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1 difficulty
plural - difficulties; noun1) (the state or quality of being hard (to do) or not easy: I have difficulty in understanding him.) dificultad2) (an obstacle or objection: He has a habit of foreseeing difficulties.) dificultad, obstáculo3) ((especially in plural) trouble, especially money trouble: The firm was in difficulties.) dificultad, dificultades, problemasdifficulty n dificultad / problematr['dɪfɪkəltɪ]noun (pl difficulties)1 (trouble) dificultad nombre femenino■ I had great difficulty (in) getting hold of him tuve dificultad para localizarlo, me costó mucho localizarlo■ she did it, but with some difficulty consiguió hacerlo, pero con dificultad\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be in difficulties tener problemas, estar en un apuro, pasar dificultadesto get into difficulties meterse en dificultadesto make difficulties crear problemas, poner pegas1) : dificultad f2) problem: problema f, dificultad fn.• aprieto s.m.• apuro s.m.• conflicto s.m.• dificultad s.m.• inconveniente s.m.• nudo s.m.• tropiezo s.m.'dɪfɪkəltia) u (of situation, task) dificultad fb) c ( problem) dificultad f, problema mto be in difficulties — estar* en apuros
['dɪfɪkǝltɪ]N1) (=hardness) dificultad f•
to have difficulty (in) doing sth — tener dificultades para hacer algo, resultarle difícil a algn hacer algohe has difficulty (in) walking — tiene dificultades para andar, le resulta difícil andar
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I had no difficulty finding the house — no tuve problemas para encontrar la casa, no me resultó difícil encontrar la casa•
with difficulty — con dificultad2) (=problem) problema m, dificultad f•
to get into difficulty or difficulties — [person] (gen) meterse en problemas or apuros; (while swimming) empezar a tener problemas; [ship] empezar a peligrar•
to have difficulties with sth — tener problemas con algo•
to be in difficulties or difficulty — estar teniendo problemasthey are in financial difficulties — tienen problemas económicos, están pasando dificultades económicas
learning, run into•
to make difficulties for sb — crear problemas a algn* * *['dɪfɪkəlti]a) u (of situation, task) dificultad fb) c ( problem) dificultad f, problema mto be in difficulties — estar* en apuros
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2 difficulty
adv.in difficulty -> con problemas.s.1 dificultad (trouble)2 dificultad, problema (obstacle, problem) (plural difficulties) -
3 breathe with difficulty
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4 chew badly or with difficulty
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5 get out of a difficulty
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6 solve a difficulty
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7 speak brokenly and with difficulty
English-spanish dictionary > speak brokenly and with difficulty
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8 with difficulty
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9 with great difficulty
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10 added difficulty
s.dificultad agregada, agravante. -
11 discouraging difficulty
s.dificultad desalentadora. -
12 find difficulty
v.tener dificultad. -
13 have difficulty
v.tener dificultad, tener dificultad de, tener dificultades para. -
14 learning difficulty
s.dificultad de aprendizaje. -
15 with difficulty
adv.con dificultad, a duras penas, apuradamente, difícilmente. -
16 without difficulty
adv.con facilidad, fácilmente, sueltamente, desenvueltamente. -
17 struggle
1. verb1) (to twist violently when trying to free oneself: The child struggled in his arms.) luchar, forcejear2) (to make great efforts or try hard: All his life he has been struggling with illness / against injustice.) luchar (por/contra)3) (to move with difficulty: He struggled out of the hole.) moverse con dificultad
2. noun(an act of struggling, or a fight: The struggle for independence was long and hard.) luchastruggle1 n1. lucha2. forcejeoafter a struggle, they managed to arrest the thief después de un forcejeo, consiguieron detener al ladrónstruggle2 vb1. forcejear2. luchartr['strʌgəl]1 (gen) lucha; (physical fight) pelea, forcejeo1 (fight) luchar; (physically) forcejear2 (strive) luchar ( for, por), esforzarse ( for, por); (suffer) pasar apuros; (have difficulty) costar, tener problemas3 (move with difficulty) con dificultad\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLarmed struggle lucha armadaclass struggle lucha de clases1) contend: forcejear (físicamente), luchar, contender2) : hacer con dificultadshe struggled forward: avanzó con dificultadstruggle n: lucha f, pelea f (física)n.• apretón s.m.• batalla s.f.• brega s.f.• combate s.m.• contención s.f.• contienda s.f.• esfuerzo s.m.• forcejeo s.m.• guerra s.f.• lucha s.f.• pelea s.f.• pugna s.f.v.• bracear v.• bregar v.• combatir v.• debatir v.• forcejear v.• lidiar v.• luchar v.• pelear v.• pugnar v.• pujar v.• resistir v.
I 'strʌgəla) ( against opponent) lucha f; ( physical) refriega fto put up a struggle — luchar, oponer* resistencia
to give up without a struggle — rendirse* sin luchar
b) ( against difficulties) lucha f
II
1)a) ( thrash around) forcejearb) (contend, strive) lucharto struggle (against/with something) — luchar (contra algo)
c) ( be in difficulties) pasar apuros2) ( move with difficulty) (+ adv compl)['strʌɡl]1. N1) (lit) pelea f, forcejeo m•
two men went up to him and a struggle broke out — dos hombres se acercaron a él y se desencadenó una pelea•
he lost his glasses in the struggle — perdió las gafas en la pelea or refriega•
to put up a struggle — oponer resistencia, forcejear•
he handed over his wallet without a struggle — entregó su billetera sin oponer resistencia2) (fig) lucha f ( for por)•
he finally lost his struggle against cancer — finalmente perdió su lucha contra el cáncer•
the struggle for survival — la lucha por la supervivencia•
there is a fierce power struggle going on behind the scenes — hay una intensa lucha por el poder entre bastidoresclass 4., uphill•
local shopkeepers are not giving up without a struggle — los tenderos del barrio no van a rendirse sin luchar2. VI1) (=scuffle) forcejearstop struggling! — ¡deja de forcejear!
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we were struggling for the gun when it went off — forcejeábamos para hacernos con la pistola cuando se disparó•
to struggle with sb — forcejear con algn2) (=move with difficulty)•
I struggled into my costume — logré ponerme el disfraz como pude•
we struggled through the crowd — nos abrimos paso a duras penas entre la multitud•
she struggled to her feet — logró ponerse de pie•
the bus was struggling up the hill — el autobús subía con dificultad la cuesta•
he was struggling with his luggage — cargaba con su equipaje con gran esfuerzo3) (=fight against odds) lucharto struggle to do sth — luchar por hacer algo, esforzarse por hacer algo
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to struggle against sth — luchar contra algo•
we could see she was struggling for breath — veíamos como respiraba con dificultad4) (=have difficulties) tener problemasthey were struggling to pay their bills — tenían problemas or iban apurados para pagar las facturas
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I struggled through the book — me costó terminar de leer el libro, tuve problemas para terminar de leer el libro•
she has struggled with her weight for years — ha tenido problemas con su peso durante años* * *
I ['strʌgəl]a) ( against opponent) lucha f; ( physical) refriega fto put up a struggle — luchar, oponer* resistencia
to give up without a struggle — rendirse* sin luchar
b) ( against difficulties) lucha f
II
1)a) ( thrash around) forcejearb) (contend, strive) lucharto struggle (against/with something) — luchar (contra algo)
c) ( be in difficulties) pasar apuros2) ( move with difficulty) (+ adv compl) -
18 easily
1) (without difficulty: She won the race easily.) fácilmente2) (by far: This is easily the best book I've read this year.) con diferencia3) (very probably: It may easily rain tomorrow.) probablementeeasily adv fácilmente / sin problemastr['iːzɪlɪ]1 (without difficulty) fácilmente, con facilidad2 (by far) con mucho; (without doubt) sin duda3 (possibly) fácilmente, perfectamenteeasily ['i:zəli] adv1) : fácilmente, con facilidad2) unquestionably: con mucho, de lejosadv.• buenamente adv.• fácilmente adv.• ligeramente adv.'iːzəli, 'iːzɪli1)a) ( without difficulty) fácilmente, con facilidadb) ( readily) <break/stain/cry> con facilidad2)a) ( by far) con mucho, fácil (fam), (de) lejos (AmL fam)b) ( at least) por lo menos, fácil (fam)it must have cost easily $100 — debe de haber costado por lo menos $100
3) ( very conceivably) perfectamente, fácilmente['iːzɪlɪ]ADV1) (=without difficulty) [win, climb, break, tire, cry] fácilmente, con facilidadhe makes friends easily — hace amigos fácilmente or con facilidad
she's easily pleased/upset — es fácil complacerla/disgustarla, se contenta/disgusta fácilmente
don't worry, it's easily done — (replying to apology) no te preocupes, le puede pasar a cualquiera
it holds four litres easily — caben cuatro litros largos, caben cuatro litros fácilmente
that will cost you £50 easily — eso te costará fácilmente or por lo menos 50 libras
2) (=very possibly) perfectamente, fácilmentehe may easily change his mind — puede perfectamente or fácilmente cambiar de opinión, fácilmente cambia de opinión (LAm)
it could very easily happen again — podría perfectamente or fácilmente ocurrir de nuevo
3) (=by far) con mucho* * *['iːzəli, 'iːzɪli]1)a) ( without difficulty) fácilmente, con facilidadb) ( readily) <break/stain/cry> con facilidad2)a) ( by far) con mucho, fácil (fam), (de) lejos (AmL fam)b) ( at least) por lo menos, fácil (fam)it must have cost easily $100 — debe de haber costado por lo menos $100
3) ( very conceivably) perfectamente, fácilmente -
19 experience
ik'spiəriəns
1. noun1) ((knowledge, skill or wisdom gained through) practice in some activity, or the doing of something: Learn by experience - don't make the same mistake again; Has she had experience in teaching?) experiencia2) (an event that affects or involves a person etc: The earthquake was a terrible experience.) experiencia
2. verb(to have experience of; to feel: I have never before experienced such rudeness!) experimentarexperience1 n experienciahave you any experience as a waiter? ¿tienes experiencia como camarero?experience2 vb experimentar / sentir / sufrirtr[ɪk'spɪərɪəns]1 experienciaexperience [ɪk'spɪriənts, ɛk-] vt, - enced ; - encing : experimentar (sentimientos), tener (dificultades), sufrir (una pérdida): experiencia fn.• experiencia s.f.• experimento s.m.v.• experimentar v.
I ɪk'spɪriənsmass & count noun experiencia fto know something by o from experience — saber* algo por experiencia
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transitive verb \<\<loss/setback/delays\>\> sufrir; \<\<difficulty\>\> tener*, encontrarse* con; \<\<change/improvement\>\> experimentar; \<\<pleasure/pain/relief\>\> experimentar, sentir*[ɪks'pɪǝrɪǝns]1. N1) (=knowledge) experiencia fI know from bitter/personal experience — lo sé por mi amarga experiencia/por experiencia propia
he has no experience of grief/being out of work — no conoce la tristeza/el desempleo
2) (=skill, practice) práctica f, experiencia fhave you any previous experience? — ¿tiene usted experiencia previa?
practical experience — experiencia f práctica
work 4.teaching experience — experiencia f docente
3) (=event) experiencia f, aventura fto have a pleasant/frightening experience — tener una experiencia agradable/aterradora
2.VT (=feel) [+ emotion, sensation] experimentar; (=suffer) [+ defeat, loss, hardship] sufrir; [+ difficulty] tener, tropezar conhe experiences some difficulty/pain in walking — tiene dificultades/dolor al andar
he experienced a loss of hearing after the accident — después del accidente, sufrió una pérdida del oído
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I [ɪk'spɪriəns]mass & count noun experiencia fto know something by o from experience — saber* algo por experiencia
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transitive verb \<\<loss/setback/delays\>\> sufrir; \<\<difficulty\>\> tener*, encontrarse* con; \<\<change/improvement\>\> experimentar; \<\<pleasure/pain/relief\>\> experimentar, sentir* -
20 snag
snæɡ1) (a difficulty or drawback: We did not realize at first how many snags there were in our plan.) pega, problema, inconveniente2) (a place on a garment where a thread has been torn or pulled out of place.) enganchón, desgarrónsnag n pegatr[snæg]2 (tear, hole, thread) enganchón nombre masculino, desgarrón nombre masculino, rasgón nombre masculino, siete nombre masculino1 (catch, tear) enganchar: engancharsnag vi: engancharsesnag n: problema m, inconveniente mn.• entresijo s.m.• gabarro s.m.• intríngulis s.m.• nudo en la madera s.m.• raigón de un diente s.m.• tocón s.m.• yema s.f.v.• enganchar v.• enredar v.
I snæga) ( difficulty) inconveniente m, problema m, pega f (Esp fam)b) (in fabric, stocking) enganchón m, enganche m (CS), jalón m (Méx)
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transitive verb - gg- enganchar[snæɡ]1. N1) (=difficulty) inconveniente m, problema mthere's a snag — hay un inconveniente or problema
what's the snag? — ¿cuál es el problema?, ¿qué pega hay? (Sp)
the snag is that... — la dificultad es que...
to run into or hit a snag — encontrar inconvenientes, dar con un obstáculo
2) [of tooth] raigón m4) (in fabric) enganchón m2.VT enganchar, coger (on en)3.VI engancharse, quedar cogido (on en)* * *
I [snæg]a) ( difficulty) inconveniente m, problema m, pega f (Esp fam)b) (in fabric, stocking) enganchón m, enganche m (CS), jalón m (Méx)
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transitive verb - gg- enganchar
См. также в других словарях:
difficulty — difficulty, hardship, rigor, vicissitude are synonyms only when they mean something which demands effort and endurance if it is to be overcome or one s end achieved. Difficulty, the most widely applicable of these terms, applies to any condition … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Difficulty — Dif fi*cul*ty, n.; pl. {Difficulties}. [L. difficultas, fr. difficilis difficult; dif = dis + facilis easy: cf. F. difficult[ e]. See {Facile}.] 1. The state of being difficult, or hard to do; hardness; arduousness; opposed to {easiness} or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
difficulty — [dif′i kul΄tē, dif′ikəl΄tē] n. pl. difficulties [ME & OFr difficulte < L difficultas < difficilis, difficult < dis , not + facilis, easy: see FACILE] 1. the condition or fact of being difficult 2. something that is difficult, as a hard… … English World dictionary
difficulty — [n1] problem; situation requiring great effort adversity, arduousness, awkwardness, barricade, check, complication, crisis, crux, dead end, deadlock, deep water*, dilemma, distress, emergency, exigency, fix*, frustration, hardship, hazard,… … New thesaurus
difficulty — late 14c., from O.Fr. difficulté, from L. difficultatem (nom. difficultas) difficulty, distress, poverty, from difficilis hard, from dis not, away from (see DIS (Cf. dis )) + facilis easy (see FACILE (Cf. facile)) … Etymology dictionary
difficulty — index adversity, aggravation (annoyance), bar (obstruction), burden, complex (entanglement) … Law dictionary
difficulty — ► NOUN (pl. difficulties) 1) the state or condition of being difficult. 2) a difficult or dangerous situation or circumstance. ORIGIN Latin difficultas, from facultas ability, opportunity … English terms dictionary
difficulty — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ considerable, enormous, extreme, grave, great, major, real, serious, severe ▪ We had enormous difficulty … Collocations dictionary
difficulty */*/*/ — UK [ˈdɪfɪk(ə)ltɪ] / US [ˈdɪfɪkəltɪ] noun Word forms difficulty : singular difficulty plural difficulties Metaphor: A difficult idea or situation is like a knot or something that is tied up, tangled, or twisted. When you deal with it successfully … English dictionary
difficulty — dif|fi|cul|ty [ dıfıkəlti ] noun *** 1. ) uncount how difficult something is: The courses vary in content and difficulty. 2. ) uncount if you have difficulty with something, you are not able to do it easily: difficulty (in) doing something: Six… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
difficulty — n. 1) to cause, create, make, present difficulties for 2) to come across, encounter, experience, face, meet, run into difficulties 3) to clear up, overcome, resolve, surmount a difficulty 4) (a) grave, great, insurmountable, serious, severe… … Combinatory dictionary