-
1 atrasar
atrasar ( conjugate atrasar) verbo transitivo verbo intransitivo [ reloj] to lose time atrasarse verbo pronominal 1 [ persona] to be late 2
atrasar
I verbo transitivo to put back
II vi (un reloj) to be slow ' atrasar' also found in these entries: English: set back - turn back - lose - put - set -
2 set back
(to delay the progress of: His illness set him back a bit at school.) retrasar, atrasarv.• atrasar v.• retrasar v.1) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( delay) \<\<progress\>\> retrasar, atrasar; \<\<clock\>\> atrasarb) ( place at a distance) (usu pass)2) v + o + adv ( cost) (colloq)the trip set me back £100 — el viaje me costó 100 libras or me salió en 100 libras
VT + ADV1) (=retard) [+ project, process] retrasar; [+ clocks] atrasar2) (=place apart) apartar3) * (=cost) costarthe dinner set me back £40 — la cena me costó 40 libras
4) (=replace) devolver a su lugar* * *1) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( delay) \<\<progress\>\> retrasar, atrasar; \<\<clock\>\> atrasarb) ( place at a distance) (usu pass)2) v + o + adv ( cost) (colloq)the trip set me back £100 — el viaje me costó 100 libras or me salió en 100 libras
-
3 atrasado
Del verbo atrasar: ( conjugate atrasar) \ \
atrasado es: \ \el participioMultiple Entries: atrasado atrasar
atrasado
◊ -da adjetivo1b) ( con respecto a lo esperado):el proyecto está atrasado the project is behind schedule; el tren llegó/salió atrasado (AmL) the train arrived/left late; apúrate que voy atrasado (AmL) hurry up, I'm late 2 (acumulado, pasado): tengo trabajo atrasado I'm behind with my work; todas las cuotas atrasadas all outstanding payments; un ejemplar atrasado a back number o issue 3
atrasar ( conjugate atrasar) verbo transitivo verbo intransitivo [ reloj] to lose time atrasarse verbo pronominal 1 [ persona] to be late 2
atrasado,-a adjetivo
1 (un pago) overdue (un reloj) slow (un país, una región) backward (un número, un fascículo) back number
2 (rezagado) va atrasado en los estudios, he is behind in his studies
atrasar
I verbo transitivo to put back
II vi (un reloj) to be slow ' atrasado' also found in these entries: Spanish: atrasada - número - atrasar English: back - backlog - behind - overdue - slow - arrears - backward - late - schedule -
4 atraso
Del verbo atrasar: ( conjugate atrasar) \ \
atraso es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
atrasó es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativoMultiple Entries: atrasar atraso
atrasar ( conjugate atrasar) verbo transitivo verbo intransitivo [ reloj] to lose time atrasarse verbo pronominal 1 [ persona] to be late 2
atraso sustantivo masculino salió con unos minutos de atraso it left a few minutes late; viene con una hora de atraso it's (running) an hour late
atrasar
I verbo transitivo to put back
II vi (un reloj) to be slow
atraso sustantivo masculino
1 delay
2 (de un país) backwardness
3 Fin atrasos, arrears ' atraso' also found in these entries: Spanish: tiniebla English: back -
5 put back
(to return to its proper place: Did you put my keys back?) volver a poner (en su sitio), volver a guardar (en su sitio)v.• reponer v.(§pres: -pongo, -pones...) pret: -pus-pp: -puestofut/c: -pondr-•)1) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( replace) volver* a ponerb) ( reset) \<\<clocks\>\> atrasar, retrasarc) (delay, retard) \<\<project\>\> retrasard) ( postpone) posponer*, aplazar*, postergar*2) v + o + adv (AmE)1. VT + ADV1) (=replace) poner otra vez en su sitio; (in pocket, drawer etc) volver a guardarput that back! — ¡deja eso en su sitio or donde estaba!
•
the fresh air will put the colour back in your cheeks — el aire fresco te devolverá el color a las mejillas2) (=postpone) aplazar, posponer•
the meeting has been put back till 2 o'clock — la reunión ha sido aplazada hasta las 23) (=delay) [+ development, progress] retrasar, atrasarhe has been put back a class or year — (Scol) tiene que repetir el curso
4) (=change) [+ clock]•
to put a clock back one hour — atrasar or retrasar un reloj una horadon't forget to put your clocks back on Saturday — el sábado no olviden atrasar or retrasar los relojes
5) (=move back)•
he put his head back and roared with laughter — echó hacia atrás la cabeza y se puso a reír a carcajadasthe government didn't put enough money back into the economy — el gobierno no reinvirtió suficiente dinero en la economía
7) * (=drink) beber, beberse2.VI + ADV (Naut) volver, regresarto put back to port — volver or regresar a puerto
* * *1) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( replace) volver* a ponerb) ( reset) \<\<clocks\>\> atrasar, retrasarc) (delay, retard) \<\<project\>\> retrasard) ( postpone) posponer*, aplazar*, postergar*2) v + o + adv (AmE) -
6 lose
lu:zpast tense, past participle - lost; verb1) (to stop having; to have no longer: She has lost interest in her work; I have lost my watch; He lost hold of the rope.) perder2) (to have taken away from one (by death, accident etc): She lost her father last year; The ship was lost in the storm; He has lost his job.) perder3) (to put (something) where it cannot be found: My secretary has lost your letter.) perder4) (not to win: I always lose at cards; She lost the race.) perder5) (to waste or use more (time) than is necessary: He lost no time in informing the police of the crime.) perder•- loser- loss
- lost
- at a loss
- a bad
- good loser
- lose oneself in
- lose one's memory
- lose out
- lost in
- lost on
lose vb perdertr[lʊːz]1 (in general) perder2 (immerse) sumergir (in, en)3 (clock) atrasar1 (in general) perder2 (clock) atrasarse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto have nothing to lose familiar no tener nada que perderto lose one's head perder la cabezato lose one's heart (to somebody) enamorarse (de alguien)to lose one's life perder la vida, perecerto lose one's way perderseto lose sight of something perder algo de vistato lose weight adelgazar, perder peso1) : perderI lost my umbrella: perdí mi paraguasto lose blood: perder sangreto lose one's voice: quedarse fónicoto have nothing to lose: no tener nada que perderto lose no time: no perder tiempoto lose weight: perder peso, adelgazarto lose one's temper: perder los estribos, enojarse, enfadarseto lose sight of: perder de vista2) : costar, hacer perderthe errors lost him his job: los errores le costaron su empleo3) : atrasarmy watch loses 5 minutes a day: mi reloj atrasa 5 minutos por día4)to lose oneself : perderse, ensimismarselose vi1) : perderwe lost to the other team: perdimos contra el otro equipo2) : atrasarsethe clock loses time: el reloj se atrasav.(§ p.,p.p.: lost) = palmar v.• perder v.luːz
1.
1) transitive verb (past & past p lost)2) ( mislay) perder*I've lost my key — he perdido or se me ha perdido la llave
to lose one's way — perderse*
3) ( be deprived of) \<\<sight/territory/right\>\> perder*4)a) ( fail to keep) \<\<customers/popularity/speed\>\> perder*we are losing our best teachers to industry — los mejores profesores se nos están yendo a trabajar a la industria
b) ( rid oneself of) \<\<inhibitions\>\> perder*to lose weight — adelgazar*, perder* peso
5)a) ( shake off) \<\<pursuer\>\> deshacerse* deb) ( lose sight of) perder* de vista6) ( confuse) confundiryou've lost me there! — no entiendo, no te sigo
7) ( cause to lose) costar*, hacer* perdertheir hesitation lost them the contract — la falta de decisión les costó or les hizo perder el contrato
8)a) ( miss) \<\<train/flight/connection\>\> perder*b) ( let pass) \<\<time/opportunity\>\> perder*9) ( fail to win) \<\<game/battle/election\>\> perder*
2.
vi1)a) ( be beaten) \<\<team/contestant/party\>\> perder*to lose TO somebody — perder* frente a alguien
b) losing pres p <team/party> perdedorto be on the losing side — ser* de los perdedores
2)a) ( suffer losses) perder*to lose on a deal — salir* perdiendo en un negocio
b) ( be less effective) perder*the poem loses in translation — el poema pierde con la traducción or al ser traducido
3) \<\<watch/clock\>\> atrasar, atrasarse
3.
v reflPhrasal Verbs:- lose out[luːz] (pt, pp lost)1. VT1) (=mislay, fail to find) perder2) (=be deprived of) perderwhat have you got to lose? — ¿qué tienes tú que perder?, ¿qué vas a perder?
he lost £1,000 on that deal — perdió 1.000 libras en ese trato
breath 1., 1), voice 1., 1)•
to lose the use of an arm — perder el uso de un brazo3) (=fail to keep) perder•
she's lost her figure/her looks — ha perdido la línea/su belleza- lose itinterest 1., 1), rag I, 1., 1), sight 1., 2), temper 1., 1)4) (=fail to win) [+ game, war, election] perder5) (=miss)to lose one's way — (lit) perderse; (fig) perder el rumbo
6) (=waste) perder•
there was not a moment to lose — no había ni un momento que perder•
I wouldn't lose any sleep over it! — ¡no pierdas el sueño por ello!, ¡no te preocupes por ello!•
to lose no time in doing sth, she lost no time in making up her mind — se decidió enseguida, no le costó nada decidirseI lost no time in telling him exactly what I thought of him — no vacilé en decirle exactamente lo que pensaba de él
7) * (=get rid of) [+ unwanted companion] deshacerse de; [+ pursuers] zafarse de•
to lose weight — perder peso, adelgazarI lost two kilos — perdí or adelgacé dos kilos
8) (=fall behind) [watch, clock] atrasarse9) (=cause loss of)it lost him the job/the match — le costó el puesto/el partido, le hizo perder el puesto/el partido
that deal lost me £5,000 — ese negocio me costó or me hizo perder 5.000 libras
10) * (=confuse) confundiryou've lost me there — ahora sí que me has confundido, ahora sí que no te entiendo
11)to lose o.s. in sth — (a book, music, memories) ensimismarse en algo
2. VI1) [player, team] perder•
you can't lose — no tienes pérdida, tienes que forzosamente salir ganando2) [watch, clock] atrasarse- lose out* * *[luːz]
1.
1) transitive verb (past & past p lost)2) ( mislay) perder*I've lost my key — he perdido or se me ha perdido la llave
to lose one's way — perderse*
3) ( be deprived of) \<\<sight/territory/right\>\> perder*4)a) ( fail to keep) \<\<customers/popularity/speed\>\> perder*we are losing our best teachers to industry — los mejores profesores se nos están yendo a trabajar a la industria
b) ( rid oneself of) \<\<inhibitions\>\> perder*to lose weight — adelgazar*, perder* peso
5)a) ( shake off) \<\<pursuer\>\> deshacerse* deb) ( lose sight of) perder* de vista6) ( confuse) confundiryou've lost me there! — no entiendo, no te sigo
7) ( cause to lose) costar*, hacer* perdertheir hesitation lost them the contract — la falta de decisión les costó or les hizo perder el contrato
8)a) ( miss) \<\<train/flight/connection\>\> perder*b) ( let pass) \<\<time/opportunity\>\> perder*9) ( fail to win) \<\<game/battle/election\>\> perder*
2.
vi1)a) ( be beaten) \<\<team/contestant/party\>\> perder*to lose TO somebody — perder* frente a alguien
b) losing pres p <team/party> perdedorto be on the losing side — ser* de los perdedores
2)a) ( suffer losses) perder*to lose on a deal — salir* perdiendo en un negocio
b) ( be less effective) perder*the poem loses in translation — el poema pierde con la traducción or al ser traducido
3) \<\<watch/clock\>\> atrasar, atrasarse
3.
v reflPhrasal Verbs:- lose out -
7 clock
klok
1. noun1) (an instrument for measuring time, but not worn on the wrist like a watch: We have five clocks in our house; an alarm clock (= a clock with a ringing device for waking one up in the morning).) reloj2) (an instrument for measuring speed of a vehicle or distance travelled by a vehicle: My car has 120,000 miles on the clock.) cuentakilómetros
2. verb(to register (a time) on a stopwatch etc.) cronometrar- clockwork
- clock in
- out/on
- off
- clock up
- like clockwork
- round the clock
clock n relojtr[klɒk]1 (gen) reloj nombre masculino (de pared)2 SMALLAUTOMOBILES/SMALL familiar (mileometer) cuentakilómetros nombre masculino; (speedometer) velocímetro; (taximeter) taxímetro■ this car's only got 8,000 miles on the clock este coche sólo ha hecho 8.000 millas1 (time - athlete, race) cronometrar2 (register - speed, time) registrar, hacer\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLagainst the clock contra relojaround/round the clock día y nocheto put the clock back/forward atrasar/adelantar el relojto watch the clock tener ganas de acabar el trabajoclock radio radiodespertador nombre femeninoclock ['klɑk] vt: cronometrarclock n1) : reloj m (de pared), cronómetro m (en deportes o competencias)2)around the clock : las veinticuatro horasn.• cuadrado s.m.• horario s.m.• reloj s.m.• reloj de pared o de mesa s.m.v.• cronometrar v.
I klɑːk, klɒka) ( timepiece) reloj mto work around o round the clock — trabajar las veinticuatro horas del día, trabajar día y noche
around-the-clock o round-the-clock surveillance — vigilancia f las veinticuatro horas del día
to put the clocks back/forward — atrasar/adelantar los relojes
to turn o put the clock back — volver* atrás
b) ( time clock) reloj m registrador or (Méx) checadorc) ( Auto) ( odometer) (colloq) cuentakilómetros m; ( speedometer) velocímetro md) ( in taxi) (colloq) taxímetro m
II
transitive verb (colloq)a) (achieve, reach) \<\<speed/time\>\> registrar, hacer*b) ( time) \<\<athlete/race\>\> cronometrarPhrasal Verbs:- clock in- clock up[klɒk]1. N1) (=timepiece) (gen) reloj m ; [of taxi] taxímetro m ; (=speedometer) velocímetro m ; (=milometer) cuentakilómetros m invyou can't put the clock back — (=return to past) no puedes volver al pasado; (=stop progress) no se puede detener el progreso
to keep one's eyes on or watch the clock — mirar mucho el reloj (ansiando abandonar el trabajo)
•
to work against the clock — trabajar contra reloj•
30,000 miles on the clock — (Aut) 30.000 millas en el cuentakilómetroswe have surveillance round the clock — tenemos vigilancia de veinticuatro horas, tenemos vigilancia permanente
2) ** (=face) jeta f2. VT1) (=time, measure) [+ runner, time] cronometrar2) (Brit)* (=hit)3.CPDclock card N — tarjeta f de fichar
clock golf N — variedad del golf que consiste en golpear la pelota desde distintas posiciones en una circunferencia alrededor del agujero
clock radio N — radio-despertador m
clock repairer N — relojero(-a) m / f
clock tower N — torre f de reloj
clock watcher N — persona que mira mucho el reloj ansiando abandonar el trabajo
- clock in- clock on- clock up* * *
I [klɑːk, klɒk]a) ( timepiece) reloj mto work around o round the clock — trabajar las veinticuatro horas del día, trabajar día y noche
around-the-clock o round-the-clock surveillance — vigilancia f las veinticuatro horas del día
to put the clocks back/forward — atrasar/adelantar los relojes
to turn o put the clock back — volver* atrás
b) ( time clock) reloj m registrador or (Méx) checadorc) ( Auto) ( odometer) (colloq) cuentakilómetros m; ( speedometer) velocímetro md) ( in taxi) (colloq) taxímetro m
II
transitive verb (colloq)a) (achieve, reach) \<\<speed/time\>\> registrar, hacer*b) ( time) \<\<athlete/race\>\> cronometrarPhrasal Verbs:- clock in- clock up -
8 turn back
(to (cause to) go back in the opposite direction: He got tired and turned back; The travellers were turned back at the frontier.) (hacer) retroceder/volver, volverse atrásturn back vb volverse atrásv.• atrasar v.• cejar v.• contramarchar v.1) v + adva) ( go back) volver*, regresar, devolverse* (AmL exc RPl)b) ( change plan) echarse or volverse* atrás2) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( send back)he was turned back at the border — en la frontera lo hicieron regresar or lo mandaron de vuelta
b) ( fold) \<\<bedclothes\>\> doblar1. VI + ADV1) (in journey etc) volverse (atrás), desandar el caminothere can be no turning back now — (fig) ahora no vale volverse atrás
2) (in book) volver2. VT + ADV1) (=fold) [+ bedclothes] doblar2) (=send back) [+ person] hacer volver, hacer regresar, devolver; [+ vehicle] volver, dar la vuelta a3) [+ clock] retrasarto turn the clock back —
we can't turn the clock back — no podemos dar marcha atrás or volver al pasado
- turn the clock back 20 years* * *1) v + adva) ( go back) volver*, regresar, devolverse* (AmL exc RPl)b) ( change plan) echarse or volverse* atrás2) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( send back)he was turned back at the border — en la frontera lo hicieron regresar or lo mandaron de vuelta
b) ( fold) \<\<bedclothes\>\> doblar -
9 delay
[di'lei] 1. verb1) (to put off to another time: We have delayed publication of the book till the spring.) adiar2) (to keep or stay back or slow down: I was delayed by the traffic.) atrasar2. noun((something which causes) keeping back or slowing down: He came without delay; My work is subject to delays.) atraso* * *de.lay[dil'ei] n 1 demora, paragem, detença, retardamento, atraso, adiamento, protelação. 2 dilação, prazo. • vt+vi demorar(-se), dilatar, adiar, retardar, atrasar, procrastinar, deter(-se). -
10 lag
[læɡ] 1. past tense, past participle - lagged; verb((often with behind) to move too slowly and become left behind: We waited for the smaller children, who were lagging behind the rest.) atrasar-se2. noun(an act of lagging or the amount by which one thing is later than another: There is sometimes a time-lag of several seconds between our seeing the lightning and our hearing the thunder.) atraso* * *[læg] n 1 retardo, atraso, demora. 2 retardatário. 3 defasagem. 4 Brit sl prisioneiro. 5 revestimento ou forro de caldeira ou cilindros. • vt+vi 1 ficar atrás, retardar-se, ir devagar, demorar-se, atrasar-se. 2 prender, encarcerar. 3 revestir ou forrar caldeiras. • adj último, tardio, retardado. -
11 put
[put]present participle - putting; verb1) (to place in a certain position or situation: He put the plate in the cupboard; Did you put any sugar in my coffee?; He put his arm round her; I'm putting a new lock on the door; You're putting too much strain on that rope; When did the Russians first put a man into space?; You've put me in a bad temper; Can you put (=translate) this sentence into French?) pôr2) (to submit or present (a proposal, question etc): I put several questions to him; She put her ideas before the committee.) apresentar3) (to express in words: He put his refusal very politely; Children sometimes have such a funny way of putting things!) exprimir4) (to write down: I'm trying to write a letter to her, but I don't know what to put.) pôr5) (to sail in a particular direction: We put out to sea; The ship put into harbour for repairs.) navegar•- put-on- a put-up job
- put about
- put across/over
- put aside
- put away
- put back
- put by
- put down
- put down for
- put one's feet up
- put forth
- put in
- put in for
- put off
- put on
- put out
- put through
- put together
- put up
- put up to
- put up with* * *[put] n 1 arremesso, lançamento. 2 Sports arremesso de peso. 3 (bolsa) operação a prazo. • vt+vi ps, pp put 1 pôr: a) colocar. b) reduzir a um estado ou condição. c) fixar, determinar. d) guardar. e) depositar. f) atribuir, imputar. g) adicionar, deitar. h) assinar, apor. i) expressar, afirmar. j) dedicar-se a. k) aplicar. l) impor ônus a. m) firmar, assentar. 2 formular, propor. 3 seguir, rumar. 4 avaliar, orçar. 5 incitar. 6 lançar à água (navio). 7 forçar, obrigar. 8 arremessar, lançar. 9 apostar. 10 investir. 11 adaptar. 12 traduzir. • adj no lugar, fixado, fixo, parado. he puts the distance at eight miles ele avalia a distância em oito milhas. how shall I put it? como direi? if I may put my two cents in se eu posso dar um conselho, um palpite. if one puts it upon that ground considerando-o deste ponto de vista. I put him on guard eu o preveni. I put it to you deixo-o a seu critério. she put him down to it ela lhe confiou (segredo, novidade). she put him down to it ela lhe confiou (segredo, novidade). she put him on his oath ela o fez jurar. stay put! não se mova! they put their heads together eles confabularam. to put about 1 publicar ou circular. 2 mudar o curso, o rumo. 3 espalhar (boato). to put a bug in one’s ear deixar alguém com a pulga atrás da orelha. to put across 1 conseguir explicar algo. 2 levar a cabo. I just can’t put it across / não consigo mesmo levá-lo a cabo. to put a flea in one’s ear deixar alguém com a pulga atrás da orelha. to put ahead avançar, adiantar. to put an end to pôr fim em, acabar, encerrar. he put an end to his life / ele deu cabo da vida. he put an end to the matter / ele encerrou o assunto. to put a question levantar uma questão. to put aside 1 pôr de lado (para fazer uma outra coisa). 2 não dar importância. to put away 1 pôr de lado. 2 descartar, dispor de. 3 guardar, economizar. 4 guardar, colocar no devido lugar. 5 divorciar. 6 matar um animal velho ou doente. 7 confinar, prender. 8 comer. to put back 1 adiar. 2 atrasar. 3 repelir. 4 recusar, negar. 5 repor, recolocar. 6 Naut voltar, regressar. 7 atrasar o relógio. to put by 1 guardar, economizar. 2 pôr de lado. 3 armazenar. 4 rejeitar, recusar. 5 livrar-se de. 6 desviar, esquivar. to put down 1 criticar alguém na frente de outras pessoas, humilhar. 2 dar uma quantia de dinheiro como entrada. 3 anotar, inscrever, registrar (no papel). 4 matar um animal velho ou doente. 5 parar o veículo para alguém descer. 6 Aeron aterrissar. 7 pôr a criança para dormir. 8 derrubar. 9 suprimir, eliminar. 10 rebaixar, degradar. 11 depor. 12 cortar, renunciar a. 13 atribuir. 14 estimar, considerar. 15 beber continuadamente. to put down for relacionar, pedir por escrito. to put for fazer uma tentativa para ganhar. to put forth 1 estender. 2 tornar manifesto. 3 desenvolver, tornar. 4 empregar, aplicar (força). 5 elevar, erguer (voz). 6 propor. 7 publicar, editar. 8 emprestar com juros. to put forward 1 promover, pôr em evidência. 2 fazer progredir, avançar. 3 propor, formular, apresentar. she put forward an argument / ela apresentou um argumento. to put in 1 consertar um equipamento doméstico. 2 gastar tempo e energia fazendo uma atividade. 3 interromper alguém. 4 introduzir, apresentar. 5 intercalar, encaixar. 6 interferir, intervir. 7 aportar. the ship put into the port / o navio entrou no porto. 8 eleger um político ou um partido político. to put in brackets/ parentheses colocar entre parênteses. to put in for 1 requerer algo formalmente. 2 oferecer-se, candidatar-se. to put in mind lembrar. to put in possession 1 empossar, dar posse a. 2 informar, pôr a par de. to put in practice 1 pôr em ação. 2 praticar, fazer. to put into gear embrear. to put it on 1 fingir. 2 sobrecarregar. 3 exagerar. to put off 1 despir, tirar, descalçar. 2 adiar, protelar, transferir, postergar. 3 dissuadir. 4 usar de evasivas. 5 coll desconcertar, confundir. 6 desembarcar, pôr em terra (passageiros). 7 partir. 8 desencorajar, desanimar. 9 atrapalhar (o trabalho, a concentração de alguém). to put on 1 vestir, calçar. 2 assumir. 3 imputar, atribuir a. 4 impor, infligir. 5 incitar, instigar. 6 empregar, aplicar. 7 carregar no preço. 8 ganhar pressão. 9 fingir, simular. he puts on a big act / ele está fazendo fita. 10 apostar em. 11 adiantar (relógios). 12 antecipar. 13 coll representar, levar. to put on the ritz dar-se ares de riqueza, mostrar-se, exibir-se. to put on to 1 estar consciente de. 2 conectar-se com/ao telefone. to put one’s ass on the line vulg colocar-se em perigo, assumir a responsabilidade. to put one’s back into dedicar-se de corpo e alma a. to put one’s cards on the table colocar as cartas na mesa, fazer jogo franco. to put oneself in somebody’s place imaginar-se em lugar de alguém. to put one’s foot in one’s mouth meter os pés pelas mãos. to put one’s hands to the plow meter mãos à obra. to put one through the mill 1 sujeitar a disciplina rigorosa. 2 punir, castigar. to put on trial levar à barra do tribunal. to put out 1 expelir, lançar fora. 2 extinguir, aparar. 3 emprestar. 4 desconcertar, confundir. he was put by this news / esta notícia o desconcertou. 5 estender a mão. 6 exibir, mostrar. 7 publicar, editar. 8 gastar, despender. 9 dar para criar (criança). 10 pôr para fora. 11 dar para fora (roupa suja, etc.). 12 ir embora, partir, sair. 13 Med deslocar, distender. 14 Naut fazer-se ao mar. the ship put out to sea / o navio fez-se ao mar. 15 Sports pôr fora de jogo. 16 desfraldar (bandeira). to put out of action pôr fora de função ou ação. to put out of gear desengrenar. to put out of one’s head fazer esquecer. to put out of order pôr em desordem. to put out of the way 1 matar, eliminar. 2 destruir. to put over 1 colocar acima de. 2 conduzir através de, fazer transpor. 3 levar a cabo. 4 sl prevalecer, impor-se. he put himself over / ele conseguiu prevalecer. 5 comunicar. 6 iludir, tapear. to put somebody in a hole coll pôr alguém em dificuldades. to put somebody on the floor arrasar, fazer com que todos o apreciem, desbundar alguém. to put somebody through college/ school financiar os estudos de alguém. she put him through college / ela lhe financiou os estudos. to put something into one’s head colocar, meter algo na cabeça. to put something over on someone fazer alguém crer. one can’t put anything over on him / ele não se deixa ludibriar. to put the bite on sl dar uma mordidinha, pedir dinheiro emprestado. to put the cart before the horse pôr a carroça diante dos bois. to put the pen to paper começar a escrever. she put the pen to the paper / ela começou a escrever. to put the screw to sl apertar, pressionar, agir coercivamente. to put the wind up 1 alarmar, alvoroçar. 2 alarmar-se. 3 tornar-se irritado ou excitado. to put the wood to sl castigar, coagir. to put through 1 levar a cabo. 2 conseguir a aprovação de lei. 3 fazer penetrar ou atravessar. 4 fazer agir. 5 coll fazer ligação telefônica. 6 forçar alguém a, obrigar alguém a. to put to 1 combinar, juntar, unir. 2 confiar a. 3 afixar a, prender a. 4 atrelar. he put the horses to the car / ele atrelou os cavalos. 5 limitar a. 6 expor a, sujeitar a. to put to a stand dar um paradeiro a. to put to bed pôr na cama, fazer deitar. to put to death matar, executar. the murderer was put to death / o assassino foi executado. to put to flight lançar em fuga. to put together 1 agregar. 2 juntar, reunir. to put to rights pôr em ordem, endireitar. to put to sea começar uma viagem, fazer-se ao mar. to put to shame fazer envergonhar. to put to silence silenciar, fazer calar. to put to sleep pôr na cama, fazer dormir. to put to the sword matar com a espada. to put to the vote submeter à votação. to put two and two together chegar, tirar conclusões. to put under the screw forçar, pressionar. to put up 1 levantar, alçar, içar, suspender, pendurar. 2 erigir, erguer, edificar. 3 montar (máquinas). 4 pôr em leilão. 5 levar à cena. 6 guardar, economizar. 7 pôr em conserva. 8 pôr de lado. 9 acolher, dar hospedagem a, acomodar. 10 designar candidato. 11 candidatar-se. 12 acondicionar, embrulhar. 13 sl tramar, conspirar. 14 aumentar, elevar (preços). 15 alojar-se, hospedar-se. 16 embainhar (espada). 17 cessar (luta). to put up a big stink Braz coll armar um salseiro, rodar a baiana. to put up to 1 instigar, incitar a. he put him up to it / ele o instigou a dizê-lo. 2 dar informações importantes. I’ll put it up to him / levá-lo-ei ao seu conhecimento. to put up with tolerar, agüentar, suportar. what would you put it at? em quanto você avalia isto? -
12 to put a question
to put a questionlevantar uma questão. to put aside 1 pôr de lado (para fazer uma outra coisa). 2 não dar importância. to put away 1 pôr de lado. 2 descartar, dispor de. 3 guardar, economizar. 4 guardar, colocar no devido lugar. 5 divorciar. 6 matar um animal velho ou doente. 7 confinar, prender. 8 comer. to put back 1 adiar. 2 atrasar. 3 repelir. 4 recusar, negar. 5 repor, recolocar. 6 Naut voltar, regressar. 7 atrasar o relógio. to put by 1 guardar, economizar. 2 pôr de lado. 3 armazenar. 4 rejeitar, recusar. 5 livrar-se de. 6 desviar, esquivar. to put down 1 criticar alguém na frente de outras pessoas, humilhar. 2 dar uma quantia de dinheiro como entrada. 3 anotar, inscrever, registrar (no papel). 4 matar um animal velho ou doente. 5 parar o veículo para alguém descer. 6 Aeron aterrissar. 7 pôr a criança para dormir. 8 derrubar. 9 suprimir, eliminar. 10 rebaixar, degradar. 11 depor. 12 cortar, renunciar a. 13 atribuir. 14 estimar, considerar. 15 beber continuadamente. -
13 fall behind
1) (to be slower than (someone else): Hurry up! You're falling behind (the others); He is falling behind in his schoolwork.) atrasar-se/ficar para trás2) ((with with) to become late in regular payment, letter-writing etc: Don't fall behind with the rent!) atrasar-se -
14 delay
di'lei
1. verb1) (to put off to another time: We have delayed publication of the book till the spring.) aplazar, retrasar2) (to keep or stay back or slow down: I was delayed by the traffic.) retrasar
2. noun((something which causes) keeping back or slowing down: He came without delay; My work is subject to delays.) retrasodelay1 n retrasodelay2 vb retrasartr[dɪ'leɪ]1 (act, state) demora, tardanza, dilación nombre femenino; (amount of time) retraso, demora; (traffic hold-up) embotellamiento, atasco■ without delay sin demora, sin dilación1 (defer, postpone - gen) aplazar, retrasar; (payment) aplazar, diferir2 (make late - flight, train) retrasar, demorar; (person) entretener1 (be late) tardar; (act slowly) entretenerse■ don't delay! ¡no tardes!delay [di'leɪ] vt1) postpone: posponer, postergar2) hold up: retrasar, demorardelay vi: tardar, demorardelay n1) lateness: tardanza f2) holdup: demora f, retraso mn.• atraso s.m.• demora s.f.• dilación s.f.• dilatoria s.f.• espera s.f.• larga s.f.• postergación s.f.• retardo s.m.• retraso s.m.• tardanza s.f.v.• atrasar v.• demorar v.• diferir v.• dilatar v.• emperezar v.• postergar v.• retardar v.• retrasar v.• tardar v.
I
1. dɪ'leɪ1)a) (make late, hold up) retrasar, demorar (esp AmL)b) delaying pres p <action/tactics> dilatorio2)a) ( defer) \<\<decision/payment\>\> retrasar, demorar (esp AmL)to delay -ING: we delayed signing the contract — retrasamos or (AmL tb) demoramos la firma del contrato
b) delayed past p <action/effect/reaction> retardado
2.
vi tardar, demorar (esp AmL)
II
1)a) u ( waiting) tardanza f, dilación f, demora f (esp AmL)and now, without further delay... — y ahora, sin más preámbulos...
b) c ( holdup) retraso m, demora f (esp AmL)delays can be expected on major roads — se puede esperar embotellamientos en las principales carreteras
2) ca) ( extra time) ( Law) aplazamiento m, prórroga fb) ( interval) lapso m, intervalo m[dɪ'leɪ]1.N (=hold-up) retraso m, demora f (esp LAm); (=act of delaying) retraso m, dilación f ; (to traffic) retención f, atasco m ; (to train) retraso mthere will be delays to traffic — habrá retenciones or atascos en las carreteras
these measures should be implemented without further delay — estas medidas deben ponerse en práctica sin más demora
2.VT (=hold up) [+ person] retrasar, entretener; [+ train] retrasar; [+ start, opening] retrasar, demorar (LAm); (=postpone) aplazar, demorar (LAm); (=obstruct) impedirwhat delayed you? — ¿por qué has tardado tanto?
to delay doing sth: we delayed going out until Jane arrived — retrasamos la salida hasta que llegara Jane
the illness could have been treated if you hadn't delayed going to the doctor — se hubiera podido tratar la enfermedad si no hubieras tardado tanto en ir al médico
delayed broadcast — (US) transmisión f en diferido
delayed effect — efecto m retardado
3.VI tardar, demorarse (LAm)don't delay! — (in doing sth) ¡no pierdas tiempo!; (on the way) ¡no te entretengas!, ¡no tardes!, ¡no te demores! (LAm)
* * *
I
1. [dɪ'leɪ]1)a) (make late, hold up) retrasar, demorar (esp AmL)b) delaying pres p <action/tactics> dilatorio2)a) ( defer) \<\<decision/payment\>\> retrasar, demorar (esp AmL)to delay -ING: we delayed signing the contract — retrasamos or (AmL tb) demoramos la firma del contrato
b) delayed past p <action/effect/reaction> retardado
2.
vi tardar, demorar (esp AmL)
II
1)a) u ( waiting) tardanza f, dilación f, demora f (esp AmL)and now, without further delay... — y ahora, sin más preámbulos...
b) c ( holdup) retraso m, demora f (esp AmL)delays can be expected on major roads — se puede esperar embotellamientos en las principales carreteras
2) ca) ( extra time) ( Law) aplazamiento m, prórroga fb) ( interval) lapso m, intervalo m -
15 go back
(to return to an earlier time, topic of conversation etc: Let's go back for a minute to what we were talking about earlier.) volver ago back vb volverv.• remontar v.v + adv1)a) ( return) volver*go back! — vuelve atrás!, retrocede!
there's no going back now — ya no se puede (or no nos podemos etc) volver atrás
b) (in lecture, text) volver*to go back to what I was saying earlier... — volviendo a lo que decía antes...
c) ( be returned)this dress'll have to go back — voy (or vas etc) a tener que devolver ese vestido
2)a) (date, originate) \<\<tradition/dynasty\>\> remontarsewe go back a long way — (colloq) nos conocemos desde hace mucho
b) (return in time, revert) volver*c) \<\<clocks\>\> atrasarseVI + ADV1) (=return) volver, regresar (to a)•
when do the schools go back? — ¿cuándo empieza el colegio?•
the strikers have voted to go back to work — los huelguistas han votado en favor de volver al trabajogo back togoing back to the point you raised earlier,... — volviendo al tema que planteaste antes,...
2) (=retreat) volverse atrás•
there's no going back now — ya no podemos volvernos atrás3) (=extend) extendersethe path goes back to the river — el camino llega or se extiende hasta el río
the cave goes back 300 metres — la cueva tiene 300 metros de fondo, la cueva tiene una extensión de 300 metros
4) (=date back) remontarse•
we go back a long way — nos conocemos desde hace mucho•
my memories don't go back so far — mis recuerdos no se remontan tan lejos•
it goes back to Elizabeth I — se remonta a Isabel I5) (=change)•
when do the clocks go back? — ¿cuándo hay que atrasar los relojes?* * *v + adv1)a) ( return) volver*go back! — vuelve atrás!, retrocede!
there's no going back now — ya no se puede (or no nos podemos etc) volver atrás
b) (in lecture, text) volver*to go back to what I was saying earlier... — volviendo a lo que decía antes...
c) ( be returned)this dress'll have to go back — voy (or vas etc) a tener que devolver ese vestido
2)a) (date, originate) \<\<tradition/dynasty\>\> remontarsewe go back a long way — (colloq) nos conocemos desde hace mucho
b) (return in time, revert) volver*c) \<\<clocks\>\> atrasarse -
16 hold back
1) (to refuse to tell someone (something): The police were convinced the man was holding something back.) esconder, guardarse algo, ocultar2) (to prevent from happening, being seen etc, with an effort: The little girl succeeded in holding back her tears.) retener, contener(se), reprimir(se)3) (to prevent from making progress: I meant to finish cleaning the house but the children have held me back all morning.) refrenar, impedirv.• atrasar v.• detener v.(§pres: -tengo, -tienes...-tenemos) pret: -tuv-fut/c: -tendr-•)• frenar v.1) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( restrain) \<\<crowds/water/tears\>\> contener*b) (withhold, delay) \<\<information\>\> no revelar; \<\<payment\>\> retrasar2) v + adv ( restrain oneself) contenerse*, frenarse1.VT + ADV (=keep) guardar, retener; (=stop) [+ river, flood] retener; [+ progress] refrenar; [+ information] ocultar, no revelar; [+ names] no comunicar; [+ emotion, tears] reprimir, contenerare you holding sth back from me? — ¿me estás ocultando algo?
to hold o.s. back from doing sth — refrenarse de hacer algo
2.VI + ADV refrenarse; (in doubt) vacilar* * *1) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( restrain) \<\<crowds/water/tears\>\> contener*b) (withhold, delay) \<\<information\>\> no revelar; \<\<payment\>\> retrasar2) v + adv ( restrain oneself) contenerse*, frenarse -
17 leave behind
v.• atrasar v.• olvidar v.• rezagar v.v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( not take or bring - deliberately) dejar; (- inadvertently) olvidarse de, dejarseb) ( abandon) \<\<worries/cares\>\> dejar atrásc) (in race, at school) \<\<opponent/classmate\>\> dejar atrásVT + ADV1) (=not take) [+ person] dejar, no llevar consigowe have left all that behind us — (fig) todo eso ha quedado atrás or ya es historia
2) (=forget) olvidarse3) (=outdistance) dejar atrás* * *v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( not take or bring - deliberately) dejar; (- inadvertently) olvidarse de, dejarseb) ( abandon) \<\<worries/cares\>\> dejar atrásc) (in race, at school) \<\<opponent/classmate\>\> dejar atrás -
18 retard
(to make slower or later: The country's economic progress was retarded by strikes; The baby's development was retarded by an accident he had shortly after birth.) retrasar- retarded
tr[rɪ'tɑːd]1 retardar, retrasarretard [ri'tɑrd] vt: retardar, retrasarn.• retardo s.m.v.• atrasar v.• emperezar v.• retardar v.• retrasar v.
I rɪ'tɑːrd, rɪ'tɑːdtransitive verb \<\<growth\>\> retardar; \<\<progress\>\> retrasar
II 'riːtɑːrd, 'riːtɑːdnoun (AmE colloq & pej) tarado, -da m,f (fam)1.VT [rɪ'tɑːd]retardar, retrasar2.N ['riːtɑːd](US) ** atrasado(-a) m / f mental ** * *
I [rɪ'tɑːrd, rɪ'tɑːd]transitive verb \<\<growth\>\> retardar; \<\<progress\>\> retrasar
II ['riːtɑːrd, 'riːtɑːd]noun (AmE colloq & pej) tarado, -da m,f (fam) -
19 slow
sləu
1. adjective1) (not fast; not moving quickly; taking a long time: a slow train; The service at that restaurant is very slow; He was very slow to offer help.) lento2) ((of a clock etc) showing a time earlier than the actual time; behind in time: My watch is five minutes slow.) atrasado3) (not clever; not quick at learning: He's particularly slow at arithmetic.) lento, torpe, estúpido
2. verb(to make, or become slower: The car slowed to take the corner.) retrasar, ralentizar, retardar- slowly- slowness
- slow motion
- slow down/up
slow adj1. lento2. atrasadotr[sləʊ]1 (gen) lento,-a2 (clock, watch) atrasado,-a■ my watch is slow mi reloj va atrasado, mi reloj atrasa3 (dull, not active) aburrido,-a, pesado,-a4 (not quick to learn) lento,-a, torpe; (thick) corto,-a de alcances1 despacio, lentamente■ drive slow! ¡conduce despacio!1 (vehicle, machine) reducir la marcha de; (production, progress) retrasar, retardar; (person) hacer ir más lento, retrasar1 (gen) ir más despacio; (vehicle) reducir la velocidad; (pace) aminorar el paso; (person) tomarse las cosas con calma\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLin a slow oven a fuego lentoto be slow about/in doing something tardar en hacer algoto be slow off the mark ser un poco lento,-a de reflejosto be slow to do something tardar en hacer algoto go slow (workers) hacer una huelga de celoslow lane carril nombre masculino lentoslow [slo:] vt: retrasar, reducir la marcha deslow vi: ir más despacioslow adv: despacio, lentamenteslow adj1) : lentoa slow process: un proceso lento2) : atrasadomy watch is slow: mi reloj está atrasado, mi reloj se atrasa3) sluggish: lento, poco activo4) stupid: lento, torpe, corto de alcancesadj.• despacioso, -a adj.• detenido, -a adj.• espacioso, -a adj.• lento, -a adj.• lerdo, -a adj.• parsimonioso, -a adj.• pausado, -a adj.• premioso, -a adj.• pánfilo, -a adj.• tardo, -a adj.• tardío, -a adj.• tardón, -ona adj.adv.• despacio adv.• lentamente adv.n.• posma s.f.v.• atrasar v.• retardar v.
I sləʊadjective -er, -est1) <speed/rate/reactions> lentoshe's a slow learner — tiene problemas de aprendizaje, le cuesta aprender
it has a slow leak o (BrE) puncture — pierde aire
to be slow to + INF — tardar en + inf
he was slow to anger — tenía mucha paciencia; mark I 3) b)
2)a) ( not lively) <novel/plot> lentob) ( stupid) (euph) poco despierto (euf), corto (de entendederas) (fam)3) (of clock, watch)the kitchen clock is slow — el reloj de la cocina (se) atrasa or está atrasado
II
1.
2.
vtwe slowed our pace — aflojamos el paso or aminoramos la marcha
Phrasal Verbs:- slow up
III
adverb lentamente, despacio[slǝʊ] (compar slower) (superl slowest)to go slow — \<\<driver/walker\>\> avanzar* lentamente, ir* despacio; \<\<workers\>\> (BrE) trabajar a reglamento, hacer* huelga de celo (Esp), hacer* una operación tortuga (Col)
1. ADJ1) (=not speedy) [vehicle, music, progress, death, pulse] lento•
to be slow in doing sth — tardar or (LAm) demorar en hacer algo•
after a slow start, he managed to end up in third place — después de un comienzo flojo, consiguió llegar en tercer puesto•
to be slow to do sth — tardar or (LAm) demorar en hacer algogoing 1., 1), mark II, 1., 6), uptakehe's slow to learn — aprende lentamente, tarda mucho en aprender
2) [clock, watch] atrasado•
my watch is 20 minutes slow — mi reloj está 20 minutos atrasado3) (=mentally sluggish) torpe, lento•
he's a bit slow at maths — es algo torpe para las matemáticas4) (=boring, dull) [match, game, film, plot] lento, pesado; [party, evening] pesado, aburrido•
business is slow — hay poco movimiento (en el negocio)•
life here is slow — aquí se vive a un ritmo lento or pausado5) (Culin)6) (Sport) [pitch, track, surface] lento7) (Phot) [film] lento2.ADV despacio, lentamente, lentoI began to walk slower and slower — empecé a andar cada vez más despacio or lentamente or lento
how slow would you like me to play? — ¿cómo de lento le gustaría que tocara?
to go slow — [driver] conducir despacio; (in industrial dispute) trabajar a ritmo lento, hacer huelga de celo (Sp)
3.VT (also: slow down, slow up) [+ person] retrasar; [+ progress] retrasar, disminuir el ritmo de; [+ engine, machine] reducir la marcha de; [+ reactions] entorpecer; [+ economy] ralentizar; [+ development] retardar•
he slowed his car before turning in at the gate — redujo la marcha del coche antes de entrar por el portón•
they want to slow the pace of reform — quieren reducir el ritmo de la reformaas she approached, she slowed her pace — a medida que se acercaba, fue aminorando la marcha or fue aflojando el paso
•
we slowed our speed to 30 miles an hour — redujimos la velocidad a 30 millas por hora4.VI [vehicle, runner] reducir la marcha; [driver] reducir la velocidad or la marcha; [growth] disminuir; [breathing] hacerse más lento•
production has slowed to almost nothing — la producción ha bajado casi a cero5.CPDslow burn * N (US) —
slow cooker N — olla f eléctrica de cocción lenta
slow cooking N — cocción f a fuego lento
slow handclap N — (Brit) (by audience) palmadas fpl lentas
slow lane N — (Brit) (Aut) carril m de la izquierda; (most countries) carril m de la derecha
slow motion N (Cine) —
slow-motionin slow motion — a or (LAm) en cámara lenta
slow puncture N — pinchazo m lento
slow train N — (Brit) tren que para en todas las estaciones
- slow off- slow up* * *
I [sləʊ]adjective -er, -est1) <speed/rate/reactions> lentoshe's a slow learner — tiene problemas de aprendizaje, le cuesta aprender
it has a slow leak o (BrE) puncture — pierde aire
to be slow to + INF — tardar en + inf
he was slow to anger — tenía mucha paciencia; mark I 3) b)
2)a) ( not lively) <novel/plot> lentob) ( stupid) (euph) poco despierto (euf), corto (de entendederas) (fam)3) (of clock, watch)the kitchen clock is slow — el reloj de la cocina (se) atrasa or está atrasado
II
1.
2.
vtwe slowed our pace — aflojamos el paso or aminoramos la marcha
Phrasal Verbs:- slow up
III
adverb lentamente, despacioto go slow — \<\<driver/walker\>\> avanzar* lentamente, ir* despacio; \<\<workers\>\> (BrE) trabajar a reglamento, hacer* huelga de celo (Esp), hacer* una operación tortuga (Col)
-
20 slow down
slow down vb reducir la velocidadexpr.• aflojar el paso expr.v.• atrasar v.• ciar v.• emperezar v.• frenar v.• pausar v.• retardar v.• retrasar v.1) v + adva) ( go more slowly) \<\<runner\>\> aflojar el paso, aminorar la marcha; \<\<vehicle/driver\>\> reducir* la velocidad; \<\<speaker\>\> hablar más despaciob) ( be less active) (colloq) tomarse las cosas con más calma2) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) \<\<process\>\> hacer* más lento, ralentizar*, enlentecer*b) \<\<vehicle/engine\>\> reducir* la velocidad de1. VI + ADV1) (=go slower) [engine, vehicle, runner] reducir la marcha; [driver] reducir la velocidad or la marchaslow down, I can't keep up with you — (to sb running) no corras tanto, no puedo seguirte; (to sb speaking) no hables tan rápido, que no te sigo
2) (=work less)you must slow down or you'll make yourself ill — tienes que aflojar el ritmo de vida o te pondrás enfermo
2. VT + ADV1) (=reduce speed of) [+ vehicle] reducir la velocidad de2) (=cause delay to) retrasar* * *1) v + adva) ( go more slowly) \<\<runner\>\> aflojar el paso, aminorar la marcha; \<\<vehicle/driver\>\> reducir* la velocidad; \<\<speaker\>\> hablar más despaciob) ( be less active) (colloq) tomarse las cosas con más calma2) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) \<\<process\>\> hacer* más lento, ralentizar*, enlentecer*b) \<\<vehicle/engine\>\> reducir* la velocidad de
См. также в других словарях:
atrasar — Se conjuga como: amar Infinitivo: Gerundio: Participio: atrasar atrasando atrasado Indicativo presente imperfecto pretérito futuro condicional yo tú él, ella, Ud. nosotros vosotros ellos, ellas, Uds. atraso atrasas atrasa atrasamos atrasáis … Wordreference Spanish Conjugations Dictionary
atrasar-se — em (com) ele atrasou se no pagamento; estás a atrasar te com o trabalho … Dicionario dos verbos portugueses
atrasar — v. tr. 1. Não dar expediente tão rápido como é devido. = DEMORAR ≠ ADIANTAR 2. Fazer retrogradar. 3. Alterar a hora de um relógio para antes do tempo que ele está a marcar. = RETARDAR ≠ ADIANTAR • v. intr. 4. Ter (o relógio) movimento mais lento… … Dicionário da Língua Portuguesa
atrasar — verbo transitivo 1. Establecer (una persona) una fecha o una hora posterior a la que se había fijado para hacer [una cosa]: Atrasó la compra del coche. Sinónimo: retrasar. 2. Ser … Diccionario Salamanca de la Lengua Española
atrasar — (De atrás). 1. tr. retardar. U. t. c. prnl.) 2. Fijar un hecho en época posterior a aquella en que ha ocurrido. 3. Hacer que retrocedan las agujas del reloj, o tocar su registro a fin de que el volante o la péndola marchen con menos velocidad. 4 … Diccionario de la lengua española
atrasar — v tr (Se conjuga como amar) 1 Hacer que el paso, el ritmo, la marcha o la simultaneidad de alguna acción en relación con otra disminuya, o se quede atrás: atrasar un reloj, atrasar una máquina, atrasarse la economía 2 Hacer que algo ocurra más… … Español en México
atrasar — ► verbo transitivo 1 Señalar una nueva fecha, posterior a la que se había fijado, para hacer una cosa: ■ atrasó la cita porque andaba muy ocupada. SINÓNIMO retardar 2 Hacer que el reloj señale un tiempo que ya ha pasado: ■ atrasaron los… … Enciclopedia Universal
atrasar — transitivo y pronominal 1 retrasar, retardar, demorar, diferir*, rezagar, dilatar. ≠ adelantar. Atrasar coincide con retrasar en todas sus aceptaciones. Retardar no se usa hablando del reloj. En general sugiere disminución de velocidad motivada… … Diccionario de sinónimos y antónimos
atrasar — {{#}}{{LM A03957}}{{〓}} {{ConjA03957}}{{\}}CONJUGACIÓN{{/}}{{SynA04045}} {{[}}atrasar{{]}} ‹a·tra·sar› {{《}}▍ v.{{》}} {{<}}1{{>}} {{♂}}Referido a un reloj,{{♀}} correr o desplazar hacia atrás sus agujas: • Me gastaron la broma de atrasarme el… … Diccionario de uso del español actual con sinónimos y antónimos
atrasar(se) — Sinónimos: ■ diferir, postergar, dilatar, aplazar, posponer, prolongar, relegar, preterir, retrotraer, alargar, retrasarse, demorarse, retardarse, rezagarse Antónimos: ■ adelantar, anticipar, anteponer … Diccionario de sinónimos y antónimos
retrasar — ► verbo transitivo/ pronominal 1 Atrasar la realización de una cosa: ■ retrasaré la boda; se retrasó la paga de navidad. SINÓNIMO aplazar ► verbo transitivo 2 Dar marcha atrás a las agujas del reloj: ■ hay que retrasar el reloj. ANTÓNIMO… … Enciclopedia Universal