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1 accustomed
adjective (usual: his accustomed seat.) acostumbrado, de costumbre, habitualtr[ə'kʌstəmd]1 acostumbrado,-a (to, a)\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto grow accustomed to something acostumbrarse a algoadj.• acostumbrado, -a adj.• baqueteado, -a adj.• habituado, -a adj.• habitual adj.• usual adj.ə'kʌstəmda) ( habituated) (pred)to be accustomed to something/-ing — estar* acostumbrado a algo/+ inf
to become o get accustomed to something/-ing — acostumbrarse or habituarse* a algo/+ inf
b) (usual, customary) (before n) acostumbrado[ǝ'kʌstǝmd]ADJ acostumbrado, usual* * *[ə'kʌstəmd]a) ( habituated) (pred)to be accustomed to something/-ing — estar* acostumbrado a algo/+ inf
to become o get accustomed to something/-ing — acostumbrarse or habituarse* a algo/+ inf
b) (usual, customary) (before n) acostumbrado -
2 accustomed to
(familiar with or used to: I am not accustomed to being treated like this.) acostumbrado a, habituado a -
3 accustomed
adj.frecuente, usual, acostumbrado.pp.participio pasado del verbo ACCUSTOM.pt.pretérito del verbo ACCUSTOM. -
4 be accustomed
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5 become accustomed
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6 become habituated or accustomed
English-spanish dictionary > become habituated or accustomed
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7 be used or accustomed
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8 to grow accustomed to something
acostumbrarse a algoEnglish-spanish dictionary > to grow accustomed to something
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9 to be accustomed.
gener. Suele -
10 become accustomed
v.acostumbrarse, adaptarse, familiarizarse, habituarse. -
11 get accustomed
v.acostumbrarse, familiarizarse, adaptarse, habituarse. -
12 grow accustomed
v.acostumbrarse, irse acostumbrando. -
13 make accustomed
v.acostumbrar. -
14 accustom
(to make (especially oneself) familiar with or used to: He soon accustomed himself to the idea.) acostumbrarse- accustomed to
tr[ə'kʌstəm]1 acostumbrar (to, a)accustom [ə'kʌstəm] vt: acostumbrar, habituarv.• acostumbrar v.• avezar v.• habituar v.ə'kʌstəmto accustom somebody to something/-ing — acostumbrar or habituar* a alguien a algo/+inf
to accustom oneself TO something/-ING — acostumbrarse or habituarse* a algo/+ inf
[ǝ'kʌstǝm]VT acostumbrar, habituar (to a)to accustom o.s. to (doing) sth — acostumbrarse a (hacer) algo
* * *[ə'kʌstəm]to accustom somebody to something/-ing — acostumbrar or habituar* a alguien a algo/+inf
to accustom oneself TO something/-ING — acostumbrarse or habituarse* a algo/+ inf
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15 become
past tense - became; verb1) (to come or grow to be: Her coat has become badly torn; She has become even more beautiful.) volverse, ponerse, convertirse2) (to qualify or take a job as: She became a doctor.) hacerse, llegar a ser3) ((with of) to happen to: What became of her son?) ser de4) (to suit: That dress really becomes her.) sentar bien, quedar bien•- becoming- becomingly
become vb1. hacerse / convertirse en / llegar a ser2. hacerse / volverse / ponerseshe became angry se puso furiosa / se enfadótr[bɪ'kʌm]1 (with noun) convertirse en, hacerse, llegar a ser■ to become a doctor/teacher hacerse médico,-a/maestro,-a2 (change into) convertirse en, transformarse en■ to become mad volverse loco,-a, enloquecer■ to become fat ponerse gordo,-a, engordar■ to become angry ponerse enfadado,-a, enfadarse■ to become sad ponerse triste, entristecerse■ to become deaf quedarse sordo,-a, ensordecerse■ to become blind quedarse ciego,-a\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLwhat has become of...? ¿qué ha sido de...?■ what has become of your sister? ¿qué ha sido de tu hermana?: hacerse, volverse, ponersehe became famous: se hizo famosoto become sad: ponerse tristeto become accustomed to: acostumbrarse abecome vt1) befit: ser apropiado para2) suit: favorecer, quedarle bien (a alguien)that dress becomes you: ese vestido te favorecep.p.(Participio pasivo de "to become")v.(§ p.,p.p.: became, become) = convenir v.(§pres: -vengo, -vienes...-venimos) pret: -vin-fut: -vendr-•)• convertirse v.• convertirse en v.• devenir v.(§pres: -vengo, -vienes...-venimos) pret: -vin-fut: -vendr-•)• hacerse v.• llegar a ser v.• ponerse v.• resultar v.• volverse v.bɪ'kʌm
1.
to become arrogant/distant — volverse* arrogante/distante
to become famous — hacerse* famoso
she soon became bored/tired — pronto se aburrió/se cansó
to become a lawyer — hacerse* abogado
2.
vta) ( befit) (frml) (often neg) ser* apropiado parab) ( suit) favorecer*Phrasal Verbs:[bɪ'kʌm] (pt became) (pp become)1. VI1) (=grow to be)to become ill — ponerse enfermo, enfermar
to become old — hacerse or volverse viejo
to become red — ponerse rojo, enrojecerse
it became known that... — se supo que..., llegó a saberse que...
2) (=turn into) convertirse en, transformarse enthe building has become a cinema — el edificio se ha convertido or transformado en cine
2.IMPERS VBwhat has become of him? — ¿qué ha sido de él?
what will become of me? — ¿qué será de mí?
whatever can have become of that book? — ¿dónde estará ese libro?
3.VT (=look nice on) favorecer, sentar bienBECOME, GO, GET The translation of become/go/ get depends on the context and the type of change involved and how it is regarded. Very often there is more than one possible translation, or even a special verb to translate get + ((adjective)) (e.g. get angry - enfadarse), but here are some general hints.
Become {etc} + adjective
► Use pon erse to talk about temporary but normal changes:
I got quite ill Me puse muy malo
He went pale Se puso blanco
You've got very brown Te has puesto muy moreno
He got very angry Se puso furioso ► Use vol verse to refer to sudden, longer-lasting and unpredictable changes, particularly those affecting the mind:
He has become very impatient in the last few years Se ha vuelto muy impaciente estos últimos años
She went mad Se volvió loca ► Use que dar(se) especially when talking about changes that are permanent, involve deterioration and are due to external circumstances. Their onset may or may not be sudden:
He went blind (Se) quedó ciego
Goya went deaf Goya (se) quedó sordo
Q uedar(se) is also used to talk about pregnancy:
She became pregnant (Se) quedó embarazada ► Use hac erse for states resulting from effort or from a gradual, cumulative process:
They became very famous Se hicieron muy famosos
The pain became unbearable El dolor se hizo insoportable ► Use lle gar a ser to suggest reaching a peak:
The heat became stifling El calor llegó a ser agobiante
Become {etc} + noun
► Use hac erse for career goals and religious or political persuasions:
He became a lawyer Se hizo abogado
I became a Catholic in 1990 Me hice católico en 1990
He became a member of the Green Party Se hizo miembro del Partido Verde ► Use lle gar a + ((noun)) and llegar a ser + ((phrase)) for reaching a peak after a period of gradual change. This construction is often used to talk about professional accomplishments:
If you don't make more effort, you'll never get to be a teacher Si no te esfuerzas más, no llegarás a profesor
Castelar became one of the most important politicians of his time Castelar llegó a ser uno de los políticos más importantes de su época
Football became an obsession for him El fútbol llegó a ser una obsesión para él ► Use con vertirse en for long-lasting changes in character, substance and kind which take place gradually:
Those youngsters went on to become delinquents Aquellos jóvenes se convirtieron después en delincuentes
Over the years I have become a more tolerant person Con los años me he convertido en una persona más tolerante
Water turns into steam El agua se convierte en vapor ► Use que dar(se) + ((adjective)) to talk about changes, particularly when they are permanent, for the worse and due to external circumstances. Their onset may or may not be sudden:
She became a widow (Se) quedó viuda ► To translate hav e turned into {or} have become {etc} + ((noun)) in emphatic phrases particularly about people, you can use estar hecho un(a) + ((noun)):
Juan has become a really good pianist Juan está hecho todo un pianista For further uses and examples, see become, go, get, turn* * *[bɪ'kʌm]
1.
to become arrogant/distant — volverse* arrogante/distante
to become famous — hacerse* famoso
she soon became bored/tired — pronto se aburrió/se cansó
to become a lawyer — hacerse* abogado
2.
vta) ( befit) (frml) (often neg) ser* apropiado parab) ( suit) favorecer*Phrasal Verbs: -
16 used
1) (employed or put to a purpose: This road is not used any more.) utilizado2) (not new: used cars.) usado, de segunda manoused adj usado / de segunda mano1 (tr[jʊːzd]) (second-hand) usado,-a, de segunda mano■ she doesn't want a used car, she wants a new one no quiere un coche usado, lo quiere nuevo2 (tr[jʊːst]) (accustomed) acostumbrado,-a\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be used to estar acostumbrado,-a aused ['ju:zd] adj1) secondhand: usado, de segunda manoused cars: coches usados2)used to accustomed: acostumbradoused to the heat: acostumbrado al caloradj.• andado, -a adj.• de segunda mano adj.• tronado, -a adj.• usado, -a adj.
I
1) juːzda) <needle/stamp> usadob) ( secondhand) <car/clothing> usado, de segunda mano2) juːst ( accustomed) (pred)to be used TO something/-ING — estar* acostumbrado a algo/+ inf
I'm not used to this heat/getting up early — no estoy acostumbrado a tanto calor/a madrugar
to get used TO something/-ING — acostumbrarse a algo/+ inf
II juːstmodal verb (indicating former state, habit) (only in past)used to (+ INF): there used to be a shop next door antes había una tienda al lado; things aren't what they used to be (set phrase) las cosas ya no son lo que eran; I used to work in that shop (antes) trabajaba en esa tienda; do you play chess? - I used to — ¿juegas al ajedrez? - antes solía jugar or ya no; see also use II
I
[juːzd]ADJ1) (=finished with) [stamp, syringe] usado; [battery, tyre] gastado, usado2) (=second-hand) [clothing, car] usado
II
[juːst]ADJdon't worry, I'm used to it — no te preocupes, estoy acostumbrado
* * *
I
1) [juːzd]a) <needle/stamp> usadob) ( secondhand) <car/clothing> usado, de segunda mano2) [juːst] ( accustomed) (pred)to be used TO something/-ING — estar* acostumbrado a algo/+ inf
I'm not used to this heat/getting up early — no estoy acostumbrado a tanto calor/a madrugar
to get used TO something/-ING — acostumbrarse a algo/+ inf
II [juːst]modal verb (indicating former state, habit) (only in past)used to (+ INF): there used to be a shop next door antes había una tienda al lado; things aren't what they used to be (set phrase) las cosas ya no son lo que eran; I used to work in that shop (antes) trabajaba en esa tienda; do you play chess? - I used to — ¿juegas al ajedrez? - antes solía jugar or ya no; see also use II
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17 get into
1) (to put on (clothes etc): Get into your pyjamas.) ponerse2) (to begin to be in a particular state or behave in a particular way: He got into a temper.) ponerse3) (to affect strangely: I don't know what has got into him) pasar algo a alguien, (expresión) ¿qué mosca ha picado a alguien?1) v + prep + oa) ( enter) \<\<house\>\> entrar en or (AmL tb) a; \<\<car\>\> subir a; \<\<hole/cranny\>\> meterse enb) ( arrive at) \<\<station/office\>\> llegar* ac) (be selected for, elected to) \<\<college/club/Congress\>\> entrar en or (AmL tb) ad) ( fit into) \<\<coat/robe\>\> ponerse*I can't get into this dress any more — este vestido ya no me entra or no me cabe
e) ( into a given state)to get into a rage — ponerse* furioso
f) ( become accustomed to) \<\<job/method\>\> acostumbrarse a; \<\<book/subject\>\> meterse eng) ( affect)what's got into her? — ¿qué le pasa?
2) v + o + prep + oa) (bring, take, put in) meterb) (cause to be admitted to, elected to)she got me into the club — consiguió que me aceptaran or admitieran en el club
c) ( involve)1. VI + PREP1) (=enter) [+ house] entrar en; [+ vehicle] subir a; [+ bed, bath] meterse enI don't know what's got into you! — ¡no sé qué mosca te ha picado!, ¡no sé qué demonios te pasa!
2) (=reach) [+ office, school] llegar aif this document gets into the wrong hands... — si este documento cae en manos de quien no debe...
3) (=become member of) [+ club] entrar en4) (=put on) [+ clothes] ponerse5) (=become involved in) [+ situation, trouble, argument, fight] meterse en•
the yacht got into difficulties in a heavy sea — el yate empezó a tener problemas en el mar encrespado•
he got into trouble with the police — se metió en problemas con la policía6) (=acquire)shape 1., 5)•
to get into the habit of doing sth — coger or (LAm) agarrar la costumbre de hacer algo2. VT + PREP1) (=cause to enter) meter enhead 1., 2), tooth 1., 1)2) (=involve in)* * *1) v + prep + oa) ( enter) \<\<house\>\> entrar en or (AmL tb) a; \<\<car\>\> subir a; \<\<hole/cranny\>\> meterse enb) ( arrive at) \<\<station/office\>\> llegar* ac) (be selected for, elected to) \<\<college/club/Congress\>\> entrar en or (AmL tb) ad) ( fit into) \<\<coat/robe\>\> ponerse*I can't get into this dress any more — este vestido ya no me entra or no me cabe
e) ( into a given state)to get into a rage — ponerse* furioso
f) ( become accustomed to) \<\<job/method\>\> acostumbrarse a; \<\<book/subject\>\> meterse eng) ( affect)what's got into her? — ¿qué le pasa?
2) v + o + prep + oa) (bring, take, put in) meterb) (cause to be admitted to, elected to)she got me into the club — consiguió que me aceptaran or admitieran en el club
c) ( involve) -
18 year
jiə
1. noun1) (the period of time the earth takes to go once round the sun, about 365 days: We lived here for five years, from November 1968 to November 1973; a two-year delay.) año2) (the period from January 1 to December 31, being 365 days, except in a leap year, when it is 366 days: in the year 1945.) año•- yearly
2. adverb(every year: The festival is held yearly.) anualmente- all the year round
- all year round
- long
year n1. año2. cursotr[jɪəːSMALLr/SMALL]1 añoshe earns 14,000 pounds a year gana 14.000 libras al año2 SMALLEDUCATION/SMALL curso\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLall the year round durante todo el añosince the year dot desde el año de la nanato put years on somebody envejecerto take years off somebody rejuvenecer a alguienyear in, year out año tras añoyear ['jɪr] n1) : año mlast year: el año pasadohe's ten years old: tiene diez años2) : curso m, año m (escolar)3) years nplages: siglos mpl, años mplI haven't seen them in years: hace siglos que no los veon.• añada s.f.• año s.m.jɪr, jɪə(r)1) ( period of time) año mnext year — el año que viene, el próximo año
this time last year... — el año pasado por estas fechas...
every year — todos los años, cada año
every other o every second year — cada dos años, un año sí y otro no
once or twice a year — una o dos veces al or por año
it costs $500 a year — cuesta 500 dólares al año
it'll be a year next Monday/August — el lunes que viene/en agosto hará un año
in all my years as a teacher... — en todos mis años que ha trabajado de profesor,...
I'll return in a year o in a year's time — volveré dentro de un año
over the years I've grown accustomed to it — con el tiempo or con los años me he ido acostumbrando
year after year/year in, year out — año tras año
she got five years — (colloq) le cayeron cinco años (fam)
the year one o (BrE) the year dot — (colloq) el año de Maricastaña or de la pera (fam)
2) years pla) ( a long time)it's years since I saw him, I haven't seen him for years — hace años que no lo veo
that was years ago — de eso hace mucho tiempo or muchos años
years ago, there was a church here — años atrás, aquí había una iglesia
it put years on me — me avejentó or me envejeció, me echó años encima
b) ( age)3)a) ( Educ) curso m, año mI'm still in (the) first year — todavía estoy en primer año or en primero
b) ( of wine) cosecha f['jɪǝ(r)]N1) (=twelve months) año mit takes years — es cosa de años, se tarda años
•
three times a year — tres veces al año•
in after years — liter en los años siguientes, años después•
to reckon sth by the year — calcular algo por años•
year in, year out — año tras año, todos los años sin falta•
last year — el año pasadothe next year — (in past time) el año siguiente
•
the work has put years on him — el trabajo lo ha envejecidosince the year dot — desde el año de la nana *, desde siempre
2) (=age)•
in my early years — en mi infancia, en mi juventud•
he looks old/young for his years — aparenta más/menos años de los que tiene•
he's getting on in years — va para viejo•
in his later years — en sus últimos años3) (Brit) (Scol, Univ) curso m, año m4) [of wine] cosecha f, vendimia f1982 was a good/bad year — 1982 fue una buena/mala cosecha or vendimia, 1982 fue un buen/mal año
* * *[jɪr, jɪə(r)]1) ( period of time) año mnext year — el año que viene, el próximo año
this time last year... — el año pasado por estas fechas...
every year — todos los años, cada año
every other o every second year — cada dos años, un año sí y otro no
once or twice a year — una o dos veces al or por año
it costs $500 a year — cuesta 500 dólares al año
it'll be a year next Monday/August — el lunes que viene/en agosto hará un año
in all my years as a teacher... — en todos mis años que ha trabajado de profesor,...
I'll return in a year o in a year's time — volveré dentro de un año
over the years I've grown accustomed to it — con el tiempo or con los años me he ido acostumbrando
year after year/year in, year out — año tras año
she got five years — (colloq) le cayeron cinco años (fam)
the year one o (BrE) the year dot — (colloq) el año de Maricastaña or de la pera (fam)
2) years pla) ( a long time)it's years since I saw him, I haven't seen him for years — hace años que no lo veo
that was years ago — de eso hace mucho tiempo or muchos años
years ago, there was a church here — años atrás, aquí había una iglesia
it put years on me — me avejentó or me envejeció, me echó años encima
b) ( age)3)a) ( Educ) curso m, año mI'm still in (the) first year — todavía estoy en primer año or en primero
b) ( of wine) cosecha f -
19 acostumbrado
Del verbo acostumbrar: ( conjugate acostumbrar) \ \
acostumbrado es: \ \el participioMultiple Entries: acostumbrado acostumbrar
acostumbrado
◊ -da adjetivoa) ( habituado):acostumbrado a algo/hacer algo used to sth/doing sth; estamos acostumbrados a cenar temprano we're used to having dinner early; está acostumbrado a que le sirvan he's used to being served
acostumbrar ( conjugate acostumbrar) verbo transitivo acostumbrado a algn a algo/hacer algo to get sb used to sth/doing sth verbo intransitivo: acostumbrado a hacer algo to be accustomed to doing sth, be in the habit of doing sth acostumbrarse verbo pronominal acostumbradose a algo/algn to get used to sth/sb; acostumbradose a hacer algo to get used to doing sth
acostumbrado,-a adjetivo
1 usual, customary 2 estar acostumbrado, (estar habituado a algo) to be used to: estoy acostumbrada a coger el metro, I'm used to taking the subway ➣ Ver nota en soler
acostumbrar
I vi (tener por costumbre) to be in the habit of: acostumbra a contar cuanto le sucede, he's in the habit of telling everything that happens to him
acostumbramos a comer a las dos, we usually have lunch at two o'clock
II vtr (inculcar un hábito) to get (somebody) used [a, to]: acostumbró a su hija a dormir la siesta, she got her daughter used to taking a siesta ' acostumbrado' also found in these entries: Spanish: acostumbrada - hecha - hecho - soler English: accustom - attuned to - unaccustomed - used - accustomed - customary - habitual - usual - way -
20 acostumbrarse
■acostumbrarse verbo reflexivo to become accustomed [a, to], get used [a, to] ' acostumbrarse' also found in these entries: Spanish: acomodarse - estercolar - hacerse - acostumbrar - amañar - costar - enseñar - hacer English: feel - get - settle down - accustomed - become - settle - used
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См. также в других словарях:
Accustomed — Ac*cus tomed, a. 1. Familiar through use; usual; customary. An accustomed action. Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. Frequented by customers. [Obs.] A well accustomed shop. Smollett. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
accustomed — I (customary) adjective adsuetus, common, commonplace, confirmed, consuetudinal, consuetudinary, conventional, established, fixed, habitual, normal, ordinary, prevailing, regular, routine, solitus, traditional, usual associated concepts:… … Law dictionary
accustomed — [ə kus′təmd] adj. 1. customary; usual; characteristic [he spoke with accustomed ease] 2. used (to); habituated ( to) [accustomed to obeying orders] SYN. USUAL … English World dictionary
accustomed — accustomed; un·accustomed; … English syllables
accustomed — [adj1] be or become prepared, used to acclimatized, acquainted, adapted, addicted, confirmed, disciplined, familiar, familiarized, given to, grooved*, habituated, habituated in, in the habit, inured, seasoned, settled in, trained; concept 403 Ant … New thesaurus
accustomed — (adj.) late 15c., made customary, habitual, pp. adjective formed from ACCUSTOM (Cf. accustom) (v.) … Etymology dictionary
accustomed — wonted, customary, habitual, *usual Analogous words: natural, normal, *regular, typical: *common, ordinary, familiar Antonyms: unaccustomed Contrasted words: *strange, singular, peculiar, odd, queer, erratic: * … New Dictionary of Synonyms
accustomed — ► ADJECTIVE ▪ customary; usual … English terms dictionary
accustomed — [[t]əkʌ̱stəmd[/t]] 1) ADJ GRADED: v link ADJ to n/ ing If you are accustomed to something, you know it so well or have experienced it so often that it seems natural, unsurprising, or easy to deal with. I was accustomed to being the only child at… … English dictionary
accustomed to — If you are accustomed to something, you have become familiar with it and you no longer find it strange. Accustomed to usually comes after verbs such as be , become , get , or grow . It did not get lighter but I became accustomed to the dark. I am … Useful english dictionary
accustomed — adj. (cannot stand alone) accustomed to (accustomed to hard work; accustomed to walking long distances; he got accustomed to the warm climate) * * * [ə kʌstəmd] (cannot stand alone) accustomed to (accustomed to hard work; accustomed to walking… … Combinatory dictionary