imagine)¦ 2 change your mind 3 make up your mind/make your mind up 4 have somebody/something in mind (for something) 5 bear/keep somebody/something in mind 6 with somebody/something in mind 7… … Dictionary of contemporary English
come — come1 W1S1 [kʌm] v past tense came [keım] past participle come ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(move towards somebody/something)¦ 2¦(go with somebody)¦ 3¦(travel to a place)¦ 4¦(post)¦ 5¦(happen)¦ 6¦(reach a level/place)¦ 7¦(be produce … Dictionary of contemporary English
push — push1 W2S1 [puʃ] v ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(move)¦ 2¦(button/switch)¦ 3¦(try to get past)¦ 4¦(encourage)¦ 5¦(persuade)¦ 6¦(change)¦ 7¦(increase/decrease)¦ 8¦(army)¦ 9¦(advertise)¦ 10¦(drugs)¦ … Dictionary of contemporary English
talk — 1 verb 1 CONVERSATION (I) to say things to someone, especially in a conversation: talk to: Who was that you were talking to at the party? | talk with: Bob was talking with a pretty woman from the fire department. | talk about/of: We were talking… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
admit — ad|mit W1S2 [ədˈmıt] v past tense and past participle admitted present participle admitting ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(accept truth)¦ 2¦(accept blame)¦ 3¦(allow to enter)¦ 4¦(allow to join)¦ 5¦(hospital)¦ 6 admit defeat 7 admit evidence … Dictionary of contemporary English
afraid — a|fraid W2S1 [əˈfreıd] adj [not before noun] [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: Past participle of affray to frighten (14 19 centuries), from Old French affreer; AFFRAY] 1.) frightened because you think that you may get hurt or that something bad may… … Dictionary of contemporary English
hell — hell1 W3S1 [hel] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(when you die)¦ 2¦(suffering)¦ 3¦(unpleasant situation)¦ 4 what/how/why/where etc the hell? 5 a/one hell of a something 6 go to hell! 7 feel/look like hell 8 beat/surprise/scare the hell out of somebody 9 (just) for… … Dictionary of contemporary English
shrink — shrink1 [ʃrıŋk] v past tense shrank [ʃræŋk] past participle shrunk [ʃrʌŋk] [: Old English; Origin: scrincan] 1.) [I and T] to become smaller, or to make something smaller, through the effects of heat or water ▪ I m worried about washing that… … Dictionary of contemporary English
scare — scare1 [skeə US sker] v [Date: 1100 1200; : Old Norse; Origin: skirra, from skjarr shy, fearful ] 1.) [T] to make someone feel frightened = ↑frighten →↑afraid ▪ Loud noises can scare animals or birds. scare the life/living daylights/hell etc out… … Dictionary of contemporary English