-
1 broom
bru:m1) (a wild shrub of the pea family with (usually yellow) flowers: The hillside was covered in broom.) hiniesta2) (a long-handled sweeping brush.) escobabroom n escobatr[brʊːm]1 (for sweeping) escoba2 SMALLBOTANY/SMALL hiniestabroom ['bru:m, 'brʊm] n1) : retama f, hiniesta f2) : escoba f (para barrer)n.• escoba s.f.• escobón s.m.bruːm1) c ( brush) escoba fa new broom sweeps clean — escoba nueva barre bien; (before n)
broom cupboard o (AmE) closet — armario m de los artículos de limpieza
2) u ( plant) retama f, hiniesta f[bruːm, brʊm]1. N1) (=brush) escoba fnew broom — (fig) escoba f nueva
2) (Bot) retama f, hiniesta f2.CPDbroom closet (US), broom cupboard (Brit) N — armario m de los artículos de limpieza
* * *[bruːm]1) c ( brush) escoba fa new broom sweeps clean — escoba nueva barre bien; (before n)
broom cupboard o (AmE) closet — armario m de los artículos de limpieza
2) u ( plant) retama f, hiniesta f -
2 blow with a broom
-
3 sweep
swi:p
1. past tense, past participle - swept; verb1) (to clean (a room etc) using a brush or broom: The room has been swept clean.) barrer2) (to move as though with a brush: She swept the crumbs off the table with her hand; The wave swept him overboard; Don't get swept away by (= become over-enthusiastic about) the idea!; She swept aside my objections.) barrer, limpiar, recoger; arrastrar, llevarse; rechazar, descartar3) (to move quickly over: The disease/craze is sweeping the country.) azotar, asolar, arrasar4) (to move swiftly or in a proud manner: High winds sweep across the desert; She swept into my room without knocking on the door.) deslizarse, pasar rápidamente; pasar majestuosamente
2. noun1) (an act of sweeping, or process of being swept, with a brush etc: She gave the room a sweep.) barrido2) (a sweeping movement: He indicated the damage with a sweep of his hand.) gesto/movimiento amplio3) (a person who cleans chimneys.) deshollinador4) (a sweepstake.) apuesta de caballos•- sweeper- sweeping
- sweeping-brush
- at one/a sweep
- sweep someone off his feet
- sweep off his feet
- sweep out
- sweep the board
- sweep under the carpet
- sweep up
sweep vb1. barrerthe floor is dirty, I'm going to sweep it el suelo está sucio, voy a barrerlo2. arrastrartr[swiːp]1 (with broom) barrido5 (by police, rescuers) peinado, rastreo6 familiar (chimney cleaner) deshollinador,-ra1 (room, floor) barrer; (chimney) deshollinar2 (with hand) quitar de un manotazo3 (move over) azotar, barrer4 (remove by force) arrastrar, llevarse■ the swimmers were swept out to sea by the current la corriente arrastró a los nadadores mar adentro5 (pass over) recorrer6 figurative use (spread through) recorrer, extenderse por7 (touch lightly) rozar, pasar por1 (with broom) barrer2 (move quickly) pasar rápidamente3 (extend) recorrer, extenderse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto sweep somebody off his/her feet hacerle perder la cabeza a alguiento sweep something under the carpet ocultar algoto make a clean sweep of things barrer con todo, hacer tabla rasato sweep the board llevarse todos los premios1) : barrer (el suelo, etc.), limpiar (suciedad, etc.)he swept the books aside: apartó los libros de un manotazosweep vi1) : barrer, limpiar2) : extenderse (en una curva), describir una curvathe sun swept across the sky: el sol describía una curva en el cielosweep n1) : barrido m, barrida f (con una escoba)2) : movimiento m circular3) scope: alcance mn.• barredura s.f.• deshollinador s.m.• escobada s.f.• escobazo s.m.• recorrido s.m.• redada s.f.• turbión s.f.v.(§ p.,p.p.: swept) = abalear v.• copar v.• deshollinar v.• dragar v.• escobar v.• rastrear v.• rozar v.swiːp
I
1) ( act) (no pl) barrido m, barrida fgive it a sweep — dale un barrido or una barrida, bárrelo
2)a) c ( movement)b) c (curve - of road, river) curva fc) ( range) (no pl) alcance m, extensión f3) c ( search) peinado m, rastreo m4) c ( chimney sweep) deshollinador, -dora m,f
II
1.
(past & pp swept) transitive verb1)a) ( clean) \<\<floor/path\>\> barrer; \<\<chimney\>\> deshollinarb) ( remove) \<\<leaves/dirt\>\> barrer; \<\<mines\>\> barrershe swept the leaves into a pile — barrió la terraza (or el patio etc) y amontonó las hojas
to sweep something under the rug o (BrE) carpet — correr un velo sobre algo
2) (touch lightly, brush) \<\<surface\>\> rozar*3)a) (pass over, across)severe storms swept the coast — grandes tormentas azotaron or barrieron la costa
the epidemic is sweeping the country — la epidemia se extiende como un reguero de pólvora por el país
b) ( remove by force) arrastrar4)a) ( scan) recorrerb) ( search) \<\<area\>\> peinar, rastrear
2.
vi1) (+ adv compl)a) ( move rapidly)the car swept by o past — el coche pasó rápidamente
b) ( move proudly)he swept past as if I wasn't there — pasó por mi lado con la cabeza en alto, como si yo no existiera
2) (+ adv compl)a) ( spread)fire swept through the hotel — el fuego se propagó or se extendió por todo el hotel
b) ( extend)•Phrasal Verbs:- sweep up[swiːp] (vb: pt, pp swept)1. VT1) [+ place, area]a) (=clean) [+ floor, room, street] barrer; [+ chimney] deshollinarhave you had your chimney swept lately? — ¿te han deshollinado la chimenea recientemente?
b) (=touch) rozarc) (=spread through) [disease, idea, craze] arrasar; [rumours] correr por, extenderse pord) (=lash) [storm, rain, waves] azotar, barrertorrential storms swept the country — tormentas torrenciales azotaron or barrieron el país
the beach was swept by great waves — olas gigantescas azotaron or barrieron la playa
e) (=scan) [searchlight, eyes] recorrerf) (=search) peinar2) (=move)a) (with brush)•
she was sweeping crumbs into a dustpan — estaba recogiendo las migas con una escoba y un recogedor•
he swept the leaves off the path — barrió las hojas del camino- sweep sth under the carpetb) (with hand, arm)•
she swept her hair back with a flick of her wrist — se echó el pelo hacia atrás con un movimiento rápido de muñeca•
he swept the stamps into a box — recogió los sellos en una cajato sweep sb into one's arms — coger or tomar a algn en brazos
•
I swept the rainwater off the bench with my hand — quité el agua de la lluvia del banco con la manoc) (forcefully)to be swept along by or on a wave of sth — (fig) dejarse llevar por una ola de algo
•
landslides that swept cars into the sea — corrimientos de tierra que arrastraron coches hasta el marthe election which swept Labour into office or power — las elecciones en la que los laboristas arrasaron haciéndose con el poder
•
the water swept him off his feet — la fuerza del agua lo derribó- sweep all before one3) (=win decisively) [+ election] arrasar en- sweep the board2. VI1) (=clean) barrer2) (=spread)a) [violence, disease, storm]•
the violence which swept across Punjab — la violencia que arrasó el Punjab•
the storm which swept over the country — la tormenta que arrasó el país•
plague swept through the country — la peste arrasó el paísb) [fire, smoke]•
the fire swept rapidly through the forest — el fuego se propagó or extendió rápidamente por el bosquethick smoke swept through their home — una densa humareda se propagó or extendió por la casa
c) [emotion]•
a great wave of anger swept over me — me invadió una gran oleada de ira•
panic swept through the city — en la ciudad cundió el pánico3) (=move)a) [crowd, procession]•
an angry crowd swept along the main thoroughfare — una multitud airada avanzaba por la calle principalb) (majestically) [person, car]•
to sweep past/in/out — pasar/entrar/salir majestuosamentec) (quickly) [vehicle, convoy]•
the convoy swept along the road — la caravana pasó por la carretera a toda velocidad- sweep into power4) (=stretch) [land, water]•
the bay sweeps away to the south — la bahía se extiende (majestuosamente) hacia el sursweep up•
the hills/woods sweep down to the sea — las colinas/los bosques bajan (majestuosamente) hacia el mar3. N1) (with broom, brush) barrido m, barrida fthe floor/the kitchen could do with a sweep — al suelo/a la cocina le hace falta un barrido or una barrida
•
to give sth a sweep — darle un barrido or una barrida a algo3) (=movement) [of pendulum] movimiento m ; [of scythe] golpe m ; [of beam] trayectoria f ; (fig) [of events, progress, history] marcha f•
with a sweep of his arm — con un amplio movimiento del brazowith one sweep of his scythe, he cleared all the nettles — con un golpe de guadaña hizo desaparecer todas las ortigas
with a sweep of her hand she indicated the desk — extendió la mano indicando el pupitre con un gesto amplio
4) (=search) (for criminals, drugs) batida f, rastreo mto make a sweep: they made a sweep for hidden arms — dieron una batida or hicieron un rastreo buscando armas ocultas
to make a sweep of sth — (with binoculars, torch) hacer una pasada por algo; (with team of people) rastrear algo
5)•
clean sweep —a) (=change)there will be a clean sweep of all those involved in this cover-up — se hará tabla rasa con todos los que estén involucrados en esta tapadera
b) (in competition, series of competitions)•
to make a clean sweep — arrasar ganándolo todo; (Cards) ganar todas las bazas•
it was the first club to make a clean sweep of all three trophies — fue el primer club que arrasó llevándose or ganando el total de los tres trofeos6) (=curve, line) [of coastline, river] curva f ; [of land] extensión f ; [of staircase] trazado m ; [of long skirt, curtains] vuelo m ; [of wings] envergadura f7) (=range)a) (lit) [of telescope, gun, lighthouse, radar] alcance mwith a sweep of 180° — con un alcance de 180°
b) (fig) [of views, ideas] espectro mrepresentatives from a broad sweep of left-wing opinion — representantes de un amplio espectro de la izquierda
8) (=wave) [of emotion] ola f9) = sweepstake- sweep up* * *[swiːp]
I
1) ( act) (no pl) barrido m, barrida fgive it a sweep — dale un barrido or una barrida, bárrelo
2)a) c ( movement)b) c (curve - of road, river) curva fc) ( range) (no pl) alcance m, extensión f3) c ( search) peinado m, rastreo m4) c ( chimney sweep) deshollinador, -dora m,f
II
1.
(past & pp swept) transitive verb1)a) ( clean) \<\<floor/path\>\> barrer; \<\<chimney\>\> deshollinarb) ( remove) \<\<leaves/dirt\>\> barrer; \<\<mines\>\> barrershe swept the leaves into a pile — barrió la terraza (or el patio etc) y amontonó las hojas
to sweep something under the rug o (BrE) carpet — correr un velo sobre algo
2) (touch lightly, brush) \<\<surface\>\> rozar*3)a) (pass over, across)severe storms swept the coast — grandes tormentas azotaron or barrieron la costa
the epidemic is sweeping the country — la epidemia se extiende como un reguero de pólvora por el país
b) ( remove by force) arrastrar4)a) ( scan) recorrerb) ( search) \<\<area\>\> peinar, rastrear
2.
vi1) (+ adv compl)a) ( move rapidly)the car swept by o past — el coche pasó rápidamente
b) ( move proudly)he swept past as if I wasn't there — pasó por mi lado con la cabeza en alto, como si yo no existiera
2) (+ adv compl)a) ( spread)fire swept through the hotel — el fuego se propagó or se extendió por todo el hotel
b) ( extend)•Phrasal Verbs:- sweep up -
4 sweep up
(to gather together or remove (dirt etc) by sweeping: She swept up the crumbs/mess.) barrer1) v + adv ( clear up) barrer, limpiar2) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( clear up) \<\<dust/leaves\>\> barrer y recoger*b) ( gather up) \<\<belongings/bags\>\> recoger*1. VI + ADV1) (with broom, brush) barrer2)to sweep up to sth: the car swept up to the house — (majestically) el coche subió majestuosamente hasta la casa; (fast) el coche subió a toda velocidad hasta la casa
the lawn swept up to the woods — el césped llegaba or se extendía hasta el bosque
2. VT + ADV2) (=seize, pick up) [person] coger, agarrar (LAm); [storm] arrastrar3) (=arrange) recoger4) (fig) (=carry along)she had been swept up in an exciting relationship — se había dejado arrastrar por una relación apasionante
they became so swept up with excitement that... — se dejaron llevar tanto por el entusiasmo que...
* * *1) v + adv ( clear up) barrer, limpiar2) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( clear up) \<\<dust/leaves\>\> barrer y recoger*b) ( gather up) \<\<belongings/bags\>\> recoger* -
5 sweep
s.1 barrido (action)barrida (Am.)with a sweep of the arm moviendo el brazo extendido3 extensión (extent) (of land, knowledge); curva (of road, river)4 campo de acción, alcance, rango, radio de acción.5 deshollinador, escobón.6 victoria aplastante.vt.1 barrer (floor, street); deshollinar (chimney)to sweep something under the carpet soterrar algothe latest craze to sweep the country la última moda que está haciendo furor en todo el país3 barrer con todo, barrer totalmente, ganar todo.4 pasar rápidamente.5 arrollar, pasarse llevando.vi.1 barrer (with broom)to sweep in/out entrar/salir con gallardíato sweep to power subir al poder de forma arrasadora(pt & pp swept) -
6 handle
'hændl
1. noun(the part of an object by which it may be held or grasped: I've broken the handle off this cup; You've got to turn the handle in order to open the door.) mango; asa; manilla, pomo(puerta)
2. verb1) (to touch or hold with the hand: Please wash your hands before handling food.) manipular, manejar2) (to control, manage or deal with: He'll never make a good teacher - he doesn't know how to handle children.) tratar3) (to buy or sell; to deal in: I'm afraid we do not handle such goods in this shop.) comerciar con, tratar4) (to treat in a particular way: Never handle animals roughly.) tratar•- - handled- handler
- handlebars
handle1 n1. asa / mango2. manilla / tiradorhandle2 vb1. tocar / manosearplease do not handle the food no tocar la comida, por favor2. manejar / tratartr['hændəl]1 (of door) pomo, manilla2 (of drawer) tirador nombre masculino3 (of cup) asa4 (of knife) mango5 (lever) palanca6 (crank) manivela7 figurative use pretexto1 (gen) manejar, manipular2 (people) tratar3 (tolerate) aguantar4 (control) controlar, dominar5 (deal with) ocuparse de6 (manage) poder con, tener la capacidad para7 (responsibility) encargarse de8 familiar soportar, aguantar1 (car) comportarse, manejarse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALL'Handle with care' "Frágil"to fly off the handle salirse de sus casillas1) touch: tocar2) manage: tratar, manejar, despachar3) sell: comerciar con, venderhandle vi: responder, conducirse (dícese de un vehículo)handle n: asa m, asidero m, mango m (de un cuchillo, etc.), pomo m (de una puerta), tirador m (de un cajón)n.• agarradero s.m.• asa s.f.• asidero s.m.• asta s.f.• astil s.m.• cacha s.f.• cogedero s.m.• empuñadura s.f.• mango s.m.• manija s.f.• manubrio s.m.• palanca s.f.• palo s.m.• puño s.m.• soporte s.m.v.• dirigir v.• manejar v.• manipular v.• manosear v.• tentar v.• tocar v.• tratar v.'hændḷ
I
noun (of cup, jug) asa f‡; ( of door) picaporte m; ( knob) pomo m; ( of drawer) tirador m, manija f; (of broom, knife, spade) mango m; (of bag, basket) asa f‡; (of wheelbarrow, stretcher) brazo m; ( of pump) manivela fto fly off the handle — perder* los estribos
II
1.
1)a) ( touch)b) (manipulate, manage) \<\<vehicle/weapon\>\> manejar; \<\<chemicals\>\> manipular2) ( deal with) \<\<people\>\> tratar; \<\<situation/affair\>\> manejarhe can't handle the job — (colloq) no puede con el trabajo
I can't tell him the truth; he couldn't handle it — (colloq) no puedo decirle la verdad; lo destrozaría
3)a) ( be responsible for) \<\<business/financial matters\>\> encargarse* or ocuparse de, llevarb) ( do business in) \<\<goods/commodities\>\> comerciar conc) ( process)d) \<\<computer\>\> \<\<data\>\> procesar
2.
vi responder
3.
v refl['hændl]to handle oneself — desenvolverse*
1. N1) [of knife, brush, spade, saucepan] mango m; [of broom] palo m; [of basket, bucket, jug] asa f; [of drawer] tirador m, manija f; [of door] (=round knob) pomo m; (=lever) picaporte m, manilla f (LAm); [of stretcher, wheelbarrow] brazo m; [of pump] palanca f; (for winding) manivela f- fly off the handle2) (fig) (=pretext) excusa f, pretexto m; (=opportunity) oportunidad f3) * (=title) título m; (=name) nombre mto have a handle to one's name — (aristocratic) tener un título nobiliario
2. VT1) (=touch with hands) tocarto handle the ball — (Ftbl) tocar la pelota con la mano
2) (=manipulate, move with hands) [+ food] manipularher hands are black from handling newsprint — tiene las manos negras de andar con or andar manipulando periódicos
handle with care — manéjese or trátese con cuidado
- handle sb with kid gloveshot 1., 3)3) (=use) [+ gun, machine] manejar"not to be taken before handling machinery" — "no ingerir en caso de ir a manejar maquinaria"
4) (=drive, steer) [+ car] conducir, manejar (LAm); [+ ship] gobernar; [+ horse] manejar5) (=tackle) [+ situation] manejar; [+ people] tratarhe handled the situation very well — manejó or llevó muy bien la situación
6) (=manage effectively) [+ people] manejar bien; [+ emotions] controlarshe can certainly handle children — no cabe duda de que maneja bien a or sabe manejarse con los niños
7) (=be responsible for) [+ case, investigation] llevar, encargarse dethe solicitor handling your case — el abogado que lleva or se encarga de tu caso
we don't handle criminal cases — nosotros no nos encargamos or ocupamos de las causas penales
8) (=deal in) [+ goods] comerciar con9) (=process)a computer can store and handle large amounts of information — un ordenador puede almacenar y trabajar con or procesar muchísima información
can the port handle big ships? — ¿tiene capacidad el puerto para buques grandes?
there is an extra fee for handling and packing your order — hay un recargo por tramitación y embalaje de su pedido
we handle ten per cent of their total sales — movemos or trabajamos un diez por ciento del total de sus ventas
we handle 2,000 travellers a day — por aquí pasan 2.000 viajeros cada día
3.VI [car, plane, horse] comportarse; [ship] gobernarsethis car handles like a dream — este coche va or se comporta de maravilla
* * *['hændḷ]
I
noun (of cup, jug) asa f‡; ( of door) picaporte m; ( knob) pomo m; ( of drawer) tirador m, manija f; (of broom, knife, spade) mango m; (of bag, basket) asa f‡; (of wheelbarrow, stretcher) brazo m; ( of pump) manivela fto fly off the handle — perder* los estribos
II
1.
1)a) ( touch)b) (manipulate, manage) \<\<vehicle/weapon\>\> manejar; \<\<chemicals\>\> manipular2) ( deal with) \<\<people\>\> tratar; \<\<situation/affair\>\> manejarhe can't handle the job — (colloq) no puede con el trabajo
I can't tell him the truth; he couldn't handle it — (colloq) no puedo decirle la verdad; lo destrozaría
3)a) ( be responsible for) \<\<business/financial matters\>\> encargarse* or ocuparse de, llevarb) ( do business in) \<\<goods/commodities\>\> comerciar conc) ( process)d) \<\<computer\>\> \<\<data\>\> procesar
2.
vi responder
3.
v reflto handle oneself — desenvolverse*
-
7 palo
palo sustantivo masculino 1 (de valla, portería) post; ( de herramienta) handle; (de tienda, carpa) tent pole; de tal palo, tal astilla a chip off the old block, like father like son (o like mother like daughter etc) ( de hockey) hockey stickd) (Náut) mast;2 ( madera) wood; 3 (fam) ( golpe) blow (with a stick);◊ lo molieron a palos they beat him till he was black and blue4 ( en naipes) suit
palo sustantivo masculino
1 stick: este queso está más seco que un palo, this cheese is as dry as dust
su hermano está como un palo, his brother is as thin as a rake
2 (estacazo) blow
3 fam (disgusto, golpe) blow: su muerte ha sido un palo para ella, his death was a real blow to her
me da palo tener que decírselo yo, I'm really cut up about having to tell her (decepción) disappointment: menudo palo nos dio cuando nos dijeron que no cantaría, it was a real disappointment to us when we heard that he wasn't going to sing (rollo) drag
4 (madera) una cuchara/pata de palo, a wooden spoon/ leg
5 Náut (mástil) mast
palo mayor, mainmast
6 Dep (de portería) woodwork
7 Golf club
8 Naipes suit Locuciones: moler a palos a alguien, to beat sb up
a palo seco, on its own
de tal palo, tal astilla, like father, like son ' palo' also found in these entries: Spanish: astilla - caballito - estaca - garrote - hisopo - jarabe - tranca - trinquete - vara - verga - bolo - cachiporra - corazón - empuñar - espada - extremo - helado - oro - partir - pata - pica - pique - rombo - trébol - triunfo English: broomstick - carrot - chip - club - drive - end - father - golf club - like - pointed - Pole - ram - rosewood - shaft - stake - stick - stout - stroke - suit - taper - wave - wooden - broom - dead - golf - pole - spar - wood
См. также в других словарях:
sweep the house with broom in May, you sweep the head of the house away — There was a widespread folk belief associating broom with witches and magic; hence, flowering broom was considered unlucky and a harbinger of death in any house into which it was brought. 1873 Folk Lore Record I. 52 The old gentleman..strictly… … Proverbs new dictionary
broom — O.E. brom broom, brushwood, the common flowering shrub whose twigs were tied together to make a tool for sweeping, from P.Gmc. *bræmaz thorny bush (Cf. Du. braam, Ger. Brombeere blackberry ), from PIE root *bh(e)rem to project, a point. Both the… … Etymology dictionary
broom — Many people in 19th century Suffolk, Sussex, and Wiltshire thought that during the month of *May the broom meant bad luck, even death; one must not bring its flowers into the house, nor *sweep the floor with broom twigs: If you sweep the… … A Dictionary of English folklore
broom — see new brooms sweep clean sweep the house with broom in May, you sweep the head of the house away … Proverbs new dictionary
Broom — (br[=oo]m), n. [OE. brom, brome, AS. br[=o]m; akin to LG. bram, D. brem, OHG. br[=a]mo broom, thorn?bush, G. brombeere blackberry. Cf. {Bramble}, n.] 1. (Bot.) A plant having twigs suitable for making brooms to sweep with when bound together; esp … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Broom of the Cowdenknowes — is a traditional Scottish love ballad. It is traceable back to the seventeenth century, but the exact origin is unknown. The title of the song references the Scotch Broom ( Cytisus scoparius ) flower, a vibrant yellow flower found throughout… … Wikipedia
broom — brüm, bru̇m n any of various leguminous shrubs (esp. genera Cytisus and Genista) with long slender branches, upright growth, small leaves, and usu. showy yellow flowers esp SCOTCH BROOM see BROOM TOP * * * (br m) any of various s … Medical dictionary
broom — [bru:m, brum] n ↑broom [: Old English; Origin: brom broom plant ;] [Sense: 1; Origin: because broom branches were used for making brushes] 1.) a large brush with a long handle, used for sweeping floors 2.) [U] a large bush with small yellow… … Dictionary of contemporary English
broom|y — «BROO mee», adjective. 1. covered with or abounding in broom. 2. of a broom or besom. 3. like broom or a broom … Useful english dictionary
Broom Bridge — Broom Bridge, also known as Brougham Bridge, is a small bridge along Broombridge road which crosses the Royal Canal in Cabra, Dublin, Ireland. Broom bridge is named after William Broom, one of the directors of the Royal Canal company. Broom… … Wikipedia
broom — [bro͞om, broom] n. [ME & OE brom, brushwood < IE base * bh(e)rem , to project, a point > BERM, BRAMBLE] 1. any of a group of flowering shrubs (esp. genera Cytisus, Genista, and Spartium) of the pea family, often grown for their abundant,… … English World dictionary