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1 mock
mok
1. verb(to laugh at or cause to seem ridiculous: They mocked her efforts at cooking.) burlarse
2. adjective(pretended or not real: a mock battle; He looked at me in mock horror.) ficticio, falso- mockery- mocking
- mockingly
mock1 adj simuladomock2 vb burlarse / mofarsetr[mɒk]1 (object) de imitación2 (event) de prueba1 (exam) examen nombre masculino de prueba1 (laugh at, make fun of) burlarse de, mofarse de2 (imitate) imitar, remedar1 burlarse (at, de)\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto make a mock of somebody/something poner a alguien/algo en ridículomock ['mɑk, 'mɔk] vt1) ridicule: burlarse de, mofarse de2) mimic: imitar, remedar (de manera burlona)mock adj1) simulated: simulado2) phony: falsoadj.• burlesco, -a adj.• fingido, -a adj.• simulado, -a adj.n.• burla s.f.• mofa s.f.v.• befar v.• burlar v.• burlarse v.• burlarse de v.• decepcionar v.• fisgar v.• mofar v.• remedar v.
I mɑːk, mɒktransitive verb burlarse or mofarse dehe mocked her accent — imitó or remedó su acento burlonamente
II
adjective (before n) <examination/interview> de práctica, de prueba; <anger/outrage> fingido, simulado[mɒk]1.VT (=ridicule) mofarse de, burlarse de; (=mimic) imitar, remedaryou shouldn't mock other people's beliefs — no hay que mofarse or burlarse de las creencias de la gente
2.VI mofarse, burlarseto mock at sth/sb — mofarse de algo/algn, burlarse de algo/algn
3.ADJ (=feigned) [solemnity, terror] fingido, simulado; (=imitation) [leather, fur] de imitación4. N1)2) mocks (Brit) (Scol) * exámenes mpl de prueba5.CPDmock battle N — simulacro m (de batalla)
mock orange N — (Bot) jeringuilla f, celinda f
mock trial N — juicio m de prueba
* * *
I [mɑːk, mɒk]transitive verb burlarse or mofarse dehe mocked her accent — imitó or remedó su acento burlonamente
II
adjective (before n) <examination/interview> de práctica, de prueba; <anger/outrage> fingido, simulado -
2 tease
ti:z
1. verb1) (to annoy or irritate on purpose: He's teasing the cat.) molestar, irritar; provocar, picar2) (to annoy or laugh at (a person) playfully: His school-friends tease him about his size.) tomar el pelo; meterse con alguien; reírse de alguien
2. noun(a person who enjoys teasing others: He's a tease!) provocador, bromista- teaser- teasingly
tease vb burlarse / tomar el pelotr[tiːz]1 (make fun of - playfully) tomar el pelo a, burlarse de; (- annoyingly, unkindly) atormentar, molestar2 (sexually) provocar, incitar3 (wool etc) cardar1 tomar el pelo1 (joker) bromista nombre masulino o femenino1) mock: burlarse de, mofarse de2) annoy: irritar, fastidiartease n1) teasing: burla f, mofa f2) : bromista mf; guasón m, -sona fn.• embromador, -ora s.m.,f.• guasona s.f.• guasón s.m.v.• candonguear v.• embromar v.• tomar el pelo a v.• vejar v.
I
1. tiːz1)a) ( make fun of) tomarle el pelo a (fam); ( cruelly) burlarse or reírse deb) ( annoy) hacer* rabiar, fastidiar, jorobar (fam)c) ( tantalize sexually) provocar*, incitar2) \<\<hair/wool\>\> cardar
2.
vidon't take any notice, he's only teasing — no le hagas caso, te está tomando el pelo (fam)
Phrasal Verbs:
II
noun (colloq)a) ( joker) bromista mfb) ( flirt)[tiːz]she's a terrible tease — es muy coqueta or provocativa
1. N1) (=person) (=leg-puller) bromista mf, guasón(-ona) * m / fhe's a dreadful tease — es muy bromista, es muy guasón *
2) (=flirt)3) (=joke)2. VT1) [+ person] (=make fun of) tomar el pelo a, mofarse de; (=annoy) fastidiar, molestar; (cruelly) atormentar; (sexually) coquetear con2) [+ animal] provocar3) (Tech) [+ fibres] cardar* * *
I
1. [tiːz]1)a) ( make fun of) tomarle el pelo a (fam); ( cruelly) burlarse or reírse deb) ( annoy) hacer* rabiar, fastidiar, jorobar (fam)c) ( tantalize sexually) provocar*, incitar2) \<\<hair/wool\>\> cardar
2.
vidon't take any notice, he's only teasing — no le hagas caso, te está tomando el pelo (fam)
Phrasal Verbs:
II
noun (colloq)a) ( joker) bromista mfb) ( flirt)she's a terrible tease — es muy coqueta or provocativa
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3 burla
Del verbo burlar: ( conjugate burlar) \ \
burla es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativoMultiple Entries: burla burlar
burla sustantivo femeninoa) ( mofa):b) ( atropello):◊ esto es una burla del reglamento this makes a mockery of the regulations
burlar ( conjugate burlar) verbo transitivo burlarse verbo pronominal burlase de algo/algn to make fun of sth/sb
burla sustantivo femenino
1 (mofa) mockery
2 (broma) joke Locuciones: hacer burla de, to make fun of
burlar verbo transitivo
1 (engañar) to outwit
2 (esquivar) to evade ' burla' also found in these entries: Spanish: mueca - refinada - refinado - remedar - sorna - vacilar - guasa - son - tomadura de pelo English: mockery - spoof -
4 mofarse
mofarse ( conjugate mofarse) verbo pronominal mofarse DE algo/algn to make fun of sth/sb
mofarse verbo reflexivo to jeer [de, at], scoff [de, at], make fun [de, of]: se mofaban del equipo perdedor, they scoffed at the losing team ' mofarse' also found in these entries: Spanish: reírse English: jeer - mock - taunt -
5 práctica
Del verbo practicar: ( conjugate practicar) \ \
practica es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativoMultiple Entries: practicar práctica
practicar ( conjugate practicar) verbo transitivo 1 ‹ tenis› to play; no practica ningún deporte he doesn't play o do any sport(s) 2 (frml) (llevar a cabo, realizar) ‹corte/incisión› to make; ‹autopsia/operación› to perform, do; ‹redada/actividad› to carry out; ‹ detenciones› to make verbo intransitivo ( repetir) to practice( conjugate practice); ( ejercer) to practice( conjugate practice)
práctica sustantivo femenino 1 ( en trabajo) experience; 2 ( aplicación) practice; poner algo en práctica or llevar algo a la práctica to put sth into practice 3 ( de maestro) teaching practice; 4 ( costumbre) practice
practicar
I verbo transitivo
1 (una profesión) to practise, US practice
2 (una actividad) to play, practise: deberías practicar el tenis más a menudo, you should play tennis more regularly
3 (una operación, etc) to carry out, do, perform: tuvieron que practicarle una autopsia, they had to perform a post mortem on him
4 Rel to practise
II verbo intransitivo to practise: si quieres hablar bien el inglés, debes practicar más, if you want to speak good English, you must practise more ➣ Ver nota en practise
práctico,-a
I adjetivo
1 (un objeto) handy, useful
2 (una persona, disciplina) practical
II m Náut pilot
práctica sustantivo femenino
1 (actividad) practice
2 (aplicación) poner algo en práctica, to put sthg into practice
3 (costumbre) una práctica habitual, a common practice
4 (aprendizaje, formación) prácticas, teaching practice
5 Educ (clases no teóricas) practicals, US labs: por la mañana tiene prácticas de química, in the morning he has chemistry practicals ➣ Ver nota en practise
' práctica' also found in these entries: Spanish: continuismo - costumbre - docencia - marcha - vela - ejercicio - equitación - instrucción - perder - practicar English: action - code - current - excel - feasible - follow up - hate - implement - insider dealing - insider trading - observance - practically - practice - practise - run-through - rusty - turn - convenient - malpractice - mock - practical - protection - teaching
См. также в других словарях:
mock — 1 verb 1 (I, T) formal to laugh at someone or something and try to make them look stupid by making unkind remarks about them or by copying them; make fun of: mock sth/sb: They have insulted us and mocked our religion. | It s easy for you to mock … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
mock — mock1 [mɔk US ma:k] v [Date: 1400 1500; : Old French; Origin: moquier] 1.) [I and T] formal to laugh at someone or something and try to make them look stupid by saying unkind things about them or by copying them = make fun of ▪ Opposition MPs… … Dictionary of contemporary English
mock — mock1 [mɔk US ma:k] v [Date: 1400 1500; : Old French; Origin: moquier] 1.) [I and T] formal to laugh at someone or something and try to make them look stupid by saying unkind things about them or by copying them = make fun of ▪ Opposition MPs… … Dictionary of contemporary English
mockery — mock|e|ry [ˈmɔkəri US ˈma: ] n 1.) make a mockery of sth to make something such as a plan or system seem completely useless or ineffective ▪ This building plan makes a mockery of the government s environmental policy. 2.) [U] when someone laughs… … Dictionary of contemporary English
eye — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 part of the body ADJECTIVE ▪ left, right ▪ amber, blue, brown, dark, golden, green, grey/gray … Collocations dictionary
perfect — per|fect1 W2S2 [ˈpə:fıkt US ˈpə:r ] adj [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: parfit, from Latin perfectus, past participle of perficere to do completely, finish ] 1.) not having any mistakes, faults, or damage ≠ ↑imperfect ▪ His English was… … Dictionary of contemporary English
The Emerson Theater — is an all age music venue located at 4634 E. 10th Street in the Little Flower neighborhood of Indianapolis, Indiana. The Emerson Theater hosts original local music Friday and Saturday nights every week and also hosts some regional/national acts.… … Wikipedia
deride — de|ride [dıˈraıd] v [T] formal [Date: 1500 1600; : Latin; Origin: deridere, from ridere to laugh ] to make remarks or jokes that show you think someone or something is silly or useless = ↑mock ▪ You shouldn t deride their efforts. deride sb as… … Dictionary of contemporary English
take the mickey (out of somebody) — take the ˈmickey/ˈmick (out of sb) idiom (BrE, informal) to make sb look or feel silly by copying the way they talk, behave, etc. or by making them believe sth that is not true, often in a way that is not intended to be unkind Syn: ↑tease, Syn … Useful english dictionary
take the mick (out of somebody) — take the ˈmickey/ˈmick (out of sb) idiom (BrE, informal) to make sb look or feel silly by copying the way they talk, behave, etc. or by making them believe sth that is not true, often in a way that is not intended to be unkind Syn: ↑tease, Syn … Useful english dictionary