-
1 debilitarse
1 to weaken, get weak, become weak* * *VPR1) [persona] to grow weaker, weaken2) [voz, luz] to grow o become fainter* * *(v.) = become + brittle, languishEx. The quality of the paper is often poor and it yellows and becomes brittle with age.Ex. Whereas in most European countries during this period welfare provision continued to develop, in Australia it languished at a level which, with the exception of Japan, was the meanest of the developed countries.* * *(v.) = become + brittle, languishEx: The quality of the paper is often poor and it yellows and becomes brittle with age.
Ex: Whereas in most European countries during this period welfare provision continued to develop, in Australia it languished at a level which, with the exception of Japan, was the meanest of the developed countries.* * *
■debilitarse verbo reflexivo to weaken, grow weak
' debilitarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
resentirse
- debilitar
- flojear
English:
dim
- weaken
- fade
- weak
* * *vpr1. [enfermo, organismo] to grow weaker;[salud] to deteriorate2. [voluntad, moral] to grow weaker, to weaken3. [gobierno, moneda, economía] to become o grow weak4. [voz, sonido] to grow fainter;[luz] to grow dimmer o fainter* * *v/r weaken, become weaker; de salud deteriorate* * *vr -
2 debilitarse
-
3 debilitarse
• become weak• get washed down• get wealthy• grow upon• grow weaker and weaker• lose strength• wilt -
4 debilitar
v.to weaken.Las drogas debilitan la mente Drugs weaken the mind.La falta de ejercicio debilita el cuerpo Lack of exercise weakens the body* * *1 to weaken, debilitate1 to weaken, get weak, become weak* * *verb* * *1. VT1) (Med) [+ persona, sistema inmunológico] to weaken, debilitate; [+ salud] to weaken2) [+ resistencia] to weaken, impair2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) < persona> to weaken, debilitate; <salud/voluntad> to weakenb) <economía/defensa> to weaken, debilitate2.debilitarse v pronb) sonido to get o become faint/fainterc) economía to grow o become weak/weaker* * *= undermine, weaken, attenuate, undercut, lay + Nombre + low.Ex. Furthermore, the value of citation bibliometry is currently being undermined by the formation of 'citation clubs', which aim to indiscriminately achieve maximum cross-citing between 'club members'.Ex. The gangplank can be thrown across without weakening the chain of command.Ex. In the emerging technological environment of distributed systems, however, the informal or even formal links between source and user are attenuated or broken.Ex. The effects of liberalization threaten to undercut the delivery of a long cherished social objective.Ex. She suffered frequent flare-ups of widespread inflammation that would lay her low for days on end.----* debilitarse = become + brittle, languish.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) < persona> to weaken, debilitate; <salud/voluntad> to weakenb) <economía/defensa> to weaken, debilitate2.debilitarse v pronb) sonido to get o become faint/fainterc) economía to grow o become weak/weaker* * *= undermine, weaken, attenuate, undercut, lay + Nombre + low.Ex: Furthermore, the value of citation bibliometry is currently being undermined by the formation of 'citation clubs', which aim to indiscriminately achieve maximum cross-citing between 'club members'.
Ex: The gangplank can be thrown across without weakening the chain of command.Ex: In the emerging technological environment of distributed systems, however, the informal or even formal links between source and user are attenuated or broken.Ex: The effects of liberalization threaten to undercut the delivery of a long cherished social objective.Ex: She suffered frequent flare-ups of widespread inflammation that would lay her low for days on end.* debilitarse = become + brittle, languish.* * *debilitar [A1 ]vt1 ‹persona› to weaken, debilitate; ‹salud› to weakenla quimioterapia lo ha ido debilitando he's become weaker and weaker with the chemotherapy, the chemotherapy has made him increasingly weak o has gradually weakened o debilitated himcontribuyó a debilitar su salud mental it contributed to the deterioration of his mental state2 ‹voluntad› to weaken3 ‹economía/defensa› to weaken, debilitate1 «persona» to become weak; «salud» to deterioratese debilitó mucho con la enfermedad the illness made him very weak, he was debilitated by the illness, he became very weak as a result of the illness2 «voluntad» to weaken3 «sonido» to get o become faint/fainter4 «economía» to grow o become weak/weaker* * *
debilitar ( conjugate debilitar) verbo transitivo
to weaken
debilitarse verbo pronominal
[ salud] to deteriorate;
[ voluntad] to weaken
debilitar verbo transitivo to weaken, debilitate: la operación le ha debilitado, the operation left her feeling weak
su opción debilita la posición alemana, her decision undermines the German position
' debilitar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
enervar
- minar
- desgastar
English:
chip away
- debilitate
- shake
- soften up
- weaken
* * *♦ vt1. [enfermo, organismo] to weaken;[salud] to weaken, to undermine2. [voluntad, moral] to weaken, to undermine3. [gobierno, moneda, economía] to weaken, to debilitate;este escándalo puede debilitar al ministro this scandal could weaken the minister's position* * *v/t weaken* * *debilitar vt: to debilitate, to weaken* * *debilitar vb to weaken -
5 flojear
v.1 to weaken (piernas, fuerzas).me flojeaban las fuerzas I was feeling weakle flojea la memoria his memory is going o failing2 to laze about or around (informal) (no hacer nada). (Andean Spanish (Bolivia, Chilean Spanish, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru))3 to ease up, to fall off, to let up, to falter.4 to lose.Te flojea la energía You lose energy.* * *1 (disminuir) to fall off, go down2 (debilitarse) to weaken, grow weak* * *VI1) (=debilitarse)2) (=flaquear)* * *verbo intransitivoa) ( debilitarse) to grow o get weakb) (fam) ( holgazanear) to laze around* * *= loaf (about/around), laze (about/around), lounge (about/around), bum around.Ex. The less you work, the less you spend and the more time you have for loafing about.Ex. In the afternoon quite a few of our mob decided that they would prefer to spend a bit of time lazing about in the water and soaking up a few rays.Ex. He spends all his time lounging around the house, driving his parents to despair.Ex. He spent his early twenties bumming around the world and became fascinated by the differences and similarities in all of us.* * *verbo intransitivoa) ( debilitarse) to grow o get weakb) (fam) ( holgazanear) to laze around* * *= loaf (about/around), laze (about/around), lounge (about/around), bum around.Ex: The less you work, the less you spend and the more time you have for loafing about.
Ex: In the afternoon quite a few of our mob decided that they would prefer to spend a bit of time lazing about in the water and soaking up a few rays.Ex: He spends all his time lounging around the house, driving his parents to despair.Ex: He spent his early twenties bumming around the world and became fascinated by the differences and similarities in all of us.* * *flojear [A1 ]vi1 (debilitarse) to grow o get weakme flojean las piernas my legs are getting weaknos flojeaban las fuerzas our strength was ebbing away, we were getting weaker o flagging2 ( fam) (holgazanear) to laze around* * *
flojear ( conjugate flojear) verbo intransitivo
flojear verbo intransitivo
1 (ir mal) to fall off, go down
(estar débil, flaquear) to weaken, grow weak
(memoria) to fail
2 (actuar con desgana) to slack
' flojear' also found in these entries:
English:
slacken off
- slack
* * *flojear vi1. [piernas, fuerzas] to weaken;[película, libro] to flag; [calor, trabajo] to ease off; [ventas] to fall off;me flojeaban las fuerzas I was feeling weak;le flojea la memoria his memory is going o failing;flojea especialmente en literatura she is especially weak in literaturepasamos el domingo entero flojeando we just lazed about o around all Sunday* * *v/i weaken, become oget weak* * *flojear vi1) debilitarse: to weaken, to flag2) : to idle, to loaf around* * * -
6 depauperar
v.1 to debilitate, to weaken (físicamente) (person).La depresión depaupera al organismo Depression weakens the organism.2 to impoverish.La inflación depaupera al pueblo Inflation impoverishes the people.* * *1 formal (empobrecer) to impoverish2 MEDICINA (debilitar) to weaken1 (empobrecerse) to impoverish2 MEDICINA (debilitarse) to weaken* * *1. VT1) (=empobrecer) to impoverish2) (=debilitar) to weaken2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo (frml) to impoverish2.depauperarse v pron (frml)a) ( empobrecerse) to become impoverishedb) ( debilitarse) to become weak o (frml) debilitated* * *= depauperate.Ex. These have also been responsible for depauperating both numbers and species of pollinators within agricultural environments.* * *1.verbo transitivo (frml) to impoverish2.depauperarse v pron (frml)a) ( empobrecerse) to become impoverishedb) ( debilitarse) to become weak o (frml) debilitated* * *= depauperate.Ex: These have also been responsible for depauperating both numbers and species of pollinators within agricultural environments.
* * *depauperar [A1 ]vt( frml); to impoverish( frml)1 (empobrecerse) to become impoverished2 (debilitarse) to become weak o ( frml) debilitated* * *♦ vt1. [físicamente] [persona] to debilitate, to weaken;[salud] to undermine2. [económicamente] to impoverish* * *v/t impoverish -
7 resentirse
pron.v.1 to be weakened.2 to be offended.* * *1 (sentirse) to suffer (de, from), feel the effects (de, of)■ me resiento del tobillo my ankle hurts, I have a sore ankle2 (flaquear) to be weakened3 figurado (enojarse) to become resentful, feel resentment\resentirse con/contra alguien figurado to bear somebody resentmentresentirse por algo figurado to take offence (US offense) at something* * *verb1) to suffer2) be hurt* * *VPR1) (=estar resentido)resentirse con o por algo — to resent sth, feel bitter about sth
2) (=debilitarse) to be weakened, suffercon los años se resintió su salud — his health suffered o was affected over the years
3) (=sentir)resentirse de — [+ defecto] to suffer from
* * *verbo pronominal1)a) ( sentir dolor)resentirse DE algo: aún se resiente de la lesión he is still suffering the effects of the injury; ya no me resiento de la espalda my back doesn't give me trouble any more (colloq); aún se resienten de la derrota — they're still smarting from the defeat
b) ( sufrir las consecuencias) to suffer2) (ofenderse, molestarse) to get upset* * *(v.) = smart, grudge, piqueEx. The Soviet hosts, meanwhile, still smarting over myriad implications of inferiority, found themselves in the novel position of being expected to instruct and enlighten Westerners.Ex. He did not grudge them the money, but he grudged terribly the risk which the spending of that money might bring on them.Ex. In one interview, piqued by this recurrent comment on his Irishness, he pointed out that he came not from idyllic emerald green surroundings.* * *verbo pronominal1)a) ( sentir dolor)resentirse DE algo: aún se resiente de la lesión he is still suffering the effects of the injury; ya no me resiento de la espalda my back doesn't give me trouble any more (colloq); aún se resienten de la derrota — they're still smarting from the defeat
b) ( sufrir las consecuencias) to suffer2) (ofenderse, molestarse) to get upset* * *(v.) = smart, grudge, piqueEx: The Soviet hosts, meanwhile, still smarting over myriad implications of inferiority, found themselves in the novel position of being expected to instruct and enlighten Westerners.
Ex: He did not grudge them the money, but he grudged terribly the risk which the spending of that money might bring on them.Ex: In one interview, piqued by this recurrent comment on his Irishness, he pointed out that he came not from idyllic emerald green surroundings.* * *resentirse [ I11 ]A1 (sentir dolor) resentirse DE algo:todavía se resiente de aquella lesión he is still feeling o suffering the effects of that injuryya no me resiento de la espalda my back doesn't give me trouble any more, my back doesn't play me up any more ( colloq)todavía se resienten de aquella derrota they're still smarting from that defeat2 (sufrir las consecuencias) to suffersu salud se resentía con el exceso de trabajo the excessive workload was telling on his health o was taking its toll on his health, his health was suffering because he was overworkingsu trabajo no se resentía his work didn't suffer, it didn't affect his workse resentiría el sabor the flavor would suffer o would be affected, it would spoil the flavorB (ofenderse, molestarse) to get upsetse resintió mucho porque no lo invitaron he was very put out o offended o upset that they didn't invite him* * *
resentirse ( conjugate resentirse) verbo pronominala) ( sentir dolor):
aún se resienten de la derrota they're still smarting from the defeat
resentirse verbo reflexivo
1 (volver a sentir dolor por una antigua dolencia) to suffer [de, from], to feel the (after-) effects [de, of]: aún se resiente del golpe en la cadera, she's still feeling the effects of having bumped her thigh
2 (debilitarse) to weaken
3 (ofenderse) to feel offended
resentirse por algo, to take offence at sthg o to feel bitter about sthg
' resentirse' also found in these entries:
English:
smart
- suffer
* * *resentirse vpr1. [debilitarse] to be weakened;[salud] to deteriorate;la calidad de su trabajo se resintió por la falta de motivación her work deteriorated through lack of motivationaún se resiente de aquel golpe she's still suffering from the effects of that blow;se resiente de la rodilla he's got a bad knee, his knee is giving him trouble3. [ofenderse] to be offended* * *v/r1 get upset;resentirse con alguien feel resentful toward s.o.resentirse de algo suffer from the effects of sth* * *resentirse {76} vr1) : to suffer, to be weakened2) ofenderse: to be upsetse resintió porque la insultaron: she got upset when they insulted her, she resented being insulted3)resentirse de : to feel the effects of -
8 depauperarse
1 (empobrecerse) to impoverish2 MEDICINA (debilitarse) to weaken* * *VPR1) (=empobrecerse) to become impoverished2) (=debilitarse) to become weak* * *vpr1. [físicamente] [persona] to become debilitated;[salud] to be undermined2. [económicamente] to become poorer* * *v/r become impoverished -
9 decaer
v.1 to decline.¡que no decaiga! don't lose heart!su belleza no ha decaído con los años her beauty has not faded with the yearsLa intensidad decae con el tiempo Intensity wanes in time.2 to decay, to fall into decline.El entusiasmo decayó desde el evento Enthusiasm decayed since the event.3 to be losing.Nos decayó el juego We were losing the game.4 to decrease, to dwindle.Me decayó el negocio My business decreased.* * *1 (perder fuerzas) to weaken; (- entusiasmo, interés) to flag; (- salud) to go down, deteriorate, decay; (- belleza etc) to lose2 (imperio, costumbre) to decay3 (fiebre) to go down4 (negocio) to fall off, decline5 (ánimo) to lose heart* * *verb1) to decline, decay2) weaken* * *VI1) [imperio, país] to declinedesde que cerraron la fábrica el pueblo ha decaído — since they closed the factory the town has gone downhill
2) (=disminuir) [entusiasmo, interés] to wane, fade (away); [esperanzas] to fade¡ánimo, que no decaiga! — bear up, don't lose heart!
¡que no decaiga la fiesta! — come on, let's keep the party going!
3) (=empeorar) [salud] to fail, decline; [enfermo] to deteriorate, fail4) (Com) [demanda] to fall off; [calidad] to decline, fall off5)decaer en algo: ha decaído en belleza — her beauty has faded
su fuerza dramática decae en intensidad al final — its dramatic force declines in intensity at the end
6) (Náut) to drift, drift off course* * *verbo intransitivoa) ánimo/fuerzas to flag; interés/popularidad to waneb) barrio/restaurante to go downhill; calidad/prestigio to declinec) imperio/civilización to decay, declined) enfermo to deteriorate* * *= lapse, flag, ebb.Ex. The first weeks are vital, and after that the shop must be constantly on the lookout for ways of stimulating further interest and re-awakening those who lapse.Ex. But more mature readers can be expected to go on reading for full sessions without flagging, a point that most children should reach by ten years old.Ex. Subsequently, library development stalled as cultural interaction ebbed from classical levels.----* interés + decaer = interest + flag.* * *verbo intransitivoa) ánimo/fuerzas to flag; interés/popularidad to waneb) barrio/restaurante to go downhill; calidad/prestigio to declinec) imperio/civilización to decay, declined) enfermo to deteriorate* * *= lapse, flag, ebb.Ex: The first weeks are vital, and after that the shop must be constantly on the lookout for ways of stimulating further interest and re-awakening those who lapse.
Ex: But more mature readers can be expected to go on reading for full sessions without flagging, a point that most children should reach by ten years old.Ex: Subsequently, library development stalled as cultural interaction ebbed from classical levels.* interés + decaer = interest + flag.* * *vi1 «ánimo/fuerzas» to flag; «interés/popularidad» to wane, fall off, diminish¡que no decaiga! keep it up!el ritmo de trabajo ha decaído considerablemente the work rate has fallen off o declined considerably2 «barrio/restaurante» to go downhill; «calidad/popularidad» to declineel prestigio de la compañía ha decaído mucho the company's prestige has declined o waned considerably3 «imperio/civilización» to decay, decline4 «enfermo» to deteriorate* * *
decaer ( conjugate decaer) verbo intransitivo
[ enfermo] to deteriorate;
[interés/popularidad] to waneb) [barrio/restaurante] to go downhill;
[calidad/prestigio] to decline
decaer verbo intransitivo
1 (la energía, la salud, etc) to deteriorate
2 (en fuerza, intensidad) to decline: la minería ha decaído mucho en la última década, the mining industry has been in decline for the last ten years
' decaer' also found in these entries:
English:
decline
- fall off
- flag
- lapse
- sag
- slip
- slump
- wane
- decay
- decrease
- droop
- ebb
- fade
- fall
- falter
- rot
- sink
- slacken
- subside
- taper
* * *decaer vi1. [debilitarse] to decline;[actividad, ritmo, trabajo] to fall off, to slacken; [entusiasmo, ánimos, energías] to flag; [interés, fama] to decline, to wane;su belleza no ha decaído con los años her beauty has not faded with age;¡que no decaiga! don't lose heart!2. [imperio, sociedad] to decline;[empresa, establecimiento, zona] to go downhill;la fiesta fue decayendo the party gradually fizzled out3. [enfermo] to get weaker;[salud] to fail* * ** * *decaer {13} vi1) : to decline, to decay, to deteriorate2) flaquear: to weaken, to flag -
10 desfallecer
v.1 to be exhausted.desfallecer de to feel faint from2 to faint.3 to pine, to fall away, to grow weak.4 to weaken, to debilitate.5 to pass out, to faint, to pine away, to waver.* * *1 (disminuir las fuerzas) to weaken1 (debilitar) to weaken, lose strength2 (decaer) to lose heart* * *VI1) (=perder las fuerzas) to get weak2) (=desmayarse) to faint* * *verbo intransitivosintió desfallecer su ánimo — she felt her spirits falling o flagging
b) ( desmayarse) to faint, pass outdesfallecía de agotamiento/hambre — he was faint with exhaustion/hunger
* * *= faint.Ex. The article 'Reeling and writhing and fainting' outlines the problems encountered by illustrators of books.----* no desfallecer = keep up.* * *verbo intransitivosintió desfallecer su ánimo — she felt her spirits falling o flagging
b) ( desmayarse) to faint, pass outdesfallecía de agotamiento/hambre — he was faint with exhaustion/hunger
* * *= faint.Ex: The article 'Reeling and writhing and fainting' outlines the problems encountered by illustrators of books.
* no desfallecer = keep up.* * *desfallecer [E3 ]vi1 (flaquear) «persona» to become weak; «fuerzas» to fade, failsintió desfallecer su ánimo she felt her spirits flagginglucharon sin desfallecer they fought tirelessly2 (desmayarse) to faint, pass outestaba que desfallecía de agotamiento/hambre he was almost fainting o passing out with exhaustion/hunger, he was faint with exhaustion/hunger* * *
desfallecer ( conjugate desfallecer) verbo intransitivo
[ fuerzas] to fade, fail;
[ ánimos] to flag;
desfallecer verbo intransitivo
1 (de hambre, cansancio) to feel faint
(perder el conocimiento) to faint
2 (perder el ánimo, abatirse) to lose heart
' desfallecer' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
abandonar
English:
droop
- flag
* * *desfallecer vi1. [debilitarse] to begin to flag;no desfallezcas, queda poco para llegar don't give up, we're almost there;desfallecíamos de hambre we were faint o fainting with hunger;sin desfallecer without flagging2. [desmayarse] to faint;me sentía desfallecer I felt that I was going to faint* * *v/i faint;sus fuerzas desfallecieron fig he lost heart* * *desfallecer {53} vi1) : to weaken2) : to faint -
11 desgastar
v.1 to wear out.2 to wear down, to fret, to eat away, to rub away.El roce desgasta el cuero Friction wears down leather.3 to exhaust, to play out.El acoso desgasta la mente Harassment exhausts the mind.4 to tire out, to drain.* * *2 (erosionar) to erode3 figurado (debilitar) to weaken1 (gastarse) to wear out, get worn2 figurado (debilitarse) to weaken* * *verbto wear out, wear down* * *1. VT1) [+ ropa, zapatos, tejido, moqueta, neumático] to wear out; [+ tacones, suela] to wear down; [+ superficie] to wear away2) [+ rival, contrincante] to wear down2.VI (=debilitar)veinte años de poder desgastan — after twenty years in power you get stale o run out of steam
3.See:* * *1.verbo transitivob) ( debilitar) to wear... down2.desgastarse v pron* * *= wear out, eat away at.Ex. What we really want is a product that wears out from use over a reasonable amount of time.Ex. Rather than catalog departments going out of business, they could turn their attention once again to cataloging special local materials, eating away at store-rooms of uncataloged materials, and making their collections as a whole more responsive to their local constituency.----* desgastarse = wear off.* no desgastarse fácilmente = wear + well.* sin desgastar = unworn.* * *1.verbo transitivob) ( debilitar) to wear... down2.desgastarse v pron* * *= wear out, eat away at.Ex: What we really want is a product that wears out from use over a reasonable amount of time.
Ex: Rather than catalog departments going out of business, they could turn their attention once again to cataloging special local materials, eating away at store-rooms of uncataloged materials, and making their collections as a whole more responsive to their local constituency.* desgastarse = wear off.* no desgastarse fácilmente = wear + well.* sin desgastar = unworn.* * *desgastar [A1 ]vt1 (gastar) ‹suelas/ropa› to wear out; ‹roca› to wear away, erode2 (debilitar) to wear … down1 (gastarse) «ropa» to wear out; «roca» to wear away; «tacón» to wear down2 «persona» to wear oneself out; «relación» to grow stale* * *
desgastar ( conjugate desgastar) verbo transitivo
‹ roca› to wear away, erode
desgastarse verbo pronominal
[ roca] to wear away;
[ tacón] to wear down
[ relación] to grow stale
desgastar verbo transitivo to wear out
' desgastar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
gastar
English:
eat away
- erode
- wear
- wear away
- weather
* * *♦ vt1. [suela, neumático] to wear down;[puño, cuerda] to fray; [roca] to wear away;han desgastado la tapicería del sofá con sus juegos they've caused a lot of wear on the upholstery of the sofa with their playing on it2. [persona] to wear out;[organización] to weaken* * *v/t1 zapatos wear out2 defensas wear down* * *desgastar vt1) : to use up2) : to wear away, to wear down* * * -
12 desgastarse
1 (gastarse) to wear out, get worn2 figurado (debilitarse) to weaken* * *VPR1) (=gastarse) [ropa, zapatos, tejido, neumático] to wear out; [tacones, suela, grada] to wear down; [superficie, roca] to wear away2) (=agotarse) [persona] to wear o.s. out* * *(v.) = wear offEx. We're all familiar with the idea of novelty value and how it wears off with time.* * *(v.) = wear offEx: We're all familiar with the idea of novelty value and how it wears off with time.
* * *
■desgastarse verbo reflexivo
1 (una prenda, un instrumento) to wear out
2 (una persona) to wear oneself out
' desgastarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
deteriorarse
- gastarse
- desgastar
- gastar
- quemar
English:
wear
- wear away
- wear down
- wear off
- weather
* * *vpr1. [suela, neumático] to wear down;[puño, cuerda] to fray; [roca] to wear away; [tela] to become worn2. [persona] to become worn out;[organización] to become ineffective* * *v/r figwear o.s. out -
13 deshacerse
2 (disolverse) to dissolve; (derretirse) to melt3 (desaparecer) to disappear, fade away4 (afligirse) to go to pieces, be shattered5 (librarse) to get rid (de, of)6 (agotarse) to break one's back, wear oneself out7 (desvivirse) to go out of one's way ( por, to), bend over backwards* * ** * *VPR1) (=separarse) [nudo] to come undone, come untied; [costura] to come undone, split; [moño, trenza] to come undone2) (=romperse) to smash, shatterel jarrón se deshizo en sus manos — the vase just fell to pieces o came apart in his hands
cuando lo levanté, se me deshizo todo — when I lifted it up it all fell to bits
3) (=derretirse) [caramelo, hielo] to melt4) (=desmembrarse) [organización, manifestación] to break up; [ejército] to be routed5) (=desaparecer) to vanish6) [persona] (=afligirse) to go to pieces; (=impacientarse) to be at one's wits' end7)• deshacerse de — [queriendo] to get rid of; [sin querer] to part with; (Dep) to dispose of; (Com) to dump
8) (=esforzarse)•
deshacerse en, deshacerse en cumplidos con algn — to be very complimentary towards sb, shower sb with complimentsdeshacerse en elogios con algn — to be full of praise for sb, shower sb with praise
deshacerse en lágrimas — to burst o dissolve into tears
•
se deshace por su familia — he bends over backwards for his familydeshacerse por hacer algo — to strive to do sth, do one's utmost to do sth
deshacerse por complacer a algn — to strive to please sb, do one's utmost to please sb
9) (Med) (=debilitarse) to get weak, grow feeble; (=consumirse) to waste away* * *= throw away.Ex. The person who never throws away a newspaper is regarded as an eccentric; the person who never throws away a book is more likely to be regarded as a bibliophile no matter what the resulting motley assortment of books may be.----* deshacerse de = dispense with, dispose of, get + rid of, rid of, axe [ax, -USA], shed, jettison, shake off, break + loose from, chuck + Nombre + out, fob + Algo + off on + Alguien, land + Alguien + with + Nombre, fob + Alguien + off with + Algo.* deshacerse de Algo = drive out + with a pitchfork.* deshacerse de Alguien/Algo = get + Nombre + off + Posesivo + back.* deshacerse de + Nombre/Pronombre = let + Nombre + go.* deshacerse de = offload + Nombre + onto.* * *= throw away.Ex: The person who never throws away a newspaper is regarded as an eccentric; the person who never throws away a book is more likely to be regarded as a bibliophile no matter what the resulting motley assortment of books may be.
* deshacerse de = dispense with, dispose of, get + rid of, rid of, axe [ax, -USA], shed, jettison, shake off, break + loose from, chuck + Nombre + out, fob + Algo + off on + Alguien, land + Alguien + with + Nombre, fob + Alguien + off with + Algo.* deshacerse de Algo = drive out + with a pitchfork.* deshacerse de Alguien/Algo = get + Nombre + off + Posesivo + back.* deshacerse de + Nombre/Pronombre = let + Nombre + go.* deshacerse de = offload + Nombre + onto.* * *
■deshacerse verbo reflexivo
1 (una lazada, un nudo) to come undone
2 (en un líquido) to dissolve
3 (derretirse) to melt
4 (por la tristeza) to go to pieces
deshacerse en lágrimas, to cry one's eyes out
(prodigarse) se deshizo en elogios, she praised it to the skies 5 deshacerse de alguien/algo, to get rid of sb/sthg
' deshacerse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
descomponerse
- desprenderse
- disolverse
- librarse
- prescindir
- tirar
- deshacer
English:
apart
- cast off
- destruction
- discard
- dispose of
- ditch
- do away with
- hand
- heart
- jettison
- part with
- rid
- shed
- undone
- come
- disposal
- fall
- see
- shake
* * *vpr1. [desarmarse] to fall apart;[costura] to come undone o unstitched; [trenza, moño] to come undone; [peinado] to get messed up;el jarrón se deshizo en pedazos the vase smashed to pieces2. [disolverse] [helado, mantequilla, nieve] to melt;[pastilla, terrón de azúcar] to dissolve; [niebla] to lift;el azúcar se deshace al contacto con el agua sugar dissolves when it comes into contact with water;los caramelos se van deshaciendo en la boca the sweets gradually melt in your mouth;la organización se deshizo tras la guerra the organization broke up after the war;la concentración se deshizo antes de que llegara la policía the crowd dispersed before the police arrived3.deshacerse de [desprenderse de, librarse de] to get rid of;se resiste a deshacerse de sus joyas she's reluctant to part with her jewels;se deshicieron de un sofá viejo they got rid of an old sofa;salió por una puerta trasera para deshacerse del detective he left by a back door to lose the detective;nos costó mucho deshacernos de él it wasn't easy to get rid of him4.deshacerse en [prodigarse en] [m5] se deshizo en elogios con o [m5] hacia su anfitrión she lavished praise on her host;se deshizo en lágrimas al enterarse he cried his heart out when he found out;siempre se deshace en atenciones con nosotros she is always extremely attentive towards us5.[estar enamorado] to be madly in love with sb;deshacerse por alguien [desvivirse] to bend over backwards for sb;se deshace por la empresa, y nadie se lo reconoce he does everything he can for the company, and no one appreciates it;deshacerse por hacer/conseguir algo to go out of one's way to do/get sth* * *v/r2 de hielo melt; figgo to pieces3:deshacerse de get rid of4:deshacerse en elogios be full of praise;deshacerse en insultos let fly a series of insults5:deshacerse por alguien fam bend over backward for s.o.* * *vr1) : to fall apart, to come undone2)deshacerse de : to get rid of* * *deshacerse vb1. (nudo) to come undone2. (hielo, nieve, helado) to melt3. (sólidos) to dissolvedeshacerse de to get rid of / to dispose of -
14 flaquear
v.1 to weaken (fuerzas).2 to falter, to give way, to give, to lose strength.El presidente flaqueó The president faltered.Me flaquea la fuerza I lose strength.3 to lose strength in.4 to give in, to weaken.Sus piernas flaquearon His legs gave in.* * *1 (ceder) to weaken, give in2 (fallar) to fail3 (desalentarse) to lose heart4 (disminuir) to decrease* * *verbto flag, weaken* * *VI1) (=debilitarse) [gen] to weaken, grow weak; [esfuerzo] to slacken, flag; [salud] to decline frm, get worse; [viga] to give way2) (=desanimarse) to lose heart, become dispirited* * *verbo intransitivo persona/fuerzas to flag* * *= flag, falter, falter, waver.Ex. But more mature readers can be expected to go on reading for full sessions without flagging, a point that most children should reach by ten years old.Ex. The project faltered because the data became increasingly difficult to input and manipulate.Ex. The project faltered because the data became increasingly difficult to input and manipulate.Ex. The first decision in establishing headings for the works of corporate bodies is the one over which code makers have wavered.* * *verbo intransitivo persona/fuerzas to flag* * *= flag, falter, falter, waver.Ex: But more mature readers can be expected to go on reading for full sessions without flagging, a point that most children should reach by ten years old.
Ex: The project faltered because the data became increasingly difficult to input and manipulate.Ex: The project faltered because the data became increasingly difficult to input and manipulate.Ex: The first decision in establishing headings for the works of corporate bodies is the one over which code makers have wavered.* * *flaquear [A1 ]vile empezaron a flaquear las fuerzas he began to flagsu voluntad empezó a flaquear she began to lose heartresistió sin flaquear he resisted staunchly* * *
flaquear ( conjugate flaquear) verbo intransitivo [persona/fuerzas] to flag;
flaquear vi (perder fuerza, voluntad) to weaken, give way
' flaquear' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
flojear
- desfallecer
English:
flag
- sag
- waver
- droop
- falter
- shake
- weaken
* * *flaquear vi1. [disminuir] [entusiasmo, equipo] to flag;al final del día le flaqueaban las fuerzas at the end of the day he was beginning to flag;le flaquea la vista her eyesight is getting worse2. [flojear] to lose heart3. [mostrarse débil] to be weak o poor;flaquea especialmente en latín he's particularly weak in o poor at Latin* * ** * *flaquear videcaer: to flag, to weaken* * * -
15 resentido
adj.resentful, peeved, sullen, disaffected.past part.past participle of spanish verb: resentirse.* * *1 see resentir► adjetivo1 resentful► nombre masculino,nombre femenino1 resentful person\estar resentido,-a con/contra alguien to bear resentment towards somebodyestar resentido,-a por algo to be resentful of something, resent something* * *resentido, -a1. ADJ1) (=disgustado) resentfulaún está resentido porque no le felicitaste — he still feels resentful that you didn't congratulate him, he still resents the fact that you didn't congratulate him
2) (=dolorido) painfulaún tiene la mano resentida por el golpe — his hand is still painful o hurting from the knock
2.SM / Fes un resentido — he has a chip on his shoulder, he is resentful
* * *I- da adjetivo1) ( dolorido) painful2) ( disgustado) upset, hurt; ( con rencor) resentfulII- da masculino, femenino* * *= bitter, sullen, a chip on + Posesivo + shoulder, resentful, miffed.Ex. A number of respondents to the study expressed themselves in bitter terms at the lack of readiness to support programmes which are attempting to encourage the transfer of technological innovation to information applications.Ex. He makes his feelings abundantly clear by sullen silences and glances that indicate complete disgust.Ex. He was grim and sullen, with cold, wary eyes and a chip on his shoulder.Ex. Obsessional stalkers tend to be resentful males who stalk partners from prior relationships.Ex. These are just superfluous rantings of miffed children.----* estar resentido = carry + a chip on + Posesivo + shoulder.* sentirse resentido = carry + a chip on + Posesivo + shoulder.* ser un resentido = carry + a chip on + Posesivo + shoulder.* * *I- da adjetivo1) ( dolorido) painful2) ( disgustado) upset, hurt; ( con rencor) resentfulII- da masculino, femenino* * *= bitter, sullen, a chip on + Posesivo + shoulder, resentful, miffed.Ex: A number of respondents to the study expressed themselves in bitter terms at the lack of readiness to support programmes which are attempting to encourage the transfer of technological innovation to information applications.
Ex: He makes his feelings abundantly clear by sullen silences and glances that indicate complete disgust.Ex: He was grim and sullen, with cold, wary eyes and a chip on his shoulder.Ex: Obsessional stalkers tend to be resentful males who stalk partners from prior relationships.Ex: These are just superfluous rantings of miffed children.* estar resentido = carry + a chip on + Posesivo + shoulder.* sentirse resentido = carry + a chip on + Posesivo + shoulder.* ser un resentido = carry + a chip on + Posesivo + shoulder.* * *A (dolorido) painfulla rodilla le quedó resentida his knee is painful o ( colloq) is playing him upB(molesto): quedó resentida porque no le regalaste nada she was upset o hurt because you didn't give her anythingtodavía está resentido porque no lo ascendieron he's still bitter that he wasn't promoted, he still resents the fact o he still feels resentful that he wasn't promotedmasculine, femininees un resentido he has a chip on his shoulder, he feels resentful o ( colloq) hard done by* * *
Del verbo resentirse: ( conjugate resentirse)
resentido es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
resentido
resentirse
resentido◊ -da adjetivo
( con rencor) resentful
■ sustantivo masculino, femenino:
resentirse ( conjugate resentirse) verbo pronominala) ( sentir dolor):
aún se resienten de la derrota they're still smarting from the defeat
resentido,-a adjetivo & m,f (persona) resentful
resentirse verbo reflexivo
1 (volver a sentir dolor por una antigua dolencia) to suffer [de, from], to feel the (after-) effects [de, of]: aún se resiente del golpe en la cadera, she's still feeling the effects of having bumped her thigh
2 (debilitarse) to weaken
3 (ofenderse) to feel offended
resentirse por algo, to take offence at sthg o to feel bitter about sthg
' resentido' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
amargada
- amargado
- resentida
English:
chip
- embittered
- sore
- bitter
- resentful
* * *resentido, -a♦ adjbitter, resentful;estar resentido con alguien to be really upset with sb♦ nm,fbitter o resentful person;ser un resentido to be bitter o resentful* * *adj resentful* * *resentido, -da adj: resentful -
16 quebrar
v.1 to break.Ellos quebraron el vaso They broke the glass.2 to weaken.3 to go bankrupt (finance) (empresa).La empresa quebró The company went bankrupt.4 to turn (torcer). (Mexican Spanish)5 to bankrupt, to break.El banco quebró a la empresa The bank bankrupted the company.6 to break up.7 to kill, to murder, to assassinate, to slay.* * *1 (romper, incumplir) to break2 (doblar el cuerpo) to bend3 figurado (interrumpir) to alter the course of, interrupt1 FINANZAS to go bankrupt2 figurado (flaquear) to weaken1 (romperse) to break2 (herniarse) to rupture oneself3 (interrumpirse) to be broken, open up■ la cordillera se quiebra a pocos kilómetros there is a break in the mountain range in a few kilometres* * *verb1) to break2) go bankrupt* * *1. VT1) (=romper) to break, smash2) (=doblar) [gen] to bend; [+ cuerpo] to bend (at the waist)3) (=torcer) to twist4) [+ proceso] (=interrumpir) to interrupt; (=modificar) to alter the course of, seriously interfere with5) [+ color] to tone down6) Méx * (=matar) to bump off *, waste *7) = quebrantar 1., 2)2. VI1) (Econ) to fail, go bankrupt2) (=debilitarse) to weaken3)3.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo2) (AmL) < cartulina> to crease3) (Méx fam) ( matar) to kill2.quebrar vi1) (Com) empresa/persona to go bankrupt2) ( cambiar de dirección) to turn3) (AmC) ( romper una relación) to break up3.quebrarse v pron1) (esp AmL)b) <pierna/brazo> to break2) (Col) ( arruinarse) to go bankrupt* * *1.verbo transitivo2) (AmL) < cartulina> to crease3) (Méx fam) ( matar) to kill2.quebrar vi1) (Com) empresa/persona to go bankrupt2) ( cambiar de dirección) to turn3) (AmC) ( romper una relación) to break up3.quebrarse v pron1) (esp AmL)b) <pierna/brazo> to break2) (Col) ( arruinarse) to go bankrupt* * *quebrar11 = fracture.Ex: He will miss a month after fracturing his hand in practice.
* quebrarse = snap off.quebrar22 = go + belly up, fold, go + bust, go into + liquidation.Ex: Our ISP (Internet Service Provider) went belly up 10 days ago and we have been unable to send & receive emails since.
Ex: By the mid-eighties, two of the big companies folded, but were replaced by a handful of small, independent firms = A mediados de los ochenta, dos de las grandes compañías quebraron, pero fueron sustituidas por un puñado de pequeñas empresas independientes.Ex: If fuel pump prices are reduced drastically many petrol station operators will go bust.Ex: When a company goes into liquidation, the directors cease to have control of the company, and the liquidator takes over.* hacer quebrar = bankrupt.* no quebrar = stay in + business.* * *quebrar [A5 ]vtA ( esp AmL)1 ‹lápiz/palo› to snap3 ‹diente› to chipB ( AmL) ‹cartulina› to crease■ quebrarviA ( Com) «empresa» to go bankrupt, fail, go into liquidation; «persona» to go bankruptB1 (cambiar de dirección) to turn2 (mover las caderas) to sway at the hipsA ( esp AmL)1 «lápiz/rama» to snap2 «vaso/plato» (romperse) to break; (rajarse) to crack3 ( refl) ‹pierna/brazo› to breakse quebró un diente he chipped a toothB ( Col) (arruinarse) to go bankrupt* * *
quebrar ( conjugate quebrar) verbo transitivo
1 (esp AmL) ‹lápiz/rama› to snap;
‹vaso/plato› ( romper) to break;
( rajar) to crack
2 (Méx fam) ( matar) to kill
verbo intransitivo
1 (Com) [empresa/persona] to go bankrupt
2 (AmC) ( romper una relación) to break up
quebrarse verbo pronominal
1 (esp AmL)
[vaso/plato] ( romperse) to break;
( rajarse) to crack
‹ diente› to chip
2 (Col) ( arruinarse) to go bankrupt
quebrar
I verbo transitivo
1 to break
2 (al bailar, moverse) para hacerlo bien tienes que quebrar la cintura, you've got to twist/bend at the waist if you want to do it well
II verbo intransitivo
1 Fin to go bankrupt
2 (hacer un quiebro) to dodge, swerve
' quebrar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
partir
English:
bankrupt
- break
- break up
- business
- bust
- crash
- fail
- fold
- smash
* * *♦ vt1. [objeto] to break;tanto peso puede quebrar la plancha de vidrio all that weight may cause the sheet of glass to break2. [situación, proceso] to break;el terrorismo pretende quebrar la estabilidad constitucional the terrorists are trying to destroy the constitutional order3. [debilitar] [voz, salud] to weaken4. [cintura] to bend;al hacer este ejercicio, no se debe quebrar la cintura when doing this exercise you should avoid bending at the waist;a fuerza de quebrar la cintura, atrae todas las miradas the way she swings her hips attracts a lot of attention♦ vi1. [empresa] to go bankrupten la esquina, quebré a la izquierda I turned left at the corner* * *I v/t breakII v/i COM go bankrupt* * *quebrar {55} vt1) romper: to break2) doblar: to bend, to twistquebrar vi1) : to go bankrupt2) : to fall out, to break up* * *quebrar vb to go bankrupt -
17 engarabitarse
pron.v.to climb, to mount, to ascend (subir).* * *VPR1) (=subir) to climb, shin up2) (=padecer frío) to get stiff with cold3) And (=debilitarse) to grow weak, get thin* * *engarabitarse vprFam [subir] to climb, to go up -
18 extenuarse
1 (agotarse) to exhaust oneself, wear oneself out* * *VPR (=cansarse) to get exhausted; (=debilitarse) to become emaciated, waste away* * *
■extenuarse verbo reflexivo to exhaust oneself
* * *vprto exhaust oneself, to tire oneself out* * *v/r exhaust o.s., tire o.s. out* * *vr♦ extenuante adj -
19 quebrantarse
1 (cascarse) to crack2 (romperse) to break3 (la salud) to be shattered* * *VPR [persona] to be broken (in health etc)* * *
■quebrantarse verbo reflexivo to break down
* * *vpr1. [rocas] to crack2. [moral, resistencia] [romperse] to break;[debilitarse] to weaken* * *v/r be broken, be undermined
См. также в других словарях:
debilitarse — {{#}}{{LM SynD11796}}{{〓}} {{CLAVE D11528}}{{\}}{{CLAVE}}{{/}}{{\}}SINÓNIMOS Y ANTÓNIMOS:{{/}} {{[}}debilitar(se){{]}} {{《}}▍ v.{{》}} = {{<}}1{{>}} disminuir • mitigar • consumir • mustiar • agotar • extenuar • minar • declinar • desgastar •… … Diccionario de uso del español actual con sinónimos y antónimos
Temporada de huracanes en el Pacífico de 2009 — Mapa resumen de temporada Primer ciclón formado Uno E 18 de junio de 2009 … Wikipedia Español
Temporada de huracanes en el Pacífico de 2010 — Mapa resumen de actividad en la temporada. Primer ciclón formado Agatha 29 de mayo de 2010 … Wikipedia Español
Temporada de huracanes en el Pacífico de 2003 — Mapa resumen de l … Wikipedia Español
Temporada de huracanes en el Atlántico de 2010 — Mapa resumen de actividad en la temporada Sistemas activos Ninguno … Wikipedia Español
flaquear — ► verbo intransitivo 1 Perder la fuerza o la resistencia física o moral una persona o cosa: ■ su ánimo flaqueó al fallecer su amigo. SINÓNIMO [debilitarse] 2 Tener menos preparación o ser menos eficaz en unas actividades que en otras: ■ flaquea… … Enciclopedia Universal
Temporada de huracanes en el Pacífico de 1995 — Mapa resumen de la temporada. Primer ciclón formado 21 de mayo de 1995 … Wikipedia Español
atardecer — (Derivado de tardar.) ► sustantivo masculino 1 Última hora de la tarde, cuando empieza a debilitarse la luz solar. ► verbo impers 2 Empezar a ponerse el sol: ■ ya atardecía cuando llegamos al refugio. * * * atardecer1 (terciop.) intr. Llegar la… … Enciclopedia Universal
ceder — (Del lat. cedere, retirarse, marcharse.) ► verbo transitivo 1 Dar, dejar o transferir voluntariamente una cosa o un derecho a otro: ■ el rey cedió el trono a su hijo primogénito. SINÓNIMO conceder entregar transferir ► verbo intransitivo 2 Dejar… … Enciclopedia Universal
decaer — ► verbo intransitivo 1 Perder una persona o una cosa fuerza o intensidad poco a poco, pasando de un estado positivo a otro negativo: ■ el escándalo le hizo decaer de su prestigio. SE CONJUGA COMO caer REG. PREPOSICIONAL + de SINÓNIMO declinar 2… … Enciclopedia Universal
resentirse — ► verbo pronominal 1 Perder una persona o una cosa fuerza: ■ las vigas se resienten por el peso. SE CONJUGA COMO sentir SINÓNIMO [debilitarse] ANTÓNIMO fortalecer 2 Sentir una persona dolor en una parte del cuerpo a causa de una antigua lesión: ■ … Enciclopedia Universal