-
1 asquear
v.1 to disgust, to make sick.2 to detest, to feel nausea at.3 to loathe to.4 to nauseate, to put off, to disgust, to sicken.* * *1 to disgust, revolt, make sick* * *verb* * *1.VT to disgustme asquean las ratas — I loathe rats, rats disgust me
2.See:* * *verbo transitivo ( dar asco a) to sicken; (aburrir, hartar)* * *verbo transitivo ( dar asco a) to sicken; (aburrir, hartar)* * *asquear [A1 ]vt(dar asco a) to sickenme asquea tanta corrupción all this corruption sickens me, I find all this corruption sickening, I'm sickened by all this corruption* * *
asquear ( conjugate asquear) verbo transitivo ( dar asco a) to sicken;
(aburrir, hartar):◊ está asqueado de todo he's fed up with everything (colloq)
asquear verbo intransitivo to sicken, revolt
' asquear' also found in these entries:
English:
nauseate
- sicken
* * *asquear vtto disgust, to make sick;ese olor me asquea that smell is disgusting;le asquea su trabajo she loathes her job* * *v/t disgust* * *asquear vt: to sicken, to disgust -
2 asquear
-
3 asquear
3) надоесть, быть в тягость -
4 asquear
-
5 asquear
vt; П.испы́тывать глубо́кое отвраще́ние, испы́тывать глубо́кое не́нависть к кому-л. -
6 asquear
-
7 asquear
• hnusit se• protivit se• vzbuzovat hnus -
8 asquear
v. Millakuy. -
9 ASQUEAR
v:Taatak xej. -
10 asquear
intr изпитвам, показвам отвращение. -
11 asquear
1) vi (тж vt) чувствовать (испытывать) отвращение ( к чему-либо)3) надоесть, быть в тягость -
12 asquear
fastiguejar -
13 hastiar
v.to bore.* * *1 to bore1 to get sick (de, of), get tired (de, of)* * *1. VT1) (=cansar) to weary2) (=aburrir) to bore3) (=asquear) to sicken, disgust2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivole hastiaban aquellas fiestas — she was tired o weary of those parties
2.hastiado de la vida — tired o weary of life
hastiarse v pronhastiarse de algo — to grow tired o weary of something
* * *= weary.Ex. She wearies of the constant procession of visitors, and the round of invitations and commissions, which swallow up her time.* * *1.verbo transitivole hastiaban aquellas fiestas — she was tired o weary of those parties
2.hastiado de la vida — tired o weary of life
hastiarse v pronhastiarse de algo — to grow tired o weary of something
* * *= weary.Ex: She wearies of the constant procession of visitors, and the round of invitations and commissions, which swallow up her time.
* * *vtestaba hastiado de la vida he was tired o weary of lifele hastiaban aquellas fiestas she was tired o weary of those partieshastiarse DE algo to grow tired o weary OF sthse había hastiado de esa vida frívola she had grown weary o tired of her frivolous lifese hastió de vivir allí he grew tired o weary of living there, he wearied o tired of living there ( liter)* * *
hastiar verbo transitivo to bore, sicken, disgust
* * *♦ vt1. [aburrir] to bore2. [asquear] to sicken, to disgust* * *v/t bore* * *hastiar {85} vt1) : to make weary, to bore2) : to disgust, to sicken -
14 осатанеть
сов.1) разг. endiablarse, enfurecerse (непр.) -
15 repugnar
rrɛpuɡ̱'narvanekeln, anwidernverbo intransitivo[provocar asco] anekeln[causar rechazo] widerstrebenrepugnarrepugnar [rrepuγ'nar]num1num (producir aversión) abstoßen; (asquear) anekeln; me repugna la carne grasosa fettes Fleisch finde ich ekelhaft(rehusar) ablehnen -
16 aburrir
v.1 to bore.este trabajo me aburre this job is boringaburre a todo el mundo con sus batallitas he bores everyone with his old stories2 to be boring, to bore, to dull, to pall.Este juego aburre This game is boring.3 to tire, to weary, to bore, to bore the pants off.María aburre a Ricardo con su charla Mary tires Richard with her chattering.4 to be boring to.Aburre estudiar sola It is boring to study alone.* * *1 to bore2 (cansar) to tire1 to get bored (con/de/por, with)\aburrirse como una ostra familiar to be bored stiff* * *verb* * *1. VT1) [gen] to bore; (=cansar) to tire, weary2) ** [+ dinero] to blow *; [+ tiempo] to waste2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo to bore2.aburrirse v prona) ( por falta de entretenimiento) to get boredb) ( hartarse)aburrirse de algo/alguien — to get tired of o fed up with something/somebody
aburrirse de + inf — to get tired of -ing
* * *= pall, bore, wear + a little thin, weary.Ex. The experience of 'flying through' virtual worlds to discover the identities of hundreds of criptics nodes palls very quickly.Ex. Frustrated by the limitations on developing work relationships with students, and bored with the demands of the library, she returned to teaching English.Ex. His jauntiness can wear a little thin, and the buff will be sorry there is no index, but there is much to be grateful for in this book.Ex. She wearies of the constant procession of visitors, and the round of invitations and commissions, which swallow up her time.----* aburrirse como ostras = be bored stiff, be bored to death, be bored to tears, be bored out of + Posesivo + mind.* aburrirse (con) = be bored (with).* no aburrir a Alguien con todos los detalles = spare + Nombe + all the details.* * *1.verbo transitivo to bore2.aburrirse v prona) ( por falta de entretenimiento) to get boredb) ( hartarse)aburrirse de algo/alguien — to get tired of o fed up with something/somebody
aburrirse de + inf — to get tired of -ing
* * *= pall, bore, wear + a little thin, weary.Ex: The experience of 'flying through' virtual worlds to discover the identities of hundreds of criptics nodes palls very quickly.
Ex: Frustrated by the limitations on developing work relationships with students, and bored with the demands of the library, she returned to teaching English.Ex: His jauntiness can wear a little thin, and the buff will be sorry there is no index, but there is much to be grateful for in this book.Ex: She wearies of the constant procession of visitors, and the round of invitations and commissions, which swallow up her time.* aburrirse como ostras = be bored stiff, be bored to death, be bored to tears, be bored out of + Posesivo + mind.* aburrirse (con) = be bored (with).* no aburrir a Alguien con todos los detalles = spare + Nombe + all the details.* * *aburrir [I1 ]vtto boreestas reuniones me aburren these meetings bore me, I find these meetings boring o tediousno aburras a la abuela con tus historias don't bore Granny with your stories1 (por falta de entretenimiento) to get borednunca me había aburrido tanto I'd never been so bored2 (hartarse) aburrirse DE algo/algn to get tired OF o fed up WITH sth/sbse aburrió de hacer lo mismo todos los días he got tired of o fed up with doing the same thing every day, he tired of doing the same thing every day* * *
aburrir ( conjugate aburrir) verbo transitivo
to bore
aburrirse verbo pronominal
aburrirse de hacer algo to get tired of doing sth
aburrir verbo transitivo to bore
♦ Locuciones: aburrir a las ovejas, to be incredibly boring
' aburrir' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
amuermar
- cansar
- empalagar
- martirizar
- asquear
- chorear
English:
bore
* * *♦ vtto bore;este trabajo me aburre this job is boring;aburre a todo el mundo con sus batallitas he bores everyone with his old stories;me aburre tener que madrugar todos los días it's really tiresome having to get up early every day* * *v/t bore* * *aburrir vt: to bore, to tire* * *aburrir vb1. (cansar) to bore2. (resultar pesado) to be boring -
17 asco
m.1 disgust, revulsion.me da asco I find it disgustinglas anguilas me dan asco I find eels disgusting¡me das asco! you make me sick!siento asco I feel sick¡qué asco! how disgusting!tener asco a algo to find something disgustinghacer ascos a to turn one's nose up atno le hace ascos a nada/nadie he won't turn down anything/anyone2 nausea, revulsion, disgust, repulsion.* * *1 disgust, repugnance\coger asco a algo to get sick of somethingdar asco to be disgustingdar asco a alguien to make somebody sick■ me da asco ese sitio this place makes me feel sick, this place is disgustingestar hecho,-a un asco (cosa) to be filthy, look a real mess 2 (persona) to be filthy, be in a right statehacer ascos a algo to turn up one's nose at something¡qué asco! how disgusting!, how revolting!* * *noun m.- dar asco* * *SM1) (=sensación) disgust, revulsion¡qué asco! — how disgusting!, how revolting!
¡qué asco de gente! — what awful o ghastly * people!
dar asco a algn — to sicken sb, disgust sb
poner cara de asco — to look disgusted, pull a face
morirse de asco — Esp * to be bored to tears o to death
2) (=objeto)poner a algn de asco — Méx * to call sb all sorts of names
* * *a) ( repugnancia)qué asco! — how revolting!, how disgusting!
poner cara de asco — to make o (BrE) pull a face
hacerle ascos a algo — (fam) to turn one's nose up at something
poner a alguien del asco — (Méx fam) to rip somebody to shreds o pieces
b) (fam) (cosa repugnante, molesta)qué asco de tiempo! — what foul o lousy weather!
* * *= disgust, repulsion.Ex. I gave him a look of scorn and disgust, but he merely laughed at me.Ex. So, food repulsions take root in social imagination and the logic of food classification show what is eatable or not, what disgusts and what soils the soul.----* con asco = disgustedly.* dar asco = stink, disgust.* estar muerto de asco = be bored to death, be bored stiff, be bored to tears, be bored out of + Posesivo + mind.* * *a) ( repugnancia)qué asco! — how revolting!, how disgusting!
poner cara de asco — to make o (BrE) pull a face
hacerle ascos a algo — (fam) to turn one's nose up at something
poner a alguien del asco — (Méx fam) to rip somebody to shreds o pieces
b) (fam) (cosa repugnante, molesta)qué asco de tiempo! — what foul o lousy weather!
* * *= disgust, repulsion.Ex: I gave him a look of scorn and disgust, but he merely laughed at me.
Ex: So, food repulsions take root in social imagination and the logic of food classification show what is eatable or not, what disgusts and what soils the soul.* con asco = disgustedly.* dar asco = stink, disgust.* estar muerto de asco = be bored to death, be bored stiff, be bored to tears, be bored out of + Posesivo + mind.* * *1(repugnancia): ¡qué asco! how revolting!, how disgusting!no pongas cara de asco don't make a face o that face, don't pull a face ( BrE)le dan asco las zanahorias he can't stand carrotsno pude comerlo, me dio asco I couldn't eat it, it made me feel sickla casa estaba tan sucia que daba asco the house was in a disgusting o revolting statetanta corrupción da asco all this corruption is sickeningle tengo asco al queso I can't stand cheese, cheese turns my stomachle tengo asco I really loathe o detest himhacerle ascos a algo ( fam); to turn one's nose up at somethingen este pueblo uno se muere de asco it's deathly ( AmE) o ( BrE) deadly boring in this village, you get bored stiff o bored to death in this village2 ( fam)(cosa repugnante, molesta): la película es un asco, pura violencia y sexo the movie is disgusting, nothing but sex and violenceel parque está hecho un asco the park is in a real state ( colloq), the park looks like ( AmE) o ( BrE) looks a real mess ( colloq)¡qué asco de tiempo! what foul o lousy weather!¡qué asco de vida! what a (rotten) life!¡qué asco! otra vez lloviendo raining again! what a drag! o what a pain! ( colloq)* * *
asco sustantivo masculinoa) ( repugnancia):◊ ¡qué asco! how revolting!, how disgusting!;
me dio asco it made me feel sick;
poner cara de asco to make o (BrE) pull a face;
tanta corrupción da asco all this corruption is sickeningb) (fam) (cosa repugnante, molesta):
el parque está hecho un asco the park is in a real state (colloq);
¡qué asco de tiempo! what foul o lousy weather!
asco sustantivo masculino disgust, repugnance: la corrupción me da asco, corruption makes me (feel) sick
¡qué asco!, how disgusting o revolting!
' asco' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
escrúpulo
- grima
- mohín
- repeler
- agarrar
- aprensión
- asquear
- cara
English:
disgust
- distaste
- put off
- recoil
- revolt
- sickening
- turn off
- mess
- revulsion
- sick
- state
- stink
* * *asco nm1. [sensación] disgust, revulsion;¡qué asco! how disgusting!;lo miró con cara de asco she looked at him in disgust;me da asco I find it disgusting;las anguilas me dan asco I find eels disgusting;da asco ver cómo trata a su mujer it's sickening to see how he treats his wife;¡me das asco! you make me sick!;tener asco a algo to find sth disgusting;Fammorirse de asco: en clase nos morimos de asco we're bored to death in class;está muerto de asco esperando que le llamen he's fed up to the back teeth waiting for them to call;tienes la bici ahí muerta de asco you've got that bike just gathering dust there;hacer ascos a to turn one's nose up at, to turn down;no le hace ascos a nada he won't turn anything down;no le haría ascos a una cervecita fría I wouldn't say no to a cold beeres un asco de persona he's scum;es un asco de lugar it's a hole;un asco de tiempo rotten weather;¡qué asco de vida! what a life!;hecho un asco: este cuarto está hecho un asco this room is a tip;después de la tormenta llegó a casa hecho un asco he arrived back home after the storm in a real state;la enfermedad lo dejó hecho un asco the illness left him a total wreck* * *m disgust;me da asco I find it disgusting;¡qué asco! how revolting o disgusting!;estar hecho un asco be a real mess;morirse de asco be bored to death;no hacer ascos a not turn one’s nose up at* * *asco nm1) : disgust¡qué asco!: that's disgusting!, how revolting!2)darle asco (a alguien) : to sicken, to revolt3)estar hecho un asco : to be filthy4)hacerle ascos a : to turn up one's nose at* * *asco n disgust¡qué asco! how disgusting! -
18 chocar
v.1 to crash.chocaron dos autobuses two buses crashed o collidedla moto chocó contra un árbol the motorbike hit a treechocar de frente con to have a head-on collision with2 to clash.mis ideas siempre han chocado con las suyas he and I have always had different ideas about things3 to surprise, to puzzle.me choca que no haya llegado ya I'm surprised o puzzled that she hasn't arrived yet4 to annoy, to bug (informal) (molestar). (Colombian Spanish, Mexican Spanish, Venezuelan Spanish)me choca que esté siempre controlándome it really annoys me how he's always watching me5 to shake (manos).¡chócala!, ¡choca esos cinco! (informal) put it there!6 to clink (copas, vasos).7 to hit, to crash, to bump, to collide with.8 to dislike.Me choca esa mala actidud I dislike that bad attitude.* * *1 (colisionar con algo) to collide (contra/con, with), crash (contra/con, into), run (contra/con, into)2 (colisionar entre sí) to collide (with each other), crash (into each other)5 figurado (en una discusión) to clash, fall out■ me choca que no haya llegado todavía I'm surprised he hasn't arrived yet, it's strange that he hasn't arrived yet■ me chocó lo que dijo I was shocked at what he said, what he said shocked me2 (las manos) to shake3 (copas) to clink\¡choca esos cinco! / ¡chócala! put it there!, give me five!* * *verb1) to collide, crash2) clash3) shock4) shake5) clink* * *1. VI1) (=colisionar) [coches, trenes] to collide, crash; [barcos] to collidelos dos coches chocaron de frente — the two cars crashed head on o were in a head-on collision
•
chocar con o contra — [+ vehículo] to collide with, crash into; [+ objeto] to bang into; [+ persona] to bump intopara no chocar contra el avión — to avoid crashing into o colliding with the plane
2) (=enfrentarse) [opiniones, personalidades] to clash•
chocar con — [+ ideas, intereses] to run counter to, be at odds with; [+ obstáculos, dificultades] to come up against, run into; [+ personas] to clash withesa propuesta choca con los intereses de EEUU — that proposal runs counter to o is at odds with American interests
esa sería una de las mayores dificultades con las que chocarían en este proyecto — that would be one of the biggest problems they would come up against in this project
por su carácter chocaba a menudo con sus compañeros de trabajo — he often clashed with his colleagues because of his confrontational nature
2. VT1) (=sorprender) to shock¿no te choca la situación actual? — don't you find the current situation shocking?
me chocó muchísimo lo que dijo — I was really shocked by what he said, what he said really shocked me
2) (=hacer chocar) [+ vasos] to clink; [+ manos] to shake¡chócala! * —
¡choca esos cinco! — * put it there! *
3) Méx (=asquear) to disgust3.See:* * *1.verbo intransitivo1)a) ( colisionar) to crash; ( entre sí) to collidechocar de frente — to collide o crash head-on
nunca he chocado — (CS) I've never had an accident
chocar con or contra algo — vehículo to crash o run into something; ( con otro en marcha) to collide with something
chocaron con or contra un árbol — they crashed o ran into a tree
chocar con alguien — persona to run into somebody, collide with somebody
b) ( entrar en conflicto)esta idea choca con su conservadurismo — this idea conflicts with o is at odds with his conservatism
c)chocar con algo — con problema/obstáculo to come up against something
2)a) (causar impresión, afectar) (+ me/te/le etc)b) ( extrañar)c) ( escandalizar) to shock3) (Col, Méx, Ven fam) (irritar, molestar) (+ me/te/le etc) to annoy, bug (colloq)2.chocar vta) < copas> to clinkchocarla: estaban enojados pero ya la chocaron (Méx fam) they had fallen out but they've made it up again now (colloq); chócala! — (fam) put it there! (colloq), give me five! (colloq)
b) (AmL) < vehículo>( que se conduce) to crash; ( de otra persona) to run into3.chocarse v pron1) (Col) ( en vehículo) to have a crash o an accident2) (Col fam) ( molestarse) to get annoyed* * *= crash.Ex. It doesn't take a wild imagination to grasp what happens to a rider who crashes with protective gear on and one who goes down in street clothes.----* chocar (con) = conflict with, run into, lock + horns (with), grate against, grate on, collide (with).* chocar destruyendo = smash into.* chocar por detrás = rear-end.* * *1.verbo intransitivo1)a) ( colisionar) to crash; ( entre sí) to collidechocar de frente — to collide o crash head-on
nunca he chocado — (CS) I've never had an accident
chocar con or contra algo — vehículo to crash o run into something; ( con otro en marcha) to collide with something
chocaron con or contra un árbol — they crashed o ran into a tree
chocar con alguien — persona to run into somebody, collide with somebody
b) ( entrar en conflicto)esta idea choca con su conservadurismo — this idea conflicts with o is at odds with his conservatism
c)chocar con algo — con problema/obstáculo to come up against something
2)a) (causar impresión, afectar) (+ me/te/le etc)b) ( extrañar)c) ( escandalizar) to shock3) (Col, Méx, Ven fam) (irritar, molestar) (+ me/te/le etc) to annoy, bug (colloq)2.chocar vta) < copas> to clinkchocarla: estaban enojados pero ya la chocaron (Méx fam) they had fallen out but they've made it up again now (colloq); chócala! — (fam) put it there! (colloq), give me five! (colloq)
b) (AmL) < vehículo>( que se conduce) to crash; ( de otra persona) to run into3.chocarse v pron1) (Col) ( en vehículo) to have a crash o an accident2) (Col fam) ( molestarse) to get annoyed* * *= crash.Ex: It doesn't take a wild imagination to grasp what happens to a rider who crashes with protective gear on and one who goes down in street clothes.
* chocar (con) = conflict with, run into, lock + horns (with), grate against, grate on, collide (with).* chocar destruyendo = smash into.* chocar por detrás = rear-end.* * *chocar [A2 ]viA1 (colisionar) to crash, collidelos trenes chocaron de frente the trains collided o crashed head-onlos dos coches chocaron en el puente the two cars crashed o collided on the bridgecuatro coches chocaron en el cruce there was a collision at the crossroads involving four carsnunca he chocado (CS); I've never had an accident o a crashchocar CON algo «vehículo» to collide WITH sthel expreso chocó con un tren de mercancías the express collided with o ran into o hit a freight trainchocar CON algn «persona» to run INTO sb, collide WITH sbchocó con el árbitro he ran into o collided with the refereechocar CONTRA algo/algn to run o crash INTO sth/sbchocaron contra un árbol they crashed o ran into a treeel tren chocó contra los topes the train crashed into o ran into the buffersel balón chocó contra el poste the ball hit the goalpostla lluvia chocaba contra los cristales the rain lashed against the windowslas olas chocaban contra el espigón the waves crashed against the breakwater2 (entrar en conflicto) chocar CON algn/algo:chocó con el gerente he clashed o ( colloq) had a run-in with the manageres tan quisquilloso que choca con todo el mundo he's so touchy he falls out o clashes with everyoneesta idea choca con su conservadurismo this idea conflicts with o is at odds with his conservatism3 chocar CON algo ‹con un problema/un obstáculo›chocaron con la oposición de los habitantes de la zona they met with o came up against opposition from local peopleB1 (causar impresión, afectar) to shock(+ me/te/le etc): le chocó la noticia de que se habían divorciado he was very shocked to hear that they had divorced, it came as a real shock to him to hear that they had divorcedme chocó que invitara a todos menos a mí I was taken aback that he invited everybody except mele chocó que lo recibieran de esa manera he was taken aback by the reception he was given2 (escandalizar) to shockme chocó que dijera esa palabrota I was shocked o it shocked me to hear him use that wordme choca que me trate así I can't stand it o it really annoys me when he treats me like that, it really gets me o bugs me when he treats me like that ( colloq)me choca todo este tramiterío all this red tape really annoys o ( colloq) gets me■ chocarvt1 ‹copas› to clinkchocarla: estaban enojados pero ya la chocaron ( Méx fam); they had fallen out but they've made it up again now ( colloq)2( AmL) ‹vehículo› te lo presto pero no me lo vayas a chocar I'll lend it to you but you'd better not crash it o have a crashal estacionar choqué el auto del vecino as I was parking I ran into o hit my neighbor's car■ chocarseA ( Col) (en un vehículo) to have a crash o an accident* * *
chocar ( conjugate chocar) verbo intransitivo
1
( entre sí) to collide;◊ chocar de frente to collide o crash head-on;
chocar con or contra algo [ vehículo] to crash o run into sth;
( con otro en marcha) to collide with sth;
chocar con algn [ persona] to run into sb;
( con otra en movimiento) to collide with sbb) ( entrar en conflicto) chocar con algn to clash with sbc) chocar con algo ‹con problema/obstáculo› to come up against sth
2a) ( extrañar):
3 (Col, Méx, Ven fam) (irritar, molestar) to annoy, bug (colloq)
verbo transitivo
◊ ¡chócala! (fam) put it there! (colloq), give me five! (colloq)
( de otra persona) to run into
chocarse verbo pronominal (Col)
1 ( en vehículo) to have a crash o an accident
2 (fam) ( molestarse) to get annoyed
chocar
I verbo intransitivo
1 (colisionar) to crash, collide
chocar con/contra, to run into, collide with
2 (discutir) to clash [con, with]
3 (sorprender, extrañar) to surprise
II verbo transitivo
1 to knock
(la mano) to shake
familiar ¡chócala!, ¡choca esos cinco!, shake (on it)!, US give me five!
' chocar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
cristalera
- empotrar
- estamparse
- estrellarse
- incidir
- tris
- tropezar
- estrellar
- frente
- impactar
English:
avoid
- barge into
- bump into
- cannon
- clash
- collide
- conflict
- crash
- hit
- plough
- ram
- run into
- she
- smash
- bump
- go
- knock
- run
- strike
* * *♦ vi1. [colisionar] to crash, to collide ( con o contra with);chocaron dos autobuses two buses crashed o collided;el taxi chocó con una furgoneta the taxi crashed into o collided with a van;la moto chocó contra un árbol the motorbike hit a tree;iba despistado y chocó contra una farola he wasn't concentrating and drove into a lamppost;la pelota chocó contra la barrera the ball hit the wall;chocar de frente con to have a head-on collision with;2. [enfrentarse] to clash;la policía chocó con los manifestantes a las puertas del congreso the police clashed with the demonstrators in front of the parliament;el proyecto chocó con la oposición del ayuntamiento the project ran into opposition from the town hall;mis opiniones siempre han chocado con las suyas he and I have always had different opinions about things;tenemos una ideología tan diferente que chocamos constantemente we have such different ideas that we're always disagreeing about something;esta política económica choca con la realidad del mercado de trabajo this economic policy goes against o is at odds with the reality of the labour market3. [extrañar, sorprender] [ligeramente] to puzzle, to surprise;[mucho] to shock, to astonish;me choca que no haya llegado ya I'm surprised o puzzled that she hasn't arrived yet;le chocó su actitud tan hostil she was taken aback o shocked by how unfriendly he was;es una costumbre que choca a los que no conocen el país it's a custom which comes as a surprise to those who don't know the countryme choca que esté siempre controlándome it really annoys me how she's always watching me♦ vt1. [manos] to shake;Fam¡chócala!, ¡choca esos cinco! put it there!, give me five!2. [copas, vasos] to clink;¡choquemos nuestros vasos y brindemos por los novios! let's raise our glasses to the bride and groom!* * *I v/t:¡choca esos cinco! give me five!, put it there!II v/i1 crash (con, contra into), collide ( con with);chocar frontalmente crash head on;chocar con un problema come up against a problem2:3:me choca ese hombre that guy disgusts me* * *chocar {72} vi1) : to crash, to collide2) : to clash, to conflict3) : to be shockingle chocó: he was shocked4) Mex, Ven fam : to be unpleasant or obnoxiousme choca tu jefe: I can't stand your bosschocar vt1) : to shake (hands)2) : to clink glasses* * *chocar vb to collide / to crash -
19 hartar
v.1 to stuff (full).2 to get sick, to irritate, to put off, to overtire.Su actitud harta a María His attitude overtires Mary.3 to satiate, to fill up, to glut, to feed up.La comida harta a Ricardo The food satiates Richard.4 to annoy, to cheese up, to suck.Su actitud harta His attitude annoys.* * *1 (atiborrar) to satiate, fill up2 figurado (deseo etc) to satisfy3 (fastidiar) to annoy, irritate4 (cansar) to tire, bore5 (causar, dar) to overwhelm (de, with)1 (atiborrarse) to eat one's fill, stuff oneself2 (cansarse) to get fed up (de, with), get tired (de, of)3 familiar (hacer algo) to do nothing but\hasta hartarse to repletion* * *1. VT1) (=cansar)me harta tanta televisión — I get tired of o fed up with * o sick of * watching so much television
los estás hartando con tantas bobadas — they're getting tired of o fed up with * o sick of * your fooling around
ya me está hartando que siempre me hable de lo mismo — I'm getting tired of o fed up with * o sick of * him always talking about the same thing
2) (=atiborrar)hartar a algn a o de — [+ comida, alcohol] to fill sb full of
nos hartan a chistes malos — we get fed up with * o sick of * o tired of their bad jokes
3) CAm (=maldecir de) to malign, slander2.VI (=cansar)todos estos tópicos manidos ya hartan — all these worn-out clichés get so boring, you get tired of o get fed up with * o sick of * all these worn-out clichés
3.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1) (cansar, fastidiar)me hartó con sus quejas — I got tired o (colloq) sick of his complaints
2) (fam) ( llenar)2.hartar a alguien a or de algo: nos hartaban a sopa they fed us on nothing but soup; lo hartaron a palos — they gave him a real beating
hartarse v pron1) (cansarse, aburrirse) to get fed uphartarse de algo — to get tired o sick of something, get fed up with something
hartarse de alguien — get tired of somebody, get fed up with somebody
hartarse de + inf — to get tired o sick of -ing, get fed up with -ing
me harté de que se burlara de mí — I got fed up with o I got tired of her making fun of me
2) ( llenarse)comieron hasta hartarse — they gorged o (colloq) stuffed themselves
hartarse de algo — to gorge oneself on something, to stuff oneself with something (colloq)
* * *= weary.Ex. She wearies of the constant procession of visitors, and the round of invitations and commissions, which swallow up her time.* * *1.verbo transitivo1) (cansar, fastidiar)me hartó con sus quejas — I got tired o (colloq) sick of his complaints
2) (fam) ( llenar)2.hartar a alguien a or de algo: nos hartaban a sopa they fed us on nothing but soup; lo hartaron a palos — they gave him a real beating
hartarse v pron1) (cansarse, aburrirse) to get fed uphartarse de algo — to get tired o sick of something, get fed up with something
hartarse de alguien — get tired of somebody, get fed up with somebody
hartarse de + inf — to get tired o sick of -ing, get fed up with -ing
me harté de que se burlara de mí — I got fed up with o I got tired of her making fun of me
2) ( llenarse)comieron hasta hartarse — they gorged o (colloq) stuffed themselves
hartarse de algo — to gorge oneself on something, to stuff oneself with something (colloq)
* * *= weary.Ex: She wearies of the constant procession of visitors, and the round of invitations and commissions, which swallow up her time.
* * *hartar [A1 ]vtA(cansar, fastidiar): me estás empezando a hartar con tus quejas I'm beginning to get sick o tired of your complaints, your complaints are beginning to get on my nervesnos hartaban a sopa de verduras they used to give us vegetable soup until it came out of our ears ( colloq), they fed us on nothing but vegetable soupentre los tres lo hartaron a palos the three of them gave him a real beating■ hartarseA (cansarse, aburrirse) to get fed upun día se hartó y se fue one day he got fed up and left, one day he got sick o tired of it ( o of things etc) and he lefthartarse DE algo to get tired o sick OF sth, get fed up WITH sthya me estoy hartando de tus tonterías I'm getting tired of o sick of o fed up with your nonsensehartarse DE algn to tire of sb, get tired OF sb, get fed up WITH sbpronto se hartará de él she'll soon tire of him o get tired of him o get fed up with himhartarse DE + INF to get tired o sick of -ING, get fed up WITH -INGme harté de repetírselo I got tired o sick of telling him over and over again, I got fed up with telling him over and over againhartarse DE QUE + SUBJ:me harté de que se burlara de mí I got fed up with o I got tired of her making fun of meBvamos a hartarnos de mariscos y champán we're going to gorge ourselves on o stuff ourselves with shellfish and champagne* * *
hartar ( conjugate hartar) verbo transitivo
1 (cansar, fastidiar):
2 (fam) ( llenar): nos hartaban a or de sopa they fed us on nothing but soup;
hartarse verbo pronominal
1 (cansarse, aburrirse) to get fed up;
hartarse de algo/algn to get tired o sick of sth/sb, get fed up with sth/sb;
hartarse de hacer algo to get tired o sick of doing sth, get fed up with doing sth
2 ( llenarse): hartarse (de algo) to gorge oneself (on sth), to stuff oneself (with sth) (colloq)
hartar verbo transitivo
1 (molestar, cansar) to annoy: la escuché hasta que me hartó con tanto reproche, I listened to her until I got sick of hearing so much criticism
2 (saciar) to satiate
3 (dar en abundancia) to overwhelm [de, with]: me hartaron de comida, they made me eat too much
' hartar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
cansar
- asquear
English:
weary
* * *♦ vt1. [atiborrar] to stuff (full);hartaron de regalos a sus nietos they showered gifts on their grandchildren;sus detractores lo hartaron a insultos his critics showered him with insults;los atacantes los hartaron a golpes they were very badly beaten up by the attackersme estás hartando con tantas exigencias I'm getting fed up with all your demands♦ viesta comida harta mucho you can't eat a lot of this food;esta telenovela ya está empezando a hartar this soap is beginning to get tedious* * *v/t:hartar a alguien con algo tire s.o. with sth;hartar a alguien de algo give s.o. too much of sth* * *hartar vt1) : to glut, to satiate2) fastidiar: to tire, to irritate, to annoy -
20 asqueado
См. также в других словарях:
asquear — Se conjuga como: amar Infinitivo: Gerundio: Participio: asquear asqueando asqueado Indicativo presente imperfecto pretérito futuro condicional yo tú él, ella, Ud. nosotros vosotros ellos, ellas, Uds. asqueo asqueas asquea asqueamos asqueáis … Wordreference Spanish Conjugations Dictionary
asquear — verbo transitivo,intr. 1. Dar (una persona o una cosa) asco o fastidio [a una persona]: Esta vida asquea. Me asquean las calles llenas de basura. Le asquea la mentira. Sinónimo: repugnar … Diccionario Salamanca de la Lengua Española
asquear — intr. Dicho de una cosa: Causar asco. Este trabajo me asquea. U. t. c. tr.) … Diccionario de la lengua española
asquear — ► verbo transitivo/ intransitivo 1 Sentir o mostrar asco: ■ su actitud prepotente me asquea. 2 Sentir fastidio o aburrimiento: ■ me asquean las fiestas con mucha gente. SINÓNIMO fastidiar * * * asquear 1 intr. Sentir asco. 2 tr. Producir una cosa … Enciclopedia Universal
asquear — {{#}}{{LM A03751}}{{〓}} {{ConjA03751}}{{\}}CONJUGACIÓN{{/}}{{SynA03832}} {{[}}asquear{{]}} ‹as·que·ar› {{《}}▍ v.{{》}} Causar asco, repugnancia o fastidio: • Me asquea la mentira.{{○}} {{★}}{{\}}MORFOLOGÍA:{{/}} Verbo regular. {{#}}{{LM… … Diccionario de uso del español actual con sinónimos y antónimos
asquear — intransitivo repugnar, revolver, hacer cuesta arriba. Revolver especialmente el estómago y las tripas. * * * Sinónimos: ■ repugnar, repeler, desagradar, disgustar, fastidiar, rehusar, resistir Antónimos: ■ atraer, agradar … Diccionario de sinónimos y antónimos
Falsos amigos — Anexo:Falsos amigos Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Los falsos amigos son palabras que pueden escribirse o tener una pronunciación similar en dos o más idiomas, pero en realidad significan conceptos diferentes, debido a sus distintas etimologías, o … Wikipedia Español
Anexo:Episodios de MythBusters — A continuación se enumerará la lista de episodios del popular programa de televisión de divulgación científica MythBusters, Cazadores de mitos, que se emitió originalmente en Discovery Channel. Los episodios de la serie no tienen un orden… … Wikipedia Español
Anexo:Falsos amigos — Los falsos amigos son palabras que, a pesar de tener significados diferentes, pueden escribirse o pronunciarse de una manera similar en dos o más idiomas. Lo anterior puede deberse tanto a distintas etimologías como a un cambio en el significado… … Wikipedia Español
asqueado — ► adjetivo 1 Que siente asco. FRASEOLOGÍA estar asqueado Sentir fastidio o aburrimiento: ■ está asqueado de su trabajo. SINÓNIMO [aburrido] * * * asqueado, a («Estar») Participio adjetivo de «asquear». ⊚ (« … Enciclopedia Universal
harto — (Del lat. fartus, relleno.) ► adjetivo 1 Que está saciado: ■ no me ponga más carne, estoy harto. SINÓNIMO [ahito] repleto [saciado] ANTÓNIMO ávido necesitado 2 Que está cansado de hacer una cosa: ■ estoy harto de trabajar … Enciclopedia Universal