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1 librarse de
v.1 to get rid of, to do away with, to break oneself of, to break away from.Nos libramos de sus amigos We got rid of her friends.2 to escape, to get out of, to avoid, to elude.Nos libramos del castigo We escaped the punishment.* * *2) escape* * *(v.) = disentangle + Reflexivo + from, extricate + Reflexivo + from, rid of, be free from, break + loose from, duck out ofEx. Reference librarians must have the capability of kindly and tactfully disentangling themselves from hangers-on who would monopolize their time, to the detriment of others.Ex. This article examines the importance of biography as an element of public library provision which must be extricated from the straitjacket of the classification system.Ex. Two recently elected school board members have announced their intention of ' ridding the high school of Mrs Panopoulos' -- to which she replied, with a defiant shrug, 'Let them try'.Ex. What one might call 'fetishistic bibliomania' is a disease -- and few serious book-readers, let alone librarians, are free from a squirrel-like proclivity to hoard books.Ex. It is a time, in other words, when professionals often long to break loose from the stress 'to do far more, in less time'.Ex. There's no polite way to duck out of a dinner party.* * *(v.) = disentangle + Reflexivo + from, extricate + Reflexivo + from, rid of, be free from, break + loose from, duck out ofEx: Reference librarians must have the capability of kindly and tactfully disentangling themselves from hangers-on who would monopolize their time, to the detriment of others.
Ex: This article examines the importance of biography as an element of public library provision which must be extricated from the straitjacket of the classification system.Ex: Two recently elected school board members have announced their intention of ' ridding the high school of Mrs Panopoulos' -- to which she replied, with a defiant shrug, 'Let them try'.Ex: What one might call 'fetishistic bibliomania' is a disease -- and few serious book-readers, let alone librarians, are free from a squirrel-like proclivity to hoard books.Ex: It is a time, in other words, when professionals often long to break loose from the stress 'to do far more, in less time'.Ex: There's no polite way to duck out of a dinner party. -
2 librarse
1 to escape (de, from)* * *VPR1) (=eximirse)librarse de algo/algn — to escape from sth/sb
2) (=deshacerse)librarse de algn/algo — to get rid of sb/sth
* * *
■librarse verbo reflexivo
1 to escape: nos libramos por los pelos, we had a narrow escape o we escaped by the skin of our teeth ➣ Ver nota en escape
2 (deshacerse, desentenderse) to get rid of: intenta librarte de él tan pronto como puedas, try to get rid of him as soon as you can
' librarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
buena
- bueno
- salvarse
- deshacer
- desligarse
- librar
English:
escape
- feign
- get off
- hook
- miss
- rid
- get
* * *vprse libró del servicio militar he got off having to do military service;me libré de tener que ir a la fiesta I got out of having to go to the party;de buena te libraste you had a lucky escape2. [deshacerse]librarse de algo/alguien to get rid of sth/sb;el asesino consiguió librarse de sus perseguidores the killer managed to shake off his pursuers;no conseguimos librarnos de ese olor we can't get rid of that smell* * *v/r:librarse de algo get out of sth;de buena nos hemos librado fam that was lucky* * *vrlibrarse de : to free oneself from, to get out of* * *librarse vb1. (evitar) to get out2. (deshacerse) to get rid
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