-
1 comedia de intriga
• comedy of intrigue -
2 comedia de misterio
• comedy of intrigue -
3 comedia de enredo
• comedy of intrigue• comedy of situation -
4 comedia
f.1 comedy.comedia musical musical (comedy)2 stand-up comedy.* * *1 TEATRO comedy, play2 figurado farce, pretence (US pretense)\hacer comedia familiar to put on an actcomedia de costumbres comedy of mannerscomedia de enredo farcecomedia musical musical, musical comedy* * *noun f.* * *SF1) (Teat) (=obra cómica) comedy2) (Teat) (=obra dramática) play3) (TV)comedia de situación — situation comedy, sitcom *
4) (=fingimiento) play-acting¡déjate ya de tanta comedia! — stop your play-acting!
COMEDIA The Spanish comedias written by dramatists of the Golden Age, or Edad de Oro, were five-act plays performed in open-air theatres. They involved stock characters similar to those of the Italian Commedia dell'Arte: a beautiful lady, her suitor, servants and go-betweens. In these comedias, which were not always comical in nature, action and a moral theme took precedence over character. Cloak and dagger episodes were built around plots involving disguises and mistaken identity. They dealt primarily with affairs of the nobility, while peasants were there to provide comic relief or to enhance particular pastoral themes. One of the most prolific comedia writers was Lope de Vega, who wrote on religious, historical and social themes. Other major comedia writers were Pedro Calderón de la Barca and Tirso de Molina, from whose pen came the figure of the archetypal seducer, Don Juan, in El Burlador de Sevilla y Convidado de Piedra (1630).¡deja de hacer comedia y di la verdad! — stop play-acting o pretending and tell the truth!
* * *b) ( serie cómica) comedy seriesc) (AmL) ( telenovela) soap opera, soap; ( radionovela) radio serial* * *= comedy, funny story, farce.Ex. To take a fairly simple example, we can imagine a user who is searching for information about a particular edition of Dante's 'Divine comedy'.Ex. The article 'Every picture tells a story' describes a new labelling system for the categorisation of library materials which includes a star-shaped badge for Westerns, a flower for gardening and plants, a tank for war, and a clown's face for ' funny stories'.Ex. University libraries are facing the farce of new information and communication technologies.----* comedia de humor negro = black comedy.* comedia musical = musical.* comedia romántica = romantic comedy.* de la comedia = comedic.* Divina Comedia, La = Divine Comedy, The.* sobre la comedia = comedic.* * *b) ( serie cómica) comedy seriesc) (AmL) ( telenovela) soap opera, soap; ( radionovela) radio serial* * *= comedy, funny story, farce.Ex: To take a fairly simple example, we can imagine a user who is searching for information about a particular edition of Dante's 'Divine comedy'.
Ex: The article 'Every picture tells a story' describes a new labelling system for the categorisation of library materials which includes a star-shaped badge for Westerns, a flower for gardening and plants, a tank for war, and a clown's face for ' funny stories'.Ex: University libraries are facing the farce of new information and communication technologies.* comedia de humor negro = black comedy.* comedia musical = musical.* comedia romántica = romantic comedy.* de la comedia = comedic.* Divina Comedia, La = Divine Comedy, The.* sobre la comedia = comedic.* * *2 (serie cómica) comedy seriesCompuestos:cloak-and-dagger dramacomedy of mannerscomedy of intriguemusical* * *
Del verbo comedirse: ( conjugate comedirse)
me comedía es:
1ª persona singular (yo) imperfecto indicativo
se comedía es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) imperfecto indicativo
comedia sustantivo femenino
( cómica) comedy;
( radionovela) radio serial
comedia sustantivo femenino
1 Teat comedy
2 familiar (farsa) act: tu llanto es pura comedia, your crying is just an act
' comedia' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
delirante
- golpe
- telecomedia
- picante
English:
comedy
- pantomime
- sitcom
- play
- situation
- soap
* * *comedia nf1. [obra humorística] comedy;[obra dramática] play;hacer (la) comedia to put on an act;no me vengas con comedias don't start your play-actingLit comedia de capa y espada = play about chivalry, typical of Spanish 17th century theatre;comedia costumbrista comedy of manners;comedia de enredo comedy of intrigue;comedia musical musical (comedy);comedia romántica romantic comedy2. [película] comedy;[serie televisiva] comedy series comedia de situación situation comedy, sitcom3. [género] comedy4. [engaño] farce;su cansancio es pura comedia her tiredness is just an act5. Am [telenovela, radionovela] soap opera* * *f1 comedy;hacer comedia fig put on an act2 L.Am. ( telenovela) soap* * *comedia nf: comedy* * * -
5 enredo
m.1 tangle, knot (maraña).2 mess, complicated affair.comedia de enredo (Teatro & Cine) farce3 (love) affair (amoroso).pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: enredar.* * *1 (maraña) tangle2 (confusión) mess, muddle, confusion, mix-up3 (engaño) deceit4 (travesura) mischief5 (amoroso) love affair6 LITERATURA plot* * *noun m.1) mess2) tangle* * *SM1) [de hilos, cuerda] tangle2) [de datos] [gen] maze, tangle; (=confusión) mix-up3) (=laberinto) maze4) (=asunto turbio) shady business5) (=amorío) love affair6) (=implicación) embroilment, involvement7) [en novela] complicated situation* * *a) ( de hilos) tangle; ( en el pelo) tangle, knotb) ( embrollo)tengo un enredo en las cuentas... — my accounts are in a terrible mess
c) (fam) ( lío amoroso) affair* * *= tangle, snarl, snarl-up, snare, kink.Ex. This project is designed to enable users everywhere to navigate through the information technology tangle.Ex. His work is such a snarl of so many different things that it is as endlessly demanding as it is rewarding.Ex. However, taxi is a more advisable option considering the never-ending Bangkok traffic snarl-up, especially during the rush hour.Ex. Whilst telematics for Africa is full of snares, it is the way towards the road to mastery in the future.Ex. She died at 37 weeks due to a kink in her umbilical cord.----* armar enredos = make + trouble.* enredo de lengua = slip of the tongue.* * *a) ( de hilos) tangle; ( en el pelo) tangle, knotb) ( embrollo)tengo un enredo en las cuentas... — my accounts are in a terrible mess
c) (fam) ( lío amoroso) affair* * *= tangle, snarl, snarl-up, snare, kink.Ex: This project is designed to enable users everywhere to navigate through the information technology tangle.
Ex: His work is such a snarl of so many different things that it is as endlessly demanding as it is rewarding.Ex: However, taxi is a more advisable option considering the never-ending Bangkok traffic snarl-up, especially during the rush hour.Ex: Whilst telematics for Africa is full of snares, it is the way towards the road to mastery in the future.Ex: She died at 37 weeks due to a kink in her umbilical cord.* armar enredos = make + trouble.* enredo de lengua = slip of the tongue.* * *1 (de hilos) tangle; (en el pelo) tangle, knot2(embrollo): tengo un enredo en las cuentas … my accounts are in a terrible messlos enredos burocráticos red tapeestá metido en un enredo de dólares he's involved in some shady currency dealsarmar enredos to make trouble, stir up trouble ( colloq)3 ( fam) (lío amoroso) affair* * *
Del verbo enredar: ( conjugate enredar)
enredo es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
enredó es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo
Multiple Entries:
enredar
enredo
enredar ( conjugate enredar) verbo transitivo
‹asunto/situación› to complicate
verbo intransitivo (fam)
enredo con algo to fiddle (around) with sth
enredarse verbo pronominal
1 [lana/cuerda] to get tangled, become entangled;
[ pelo] to get tangled o knotted;
[ planta] to twist itself around
2 (fam)a) ( en lío amoroso) enredose con algn to get involved with sb
enredo sustantivo masculino
( en el pelo) tangle, knot
◊ tengo un enredo en las cuentas … my accounts are in a terrible mess
enredar verbo transitivo
1 (cables, cuerdas, pelo) to entangle, tangle up
2 (un asunto, situación) to confuse, complicate
3 fig (implicar en algo ilegal, turbio) to involve [en, in], to mix up [en, in]
4 (convencer, liar) lo enredaron para presentarse a las elecciones, they talked him into being a candidate in the election
enredo sustantivo masculino
1 (maraña) tangle
2 (asunto lioso) muddle, mess, mix up
3 (amorío) affair
' enredo' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
berenjenal
- embrollo
- enredarse
- tejemaneje
- tinglado
- tramoya
- greña
English:
mire
- tangle
* * *enredo nm1. [en cuerdas, madeja, pelo] tangle2. [de una situación] mess, complicated affair;¡en menudo enredo me he metido! this is a fine mess I've got myself into!3. [en la mente, al expresarse] muddle;tengo un enredo tremendo de fechas o [m5] con las fechas I've got into a terrific muddle over the dates4. [asunto ilícito] shady affair5. [amoroso] (love) affair, entanglement;tener un enredo con alguien to have an affair with sb, to be involved with sb6. [mentira, intriga] mischief-making7. Lit plot* * *m1 tangle2 ( confusión) mess, confusion3 ( intriga) intrigue4 amoroso affair* * *enredo nm1) embrollo: muddle, confusion2) maraña: tangle* * *enredo n1. (lío, confusión) mess2. (maraña) tangle -
6 comedia de enredo
-
7 comedia de costumbres/de enredo
comedy of manners/of intrigue* * *comedy of manners/of intrigueSpanish-English dictionary > comedia de costumbres/de enredo
-
8 excéntrico
adj.eccentric, odd, weird, cranky.m.eccentric, screwball, rara avis, weirdie.* * *► adjetivo1 eccentric* * *(f. - excéntrica)noun adj.* * *excéntrico, -aADJ SM / F eccentric* * *- ca adjetivo/masculino, femenino eccentric* * *= eccentric, crank, oddball [odd ball], kooky, flaky [flakey], wacky [wackier -comp., wackiest -sup.].Ex. The person who never throws away a newspaper is regarded as an eccentric; the person who never throws away a book is more likely to be regarded as a bibliophile no matter what the resulting motley assortment of books may be.Ex. The British Museum Reading Room is filled with cranks, hacks, poverty-stricken scholars who cherish their hobby.Ex. Some librarians think people making these kinds of requests for responsive, contemporaneous headings, and for different cataloging practices are sort of kooky, unrealistic, oddballs.Ex. Some librarians think people making these kinds of requests for responsive, contemporaneous headings, and for different cataloging practices are sort of kooky, unrealistic, oddballs.Ex. Children who were in some way different were excused from family responsibilities in childhood because they were, for example, 'spoiled,' a 'problem child,' or ' flaky'.Ex. 'Open Season' is a wild and wacky animated comedy set in the town of Timberline.* * *- ca adjetivo/masculino, femenino eccentric* * *= eccentric, crank, oddball [odd ball], kooky, flaky [flakey], wacky [wackier -comp., wackiest -sup.].Ex: The person who never throws away a newspaper is regarded as an eccentric; the person who never throws away a book is more likely to be regarded as a bibliophile no matter what the resulting motley assortment of books may be.
Ex: The British Museum Reading Room is filled with cranks, hacks, poverty-stricken scholars who cherish their hobby.Ex: Some librarians think people making these kinds of requests for responsive, contemporaneous headings, and for different cataloging practices are sort of kooky, unrealistic, oddballs.Ex: Some librarians think people making these kinds of requests for responsive, contemporaneous headings, and for different cataloging practices are sort of kooky, unrealistic, oddballs.Ex: Children who were in some way different were excused from family responsibilities in childhood because they were, for example, 'spoiled,' a 'problem child,' or ' flaky'.Ex: 'Open Season' is a wild and wacky animated comedy set in the town of Timberline.* * *1 ‹conducta/persona› eccentricmasculine, feminineeccentric* * *
excéntrico◊ -ca adjetivo/ sustantivo masculino, femenino
eccentric
excéntrico,-a adjetivo eccentric
' excéntrico' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
excéntrica
English:
crank
- eccentric
- flaky
- intrigue
- off-beat
- queer
- wacky
- screw
* * *excéntrico, -a♦ adj1. [extravagante] eccentric2. Geom eccentric♦ nm,feccentric* * *I adj eccentricII m, excéntrica f eccentric* * *excéntrico, -ca adj & n: eccentric* * *excéntrico adj eccentric
См. также в других словарях:
comedy of intrigue — a comedy of situation in which complicated conspiracies and stratagems dominate the plot … Useful english dictionary
intrigue, comedy of — ▪ narrative genre also called comedy of situation in dramatic literature, a comic form in which complicated conspiracies and stratagems dominate the plot. The complex plots and subplots of such comedies are often based on ridiculous and… … Universalium
Comedy — This article is about a genre of dramatic works. For other uses, see Comedy (disambiguation). For the popular meaning of the term comedy , see Humour. Thalia, muse of comedy, holding a comic mask detail of “Muses Sarcophagus”, the nine Muses and… … Wikipedia
Comedy (drama) — This article is about performing arts. For a general genre, see Comedy. Performing arts Major forms Dance · Music · Opera · Theatre · Circus … Wikipedia
comedy — Synonyms and related words: Atticism, Thalia, agile wit, arlequinade, black comedy, black humor, bladder, broad comedy, burlesque, burletta, camp, cap and bells, caricature, comedie bouffe, comedie larmoyante, comedie rosse, comedietta, comedy… … Moby Thesaurus
Intrigue — In*trigue , n. [Cf. F. intrique. See {Intrigue}, v. i.] [1913 Webster] 1. Intricacy; complication. [Obs.] Sir M. Hale. [1913 Webster] 2. A complicated plot or scheme intended to effect some purpose by secret artifice; conspiracy; stratagem. [1913 … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
comedy — comedial /keuh mee dee euhl/, adj. /kom i dee/, n., pl. comedies. 1. a play, movie, etc., of light and humorous character with a happy or cheerful ending; a dramatic work in which the central motif is the triumph over adverse circumstance,… … Universalium
Comedy of menace — Main article: Characteristics of Harold Pinter s work# Comedy of menace Comedy of menace is a term used to describe the plays of David Campton, Nigel Dennis, N. F. Simpson, and Harold Pinter by drama critic Irving Wardle, borrowed from the… … Wikipedia
situation comedy — Synonyms and related words: Grand Guignol, Passion play, Thalia, Tom show, antimasque, arlequinade, audience success, ballet, black comedy, bomb, broad comedy, broadcast drama, burlesque, burlesque show, burletta, camp, charade, cliff hanger,… … Moby Thesaurus
musical comedy — Synonyms and related words: Broadway musical, Singspiel, Thalia, arlequinade, ballad opera, ballet, ballet divertissement, black comedy, broad comedy, burlesque, burletta, camp, chorus show, comedie bouffe, comedie larmoyante, comedie rosse,… … Moby Thesaurus
Restoration comedy — is the name given to English comedies written and performed in the Restoration period from 1660 to 1710. After public stage performances had been banned for 18 years by the Puritan regime, the re opening of the theatres in 1660 signalled a… … Wikipedia