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1 bounce up and down
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2 bounce
1. verb1) (to (cause to) spring or jump back from a solid surface.) hacer botar, botar, rebotar2) ((of a cheque) to be sent back unpaid, because of lack of money in a bank account.) ser rechazado por el banco
2. noun1) ((of a ball etc) an act of springing back: With one bounce the ball went over the net.) bote2) (energy: She has a lot of bounce.) vitalidad•- bouncingbounce vb1. rebotar / botar2. saltar3. hacer botar / hacer rebotartr[baʊns]1 (of ball) bote nombre masculino1 (ball) rebotar, botar1 (cheque) ser rechazado por el banco2 (ball) hacer botar: hacer rebotarbounce vi: rebotarbounce n: rebote mn.n.• bote s.m.• brinco s.m.• resalto s.m.v.• botar v.• brincar v.• despedir v.• rebotar v.• resaltar v.• saltar v.
I
1. baʊnsa) \<\<ball/object\>\> rebotar, picar* (AmL), botar (Esp, Méx)the child was bouncing up and down on the sofa — el niño saltaba or daba brincos en el sofá
b) ( move jauntily) (+ adv compl)she bounced into the room — entró a la habitación saltando or brincando or dando brincos
c) \<\<check\>\> (colloq) ser* devuelto or rechazado, rebotar (fam)
2.
vt1)a) \<\<ball/object\>\> hacer* rebotar, darle* botes a, hacer* picar (AmL), (hacer*) botar (Esp, Méx)b) \<\<check\>\> (colloq) devolver*, rechazar*2) ( get rid of) (esp AmE colloq) \<\<drunk/employee\>\> echar, botar (AmL exc RPl fam)•Phrasal Verbs:
II
1)a) c ( action) rebote m, bote m, pique m (AmL)b) u (springiness, vitality)2) ( dismissal) (AmE colloq)[baʊns]to give somebody the bounce — poner* a alguien de patitas en la calle (fam), botar a alguien (AmE excl RPl fam)
1. N1) [of ball] (re)bote m2) (=springiness) [of hair, mattress] elasticidad f3) (fig) (=energy) energía f, dinamismo m2. VT1) [+ ball] hacer (re)botar2) * [+ cheque] rechazar3) * (=eject) plantar en la calle *, poner de patitas en la calle *4)I will not be bounced into it — no lo voy a hacer bajo presión, no voy a dejar que me presionen para hacerlo
3. VI1) [ball] (re)botar2) * [cheque] ser rechazado3) (=bound) dar saltos4) (=be returned) [email message] ser devuelto* * *
I
1. [baʊns]a) \<\<ball/object\>\> rebotar, picar* (AmL), botar (Esp, Méx)the child was bouncing up and down on the sofa — el niño saltaba or daba brincos en el sofá
b) ( move jauntily) (+ adv compl)she bounced into the room — entró a la habitación saltando or brincando or dando brincos
c) \<\<check\>\> (colloq) ser* devuelto or rechazado, rebotar (fam)
2.
vt1)a) \<\<ball/object\>\> hacer* rebotar, darle* botes a, hacer* picar (AmL), (hacer*) botar (Esp, Méx)b) \<\<check\>\> (colloq) devolver*, rechazar*2) ( get rid of) (esp AmE colloq) \<\<drunk/employee\>\> echar, botar (AmL exc RPl fam)•Phrasal Verbs:
II
1)a) c ( action) rebote m, bote m, pique m (AmL)b) u (springiness, vitality)2) ( dismissal) (AmE colloq)to give somebody the bounce — poner* a alguien de patitas en la calle (fam), botar a alguien (AmE excl RPl fam)
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3 bote
Del verbo botar: ( conjugate botar) \ \
boté es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) pretérito indicativo
bote es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) imperativoMultiple Entries: botar bote
botar ( conjugate botar) verbo transitivo 1 ‹ barco› to launch 2 ‹ pelota› to bounce 3 (AmL exc RPl) ( tirar) to throw … out; bótalo a la basura chuck o throw it out (colloq); bote el dinero to throw your money away 4 (AmL exc RPl fam) (— de trabajo) to fire (colloq), to sack (BrE colloq) ‹marido/esposa› to leave; 5 (AmL exc RPl fam) ( derribar) ‹puerta/árbol› to knock down; ‹botella/taza› to knock over;◊ no empujes que me botas stop pushing, you're going to knock me over6 (AmL exc RPl) ( perder) ‹aceite/gasolina› to leak verbo intransitivo (Esp) [ pelota] to bounce botarse verbo pronominal (AmL exc CS fam)
bote sustantivo masculino 1 (Náut) boat; bote de or a remos rowboat (AmE), rowing boat (BrE); 2 ( recipiente — de lata) tin; (— de vidrio, plástico) storage jar; (— de cerveza) (Esp) can; (— de mermelada) (Esp) jar; de bote en bote packed 3 ( de pelota) bounce;
botar
I verbo intransitivo
1 (una persona) to jump
2 (un objeto) to bounce
II verbo transitivo
1 Náut to launch
2 (un balón, pelota) to bounce
3 LAm (echar de un lugar, despedir) to throw o chuck out
bote 1 sustantivo masculino
1 jump, bound
2 (de pelota) bounce, rebound Locuciones: dar botes, to jump up and down
dar un bote, (asustarse) to give a start (de alegría) to jump for joy
bote 2 sustantivo masculino
1 (de lata) can, tin, canister (de vidrio) jar (para propinas) jar o box for tips
2 (en lotería) jackpot
3 bote de humo, teargas canister Locuciones: familiar chupar del bote, to scrounge, to be on the make
en el bote, in the bag: ya los tengo en el bote, they are eating out of my hand
bote 3 m Náut boat
bote de salvamento, lifeboat
bote 4 Locuciones: estar de bote en bote, to be packed o to be full to bursting ' bote' also found in these entries: Spanish: lata - limonada - salvavidas - tarro - lancha - patín - remar English: can - canister - dinghy - disclaimer - fit on - jam jar - jar - launch - lifeboat - paint pot - rowboat - rowing boat - screw top - sea - bin - boat - boating - garbage - jack - jam - kitty - life - pedal bin - pleasure - pot - row - rubbish - swing - tin - trash -
4 salto
Del verbo saltar: ( conjugate saltar) \ \
salto es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
saltó es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativoMultiple Entries: saltar salto
saltar ( conjugate saltar) verbo intransitivo 1 (más alto, más lejos) to leap; salto a la cuerda or (Esp) comba to jump rope (AmE), to skip (BrE); salto con or en una pierna to hop; salto de la cama/silla to jump out of bed/one's chair salto en paracaídas to parachute; ¿sabes salto del trampolín? can you dive off the springboard?; saltó al vacío he leapt into space; salto SOBRE algo/algn to jump on sth/sb 2 ( pasar) salto DE algo A algo to jump from sth to sth; 3 [ botón] to come off, pop off; [ chispas] to fly; [ aceite] to spit; [ corcho] to pop out; [ fusibles] to blow; verbo transitivo ‹obstáculo/valla/zanja› to jump (over); ( apoyándose) to vault (over) saltarse verbo pronominal 1 ‹ comida› to miss, skip 2 [ botón] to come off, pop off; [ pintura] to chip; 3 (Chi) [diente/loza] to chip
salto sustantivo masculino 1 ( del suelo) he leapt o jumped up from the floor;◊ se puso en pie de un salto she leapt o sprang to her feet;los pájaros se acercaban dando saltitos the birds were hopping closer to me/us; dar or pegar un salto ( dar un brinco) to jump; ( de susto) to start, jump; ( en natación) dive; salto con pértiga or (AmL) garrocha pole vault;◊ salto de altura/longitud high/long jump;salto (en) alto/(en) largo (AmL) high/long jump; salto mortal somersault 2 (Geog) tb
saltar
I verbo intransitivo
1 to jump, leap
saltar con una pierna, to hop
saltar en paracaídas, to parachute
2 (el aceite, etc) to spit
3 (una alarma, etc) to go off
4 (con una explosión o estallido) to explode, blow up
5 (con una frase) to retort: no me vuelvas a saltar con esa tontería, don't come out with such nonsense again
6 (a la mente) to leap (to one's mind)
II verbo transitivo
1 (por encima de algo) to jump (over) Locuciones: hacer saltar por los aires, to blow into the air
saltar a la vista, to be obvious
salto sustantivo masculino
1 jump, leap
avanzar a saltos, to hop along
dar un salto de alegría, to jump for joy (el corazón) dar un salto, to pound [de, with]
2 Dep jump
salto con pértiga, pole vault
salto mortal, somersault (en el agua) dive
triple salto, hop, step and jump
salto de longitud/de altura, long jump/high jump
3 (por omisión, diferencia, vacío) gap
4 salto atrás, backward step 5 salto de agua, waterfall 6 salto de cama, negligée Locuciones: (avanzar, progresar) dar el salto, to make headway familiar vivir a salto de mata, to live from day to day ' salto' also found in these entries: Spanish: alarma - caída - espontánea - espontáneo - pértiga - rebasar - tijereta - trenzado - ejecutar - encima - listón - pedazo - pegar - saltar - zambullida English: blow up - bound - dive - event - gallop up - headline - in - jump - jump across - jump down - jump off - jump on - leap - moving - over - parachute - pole-vaulting - show-jumping - ski jumping - skip - somersault - spring - spring up - vault - caper - dressing - high - hop - long - pole - robe - shoot - triple - water - wrap
См. также в других словарях:
bounce — I n. 1) a bounce to (there s a bounce to his walk) 2) on the bounce (to catch a ball on the bounce; to hit on the first bounce) II v. 1) (d; intr.) to bounce out of (she bounced out of the chair) 2) (d; intr.) to bounce to (he bounced to his… … Combinatory dictionary
bounce — 1 verb 1 MOVE FROM A SURFACE (I, T) if a ball or other object bounces, it immediately moves away from a surface it has just hit, or you make it move in this way (+ off): The ball bounced off the crossbar and into the net. | bounce sth on/against… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
bounce — 01. The basketball [bounced] off the backboard, and dropped into the net. 02. The children were [bouncing] a rubber ball against the side of the house. 03. The rocks [bounced] down the hillside before coming to a rest in a stream. 04. Bats find… … Grammatical examples in English
bounce — ► VERB 1) spring quickly up or away from a surface after hitting it. 2) move or jump up and down repeatedly. 3) (of light or sound) reflect back from a surface. 4) (bounce back) recover well after a setback or problem. 5) informal (of a cheque)… … English terms dictionary
bounce — [n] spring animation, bound, dynamism, elasticity, energy, give, go, life, liveliness, pep, rebound, recoil, resilience, springiness, vigor, vitality, vivacity, zip; concepts 150,411 bounce [v1] spring up; rebound backlash, bob, boomerang, bound … New thesaurus
bounce — bounce1 S3 [bauns] v ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(ball/object)¦ 2¦(jump up and down)¦ 3¦(cheque)¦ 4¦(walk)¦ 5¦(something moves up and down)¦ 6¦(light/sound)¦ 7¦(email)¦ 8 bounce ideas off somebody 9¦(force somebody to leave)¦ Phrasal … Dictionary of contemporary English
bounce — bounce1 [ bauns ] verb ** ▸ 1 hit surface ▸ 2 move up and down ▸ 3 be reflected ▸ 4 when check is not paid ▸ 5 move energetically ▸ 6 when email comes back ▸ + PHRASES 1. ) intransitive or transitive if a ball or other object bounces, or if you… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
bounce — [[t]ba͟ʊns[/t]] bounces, bouncing, bounced 1) V ERG When an object such as a ball bounces or when you bounce it, it moves upwards from a surface or away from it immediately after hitting it. [V n prep] I bounced a ball against the house... [V n]… … English dictionary
bounce — I UK [baʊns] / US verb Word forms bounce : present tense I/you/we/they bounce he/she/it bounces present participle bouncing past tense bounced past participle bounced ** 1) [intransitive/transitive] if a ball or other object bounces, or if you… … English dictionary
bounce back phrasal — verb (I) to feel better quickly or become successful again after having a lot of problems: In spite of the difficulties we always managed to bounce back. | Becker bounced back in the second set. 2 noun 1 (C) the action of moving up and down on a… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
bounce — [baʊns] verb I 1) [I/T] if a ball or other object bounces, or if you bounce it, it hits a surface then immediately moves away The ball bounced twice before hitting the net.[/ex] Hailstones were bouncing off the roof.[/ex] Josh bounced the ball… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English