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(with+fear)

  • 41 gasp

    1. noun
    (the sound made by suddenly breathing in, eg because of surprise or sudden pain: a gasp of fear.) grito
    2. verb
    He gasped with pain.) gritar
    * * *
    [ga:sp; gæsp] n respiração penosa, ofego, suspiro. • vt+vi 1 respirar com dificuldade, bafejar, ofegar, arfar. 2 falar de modo ofegante. 3 desejar com veemência. he was at his last gasp 1 ele estava nas últimas, às portas da morte. 2 quase sem fôlego. she gasped out ela falou ofegantemente. to gasp for breath ofegar. to gasp out one’s life dar o último suspiro.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > gasp

  • 42 live

    I 1. [liv] verb
    1) (to have life; to be alive: This poison is dangerous to everything that lives.) viver
    2) (to survive: The doctors say he is very ill, but they think he will live; It was difficult to believe that she had lived through such an experience.) sobreviver
    3) (to have one's home or dwelling (in a particular place): She lives next to the church; They went to live in Bristol / in a huge house.) morar
    4) (to pass (one's life): He lived a life of luxury; She lives in fear of being attacked.) viver
    5) ((with by) to make enough money etc to feed and house oneself: He lives by fishing.) viver
    - - lived
    - living 2. noun
    (the money etc needed to feed and house oneself and keep oneself alive: He earns his living driving a taxi; She makes a good living as an author.) sustento
    - live-in
    - live and let live
    - live down
    - live in
    - out
    - live on
    - live up to
    - within living memory
    - in living memory
    II 1. adjective
    1) (having life; not dead: a live mouse.) vivo
    2) ((of a radio or television broadcast etc) heard or seen as the event takes place; not recorded: I watched a live performance of my favourite opera on television; Was the performance live or recorded?) directo
    3) (full of energy, and capable of becoming active: a live bomb) activo
    4) (burning: a live coal.) aceso
    2. adverb
    ((of a radio or television broadcast etc) as the event takes place: The competition will be broadcast live.) ao vivo
    - liveliness
    - livestock
    - live wire
    * * *
    live1
    [laiv] adj 1 vivo. 2 ativo, esperto, aceso, pronto para agir. 3 ao vivo (transmissão). 4 carregado com eletricidade (como um fio). 5 que não explodiu ainda (como uma granada). 6 vivo, brilhante (cor). 7 fig eficaz, cheio de energia, de interesse atual. 8 em estado natural. • adv ao vivo.
    ————————
    live2
    [liv] vt+vi 1 viver, existir. 2 subsistir. 3 morar, habitar. 4 ganhar a vida. she lives by sewing / ela ganha a vida costurando. 5 gozar a vida. 6 nutrir-se. to live and let live ser tolerante, cuidar da própria vida e deixar os outros em paz. to live away viver alegre e despreocupadamente. to live by/on one’s wits viver de expedientes. to live down fazer esquecer um delito por uma vida impecável. to live from hand to mouth ter apenas o suficiente para as necessidades indispensáveis à vida. to live in morar no emprego. to live it up viver à larga, viver de forma intensa. to live off viver à custa de. to live on viver de. to live out a) sobreviver. b) morar fora do emprego. to live through superar, sobreviver. to live to a great age atingir uma idade avançada. to live up to a) viver à altura de. b) cumprir o prometido, corresponder às expectativas.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > live

  • 43 master

    1. feminine - mistress; noun
    1) (a person or thing that commands or controls: I'm master in this house!) senhor
    2) (an owner (of a slave, dog etc): The dog ran to its master.) dono
    3) (a male teacher: the Maths master.) professor
    4) (the commander of a merchant ship: the ship's master.) comandante
    5) (a person very skilled in an art, science etc: He's a real master at painting.) mestre
    6) ((with capital) a polite title for a boy, in writing or in speaking: Master John Smith.) Menino
    2. adjective
    ((of a person in a job) fully qualified, skilled and experienced: a master builder/mariner/plumber.) experiente
    3. verb
    1) (to overcome (an opponent, handicap etc): She has mastered her fear of heights.) controlar
    2) (to become skilful in: I don't think I'll ever master arithmetic.) dominar
    - masterfully
    - masterfulness
    - masterly
    - masterliness
    - mastery
    - master key
    - mastermind
    4. verb
    (to plan (such a scheme): Who masterminded the robbery?) planear
    - master stroke
    - master switch
    - master of ceremonies
    * * *
    mas.ter
    [m'a:stə; m'æstə] n 1 dono, senhor, amo. 2 mestre, patrão. 3 professor. 4 artista. 5 proprietário, empregador. 6 vencedor. 7 chefe, supervisor. 8 perito, especialista. 9 título honorífico nas universidades. • vt 1 domar, controlar. 2 assenhorear-se de. 3 dominar a fundo. 4 tornar-se perito em, ser mestre em. • adj 1 magistral, de mestre, superior. 2 principal. Master of Arts Educ mestre em Ciências Humanas. master of ceremonies mestre-de-cerimônias. Master of Science Educ mestre em Ciências. the Master Jesus Cristo. to be master of ser dono ou senhor de. to be one’s own master ser independente.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > master

  • 44 overcome

    1. adjective
    (helpless; defeated by emotion etc: overcome with grief; I felt quite overcome.) emocionado
    2. [-'keim] verb
    (to defeat or conquer: She finally overcame her fear of the dark.) dominar
    * * *
    o.ver.come
    [ouvək'∧m] vt (ps overcame, pp overcome) superar, conquistar, dominar.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > overcome

  • 45 prickle

    ['prikl]
    1) (a sharp point growing on a plant or animal: A hedgehog is covered with prickles.) espinho
    2) (a feeling of being pricked: a prickle of fear.) picada
    - prickliness
    * * *
    prick.le
    [pr'ikəl] n 1 espinho, ferrão, bico, pua. 2 Bot acúleo. 3 pruridos, comichão. • vt+vi 1 picar, ferroar. 2 formigar. 3 comichar.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > prickle

  • 46 proceed

    [prə'si:d, 'prousi:d]
    1) (to go on; to continue: They proceeded along the road; They proceeded with their work.) continuar
    2) (to follow a course of action: I want to make a cupboard, but I don't know how to proceed.) proceder
    3) (to begin (to do something): They proceeded to ask a lot of questions.) começar a
    4) (to result: Fear often proceeds from ignorance.) derivar
    5) (to take legal action (against): The police decided not to proceed against her.) proceder contra
    - proceeds
    * * *
    pro.ceed
    [prəs'i:d] vi 1 proceder: a) prosseguir, continuar. b) derivar-se, originar-se, emanar, provir (from, out of, de). the noise proceeded from the adjoining room / o barulho provinha da sala ao lado. c) agir, obrar. d) ter seguimento. e) Jur instaurar processo contra. he proceeded against his partner / ele instaurou processo contra seu sócio. 2 ocorrer, ter lugar. he proceeded on his voyage / ele prosseguiu viagem. 3 reatar (discurso). 4 obter um grau acadêmico. he proceeded to the degree of... / ele obteve o grau de...

    English-Portuguese dictionary > proceed

  • 47 roll

    I 1. [rəul] noun
    1) (anything flat (eg a piece of paper, a carpet) rolled into the shape of a tube, wound round a tube etc: a roll of kitchen foil; a toilet-roll.) rolo
    2) (a small piece of baked bread dough, used eg for sandwiches: a cheese roll.) pãozinho
    3) (an act of rolling: Our dog loves a roll on the grass.) viradela
    4) (a ship's action of rocking from side to side: She said that the roll of the ship made her feel ill.) balanço
    5) (a long low sound: the roll of thunder.) trovão
    6) (a thick mass of flesh: I'd like to get rid of these rolls of fat round my waist.) papo
    7) (a series of quick beats (on a drum).) rufo
    2. verb
    1) (to move by turning over like a wheel or ball: The coin/pencil rolled under the table; He rolled the ball towards the puppy; The ball rolled away.) rolar
    2) (to move on wheels, rollers etc: The children rolled the cart up the hill, then let it roll back down again.) rolar
    3) (to form (a piece of paper, a carpet) into the shape of a tube by winding: to roll the carpet back.) enrolar
    4) ((of a person or animal in a lying position) to turn over: The doctor rolled the patient (over) on to his side; The dog rolled on to its back.) virar(-se)
    5) (to shape (clay etc) into a ball or cylinder by turning it about between the hands: He rolled the clay into a ball.) moldar
    6) (to cover with something by rolling: When the little girl's dress caught fire, they rolled her in a blanket.) envolver
    7) (to make (something) flat or flatter by rolling something heavy over it: to roll a lawn; to roll pastry (out).) alisar com rolo
    8) ((of a ship) to rock from side to side while travelling forwards: The storm made the ship roll.) balançar
    9) (to make a series of low sounds: The thunder rolled; The drums rolled.) reboar
    10) (to move (one's eyes) round in a circle to express fear, surprise etc.) revirar
    11) (to travel in a car etc: We were rolling along merrily when a tyre burst.) rodar
    12) ((of waves, rivers etc) to move gently and steadily: The waves rolled in to the shore.) fluir
    13) ((of time) to pass: Months rolled by.) passar
    - rolling
    - roller-skate
    3. verb
    (to move on roller-skates: You shouldn't roller-skate on the pavement.) andar de patins
    - roll in
    - roll up
    II
    (a list of names, eg of pupils in a school etc: There are nine hundred pupils on the roll.) registo de matrículas
    * * *
    [roul] n 1 rolo (de arame, papel, etc.), qualquer coisa enrolada. 2 cilindro ou qualquer forma aproximadamente cilíndrica. 3 movimento de rotação, ondulação, agitação. 4 rufar de tambor. 5 ribombar do trovão ou de artilharia. 6 ação de rolar. 7 manobra em que o avião dá uma volta completa em torno de seu eixo longitudinal, mantendo a posição horizontal de vôo. 8 lista, rol, catálogo, registro, relação. he called the rolls / ele procedeu à leitura dos nomes, fez a chamada. 9 pãozinho, pão francês. 10 sl maço de notas ou cédulas, dinheiro. 11 rolls atas, anais, crônica, anuário. 12 fardo. 13 ritmo, cadência (linguagem, poesia). 14 encrespamento das ondas do mar. • vt 1 a) rolar. b) fazer rolar. 2 enrolar, dar forma de rolo a. 3 passar suavemente, deslizar (tempo). 4 girar, revolver. 5 agitar, balançar (navio). 6 ondular, flutuar. 7 aplainar, laminar, calandrar. 8 preparar massas alimentícias com o rolo. 9 aplicar cor, por meio de um rolo. 10 ribombar (trovão). 11 rufar (tambor). 12 Amer sl roubar pessoa alcoolizada ou indefesa. 13 ressoar, vibrar (órgão). 14 coll possuir em abundância. 15 correr (rio), fluir. 16 rodar (carro). 17 gingar, menear, bambolear. 18 trinar, gorjear. 19 enfaixar, envolver. 20 encrespar-se (ondas). 21 transportar em carro (ou outro veículo de rodas). 22 começar a operar (câmera), rodar. 23 jogar (dados). 24 Mus arpejar. heads will roll cabeças vão rolar, punições severas vão acontecer (com perda de cargos). pay roll folha de pagamento to be rolling in a) coll chegar em grande número ou quantidade. b) ter em grande quantidade, estar "nadando" em. to roll back a) reduzir (preço). b) recuar, ir para trás. to roll in the aisles morrer de rir.. to roll in the hay sl praticar sexo. to roll in wealth nadar em dinheiro. to roll out a) estender. b) levantar-se da cama. c) produzir em grande quantidade. to roll out the red carpet for receber com a máxima hospitalidade. to roll up a) enrolar. b) fazer recuar (inimigo). c) chegar, vir. to roll up one’s sleeves arregaçar as mangas, preparar-se para entrar em ação. to strike off the rolls riscar da lista, desclassificar, expulsar.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > roll

  • 48 shiver

    ['ʃivə] 1. verb
    (to quiver or tremble (with cold, fear etc).) tremer
    2. noun
    (an act of shivering.) tremura
    - the shivers
    * * *
    shiv.er1
    [ʃ'ivə] n tremor, calafrio, arrepio. that gave me the shivers / isto me deu arrepios, isto me amedrontou. • vi tremer (de frio), tiritar. he shivered all over / ele tremeu dos pés à cabeça.
    ————————
    shiv.er2
    [ʃ'ivə] n 1 lasca, pedaço, fragmento. 2 ardósia. • vt+vi despedaçar, fragmentar, quebrar.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > shiver

  • 49 terror

    ['terə]
    1) (very great fear: She screamed with/in terror; She has a terror of spiders.) pavor
    2) (something which makes one very afraid: The terrors of war.) horror
    3) (a troublesome person, especially a child: That child is a real terror!) diabrete
    - terrorist
    - terrorize
    - terrorise
    - terrorization
    - terrorisation
    - terror-stricken
    * * *
    ter.ror
    [t'erə] n terror, pavor, medo, horror. reign of terror regime terrorista. the king of terrors a morte. to be a terror ser um terror (pessoa desagradável).

    English-Portuguese dictionary > terror

  • 50 wring

    [riŋ]
    past tense, past participle - wrung; verb
    1) (to force (water) from (material) by twisting or by pressure: He wrung the water from his soaking-wet shirt.) torcer
    2) (to clasp and unclasp (one's hands) in desperation, fear etc.) torcer
    - wringing wet
    * * *
    [riŋ] n 1 torcedura, torção. 2 espremedura. 3 aperto. 4 prensa (de queijo), espremedor de fruta. • vt+vi (ps, pp wrung) 1 torcer(-se), retorcer(-se). I’d like to wring his neck / tenho vontade de torcer-lhe o pescoço, estou furioso com ele. 2 espremer. 3 prensar (up). 4 apertar (mão). 5 distender, luxar. 6 contorcer, desfigurar (rosto). 7 arrancar à força ( from de). 8 virar, volver (pescoço). 9 extorquir ( out of de). 10 oprimir, hostilizar, atormentar, torturar. he wrung me by the hand ele me apertou a mão. I gave his hand a wring, I gave him a wring of the hand dei-lhe um aperto de mão. to wring off arrancar torcendo. to wring one’s hands in despair torcer as mãos em desespero. to wring out espremer torcendo. to wring someone’s heart/ soul cortar o coração de alguém. it wrings my heart / faz-me doer o coração, corta-me o coração. to wring something’s neck matar algo (algum animal) torcendo o pescoço. he wrung the hen’s neck / ele torceu o pescoço da galinha. to wring water out from the washing tirar água da roupa lavada espremendo-a. wrung with fustigado, atormentado por. you can’t wring blood from a stone você não pode tirar leite das pedras, você não pode tirar dinheiro de um sovina.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > wring

  • 51 afraid

    [ə'freid]
    1) (feeling fear or being frightened (of a person, thing etc): The child is not afraid of the dark; She was afraid to go.) com medo
    2) (sorry (to have to say that): I'm afraid I don't agree with you.) receoso (desculpe, mas...)

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > afraid

  • 52 awe

    [o:] 1. noun
    (wonder and fear: The child looked in awe at the king.) espanto
    2. verb
    (to fill with awe: He was awed by his new school.) apavorar
    - awesome - awestruck

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > awe

  • 53 crouch

    1) (to stand with the knees well bent; to squat: He crouched behind the bush.) agachar-se
    2) ((of animals) to lie close to the ground, in fear, readiness for action etc: The tiger was crouching ready to spring on its prey.) armar o bote

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > crouch

  • 54 emotion

    [i'məuʃən]
    1) (a (strong) feeling of any kind: Fear, joy, anger, love, jealousy are all emotions.) emoção, afeto
    2) (the moving or upsetting of the mind or feelings: He was overcome by/with emotion.) emoção
    - emotionally

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > emotion

  • 55 gasp

    1. noun
    (the sound made by suddenly breathing in, eg because of surprise or sudden pain: a gasp of fear.) sobressalto
    2. verb
    He gasped with pain.) arfar

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > gasp

  • 56 live

    I 1. [liv] verb
    1) (to have life; to be alive: This poison is dangerous to everything that lives.) viver
    2) (to survive: The doctors say he is very ill, but they think he will live; It was difficult to believe that she had lived through such an experience.) sobreviver
    3) (to have one's home or dwelling (in a particular place): She lives next to the church; They went to live in Bristol / in a huge house.) morar
    4) (to pass (one's life): He lived a life of luxury; She lives in fear of being attacked.) viver
    5) ((with by) to make enough money etc to feed and house oneself: He lives by fishing.) viver
    - - lived
    - living 2. noun
    (the money etc needed to feed and house oneself and keep oneself alive: He earns his living driving a taxi; She makes a good living as an author.) meio de vida
    - live-in - live and let live - live down - live in - out - live on - live up to - within living memory - in living memory II 1. adjective
    1) (having life; not dead: a live mouse.) vivo
    2) ((of a radio or television broadcast etc) heard or seen as the event takes place; not recorded: I watched a live performance of my favourite opera on television; Was the performance live or recorded?) ao vivo
    3) (full of energy, and capable of becoming active: a live bomb) em atividade
    4) (burning: a live coal.) aceso
    2. adverb
    ((of a radio or television broadcast etc) as the event takes place: The competition will be broadcast live.) ao vivo
    - liveliness - livestock - live wire

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > live

  • 57 master

    1. feminine - mistress; noun
    1) (a person or thing that commands or controls: I'm master in this house!) patrão
    2) (an owner (of a slave, dog etc): The dog ran to its master.) dono
    3) (a male teacher: the Maths master.) professor
    4) (the commander of a merchant ship: the ship's master.) capitão
    5) (a person very skilled in an art, science etc: He's a real master at painting.) mestre
    6) ((with capital) a polite title for a boy, in writing or in speaking: Master John Smith.) senhor
    2. adjective
    ((of a person in a job) fully qualified, skilled and experienced: a master builder/mariner/plumber.) mestre
    3. verb
    1) (to overcome (an opponent, handicap etc): She has mastered her fear of heights.) dominar
    2) (to become skilful in: I don't think I'll ever master arithmetic.) dominar
    - masterfully - masterfulness - masterly - masterliness - mastery - master key - mastermind 4. verb
    (to plan (such a scheme): Who masterminded the robbery?) planejar
    - master stroke - master switch - master of ceremonies

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > master

  • 58 overcome

    1. adjective
    (helpless; defeated by emotion etc: overcome with grief; I felt quite overcome.) comovido, dominado pela emoção
    2. [-'keim] verb
    (to defeat or conquer: She finally overcame her fear of the dark.) superar

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > overcome

  • 59 prickle

    ['prikl]
    1) (a sharp point growing on a plant or animal: A hedgehog is covered with prickles.) espinho
    2) (a feeling of being pricked: a prickle of fear.) alfinetada
    - prickliness

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > prickle

  • 60 proceed

    [prə'si:d, 'prousi:d]
    1) (to go on; to continue: They proceeded along the road; They proceeded with their work.) continuar, prosseguir
    2) (to follow a course of action: I want to make a cupboard, but I don't know how to proceed.) proceder
    3) (to begin (to do something): They proceeded to ask a lot of questions.) começar a
    4) (to result: Fear often proceeds from ignorance.) provir de
    5) (to take legal action (against): The police decided not to proceed against her.) processar
    - proceeds

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > proceed

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