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1 detach
di'tæ(to unfasten or remove (from): I detached the bottom part of the form and sent it back.) separar, quitar- detached
- detachment
detach vb separartr[dɪ'tæʧ]1 (separate, remove) separar, quitar; (unstick) despegar2 SMALLMILITARY/SMALL destacar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto detach oneself from something distanciarse de algodetach [di'tæʧ] vt: separar, quitar, desprenderv.• desatar v.• desfijar v.• desglosar v.• desligar v.• despegar v.• desprender v.• destrabar v.• quitar v.• separar v.• soltar v.dɪ'tætʃ[dɪ'tætʃ]VT (=separate) separar ( from de); (=unstick) despegar; (Mil) destacarto detach o.s. from a group — separarse de un grupo
to detach o.s. from a situation — distanciarse de una situación
* * *[dɪ'tætʃ] -
2 detach
vt.1 separar ( from de)2 despegar, desconectar, desprender, separar.3 destacar.4 abstraer. (pt & pp detached) -
3 to detach oneself from something
distanciarse de algoEnglish-spanish dictionary > to detach oneself from something
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4 break off
(to stop: She broke off in the middle of a sentence.) detenerse1) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( detach) partirb) \<\<engagement/diplomatic relations\>\> romper*2) v + adva) (snap off, come free) \<\<piece of ice\>\> desprenderseb) ( stop talking) parar (de hablar), detenerse*1. VT + ADV1) [+ piece etc] partir2) (=end) [+ engagement, talks] romper; (Mil) [+ action] terminar2. VI + ADV1) [piece of rock, ice, handle] desprenderse; [twig, segment of orange] desgajarse2) (=stop) interrumpirse, pararse* * *1) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( detach) partirb) \<\<engagement/diplomatic relations\>\> romper*2) v + adva) (snap off, come free) \<\<piece of ice\>\> desprenderseb) ( stop talking) parar (de hablar), detenerse* -
5 come off
1) (to fall off: Her shoe came off.) caerse, soltarse2) (to turn out (well); to succeed: The gamble didn't come off.) tener lugar, sucedercome off vb caerse / quitarse / desprendersev.• despegar v.come off*expr.• realizarse v.1)a) v + adv ( detach itself) \<\<handle\>\> soltarse*; \<\<button\>\> desprenderse, caerse*; \<\<wallpaper\>\> despegarse*; \<\<dirt/grease\>\> quitarse, salir*b) v + prep + o ( fall off) \<\<horse/motorcycle\>\> caerse* de2) v + adva) ( take place) sucederb) ( succeed) tener* éxitoc) (fare, acquit oneself)to come off badly — salir* mal parado
d) (appear, seem) (AmE colloq)to come off as something: she doesn't come off as very bright — no da la impresión de ser muy inteligente
3) v + prep + oa) ( stop taking) \<\<drug\>\> dejar de tomarb) ( be serious)come off it! — (colloq) anda! no digas tonterías! (fam)
1. VI + ADV1) [button] caerse; [stain] quitarsedoes this lid come off? — ¿se puede quitar esta tapa?
2) (=take place, come to pass) tener lugar, realizarse3) (=succeed) tener éxito, dar resultadosto come off well/badly — (=turn out) salir bien/mal
4) (=acquit o.s.) portarseto come off best — salir mejor parado, salir ganando
5) (Theat)2. VI + PREP1) (=separate from)come off it! * — ¡vamos, anda!, ¡venga ya!
2) (=give up) dejar* * *1)a) v + adv ( detach itself) \<\<handle\>\> soltarse*; \<\<button\>\> desprenderse, caerse*; \<\<wallpaper\>\> despegarse*; \<\<dirt/grease\>\> quitarse, salir*b) v + prep + o ( fall off) \<\<horse/motorcycle\>\> caerse* de2) v + adva) ( take place) sucederb) ( succeed) tener* éxitoc) (fare, acquit oneself)to come off badly — salir* mal parado
d) (appear, seem) (AmE colloq)to come off as something: she doesn't come off as very bright — no da la impresión de ser muy inteligente
3) v + prep + oa) ( stop taking) \<\<drug\>\> dejar de tomarb) ( be serious)come off it! — (colloq) anda! no digas tonterías! (fam)
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6 pull
pul
1. verb1) (to (try to) move something especially towards oneself usually by using force: He pulled the chair towards the fire; She pulled at the door but couldn't open it; He kept pulling the girls' hair for fun; Help me to pull my boots off; This railway engine can pull twelve carriages.) arrastrar, tirar de2) ((with at or on) in eg smoking, to suck at: He pulled at his cigarette.) chupar3) (to row: He pulled towards the shore.) remar4) ((of a driver or vehicle) to steer or move in a certain direction: The car pulled in at the garage; I pulled into the side of the road; The train pulled out of the station; The motorbike pulled out to overtake; He pulled off the road.) tirar, ir hacia
2. noun1) (an act of pulling: I felt a pull at my sleeve; He took a pull at his beer/pipe.) tirón; calada, chupada (tabaco); sorbo (bebida)2) (a pulling or attracting force: magnetic pull; the pull (=attraction) of the sea.) atracción3) (influence: He thinks he has some pull with the headmaster.) enchufe•- pull down
- pull a face / faces at
- pull a face / faces
- pull a gun on
- pull off
- pull on
- pull oneself together
- pull through
- pull up
- pull one's weight
- pull someone's leg
pull1 n tirónpull2 vb1. tirarit's heavy, but if you pull and I push, we'll move it pesa mucho, pero si tú tiras y yo empujo lo moveremos2. tirar / dar un tirón3. arrastrartr[pʊl]1 (tug) tirón nombre masculino2 (of moon, current) fuerza4 (on bottle) sorbo; (on cigarette) calada, chupada5 (prolonged effort) paliza6 (single impression, proof) prueba2 (tug forcefully) tirar de, dar un tirón a■ don't pull my hair! ¡no me tires del pelo!■ have you pulled the chain? ¿has tirado de la cadena?3 (remove, draw out) sacar4 (damage - muscle) sufrir un tirón5 (operate - trigger) apretar1 (tug) tirar (at/on, de)2 (on pipe, cigarette) chupar, dar caladas a3 (of vehicle - veer) tirarpull ['pʊl, 'pʌl] vt1) draw, tug: tirar de, jalar2) extract: sacar, extraerto pull teeth: sacar muelasto pull a gun on: amenazar a (alguien) con pistola3) tear: desgarrarse (un músculo, etc.)4)to pull down : bajar, echar abajo, derribar (un edificio)5)to pull in attract: atraer (una muchedumbre, etc.)to pull in votes: conseguir votos6)to pull off remove: sacar, quitar7)to pull oneself together : calmarse, tranquilizarse8)to pull up raise: levantar, subirpull vi1) draw, tug: tirar, jalarthey pulled in front of us: se nos metieron delanteto pull to a stop: pararse3)to pull through recover: recobrarse, reponerse4)to pull together cooperate: trabajar juntos, cooperarpull n1) tug: tirón m, jalón mhe gave it a pull: le dio un tirón2) attraction: atracción f, fuerza fthe pull of gravity: la fuerza de la gravedad3) influence: influencia f4) handle: tirador m (de un cajón, etc.)5)bell pull : cuerda fn.• chupada s.f.• estirón s.m.• primeras pruebas s.f.pl.• tirador s.m.• tirón s.m.v.• arrastrar v.• halar v.• jalar v.• tirar v.• tirar de v.
I
1. pʊl1)b) ( in specified direction) (+ adv compl)pull your chair closer to the fire — acerca or arrima la silla al fuego
could you pull the door to/the curtains, please? — por favor, cierra la puerta/corre las cortinas
the current pulled him under — la corriente lo arrastró or se lo llevó al fondo
to pull the carpet o rug (out) from under somebody o somebody's feet — fastidiarle los planes a alguien, moverle* el tapete a alguien (Méx fam)
2)a) ( tug) tirar de, jalar (AmL exc CS)pull the other one! — (BrE colloq) me estás tomando el pelo (fam)
to pull strings o wires — ( use influence) tocar* todos los resortes or muchas teclas, mover* hilos
to pull the strings o wires — ( be in control) tener* la sartén por el mango
b) (tear, detach)he pulled the toy to bits — rompió or destrozó el juguete
c) ( snag)3)a) \<\<weeds/nail\>\> arrancar*; \<\<tooth\>\> sacar*b) ( take out) sacar*he pulled a gun on them — sacó una pistola y los amenazó; see also pull out
4) (colloq) \<\<crowd/audience\>\> atraer*; \<\<votes\>\> conseguir*5) ( perform) (colloq)don't you ever pull a stunt like that on me again — no me vuelvas a hacer una faena así or una cosa semejante
to pull a fast one on somebody — hacerle* una jugarreta a alguien (fam)
6) ( Med) \<\<muscle/tendon\>\> desgarrarse
2.
vi1)a) (drag, tug) tirar, jalar (AmL exc CS)to pull AT/ON something — tirar de or (AmL exc CS) jalar algo
b) ( suck)to pull ON o AT something — \<\<on pipe\>\> darle* una chupada or (AmL tb) una pitada or (Esp tb) una calada a algo
2)a) \<\<vehicle\>\> ( move) (+ adv compl)to pull off the road — salir* de la carretera
to pull into the station — entrar en la estación; see also pull in, pull up
b) ( row) remar•Phrasal Verbs:- pull in- pull off- pull on- pull out- pull up
II
1) c ( tug) tirón m, jalón m (AmL exc CS)2) ua) ( pulling force) fuerza fb) ( influence) influencia f4) c ( difficult journey)[pʊl]1. N2) [of moon, magnet, sea etc] (fuerza f de) atracción f; [of current] fuerza f, ímpetu m; (fig) (=attraction) atracción fthe pull of the south — la atracción del Sur, lo atractivo del Sur
3) * (=influence) enchufe * m, palanca f (LAm) *; (=advantage) ventaja fhe took a pull from the bottle — tomó un trago de la botella, dio un tiento a la botella (Sp)
5) (=journey, drive etc)it was a long pull — fue mucho camino or trecho
6) (=handle of drawer etc) tirador m; [of bell] cuerda f7) (Typ) primeras pruebas fpl8) (Brit)*to be on the pull — estar de ligue (Sp) *, estar chequeando (LAm) *
2. VT1) (=draw, drag) tirar de, jalar (LAm)punch I, 1., 2), weight 1., 1)to pull a door shut/open — cerrar/abrir una puerta de un tirón or (LAm) jalón
2) (=tug) tirar de, jalar (LAm); [+ trigger] apretar; [+ oar] tirar de; [+ boat] remar; (Naut) [+ rope] halar, jalar; [+ tooth] sacar; [+ weeds] arrancarto pull sb's hair — tirar or (LAm) jalar de los pelos a algn
- pull the other oneleg 1., 1)3) (=extract, draw out) sacar, arrancar; [+ beer] servirrank I, 1., 1)4) (=injure)5) [+ ball] (at golf etc) golpear oblicuamente (a la izquierda)6) (Typ) imprimir7) * (=cancel) [+ TV programme] suspender8) * (=carry out, do)what are you trying to pull? — ¿qué quieres conseguir?, ¿qué es lo que pretendes con esto?
to pull a fast one or a trick on sb — jugar una mala pasada a algn
9) * (=attract)he knows how to pull the birds — (Brit) sabe ligar con las chicas *
3. VI1) tirar, jalar (LAm)to pull at or on a rope — tirar de una cuerda
2)to pull at or on one's pipe — dar chupadas a la pipa
to pull at a bottle — tomar un trago or (Sp) dar un tiento a una botella
3) (=move) [vehicle] ir; [oarsmen etc] remarhe pulled sharply to one side to avoid the lorry — torció bruscamente a un lado para no chocar con el camión
4) (Brit) * ligar *, pillar (cacho) (Sp) **4.CPDpull ring, pull tab N — anilla f
- pull in- pull off- pull on- pull out- pull up* * *
I
1. [pʊl]1)b) ( in specified direction) (+ adv compl)pull your chair closer to the fire — acerca or arrima la silla al fuego
could you pull the door to/the curtains, please? — por favor, cierra la puerta/corre las cortinas
the current pulled him under — la corriente lo arrastró or se lo llevó al fondo
to pull the carpet o rug (out) from under somebody o somebody's feet — fastidiarle los planes a alguien, moverle* el tapete a alguien (Méx fam)
2)a) ( tug) tirar de, jalar (AmL exc CS)pull the other one! — (BrE colloq) me estás tomando el pelo (fam)
to pull strings o wires — ( use influence) tocar* todos los resortes or muchas teclas, mover* hilos
to pull the strings o wires — ( be in control) tener* la sartén por el mango
b) (tear, detach)he pulled the toy to bits — rompió or destrozó el juguete
c) ( snag)3)a) \<\<weeds/nail\>\> arrancar*; \<\<tooth\>\> sacar*b) ( take out) sacar*he pulled a gun on them — sacó una pistola y los amenazó; see also pull out
4) (colloq) \<\<crowd/audience\>\> atraer*; \<\<votes\>\> conseguir*5) ( perform) (colloq)don't you ever pull a stunt like that on me again — no me vuelvas a hacer una faena así or una cosa semejante
to pull a fast one on somebody — hacerle* una jugarreta a alguien (fam)
6) ( Med) \<\<muscle/tendon\>\> desgarrarse
2.
vi1)a) (drag, tug) tirar, jalar (AmL exc CS)to pull AT/ON something — tirar de or (AmL exc CS) jalar algo
b) ( suck)to pull ON o AT something — \<\<on pipe\>\> darle* una chupada or (AmL tb) una pitada or (Esp tb) una calada a algo
2)a) \<\<vehicle\>\> ( move) (+ adv compl)to pull off the road — salir* de la carretera
to pull into the station — entrar en la estación; see also pull in, pull up
b) ( row) remar•Phrasal Verbs:- pull in- pull off- pull on- pull out- pull up
II
1) c ( tug) tirón m, jalón m (AmL exc CS)2) ua) ( pulling force) fuerza fb) ( influence) influencia f4) c ( difficult journey) -
7 take off
1) (to remove (clothes etc): He took off his coat.) quitarse, despojarse (de)2) ((of an aircraft) to leave the ground: The plane took off for Rome (noun take-off).) despegar3) (not to work during (a period of time): I'm taking tomorrow morning off.) tomarse libre4) (to imitate someone (often unkindly): He used to take off his teacher to make his friends laugh (noun take-off).) imitartake off1 n despeguetake off2 vb1. despegar2. quitartake off vtremove: quitartake off your hat: quítate el sombrerotake off vi1) : despegar (dícese de un avión o un cohete)2) leave: irse, partirn.• despegue (Aeronáutica) s.m. (To leave)expr.• marcharse v.v.• aviar v.• descalzar v.• desceñir v.• descontar v.• despegar (Aeronáutica) v.• quitarse (Textil) (•Ropa•) v.1) v + o + adv, v + adv + o v + o + prep + o(detach, remove) quitar, sacar*she took her make-up off — se quitó or (esp AmL) se sacó el maquillaje
to take off one's dress/shoes — quitarse or (esp AmL) sacarse* el vestido/los zapatos
2)a) ( cut off) \<\<branch/shoot\>\> cortar; \<\<limb\>\> amputarb) ( deduct) descontar*3) ( have free)4) ( imitate) (colloq) imitar, remedar5) v + adva) \<\<aircraft/pilot\>\> despegar*, decolar (AmL); \<\<flight\>\> salir*b) ( succeed) \<\<career\>\> tomar vueloc) ( depart) largarse* (fam), irse*6) v + o + adv ( convey) llevar(se)to take oneself off — irse*
7) v + o + adv v + o + prep + o( remove) quitar, sacar* (esp AmL)take your hands off me! — quítame las manos de encima!, no me toques!
8) ( take away from) (colloq) quitar, sacar* (CS)I took the gun off him — le quité or (CS tb) le saqué la pistola
1. VT + ADV1) (=remove) [+ lid, wrapping, label, stain] quitar; [+ clothes] quitarse, sacarse (LAm); [+ limb] amputar; [+ train] cancelar; [+ item from menu] quitar2) (=deduct) (from bill, price) descontarshe took 50p off — descontó or hizo un descuento de 50 peniques
3) (=lead away) [+ person, object] llevarseto take o.s. off — irse, largarse *
4) (=not work)he has to work weekends but takes time off in lieu — tiene que trabajar los fines de semana pero le dan días libres a cambio
5) (=imitate) imitar2. VI + ADV2) (=succeed) empezar a tener éxito3. VT + PREP1) (=remove) quitar, sacar (LAm)they took two names off the list — quitaron or tacharon dos nombres de la lista
take your hands off me! — ¡no me toques!
2) (=deduct) (from bill, price) descontarhe took £5 off the price — descontó 5 libras del precio
* * *1) v + o + adv, v + adv + o v + o + prep + o(detach, remove) quitar, sacar*she took her make-up off — se quitó or (esp AmL) se sacó el maquillaje
to take off one's dress/shoes — quitarse or (esp AmL) sacarse* el vestido/los zapatos
2)a) ( cut off) \<\<branch/shoot\>\> cortar; \<\<limb\>\> amputarb) ( deduct) descontar*3) ( have free)4) ( imitate) (colloq) imitar, remedar5) v + adva) \<\<aircraft/pilot\>\> despegar*, decolar (AmL); \<\<flight\>\> salir*b) ( succeed) \<\<career\>\> tomar vueloc) ( depart) largarse* (fam), irse*6) v + o + adv ( convey) llevar(se)to take oneself off — irse*
7) v + o + adv v + o + prep + o( remove) quitar, sacar* (esp AmL)take your hands off me! — quítame las manos de encima!, no me toques!
8) ( take away from) (colloq) quitar, sacar* (CS)I took the gun off him — le quité or (CS tb) le saqué la pistola
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8 desmontar
desmontar ( conjugate desmontar) verbo transitivo ‹ tienda de campaña› to take down verbo intransitivo [ jinete] to dismount
desmontar
I verbo transitivo
1 (un mueble, artefacto) to dismantle, take to pieces
2 (una excusa, argumento) to take to pieces
II vi (de un caballo, vehículo) to dismount [de, -], get off [de, -] ' desmontar' also found in these entries: Spanish: deshacer - tienda English: apart - disassemble - dismantle - piece - pull apart - strip - take apart - take down - clear - detach - dismount - take - throw - unseat -
9 despegar
despegar ( conjugate despegar) verbo transitivo ‹etiqueta/esparadrapo› to remove, peel off; ‹piezas/ensambladura› to get … unstuck o apart; verbo intransitivo [ avión] to take off; [ cohete] to lift off, be launched despegarse verbo pronominal [sello/etiqueta] to come unstuck, peel off; [esparadrapo/empapelado] to come off
despegar
I verbo transitivo to take off, detach
II verbo intransitivo
1 Av to take off
2 (afianzarse, mostrar progreso) to take off: las ganancias han despegado, earnings have taken off ' despegar' also found in these entries: Spanish: desprender - separar English: buckle up - ground - lift off - take off - blast - detach - lift - peel - take - unstick -
10 desprender
desprender ( conjugate desprender) verbo transitivo (soltar, separar) ‹ teja› to dislodge; ‹ etiqueta› to detach desprenderse verbo pronominal 1 [ teja] to come loose; [ botón] to come off; [ retina] to become detached; desprenderse de algo to come away from sth 2 (renunciar, entregar) desprenderse de algo ‹ de posesiones› to part with sth
desprender verbo transitivo
1 (despegar) to remove, detach
2 (emanar un olor, humo) to give off ' desprender' also found in these entries: Spanish: desprenderse - desprendido - soltar -
11 desprendido
Del verbo desprender: ( conjugate desprender) \ \
desprendido es: \ \el participioMultiple Entries: desprender desprendido
desprender ( conjugate desprender) verbo transitivo (soltar, separar) ‹ teja› to dislodge; ‹ etiqueta› to detach desprenderse verbo pronominal 1 [ teja] to come loose; [ botón] to come off; [ retina] to become detached; desprendidose de algo to come away from sth 2 (renunciar, entregar) desprendidose de algo ‹ de posesiones› to part with sth
desprendido
◊ -da adjetivo [ser] generous, open-handed;ver tb desprender
desprender verbo transitivo
1 (despegar) to remove, detach
2 (emanar un olor, humo) to give off
desprendido,-a adj (generoso) generous, unselfish, open-handed ' desprendido' also found in these entries: Spanish: desprendida English: fall off -
12 separar
separar ( conjugate separar) verbo transitivo 1 separa la cama de la pared move the bed away from the wallc) (guardar, reservar) to put o set aside2b) ( despegar):separarse verbo pronominal separarse DE algn to separate from sbc) (apartarse, alejarse):◊ no se separen, que los pequeños se pueden perder please stay together in case the children get lost;no me he separado nunca de mis hijos I've never been away o apart from my children
separar verbo transitivo
1 (aumentar la distancia física) to move apart
2 (poner aparte) to separate: separa las rosas de los claveles, separate the roses from the carnations
3 (reservar) to save
4 (algo pegado, grapado) to detach
5 (distanciar, disgregar) to divide ' separar' also found in these entries: Spanish: abrir - desgajar - desunir - paja - quitar - segregar - aislar - apartar - cortar - desmontar - desprender English: detach - divide - divorce - fence off - part - peel off - prise - pull apart - screen off - separate - sort out - space - split up - twist off - wall off - fence - pull - screen - sort - splay - split - wall -
13 detached
adj.1 desprendido, desapegado.2 despegado, desprendido, suelto.3 ajeno de sí, aislado, distanciado.pp.participio pasado del verbo DETACH.pt.pretérito del verbo DETACH. -
14 separate
1. 'sepəreit verb1) ((sometimes with into or from) to place, take, keep or force apart: He separated the money into two piles; A policeman tried to separate the men who were fighting.) separar2) (to go in different directions: We all walked along together and separated at the cross-roads.) separarse3) ((of a husband and wife) to start living apart from each other by choice.) separarse
2. -rət adjective1) (divided; not joined: He sawed the wood into four separate pieces; The garage is separate from the house.) separado2) (different or distinct: This happened on two separate occasions; I like to keep my job and my home life separate.) distinto, diferente•- separable
- separately
- separates
- separation
- separatist
- separatism
- separate off
- separate out
- separate up
separate1 adj1. distinto2. aparteseparate2 vb separar2 (distinguish) distinguir, separar1 (gen) separarse2 (mayonnaise etc) cortarse1 (apart) separado,-a■ political prisoners are kept separate from the others los presos políticos están separados de los demás2 (not shared) separado,-a, individual3 (different, distinct) distinto,-a, diferente■ that is a separate issue eso es un tema aparte, eso es otro tema1 (clothes) prendas de mujer que combinan con otras, pero que se venden sueltas\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto go one's separate ways irse cada uno por su ladoto lead separate lives hacer cada uno su propia vidato send something under separate cover mandar algo por separado1) detach, sever: separar2) distinguish: diferenciar, distinguirseparate vipart: separarseseparate ['sɛprət, 'sɛpə-] adj1) individual: separado, apartea separate state: un estado separadoin a separate envelope: en un sobre aparte2) distinct: distintoadj.• aparte adj.• distinto, -a adj.• separado, -a adj.• suelto, -a adj.v.• alejar v.• apartar v.• desaparear v.• desarrimar v.• desatar v.• desjuntar v.• desligar v.• despegar v.• desprender v.• destrabar v.• desunir v.• quitar v.• separar v.
I 'sepərəta) ( individual) <beds/rooms/bank accounts> separadoto go our/their separate ways — irse* cada uno por su lado
b) ( physically apart) aparte adj invthe gym is in a separate building — el gimnasio está en un edificio aparte or en otro edificio
c) (distinct, different)
II
1. 'sepəreɪta) ( set apart) separarto separate something/somebody FROM something/somebody — separar algo/a alguien de algo/alguien
b) ( keep apart) separarto be separated FROM somebody — estar* separado de alguien
c) ( distinguish) distinguir*, diferenciarto separate something FROM something — distinguir* or diferenciar algo de algo
d) ( Tech) extraer*
2.
via) ( move apart) separarseb) \<\<couple\>\> separarsePhrasal Verbs:['seprɪt]1.ADJ (=apart) separado; (=different) distinto, diferente; (=distant) apartado, retirado•
could we have separate bills? — queremos cuentas individuales, ¿podemos pagar por separado?2.Nseparates (=clothes) coordinados mpl3.['sepǝreɪt]VT (=keep apart) separar; (=set aside) apartar; (=divide) dividir, partir; (=distinguish) distinguirto separate truth from error — separar lo falso de lo verdadero, distinguir entre lo falso y lo verdadero
4.['sepǝreɪt]VI separarse* * *
I ['sepərət]a) ( individual) <beds/rooms/bank accounts> separadoto go our/their separate ways — irse* cada uno por su lado
b) ( physically apart) aparte adj invthe gym is in a separate building — el gimnasio está en un edificio aparte or en otro edificio
c) (distinct, different)
II
1. ['sepəreɪt]a) ( set apart) separarto separate something/somebody FROM something/somebody — separar algo/a alguien de algo/alguien
b) ( keep apart) separarto be separated FROM somebody — estar* separado de alguien
c) ( distinguish) distinguir*, diferenciarto separate something FROM something — distinguir* or diferenciar algo de algo
d) ( Tech) extraer*
2.
via) ( move apart) separarseb) \<\<couple\>\> separarsePhrasal Verbs: -
15 step back
VI + ADV1) (lit) dar un paso hacia atrás, retrocederit's like stepping back in time — es como viajar hacia atrás or retroceder en el tiempo
2) (=detach o.s.) distanciarse un poco* * * -
16 yank off
VT + ADV (=detach) arrancar de un tirónto yank sb off to jail — pillar or (LAm) agarrar y meter a algn en la cárcel
-
17 to take off
1 (clothes) quitarse2 (remove, detach) quitar, sacar3 (force to go) llevar4 (have as holiday) tomarse5 (imitate) imitar6 (deduct, discount) descontar, rebajar1 (plane) despegar2 (leave hurriedly) irse, marcharse3 (become popular) hacerse popular, tener éxito, ponerse de moda -
18 apoyacabezas
apoyacabezas sustantivo masculino (pl ' apoyacabezas' also found in these entries: English: detach - head -
19 desmonte
Del verbo desmontar: ( conjugate desmontar) \ \
desmonté es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) pretérito indicativo
desmonte es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) imperativoMultiple Entries: desmontar desmonte
desmontar ( conjugate desmontar) verbo transitivo ‹ tienda de campaña› to take down verbo intransitivo [ jinete] to dismount
desmontar
I verbo transitivo
1 (un mueble, artefacto) to dismantle, take to pieces
2 (una excusa, argumento) to take to pieces
II vi (de un caballo, vehículo) to dismount [de, -], get off [de, -]
desmonte sustantivo masculino clearing, cutting ' desmonte' also found in these entries: English: clearance -
20 despegado
Del verbo despegar: ( conjugate despegar) \ \
despegado es: \ \el participioMultiple Entries: despegado despegar
despegar ( conjugate despegar) verbo transitivo ‹etiqueta/esparadrapo› to remove, peel off; ‹piezas/ensambladura› to get … unstuck o apart; verbo intransitivo [ avión] to take off; [ cohete] to lift off, be launched despegarse verbo pronominal [sello/etiqueta] to come unstuck, peel off; [esparadrapo/empapelado] to come off
despegado,-a adjetivo
1 unstuck
2 (persona) lacking in affection, indifferent
despegar
I verbo transitivo to take off, detach
II verbo intransitivo
1 Av to take off
2 (afianzarse, mostrar progreso) to take off: las ganancias han despegado, earnings have taken off ' despegado' also found in these entries: Spanish: despegar - despegada - holgada - holgado English: unstuck - air
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
Detach — De*tach , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Detached}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Detaching}.] [F. d[ e]tacher (cf. It. distaccare, staccare); pref. d[ e] (L. dis) + the root found also in E. attach. See {Attach}, and cf. {Staccato}.] 1. To part; to separate or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
detach — detach, disengage, abstract mean to remove one thing from another with which it is in union or association. One detaches something when one breaks a literal or figurative connection, tie, or bond and thereby isolates it or makes it independent… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
detach — UK US /dɪˈtætʃ/ verb [T] ► to separate or remove something from something else that it is joined to: detach sth from sth »Detach the reply slip from this letter and return it to the above address. → Compare ATTACH(Cf. ↑attach) … Financial and business terms
detach — 1680s, from Fr. détacher to detach, untie, from O.Fr. destachier, from des apart + attachier attach (see ATTACH (Cf. attach)). Related: Detached; detaching … Etymology dictionary
detach — ► VERB 1) disengage (something) and remove it. 2) (detach oneself from) leave or distance oneself from (a group or situation). 3) (be detached) Military be sent on a separate mission. DERIVATIVES detachability noun … English terms dictionary
Detach — De*tach , v. i. To push asunder; to come off or separate from anything; to disengage. [1913 Webster] [A vapor] detaching, fold by fold, From those still heights. Tennyson. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
detach — I verb break off, cleave, disconnect, disengage, disentangle, disiungere, disjoin, dispart, dissever, dissociate, disunite, divide, divorce, part, remove, seiungere, separare, separate, sever, split, uncouple, unfasten, unlink, unplug, unstick… … Law dictionary
detach — [v] disconnect, cut off abstract, disaffiliate, disassemble, disassociate, disengage, disentangle, disjoin, dismount, dissociate, disunite, divide, divorce, free, isolate, loose, loosen, part, remove, segregate, separate, sever, sunder, take… … New thesaurus
detach — [dē tach′, ditach′] vt. [Fr détacher < OFr detachier, destachier < de , DE + estachier, to ATTACH] 1. to unfasten or separate and remove; disconnect; disengage 2. to send (troops, ships, etc.) on a special mission detachability n.… … English World dictionary
detach — [[t]dɪtæ̱tʃ[/t]] detaches, detaching, detached 1) V ERG If you detach one thing from another that it is fixed to, you remove it. If one thing detaches from another, it becomes separated from it. [FORMAL] [V n] Detach the white part of the… … English dictionary
detach — 01. The arms of this toy robot can be [detached], and replaced with wings or various tools. 02. Roman statues were made with [detachable] heads so that one head could be removed and replaced by another. 03. [Detach] the pink copy of the form, and … Grammatical examples in English