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1 ached
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2 ache
eik
1. noun(a continuous pain: I have an ache in my stomach.) dolor
2. verb1) (to be in continuous pain: My tooth aches.) doler2) (to have a great desire: I was aching to tell him the news.) ansiar; morirse porache1 n dolorEntra en la formación de palabras compuestas como headache ( dolor de cabeza), toothache ( dolor de muelas), earache ( dolor de oídos ) o stomachache ( dolor de estómago)ache2 vb dolertr[eɪk]1 dolor nombre masculino1 doler■ my head aches me duele la cabeza, tengo dolor de cabeza1) : doler2)to ache for : anhelar, ansiarache n: dolor mn.• dolencia s.f.• dolor s.m.v.• ansiar v.• doler v.
I eɪk1)a) ( give pain) \<\<tooth/ear/leg\>\> doler*b) aching pres p <shoulders/muscles> dolorido2) ( yearn)to ache to + inf — ansiar* + inf
II
noun dolor m ( sordo y continuo)[eɪk]aches and pains — achaques mpl
1.N (=pain) dolor mfull of aches and pains — lleno de achaques or goteras *
2. VI1) (=hurt) doler2) (fig)3) (=yearn) desear, suspirar ( for por)* * *
I [eɪk]1)a) ( give pain) \<\<tooth/ear/leg\>\> doler*b) aching pres p <shoulders/muscles> dolorido2) ( yearn)to ache to + inf — ansiar* + inf
II
noun dolor m ( sordo y continuo)aches and pains — achaques mpl
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3 ache
s.1 dolor.2 achaque, dolor, dolorimiento.3 sufrimiento, congoja.4 acetilcolinesterasa.v.doler.vi.doler. (pt & pp ached)
См. также в других словарях:
Ached — Ache Ache, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Ached}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Aching}.] [OE. aken, AS. acan, both strong verbs, AS. acan, imp. [=o]c, p. p. acen, to ache; perh. orig. to drive, and akin to agent.] To suffer pain; to have, or be in, pain, or in… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
ached — stom·ached; … English syllables
ached — eɪk v. suffer from a continuous dull pain, hurt; miss, yearn for n. continuous dull pain, hurt … English contemporary dictionary
his heart ached — he felt great sorrow and anguish … English contemporary dictionary
ache — /ayk/, v., ached, aching, n. v.i. 1. to have or suffer a continuous, dull pain: His whole body ached. 2. to feel great sympathy, pity, or the like: Her heart ached for the starving animals. 3. to feel eager; yearn; long: She ached to be the… … Universalium
ache — 01. My thumb has really been [aching] since I shut the door on it. 02. The hockey player had a terrible [ache] in his shoulder after the game. 03. Her tooth was [aching] so much that she had trouble falling asleep. 04. When I had the flu, my skin … Grammatical examples in English
ache — [[t]e͟ɪk[/t]] aches, aching, ached 1) VERB If you ache or a part of your body aches, you feel a steady, fairly strong pain. [V adv/prep] The glands in her neck were swollen, her head was throbbing and she ached all over... My leg is giving me… … English dictionary
ache */ — I UK [eɪk] / US verb [intransitive] Word forms ache : present tense I/you/we/they ache he/she/it aches present participle aching past tense ached past participle ached 1) if part of your body aches, you feel a continuous pain there that is… … English dictionary
ache — [[t]eɪk[/t]] v. ached, ach•ing, n. 1) pat to have or suffer a continuous dull pain 2) to feel great sympathy, pity, or the like: His heart ached for the starving animals[/ex] 3) to feel painful eagerness; yearn; long: She ached to be the… … From formal English to slang
ache — n. & v. n. 1 a continuous or prolonged dull pain. 2 mental distress. v.intr. 1 suffer from or be the source of an ache (I ached all over; my left leg ached). 2 (foll. by to + infin.) desire greatly (we ached to be at home again). Derivatives:… … Useful english dictionary
ach´ing|ly — ache «ayk», noun, verb, ached, ach|ing. –n. a continuous pain, especially a dull or heavy pain: »The boy lay still trying to forget the ache in his back. Muscular aches follow hard exercise. SYNONYM(S): See syn. under pain. (Cf. ↑pain) … Useful english dictionary