-
1 hartarse
1 (atiborrarse) to eat one's fill, stuff oneself2 (cansarse) to get fed up (de, with), get tired (de, of)3 familiar (hacer algo) to do nothing but* * *VPR1) (=cansarse) to get fed up *un día se hartará y se marchará — one of these days she'll get tired o get fed up * of it all and leave
•
hartarse de algo/algn — to get tired of sth/sb, get fed up with sth/sb *, get sick of sth/sb *me estoy hartando de todo esto — I'm getting tired of o fed up with * o sick of * all this
ya me he hartado de esperar — I've had enough of waiting, I'm tired of o fed up with * o sick of * waiting
se hartó de que siempre lo hicieran blanco de sus burlas — he got fed up with * o sick of * o tired of always being the butt of their jokes
2) (=atiborrarse)hartarse de — [+ comida] to gorge o.s. on, stuff o.s. with *
se hartaron de uvas — they gorged themselves on grapes, they stuffed themselves with grapes *
me harté de agua — I drank gallons o loads of water *
3) (=saciarse)•
hartarse a o de algo, en esa exposición puedes hartarte de cultura griega — in that exhibition you can get your fill of Greek culture•
hartarse a o de hacer algo, en vacaciones me harté a o de tomar el sol — I sunbathed all day on holiday•
comieron hasta hartarse — they gorged o stuffed * themselves* * *= get + fed up, have had enough.Ex. 'That new project he's been busting himself and everyone else over is way behind schedule and Peterson is getting fed up'.Ex. Last night the Israeli prime minister announced that after nine days of eyeball-to-eyeball negotiations, he' d had enough and was going home.----* hartarse de = binge.* * *= get + fed up, have had enough.Ex: 'That new project he's been busting himself and everyone else over is way behind schedule and Peterson is getting fed up'.
Ex: Last night the Israeli prime minister announced that after nine days of eyeball-to-eyeball negotiations, he' d had enough and was going home.* hartarse de = binge.* * *
■hartarse verbo reflexivo
1 (atiborrarse) to eat one's fill: se hartó de pasteles, he stuffed himself on cakes
2 (cansarse) to get fed up [de, with], grow/get tired [de, of]: no se harta de bailar, she never gets tired of dancing
nos hartamos de reír, we got tired of laughing so much
' hartarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
inflarse
- aburrir
- hartar
- hinchar
* * *vpr1. [atiborrarse] to stuff o gorge oneself (de with);se hartó de beber cerveza she drank her fill of beer;comió pasteles hasta hartarse she ate cakes until she was sick of them2. [cansarse] to get fed up;hartarse de algo to get fed up with sth;hartarse de hacer algo to get fed up of doing sthnos hartamos de reír we laughed ourselves silly;se harta de trabajar he works himself into the ground;en las últimas vacaciones me harté de tomar el sol I did nothing but sunbathe on our last holidays* * *v/r1 get sick (de of) fam, get tired (de of)2 ( llenarse) stuff o.s. (de with);hartarse de dormir sleep for hours on end* * *vr: to be weary, to get fed up* * *hartarse vb1. (cansarse) to get fed up2. (atiborrarse) to stuff yourself3. (satisfacerse) to do nothing but -
2 henchir
en'đsirv irrfüllen, auffüllen, ausstopfenverbo transitivo————————henchirse verbo pronominal1. [hartarse] sich voll stopfen2. [llenarse]henchirhenchir [en'6B36F75Cʧ6B36F75Cir]anfüllen; henchir los pulmones de aire tief einatmen; henchir una maleta einen Koffer voll stopfen -
3 hartar
v.1 to stuff (full).2 to get sick, to irritate, to put off, to overtire.Su actitud harta a María His attitude overtires Mary.3 to satiate, to fill up, to glut, to feed up.La comida harta a Ricardo The food satiates Richard.4 to annoy, to cheese up, to suck.Su actitud harta His attitude annoys.* * *1 (atiborrar) to satiate, fill up2 figurado (deseo etc) to satisfy3 (fastidiar) to annoy, irritate4 (cansar) to tire, bore5 (causar, dar) to overwhelm (de, with)1 (atiborrarse) to eat one's fill, stuff oneself2 (cansarse) to get fed up (de, with), get tired (de, of)3 familiar (hacer algo) to do nothing but\hasta hartarse to repletion* * *1. VT1) (=cansar)me harta tanta televisión — I get tired of o fed up with * o sick of * watching so much television
los estás hartando con tantas bobadas — they're getting tired of o fed up with * o sick of * your fooling around
ya me está hartando que siempre me hable de lo mismo — I'm getting tired of o fed up with * o sick of * him always talking about the same thing
2) (=atiborrar)hartar a algn a o de — [+ comida, alcohol] to fill sb full of
nos hartan a chistes malos — we get fed up with * o sick of * o tired of their bad jokes
3) CAm (=maldecir de) to malign, slander2.VI (=cansar)todos estos tópicos manidos ya hartan — all these worn-out clichés get so boring, you get tired of o get fed up with * o sick of * all these worn-out clichés
3.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1) (cansar, fastidiar)me hartó con sus quejas — I got tired o (colloq) sick of his complaints
2) (fam) ( llenar)2.hartar a alguien a or de algo: nos hartaban a sopa they fed us on nothing but soup; lo hartaron a palos — they gave him a real beating
hartarse v pron1) (cansarse, aburrirse) to get fed uphartarse de algo — to get tired o sick of something, get fed up with something
hartarse de alguien — get tired of somebody, get fed up with somebody
hartarse de + inf — to get tired o sick of -ing, get fed up with -ing
me harté de que se burlara de mí — I got fed up with o I got tired of her making fun of me
2) ( llenarse)comieron hasta hartarse — they gorged o (colloq) stuffed themselves
hartarse de algo — to gorge oneself on something, to stuff oneself with something (colloq)
* * *= weary.Ex. She wearies of the constant procession of visitors, and the round of invitations and commissions, which swallow up her time.* * *1.verbo transitivo1) (cansar, fastidiar)me hartó con sus quejas — I got tired o (colloq) sick of his complaints
2) (fam) ( llenar)2.hartar a alguien a or de algo: nos hartaban a sopa they fed us on nothing but soup; lo hartaron a palos — they gave him a real beating
hartarse v pron1) (cansarse, aburrirse) to get fed uphartarse de algo — to get tired o sick of something, get fed up with something
hartarse de alguien — get tired of somebody, get fed up with somebody
hartarse de + inf — to get tired o sick of -ing, get fed up with -ing
me harté de que se burlara de mí — I got fed up with o I got tired of her making fun of me
2) ( llenarse)comieron hasta hartarse — they gorged o (colloq) stuffed themselves
hartarse de algo — to gorge oneself on something, to stuff oneself with something (colloq)
* * *= weary.Ex: She wearies of the constant procession of visitors, and the round of invitations and commissions, which swallow up her time.
* * *hartar [A1 ]vtA(cansar, fastidiar): me estás empezando a hartar con tus quejas I'm beginning to get sick o tired of your complaints, your complaints are beginning to get on my nervesnos hartaban a sopa de verduras they used to give us vegetable soup until it came out of our ears ( colloq), they fed us on nothing but vegetable soupentre los tres lo hartaron a palos the three of them gave him a real beating■ hartarseA (cansarse, aburrirse) to get fed upun día se hartó y se fue one day he got fed up and left, one day he got sick o tired of it ( o of things etc) and he lefthartarse DE algo to get tired o sick OF sth, get fed up WITH sthya me estoy hartando de tus tonterías I'm getting tired of o sick of o fed up with your nonsensehartarse DE algn to tire of sb, get tired OF sb, get fed up WITH sbpronto se hartará de él she'll soon tire of him o get tired of him o get fed up with himhartarse DE + INF to get tired o sick of -ING, get fed up WITH -INGme harté de repetírselo I got tired o sick of telling him over and over again, I got fed up with telling him over and over againhartarse DE QUE + SUBJ:me harté de que se burlara de mí I got fed up with o I got tired of her making fun of meBvamos a hartarnos de mariscos y champán we're going to gorge ourselves on o stuff ourselves with shellfish and champagne* * *
hartar ( conjugate hartar) verbo transitivo
1 (cansar, fastidiar):
2 (fam) ( llenar): nos hartaban a or de sopa they fed us on nothing but soup;
hartarse verbo pronominal
1 (cansarse, aburrirse) to get fed up;
hartarse de algo/algn to get tired o sick of sth/sb, get fed up with sth/sb;
hartarse de hacer algo to get tired o sick of doing sth, get fed up with doing sth
2 ( llenarse): hartarse (de algo) to gorge oneself (on sth), to stuff oneself (with sth) (colloq)
hartar verbo transitivo
1 (molestar, cansar) to annoy: la escuché hasta que me hartó con tanto reproche, I listened to her until I got sick of hearing so much criticism
2 (saciar) to satiate
3 (dar en abundancia) to overwhelm [de, with]: me hartaron de comida, they made me eat too much
' hartar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
cansar
- asquear
English:
weary
* * *♦ vt1. [atiborrar] to stuff (full);hartaron de regalos a sus nietos they showered gifts on their grandchildren;sus detractores lo hartaron a insultos his critics showered him with insults;los atacantes los hartaron a golpes they were very badly beaten up by the attackersme estás hartando con tantas exigencias I'm getting fed up with all your demands♦ viesta comida harta mucho you can't eat a lot of this food;esta telenovela ya está empezando a hartar this soap is beginning to get tedious* * *v/t:hartar a alguien con algo tire s.o. with sth;hartar a alguien de algo give s.o. too much of sth* * *hartar vt1) : to glut, to satiate2) fastidiar: to tire, to irritate, to annoy -
4 harto
adj.1 fed-up, satiate, glutted, up to one's ears.2 fed-up, disgruntled, browned-off, brassed off.adv.enough.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: hartar.* * *► adjetivo1 (repleto) full, satiated3 desuso (bastante) enough\¡me tienes harto,-a! I'm fed up with you!¡ya estoy harto,-a! I'm fed up!, I'm sick and tired of it!————————► adverbio* * *(f. - harta)adj.1) full2) fed up* * *1. ADJ1) (=cansado) fed up *¡ya estamos hartos! — we've had enough!, we're fed up! *
¡me tienes harto! — I'm fed up with you! *
•
estar harto de algo/algn — to be tired of sth/sb, be fed up with sth/sb *, be sick of sth/sb *estaban un poco hartos de tanta publicidad — they were a bit tired of all the publicity, they were a bit fed up with o sick of all the publicity *
está harto de su jefe — he's fed up with o sick of his boss *
•
estar harto de hacer algo — to be tired of doing sth, be fed up of doing sth *, be sick of doing sth *está harto de no tener dinero — he's tired o fed up * o sick of * not having any money
estamos hartos de que lleguen siempre tarde — we're tired of o fed up with * o sick of * them arriving late
2) (=lleno)•
harto de algo — stuffed with sth *3) (=mucho)a) frmocurre con harta frecuencia — it happens very often o very frequently
b) LAm plenty of, a lot ofusaste harta harina — you used plenty of o a lot of flour
hartos chilenos — plenty of o a lot of Chileans
ha habido hartos accidentes — there have been a lot of o plenty of accidents
2. ADV1) [con adjetivo]a) frm very, extremelyuna tarea harto difícil — a very difficult task, an extremely difficult task
b) LAm very2) LAm [con adverbio] verylo sé harto bien — I know that very well o all too well
3) LAm [con verbo] a lot3.PRON LAm-¿queda leche? -sí, harta — "is there any milk left?" - "yes, lots"
* * *I- ta adjetivo1)a) (cansado, aburrido) fed upme tienes harto con tantas exigencias — I'm sick o tired of all your demands
harto de algo/alguien — fed up with something/somebody, tired of something/somebody
harto de + inf — tired of -ing, fed up with -ing
estaba harta de que le dijeran eso — she was tired of o fed up with them telling her that
b) ( de comida) full2) (delante del n) ( mucho)a) (frml)b) (AmL exc RPl)II1) ( modificando un adjetivo)a) (frml) extremely, veryb) (AmL exc RPl) veryes harto mejor que el hermano — he's much o a lot better than his brother
2) ( modificando un verbo) (AmL exc RPl)III- ta pronombre (AmL exc RPl)¿tienes amigos allí? - sí, hartos! — do you have friends there? - yes, lots
* * *= fed up, jaded.Ex. The article is entitled 'Tough luck: To be a professional sport climber in America probably means you're broke, fed up and still no match for the foreign competition'.Ex. He is notorious for poking fun at those who advance jaded, esoteric ideas about the importance of studying classical languages.----* estar harto = have had enough.* estar harto de = be all too familiar with, be sick and tired of.* harto de = sick of.* harto de comida = fullfed.* * *I- ta adjetivo1)a) (cansado, aburrido) fed upme tienes harto con tantas exigencias — I'm sick o tired of all your demands
harto de algo/alguien — fed up with something/somebody, tired of something/somebody
harto de + inf — tired of -ing, fed up with -ing
estaba harta de que le dijeran eso — she was tired of o fed up with them telling her that
b) ( de comida) full2) (delante del n) ( mucho)a) (frml)b) (AmL exc RPl)II1) ( modificando un adjetivo)a) (frml) extremely, veryb) (AmL exc RPl) veryes harto mejor que el hermano — he's much o a lot better than his brother
2) ( modificando un verbo) (AmL exc RPl)III- ta pronombre (AmL exc RPl)¿tienes amigos allí? - sí, hartos! — do you have friends there? - yes, lots
* * *= fed up, jaded.Ex: The article is entitled 'Tough luck: To be a professional sport climber in America probably means you're broke, fed up and still no match for the foreign competition'.
Ex: He is notorious for poking fun at those who advance jaded, esoteric ideas about the importance of studying classical languages.* estar harto = have had enough.* estar harto de = be all too familiar with, be sick and tired of.* harto de = sick of.* harto de comida = fullfed.* * *A1 (cansado, aburrido) fed upme tienes harta con tantas exigencias I'm sick of o tired of o fed up with all your demands, I've had enough of your demands¡ya estoy harto! I've had enough!harto DE algo/algn fed up WITH sth/sb, tired OF sth/sb, sick OF sth/sb harto DE + INF tired OF -ING, fed up WITH -ING, sick OF -INGestoy harto de tener que repetirte todo I'm tired of o fed up with o sick of having to repeat everything I tell youharto DE QUE + SUBJ:estaba harta de que le dijeran lo que tenía que hacer she was tired of o fed up with o sick of them telling her what to doB ( delante del n) (mucho)1 ( frml):esto sucede con harta frecuencia this happens very frequentlytenían hartas ventajas they had many advantages2tiene hartas ganas de verte he really wants to see you, he's dying to see you ( colloq)había harta gente allí there were a lot of o ( colloq) loads of people there1 ( frml); extremely, veryuna doctrina harto peligrosa an extremely o a very o a highly dangerous doctrineuna tarea harto difícil an extremely o a very difficult task2 ( AmL exc RPl) verytiene una nariz harto grande she has a very big nosees harto mejor que el hermano he's much o a lot o ( colloq) miles better than his brotherpara serte harto franca to be quite frank with youB(modificando un verbo) ( AmL exc RPl): me gustó harto la película I really liked the movie, I thought the movie was great ( colloq)bailamos harto we danced a lotme divertí harto con él I had a great time with him¿tienes amigos allí? — ¡sí, hartos! do you have friends there? — yes, lots o loads ( colloq)* * *
Del verbo hartar: ( conjugate hartar)
harto es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
hartó es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo
Multiple Entries:
hartar
harto
hartar ( conjugate hartar) verbo transitivo
1 (cansar, fastidiar):
2 (fam) ( llenar): nos hartaban a or de sopa they fed us on nothing but soup;
hartarse verbo pronominal
1 (cansarse, aburrirse) to get fed up;
hartose de algo/algn to get tired o sick of sth/sb, get fed up with sth/sb;
hartose de hacer algo to get tired o sick of doing sth, get fed up with doing sth
2 ( llenarse): hartose (de algo) to gorge oneself (on sth), to stuff oneself (with sth) (colloq)
harto 1◊ -ta adjetivo
1
harto de algo/algn fed up with sth/sb, tired of sth/sb;
harto de hacer algo tired of doing sth, fed up with doing sth;◊ estaba harta de que le dijeran eso she was tired of o fed up with them telling her that
2 ( delante del n) ( mucho) (AmL exc RPl):
tiene hartas ganas de verte he really wants to see you
■ pronombre (AmL exc RPl):
¿tienes amigos allí? — ¡sí, hartos! do you have friends there? — yes, lots
harto 2 adverbio
◊ es harto mejor que el hermano he's much o a lot better than his brotherb) ( modificando un verbo):
bailamos harto we danced a lot
hartar verbo transitivo
1 (molestar, cansar) to annoy: la escuché hasta que me hartó con tanto reproche, I listened to her until I got sick of hearing so much criticism
2 (saciar) to satiate
3 (dar en abundancia) to overwhelm [de, with]: me hartaron de comida, they made me eat too much
harto,-a
I adjetivo
1 (de comida) full
2 (hastiado, aburrido) fed up: ¡me tiene harto!, I'm fed up with him!
estoy harto de decírtelo, I'm fed up with telling you
II adv frml (muy) very: es harto difícil que ganemos, it's going to be hard for us to win
' harto' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
ahíta
- ahíto
- amargada
- amargado
- cansada
- cansado
- enferma
- enfermo
- frita
- frito
- harta
- hartar
- hartarse
- quemada
- quemado
- satisfecha
- satisfecho
- torear
- aburrido
- podrido
English:
brassed off
- cheese off
- enough
- fed
- fill
- play along
- sick
- tired
- weary
- dare
- ditto
- thing
- whole
* * *harto, -a♦ adj1. [de comida] full;estoy harto de dulces I've had enough sweet things;Esp Famni harto de vino: ése no ayuda a nadie ni harto de vino he wouldn't help you if you were drowning;no le dejaría mi coche ni harto de vino I wouldn't lend him my car in a million yearsestoy harto de repetirte que cierres la puerta I'm sick and tired of telling you to shut the door;me tiene harto con el piano I'm fed up of o with her and her piano;empiezo a estar un poco harto de sus quejas I'm starting to get rather tired of o fed up with his complaintstiene harto dinero she has a lot of o lots of money;de este aeropuerto salen hartos aviones a lot of o lots of planes fly from this airport♦ adves harto frecuente it's extremely common;el examen fue harto difícil the exam was extremely difficult[mucho] a lot, very much;es harto grande it's very o really big;nos cansamos harto we got really tired;te quiero harto I love you very much♦ pronAm salvo RP [mucho]¿tiene muchos muebles? – hartos does she have a lot of furniture? – yes, she's got loads;sabes harto que te quiero you know perfectly well that I love you* * *I adj1 fed up fam ;estar harto de algo be sick of sth fam, be fed up with sth fam2 ( lleno) full (up)3:había hartos pasteles there were cakes in abundanceme gusta harto L.Am. I like it a lot;hace harto frío L.Am. it’s very cold* * *harto adv: most, extremely, veryharto, -ta adj1) : full, satiated2) : fed up* * *harto adj1. (en general) fed up2. (de comida) full up -
5 hartá
f., (m. - harto)* * *----* gustar una hartá = love + Nombre + to bits.* * ** gustar una hartá = love + Nombre + to bits.* * *
Del verbo hartar: ( conjugate hartar)
harta es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativo
Multiple Entries:
harta
hartar
hartar ( conjugate hartar) verbo transitivo
1 (cansar, fastidiar):
2 (fam) ( llenar): nos hartaban a or de sopa they fed us on nothing but soup;
hartarse verbo pronominal
1 (cansarse, aburrirse) to get fed up;
hartase de algo/algn to get tired o sick of sth/sb, get fed up with sth/sb;
hartase de hacer algo to get tired o sick of doing sth, get fed up with doing sth
2 ( llenarse): hartase (de algo) to gorge oneself (on sth), to stuff oneself (with sth) (colloq)
harto,-a
I adjetivo
1 (de comida) full
2 (hastiado, aburrido) fed up: ¡me tiene harto!, I'm fed up with him!
estoy harto de decírtelo, I'm fed up with telling you
II adv frml (muy) very: es harto difícil que ganemos, it's going to be hard for us to win
hartar verbo transitivo
1 (molestar, cansar) to annoy: la escuché hasta que me hartó con tanto reproche, I listened to her until I got sick of hearing so much criticism
2 (saciar) to satiate
3 (dar en abundancia) to overwhelm [de, with]: me hartaron de comida, they made me eat too much
' harta' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
devaneo
- forcejear
- hartarse
- harto
- lamentación
- lo
- ya
English:
male
-
6 hincharse
1 MEDICINA to swell (up)2 (engreírse) to become conceited, become bigheaded4 familiar (hacer dinero) to make a packet, line one's pockets* * ** * *VPR1) (=inflamarse) [herida, tobillo] to swell, swell up; [vientre] to get distended frm, get bloated2) (=hartarse)hincharse de — [+ comida] to stuff o.s. with *
me hinché de agua — I drank gallons o loads of water *
hincharse a o de hacer algo: hincharse a o de correr — to run like mad
hincharse de reír — to have a good laugh, split one's sides laughing
3) (=engreírse) to get conceited, become vain, get swollen-headed4) * (=enriquecerse) to make a pile *, make a mint ** * *(v.) = bloat, swell upEx. During feeding the ciliate bloats in a few minutes to 10 to 20 times its original volume.Ex. Outside the walls of the room, outside the walls of his skull, outside the impalpable energy walls of his mind, he felt those forces gathering, swelling up.* * *(v.) = bloat, swell upEx: During feeding the ciliate bloats in a few minutes to 10 to 20 times its original volume.
Ex: Outside the walls of the room, outside the walls of his skull, outside the impalpable energy walls of his mind, he felt those forces gathering, swelling up.* * *
■hincharse verbo reflexivo
1 Med to swell (up)
2 fam (comer en exceso) to stuff oneself [de, with]: me hinché de bombones, I stuffed myself with chocolates
(hacer algo en exceso) me hinché a bailar, I danced as much as I could
♦ Locuciones: familiar hincharse las narices, to get fed up: ¡me estaba hinchando las narices con tanta bromita!, I was getting fed up with all the joking around
' hincharse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
hinchar
English:
balloon
- puff up
- swell
- swell up
- billow
- distend
- puff
- surge
* * *vpr1. [de aire] to inflate;el globo se hinchó en pocas horas the balloon was inflated in a few hours2. [pierna, mano] to swell (up);se me ha hinchado el brazo my arm has swollen (up)3. [persona] to get puffed up;siempre que habla de sus títulos se hincha she gets all puffed up whenever she talks about her qualificationsnos hinchamos de paella we stuffed ourselves with paella;nos hinchamos de reír we laughed ourselves silly* * *v/r1 MED swell3 figstuff o.s (de with)* * *vr1) : to swell up2) : to become conceited, to swell with pride* * *hincharse vb2. (de comida) to stuff yourself -
7 quemar
ke'marvverbrennen, abbrennenverbo transitivo1. [gen] verbrennen2. [comida] anbrennen lassen3. [suj: electricidad] durchbrennen lassen4. [suj: sustancia corrosiva] verätzen5. [en boca] brennen6. [suj: frío] erfrieren lassen7. [fortuna] vergeuden————————verbo intransitivo1. [estar caliente] heiß sein2. [desgastar] aufreiben————————quemarse verbo pronominal1. [casa] abbrennen[comida] anbrennen[por fuego] sich verbrennen2. [por calor, por sol] verbrennen3. [por electricidad] durchbrennen4. (figurado) [hartarse] überdrüssig werden5. (figurado) [desgastarse] sich aufreibenquemarquemar [ke'mar]brennen; ¡cuidado, esta sopa quema! Vorsicht, diese Suppe ist heiß!num1num (objeto) verbrennen; (casa: completamente) niederbrennen; quemar un bosque einen Wald in Brand steckennum2num (comida) anbrennen lassennum3num (aguardiente) brennennum4num (sol) verbrennennum5num (licor, pimienta) brennen; este chili quema la garganta/la lengua dieser Chili brennt im Hals/auf der Zungenum6num (lejía) ätzennum7num (planta: calor) ausdörren; (planta: frío) erfrieren lassennum8num (fortuna) vergeudennum9num (fastidiar) ärgern■ quemarsenum1num (arder) (ver)brennen; el bosque se quema der Wald brennt (ab); me he quemado los cabellos ich habe mir die Haare versengtnum2num (herir) verbrennen -
8 объесться
(твор. п.) -
9 inflar
im'flarv1) aufpumpen2) ( soplar) aufblasen3) (fig: exagerar) aufbauschen, übertreiben, aufblasenverbo transitivo1. [soplando] aufblasen[con bomba] aufpumpen2. [exagerar] übertreiben————————inflarse verbo pronominal[hartarse]inflarinflar [i98780C67ɱ98780C67'flar]num1num (llenar de aire) aufblasennum2num (exagerar) aufbauschen■ inflarsenum2num (familiar: de comida) sich voll stopfen [de mit+dativo] -
10 atiborrarse
1 familiar (de comida) to stuff oneself (de, with)* * *VPR to stuff o.s. (de with)* * *(v.) = get + stuffedEx. The article 'Get stuffed' reviews some of the Internet sites for food enthusiasts and gourmets, including sources for home delivery of pizzas.* * *(v.) = get + stuffedEx: The article 'Get stuffed' reviews some of the Internet sites for food enthusiasts and gourmets, including sources for home delivery of pizzas.
* * *
■atiborrarse vr fam to stuff oneself [de, with]
' atiborrarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
bota
- hartarse
- tibia
- tibio
- atiborrar
English:
gorge
* * *vprto stuff one's face;se atiborraron de pasteles they stuffed their faces with cakes* * *v/r famstuff o.s. fam(de with)* * *vr: to stuff oneself -
11 quemarse
3 figurado (ir a acertar) to get warm■ ¡que te quemas! you're getting warm!* * *VPR1) [persona] [con fuego] to burn o.s.; [con el sol] to get burnedceja 1)quemarse a lo bonzo — to set fire to o.s.
2) (=arder) [cuadros, papeles] to get burned; [edificio] to burn down; [comida] to burnse me ha quemado la cena — I've burned the dinner, the dinner has burned
se han quemado 100 hectáreas de pinares en el incendio — 100 hectares of pinewood have been destroyed in the fire
no te acerques a la chimenea que se te va a quemar la ropa — don't go too close to the fire or you'll scorch o burn your clothes
3) (=desprestigiarse)tantos años trabajando en esto y aún no se ha quemado — so many years working on this and he's still going strong
quiere hacer menos en televisión para no quemarse en poco tiempo — he wants to do less television to avoid overexposure o becoming overexposed
te quemás si salís con él — Arg, Uru you'll look really bad if you go out with him
4) [en juego, adivinanzas]caliente, caliente... ¡que te quemas! — (you're getting) warm, warmer... you're really hot o you're boiling!
5) Caribe (=deprimirse) to get depressed* * *(v.) = go up in + flamesEx. The title of the article is 'National library in Sarajevo destroyed; collections, archives go up in flames'.* * *(v.) = go up in + flamesEx: The title of the article is 'National library in Sarajevo destroyed; collections, archives go up in flames'.
* * *
■quemarse verbo reflexivo
1 (una persona) (con fuego, etc) to burn oneself
2 (con líquido) to scald oneself
3 (con el sol) to get burned
4 (una cosa) to get burned, burn down
5 fam (psíquicamente) to burn oneself out
' quemarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
achicharrarse
- arder
- quemar
English:
burn
- burn out
- finger
- smoke
- blow
- sun
- tan
* * *vpr1. [por fuego] to burn down;[por calor] to burn; [por agua hirviendo] to get scalded;se quemó con una sartén he burnt himself on a frying pan;se ha quemado la lasaña the lasagne's burnt;¡te quemas! [al buscar algo] you're burning!2. [por el sol] [abrasarse] to get (sun)burnt;Am [broncearse] to get a tan;en un mes de playa se quemó divinamente after a month at the seaside he had a wonderful tanse quemó tras quince años en las canchas de tenis after fifteen years as a tennis player he was burnt outacabó quemándose por culpa de las críticas de su jefe she ended up getting fed up with her boss's criticismssi largás en la mitad del proyecto te quemás para siempre if you leave halfway through the project you'll be blowing your chances with them for good* * *v/rget burned out2 Méx ( desvirtuarse) become discredited* * *vr* * *quemarse vb1. (cosa) to get burnt3. (con el sol) to get burnt / to get sunburnt4. (edificio, bosque) to burn down -
12 henchirse
1 (atiborrarse) to stuff oneself (de, with)* * *VPR1) [gen] to swellhenchirse de comida — to stuff o.s. with food *
2) [de orgullo] to swell with pride* * *vpr1. [hartarse] to stuff oneself* * *v/r swell (de with)* * *vr1) : to stuff oneself2) llenarse: to fill up, to be full
См. также в других словарях:
llenar — ► verbo transitivo/ pronominal 1 Ocupar un espacio vacío: ■ la piscina se llenó de agua en cinco horas; el público llenaba el teatro. SINÓNIMO saturar 2 Ocupar un lugar con muchas cosas: ■ llenó la casa de cuadros y fotografías. SINÓNIMO… … Enciclopedia Universal
empajar — ► verbo transitivo 1 Cubrir, rodear o rellenar una cosa con paja: ■ empajó las fresas en el momento de plantarlas. 2 América Meridional Techar una construcción con paja. 3 Chile Mezclar con paja. ► verbo pronominal 4 Chile Echar los cereales… … Enciclopedia Universal
henchir — (Del lat. implere, llenar.) ► verbo transitivo 1 Llenar una cosa totalmente: ■ henchir globos de aire es un ejercicio respiratorio recomendado. SE CONJUGA COMO pedir SINÓNIMO atestar inundar llenar ANTÓNI … Enciclopedia Universal
morado — (Del ár. mur, violado.) ► adjetivo 1 Del color violeta que tira a azul o rojo: ■ el cardenal llevaba la vestidura talar de color morado. ► sustantivo masculino 2 Color que se obtiene de la mezcla de carmín y azul. FRASEOLOGÍA pasarlas moradas … Enciclopedia Universal
atiborrar — {{#}}{{LM A03888}}{{〓}} {{ConjA03888}}{{\}}CONJUGACIÓN{{/}}{{SynA03971}} {{[}}atiborrar{{]}} ‹a·ti·bo·rrar› {{《}}▍ v.{{》}} {{<}}1{{>}} {{♂}}Referido especialmente a un recipiente,{{♀}} llenarlo por completo forzando su capacidad: • Cuando nos… … Diccionario de uso del español actual con sinónimos y antónimos
henchir — {{#}}{{LM H19987}}{{〓}} {{ConjH19987}}{{\}}CONJUGACIÓN{{/}}{{SynH20499}} {{[}}henchir{{]}} ‹hen·chir› {{《}}▍ v.{{》}} {{<}}1{{>}} {{♂}}Referido a un espacio vacío,{{♀}} llenarlo con algo, especialmente si al hacerlo aumenta su volumen: •… … Diccionario de uso del español actual con sinónimos y antónimos
llenar — {{#}}{{LM L24061}}{{〓}} {{ConjL24061}}{{\}}CONJUGACIÓN{{/}}{{SynL24651}} {{[}}llenar{{]}} ‹lle·nar› {{《}}▍ v.{{》}} {{<}}1{{>}} {{♂}}Referido a un espacio vacío o a un recipiente,{{♀}} ocuparlos total o parcialmente: • Llena el vaso solo hasta la… … Diccionario de uso del español actual con sinónimos y antónimos
atiborrar — ► verbo transitivo 1 Llenar en exceso un espacio: ■ atiborró la habitación de muñecos. SINÓNIMO atestar rebutir ► verbo transitivo/ pronominal 2 Comer en exceso: ■ se atiborró de pasteles. REG. PREPOSICIONAL + de SINÓ … Enciclopedia Universal
empapar — ► verbo transitivo/ pronominal 1 Mojar un material o un cuerpo hasta que quede impregnado del líquido: ■ se empapó al caer vestido en la piscina. SINÓNIMO bañar calar impregnar remojar ANTÓNIMO desecar enjuagar … Enciclopedia Universal
empiparse — (de «en » y «pipa1»; Hispam., y también en España) prnl. *Hartarse de comida o bebida. * * * empiparse. (De en y pipa1). prnl. Chi … Enciclopedia Universal
Ciego — (Del lat. caecus.) ► adjetivo/ sustantivo 1 Que está incapacitado para ver por un defecto en los órganos de la vista: ■ ya nació ciego, pero se defiende bien. SINÓNIMO invidente ► adjetivo 2 Que está dominado por un sentimiento, afición u otra… … Enciclopedia Universal