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(vagar)

  • 1 vagar

    v.
    to wander about, to stroll, to wander, to gad.
    * * *
    1 (errar) to wander ( por, about), roam ( por, about)
    ————————
    1 (estar ocioso) to idle about, loaf around
    * * *
    verb
    * * *
    1. VI
    1) (=errar) to wander (about), roam; (=rondar) to prowl about; (=pasear) to saunter up and down, wander about the streets; (=entretenerse) to loiter; (=gandulear) to idle, loaf
    2) (Mec) to be loose, move about
    2.
    SM (=tiempo libre) leisure, free time; (=pereza) idleness; (=calma) lack of anxiety, freedom from worry
    * * *
    verbo intransitivo to wander, roam
    * * *
    = bob about, meander, roam (about/around), range, wander, drift off, rove.
    Ex. 'Out of the secretarial world it comes, the prime example of the untethered query, bobbing uselessly about till one can tell what caused it to be launched'.
    Ex. They are mixed up as the talk meanders about, apparently without conscious pattern.
    Ex. Unless children are given time to roam about unhindered among books of many kinds, left alone to choose for themselves, and to do what any avid adult reader does, then maybe we labor in vain.
    Ex. We will be bringing scholars from all over the world both to range widely in our multiform collections and put things together rather than just take them apart.
    Ex. The article is entitled ' Wandering the Web: further developments on the global information bazaar'.
    Ex. The study loses track of its argument at times and drifts off into analyses of the peacemaking process that are not relevant.
    Ex. The production is extremely lively: Wandering musicians rove the tiny stage and aisles, competing with birdsong and baroque concertos over the tannoy.
    ----
    * vagar libremente = roam + free.
    * * *
    verbo intransitivo to wander, roam
    * * *
    = bob about, meander, roam (about/around), range, wander, drift off, rove.

    Ex: 'Out of the secretarial world it comes, the prime example of the untethered query, bobbing uselessly about till one can tell what caused it to be launched'.

    Ex: They are mixed up as the talk meanders about, apparently without conscious pattern.
    Ex: Unless children are given time to roam about unhindered among books of many kinds, left alone to choose for themselves, and to do what any avid adult reader does, then maybe we labor in vain.
    Ex: We will be bringing scholars from all over the world both to range widely in our multiform collections and put things together rather than just take them apart.
    Ex: The article is entitled ' Wandering the Web: further developments on the global information bazaar'.
    Ex: The study loses track of its argument at times and drifts off into analyses of the peacemaking process that are not relevant.
    Ex: The production is extremely lively: Wandering musicians rove the tiny stage and aisles, competing with birdsong and baroque concertos over the tannoy.
    * vagar libremente = roam + free.

    * * *
    vagar [A3 ]
    vi
    to wander, roam, drift
    * * *

    vagar ( conjugate vagar) verbo intransitivo
    to wander, roam
    vagar vi (ir sin rumbo fijo) to wander, roam: vagamos por la ciudad toda la noche, we wandered around the town all night long
    vagaba por el desierto, he was wandering about in the desert
    ' vagar' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    errar
    - rondar
    English:
    drift
    - mooch
    - roam
    - rove
    - wander
    - meander
    * * *
    vagar vi
    vagar (por) to wander (around), to roam;
    vagando por las calles de la ciudad wandering around o roaming the streets of the city
    * * *
    v/i wander
    * * *
    vagar {52} vi
    errar: to roam, to wander
    * * *
    vagar vb to wander

    Spanish-English dictionary > vagar

  • 2 vagar

    f. pl. sledge; cf. vögur.
    * * *
    or vagir, f. pl. (from vög, f.), also vögur, pl. (from vaga, u, f.); pl. vegr, Fms. viii. 430: [vega; cp. vagn]:—a kind of bier or hand-barrow, the sing. being never used; tóku þau líkit ok lögðu í vagarnar, ok óku …, Nj. 153; Björn var úti á túnvelli ok smíðaði vögur (v. l. vagr, i. e. vagar), Eb. 90 new Ed.; tóku þeir hest ok lögðu á vögur, Bs. i. 335 (here the vagar seem to have been carried on horseback, as coffins are at the present day in Icel.)
    2. a level; þeir höfðu til vegr ok vágu fram af berginu, Fms. viii. 430; vagir (vagir?) eða slöngur, i. 127.
    COMPDS: vagaborur, vagadrumbr, vagaskalm.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > vagar

  • 3 vagar

    v
    1. to wander / to roam
    2. to suit

    Diccionari Català-Anglès > vagar

  • 4 vagar

    • weigher

    Hrvatski-Engleski rječnik > vagar

  • 5 vagar

    • Lazarus
    • laze around
    • roadworthy
    • roam about
    • roam around
    • roam over
    • scrounge around
    • walk after
    • walk all the way round
    • WAN
    • wander about

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > vagar

  • 6 vagar libremente

    (v.) = roam + free
    Ex. While in traditional working society, everybody was kept busy, and out of trouble, a leisured society would be one in which people roamed free and unfettered, and capable of absolutely anything.
    * * *
    (v.) = roam + free

    Ex: While in traditional working society, everybody was kept busy, and out of trouble, a leisured society would be one in which people roamed free and unfettered, and capable of absolutely anything.

    Spanish-English dictionary > vagar libremente

  • 7 vagar lánguidamente

    • mope about
    • mope around

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > vagar lánguidamente

  • 8 vagar por

    • range through
    • roam
    • roam around
    • roam over
    • roam the seas
    • wander off the point
    • wander on
    • wander through
    • wander through the streets

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > vagar por

  • 9 vagar sin rumbo

    • walk
    • walk across
    • walk arm in arm
    • walk around the block
    • wander
    • wander about carelessly

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > vagar sin rumbo

  • 10 vagar lánguidamente

    v.
    to mope around, to mope about.

    Spanish-English dictionary > vagar lánguidamente

  • 11 vagar por

    v.
    to roam, to bum around, to range through, to roam over.

    Spanish-English dictionary > vagar por

  • 12 Eli-vágar

    m. pl. the Ice-waves, a mythol. name, Edda.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > Eli-vágar

  • 13 a gran prisa más vagar

    • hastate
    • hasten

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > a gran prisa más vagar

  • 14 errar

    v.
    1 to choose wrongly.
    2 to wander.
    3 to make a mistake.
    María erró en sus cálculos Mary made a mistake in her calculations.
    4 to miss.
    5 to mistake, to miss, to fail, to miscalculate.
    María erró sus cálculos Mary mistook her calculations.
    6 to go astray, to err from the path of righteousness.
    El huérfano erró The orphan went astray.
    7 to roam around, to ramble, to roam about.
    * * *
    (e changes to ye in stressed syllables)
    Present Indicative
    yerro/ yerras/ yerra, erramos, erráis, yerran.
    Present Subjunctive
    yerre, yerres, yerre, erremos, erréis, yerren.
    Imperative
    yerra (tú), yerre (él/Vd.), erremos (nos.), errad (vos.), yerren (ellos/Vds.).
    * * *
    verb
    * * *
    1. VT
    1) (=equivocar) [+ tiro] to miss with, aim badly; [+ blanco] to miss; [+ vocación] to miss, mistake
    2) [en obligación] to fail ( in one's duty to)
    2. VI
    1) (=vagar) to wander, rove
    2) (=equivocarse) to be mistaken

    errar es cosa humana, de los hombres es errar — to err is human

    3.
    See:
    * * *
    1.
    verbo transitivo <tiro/golpe> to miss

    erró su vocación — she chose the wrong vocation/career

    2.
    errar vi
    1) ( fallar)

    (le) erré otra vezmissed again! (colloq), I've missed again

    le erraste feo — (RPl fam) you were way out o off the mark (colloq)

    2) (liter) persona ( vagar) to wander, roam; mirada/imaginación to wander
    * * *
    = miss + the mark, ramble, err, roam (about/around), mistake, range, rove, miss + the point.
    Ex. Such considerations suggest that exhortations directed at SLIS to transform their curricula in unspecified radical fashion miss the mark.
    Ex. Because by now comparative librarianship has a well-developed methodology, he does not have to waste his effort by rambling.
    Ex. Wherein had she erred? Try as she might she could think of nothing.
    Ex. Unless children are given time to roam about unhindered among books of many kinds, left alone to choose for themselves, and to do what any avid adult reader does, then maybe we labor in vain.
    Ex. A flat 'no' to a question such as 'Is this book recommended for Professor Shaw's course?' leaves uncertainty as to whether one was mistaken in the professor or in the suggestion that it was for a course.
    Ex. We will be bringing scholars from all over the world both to range widely in our multiform collections and put things together rather than just take them apart.
    Ex. The production is extremely lively: Wandering musicians rove the tiny stage and aisles, competing with birdsong and baroque concertos over the tannoy.
    Ex. Even those states who are pushing for legalized sports betting are missing the point when it comes to making a profit through sports betting.
    * * *
    1.
    verbo transitivo <tiro/golpe> to miss

    erró su vocación — she chose the wrong vocation/career

    2.
    errar vi
    1) ( fallar)

    (le) erré otra vezmissed again! (colloq), I've missed again

    le erraste feo — (RPl fam) you were way out o off the mark (colloq)

    2) (liter) persona ( vagar) to wander, roam; mirada/imaginación to wander
    * * *
    = miss + the mark, ramble, err, roam (about/around), mistake, range, rove, miss + the point.

    Ex: Such considerations suggest that exhortations directed at SLIS to transform their curricula in unspecified radical fashion miss the mark.

    Ex: Because by now comparative librarianship has a well-developed methodology, he does not have to waste his effort by rambling.
    Ex: Wherein had she erred? Try as she might she could think of nothing.
    Ex: Unless children are given time to roam about unhindered among books of many kinds, left alone to choose for themselves, and to do what any avid adult reader does, then maybe we labor in vain.
    Ex: A flat 'no' to a question such as 'Is this book recommended for Professor Shaw's course?' leaves uncertainty as to whether one was mistaken in the professor or in the suggestion that it was for a course.
    Ex: We will be bringing scholars from all over the world both to range widely in our multiform collections and put things together rather than just take them apart.
    Ex: The production is extremely lively: Wandering musicians rove the tiny stage and aisles, competing with birdsong and baroque concertos over the tannoy.
    Ex: Even those states who are pushing for legalized sports betting are missing the point when it comes to making a profit through sports betting.

    * * *
    errar [ A26 ]
    vt
    ‹tiro/golpe› to miss
    erró el remate he missed the shot, he shot wide/high
    erró su vocación she chose the wrong vocation/career
    ■ errar
    vi
    A
    (fallar): (le) erré otra vez missed again! ( colloq), I've missed again
    erró en su decisión he was mistaken in his decision, he made the wrong decision
    le erraste feo ( RPl fam); you were way out o way off the mark ( colloq), you were miles out ( colloq)
    errar es humano to err is human
    B ( liter); «persona» (vagar) to wander, roam, rove ( liter); «mirada» to wander
    su imaginación erraba por lugares lejanos his thoughts wandered o drifted o strayed to far-off places
    * * *

    errar ( conjugate errar) verbo transitivotiro/golpe to miss;
    erró su vocación she chose the wrong vocation/career

    verbo intransitivo [ tirador] to miss;
    erró en su decisión he made the wrong decision
    errar
    I verbo transitivo
    1 (un tiro, golpe) to miss
    2 (una elección) to get wrong
    II verbo intransitivo
    1 (vagar) to wander
    2 (cometer fallos) to make a mistake

    ' errar' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    equivocarse
    - engañar
    - fallar
    - tiro
    - yerra
    English:
    aimlessly
    - err
    - miss
    - muff
    - roam
    * * *
    vt
    1. [tiro, golpe] to miss
    2. [no acertar en]
    errar el cálculo/la respuesta to get the figures/answer wrong;
    errar el rumbo to choose the wrong course;
    errar la vocación to mistake one's vocation;
    RP
    le erraron con el diagnóstico he was misdiagnosed;
    RP Fam
    errar el biscochazo to be wide of the mark
    vi
    1. [vagar] [persona, imaginación, mirada] to wander;
    erró de pueblo en pueblo she wandered from town to town
    2. [equivocarse] to make a mistake;
    erró en la elección de carrera he chose the wrong course;
    RP
    errarle to make a mistake;
    le erré en las cuentas I made a mistake in the accounts;
    le erró, no le tendría que haber dicho nada he made a mistake, he shouldn't have told him anything
    3. [al tirar] to miss
    * * *
    I v/t miss;
    errar el tiro/golpe miss;
    errar el cálculo miscalculate, make a mistake in one’s figures
    II v/i miss;
    errar es humano to err is human
    * * *
    errar {32} vt
    fallar: to miss
    errar vi
    1) desacertar: to be wrong, to be mistaken
    2) vagar: to wander
    * * *
    errar vb
    1. (fallar) to miss
    2. (equivocarse) to be wrong
    3. (vagar) to wander

    Spanish-English dictionary > errar

  • 15 vago

    adj.
    1 footloose, errant, roving, shiftless.
    2 nebulous, amorphous, formless, shapeless.
    3 vague, general, unspecific.
    4 rambling, excursive.
    f. & m.
    1 bum, loafer, deadbeat, good-for-nothing.
    2 vagus.
    pres.indicat.
    1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: vagar.
    * * *
    1 (impreciso) vague
    ————————
    1 (vacío) empty; (desocupado) vacant
    2 (holgazán) lazy, idle
    nombre masculino,nombre femenino
    1 (holgazán) idler, layabout, slacker
    2 DERECHO vagrant
    \
    hacer el vago to laze around
    * * *
    1. (f. - vaga)
    adj.
    1) idle, lazy
    2. (f. - vaga)
    noun
    * * *
    vago, -a
    1. ADJ
    1) (gen) vague; (Arte, Fot) blurred, ill-defined; (=indeterminado) indeterminate
    2) [persona] (=perezoso) lazy, slack; (=poco fiable) unreliable; (=ocioso) idle, unemployed
    3) [ojo] lazy; [objeto] idle, unused; [espacio] empty
    4) (=errante) roving, wandering
    5)

    en vago[mantenerse] unsteadily; [esforzarse] in vain

    dar golpes en vago — to flail about, beat the air

    2. SM/ F
    1) (=holgazán) idler, lazybones *; (=inútil) useless individual, dead loss
    2) (=vagabundo) tramp, vagrant, bum (EEUU); (=pobre) down-and-out
    * * *
    I
    - ga adjetivo
    1) (fam) < persona> lazy, idle
    2) <recuerdo/idea> vague, hazy; <contorno/forma> vague, indistinct; < explicación> vague
    II
    - ga masculino, femenino (fam) layabout, slacker (colloq)
    * * *
    I
    - ga adjetivo
    1) (fam) < persona> lazy, idle
    2) <recuerdo/idea> vague, hazy; <contorno/forma> vague, indistinct; < explicación> vague
    II
    - ga masculino, femenino (fam) layabout, slacker (colloq)
    * * *
    vago1
    1 = slacker, bum, lazybones, layabout, idler.

    Ex: The article is entitled 'No slackers here: SLA's youngest members have the vision and enthusiasm to shape the profession'.

    Ex: Although the results provide support for the 'drunken bum' theory of wife beating, they also demythologize the stereotype because alcohol is shown to be far from a necessary or sufficient cause of wife abuse.
    Ex: Many see his art as a vocation for lazybones and social misfits.
    Ex: There is no evidence that inherited wealth is in itself responsible for turning young people into useless layabouts.
    Ex: This magazine prints essays and stories that celebrate the joyful life of an idler.
    * persona vaga y mal vestida = slob.

    vago2
    2 = dim [dimmer -comp., dimmest -sup.], fuzzy [fuzzier - comp., fuzziest -sup.], vague [vaguer -comp., vaguest -sup.], feeble, loose [looser -comp., loosest -sup.], wooly [woolier -comp., wooliest -sup.], indistinct, indistinctive, nebulous.

    Ex: The genesis of this brave new world of solid state logic, in which bibliographic data are reduced to phantasmagoria on the faces of cathode-ray tubes (CRT), extends at most only three-quarters of a decade into the dim past.

    Ex: This is a rather fuzzy basis for establishing subject headings, but fuzziness is not the guidelines only fault.
    Ex: Some of the terms are vague.
    Ex: Mearns warns us, 'Recollection is treacherous; it is usually too broad or too narrow for another's use; and what is more serious, it is frequently undependable and worn and feeble'.
    Ex: Kast points out that there is a 'rather loose, conglomeration of interests and approaches' in this developing field.
    Ex: On the other side, some aspects of the planning study remains wooly.
    Ex: The typescript will be fuzzy and indistinct without the smooth, firm surface which the backing sheet offers.
    Ex: This research suggests that people are threatened by categorizations that portray them as too distinctive or too indistinctive.
    Ex: The concept of such a center remained nebulous at best, and we later learned that communication problems early on had muddied the message about what was really needed.
    * de manera vaga = hazily.

    * * *
    vago1 -ga
    A ( fam); ‹persona› lazy, idle
    B ‹recuerdo/idea› vague, hazy; ‹contorno/forma› vague, indistinct
    hay un vago parecido entre los dos there is a vague resemblance between them
    me dio una explicación muy vaga de lo que había sucedido she gave me a very vague explanation of what had happened, she only explained very vaguely what had happened
    tengo la vaga sensación de haberlo visto antes I have a vague feeling I've seen him before
    vago2 -ga
    masculine, feminine
    ( fam)
    layabout, slacker ( colloq)
    deja ya de hacer el vago y ponte a trabajar stop lazing around and get some work done ( colloq)
    * * *

     

    Del verbo vagar: ( conjugate vagar)

    vago es:

    1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo

    vagó es:

    3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo

    Multiple Entries:
    vagar    
    vago
    vagar ( conjugate vagar) verbo intransitivo
    to wander, roam
    vago
    ◊ -ga adjetivo

    1 (fam) ‹ persona lazy, idle
    2recuerdo/idea vague, hazy;
    contorno/forma vague, indistinct;
    explicación/parecido vague
    ■ sustantivo masculino, femenino (fam) layabout, slacker (colloq);

    vagar vi (ir sin rumbo fijo) to wander, roam: vagamos por la ciudad toda la noche, we wandered around the town all night long
    vagaba por el desierto, he was wandering about in the desert
    vago,-a
    I adjetivo
    1 pey (holgazán) lazy
    2 (difuso) slight, vague: tiene una vaga idea de lo que ocurrió, he has a vague idea of what happened
    II m,f (gandul) layabout
    ' vago' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    boluda
    - boludo
    - floja
    - flojo
    - sambenito
    - señorito
    - vaga
    - hecho
    - indeterminado
    English:
    bone-idle
    - dim
    - do-nothing
    - easy-going
    - faint
    - hazy
    - indistinct
    - layabout
    - obscure
    - screw around
    - slack
    - slob
    - swan about
    - swan around
    - vague
    - work shy
    - bum
    - wooly
    * * *
    vago, -a
    adj
    1. [persona] lazy, idle;
    Fam Hum
    2. [imagen, recuerdo] vague
    3. Med
    nervio vago vagus nerve
    nm,f
    lazy person, idler;
    ser un vago to be lazy o idle
    nm
    hacer el vago to laze around
    * * *
    I adj
    1 ( holgazán) lazy;
    hacer el vago laze around
    2 ( indefinido) vague
    II m, vaga f idler, Br
    layabout fam
    * * *
    vago, -ga adj
    1) : vague
    2) perezoso: lazy, idle
    vago, -ga n
    1) : idler, loafer
    2) vagabundo: vagrant, bum
    * * *
    vago1 adj
    1. (gandul) lazy [comp. lazier; superl. laziest]
    2. (impreciso) vague
    vago2 n lazybones

    Spanish-English dictionary > vago

  • 16 vaga

    adj.
    1 errant, vagrant.
    2 vague, wavering, fluctuating, unsettled.
    Voz vaga a vague report.
    3 lax, loose.
    4 restless, uneasy.
    * * *
    1. f., (m. - vago) 2. f., (m. - vago)
    * * *

    Del verbo vagar: ( conjugate vagar)

    vaga es:

    3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo

    2ª persona singular (tú) imperativo

    Multiple Entries:
    vaga    
    vagar
    vagar ( conjugate vagar) verbo intransitivo
    to wander, roam
    vago,-a
    I adjetivo
    1 pey (holgazán) lazy
    2 (difuso) slight, vague: tiene una vaga idea de lo que ocurrió, he has a vague idea of what happened
    II m,f (gandul) layabout
    vagar vi (ir sin rumbo fijo) to wander, roam: vagamos por la ciudad toda la noche, we wandered around the town all night long
    vagaba por el desierto, he was wandering about in the desert
    ' vaga' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    vago
    - sensación
    English:
    fudge
    - vague
    * * *
    I adj
    1 ( holgazán) lazy;
    hacer el vago laze around
    2 ( indefinido) vague
    II m, vaga f idler, Br
    layabout fam

    Spanish-English dictionary > vaga

  • 17 corretear

    v.
    1 to run about.
    2 to hang about (informal).
    3 to overtake. (Mexican Spanish)
    4 to harass.
    5 to run playfully after, to run after.
    * * *
    1 familiar (correr) to run about
    2 familiar (vagar) to hang about
    * * *
    1. VT
    1) LAm (=acosar) to harass
    2) CAm (=ahuyentar) to scare off
    3) Cono Sur [+ trabajo] to hurry along, push *
    2. VI
    1) (=ir de prisa) to run about
    2) (=vagar) to loiter, hang about the streets
    * * *
    1.
    verbo intransitivo ( correr) to run around
    2.
    1)
    a) (esp AmL) ( perseguir) to chase, pursue
    b) (Chi fam) < ladrones> to keep... away, deter
    2) (RPl) (Com) to wholesale
    * * *
    Ex. Arboreal animals spend most of their time scampering around in trees rather than on the ground, in the air, or water.
    * * *
    1.
    verbo intransitivo ( correr) to run around
    2.
    1)
    a) (esp AmL) ( perseguir) to chase, pursue
    b) (Chi fam) < ladrones> to keep... away, deter
    2) (RPl) (Com) to wholesale
    * * *

    Ex: Arboreal animals spend most of their time scampering around in trees rather than on the ground, in the air, or water.

    * * *
    corretear [A1 ]
    vi
    to run around
    el niño correteaba por el jardín the little boy was running o rushing around the garden
    ■ corretear
    vt
    A
    1 ( esp AmL) (perseguir) to chase, pursue
    lo correteó hasta atraparlo she chased it round until she caught it
    2 ( Chi fam) ‹ladrones› to keep … away, deter
    tanto calor corretea a la gente de las calles the fierce heat keeps people off the streets
    3 ( Chi fam) ‹trámite› to chase o follow up
    si no correteas la autorización, no te la darán nunca if you don't start doing something about getting permission, they'll never give it to you
    B ( RPl) ( Com) to wholesale
    se ganaba la vida correteando artículos de escritorio he worked as a stationery wholesaler
    * * *

    corretear ( conjugate corretear) verbo intransitivo ( correr) to run around
    verbo transitivo
    1 (esp AmL) ( perseguir) to chase, pursue
    2 (RPl) (Com) to wholesale
    ' corretear' also found in these entries:
    English:
    run around
    - scamper
    - scamper about
    - run
    - scurry
    * * *
    vi
    1. [correr] to run about;
    los niños estaban correteando por el parque the children were running about in the park
    2. Fam [vagar] to hang about
    vt
    1. Méx [adelantar] to overtake
    2. Andes [perseguir] to chase, to pursue
    3. CAm [ahuyentar] to drive away
    * * *
    v/i run around
    * * *
    1) vagar: to loiter, to wander about
    2) : to run around, to scamper about
    : to pursue, to chase
    * * *
    corretear vb to scamper

    Spanish-English dictionary > corretear

  • 18 vaguear

    v.
    1 to laze around.
    2 to roam.
    * * *
    1→ link=vagar vagar 1 and vaguear 2
    * * *
    * * *
    verbo intransitivo to laze around
    * * *
    = loaf (about/around), laze (about/around), lounge (about/around), bum around.
    Ex. The less you work, the less you spend and the more time you have for loafing about.
    Ex. In the afternoon quite a few of our mob decided that they would prefer to spend a bit of time lazing about in the water and soaking up a few rays.
    Ex. He spends all his time lounging around the house, driving his parents to despair.
    Ex. He spent his early twenties bumming around the world and became fascinated by the differences and similarities in all of us.
    * * *
    verbo intransitivo to laze around
    * * *
    = loaf (about/around), laze (about/around), lounge (about/around), bum around.

    Ex: The less you work, the less you spend and the more time you have for loafing about.

    Ex: In the afternoon quite a few of our mob decided that they would prefer to spend a bit of time lazing about in the water and soaking up a few rays.
    Ex: He spends all his time lounging around the house, driving his parents to despair.
    Ex: He spent his early twenties bumming around the world and became fascinated by the differences and similarities in all of us.

    * * *
    vaguear [A1 ]
    vi
    to laze around, to lay around ( AmE), to loaf around o about ( BrE colloq)
    * * *

    vaguear verbo intransitivo to wander, roam
    ' vaguear' also found in these entries:
    English:
    bum around
    * * *
    Fam to laze around
    * * *
    v/i laze around
    * * *
    1) : to loaf, to lounge around
    2) vagar: to wander

    Spanish-English dictionary > vaguear

  • 19 VÁGR

    (-s, -ar), m.
    1) wave, sea;
    2) creek, bay;
    * * *
    m. [Ulf. wegs = σεισμός, pl. wegos = κύματα; A. S. wæg; Engl. wave; Dan. vove; Germ. wogen; the root word is vega, to stir]:—a wave, sea; but in this sense obsolete except in poetry; vind ek kyrri vági á, Hm. 155, Alm. 25; vágr vindlauss, a windless wave, Ýt.; þau á vági vindr of lék, Gkv. 1. 6; róa á vág, Hým. 17; vágs róði, Stor.; vágs hyrr, ‘wave-flame’ i. e. gold, Bragi: in prose the allit. vindr eða vágr, N. G. L. i. 34.
    COMPDS: vággarðr, vágmarr, vágþeystr, vágþrýstr.
    B. [This may be a different word, connected with varra, vörr, = a lip]:—a creek, bay, Hbl. i, 12; þeir lendu í váginn, Landn. 97; lögðu í inn ytra váginn, Fms. ix. 21; þeir liggja á vági þeim er Hjörunga-vágr heitir, xi. 122; í skerin ganga vágar, Fas. ii. 533; very freq. in Icel.
    II. also in pr. names, Vágr, Vágar, a fishing-place in northern Norway, whence Vága-floti, Fms. iv. 277: Vága-stefna, a fair at Vágar. Fms. iv. 277.
    COMPDS: vágsbotn, Vágsbrú.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > VÁGR

  • 20 libremente

    adv.
    1 freely; boldly; audaciously; impudently.
    2 freely, on the loose, without restraint.
    * * *
    1 freely
    * * *
    ADV freely
    * * *
    = at will, freely, unhindered.
    Ex. Once having got into the system, he or she can switch from database to database at will.
    Ex. Members of the audience were invited to ask questions, make statements, and express themselves freely.
    Ex. The USA is, therefore, campaigning for absolutely unhindered information flow across all national boundaries.
    ----
    * circular libremente = wander + at large.
    * dar la oportunidad de expresarse libremente = give + voice to.
    * deambular libremente = wander + at large, roam + free.
    * vagar libremente = roam + free.
    * * *
    = at will, freely, unhindered.

    Ex: Once having got into the system, he or she can switch from database to database at will.

    Ex: Members of the audience were invited to ask questions, make statements, and express themselves freely.
    Ex: The USA is, therefore, campaigning for absolutely unhindered information flow across all national boundaries.
    * circular libremente = wander + at large.
    * dar la oportunidad de expresarse libremente = give + voice to.
    * deambular libremente = wander + at large, roam + free.
    * vagar libremente = roam + free.

    * * *
    freely
    * * *
    freely
    * * *
    : freely

    Spanish-English dictionary > libremente

См. также в других словарях:

  • Vagar — Vágar Gewässer Atlantischer Ozean Inselgruppe Färöer …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Vágar — Gewässer Atlantischer Ozean Inselgruppe …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Vágar — Vagar is also the old name of Walls, Shetland Islands Island of the Faroe Islands name = Vágar municipality = area = 176 area rank = 3 population = 2890 population rank = population year = 2005 population density = location =… …   Wikipedia

  • Vagar — Vágar Carte topographique de Vágar Vágar est une des îles des îles Féroé. L île est composée par les communes de Sørvágur (avec Bøur et Gásadalur), Miðvágur (avec Vatnsoyrar) et Sandavágur. (1er janvier 2005). On y trouve le seul aéroport… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • vagar — Se conjuga como: llegar Infinitivo: Gerundio: Participio: vagar vagando vagado     Indicativo   presente imperfecto pretérito futuro condicional yo tú él, ella, Ud. nosotros vosotros ellos, ellas, Uds. vago vagas vaga vagamos vagáis vagan vagaba… …   Wordreference Spanish Conjugations Dictionary

  • vagar — v. intr. 1. Ficar vago, estar vago. 2. Estar livre e sem ter que fazer. 3. Sobrar (falando se de tempo), ocupar se; dedicar se. 4. Errar; andar sem destino; vaguear; propalar se. 5.  [Figurado] Boiar sem direção, ao sabor do mar. • v. tr. 6. … …   Dicionário da Língua Portuguesa

  • Vágar — Para otros usos de este término, véase Vágar (municipio). Mapa de Vágar, con su característica forma de cabeza de perro. Vágar, también conocida como Vágoy, es una de las 18 islas del archipiélago de las Feroe y la más situada al oeste. Con una… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Vágar — I (Del lat. vagarí, andar vagando.) ► verbo intransitivo 1 Ir una persona por distintos lugares sin un destino fijo: ■ daba pena verle vagar por las calles. SE CONJUGA COMO pagar SINÓNIMO deambular errar 2 Ir una persona por distinto …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • vagar — vagar1 (Del lat. vacāre). 1. intr. Tener tiempo y lugar suficiente o necesario para hacer algo. 2. Estar ocioso. vagar2 (Del lat. vagāri). 1. intr. Andar por varias partes sin determinación a sitio o lugar, o sin especial detención en ninguno. 2 …   Diccionario de la lengua española

  • Vágar — Carte topographique de Vágar Vágar est une des îles des îles Féroé. L île est composée par les communes de Sørvágur (avec Bøur et Gásadalur), Miðvágur (avec Vatnsoyrar) et Sandavágur. (1er janvier 2005). On y trouve le seul aéroport international …   Wikipédia en Français

  • vagar — {{#}}{{LM SynV40307}}{{〓}} {{CLAVE V39324}}{{\}}{{CLAVE}}{{/}}{{\}}SINÓNIMOS Y ANTÓNIMOS:{{/}} {{[}}vagar{{]}} {{《}}▍ v.{{》}} = vagabundear • errar • deambular • rondar • callejear (por las calles) • merodear (observando) • zangolotear (col.)… …   Diccionario de uso del español actual con sinónimos y antónimos

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