-
1 shed
I ʃed noun(a usually small building for working in, or for storage: a wooden shed; a garden shed.) cobertizo, nave
II ʃed present participle - shedding; verb1) (to send out (light etc): The torch shed a bright light on the path ahead.) arrojar2) (to cast off (clothing, skin, leaves etc): Many trees shed their leaves in autumn.) mudar3) (to produce (tears, blood): I don't think many tears were shed when she left.) derramar•shed1 n cobertizoshed2 vb perder / mudartr[ʃed]1 (in garden, for bicycles) cobertizo; (workman's hut) cabaña; (for cattle) establo; (industrial) nave nombre femenino\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLcoal shed carbonera————————tr[ʃed]1 (leaves, horns, skin) mudar; (clothes) quitarse, despojarse de; (workers, jobs) deshacerse de; (load, weight) perder2 figurative use (inhibitions etc) liberarse de3 (water) repelar4 (blood, tears, etc) derramar5 (light, warmth) emitir1) : derramar (sangre o lágrimas)2) emit: emitir (luz)to shed light on: aclarar3) discard: mudar (la piel, etc.)to shed one's clothes: quitarse uno la ropashed n: cobertizo mn.• cadahalso s.m.• cajón s.m.• cobertizo s.m.• sotechado s.m.• techado s.m.• tendajo s.m.• tendejón s.m.• vertiente de agua s.m.pret., p.p.(Preterito definido y participio pasivo de "to shed")v.(§ p.,p.p.: shed) = despojarse de v.• desprenderse de v.• largar v.• mudar v.• pelechar v.• verter v.
I
1. ʃed1)a) \<\<tears/blood\>\> derramarb) \<\<leaves/horns/skin\>\> mudar; \<\<clothing\>\> quitarse, despojarse de (frml)c) \<\<cares/inhibitions\>\> liberarse de; \<\<workers/jobs\>\> deshacerse* de2) ( send out) \<\<light\>\> emitir
2.
vi \<\<dog/cat\>\> pelechar, mudar de pelo
II
a) ( hut) cabaña f; ( garden shed) cobertizo m, galpón m (RPl)b) ( larger building) nave f, galpón m (CS)
I
[ʃed](pt, pp shed) VT1) (=get rid of) [+ clothes, fur, leaves, skin] despojarse de; [+ jobs] suprimir, recortarto shed one's clothes — desvestirse, quitarse la ropa, despojarse de la ropa frm
2) [+ tears, blood] derramarthose heroes that shed their blood in the cause of freedom — aquellos héroes que entregaron sus vidas en pro de la libertad
3) (=send out) [+ warmth] dar; [+ light] echar- shed light on sth
II
[ʃed]N (in garden) cobertizo m, galpón m (S. Cone); (for cattle) establo m ; (Ind, Rail) nave f* * *
I
1. [ʃed]1)a) \<\<tears/blood\>\> derramarb) \<\<leaves/horns/skin\>\> mudar; \<\<clothing\>\> quitarse, despojarse de (frml)c) \<\<cares/inhibitions\>\> liberarse de; \<\<workers/jobs\>\> deshacerse* de2) ( send out) \<\<light\>\> emitir
2.
vi \<\<dog/cat\>\> pelechar, mudar de pelo
II
a) ( hut) cabaña f; ( garden shed) cobertizo m, galpón m (RPl)b) ( larger building) nave f, galpón m (CS) -
2 overcome
1.
adjective(helpless; defeated by emotion etc: overcome with grief; I felt quite overcome.) afectado (por), dominado (por)
2. -'keim verb(to defeat or conquer: She finally overcame her fear of the dark.) superar, vencerovercome vb superarEl pasado de overcome es overcame y el participio pasado es overcome; el gerundio se escribe overcomingtr[əʊvə'kʌm]1 (defeat) vencer2 (overwhelm) agobiar, abrumar, invadir, apoderarse de, vencer3 (surmount) superar, dominar, vencer1 (triumph) vencer1) conquer: vencer, derrotar, superar2) overwhelm: abrumar, agobiarovercome vi: venceradj.• rendido, -a adj.• transido, -a adj.p.p.(Participio pasivo de "to overcome")v.(§ p.,p.p.: overcame, overcome) = abatanar v.• allanar v.• prevenir v.(§pres: -vengo, -vienes...-venimos) pret: -vin-fut: -vendr-•)• superar v.• vencer v.v.• llevarse por delante v.'əʊvər'kʌm, ˌəʊvə'kʌm
1.
a) \<\<opponent\>\> reducir*, vencer*b) ( overwhelm) invadir, apoderarse deto be overcome BY something: he was overcome by sleep/fatigue lo venció el sueño/la fatiga; they were overcome by emotion los embargó la emoción; to be overcome WITH something — \<\<with guilt/remorse\>\> sentirse* abrumado por algo
c) ( prevail over) \<\<fear\>\> superar, dominar, vencer*; \<\<inhibitions\>\> vencer*
2.
vi[ˌǝʊvǝ'kʌm] (pt overcame) (pp overcome)1. VT1) (=conquer) [+ enemy, opposition] vencer; [+ problem, temptation, inhibitions] superar, vencer; [+ rage, fear, disgust] superar, dominarthe book is an account of how she overcame cancer — el libro describe cómo superó or venció el cáncer
her curiosity finally overcame her shyness — finalmente, su curiosidad superó or venció su timidez
2) (=overwhelm) [feeling] adueñarse de; [sleep, fatigue] vencer•
to be overcome by sth, I was overcome by the heat — el calor me agobió, me sentí agobiado por el calorovercome by curiosity, he reached out to touch it — vencido or dominado por la curiosidad, extendió la mano para tocarlo
•
to be overcome with sth, she was overcome with remorse — le abrumaba el remordimientohe was overcome with grief — estaba abrumado or postrado de dolor
2.VI vencer, triunfarWE SHALL OVERCOMEwe shall overcome! — ¡venceremos!
We Shall Overcome (Venceremos) es el título de una canción cantada por los miembros del llamado US Civil Rights Movement (movimiento por los derechos civiles en Estados Unidos). Se cantaba sobre todo en los años 50 y 60 durante las protestas contra la discriminación racial y aún hoy la usan quienes protestan en contra de la injusticia.* * *['əʊvər'kʌm, ˌəʊvə'kʌm]
1.
a) \<\<opponent\>\> reducir*, vencer*b) ( overwhelm) invadir, apoderarse deto be overcome BY something: he was overcome by sleep/fatigue lo venció el sueño/la fatiga; they were overcome by emotion los embargó la emoción; to be overcome WITH something — \<\<with guilt/remorse\>\> sentirse* abrumado por algo
c) ( prevail over) \<\<fear\>\> superar, dominar, vencer*; \<\<inhibitions\>\> vencer*
2.
vi -
3 lose
lu:zpast tense, past participle - lost; verb1) (to stop having; to have no longer: She has lost interest in her work; I have lost my watch; He lost hold of the rope.) perder2) (to have taken away from one (by death, accident etc): She lost her father last year; The ship was lost in the storm; He has lost his job.) perder3) (to put (something) where it cannot be found: My secretary has lost your letter.) perder4) (not to win: I always lose at cards; She lost the race.) perder5) (to waste or use more (time) than is necessary: He lost no time in informing the police of the crime.) perder•- loser- loss
- lost
- at a loss
- a bad
- good loser
- lose oneself in
- lose one's memory
- lose out
- lost in
- lost on
lose vb perdertr[lʊːz]1 (in general) perder2 (immerse) sumergir (in, en)3 (clock) atrasar1 (in general) perder2 (clock) atrasarse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto have nothing to lose familiar no tener nada que perderto lose one's head perder la cabezato lose one's heart (to somebody) enamorarse (de alguien)to lose one's life perder la vida, perecerto lose one's way perderseto lose sight of something perder algo de vistato lose weight adelgazar, perder peso1) : perderI lost my umbrella: perdí mi paraguasto lose blood: perder sangreto lose one's voice: quedarse fónicoto have nothing to lose: no tener nada que perderto lose no time: no perder tiempoto lose weight: perder peso, adelgazarto lose one's temper: perder los estribos, enojarse, enfadarseto lose sight of: perder de vista2) : costar, hacer perderthe errors lost him his job: los errores le costaron su empleo3) : atrasarmy watch loses 5 minutes a day: mi reloj atrasa 5 minutos por día4)to lose oneself : perderse, ensimismarselose vi1) : perderwe lost to the other team: perdimos contra el otro equipo2) : atrasarsethe clock loses time: el reloj se atrasav.(§ p.,p.p.: lost) = palmar v.• perder v.luːz
1.
1) transitive verb (past & past p lost)2) ( mislay) perder*I've lost my key — he perdido or se me ha perdido la llave
to lose one's way — perderse*
3) ( be deprived of) \<\<sight/territory/right\>\> perder*4)a) ( fail to keep) \<\<customers/popularity/speed\>\> perder*we are losing our best teachers to industry — los mejores profesores se nos están yendo a trabajar a la industria
b) ( rid oneself of) \<\<inhibitions\>\> perder*to lose weight — adelgazar*, perder* peso
5)a) ( shake off) \<\<pursuer\>\> deshacerse* deb) ( lose sight of) perder* de vista6) ( confuse) confundiryou've lost me there! — no entiendo, no te sigo
7) ( cause to lose) costar*, hacer* perdertheir hesitation lost them the contract — la falta de decisión les costó or les hizo perder el contrato
8)a) ( miss) \<\<train/flight/connection\>\> perder*b) ( let pass) \<\<time/opportunity\>\> perder*9) ( fail to win) \<\<game/battle/election\>\> perder*
2.
vi1)a) ( be beaten) \<\<team/contestant/party\>\> perder*to lose TO somebody — perder* frente a alguien
b) losing pres p <team/party> perdedorto be on the losing side — ser* de los perdedores
2)a) ( suffer losses) perder*to lose on a deal — salir* perdiendo en un negocio
b) ( be less effective) perder*the poem loses in translation — el poema pierde con la traducción or al ser traducido
3) \<\<watch/clock\>\> atrasar, atrasarse
3.
v reflPhrasal Verbs:- lose out[luːz] (pt, pp lost)1. VT1) (=mislay, fail to find) perder2) (=be deprived of) perderwhat have you got to lose? — ¿qué tienes tú que perder?, ¿qué vas a perder?
he lost £1,000 on that deal — perdió 1.000 libras en ese trato
breath 1., 1), voice 1., 1)•
to lose the use of an arm — perder el uso de un brazo3) (=fail to keep) perder•
she's lost her figure/her looks — ha perdido la línea/su belleza- lose itinterest 1., 1), rag I, 1., 1), sight 1., 2), temper 1., 1)4) (=fail to win) [+ game, war, election] perder5) (=miss)to lose one's way — (lit) perderse; (fig) perder el rumbo
6) (=waste) perder•
there was not a moment to lose — no había ni un momento que perder•
I wouldn't lose any sleep over it! — ¡no pierdas el sueño por ello!, ¡no te preocupes por ello!•
to lose no time in doing sth, she lost no time in making up her mind — se decidió enseguida, no le costó nada decidirseI lost no time in telling him exactly what I thought of him — no vacilé en decirle exactamente lo que pensaba de él
7) * (=get rid of) [+ unwanted companion] deshacerse de; [+ pursuers] zafarse de•
to lose weight — perder peso, adelgazarI lost two kilos — perdí or adelgacé dos kilos
8) (=fall behind) [watch, clock] atrasarse9) (=cause loss of)it lost him the job/the match — le costó el puesto/el partido, le hizo perder el puesto/el partido
that deal lost me £5,000 — ese negocio me costó or me hizo perder 5.000 libras
10) * (=confuse) confundiryou've lost me there — ahora sí que me has confundido, ahora sí que no te entiendo
11)to lose o.s. in sth — (a book, music, memories) ensimismarse en algo
2. VI1) [player, team] perder•
you can't lose — no tienes pérdida, tienes que forzosamente salir ganando2) [watch, clock] atrasarse- lose out* * *[luːz]
1.
1) transitive verb (past & past p lost)2) ( mislay) perder*I've lost my key — he perdido or se me ha perdido la llave
to lose one's way — perderse*
3) ( be deprived of) \<\<sight/territory/right\>\> perder*4)a) ( fail to keep) \<\<customers/popularity/speed\>\> perder*we are losing our best teachers to industry — los mejores profesores se nos están yendo a trabajar a la industria
b) ( rid oneself of) \<\<inhibitions\>\> perder*to lose weight — adelgazar*, perder* peso
5)a) ( shake off) \<\<pursuer\>\> deshacerse* deb) ( lose sight of) perder* de vista6) ( confuse) confundiryou've lost me there! — no entiendo, no te sigo
7) ( cause to lose) costar*, hacer* perdertheir hesitation lost them the contract — la falta de decisión les costó or les hizo perder el contrato
8)a) ( miss) \<\<train/flight/connection\>\> perder*b) ( let pass) \<\<time/opportunity\>\> perder*9) ( fail to win) \<\<game/battle/election\>\> perder*
2.
vi1)a) ( be beaten) \<\<team/contestant/party\>\> perder*to lose TO somebody — perder* frente a alguien
b) losing pres p <team/party> perdedorto be on the losing side — ser* de los perdedores
2)a) ( suffer losses) perder*to lose on a deal — salir* perdiendo en un negocio
b) ( be less effective) perder*the poem loses in translation — el poema pierde con la traducción or al ser traducido
3) \<\<watch/clock\>\> atrasar, atrasarse
3.
v reflPhrasal Verbs:- lose out -
4 relax
rə'læks1) (to make or become less tight or tense or less worried etc; to rest completely: The doctor gave him a drug to make him relax; Relax your shoulders; He relaxed his grip for a second and the rope was dragged out of his hand.) relajar(se)2) (to make or become less strict or severe: The rules were relaxed because of the Queen's visit.) relajar, suavizar•relax vb1. descansar2. relajarrelax, there's nothing to worry about relájate, no hay por qué preocuparse
relax sustantivo masculino relaxation
relax sustantivo masculino relaxation
un momento de relax, a break ' relax' also found in these entries: Spanish: expansionarse - flexibilizar - relajar - relajarse - respirar - explayarse - liberalizar - relajo - tranquilo English: dishwasher - highly-strung - lie back - relax - sit back - relaxation - resttr[rɪ'læks]1 (gen) relajar2 (grip, hold) aflojar3 (rules, control) suavizar, relajar1 (gen) relajarse2 (grip, hold) aflojarserelax [ri'læks] vt: relajar, aflojarrelax vi: relajarsev.• ablandar v.• aflojar v.• amainar v.• cejar v.• descansar v.• relajarse v.• suavizar v.rɪ'læks
1.
intransitive verb relajarserelax, I'll take care of everything — quédate tranquilo que yo me encargo de todo
2.
vt relajar[rɪ'læks]1.VT [+ person, body, part of body] relajar; [+ discipline, rules, controls] relajar; [+ standards] dejar que bajento relax one's grip or hold on sth — dejar de agarrarse de or a algo tan apretadamente, soltar algo; (fig) ejercer menor control sobre algo
2. VI1) [person] (=rest, lose inhibitions) relajarse; (=calm down) relajarse, tranquilizarse; (=amuse oneself) esparcirse, expansionarserelax! everything's fine — ¡tranquilízate! todo está bien
2) [person, body, muscles] relajarse* * *[rɪ'læks]
1.
intransitive verb relajarserelax, I'll take care of everything — quédate tranquilo que yo me encargo de todo
2.
vt relajar -
5 to cast aside
См. также в других словарях:
INHIBITION — L’évolution du concept d’inhibition nerveuse est assez remarquable; presque dès l’origine, il fut appliqué à l’interprétation de phénomènes de complexités très différentes, relevant d’échelles d’appréhension du fonctionnement nerveux les plus… … Encyclopédie Universelle
ART — This article is arranged according to the following outline: Antiquity to 1800 INTRODUCTION: JEWISH ATTITUDE TO ART biblical period the sanctuary and first temple period second temple period after the fall of jerusalem relation to early christian … Encyclopedia of Judaism
DOULEUR — Les mécanismes neurophysiologiques qui provoquent chez l’homme une sensation de douleur ne sont pas encore totalement connus. Deux conceptions s’affrontent depuis longtemps. Pour les uns, la douleur aurait, comme les autres sensations spécifiques … Encyclopédie Universelle
Psychoanalysis — is a body of ideas developed by Austrian physician Sigmund Freud and his followers, which is devoted to the study of human psychological functioning and behavior. It has three applications: 1) a method of investigation of the mind; 2) a… … Wikipedia
NERVEUX (SYSTÈME) - Physiologie générale — Au plus bas de l’échelle animale (Spongiaires, Cœlentérés), le système nerveux, lorsqu’il existe, a une structure réticulée: il s’agit d’éléments cellulaires dont les prolongements, peu différenciés, s’anastomosent de façon lâche et irrégulière,… … Encyclopédie Universelle
go — go1 /goh/, v., went, gone, going, n., pl. goes, interj., adj. v.i. 1. to move or proceed, esp. to or from something: They re going by bus. 2. to leave a place; depart: People were coming and going all the time. 3 … Universalium
Attraction to disability — is a sexualised interest of people in the appearance, sensation and experience of disability. It may extend from normal human sexuality into a type of sexual fetishism. Sexologically, the pathological end of the attraction tends to be seen[Need… … Wikipedia
inhibition — 1. Depression or arrest of a function. SEE ALSO: inhibitor. 2. In psychoanalysis, the restraining of instinctual or unconscious drives or tendencies, especially if they conflict with one s conscience or with societal demands. 3. In psychology, a… … Medical dictionary
Névrose — Cet article possède un paronyme, voir : newroz. En psychiatrie et en psychopathologie psychanalytique, le terme névrose désigne des troubles psychiques sans lésion organique démontrable. Le sujet reste conscient de sa souffrance psychique et … Wikipédia en Français
Neurose — Névrose Cet article possède un paronyme, voir : newroz. Psychologie … Wikipédia en Français
Nevrose — Névrose Cet article possède un paronyme, voir : newroz. Psychologie … Wikipédia en Français