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1 unesl
-
2 von jdm. verschleppt
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3 raptado
= kidnapped.Ex. In the first pass the program compares the entry 'JAWS' with ' KIDNAPPED' and no exchange is made as they are in the correct alphabetical order.* * *= kidnapped.Ex: In the first pass the program compares the entry 'JAWS' with ' KIDNAPPED' and no exchange is made as they are in the correct alphabetical order.
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4 secuestrado
adj.1 sequestered.2 hi-jacked.f. & m.hostage, abductee, captive.past part.past participle of spanish verb: secuestrar.* * *secuestrado, -a1. ADJ1) [persona] kidnapped2) [barco, avión] hijacked2.SM / F hostage* * *= hostage, kidnapped, hijacked.Ex. This article reports on the coverage by the New York Times of the killing of a hostage victim during a highjack.Ex. In the first pass the program compares the entry 'JAWS' with ' KIDNAPPED' and no exchange is made as they are in the correct alphabetical order.Ex. One of Belgium's most dangerous criminals, who staged an audacious jailbreak on a hijacked helicopter, has been tracked down to Morocco.* * *= hostage, kidnapped, hijacked.Ex: This article reports on the coverage by the New York Times of the killing of a hostage victim during a highjack.
Ex: In the first pass the program compares the entry 'JAWS' with ' KIDNAPPED' and no exchange is made as they are in the correct alphabetical order.Ex: One of Belgium's most dangerous criminals, who staged an audacious jailbreak on a hijacked helicopter, has been tracked down to Morocco.* * *secuestrado, -a♦ adj[raptado] kidnapped; [avión, barco, pasajero] hijacked♦ nm,fhostage -
5 rapito
rapito agg.1 ( di persona) kidnapped; abducted; ( rubato) stolen; il bimbo rapito è stato ritrovato, the kidnapped child has been found; i gioielli rapiti furono nascosti in una cantina, the stolen jewels were hidden in a cellar2 (fig.) ( estasiato) ravished, enraptured, enchanted: sguardo rapito, ravished expression; la guardava rapito, he watched her enraptured.* * *[ra'pito] rapito (-a)1. agg1) (persona) kidnapped2)(
fig : in estasi) ascoltare rapito qn — to be captivated by sb's wordsguardava rapito il quadro — he gazed at the painting, entranced
2. sm/f* * *[ra'pito] 1.participio passato rapire2.1) (sequestrato) kidnapped, abducted2) (estasiato) [ sguardo] entranced, ravished* * *rapito/ra'pito/→ rapireII aggettivo1 (sequestrato) kidnapped, abducted -
6 sequestrato
◆ s.m.1 (dir.) distrainee2 ( rapito) kidnapped person.* * *[sekwes'trato] 1.participio passato sequestrare2.1) [ beni] distrained, seized, sequestered2) (rapito) kidnapped* * *sequestrato/sekwes'trato/II aggettivo1 [ beni] distrained, seized, sequestered2 (rapito) kidnapped. -
7 raptar
v.to abduct, to kidnap.* * *1 to kidnap, abduct* * *verb* * *VT to kidnap, abduct* * *verbo transitivo ( secuestrar) to kidnap, abduct (frml); (Hist, Mit) to rape (arch)* * *= kidnap, abduct.Ex. Tom Sutherland, a professor at the American University of Beirut, was kidnapped in 1985 and held prisoner for six and a half years, for much of the time shackled to his prisoner Terry Anderson.Ex. Suppose you are abducted by a highway robber, who intends to ransom you and in return for your release you promise to deliver the ransom yourself; should you subsequently keep your promise?.* * *verbo transitivo ( secuestrar) to kidnap, abduct (frml); (Hist, Mit) to rape (arch)* * *= kidnap, abduct.Ex: Tom Sutherland, a professor at the American University of Beirut, was kidnapped in 1985 and held prisoner for six and a half years, for much of the time shackled to his prisoner Terry Anderson.
Ex: Suppose you are abducted by a highway robber, who intends to ransom you and in return for your release you promise to deliver the ransom yourself; should you subsequently keep your promise?.* * *raptar [A1 ]vt1 (secuestrar) to kidnap, abduct ( frml)* * *
raptar ( conjugate raptar) verbo transitivo ( secuestrar) to kidnap, abduct (frml)
raptar verbo transitivo to kidnap
' raptar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
robar
English:
abduct
- kidnap
- snatch
* * *raptar vtto abduct, to kidnap* * *v/t kidnap* * *raptar vtsequestrar: to abduct, to kidnap* * * -
8 secuestrar
v.1 to kidnap.2 to hijack.3 to seize.* * *1 (personas) to kidnap; (avión) to hijack2 DERECHO to sequester, seize, confiscate* * *verb1) to kidnap2) hijack* * *VT1) [+ persona] to kidnap2) [+ avión] to hijack3) (Jur) to seize, confiscate* * *verbo transitivob) <periódico/revista> to seize; < bienes> to sequestrate, confiscate* * *= hold + hostage, hijack, kidnap, abduct.Ex. The author recounts some cases where librarians have been killed or held hostage, and the lessons learned from these incidents.Ex. Information may have been hijacked as the province of computer operators rather than librarians.Ex. Tom Sutherland, a professor at the American University of Beirut, was kidnapped in 1985 and held prisoner for six and a half years, for much of the time shackled to his prisoner Terry Anderson.Ex. Suppose you are abducted by a highway robber, who intends to ransom you and in return for your release you promise to deliver the ransom yourself; should you subsequently keep your promise?.* * *verbo transitivob) <periódico/revista> to seize; < bienes> to sequestrate, confiscate* * *= hold + hostage, hijack, kidnap, abduct.Ex: The author recounts some cases where librarians have been killed or held hostage, and the lessons learned from these incidents.
Ex: Information may have been hijacked as the province of computer operators rather than librarians.Ex: Tom Sutherland, a professor at the American University of Beirut, was kidnapped in 1985 and held prisoner for six and a half years, for much of the time shackled to his prisoner Terry Anderson.Ex: Suppose you are abducted by a highway robber, who intends to ransom you and in return for your release you promise to deliver the ransom yourself; should you subsequently keep your promise?.* * *secuestrar [A1 ]vt1 ‹persona› to kidnap; ‹avión› to hijack2 ‹periódico/revista› to seize; ‹bienes› to sequestrate, confiscate* * *
secuestrar ( conjugate secuestrar) verbo transitivo ‹ persona› to kidnap;
‹ avión› to hijack
secuestrar verbo transitivo
1 (a una persona) to kidnap
2 (un vehículo) to hijack
3 Jur (una edición, una publicación) to confiscate
' secuestrar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
raptar
English:
abduct
- conspiracy
- hijack
- kidnap
- seize
- snatch
* * *secuestrar vt1. [raptar] to kidnap;[avión, barco] to hijack2. [bienes, publicación] to seize* * ** * *secuestrar vt1) raptar: to kidnap, to abduct2) : to hijack, to commandeer3) confiscar: to confiscate, to seize* * *secuestrar vb2. (avión) to hijack -
9 Unbekannte
f; -n, -n; MATH.: die Unbekannte auch fig. the unknown; Gleichung mit zwei Unbekannten equation with two unknowns, binomial equation—m, f; -n, -n unknown ( oder unidentified) person ( oder man, woman); (Fremde[r]) stranger; sie wurde von Unbekannten entführt she was kidnapped by persons unknown; Verabredung mit einer Unbekannten blind date; der große Unbekannte meist iro. the mystery man* * *der Unbekannteunknown* * *Ụn|be|kann|tef decl as adj (MATH)unknown* * ** * *Un·be·kann·te<-n, -n>f MATH unknownUn·be·kann·te(r)f(m) dekl wie adj (unbekannte Person) strangerder große \Unbekannte the mystery mankein \Unbekannter mehr sein to be known to everyone* * *Ider/die; adj. Dekl. unknown or unidentified man/woman; (Fremde[r]) strangerIIder große Unbekannte — (scherzh.) the mystery man or person
die; adj. Dekl. (Math.; auch fig.) unknown* * *Unbekannte1 f; -n, -n; MATH:die Unbekannte auch fig the unknown;Gleichung mit zwei Unbekannten equation with two unknowns, binomial equationUnbekannte2 m/f; -n, -n unknown ( oder unidentified) person ( oder man, woman); (Fremde[r]) stranger;sie wurde von Unbekannten entführt she was kidnapped by persons unknown;Verabredung mit einer Unbekannten blind date;der große Unbekannte meist iron the mystery man* * *Ider/die; adj. Dekl. unknown or unidentified man/woman; (Fremde[r]) strangerIIder große Unbekannte — (scherzh.) the mystery man or person
die; adj. Dekl. (Math.; auch fig.) unknown* * *m.,f.stranger n. -
10 coartar
v.1 to limit, to restrict.2 to coarct.* * *1 to limit, restrict* * *VT to limit, restrict* * ** * *= anchor, restrict, tie down, cripple, frustrate, dam (up), shackle, box in, hamstring, fetter, hem + Nombre + in, chill, cramp.Ex. One can now picture a future investigator in his laboratory, his hands are free, he is not anchored.Ex. This is an example of a classification which is restricted to a specific physical form, as it is used to classify maps and atlases.Ex. There are many able people still tied down with the routine 'running' of their libraries.Ex. The objection to it seems to be that by reading rubbish children cripple their own imaginative, linguistic or moral powers.Ex. The psychologist Abraham H Maslow has warned of 'true psychopathological effects when the cognitive needs are frustrated'.Ex. But to prevent any meandering at all, or to dam the flow of talk too soon and too often by intruding, generally only frustrates spontaneity = Aunque evitar cualquier divagación o cortar el flujo de la conversación demasiado pronto y con demasiada frecuencia con interrupciones generalmente sólo coarta la espontaneidad.Ex. Tom Sutherland, a professor at the American University of Beirut, was kidnapped in 1985 and held prisoner for six and a half years, for much of the time shackled to his prisoner Terry Anderson.Ex. What is important is that agencies face few barriers to disseminating information on the Web quickly rather than being boxed in by standardization requirements = Lo que es importante es que las agencias se encuentran pocas trabas para diseminar información en la web de una forma rápida más que verse restringidas por cuestiones de normalización.Ex. Instead, the proposed regulations would hamstring public access.Ex. Faculty tenure is designed to allow the scholar to proceed with his investigation without being fettered with concerns arising from loss of job and salary.Ex. The world of work is no longer constrained by the four physical dimensions of space and time that have hemmed us in for most of recorded history.Ex. This would chill the freedom of inquiry that is central to the academic process and that is, moreover, privileged by the First Amendment.Ex. They used schools as a buttress of a caste system designed to subordinate blacks socially, to cramp them economically under a rigid job ceiling.----* coartar el avance de Algo = hinder + progress.* coartar el progreso de Algo = hinder + progress.* * ** * *= anchor, restrict, tie down, cripple, frustrate, dam (up), shackle, box in, hamstring, fetter, hem + Nombre + in, chill, cramp.Ex: One can now picture a future investigator in his laboratory, his hands are free, he is not anchored.
Ex: This is an example of a classification which is restricted to a specific physical form, as it is used to classify maps and atlases.Ex: There are many able people still tied down with the routine 'running' of their libraries.Ex: The objection to it seems to be that by reading rubbish children cripple their own imaginative, linguistic or moral powers.Ex: The psychologist Abraham H Maslow has warned of 'true psychopathological effects when the cognitive needs are frustrated'.Ex: But to prevent any meandering at all, or to dam the flow of talk too soon and too often by intruding, generally only frustrates spontaneity = Aunque evitar cualquier divagación o cortar el flujo de la conversación demasiado pronto y con demasiada frecuencia con interrupciones generalmente sólo coarta la espontaneidad.Ex: Tom Sutherland, a professor at the American University of Beirut, was kidnapped in 1985 and held prisoner for six and a half years, for much of the time shackled to his prisoner Terry Anderson.Ex: What is important is that agencies face few barriers to disseminating information on the Web quickly rather than being boxed in by standardization requirements = Lo que es importante es que las agencias se encuentran pocas trabas para diseminar información en la web de una forma rápida más que verse restringidas por cuestiones de normalización.Ex: Instead, the proposed regulations would hamstring public access.Ex: Faculty tenure is designed to allow the scholar to proceed with his investigation without being fettered with concerns arising from loss of job and salary.Ex: The world of work is no longer constrained by the four physical dimensions of space and time that have hemmed us in for most of recorded history.Ex: This would chill the freedom of inquiry that is central to the academic process and that is, moreover, privileged by the First Amendment.Ex: They used schools as a buttress of a caste system designed to subordinate blacks socially, to cramp them economically under a rigid job ceiling.* coartar el avance de Algo = hinder + progress.* coartar el progreso de Algo = hinder + progress.* * *coartar [A1 ]vt1 ‹persona› to inhibitsu presencia lo coartaba he found her presence inhibiting, her presence inhibited him2 ‹libertad/voluntad› to restrict* * *
coartar ( conjugate coartar) verbo transitivo ‹ persona› to inhibit;
‹libertad/voluntad› to restrict
coartar verbo transitivo to restrict
' coartar' also found in these entries:
English:
constrict
* * *coartar vtto limit, to restrict* * *v/t restrict* * *coartar vt: to restrict, to limit -
11 desaparecido
adj.missing.f. & m.missing person.past part.past participle of spanish verb: desaparecer.* * *1→ link=desaparecer desaparecer► adjetivo1 missing► nombre masculino,nombre femenino1 missing person* * *(f. - desaparecida)adj.1) missing2) deceased* * *desaparecido, -a1.desaparecido en combate — missing in action, MIA
2.SM / F LAm (Pol) missing personLOS DESAPARECIDOS Los desaparecidos is the name given to those who disappeared during the military dictatorships in the Southern Cone in the 1970s. Thousands of people were taken from their homes, schools and places of work and never seen again. Few of "the disappeared" were ever found alive, although a certain number of bodies were recovered in mass graves. Families of the victims joined forces to form pressure groups like Argentina's Madres y Abuelas de la Plaza de Mayo, but although some managed to identify and recover the bodies of their relatives, the perpetrators were rarely brought to justice.número de muertos, heridos y desaparecidos — number of dead, wounded and missing
* * *I- da adjetivoa) ( que no se encuentra) missingb) (period) ( muerto) late (before n), deceased (frml)II- da masculino, femeninoa) ( en un accidente) missing personb) (Pol)los desaparecidos — the disappeared o those who have disappeared
* * *= missing, defunct, extinct.Ex. As you read each frame, cover the area below each frame and attempt to supply the missing word.Ex. The now defunct ultra-fiche could carry up to 3000 images on the same area of film, at the reduction ratio of 150.Ex. He researched existing and extinct cricket grounds in order to write the biographies of 400 cricketers who had represented the county.----* desaparecido en combate = missing in action (MIA).* * *I- da adjetivoa) ( que no se encuentra) missingb) (period) ( muerto) late (before n), deceased (frml)II- da masculino, femeninoa) ( en un accidente) missing personb) (Pol)los desaparecidos — the disappeared o those who have disappeared
* * *= missing, defunct, extinct.Ex: As you read each frame, cover the area below each frame and attempt to supply the missing word.
Ex: The now defunct ultra-fiche could carry up to 3000 images on the same area of film, at the reduction ratio of 150.Ex: He researched existing and extinct cricket grounds in order to write the biographies of 400 cricketers who had represented the county.* desaparecido en combate = missing in action (MIA).* * *1 (que no se encuentra) missingmasculine, femininedesaparecidos (↑ desaparecido a1)1 (en un accidente) missing personentre los desaparecidos en el siniestro among those missing after the accident2 ( Pol):un grupo de madres cuyos hijos están entre los desaparecidos a group of mothers whose children are among the disappeared o among those who have disappeared o among those who have gone missingdetenido desaparecido (↑ detenido (2))* * *
Del verbo desaparecer: ( conjugate desaparecer)
desaparecido es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
desaparecer
desaparecido
desaparecer ( conjugate desaparecer) verbo intransitivo [persona/objeto] to disappear;
[dolor/síntoma/cicatriz] to disappear, go;
[ costumbre] to disappear, die out;
[ mancha] to come out
desaparecerse verbo pronominal (Andes) to disappear
desaparecido◊ -da adjetivo
■ sustantivo masculino, femenino
b) (Pol):◊ los desaparecidos the disappeared o those who have disappeared
desaparecer verbo intransitivo to disappear: me ha desaparecido la cartera, I can't find my wallet
el sol desapareció detrás de las nubes, the sun vanished behind the clouds
♦ Locuciones: desaparecer del mapa/de la faz de la tierra, to vanish off the face of the earth
desaparecido,-a
I adjetivo
1 missing
2 frml euf (muerto) late, deceased
II sustantivo masculino y femenino missing person
' desaparecido' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
desaparecer
- desaparecida
- espantada
English:
clear up
- gone
- missing
- defunct
- extinct
- give
* * *desaparecido, -a♦ adj1. [extraviado] missingun soldado desaparecido en combate a soldier missing in action♦ nm,f1. [en catástrofe] missing person;ha habido veinte muertos y tres desaparecidos twenty people have been killed and three are missing2. [en represión política] missing person [kidnapped and possibly murdered by the authorities]DESAPARECIDOSThe kidnap of alleged subversives and holding of them in undisclosed locations became a widespread repressive technique in many Latin American countries from the 1960s onwards, and is especially associated with the period of the “guerra sucia” (dirty war) in Argentina, Uruguay and Chile in the 1970s. Those kidnapped, whether by the military, secret police or paramilitary groups, were usually tortured and many were killed. The bodies were disposed of in secret, and in some cases they were dropped from planes over the open sea. Surviving friends and relatives lived for years in a permanent state of anxiety and uncertainty, as they were given no official information about the victim's fate, or the location of their body. With the restoration of democracy in these countries, there were campaigns for the truth about the kidnap victims (the desaparecidos) to be revealed. In spite of the various types of amnesty legislation that the military had enacted before relinquishing power to civilians, it was possible to gain much information about the fate of the victims through "truth commissions", and in Argentina some of the most senior of those responsible for the campaign of kidnap, torture and murder have even been brought to trial and convicted.* * *I adj missingII m, desaparecida f1:el desaparecido the deceased2 L.Am.un desaparecido one of the disappeared* * *desaparecido, -da adj1) : late, deceased2) : missingdesaparecido, -da n: missing person* * *desaparecido adj missing -
12 disfrutar de buena salud
(v.) = be in good healthEx. EU doctors kidnapped in Somalia by gunmen are in good health, a local elder says.* * *(v.) = be in good healthEx: EU doctors kidnapped in Somalia by gunmen are in good health, a local elder says.
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13 encadenar
v.1 to chain (up).El secuestrador encadenó a María The kidnapper chained Mary.2 to link (together).3 to link together, to connect.El constructor encadenó los salones The constructor connected the rooms.* * *1 (poner cadenas) to chain (up)* * *verb1) to chain2) link* * *1. VT1) (=atar con cadenas) (lit) to chain, chain together; (fig) to tie down2) [+ prisionero] to fetter, shackle3) [+ de hechos, ideas] to connect, link4) (=inmovilizar) to shackle, paralyze, immobilize2.VI (Cine) to fade in* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) <prisionero/bicicleta> to chain (up)b) obligación/trabajo to tie (down)c) <ideas/pensamientos> to link2) (Cin) <escenas/secuencias> to fade... together2.encadenarse v pron (refl)* * *= chain, shackle, fetter.Ex. Some institutional libraries were chained (when the books were necessarily shelved fore-edge outwards), the chains being attached to a staple riveted to an edge of one of the boards.Ex. Tom Sutherland, a professor at the American University of Beirut, was kidnapped in 1985 and held prisoner for six and a half years, for much of the time shackled to his prisoner Terry Anderson.Ex. Christ bears the cross on his shoulder at the head of a long shaft supported by a male prisoner fettered at the legs and a mendicant friar.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) <prisionero/bicicleta> to chain (up)b) obligación/trabajo to tie (down)c) <ideas/pensamientos> to link2) (Cin) <escenas/secuencias> to fade... together2.encadenarse v pron (refl)* * *= chain, shackle, fetter.Ex: Some institutional libraries were chained (when the books were necessarily shelved fore-edge outwards), the chains being attached to a staple riveted to an edge of one of the boards.
Ex: Tom Sutherland, a professor at the American University of Beirut, was kidnapped in 1985 and held prisoner for six and a half years, for much of the time shackled to his prisoner Terry Anderson.Ex: Christ bears the cross on his shoulder at the head of a long shaft supported by a male prisoner fettered at the legs and a mendicant friar.* * *encadenar [A1 ]vtA1 ‹prisionero› to chain, chain upencadenó la bicicleta a la reja she chained the bicycle to the railings2 «obligación/trabajo» to tie, tie down3 ‹ideas/pensamientos› to linkB ( Cin) ‹escenas/secuencias› to fade … together( refl) encadenarse A algo to chain oneself TO sthse encadenaron a las rejas en señal de protesta they chained themselves to the railings in protest* * *
encadenar ( conjugate encadenar) verbo transitivo ‹prisionero/bicicleta› to chain (up)
encadenar verbo transitivo
1 to chain [a, to]
figurado está encadenada a la casa, she's tied to the house
2 (ideas) to link, connect
' encadenar' also found in these entries:
English:
chain
- fetter
* * *♦ vt2. [enlazar] to link (together)* * *v/t chain (up); figlink oput together* * *encadenar vt1) : to chain2) : to connect, to link3) inmovilizar: to immobilize* * *encadenar vb to chain -
14 encarcelar
v.1 to imprison.2 to put in prison, to jail, to prison, to send to prison.El policía encarceló al borracho The policeman put the drunk in prison.* * *1 to imprison, jail, incarcerate* * *verbto imprison, jail* * *VT to imprison, jail* * *verbo transitivo to imprison, jail* * *= jail [gaol, -UK], incarcerate, imprison, hold + prisoner, put + Nombre + behind bars.Ex. In 1892 Klas Linderfelt, the then ALA President, was jailed for 4 days on charges of embezzling more than $4,000 from library funds.Ex. A survey was conducted to identify the information needs of a 5% sample of men and women incarcerated in correctional institutions.Ex. Juan Carlos is a blind lawyer, activist and volunteer librarian who has been imprisoned without trial since March, when he was detained for peacefully protesting the arrest of a journalist.Ex. Tom Sutherland, a professor at the American University of Beirut, was kidnapped in 1985 and held prisoner for six and a half years, for much of the time shackled to his prisoner Terry Anderson.Ex. A 92-year-old woman has been put behind bars for sitting on her front porch shouting abuse at passers-by.----* encarcelar de por vida = jail for + life.* * *verbo transitivo to imprison, jail* * *= jail [gaol, -UK], incarcerate, imprison, hold + prisoner, put + Nombre + behind bars.Ex: In 1892 Klas Linderfelt, the then ALA President, was jailed for 4 days on charges of embezzling more than $4,000 from library funds.
Ex: A survey was conducted to identify the information needs of a 5% sample of men and women incarcerated in correctional institutions.Ex: Juan Carlos is a blind lawyer, activist and volunteer librarian who has been imprisoned without trial since March, when he was detained for peacefully protesting the arrest of a journalist.Ex: Tom Sutherland, a professor at the American University of Beirut, was kidnapped in 1985 and held prisoner for six and a half years, for much of the time shackled to his prisoner Terry Anderson.Ex: A 92-year-old woman has been put behind bars for sitting on her front porch shouting abuse at passers-by.* encarcelar de por vida = jail for + life.* * *encarcelar [A1 ]vtto imprison, jailfue encarcelado he was imprisoned o jailed, he was put in prison o jail* * *
encarcelar ( conjugate encarcelar) verbo transitivo
to imprison, jail
encarcelar verbo transitivo to imprison
' encarcelar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
enjaular
- detener
English:
bang up
- imprison
- incarcerate
- jail
- send down
* * *encarcelar vtto imprison, to jail;fue encarcelado por homicidio he was jailed for murder* * *v/t put in prison, imprison* * *encarcelar vt: to incarcerate, to imprison* * *encarcelar vb to imprison -
15 encerrar
v.1 to shut up or in.2 to contain.sus palabras encerraban una amenaza there was a threat in his words3 to shut in, to close in, to confine, to lock in.Ella encerró al chico mal portado She shut in the misbehaving boy.4 to enclose, to encompass, to contain, to comprise.Ese poema encierra mucha verdad That poem encloses much truth.5 to surround, to hem.La cerca encierra el potrero The fence surrounds the pasture.6 to block in, to box in, to box up.* * *1 (gen) to shut in, shut up2 (con llave) to lock in, lock up3 (palabras, frases, etc) to put4 (ajedrez, damas) to block1 (recogerse) to go into retreat; (en sí mismo) to become withdrawn* * *verb1) to lock up, shut up2) contain* * *1. VT1) (=meter) to shut (up); [con llave] to lock (up)2) (=contener) to contain3) (=implicar) to involve4) (Ajedrez, Damas) to block2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivome encerró en mi habitación — he shut me o locked me in my room
está para que lo encierren — (fam) he's crazy o a nut (colloq)
2)a) ( contener) to containb) ( conllevar) to involve, entail2.encerrarse v pron (refl) ( en una habitación) to shut oneself in; (en una fábrica, universidad) obreros/estudiantes to lock oneself in* * *= enclose, lock, intern, shut up, closet, hold + prisoner, coop up, hem + Nombre + in, pen.Ex. The building encloses an art gallery, tourist office, conference room, concert hall and cinema.Ex. If the analogy with the fairy story is taken a little further it can be noted that no author really believes in dragons, wicked queens, fair maidens locked in high towers and the like.Ex. The Red Cross then established and ran a library for the about 500 asylum seekers who were interned on the ship awaiting police interviewing.Ex. Certainly the last thing we want is that books be shut up in tastefully decorated warehouses, watched over by highly trained storekeepers whose main purpose is to see that everything is kept tidily in its place and, as far as possible, untouched by human hands -- especially the sticky-fingered hands of marauding children.Ex. Too often guests are snatched up on arrival and closeted away from the children before being produced like a rabbit out of a hat for the 'official' appearance.Ex. Tom Sutherland, a professor at the American University of Beirut, was kidnapped in 1985 and held prisoner for six and a half years, for much of the time shackled to his prisoner Terry Anderson.Ex. We've all heard of road rage: being cooped up in a car on a crowded freeway with no means of escape.Ex. The world of work is no longer constrained by the four physical dimensions of space and time that have hemmed us in for most of recorded history.Ex. There's also goats, but I don't think they're penned anywhere -- they seem to have the run of the place as much as the chickens.----* encerrar con candado = padlock.* encerrar en una jaula = cage.* hora de encerrarse = curfew.* * *1.verbo transitivome encerró en mi habitación — he shut me o locked me in my room
está para que lo encierren — (fam) he's crazy o a nut (colloq)
2)a) ( contener) to containb) ( conllevar) to involve, entail2.encerrarse v pron (refl) ( en una habitación) to shut oneself in; (en una fábrica, universidad) obreros/estudiantes to lock oneself in* * *= enclose, lock, intern, shut up, closet, hold + prisoner, coop up, hem + Nombre + in, pen.Ex: The building encloses an art gallery, tourist office, conference room, concert hall and cinema.
Ex: If the analogy with the fairy story is taken a little further it can be noted that no author really believes in dragons, wicked queens, fair maidens locked in high towers and the like.Ex: The Red Cross then established and ran a library for the about 500 asylum seekers who were interned on the ship awaiting police interviewing.Ex: Certainly the last thing we want is that books be shut up in tastefully decorated warehouses, watched over by highly trained storekeepers whose main purpose is to see that everything is kept tidily in its place and, as far as possible, untouched by human hands -- especially the sticky-fingered hands of marauding children.Ex: Too often guests are snatched up on arrival and closeted away from the children before being produced like a rabbit out of a hat for the 'official' appearance.Ex: Tom Sutherland, a professor at the American University of Beirut, was kidnapped in 1985 and held prisoner for six and a half years, for much of the time shackled to his prisoner Terry Anderson.Ex: We've all heard of road rage: being cooped up in a car on a crowded freeway with no means of escape.Ex: The world of work is no longer constrained by the four physical dimensions of space and time that have hemmed us in for most of recorded history.Ex: There's also goats, but I don't think they're penned anywhere -- they seem to have the run of the place as much as the chickens.* encerrar con candado = padlock.* encerrar en una jaula = cage.* hora de encerrarse = curfew.* * *encerrar [A5 ]vtA ‹persona› to lock up; ‹ganado› to shut up, penlo han encerrado en la cárcel he's been locked up in prison o put behind barsme encerraban en mi habitación they used to shut me in my roomencierra al perro shut the dog inestá para que lo encierren ( fam); he's crazy o a nut ( colloq), he should be put away o certified ( colloq)nos dejaron encerrados en la oficina we got locked in the officeB1 (contener) to containla película encierra una gran carga moral the movie contains o has a strong moral message2 (conllevar) to involve, entailno sabe el peligro que encierra she does not know the danger which it involves o entails( refl) to shut oneself inse ha encerrado en su habitación he has shut himself in his roomse encerró en un convento she shut herself away in a conventlos trabajadores se encerraron en la fábrica the workers locked themselves in the factory o occupied the factory* * *
encerrar ( conjugate encerrar) verbo transitivo
1 ‹ ganado› to shut up, pen;
‹ perro› to shut … in;
‹ persona› (en cárcel, calabozo) to lock up;◊ me encerró en mi habitación he shut me o locked me in my room;
me dejaron encerrada en la oficina I got locked in the office
2 ( conllevar) ‹peligro/riesgo› to involve, entail
encerrarse verbo pronominal ( refl) ( en habitación) to shut oneself in;
(en fábrica, universidad) [obreros/estudiantes] to lock oneself in
encerrar verbo transitivo
1 to shut in: encerraron al perro en la cocina, they shut the dog in the kitchen
(con llave) to lock in
2 (entrañar) to contain, include: la Esfinge encierra la clave, the Sphinx holds the key
' encerrar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
encierra
English:
confine
- enclose
- hem in
- lock in
- lock up
- put away
- seal in
- shut away
- shut in
- shut up
- coop
- hem
- lock
- put
- shut
* * *♦ vt1. [recluir] to shut up o in;[con llave] to lock up o in; [en la cárcel] to lock away o up; [ganado, rebaño] to pen (up); [gallinas] to shut up; [en carreras] to box in;lo encerraron en un psiquiátrico they shut him away o up in a mental hospital;me encerraron en la curva y no pude esprintar they boxed me in on the bend and I couldn't put on a sprint;Fam2. [contener] to contain;el espectáculo encierra grandes sorpresas the show has some big surprises;sus palabras encerraban una amenaza there was a threat in his words3. [en ajedrez] to checkmate4. [con signos de puntuación] to enclose ( entre in);encerró el comentario entre paréntesis she enclosed the comment in brackets* * *v/t1 lock up, shut up2 ( contener) contain* * *encerrar {55} vt1) : to lock up, to shut away2) : to contain, to include3) : to involve, to entail* * *encerrar vb2. (con llave) to lock -
16 estar bien
v.1 to be all right, to be doing fine, to be doing well, to be fine.Todo está bien Everything is all right.2 to be well, to be very.3 to be OK to, to be all right to, to be alright to.4 to be OK.* * *(v.) = be okay, be in good shape, be in good healthEx. 'Anything wrong?' 'Oh, I'm okay, I guess,' volunteered Datto cautiously.Ex. China's economy is in good shape and capable of maintaining financial stability despite global chaos.Ex. EU doctors kidnapped in Somalia by gunmen are in good health, a local elder says.* * *(v.) = be okay, be in good shape, be in good healthEx: 'Anything wrong?' 'Oh, I'm okay, I guess,' volunteered Datto cautiously.
Ex: China's economy is in good shape and capable of maintaining financial stability despite global chaos.Ex: EU doctors kidnapped in Somalia by gunmen are in good health, a local elder says. -
17 estar bien de salud
(v.) = be in good healthEx. EU doctors kidnapped in Somalia by gunmen are in good health, a local elder says.* * *(v.) = be in good healthEx: EU doctors kidnapped in Somalia by gunmen are in good health, a local elder says.
-
18 mandíbula
f.jaw, jawbone, jowl, lower jaw.* * *1 jaw* * *noun f.* * *SF (Anat, Téc) jaw; (Zool) mandible* * *femenino jawreírse a mandíbula batiente — (fam) to laugh one's head off (colloq)
* * *= jaw, jawbone, mandible.Ex. In the first pass the program compares the entry ' JAWS' with 'KIDNAPPED' and no exchange is made as they are in the correct alphabetical order.Ex. The photographs show the genesis of his creations from the source of inspiration (stones, driftwood, jawbones of animals) through his drawings and maquettes to the finished sculptures.Ex. The lower jaw has its own separate bone which is called 'the mandible', which is U-shaped and stretches from one ear, down to the chin area and then back up.----* de la mandíbula inferior = mandibular.* de la mandíbula superior = maxillar, maxillary.* mandíbula inferior = lower jaw.* mandíbula superior = maxilla [maxillae, -pl.], upper jaw.* reírse a mandíbula batiente = laugh + Posesivo + head off, laugh like + a drain.* * *femenino jawreírse a mandíbula batiente — (fam) to laugh one's head off (colloq)
* * *= jaw, jawbone, mandible.Ex: In the first pass the program compares the entry ' JAWS' with 'KIDNAPPED' and no exchange is made as they are in the correct alphabetical order.
Ex: The photographs show the genesis of his creations from the source of inspiration (stones, driftwood, jawbones of animals) through his drawings and maquettes to the finished sculptures.Ex: The lower jaw has its own separate bone which is called 'the mandible', which is U-shaped and stretches from one ear, down to the chin area and then back up.* de la mandíbula inferior = mandibular.* de la mandíbula superior = maxillar, maxillary.* mandíbula inferior = lower jaw.* mandíbula superior = maxilla [maxillae, -pl.], upper jaw.* reírse a mandíbula batiente = laugh + Posesivo + head off, laugh like + a drain.* * *jaw* * *
mandíbula sustantivo femenino
jaw
mandíbula sustantivo femenino jaw
♦ Locuciones: reír a mandíbula batiente, to laugh one's head off
' mandíbula' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
desencajado
- desencajar
- superior
English:
jaw
- jaw bone
- lower
- pow
- jawbone
- jowls
* * *mandíbula nfjaw, Espec mandible* * *f ANAT jaw;reírse a mandíbula batiente laugh one’s head off fam* * *mandíbula nf1) : jaw2) : mandible* * *mandíbula n jaw -
19 quijada
f.jaw.* * *1 jaw, jawbone* * *SF jaw, jawbone* * *femenino jaw (bone)* * *= jaw, jawbone.Ex. In the first pass the program compares the entry ' JAWS' with 'KIDNAPPED' and no exchange is made as they are in the correct alphabetical order.Ex. The photographs show the genesis of his creations from the source of inspiration (stones, driftwood, jawbones of animals) through his drawings and maquettes to the finished sculptures.----* quijada inferior = lower jaw.* quijada superior = upper jaw.* * *femenino jaw (bone)* * *= jaw, jawbone.Ex: In the first pass the program compares the entry ' JAWS' with 'KIDNAPPED' and no exchange is made as they are in the correct alphabetical order.
Ex: The photographs show the genesis of his creations from the source of inspiration (stones, driftwood, jawbones of animals) through his drawings and maquettes to the finished sculptures.* quijada inferior = lower jaw.* quijada superior = upper jaw.* * *jaw, jawbone* * *
quijada sustantivo femenino
jaw (bone)
quijada sustantivo femenino Anat jaw (bone)
' quijada' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
carretilla
English:
jaw
- jawbone
* * *quijada nfjaw* * *f ANAT jawbone* * *quijada nf: jaw, jawbone -
20 recluir
v.1 to shut or lock away, to imprison.2 to shut in, to lock in, to imprison, to lock up.* * *1 (encerrar) to shut in2 (en cárcel) to imprison, intern3 (en manicomio) to confine* * *verb* * *1.VT (=encerrar) to shut away; (Jur) (=encarcelar) to imprison2.See:* * *1. 2.recluirse v pron to shut oneself awaydesde la muerte de su mujer se ha recluido — since the death of his wife he has been a recluse/lived as a recluse
* * *= intern, seclude, hold + prisoner.Ex. The Red Cross then established and ran a library for the about 500 asylum seekers who were interned on the ship awaiting police interviewing.Ex. Can't you seclude yourself and do nothing but work on this topic for the week?.Ex. Tom Sutherland, a professor at the American University of Beirut, was kidnapped in 1985 and held prisoner for six and a half years, for much of the time shackled to his prisoner Terry Anderson.----* dado a recluirse = reclusive.* * *1. 2.recluirse v pron to shut oneself awaydesde la muerte de su mujer se ha recluido — since the death of his wife he has been a recluse/lived as a recluse
* * *= intern, seclude, hold + prisoner.Ex: The Red Cross then established and ran a library for the about 500 asylum seekers who were interned on the ship awaiting police interviewing.
Ex: Can't you seclude yourself and do nothing but work on this topic for the week?.Ex: Tom Sutherland, a professor at the American University of Beirut, was kidnapped in 1985 and held prisoner for six and a half years, for much of the time shackled to his prisoner Terry Anderson.* dado a recluirse = reclusive.* * *vt(en una prisión) to imprisonfue recluido en un psiquiátrico he was shut away in a psychiatric hospital, he was confined to o interned in a psychiatric hospital ( frml)la enfermedad lo ha tenido recluido durante casi un año he has been confined to the house for almost a year because of the illnessdesde la muerte de su mujer se había recluido/había vivido recluido since the death of his wife he had been a recluse/he had lived as a recluseuna casa donde suele recluirse para escribir a house where he shuts himself away to write* * *
recluir ( conjugate recluir) verbo transitivo ( en prisión) to imprison;
( en hospital psiquiátrico), to intern (frml)
recluir verbo transitivo
1 to shut away, confine
2 (en una cárcel) to imprison
3 (en un hospital, etc) to intern
' recluir' also found in these entries:
English:
confine
- shut away
- intern
* * *♦ vtto shut o lock away, to imprison;recluyeron a los prisioneros en una cárcel de máxima seguridad they put the prisoners in a maximum security prison* * *v/t imprison, confine* * *recluir {41} vt: to confine, to lock up
См. также в других словарях:
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