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1 to be to somebody's discredit
ir en descrédito de alguien -
2 discredit
dis'kredit
1. noun((something that causes) loss of good reputation.) descrédito, deshonor, desprestigio
2. verb1) (to show (a story etc) to be false.) desacreditar2) (to disgrace.) deshonrar•- discreditably
tr[dɪs'kredɪt]1 (dishonour, disgrace) descrédito■ the English hooligans brought discredit on their team los hinchas ingleses trajeron el descrédito a su equipo2 (person, thing) vergüenza (to, para)3 (disbelief, doubt) duda1 (theory, claim) desacreditar; (person, government) desacreditar, desprestigiar2 (refuse to believe) poner en duda, poner en tela de juicio\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be to somebody's discredit ir en descrédito de alguiendiscredit [dɪs'krɛdət] vt1) disbelieve: no creer, dudar2) : desacreditar, desprestigiar, poner en dudathey discredited his research: desacreditaron sus investigaciones1) disrepute: descrédito m, desprestigio m2) doubt: duda fadj.• desautorizado, -a adj.n.• descrédito s.m.• mengua s.f.• menoscabo s.m.v.• desacreditar v.• deslucir v.• deslustrar v.• dudar v.• infamar v.• menoscabar v.
I dɪs'kredət, dɪs'kredɪttransitive verb desacreditar
II
mass noun descrédito m[dɪs'kredɪt]to bring discredit on o upon somebody/something — traer* el descrédito a alguien/algo
1.N (=dishonour) descrédito m, deshonor mit was to the general's discredit that... — fue un descrédito para el general que...
to bring discredit (up)on sth/sb — desacreditar algo/a algn, suponer un descrédito para algo/algn
2. VT1) (=prove untrue) [+ theory] rebatir, refutarthat theory is now discredited — esa teoría ya ha sido rebatida or refutada
2) (=cast doubt upon) poner en duda3) (=sully reputation of) [+ family] deshonrar, desacreditar; [+ organization, profession] desacreditar* * *
I [dɪs'kredət, dɪs'kredɪt]transitive verb desacreditar
II
mass noun descrédito mto bring discredit on o upon somebody/something — traer* el descrédito a alguien/algo
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3 discrédit
discrédit [diskʀedi]masculine noun• jeter le discrédit sur qch/qn to discredit sth/sb* * *diskʀedinom masculin disrepute* * *diskʀedi nm* * *discrédit nm disrepute; en discrédit in disrepute; jeter le discrédit sur to discredit, to bring [sth] into disrepute.[diskredi] nom masculinjeter le discrédit sur quelqu'un/quelque chose to discredit somebody/something -
4 discredit
1. noun1) no pl. Misskredit, derbring discredit on somebody/something, bring somebody/something into discredit — jemanden/etwas in Misskredit (Akk.) bringen
2) (somebody or something that discredits)2. transitive verbbe a discredit to somebody/something — jemandem/einer Sache keine Ehre machen
1) (disbelieve) keinen Glauben schenken (+ Dat.); (cause to be disbelieved) unglaubwürdig machen* * *[dis'kredit] 1. noun 2. verb2) (to disgrace.) in schlechten Ruf bringen•- academic.ru/20909/discreditable">discreditable- discreditably* * *dis·cred·it[dɪˈskredɪt]I. vt1. (disgrace)▪ to \discredit sb/sth jdn/etw in Verruf [o Misskredit] bringen, jdn/etw diskreditieren2. (cause to appear false)▪ to \discredit sth etw unglaubwürdig machen3. (disbelieve)this has brought \discredit upon the whole school das hat dem Ruf der ganzen Schule geschadetto be to sb's \discredit jdm keine Ehre machen* * *[dIs'kredɪt]1. vt1) (= cast slur/doubt on) diskreditieren2) (= disbelieve) keinen Glauben schenken (+dat)2. nto bring discredit ( up)on sb/sth — jdn/etw in Misskredit bringen
2)* * *discredit [dısˈkredıt]A v/twith bei), ein schlechtes Licht werfen auf (akk)2. anzweifeln, keinen Glauben schenken (dat)B s1. Zweifel m:2. Misskredit m, schlechter Ruf, Schande f:bring into discredit, bring discredit on → A 13. Schande f* * *1. noun1) no pl. Misskredit, derbring discredit on somebody/something, bring somebody/something into discredit — jemanden/etwas in Misskredit (Akk.) bringen
2) (somebody or something that discredits)2. transitive verbbe a discredit to somebody/something — jemandem/einer Sache keine Ehre machen
1) (disbelieve) keinen Glauben schenken (+ Dat.); (cause to be disbelieved) unglaubwürdig machen2) (disgrace) diskreditieren (geh.); in Verruf bringen* * *n.Verruf -e m. -
5 vanære
discredit, disgrace, dishonour, dishonourably* * *I. (en) disgrace ( fx you are a disgrace to your school),F ( svagere) dishonour,( stærkere) ignominy,( dyb vanære, skændsel) infamy;[ bringe vanære over], se II. vanære.II. vb disgrace,( svagere, F) dishonour;[ vanære én]( også) bring disgrace (, dishonour) on somebody. -
6 Misskredit
m discredit, disrepute; in Misskredit bringen bring discredit upon, bring into disrepute; in Misskredit kommen oder geraten fall into disrepute, get (o.s. oder itself) a bad name* * *Mịss|kre|dit [-kre'diːt]m no pldiscreditin Misskredit geraten or kommen — to be discredited
* * *Miss·kre·ditRR, Miß·kre·ditALT[ˈmɪskredi:t]jdn/etw [bei jdm] in \Misskredit bringen to bring sb/sth into discredit [with sb], to bring discredit on sb/sthin \Misskredit geraten to become discredited* * *der injemanden/etwas in Misskredit bringen — bring somebody/something into discredit; bring discredit on somebody/something
* * *Misskredit m discredit, disrepute;in Misskredit bringen bring discredit upon, bring into disrepute;* * *der injemanden/etwas in Misskredit bringen — bring somebody/something into discredit; bring discredit on somebody/something
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7 jeter
jeter [ʒ(ə)te]➭ TABLE 41. transitive verba. ( = lancer) to throwb. ( = mettre au rebut) to throw away• se faire jeter (inf) (d'une réunion, entreprise) to get thrown out (de of ) ; (lors d'une requête) to be sent packing (inf)c. ( = mettre rapidement) jeter des vêtements dans un sac to throw some clothes into a bag• jeter le trouble dans les esprits ( = perturber) to disturb people ; ( = rendre perplexe) to sow confusion in people's mindsf. ( = dire) to say• « et pourquoi pas ? » jeta-t-il "and why not?", he said2. reflexive verb► se jetera. ( = s'élancer)se jeter par la fenêtre to throw o.s. out of the window• se jeter à la tête de qn to throw o.s. at sb• se jeter dans les bras/aux pieds de qn to throw o.s. into sb's arms/at sb's feet• il s'est jeté sous un train he threw himself under a train► se jeter sur [+ personne] to rush at ; [+ lit] to throw o.s. onto ; [+ téléphone] to rush to ; [+ journal, roman] to pounce on ; [+ occasion, solution] to jump atc. [+ projectiles] to throw at each otherd. ( = boire) (inf!) on va s'en jeter un ? let's have a quick one (inf)* * *ʒəte
1.
1) ( lancer) to throw [caillou, dé]; ( avec force) to hurl, to fling [objet]jeter quelque chose à quelqu'un — ( pour qu'il l'attrape) to throw something to somebody; (pour faire mal, peur) to throw something at somebody
jeter quelque chose par terre/en l'air — to throw something to the ground/(up) in the air
jeter le buste en avant/la tête en arrière — to throw one's chest out/one's head back
2) ( placer rapidement) to throw ( dans into; sur over); ( étaler)jeter quelques idées sur le papier — fig to jot down a few ideas
3) ( mettre au rebut) to throw away ou outêtre bon à jeter — to be fit for the bin GB ou the garbage US; fenêtre
4) ( expédier)jeter quelqu'un dehors/par la fenêtre — to throw somebody out/out of the window
se faire jeter — (colloq) to get thrown out
jeter quelqu'un — (colloq) to throw somebody out
5) ( émettre) to give [cri]en jeter — (colloq) [personne, voiture] to be quite something (colloq)
6) ( construire) to lay [fondations]7) ( causer) to create [confusion]; to cause [consternation]; to sow [terreur]8) ( plonger)jeter quelqu'un dans — to throw somebody into [despair]
9) ( lancer en paroles) to hurl [insultes] ( à quelqu'un to somebody)‘tu es fou,’ jeta-t-elle — ‘you must be mad,’ she said
jeter quelques commentaires — ( dans une discussion) to put in a few comments
jeter à la tête or au visage de quelqu'un — to throw [something] in somebody's face [vérité, défi]
2.
se jeter verbe pronominal1) ( se précipiter) [personne] to throw oneselfse jeter sur — to fall upon [adversaire]; to pounce on [proie, nourriture, journal]
se jeter à l'eau — lit to jump into the water; fig to take the plunge
2) ( être jetable) to be disposable3) ( être mis au rebut) to be disposed of4) [cours d'eau] to flow ( dans into)••n'en jetez plus (la cour est pleine) — (colloq) hold your horses (colloq)
* * *ʒ(ə)te vt1) (= lancer) to throwIl a jeté son manteau sur le lit. — He threw his coat on the bed.
2) (= se défaire de) [ordures, vieilleries] to throw away, to throw outMes parents ne jettent jamais rien. — My parents never throw anything away.
3) (mouvement)4) (= émettre) [son, lueur] to give out5) NAVIGATIONjeter un coup d'œil à — to take a look at, to glance at
jeter des fleurs à qn fig — to say lovely things to sb, to shower sb with compliments
* * *jeter verb table: jeterA vtr1 ( lancer) to throw [caillou, dé]; ( avec force) to hurl, fling [objet]; jeter qch à qn ( pour qu'il l'attrape) to throw sth to sb; (pour faire mal, peur) to throw sth at sb; jeter un os à un chien to throw a dog a bone; jeter une assiette à la tête de qn to throw a plate at sb; jeter qch par terre/sur la table/en l'air to throw sth to the ground/on the table/(up) in the air; jeter une bûche dans la cheminée to throw a log on the fire; jeter les bras autour du cou de qn to throw ou fling one's arms around sb's neck; jeter le buste en avant/la tête en arrière to throw one's chest out/one's head back;2 ( placer rapidement) to throw (dans into; sur over); ( étaler) jeter une couverture sur un matelas/un blessé to throw a blanket over a mattress/an injured person; jeter une lettre à la boîte to drop a letter into the letter-box; jeter quelques idées sur le papier fig to jot down a few ideas;3 ( se débarrasser) to throw away ou out [vieilleries, ordures]; jeter qch à la poubelle to throw sth out, to throw sth in the bin GB ou the garbage US; être bon à jeter to be fit for the bin GB ou the garbage US; ⇒ froc;4 ( expédier) jeter qn dehors/par la fenêtre to throw sb out/out of the window; jeter qn en prison to throw sb in jail; jeter bas to flatten [adversaire, immeuble]; se faire jeter○ to get thrown out; jeter qn○ to throw sb out;5 ( émettre) to give [cri]; to throw [lumière, ombre]; to cast [reflet]; jeter un vif éclat to shine brightly; jeter mille feux to sparkle; en jeter○ [personne, voiture] to be quite something○; ⇒ vu F;6 ( construire) to build [pont]; to forge [lien]; to lay [fondations]; jeter un pont sur un cours d'eau to bridge a river, to throw a bridge across a river;7 ( causer) to create [confusion] (dans in; parmi among); to cause [consternation]; to sow [terreur]; to instilGB [vie]; jeter l'émoi dans la ville to throw the town into turmoil;8 ( plonger) jeter qn dans to throw sb into; jeter qn dans le désespoir to throw sb into despair; jeter le pays dans le désordre to throw the country into chaos;9 ( lancer en paroles) to hurl [insultes] (à qn to sb); ‘tu es fou,’ jeta-t-elle ‘you must be mad,’ she said; jeter quelques commentaires ( dans une discussion) to put in a few comments; jeter qch à la tête or au visage de qn to throw sth in sb's face [vérité, défi].B se jeter vpr1 ( se précipiter) [personne] to throw oneself; se jeter du haut d'un pont/par la fenêtre/dans le canal to throw oneself off a bridge/out of the window/into the canal; se jeter aux pieds de qn/dans les bras de qn to throw oneself at sb's feet/into sb's arms; se jeter sur to fall upon [adversaire]; to pounce on [proie, nourriture, journal]; se jeter au cou de qn to fling oneself around sb's neck; se jeter à l'eau lit to jump into the water; fig to take the plunge; (aller) se jeter contre un arbre [conducteur, voiture] to drive headlong into a tree; se jeter tête baissée dans qch to rush headlong into sth; se jeter à la tête de qn to throw oneself at sb; ⇒ cravate;2 ( être jetable) to be disposable;3 ( être mis au rebut) to be disposed of; où est-ce que les bouteilles se jettent? where do the bottles ou empties○ go?;4 [cours d'eau] to flow (dans into).n'en jetez plus (la cour est pleine)○ hold your horses○.[ʒəte] verbe transitif1. [lancer - balle, pierre] to throwelle m'a jeté la balle she threw me the ball, she threw the ball to mea. (familier) you're making me blush!, don't overdo it!2. [avec un mouvement du corps] to throwl'enfant jeta ses bras autour de mon cou the child threw ou flung his arms around my neckjeter un (coup d')œil sur ou à quelque chose to have a (quick) look at something, to glance at something3. [émettre - étincelle] to throw ou to give out (separable) ; [ - lumière] to cast, to shed ; [ - ombre] to cast ; [ - son] to let ou to give out (separable)en jeter (familier) : elle en jette, ta moto! (familier) that's some ou a neat bike you've got there!4. [dire brusquement]la petite phrase jetée par le ministre aux journalistes the cryptic remark the minister threw at the presselle leur jeta à la figure qu'ils étaient des incapables she told them straight (to their faces) that they were incompetentjeter des injures à la tête de quelqu'un to hurl ou to fling insults at somebody5. [mettre] to throwjeter quelqu'un dehors ou à la porte to throw somebody outjeter quelqu'un à terre to throw somebody down ou to the grounda. [à la piscine, sur la plage] to throw somebody in ou into the waterb. [d'un bateau] to throw somebody overboardce n'est pas le moment de lui demander, tu vas te faire jeter! now is not the time to ask him, he'll just send you away (with a flea in your ear)!6. [mettre au rebut - ordures, vêtements] to throw away ou out (separable)7. [plonger - dans un état, dans une humeur]jeter quelqu'un dans l'embarras to throw ou to plunge somebody into confusionjeter les fondements d'une loi/politique to lay the foundations of a law/policy[maille] to make9. [répandre - doute] to castjeter le discrédit sur quelqu'un/quelque chose to cast discredit on somebody/something, to discredit somebody/somethingjeter le trouble chez quelqu'un to disturb ou to trouble somebody10. (familier) [expulser]on a essayé d'aller en boîte mais on s'est fait jeter par un videur we tried to get into a nightclub but got thrown out by a bounceril s'est fait jeter par son père [verbalement] his father sent him packing————————[ʒəte] verbe intransitif(familier) avoir de l'allure————————se jeter verbe pronominal (emploi passif)————————se jeter verbe pronominal intransitif1. [sauter] to throw ou to hurl oneself, to leapse jeter dans le vide to throw oneself ou to hurl oneself into empty spacese jeter de côté to leap aside, to take a sideways leap2. [se précipiter] to rush (headlong)se jeter sur quelqu'un to set about ou to pounce on somebody3. [commencer]se jeter dans: se jeter à corps perdu dans une aventure to fling oneself body and soul into an adventure4. [cours d'eau] to run ou to flow intolà où la Marne se jette dans la Seine where the river Marne flows ou runs into the Seine————————se jeter verbe pronominal transitif(très familier & locution)s'en jeter un (derrière la cravate) to have a quick drink ou a quick one -
8 descrédito
m.1 discredit, disgrace, bad name, dishonor.2 disbelief, incredulity, discredit, unbelief.* * *1 discredit, disrepute\ir en descrédito de to be to the discredit of* * *noun m.* * *SM (=desprestigio) discredit, disrepute* * *masculino discreditir en descrédito de algo/alguien — to bring discredit on something/somebody
* * *----* caer en descrédito = come into + disrepute, fall into + disrepute.* * *masculino discreditir en descrédito de algo/alguien — to bring discredit on something/somebody
* * ** caer en descrédito = come into + disrepute, fall into + disrepute.* * *discreditva en descrédito de la empresa it brings discredit to o it discredits the firm, it brings the firm into disrepute ( frml)su participación lo hizo caer en descrédito his involvement brought discredit on him* * *
descrédito sustantivo masculino disrepute, discredit
' descrédito' also found in these entries:
English:
discredit
- disrepute
* * *descrédito nmdiscredit;caer en el descrédito to fall into disrepute;ir en descrédito de algo/alguien to count against sth/sb;estar en descrédito to be discredited* * *m discredit;caer en descrédito be discredited* * *descrédito nmdesprestigio: discredit -
9 desprestigio
m.1 discredit.2 loss of prestige, belittling, discredit, disrepute.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: desprestigiar.* * *1 discredit, loss of prestige, loss of reputation\campaña de desprestigio smear campaign* * *noun m.* * *SM1) (=denigración) disparagement2) (=descrédito) discredit, loss of prestige* * *a) ( pérdida de prestigio) loss of prestigeir en desprestigio de algo/alguien — to bring discredit on o upon something/somebody
b) ( falta de prestigio)el desprestigio de los políticos era tal que... — the politicians had such a bad name o reputation that...
* * *= loss of face.Ex. Males are primarily concerned with a loss of face when confronted with a jealousy situation, while females are concerned with the possible loss of a partner.* * *a) ( pérdida de prestigio) loss of prestigeir en desprestigio de algo/alguien — to bring discredit on o upon something/somebody
b) ( falta de prestigio)el desprestigio de los políticos era tal que... — the politicians had such a bad name o reputation that...
* * *= loss of face.Ex: Males are primarily concerned with a loss of face when confronted with a jealousy situation, while females are concerned with the possible loss of a partner.
* * *1 (pérdida de prestigio) loss of prestigeeste escándalo contribuyó al desprestigio de la compañía this scandal contributed to the company's loss of prestigeeste incidente supuso su desprestigio como profesional this incident damaged his professional reputationsería un desprestigio para el partido it would bring the party into disrepute, it would discredit the party2(falta de prestigio): el desprestigio de los políticos era tal que … the politicians had such a bad name o reputation that …tras el escándalo cayó en desprestigio he lost a lot of prestige o his reputation suffered greatly as a result of the scandal* * *
Del verbo desprestigiar: ( conjugate desprestigiar)
desprestigio es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
desprestigió es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo
Multiple Entries:
desprestigiar
desprestigio
desprestigiar ( conjugate desprestigiar) verbo transitivo
to discredit
desprestigiarse verbo pronominal [persona/producto/empresa] to lose prestige
desprestigio sustantivo masculino
◊ ir en desprestigio de algo/algn to bring discredit on o upon sth/sb
desprestigiar verbo transitivo to discredit, run down
desprestigio sustantivo masculino discredit, loss of reputation
' desprestigio' also found in these entries:
English:
smear campaign
* * *desprestigio nm1. [pérdida de prestigio] discredit;es un desprestigio verse envuelto en este asunto it's damaging to our reputation o good name to be involved in this business;la acusación de fraude supone un desprestigio para la empresa the accusation of fraud will damage the company's reputation o good name2. [falta de prestigio]el desprestigio de esta empresa crece cada día this company's reputation gets worse every day* * *m loss of prestige* * *desprestigio nmdescrédito: discredit, disrepute -
10 tildar
v.1 to put the diacritical accent on, to put a tilde on, to put a tilde over, to put an accent on.Ellos tildaron algunas palabras They put a diacritical accent on some words.2 to call.Ellos tildaron a Ricardo They called Richard.* * *1 (poner tilde) to put a written accent on; (de la ñ) to put a tilde on2 (tachar) to cross out3 (a una persona) to call, brand* * *VT1) (=acusar)le tildaron de vago — they dismissed him as lazy, they called him lazy
2) (Tip) [gen] to put an accent on; [sobre la n] to put a tilde over* * *verbo transitivotildar algo a alguien DE algo — to brand something/somebody (as) something
me tildaron de reaccionario — I was branded o called a reactionary
* * *= stigmatise [stigmatize, -USA], label, accuse, discredit.Ex. Findings reaffirm that television stigmatises the occupation of business, independently of economic factors.Ex. Its primer purpose is the finding of specific documents, and consequently this type of catalogue has been labelled a finding list catalogue or an inventory catalogue.Ex. He accused her of lying when they said she was at the movies when she had called in sick.Ex. Such circulation may contribute little to the creation of whole personalities but it may do much to discredit the circulators.----* tildar de = brand (as), mark + Nombre + down as.* * *verbo transitivotildar algo a alguien DE algo — to brand something/somebody (as) something
me tildaron de reaccionario — I was branded o called a reactionary
* * *= stigmatise [stigmatize, -USA], label, accuse, discredit.Ex: Findings reaffirm that television stigmatises the occupation of business, independently of economic factors.
Ex: Its primer purpose is the finding of specific documents, and consequently this type of catalogue has been labelled a finding list catalogue or an inventory catalogue.Ex: He accused her of lying when they said she was at the movies when she had called in sick.Ex: Such circulation may contribute little to the creation of whole personalities but it may do much to discredit the circulators.* tildar de = brand (as), mark + Nombre + down as.* * *tildar [A1 ]vttildar a algn DE algo to brand sb AS sthme han tildado de reaccionario I've been branded o called a reactionarylo tildaron de tacaño they said he was mean* * *
tildar vtr (tachar) to brand: lo tildó de cobarde, he branded him a coward
' tildar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
tachar
English:
brand
* * *tildar vttildar a alguien de algo to brand o call sb sth;le tildaron de colaboracionista she was branded a collaborator* * *v/t:tildar a alguien de fig brand s.o. as* * *tildar vttildar de : to brand as, to calllo tildaron de traidor: they branded him as a traitor -
11 discréditer
discréditer [diskʀedite]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verb2. reflexive verb► se discréditer [personne] to bring discredit upon o.s. (aux yeux de qn, auprès de qn in sb's eyes)* * *diskʀedite
1.
verbe transitif to discredit
2.
se discréditer verbe pronominal to discredit oneself (auprès de quelqu'un, aux yeux de quelqu'un in somebody's eyes)* * *diskʀedite vt* * *discréditer verb table: aimerA vtr to discredit.B se discréditer vpr1 ( se déconsidérer) to discredit oneself (auprès de qn, aux yeux de qn in sb's eyes);2 ( se dévaloriser) to become discredited.[diskredite] verbe transitif————————se discréditer verbe pronominal (emploi réfléchi)[personne] to bring discredit upon oneself————————se discréditer verbe pronominal intransitif[idée, pratique] to become discredited -
12 Schande
f; -, kein Pl. disgrace; (Unehre) auch shame; (öffentliches Ärgernis) scandal; jemandem / etw. Schande machen be a disgrace to s.o. / s.th., bring shame on s.o. / s.th.; er ist eine Schande für seine Familie / seinen Berufsstand he is a disgrace ( oder discredit) to his family / profession; mach uns keine Schande! umg. try not to disgrace us ( oder let us down); zu meiner Schande muss ich gestehen to my shame I have to admit, I’m ashamed to admit; zu ihrer Schande muss gesagt werden, dass sie... I’m afraid to admit ( oder to have to say) that she...; es ist eine Schande, wie so viel Papier einfach weggeworfen wird it’s disgraceful ( oder scandalous) how much paper is just thrown away; es ist doch keine Schande zu verlieren losing is no disgrace ( oder nothing to be ashamed of), there’s no shame in losing; ach du Schande! umg. oh heck ( oder hell)!* * *die Schandeignominy; shame; dishonour; disgrace; disrepute; disgracefulness; dishonor; opprobrium; infamy* * *Schạn|de ['ʃandə]f -, no pldisgrace; (= Unehre auch) shame, ignominySchande! (euph inf) — sugar! (euph inf), hell! (inf)
es ist doch keine Schande, Gefühle zu zeigen or wenn man Gefühle zeigt — there is no shame or disgrace in showing one's feelings
Schande über jdn bringen — to bring disgrace or shame upon sb, to disgrace sb
jdm/einer Sache Schande machen — to be a disgrace to sb/sth
mach mir keine Schande — don't show me up (inf), don't be a disgrace to me
zu meiner (großen) Schande muss ich gestehen,... — to my great or eternal shame I have to admit that...
See:* * *die1) (something which causes or ought to cause shame: Your clothes are a disgrace!) disgrace2) (dishonour or disgrace: The news that he had accepted bribes brought shame on his whole family.) shame3) ((with a) a cause of disgrace or a matter for blame: It's a shame to treat a child so cruelly.) shame* * *Schan·de<->[ˈʃandə]f kein pl ignominy, disgrace, shame\Schande über jdn bringen to bring disgrace on [or upon] sb, to bring shame on [or to] [or upon] sbjdn vor \Schande bewahren to save sb from disgraceeine [wahre] \Schande sein! to be a[n utter [or absolute]] disgrace!eine [wahre] \Schande sein, [dass]/wie... to be a[n utter [or absolute]] disgrace [that]/how...keine \Schande sein, dass... to not be a disgrace that...mach mir [nur] keine \Schande! (hum) don't let me down!jdm/etw \Schande machen to disgrace [or to be a disgrace to] sb/sth, to call [or bring] down disgrace [or form ignominy] on sb/sthjdm/etw keine \Schande machen to not be a disgrace to sb/sthzu jds [bleibenden] \Schande to sb's [everlasting] shameich muss zu meiner großen \Schande gestehen, dass ich unsere Verabredung völlig vergessen habe I'm deeply ashamed to have to admit that I had completely forgotten our engagement; s.a. Schimpf* * *die; Schande: disgrace; shamees ist eine [wahre] Schande — it is a[n absolute] disgrace
jemandem/einer Sache [keine] Schande machen — [not] disgrace somebody/something; bring [no] disgrace or shame on somebody/something
* * *jemandem/etwas Schande machen be a disgrace to sb/sth, bring shame on sb/sth;er ist eine Schande für seine Familie/seinen Berufsstand he is a disgrace ( oder discredit) to his family/profession;zu meiner Schande muss ich gestehen to my shame I have to admit, I’m ashamed to admit;zu ihrer Schande muss gesagt werden, dass sie … I’m afraid to admit ( oder to have to say) that she …;es ist eine Schande, wie so viel Papier einfach weggeworfen wird it’s disgraceful ( oder scandalous) how much paper is just thrown away;es ist doch keine Schande zu verlieren losing is no disgrace ( oder nothing to be ashamed of), there’s no shame in losing;* * *die; Schande: disgrace; shamees ist eine [wahre] Schande — it is a[n absolute] disgrace
jemandem/einer Sache [keine] Schande machen — [not] disgrace somebody/something; bring [no] disgrace or shame on somebody/something
* * *-n f.disgrace n.disgracefulness n.disrepute n.ignominy n.opprobrium n.shame n. -
13 honte
honte [ˈɔ̃t]feminine noun• c'est une honte ! it's disgraceful!• tu devrais avoir honte ! you should be ashamed of yourself!• tu me fais honte ! you make me feel so ashamed!* * *’ɔ̃t1) ( gêne) shamesans honte — fml shamelessly
2) ( discrédit) disgrace* * *'ɔ̃t nf* * *honte nf1 ( gêne) shame; rougir de honte to blush with shame; couvrir qn de honte to cover sb with shame; se couvrir de honte to be mortified; éprouver de la honte to feel ashamed; avoir honte de ce qu'on a fait/d'avoir mal agi to be ashamed of what one has done/of having acted badly; avoir honte de qn/qch to be ashamed of sb/sth; il n'y a pas de honte à faire there's nothing to be ashamed of in doing; il devrait avoir honte de son incompétence/d'exploiter les touristes he ought to be ashamed of his incompetence/of exploiting tourists; faire honte à qn to make sb ashamed; tu me fais honte avec ton chapeau I'm ashamed to be seen with you wearing that hat; sans honte, toute honte bue fml shamelessly; à ma (grande) honte to my (great) embarrassment; j'ai cru mourir de honte! I could have died of embarrassment!; n'ayez pas honte de poser des questions don't be embarrassed about asking questions; avouer qch sans honte to acknowledge sth openly; sans fausse honte quite openly;2 ( discrédit) disgrace; être or faire la honte de qn/d'un métier to be a disgrace to sb/to a profession; jeter la honte sur qn/qch to bring disgrace upon sb/sth; quelle honte! what a disgrace!; c'est une honte de voir ça it's disgraceful to see things like that; honte à celui/ceux qui… shame on him/those who…;3 ( scandale) disgrace.[ʼɔ̃t] nom féminin1. [sentiment d'humiliation] shameavoir honte (de quelqu'un/quelque chose) to be ou to feel ashamed (of somebody/something)j'ai honte d'arriver les mains vides I feel ou I'm ashamed at arriving empty-handeda. [il lui est un sujet de mécontentement] his father is ashamed of himb. [il lui donne un sentiment d'infériorité] he puts his father to shametoute honte bue: trois ans plus tard, toute honte bue, il recommençait son trafic three years later, totally lacking in any sense of shame, he started up his little racket againla société laisse faire, c'est une honte! it's outrageous ou it's a crying shame that society just lets it happen!essuyer ou subir la honte d'un refus to suffer the shame of a rebuffhonte à celui/celle qui... shame on him/her who...4. [dialecte: peur] fear5. [pudeur]sans honte locution adverbiale -
14 tachar
v.to cross out (lo escrito).María cancela sus malos pensamientos Mary canceled her bad thoughts.* * *1 (borrar) to cross out2 (culpar) to accuse (de, of)* * *verbto cross out, delete* * *VT1) (=suprimir) to cross out; (=corregir) to correcttachar a algn de una lista — to cross o take sb off a list
2)me molesta que taches de tonterías lo que digo — I don't like the way you dismiss what I say as nonsense
3) (Jur) [+ testigo] to challenge* * *verbo transitivo1) ( en escrito) to cross out2) ( tildar)tachar a alguien DE algo — to brand o label somebody as something
3) (Der) to impeach, discredit* * *= cross out, obliterate, cross off, strike out.Ex. The time taken to print it can mean that it is out of date when it is available, and though withdrawals can be shown by crossing out, additions cannot be shown at all.Ex. Typing errors cannot be obliterated with a normal erasing fluid as this would print and appear as a blotch on the copies.Ex. Equally the housewife happily crossing off her numbers in the bingo hall is just as much at leisure as is her husband painting his pigeon loft and then going for a drink with his mates at the pub.Ex. Dots placed under words or letters wrongly struck out by the corrector.----* tachar a + Nombre + de + Adjetivo = tag + Nombre + as + Adjetivo.* tachar de = brand (as), label.* * *verbo transitivo1) ( en escrito) to cross out2) ( tildar)tachar a alguien DE algo — to brand o label somebody as something
3) (Der) to impeach, discredit* * *= cross out, obliterate, cross off, strike out.Ex: The time taken to print it can mean that it is out of date when it is available, and though withdrawals can be shown by crossing out, additions cannot be shown at all.
Ex: Typing errors cannot be obliterated with a normal erasing fluid as this would print and appear as a blotch on the copies.Ex: Equally the housewife happily crossing off her numbers in the bingo hall is just as much at leisure as is her husband painting his pigeon loft and then going for a drink with his mates at the pub.Ex: Dots placed under words or letters wrongly struck out by the corrector.* tachar a + Nombre + de + Adjetivo = tag + Nombre + as + Adjetivo.* tachar de = brand (as), label.* * *tachar [A1 ]vtA (en un escrito) to cross out, delete ( frml)tacha éstas de la lista cross these off the listB (tildar) tachar a algn DE algo to brand o label sb AS sthlo tacharon de hipócrita they branded o labeled him as a hypocrite, he was accused of being a hypocriteC ( Der) to impeach, discredit* * *
tachar ( conjugate tachar) verbo transitivo
1 ( en escrito) to cross out
2 ( tildar) tachar a algn DE algo to brand o label sb as sth
tachar verbo transitivo
1 (en un escrito) to cross out 2 tachar de (tildar, acusar) to brand: me tachó de envidioso, he accused me of being jealous
le tachaban de soberbio, they branded o labelled him as arrogant
' tachar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
tildar
- cruzar
English:
cross off
- cross out
- delete
- label
- mark off
- remove
- score out
- scrub out
- strike off
- strike out
- blot
- brand
- cross
- lump
- scratch
- strike
* * *tachar vt1. [borrar] to cross out, to scratch (out);su nombre había sido tachado de la lista her name had been crossed off the list2. [acusar]tachar a alguien de algo: la tacharon de elitista she was accused of being elitist;lo tacharon de mentiroso/cobarde he was branded a liar/coward;tachar algo de algo: el libro fue tachado de pornográfico the book was labelled as pornographic* * *v/t1 cross out;táchese lo que no proceda delete as applicable2 ( tildar):la tacharon de egoísta she was branded o labeled as selfish* * *tachar vt1) : to cross out, to delete2)tachar de bc} to accuse of, to label aslo tacharon de mentiroso: they accused him of being a liar* * *tachar vb1. (hacer rayas) to cross out2. (acusar) to accuse -
15 discount
1. noun(Commerc.) Rabatt, dergive or offer [somebody] a discount on something — [jemandem] Rabatt auf etwas (Akk.) geben od. gewähren
discount for cash — Skonto, der od. das
2. transitive verbat a discount — mit Rabatt; (fig.) nicht gefragt
(disbelieve) unberücksichtigt lassen; (discredit) widerlegen [Beweis, Theorie]; (underrate) zu gering einschätzen* * *1. noun 2. verb(to leave aside as something not to be considered: You can discount most of what he says - it's nearly all lies!) geringen Wert beimessen* * *dis·countI. n[ˈdɪskaʊnt]\discounts are available to club members Klubmitglieder erhalten einen Rabattto give a \discount [einen] Rabatt geben [o gewähren] [o SCHWEIZ a. zusprechen]will you give me a \discount for quantity? geben Sie mir einen Mengenrabatt?at a \discount mit Rabattcurrency at a \discount Diskontwährung fat a \discount STOCKEX unter parishares which stand at a \discount Aktien, die unter pari sindII. vt[dɪˈskaʊnt]▪ to \discount sth1. (disregard) etw unberücksichtigt lassento \discount a possibility eine Möglichkeit nicht berücksichtigento \discount a testimony/an analysis eine Aussage/Analyse nicht einbeziehen2. (lower in price) etw senken [o reduzieren]to \discount an article einen Artikel herabsetzento \discount a price einen Preis reduzieren [o senken3. ECON, FIN etw diskontieren [o eskomptieren]shares are \discounting a rise in the dollar die Aktien nehmen eine Aufwertung des Dollar vorweg* * *['dɪskaʊnt]1. nto give a discount on sth — Rabatt or Prozente (inf) auf etw (acc) geben
to give sb a 5% discount — jdm 5% Rabatt/Skonto geben
at a discount — auf Rabatt/Skonto
discount for cash — Skonto or Rabatt bei Barzahlung
2)to be at a discount (Fin) — unter pari sein; (fig) nicht or wenig gefragt sein
2. vt2) [dɪs'kaʊnt]person's opinion unberücksichtigt lassento discount sth as an exaggeration/as untrue — etw als Übertreibung/als unwahr abtun
* * *discount [ˈdıskaʊnt]A son auf akk)2. WIRTSCHa) Diskont m, Wechselzins mb) → academic.ru/20893/discount_rate">discount rate3. WIRTSCH Abzug m (vom Nominalwert):a) unter pari,b) fig unbeliebt, nicht geschätzt,c) fig nicht gefragt;sell at a discount mit Verlust verkaufen4. WIRTSCH Diskont m, Zinszahlung f im Voraus5. Vorbehalt m (wegen Übertreibung)B v/t [a. dıˈskaʊnt]1. WIRTSCH abziehen, abrechnen2. WIRTSCH einen Abzug auf eine Rechnung etc gewähren3. WIRTSCH einen Wechsel etc diskontieren4. fig unberücksichtigt lassen, nicht mitrechnen5. im Wert vermindern, beeinträchtigen6. nur teilweise glauben, mit Vorsicht oder Vorbehalt aufnehmenC v/i WIRTSCH diskontieren, Diskontdarlehen gewährendisc. abk2. discovered* * *1. noun(Commerc.) Rabatt, dergive or offer [somebody] a discount on something — [jemandem] Rabatt auf etwas (Akk.) geben od. gewähren
discount for cash — Skonto, der od. das
2. transitive verbat a discount — mit Rabatt; (fig.) nicht gefragt
(disbelieve) unberücksichtigt lassen; (discredit) widerlegen [Beweis, Theorie]; (underrate) zu gering einschätzen* * *n.Abschlag -¨e m.Abzug ¨-e m.Rabatt -e m.Skonto -en m. -
16 lanzar
v.1 to throw.lanzar a alguien al mar/río to throw somebody into the sea/riverMaría le lanza la bola a Ricardo Mary throws Richard the ball.2 to let out.lanzar insultos contra alguien to insult somebody3 to launch (commerce).Ellos lanzan su producto nuevo They launch their new product.4 to come at, to jump at.Se me lanzó un león A lion came at me.5 to give.María le lanza a Sue un golpe Mary gives Sue a blow.6 to be thrown at, to be thrown to.Se me lanzó una piedra A stone was thrown at me.7 to evict.El juez lanzó al inquilino The judge evicted the tenant.* * *1 (gen) to throw2 (cohete) to launch4 (producto) to launch1 (actuar decididamente) to throw oneself, launch oneself into■ se lanzaron a la calle en protesta por la nueva ley they went out onto the streets to protest against the new law\lanzarse contra alguien to attack somebody* * *verb1) to throw, hurl2) launch3) pitch•- lanzarse* * *1. VT1) [+ objeto, piedra] [gen] to throw; [con violencia] to hurl, flinglanzaron botes de humo contra los manifestantes — they threw o hurled smoke bombs at the demonstrators
la explosión lanzó algunas piedras al cielo — the explosion threw o flung stones into the sky
lanzar algo/a algn al suelo — [gen] to throw sth/sb to the ground; [con violencia] to hurl sth/sb to the ground
2) (=disparar) [+ flecha, proyectil] to fire; [+ cohete, misil] [hacia el aire] to launch; [hacia tierra] to drop3) (Dep) [+ disco, jabalina, balón] to throw; [+ peso] to put; [+ pelota] (Béisbol) to pitch; (Cricket) to bowllanzar una falta — (Ftbl) to take a free kick
4) (=emitir) [+ mensaje] to deliver; [+ insulto, ataque] to hurl; [+ indirecta] to drop; [+ desafío] to issue, throw down; [+ grito, suspiro] to let outlas autoridades han lanzado un nuevo mensaje a los inversores — the authorities have issued a new message to investors
la emisora lanzó duros ataques contra el presidente — the radio station launched harsh attacks against the president
lanzar críticas contra algn — to criticize sb, level criticism against sb frm
llamamientolanzar una mirada — to shoot a glance o look
5) (Com) [+ producto, moda] to launch, bring out; [+ disco] to release, bring outhan lanzado al mercado un nuevo modelo — they have brought out a new model, they have released a new model onto the market
fue el primer banco que lanzó al mercado bonos hipotecarios — it was the first bank to issue mortgage bonds
6) (Mil) [+ campaña, ataque] to launch7) (=vomitar) to bring up8) (Bot) [+ hojas, flores] to come out in, put out9) (Jur) to dispossess2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) <pelota/objetos/jabalina> to throw; ( en béisbol) to pitchlanzar la bala or (Esp) el peso — to put the shot
b) <misil/satélite> to launch; < bomba> to drop2) <producto/libro> to launch3)a) <ofensiva/ataque> to launchb) < crítica> to launch4)a) < mirada> to shoot, giveb) < grito> to give2.lanzar vi ( en béisbol) to pitch3.lanzarse v prona) (refl) ( arrojarse) to throw oneselflanzarse al agua/al vacío — to leap into the water/the void
lanzarse en paracaídas — to parachute; ( en una emergencia) to parachute, to bale out
b) (abalanzarse, precipitarse)lanzarse sobre algo/alguien — to pounce on something/somebody
se lanza a hacer las cosas sin pensar — (fam) she rushes into things without thinking
c) ( emprender)* * *= launch, lob, fling, dart, catapult, spew (out), pitch, hurl, fire off.Ex. It describes an attempt by leaders in the CD-ROM business to launch a logical file structure standard for CD-ROM.Ex. Projection is really a matter of energy rather than volume, and the energy comes from the diaphragm, which propels the breath like stones from a catapult so that the words are lobbed from speaker to listeners.Ex. A gust of wind flung a powder of snow from the window-sill into the room.Ex. 'That wouldn't be my problem,' Stanton said darting a sardonic glance at her antagonist.Ex. The success of his last book catapulted him to the pinnacle of fame.Ex. Simultaneously, automatic gunfire spewed out from a sandbagged position west of the village across the river mouth.Ex. They pitched him unceremoniously out of the window, laming him for life, on a brick pavement below.Ex. Palestinians hurled Molotov cocktails Friday at Israeli soldiers operating south of Nablus, the army said.Ex. Incredible though it may seem, the youngster didn't fire off a volley of cheerful curses, but silently obeyed.----* lanzar al mercado = ship.* lanzar amenazas = rattle + Posesivo + saber.* lanzar bombas = bomb.* lanzar gritos de protesta = cry of protest + go up.* lanzarse = rush, dart, plunge into.* lanzarse a = launch into.* lanzarse a la calle = take to + the streets.* lanzarse a la fama = shoot to + fame, catapult to + fame.* lanzarse al estrellato = shoot to + stardom, catapult to + stardom.* lanzarse al mercado = hit + the streets.* lanzarse de cabeza = jump in with + both feet.* lanzarse en paracaídas = parachute.* lanzarse sin ton ni son = dive + head-first.* lanzarse sobre = descend upon, lam into, lay into.* lanzar una idea = pilot + idea.* lanzar una indirecta = drop + a hint.* lanzar una iniciativa = launch + initiative.* lanzar una mirada de = give + a look of.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) <pelota/objetos/jabalina> to throw; ( en béisbol) to pitchlanzar la bala or (Esp) el peso — to put the shot
b) <misil/satélite> to launch; < bomba> to drop2) <producto/libro> to launch3)a) <ofensiva/ataque> to launchb) < crítica> to launch4)a) < mirada> to shoot, giveb) < grito> to give2.lanzar vi ( en béisbol) to pitch3.lanzarse v prona) (refl) ( arrojarse) to throw oneselflanzarse al agua/al vacío — to leap into the water/the void
lanzarse en paracaídas — to parachute; ( en una emergencia) to parachute, to bale out
b) (abalanzarse, precipitarse)lanzarse sobre algo/alguien — to pounce on something/somebody
se lanza a hacer las cosas sin pensar — (fam) she rushes into things without thinking
c) ( emprender)* * *= launch, lob, fling, dart, catapult, spew (out), pitch, hurl, fire off.Ex: It describes an attempt by leaders in the CD-ROM business to launch a logical file structure standard for CD-ROM.
Ex: Projection is really a matter of energy rather than volume, and the energy comes from the diaphragm, which propels the breath like stones from a catapult so that the words are lobbed from speaker to listeners.Ex: A gust of wind flung a powder of snow from the window-sill into the room.Ex: 'That wouldn't be my problem,' Stanton said darting a sardonic glance at her antagonist.Ex: The success of his last book catapulted him to the pinnacle of fame.Ex: Simultaneously, automatic gunfire spewed out from a sandbagged position west of the village across the river mouth.Ex: They pitched him unceremoniously out of the window, laming him for life, on a brick pavement below.Ex: Palestinians hurled Molotov cocktails Friday at Israeli soldiers operating south of Nablus, the army said.Ex: Incredible though it may seem, the youngster didn't fire off a volley of cheerful curses, but silently obeyed.* lanzar al mercado = ship.* lanzar amenazas = rattle + Posesivo + saber.* lanzar bombas = bomb.* lanzar gritos de protesta = cry of protest + go up.* lanzarse = rush, dart, plunge into.* lanzarse a = launch into.* lanzarse a la calle = take to + the streets.* lanzarse a la fama = shoot to + fame, catapult to + fame.* lanzarse al estrellato = shoot to + stardom, catapult to + stardom.* lanzarse al mercado = hit + the streets.* lanzarse de cabeza = jump in with + both feet.* lanzarse en paracaídas = parachute.* lanzarse sin ton ni son = dive + head-first.* lanzarse sobre = descend upon, lam into, lay into.* lanzar una idea = pilot + idea.* lanzar una indirecta = drop + a hint.* lanzar una iniciativa = launch + initiative.* lanzar una mirada de = give + a look of.* * *lanzar [A4 ]vtA1 ‹piedras/objetos› to throw2 ‹disco/jabalina/pelota› to throw; ‹peso› to put; (en béisbol) to pitch3 ‹misil/torpedo/proyectil› to launch; ‹bomba› to drop4 ‹satélite/cohete› to launchB ‹producto/libro/proyecto› to launchla canción que los lanzó a la fama the song which shot them to fameC1 ( Mil) ‹ataque/ofensiva› to launch2 ‹crítica/acusación› to launchlanzaron una serie de ataques contra la organización they launched a series of attacks on the organizationlas acusaciones lanzadas contra él por miembros del partido the accusations made against him o leveled at him by party memberslanzó un llamamiento a la calma he called o appealed for calm, he made an appeal for calmD1 ‹mirada› to shoot, givele lanzó una mirada inquisidora he shot o gave her an inquisitive lookme lanzó una indirecta she dropped me a hint2 ‹grito›los manifestantes lanzaron gritos de protesta contra el gobierno the demonstrators shouted protests against the governmentlanzaron consignas contra el régimen they shouted anti-government sloganslanzó un grito de dolor he let out a cry of pain, he cried out in painlanzar un suspiro to sigh, to breathe a sighel piloto lanzó un mensaje de emergencia the pilot sent out an SOS■ lanzarviA (en béisbol) to pitch■ lanzarse1 ( refl) (arrojarse) to throw oneselfse lanzó al vacío desde lo alto de un edificio he threw o flung himself off the top of a buildingse lanzó al agua she threw herself o jumped o leaped into the waterlanzarse en paracaídas to parachute; (en una emergencia) to parachute, to bale out2(abalanzarse, precipitarse): se lanzó en su búsqueda he set about looking for herlanzarse a la calle to take to the streetsse lanzaron sobre or contra el ladrón they pounced o leaped on the thieflos niños se lanzaron sobre los pasteles the children pounced o dived on the cakesse lanzaron escaleras arriba they rushed o charged upstairsse lanzaron al ataque they attackedno te lances a comprar ( fam); don't rush into buying anythingse lanza a hacer las cosas sin pensar ( fam); she dives o rushes into things without thinking3 (emprender) lanzarse A algo to undertake sth, embark UPON sthse lanzaron a una campaña aparatosa de publicidad they embarked on o undertook a spectacular publicity campaign4 (en una carrera) to launch oneselfse lanzó como cantante popular she launched herself as a pop singer* * *
lanzar ( conjugate lanzar) verbo transitivo
1
( en béisbol) to pitch
‹ bomba› to drop
2 ‹producto/libro› to launch
3
‹ indirecta› to drop;
‹ grito› to give;
verbo intransitivo ( en béisbol) to pitch
lanzarse verbo pronominal
◊ lanzarse al agua/al vacío to leap into the water/the void;
lanzarse en paracaídas to parachute;
( en una emergencia) to bale outb) (abalanzarse, precipitarse):◊ lanzarse sobre algo/algn to pounce on sth/sb;
lanzarse al ataque to attack
lanzar verbo transitivo
1 (arrojar) to throw
2 (insulto, grito) to let out: le lanzó una mirada de rencor, she shot him a resentful look
3 Mil & Com to launch
' lanzar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
arrojar
- bombear
- canuto
- bomba
- córner
- echar
- indirecta
- mandar
- puya
- tirar
English:
blast off
- bowl
- bring in
- bring out
- cast
- dare
- drive
- drop
- fire
- float
- glower
- ground
- heave
- hurl
- introduce
- launch
- send up
- shoot
- squirt
- throw
- throw down
- toss
- toss about
- toss around
- utter
- dart
- deliver
- fling
- hint
- hit
- lob
- loose
- pitch
- project
- put
- set
- sling
- spew
* * *♦ vt1. [tirar] to throw;[con fuerza] to hurl, to fling;lanzar a alguien al mar/río to throw sb into the sea/river;los alborotadores lanzaban palos y piedras a la policía the rioters were hurling sticks and stones at the police2. [bomba] to drop;[flecha, misil] to fire3. [cohete, satélite] to launch4. [ataque] to launch[con el pie] to kick; [en béisbol] to pitch;lanzó el balón a las gradas (de una patada) he kicked o sent the ball into the stands;lanzar el balón fuera to put the ball out of play;lanzar un penalty to take a penalty;lanzar peso to put the shot6. [grito, gemido, aullido] to let out;[acusación] to make; [suspiro] to heave; [mirada, sonrisa] to give; [beso] to blow;lanzar insultos contra alguien to insult sb;el lobo lanzaba aullidos the wolf was howling7. [producto, artista, periódico] to launch;[disco, película] to release;lanzar una campaña de descrédito contra alguien to start a campaign to discredit sb9. [en ciclismo] to lead out10. [despojar] to dispossess;[desalojar] to evict* * *v/t* * *lanzar {21} vt1) : to throw, to hurl2) : to pitch3) : to launch* * *lanzar vb2. (mísil, producto) to launch -
17 disgrace
dis'ɡreis
1. noun1) (the state of being out of favour: He is in disgrace because of his behaviour.) desgracia2) (a state of being without honour and regarded without respect: There seemed to be nothing ahead of him but disgrace and shame.) deshonra3) (something which causes or ought to cause shame: Your clothes are a disgrace!) vergüenza
2. verb1) (to bring shame upon: Did you have to disgrace me by appearing in those clothes?) avergonzar2) (to dismiss from a position of importance: He was publicly disgraced.) caer en desgracia•- disgracefully
disgrace n vergüenzatr[dɪs'greɪs]1 (loss of favour) desgracia; (loss of honour) deshonra, deshonor nombre masculino; (public dishonour) ignominia2 (shame) escándalo, vergüenza1 (bring shame on) deshonrar2 (discredit) desacreditar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be a disgrace (to somebody/something) ser una vergüenza (para alguien/algo)to be in disgrace (adult) estar desacreditado,-a, haber caído en desgracia 2 (child) estar castigado,-ato bring disgrace on somebody traer la deshonra a alguiento disgrace oneself hacer el ridículoto fall into disgrace caer en desgraciadisgrace n1) dishonor: desgracia f, deshonra f2) shame: vergüenza fhe's a disgrace to his family: es una vergüenza para su familian.• desgracia s.f.• deshonra s.f.• deslucimiento s.m.• ignominia s.f.• mancha s.f.• sambenito s.m.v.• baldonar v.• desacreditar v.• deshonrar v.
I dɪs'greɪsmass & count nouna) ( shame) vergüenza fit's a disgrace — es una vergüenza, es un escándalo
b) (somebody, something shameful) (no pl) vergüenza fto be a disgrace (TO somebody/something) — ser* una vergüenza (para alguien/algo)
II
a) ( bring shame on) \<\<person/family/school\>\> deshonrarb) ( destroy reputation of) \<\<enemy/politician\>\> desacreditar[dɪs'ɡreɪs]1. N1) (=state of shame) deshonra f, ignominia fto be in disgrace — [adult] estar totalmente desacreditado, haber caído en desgracia; [pet, child] estar castigado
2) (=shameful thing) vergüenza fyou're a disgrace! — ¡lo tuyo es una vergüenza!
to be a disgrace to the school/family — ser una deshonra para la escuela/la familia
3) (=downfall) caída f2.VT [+ family, country] deshonrar* * *
I [dɪs'greɪs]mass & count nouna) ( shame) vergüenza fit's a disgrace — es una vergüenza, es un escándalo
b) (somebody, something shameful) (no pl) vergüenza fto be a disgrace (TO somebody/something) — ser* una vergüenza (para alguien/algo)
II
a) ( bring shame on) \<\<person/family/school\>\> deshonrarb) ( destroy reputation of) \<\<enemy/politician\>\> desacreditar -
18 notar
v.to notice.¿has notado algo extraño en su comportamiento? have you noticed anything strange in her behavior?noto frío en los pies my feet feel coldte noto cansado you look tired to mehacer notar algo to point something outnótese que el acusado estaba bebido note o observe that the accused was drunkNosotros notamos un resplandor We noticed a brightness.* * *1 (percibir) to notice2 (sentir) to feel1 (percibirse) to be noticeable, be evident, show■ ¿se nota que no me he peinado? can you tell I haven't combed my hair?2 (sentirse) to feel\hacer notar to point outhacerse notar to draw attention to oneselfse nota que... one can see that...* * *verb* * *1. VT1) (=darse cuenta de) to noticelos usuarios apenas han notado los efectos de la huelga — customers have hardly noticed the effects of the strike
noté que la gente la miraba — I noticed people looking at her, I noticed that people were looking at her
•
dejarse notar, la subida de los precios se dejará notar sobre todo en los alimentos — the rise in prices will be most noticeable in the case of food•
hacer notar algo — to point sth outle hice notar que había sido él, no yo, quien dio la orden — I pointed out to him that it had been him and not me who had given the order
•
hacerse notar, los resultados se hicieron notar sin tardanza — the consequences soon became apparentsolo se comportan así para hacerse notar — they only behave like that to get noticed o get attention
la esposa del presidente apenas se ha hecho notar en todo este tiempo — the president's wife has been almost invisible all this time
2) (=sentir) [+ dolor, pinchazo, frío] to feel3) + adj4) (=anotar) to note down5) (=marcar) to mark, indicate6) [+ persona] (=criticar) to criticize; (=desacreditar) to discredit•
notar a algn de algo — to brand sb as sth, criticize sb for being sth2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( advertir) to noticehacerse notar — ( atraer la atención) to draw attention to oneself; ( dejarse sentir) to be felt
b) (impers)se nota que es novato — you can tell o see he's a beginner
¿se notan las puntadas? — do the stitches show?; (+ me/te/le etc)
2.se te nota en la cara — it's written all over your face
notarse v pron (+ compl) to feel* * *= notice, perceive, see, spot, watch, note, eye + catch.Ex. Notice that records 2 and 4 do not appear on the directory.Ex. Hypermedia offers unheard of opportunities to gain insight into the way young people perceive, process and use information.Ex. Where the conference cannot be seen to have a name, then the work will normally be treated as a collection.Ex. When all necessary amendments have been spotted, edit the draft abstract and make any improvements to the style that are possible.Ex. Watch what occurs as the letters 'New' and a space are typed.Ex. Collation is the term used for the physical check of books to note any imperfections such as missing or duplicated sections.Ex. As Klaus's acute observations are unhampered by romantic ideals, his eye catches the plastic trash by the roadway as well as the colors of moss on the landing strip.----* ¡cómo se nota que no está el jefe! = while the cat's away, the mice will play.* digno de notar = noteworthy.* hacer notar = bring to + Posesivo + attention, bring to + the attention, mark, note, bring to + notice, bring + attention to, bring to + Posesivo + notice.* hacer notar la presencia de = make + Posesivo + presence felt, make + Posesivo + presence known.* nadie notaría la diferencia = no one would be the wiser.* notar 7 no pude evitar notar que = couldn't help but notice (that).* nótese el error = sic.* sin que se note la diferencia = seamlessly.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( advertir) to noticehacerse notar — ( atraer la atención) to draw attention to oneself; ( dejarse sentir) to be felt
b) (impers)se nota que es novato — you can tell o see he's a beginner
¿se notan las puntadas? — do the stitches show?; (+ me/te/le etc)
2.se te nota en la cara — it's written all over your face
notarse v pron (+ compl) to feel* * *= notice, perceive, see, spot, watch, note, eye + catch.Ex: Notice that records 2 and 4 do not appear on the directory.
Ex: Hypermedia offers unheard of opportunities to gain insight into the way young people perceive, process and use information.Ex: Where the conference cannot be seen to have a name, then the work will normally be treated as a collection.Ex: When all necessary amendments have been spotted, edit the draft abstract and make any improvements to the style that are possible.Ex: Watch what occurs as the letters 'New' and a space are typed.Ex: Collation is the term used for the physical check of books to note any imperfections such as missing or duplicated sections.Ex: As Klaus's acute observations are unhampered by romantic ideals, his eye catches the plastic trash by the roadway as well as the colors of moss on the landing strip.* ¡cómo se nota que no está el jefe! = while the cat's away, the mice will play.* digno de notar = noteworthy.* hacer notar = bring to + Posesivo + attention, bring to + the attention, mark, note, bring to + notice, bring + attention to, bring to + Posesivo + notice.* hacer notar la presencia de = make + Posesivo + presence felt, make + Posesivo + presence known.* nadie notaría la diferencia = no one would be the wiser.* notar 7 no pude evitar notar que = couldn't help but notice (that).* nótese el error = sic.* sin que se note la diferencia = seamlessly.* * *notar [A1 ]vt1 (advertir, sentir) to noticenotó que la puerta estaba abierta she noticed that the door was openhizo notar esta falta de interés he pointed out this lack of interestnotaba el frío por todo el cuerpo she felt cold all overnotó que alguien le tocaba el brazo she became aware of o she felt somebody touching her arm(+ compl): te noto muy cambiado you've changed a lotte noto muy triste you look/sound very sad, you seem very sadse le notaba indeciso he seemed hesitantlos efectos de la sequía ya se hacen notar the effects of the drought are already making themselves felt o are already being felt2 ( impers):¿se nota que son de distinto color? can you tell o does it show that they're different colors?se nota que es novato you can tell o see he's a beginner¡cómo se nota que no pagas tú! you can tell o it's obvious you're not paying!se notaba que había estado llorando you could see o tell she'd been crying¿se notan las puntadas? do the stitches show?, can you see the stitches?se notó mucho que no le gustó it was very obvious o you could tell a mile off she didn't like itte has puesto maquillaje — ¿se nota mucho? you're wearing makeup — is it very noticeable o obvious?(+ me/te/le etc): se le nota ya la barriga it's beginning to show that she's pregnantapenas se le nota la cicatriz you can hardly see the scarse te nota en la cara I can tell by your face, it's written all over your facese le notan las lentillas you can see she's wearing contact lensesse le nota mucho el acento his accent is very noticeable■ notarse(+ compl) to feelse notaban extraños entre esa gente they felt strange among those peopleme noto muy rara con este vestido I think I look funny o I feel funny in this dress* * *
notar ( conjugate notar) verbo transitivo
hacer(le) notar algo (a algn) to point sth out (to sb);
te noto muy triste you look very sad;
se le notaba indeciso he seemed hesitantb) ( impers):◊ se nota que es novato you can tell o see he's a beginner;
se te nota en la cara it's written all over your face
notarse verbo pronominal (+ compl) to feel;
notar verbo transitivo
1 (darse cuenta) to notice ➣ Ver nota en notice
2 (a alguien en un estado) to find: le noté cansado, I found him tired
3 (sentir) to feel: noté frío, I felt cold
' notar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
extrañar
- palpar
- advertir
- conocer
- cuenta
- exhibir
- observar
- remarcar
- ver
English:
detect
- discontent
- evidence
- feel
- notice
- sense
- spot
- thrust forward
- creep
- difference
- show
- tell
* * *♦ vt[advertir] to notice; [sentir] to feel;noté que alguien me miraba I sensed that someone was watching me;¿notas una corriente de aire? can you feel a draught?;noto frío en los pies my feet feel cold;te noto cansado you look tired;lo noto raro he's acting strangely;la noté muy cambiada she'd changed a lot;la crisis económica se está dejando notar the recession is really making itself felt;hacer notar algo to point sth out;nótese que el acusado estaba bebido note o observe that the accused was drunk* * *v/t1 notice;hacer notar algo a alguien point sth out to s.o.;se nota que you can tell that;hacerse notar draw attention to o.s.2 ( sentir) feel* * *notar vt1) : to noticehacer notar algo: to point out something2) : to tellla diferencia se nota inmediatamente: you can tell the difference right away* * *notar vb1. (advertir) to notice -
19 reflect
rə'flekt1) (to send back (light, heat etc): The white sand reflected the sun's heat.) kaste tilbake, reflektere2) ((of a mirror etc) to give an image of: She was reflected in the mirror/water.) gjenspeile3) (to think carefully: Give him a minute to reflect (on what he should do).) betenke seg, reflektere over•- reflection
- reflexion
- reflective
- reflectively
- reflectorgjenspeile--------reflektereverb \/rɪˈflekt\/1) reflektere, kaste tilbake2) ( også overført) reflektere, gjenspeile, gi gjenskinn, (av)speile3) reflektere (over), tenke på, betenke, grunne over, tenke etter, overveiebask in the reflected glory of eller bathe in the reflected glory of sole seg i glansen fra\/avreflect credit (up)on somebody eller reflect honour (up)on somebody kaste glans over noen, tjene noen til ære, stille noen i et heldig lysreflect discredit (up)on somebody eller reflect dishonour (up)on somebody bringe noen i vanry, stille noen i et uheldig lys, kaste en skygge over noen kritisere noen, rette kritikk mot noenreflect favourably (up)on stille i et fordelaktig lysreflect (up)on overveie, tenke over, begrunne, reflektere overreflect on oneself slå tilbake på en selvreflect unfavourably (up)on slå tilbake påtime to reflect betenkningstid -
20 reproach
1. transitive verbreproach somebody with or for something — jemandem etwas vorwerfen od. zum Vorwurf machen
2. nounhave nothing to reproach oneself for or with — sich (Dat.) nichts vorzuwerfen haben
1) (rebuke) Vorwurf, derbe above or beyond reproach — über jeden Vorwurf erhaben sein
* * *[rə'prəu ] 1. verb(to rebuke or blame but usually with a feeling of sadness and disappointment rather than anger: She reproached me for not telling her about my money troubles; There is no need to reproach yourself - you did the best you could.) vorwerfen2. noun((an) act of reproaching: a look of reproach; He didn't deserve that reproach from you.) der Vorwurf- academic.ru/61634/reproachful">reproachful- reproachfully* * *re·proach[rɪˈprəʊtʃ, AM -ˈproʊtʃ]I. vt▪ to \reproach sb jdm Vorwürfe machen▪ to \reproach sb with sth jdm etw vorwerfenII. n<pl -es>▪ to be a \reproach to sb/sth ein schlechtes Bild auf jdn/etw werfenthe recent drop in passenger numbers should be a \reproach to the airline die Fluglinie sollte auf den jüngsten Rückgang der Passagierzahlen reagierena look of \reproach ein vorwurfsvoller Gesichtsausdruckto be above [or beyond] \reproach über jeden Tadel erhaben sein* * *[rɪ'prəʊtʃ]1. n1) (= rebuke) Vorwurf mto heap reproaches on sb — jdn mit Vorwürfen überhäufen
2)(= discredit)
to be a reproach to sb/sth — eine Schande für jdn/etw seinto bring reproach ( up)on sb/sth — jdn/etw in schlechten Ruf bringen
to bring reproach ( up)on oneself — in schlechten Ruf kommen
2. vtVorwürfe machen (+dat)to reproach sb for having done sth —
he has nothing to reproach himself for or with — er hat sich (dat) nichts vorzuwerfen
* * *reproach [rıˈprəʊtʃ]A v/t1. vorwerfen, -halten, zum Vorwurf machen ( alle:sb with sth jemandem etwas)3. etwas tadeln, rügen4. fig ein Vorwurf sein für, diskreditierenB s1. Vorwurf m, Tadel m:without fear and reproach ohne Furcht und Tadel;a look of reproach ein vorwurfsvoller Blick2. Schande f (to für):bring reproach (up)on sb jemandem Schande oder wenig Ehre machen;live in reproach and ignominy in Schimpf und Schande leben* * *1. transitive verbreproach somebody with or for something — jemandem etwas vorwerfen od. zum Vorwurf machen
2. nounhave nothing to reproach oneself for or with — sich (Dat.) nichts vorzuwerfen haben
1) (rebuke) Vorwurf, derbe above or beyond reproach — über jeden Vorwurf erhaben sein
2) (disgrace) Schande, die (to für)* * *n.(§ pl.: reproaches)Vorwurf -¨e m. v.Vorwürfe machen ausdr.vorwerfen v.
- 1
- 2
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