-
1 capear
v.1 to get out of.capear el temporal to ride out o weather the storm2 to dodge, to fend off, to evade, to skirt.Luis capeó el problema Louis dodged the problem.3 to steer clear of, to dodge, to jink.Luis capeó el bloqueo policial Louis steered clear of the police block.4 to play with the cape.El torero capeaba sin cesar The bullfighter played with the cape endlessly* * *1 (tauromaquia) to confront the bull with the cape\capear el temporal figurado to weather the storm, ride out the storm* * *1. VT1) (Taur) wave the cape at; (fig) to take in, deceive2) (Náut)capear el temporal — (lit, fig) to ride out o weather the storm
3) (=esquivar) to dodge4) (Culin) to top, cover ( con with)2.VI (Náut) to ride out the storm* * *verbo transitivo1) (Taur) to make passes at ( with the cape)capear una crisis — to ride out o weather a crisis
2) (Chi fam) < trabajo> to skip, to skive off (BrE colloq)capear clase — to play hooky (esp AmE colloq), to skive off (school) (BrE colloq)
* * *----* capear el temporal = weather + the bumpy ride, weather + the storm.* * *verbo transitivo1) (Taur) to make passes at ( with the cape)capear una crisis — to ride out o weather a crisis
2) (Chi fam) < trabajo> to skip, to skive off (BrE colloq)capear clase — to play hooky (esp AmE colloq), to skive off (school) (BrE colloq)
* * ** capear el temporal = weather + the bumpy ride, weather + the storm.* * *capear [A1 ]vtA ( Taur) to make passes at ( with the cape)la empresa es capaz de capear la crisis the company can ride out o weather the crisislos encontró capeando clases he caught them playing hooky ( esp AmE) o ( BrE) skiving off (school) ( colloq)■ capearvi* * *
capear ( conjugate capear) verbo transitivo
1 (Taur) to make passes at ( with the cape)
2 (Chi fam) ‹ trabajo› to skip, to skive off (BrE colloq);
capear verbo transitivo
1 Taur to fight the bull with the cape
2 Náut to weather
fig (una mala situación) to ride out
3 (eludir un trabajo, una responsabilidad) to dodge, shirk
♦ Locuciones: figurado capear el temporal, to weather the storm
' capear' also found in these entries:
English:
brave
- ride out
- roll
- weather
- skive off
* * *♦ vt1. Taurom to make passes at with a cape2. [eludir] [persona] to avoid;[situación] to get out of;capear el temporal to ride out o weather the storm♦ viChile, Guat Fam to play Br truant o US hookey* * *v/t1 temporal weather2 TAUR make passes at with one’s cape* * *capear vt1) : to make a pass with the cape (in bullfighting)2) : to dodge, to weathercapear el temporal: to ride out the storm -
2 esquivar
v.1 to avoid.2 to dodge, to evade, to duck, to fend off.Luis capeó el problema Louis dodged the problem.* * *1 (persona) to avoid, shun2 (golpe) to dodge, elude* * *verb1) to dodge2) avoid* * *1.VT (=evitar) to avoid, shun; (=evadir) to dodge, side-stepesquivar hacer algo — to avoid doing sth, be chary of doing sth
2.See:* * *verbo transitivo < persona> to avoid; <golpe/pregunta> to dodge, evade; <problema/dificultad> to avoid; < responsabilidad> to avoid, evade* * *= dodge, eschew, skate over, parry, skirt, fend off, steer + clear of, give + Nombre + a wide berth, steer away from.Ex. But he was wiry and wily, too, and he could often out-run, track, back-track, double-back, and finally dodge unseen in the subway.Ex. However, most contributors to the debate about the future of SLIS have eschewed practicalities in favour of sweeping and dramatic generalizations.Ex. I'm sorry; I didn't wish to skate over that.Ex. 'What if we got the other departments to pay for their own services and materials?' she parried, seeing a faint ray of hope in the idea.Ex. Bridleways that cross arable land may be legally ploughed up, but not those that skirt a field.Ex. During the rutting season, they are used to fend off other males in an attempt to gather a harem of females to breed with.Ex. This entire target market has steered clear of the public library.Ex. Under the new law, motorists must give 'a wide berth' to stationary emergency vehicles displaying blue, red, or amber emergency warning lights.Ex. This article gives guidance for steering away from some of the more obvious pitfalls when buying software.----* esquivar el problema = sidestep + the problem.* esquivar la cuestión = sidestep + the issue.* esquivar la mirada de Alguien = avert + Posesivo + eyes.* esquivar una cuestión = dodge + issue.* esquivar un problema = duck + issue.* * *verbo transitivo < persona> to avoid; <golpe/pregunta> to dodge, evade; <problema/dificultad> to avoid; < responsabilidad> to avoid, evade* * *= dodge, eschew, skate over, parry, skirt, fend off, steer + clear of, give + Nombre + a wide berth, steer away from.Ex: But he was wiry and wily, too, and he could often out-run, track, back-track, double-back, and finally dodge unseen in the subway.
Ex: However, most contributors to the debate about the future of SLIS have eschewed practicalities in favour of sweeping and dramatic generalizations.Ex: I'm sorry; I didn't wish to skate over that.Ex: 'What if we got the other departments to pay for their own services and materials?' she parried, seeing a faint ray of hope in the idea.Ex: Bridleways that cross arable land may be legally ploughed up, but not those that skirt a field.Ex: During the rutting season, they are used to fend off other males in an attempt to gather a harem of females to breed with.Ex: This entire target market has steered clear of the public library.Ex: Under the new law, motorists must give 'a wide berth' to stationary emergency vehicles displaying blue, red, or amber emergency warning lights.Ex: This article gives guidance for steering away from some of the more obvious pitfalls when buying software.* esquivar el problema = sidestep + the problem.* esquivar la cuestión = sidestep + the issue.* esquivar la mirada de Alguien = avert + Posesivo + eyes.* esquivar una cuestión = dodge + issue.* esquivar un problema = duck + issue.* * *esquivar [A1 ]vt1 ‹persona› to avoid2 ‹golpe› to dodge, evade; ‹pregunta› to avoid, dodge, sidestepintentaron esquivar el tema they tried to dodge o evade the issue3 ‹problema/dificultad› to avoid; ‹responsabilidad› to avoid, evade* * *
esquivar ( conjugate esquivar) verbo transitivo ‹persona/problema/dificultad› to avoid;
‹golpe/pregunta› to dodge, evade;
‹ responsabilidad› to avoid, evade
esquivar verbo transitivo
1 (un obstáculo, golpe) to dodge: menos mal que pudo esquivar el árbol que había caído en la carretera, luckily he was able to dodge the tree that had fallen across the road
2 (a una persona) to avoid, dodge: me está esquivando, he's avoiding me
' esquivar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
burlar
- cuneta
- huir
- esquinazo
English:
dodge
- elude
- fend off
- sidestep
- way
- avoid
- divert
- duck
- fend
- fudge
- side
* * *esquivar vt1. [golpe] to dodge;[valla, obstáculo] to clear;trató de esquivar al perro para no atropellarlo he tried to avoid the dog so as not to knock it down2. [persona, discusión, tema] to avoid;[pregunta] to evade, to dodge; [compromiso, responsabilidad] to evade, to get out of; [problema, inconveniente] to avoid, to get round* * *v/t avoid, dodge fam* * *esquivar vt1) evadir: to dodge, to evade2) evitar: to avoid* * *esquivar vb1. (golpe) to dodge2. (persona) to avoid
См. также в других словарях:
Descubrimiento de América — Primer desembarco de Cristóbal Colón en América (1862) obra del pintor español Dióscoro Puebla (1831 1901); una visión romántica de la llegada de Cristóbal Colón a América. La expresión descubrimiento de América se usa habitualmente para… … Wikipedia Español