-
1 penetrar
v.1 to pierce, to penetrate (introducirse en) (sujeto: arma, sonido).Los policías penetraron The policemen penetrated.Ella penetró el misterio She penetrated=understood the mystery.El ácido penetra la piel Acid penetrates the skin.La bala penetra la pared The bullet pierces the wall.2 to get to the bottom of (secreto, misterio).3 to penetrate (sexualmente).4 to go deep into, to penetrate.El misil penetró la tierra The missile went deep into the ground.* * *1 (introducirse - en un territorio) to penetrate (en, -); (- en una casa, propiedad) to enter2 (atravesar) to penetrate, seep through1 (atravesar) to penetrate; (ruido) to pierce■ el olor era tan fuerte que penetró la ropa the smell was so strong that it got right into our clothes2 (descifrar - misterio) to get to the bottom of; (- secreto) to fathom (out)* * *verb1) to penetrate2) enter* * *1. VI1) (=entrar)penetraron a través de o por una claraboya — they entered through a skylight
el agua había penetrado a través de o por las paredes — the water had seeped into the walls
penetrar en: penetramos en un túnel — we went into o entered a tunnel
el cuchillo penetró en la carne — the knife went into o entered o penetrated the flesh
2) frm (=descifrar) to penetrate2. VT1) (=atravesar) to go right through2) [sexualmente] to penetrate3) frm (=descubrir) [+ misterio] to fathom; [+ secreto] to unlock; [+ sentido] to grasp; [+ intención] to see through, grasp3.See:* * *1.verbo intransitivoa) ( entrar)penetrar por algo — agua/humedad to seep through something
b) ( en el acto sexual) to penetrate2.penetrar vta) <defensa/membrana> to penetrateb) (liter) <misterio/secreto> to fathom, penetrate (liter)c) (Com) < mercado> to penetrated) ( en el acto sexual) to penetrate* * *= cut through, go into, penetrate, go in, permeate, break through, tread into, seep into, seep through, seep, pervade, see through, insinuate + Reflexivo + (into), insinuate + Posesivo + way through, insinuate into, pierce, intromit.Ex. Publishers attempting to cut through this nomenclature morass can check with the library's administration.Ex. As something you may or may not know, every item going into the processing stream is assigned a priority, and our judgment will in many cases be different from yours, as our needs will be different from yours.Ex. But the leaven of the principles, promulgated by the International Federation, has not yet penetrated into more than half the lump of documentary material.Ex. But in the country the processes of printing always provoke such lively curiosity that the customers preferred to go in by a glazed door set in the shop-front and giving onto the street.Ex. This concept permeates all bibliothecal activities from start to finish, especially indexing and abstracting.Ex. Is there a glass ceiling for librarians? If so, what's the best way to break through it?.Ex. This seems to suggest that Schopenhauer may have trodden much further into the mystics' domain than he is willing to admit.Ex. Rampant commercialism is seeping into every crevice of American culture.Ex. The consequences were beginning to seep through to respondents at the time of the visits made to them and were creating a great deal of concern.Ex. The outer edges of the sheet -- the deckle edges -- are rough and uneven where the stuff seeped between the deckle and the mould.Ex. I strongly believe that we must cultivate a more positive attitude towards change in the field of library work, and that this attitude must pervade all levels of librarianship.Ex. Books can seldom be disbound for the benefit of bibliographers (although it is worth remembering that they sometimes have to be rebound, when they are completely dismembered), but we can now see through printing ink by means of betaradiography.Ex. But self-concern can insinuate itself into every corner of the emotional life.Ex. As they insinuated their way through the stack area, the secretary responded that all she knew was that the director had just returned from a meeting.Ex. While endorsing the thought that language is insinuated into brains, I also identify what I believe is the theory's Achilles heel.Ex. She waited like Saint Sebastian for the arrows to begin piercing her.Ex. During copulation, hamster females maintain lordosis for hundreds of seconds, while the male mounts and intromits repeatedly.----* osar penetrar = venture into.* palabras + penetrar = words + sink.* penetrar de un modo inclinado = slant into.* penetrar una barrera = break through + barrier.* * *1.verbo intransitivoa) ( entrar)penetrar por algo — agua/humedad to seep through something
b) ( en el acto sexual) to penetrate2.penetrar vta) <defensa/membrana> to penetrateb) (liter) <misterio/secreto> to fathom, penetrate (liter)c) (Com) < mercado> to penetrated) ( en el acto sexual) to penetrate* * *= cut through, go into, penetrate, go in, permeate, break through, tread into, seep into, seep through, seep, pervade, see through, insinuate + Reflexivo + (into), insinuate + Posesivo + way through, insinuate into, pierce, intromit.Ex: Publishers attempting to cut through this nomenclature morass can check with the library's administration.
Ex: As something you may or may not know, every item going into the processing stream is assigned a priority, and our judgment will in many cases be different from yours, as our needs will be different from yours.Ex: But the leaven of the principles, promulgated by the International Federation, has not yet penetrated into more than half the lump of documentary material.Ex: But in the country the processes of printing always provoke such lively curiosity that the customers preferred to go in by a glazed door set in the shop-front and giving onto the street.Ex: This concept permeates all bibliothecal activities from start to finish, especially indexing and abstracting.Ex: Is there a glass ceiling for librarians? If so, what's the best way to break through it?.Ex: This seems to suggest that Schopenhauer may have trodden much further into the mystics' domain than he is willing to admit.Ex: Rampant commercialism is seeping into every crevice of American culture.Ex: The consequences were beginning to seep through to respondents at the time of the visits made to them and were creating a great deal of concern.Ex: The outer edges of the sheet -- the deckle edges -- are rough and uneven where the stuff seeped between the deckle and the mould.Ex: I strongly believe that we must cultivate a more positive attitude towards change in the field of library work, and that this attitude must pervade all levels of librarianship.Ex: Books can seldom be disbound for the benefit of bibliographers (although it is worth remembering that they sometimes have to be rebound, when they are completely dismembered), but we can now see through printing ink by means of betaradiography.Ex: But self-concern can insinuate itself into every corner of the emotional life.Ex: As they insinuated their way through the stack area, the secretary responded that all she knew was that the director had just returned from a meeting.Ex: While endorsing the thought that language is insinuated into brains, I also identify what I believe is the theory's Achilles heel.Ex: She waited like Saint Sebastian for the arrows to begin piercing her.Ex: During copulation, hamster females maintain lordosis for hundreds of seconds, while the male mounts and intromits repeatedly.* osar penetrar = venture into.* palabras + penetrar = words + sink.* penetrar de un modo inclinado = slant into.* penetrar una barrera = break through + barrier.* * *penetrar [A1 ]vi1(en un lugar): la puerta por donde penetró el ladrón the door through which the thief enteredel agua penetraba por entre las tejas water was seeping in o coming in between the tilesuna luz tenue penetraba a través de los visillos a pale light filtered in through the lace curtainsun intenso olor penetraba por todos los rincones de la casa a pungent smell pervaded every corner of the housepenetrar EN algo:la bala penetró en el pulmón izquierdo the bullet pierced his left lungtropas enemigas han penetrado en nuestras fronteras enemy troops have pushed over o crossed o penetrated our bordershace un frío que penetra en los huesos the cold gets right into your bonesla humedad había penetrado en las paredes the damp had seeped into the wallsesta crema penetra rápidamente en la piel this cream is quickly absorbed by the skin2 (descubrir, descifrar) penetrar EN algo:intenta penetrar en la intimidad del personaje he attempts to delve into the personality of the characteres difícil penetrar en su mente it is difficult to fathom his thoughts o ( colloq) to get inside his head3 (en un mercado) penetrar EN algo to penetrate sth4 (en el acto sexual) to penetrate■ penetrarvt1 (atravesar) to penetrateun ruido que penetra los oídos a piercing o ear-splitting noisees difícil penetrar la corteza it is difficult to penetrate o get through the outer layer2 ‹misterio/secreto› to fathom3 ( Com) ‹mercado› to penetrate4 (en el acto sexual) to penetrate* * *
penetrar ( conjugate penetrar) verbo intransitivo ( entrar) penetrar por algo [agua/humedad] to seep through sth;
[ luz] to shine through sth;
[ ladrón] to enter through sth;
penetrar EN algo to penetrate sth
verbo transitivo
to penetrate;◊ la bala le penetró el pulmón the bullet penetrated o entered his lung
penetrar
I verbo transitivo to penetrate: el aceite penetró el tejido y no pude sacar la mancha, the oil went straight through the material and I couldn't get it out
era incapaz de penetrar el sentido de sus palabras, it was impossible to get to the bottom of his meaning
un intenso olor penetraba el lugar, a strong smell seeped through the place
II vi (en un recinto) to go o get [en, in]: un frente frío penetrará por el noroeste, a cold front will sweep over from the north-east
el veneno penetró en la piel, the poison was soaked in through the skin
' penetrar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
calar
- internarse
English:
come through
- penetrate
- pierce
- sink in
- soak in
- strike through
- break
* * *♦ viel agua penetraba por la puerta the water was seeping under the door;la luz penetraba por entre las rendijas the light came filtering through the cracks;[filtrarse por] to get into, to penetrate; [perforar] to pierce; [llegar a conocer] to get to the bottom of;cinco terroristas penetraron en el palacio five terrorists got into the palace;no consiguen penetrar en el mercado europeo they have been unable to penetrate the European market♦ vt1. [introducirse en] [sujeto: arma, sonido] to pierce, to penetrate;[sujeto: humedad, líquido] to permeate; [sujeto: emoción, sentimiento] to pierce;la bala le penetró el corazón the bullet pierced her heart;el frío les penetraba hasta los huesos they were chilled to the bone;el grito le penetró los oídos the scream pierced her eardrums;han penetrado el mercado latinoamericano they have made inroads into o penetrated the Latin American market2. [secreto, misterio] to get to the bottom of3. [sexualmente] to penetrate* * *I v/t penetrateII v/i1 ( atravesar) penetrate2 ( entrar) enter* * *penetrar vi1) : to penetrate, to sink in2)penetrar por orpenetrar en : to pierce, to go in, to enter intoel frío penetra por la ventana: the cold comes right in through the windowpenetrar vt1) : to penetrate, to permeate2) : to pierceel dolor penetró su corazón: sorrow pierced her heart3) : to fathom, to understand* * *penetrar vb1. (entrar) to get into2. (perforar) to penetrate / to pierce -
2 cuore
m heartdi cuore wholeheartedlysenza cuore heartlessfig nel cuore di in the heart ofnel cuore della notte in the middle of the nightstare a cuore a qualcuno be very important to s.o.* * *cuore s.m.1 (anat.) heart: attacco di cuore, heart attack; trapianto di cuore, heart transplant; mal di cuore, heart disease; battito di cuore, heartbeat; intervento a cuore aperto, open-heart operation; soffrire di cuore, to have heart disease; avere un soffio al cuore, to have a heart murmur; cuore artificiale, artificial heart2 ( centro) centre, heart; core: il cuore del carciofo, the heart of the artichoke; il cuore di un frutto, the core of a fruit; nel cuore dell'Africa, in the heart (o centre) of Africa; nel cuore della città, della foresta, in the heart of the city, of the forest; il duomo è il cuore della città, the cathedral is the heart of the city // nel cuore dell'estate, at the height of summer; nel cuore dell'inverno, in the depths of winter; nel cuore della notte, at dead of night (o in the middle of the night)3 ( oggetto a forma di cuore) heart, heart-shaped object: un biglietto di auguri a forma di cuore, a heart-shaped greeting card◆ FRASEOLOGIA: a cuore leggero, light-heartedly; di cuore, heartily: vi ringraziamo di cuore, we are very grateful to you; ridere di cuore, to laugh heartily; di buon cuore, whole-heartedly (o very willingly o gladly o with pleasure); di tutto cuore, with all one's heart (o whole-heartedly), ( molto volentieri) most willingly; del cuore, favourite: la squadra del cuore, one's favourite team; nel profondo del cuore, in one's heart of hearts; pace del cuore, peace of mind; una persona di buon cuore, a person with a kind heart (o a kind-hearted person); uomo dal cuore di coniglio, chicken-hearted man; uomo dal cuore di leone, lion-hearted man; uomo senza cuore, dal cuore di pietra, dal cuore di tigre, heartless man (o hard-hearted man); col cuore in gola, with one's heart in one's mouth; la squadra ha giocato col cuore, the team put their hearts into the game; il cuore mi dice che è salvo, I feel in my heart that he is safe; avresti cuore di licenziarlo?, would you have the heart to sack him?; la cosa mi sta a cuore, I have the matter at heart; è una vista che fa male al cuore, it is a sickening sight; se lo strinse al cuore, she clasped him to her heart; mi fa bene al cuore vederti, it does my heart good to see you; il mio cuore batte forte, my heart is thumping; sentì un tuffo al cuore, his heart missed a beat; mi si stringe il cuore a doverglielo dire, it wrings my heart to have to tell him; non ebbe il cuore di farlo, he hadn't the heart to do it; parola che viene dal cuore, word from the heart (o heartfelt word) // aprire il proprio cuore a qlcu., to open one's heart to s.o.; avere il cuore gonfio, to be heavy-hearted (o sad at heart); avere il cuore volubile, to be giddy of heart; avere la morte nel cuore, to be heart-sick (o sick at heart); conquistare il cuore di qlcu., to win s.o.'s heart (o love); dare il proprio cuore a qlcu., to give one's heart to s.o.; farsi cuore, to take heart; leggere nel cuore di qlcu., to see into s.o.'s heart; mettersi il cuore in pace, to resign oneself; mettersi una mano sul cuore, to put one's hand on one's heart; parlare a cuore aperto, to speak without reserve (o freely); prendere qlco. a cuore, to take sthg. to heart; sentirsi allargare il cuore a qlco., to be overjoyed at sthg.; spezzare il cuore a qlcu., to break s.o.'s heart; toccare il cuore di qlcu., to touch s.o.'s heart (o to move s.o.) // il cuore non sbaglia, (prov.) the heart is wiser than the head // freddo di mano, caldo di cuore, (prov.) a cold hand and a warm heart // lontan dagli occhi, lontan dal cuore, (prov.) out of sight, out of mind.* * *['kwɔre] 1.sostantivo maschile1) (organo) heartintervento a cuore aperto — med. open-heart surgery
a (forma di) cuore — heart-shaped, in the shape of a heart
2) (petto) heart, breaststringere qcn. al, sul cuore — to clasp sb. to one's heart
3) (sede delle emozioni) heartavere buon cuore — to be all heart o great-hearted, to have a big heart
con tutto il cuore — [amare, desiderare] with all one's heart
avere il cuore infranto, a pezzi — to be heartbroken o broken-hearted, to have a broken heart
4) (persona)5) (coraggio) heart6) (parte centrale) (di carciofo, lattuga, ecc.) heart; (di problema, questione) core, heart; (di luogo, città) heart, centre BE, center AEnel cuore della notte — in the middle of the night, in the o at dead of night
nel cuore della giungla — in the heart of the jungle, deep in the jungle
7) a cuoreprendere a cuore qcs. — to take sth. to heart
prendere a cuore qcn. — to take sb. to one's bosom
8) di cuore2.••avere un cuore di pietra — to have a heart of stone, to be stony-hearted o hard-hearted o iron-hearted
avere il cuore di ghiaccio — to be cold-hearted, to have a cold heart
avere il cuore tenero — to be soft-hearted o tenderhearted
non avere, essere senza cuore — to have no heart, to be heartless
parlare a cuore aperto, con il cuore in mano — to have a heart-to-heart, to wear one's heart on one's sleeve
mi si stringe il cuore quando... — I feel a pang when...
a cuor leggero — with a light heart, light-heartedly, carelessly
mettersi il cuore in pace — = to resign oneself
* * *cuore/'kwɔre/ ⇒ 4I sostantivo m.1 (organo) heart; le batteva forte il cuore her heart was thudding; essere debole di cuore to have a bad heart; attacco di cuore heart attack; intervento a cuore aperto med. open-heart surgery; a (forma di) cuore heart-shaped, in the shape of a heart2 (petto) heart, breast; stringere qcn. al, sul cuore to clasp sb. to one's heart3 (sede delle emozioni) heart; amico del cuore bosom friend; avere buon cuore to be all heart o great-hearted, to have a big heart; dal profondo del cuore from the bottom of one's heart; con tutto il cuore [amare, desiderare] with all one's heart; in cuor mio in my heart (of hearts); avere il cuore infranto, a pezzi to be heartbroken o broken-hearted, to have a broken heart; affari di cuore affairs of the heart4 (persona) un cuore di coniglio a hen-hearted person; un cuor di leone a lion-hearted person; cuore solitario lonely heart5 (coraggio) heart; non ho avuto il cuore di rifiutare I didn't have the heart to refuse6 (parte centrale) (di carciofo, lattuga, ecc.) heart; (di problema, questione) core, heart; (di luogo, città) heart, centre BE, center AE; nel cuore della notte in the middle of the night, in the o at dead of night; nel cuore dell'inverno in the depths of winter; nel cuore della giungla in the heart of the jungle, deep in the jungle7 a cuore prendere a cuore qcs. to take sth. to heart; prendere a cuore qcn. to take sb. to one's bosom; il progetto gli sta a cuore the project is dear to his heartII cuori m.pl.avere un cuore di pietra to have a heart of stone, to be stony-hearted o hard-hearted o iron-hearted; avere il cuore di ghiaccio to be cold-hearted, to have a cold heart; avere il cuore tenero to be soft-hearted o tenderhearted; aveva un cuore d'oro to have a heart of gold; non avere, essere senza cuore to have no heart, to be heartless; aveva il cuore in gola his heart was in his mouth; parlare a cuore aperto, con il cuore in mano to have a heart-to-heart, to wear one's heart on one's sleeve; mi si stringe il cuore quando... I feel a pang when...; a cuor leggero with a light heart, light-heartedly, carelessly; mettersi il cuore in pace = to resign oneself; due -i e una capanna love in a cottage.
См. также в других словарях:
The Amanda Show — Format Sketch comedy Variety show Created by Dan Schneider Starring Amanda Bynes … Wikipedia
Dare to be Scared — … Wikipedia
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll — is an unordered list of 500 songs, created by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, that they believe have been most influential in shaping the course of rock and roll, though some of them belong to different styles even after the consolidation of rock … Wikipedia
The Thin Red Line (1998 film) — Infobox Film name = Thin Red Line image size = caption = Theatrical poster director = Terrence Malick producer = Robert Michael Geisler Grant Hill John Roberdeau writer = Screenplay: Terrence Malick Novel: James Jones narrator = starring = Sean… … Wikipedia
List of The Nostalgia Critic episodes — The Nostalgia Critic is a Web review series hosted by Doug Walker. The series began in July 2007 on YouTube, but after having a large amount of his episodes removed from YouTube, those, along with new ones, started appearing in April 2008 on… … Wikipedia
The Replacements (TV series) — This article is about the TV series The Replacements. For other uses, see The Replacements. The Replacements Logo Format Animated television series … Wikipedia
Timeline of the 2007 Burmese anti-government protests — This article details the chronology of events in the 2007 Burmese anti government protests. Timeline ProloguePrior to the summer protests, there had been growing unease in the population regarding the economic distress of the country which has… … Wikipedia
Desmond Hume — Henry Ian Cusick as Desmond Hume First appearance Man of Science, Man of Faith Centric episode(s) Live Together, Die Alone Flashes Before Your Eyes … Wikipedia
Prayers to Broken Stones — infobox Book | name = Prayers to Broken Stones title orig = translator = image caption = author = Dan Simmons illustrator = cover artist = Gary Ruddell country = United States language = English series = Multiple genre = Science fiction, Horror,… … Wikipedia
Nanyue — For other uses, see Nanyue (disambiguation). Nanyue 南越国 ← … Wikipedia
List of Rugrats episodes — The following is a list of episodes from the American animated series Rugrats. The show first aired on Sunday, August 11, 1991. The first three seasons aired between 1991 1994. The series returned with two Jewish holiday specials in May 1995 and… … Wikipedia