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1 conquista
f.1 conquest.2 pickup, casual acquaintance made in hope of having a sexual relationship, casual sexual acquaintance, bit of stuff.pres.indicat.3rd person singular (él/ella/ello) present indicative of spanish verb: conquistar.imperat.2nd person singular (tú) Imperative of Spanish verb: conquistar.* * *1 conquest\hacer una conquista (amorosa) to make a conquest* * *noun f.* * *SF conquestir de conquista — (fig) to be dressed to kill
* * *1) ( acción)a) (de territorio, pueblo) conquestir or salir a la conquista de algo — to set out to conquer something
b) (de victoria, fama)se lanzó a la conquista del éxito/de la medalla — she set out to achieve success/to win the medal
c) la Conquista (Hist) the Spanish conquest ( of America)2) ( logro) achievement3) (fam) ( amorosa) conquestsalir de conquista — to go out on the make (AmE) o (BrE) pickup (colloq)
4) (AmS period) (Dep) goal* * *= conquest, bedroom conquest.Ex. It is said that Alexander perfected the staff concept during his conquest of Macedonia.Ex. Again and again, the author races past important events in Evans' life in order to dwell on all his bedroom conquests and juvenile hijinks.----* conquista amorosa = bedroom conquest.* * *1) ( acción)a) (de territorio, pueblo) conquestir or salir a la conquista de algo — to set out to conquer something
b) (de victoria, fama)se lanzó a la conquista del éxito/de la medalla — she set out to achieve success/to win the medal
c) la Conquista (Hist) the Spanish conquest ( of America)2) ( logro) achievement3) (fam) ( amorosa) conquestsalir de conquista — to go out on the make (AmE) o (BrE) pickup (colloq)
4) (AmS period) (Dep) goal* * *= conquest, bedroom conquest.Ex: It is said that Alexander perfected the staff concept during his conquest of Macedonia.
Ex: Again and again, the author races past important events in Evans' life in order to dwell on all his bedroom conquests and juvenile hijinks.* conquista amorosa = bedroom conquest.* * *A (acción)1 (de un territorio, un pueblo) conquestir or salir a la conquista de nuevas tierras/del Everest to set out to conquer new territories/Everestla conquista del espacio the conquest of spacelanzarse a la conquista del mercado to set out to capture the market2(de una victoria, la fama): el equipo salió a la conquista de la medalla de oro the team set out to win the gold medalse lanzó a la conquista del éxito/de la fama she set out to achieve success/fame3la Conquista de México/del Perú the conquest of Mexico/PeruB (logro) achievementC1 ( fam) (de un amante) conquestsiempre está alardeando de sus conquistas amorosas he is always boasting about his conquestssalieron de conquista they went out trying to pick up women ( colloq)* * *
Del verbo conquistar: ( conjugate conquistar)
conquista es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativo
Multiple Entries:
conquista
conquistar
conquista sustantivo femenino
conquistar ( conjugate conquistar) verbo transitivo
‹ mercado› to capture
‹éxito/fama› to achieve
‹persona/público› to captivate;
‹ corazón› to capture;
conquista sustantivo femenino
1 (dominación de un territorio) conquest: la conquista del espacio, the conquest of space
2 (logro mediante esfuerzo y habilidad, un ligue) conquests, seduction, success in love: son sus conquistas de verano, they're her summer conquests
conquistar verbo transitivo
1 (territorios) to conquer: conquistamos la cima al atardecer, we reached the summit at dusk
2 (a una persona) to win over: la conquisté con mi gran encanto, I seduced her with my great charm
3 figurado (puesto, título) to win: conquistó el título después de una carrera impresionante, he achieved the position after an impressive career
' conquista' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
consagración
- conquistador
- levante
English:
conquest
- capture
* * *conquista nf1. [de tierras] conquest;[de castillo] capture;la conquista del poder the winning of power;la conquista de nuevos clientes the winning of new customersla conquista de América the conquest of America;la conquista del espacio the conquest of space2. [de libertad, derecho] winning;la conquista del voto the winning of the vote;una de las grandes conquistas de los sindicatos one of the great achievements of the trade unions3. [premio, medalla, título] victory;lucharon por la conquista del segundo puesto they battled for second place;una nueva conquista del Libertadores another victory for Libertadores4. [amorosa] conquest;va presumiendo de sus conquistas amorosas he goes around boasting about his conquests;llegó a la fiesta con su última conquista he arrived at the party with his latest conquest* * *f conquest* * *conquista nf: conquest* * *conquista n conquest -
2 Eroberung
f conquest (auch hum. Person); einer Stadt etc.: capture; eine Eroberung machen fig. make a conquest; auf Eroberungen aus sein oder ausgehen umg., hum. be aiming ( oder set out) to make a few conquests* * *die Eroberungconquest; capture* * *Er|obe|rungf -, -en (lit, fig)conquest; (einer Festung, Stadt) capture, taking* * *((an) act of conquering: The Norman Conquest; He's impressed with you - you've made a conquest.) conquest* * *Er·obe·rung<-, -en>f1. (das Erobern) conquest2. (erobertes Gebiet) conquered territoryeine \Eroberung machen to make a conquest* * *die; Eroberung, Eroberungen (auch fig. scherzh.) conquest; (einer Stadt, Festung) taking; (der Macht) seizing* * *eine Eroberung machen fig make a conquest;* * *die; Eroberung, Eroberungen (auch fig. scherzh.) conquest; (einer Stadt, Festung) taking; (der Macht) seizing* * *f.conquest n. -
3 Kavalier
m; -s, -e1. gentleman; ein Kavalier der alten Schule a ( oder the) perfect gentleman, a gentleman of the old school; der Kavalier genießt und schweigt a gentleman never boasts about his conquests2. altm., hum. (Begleiter, Freund) cavalier, beau3. HIST. (Edelmann) nobleman* * *der Kavaliergentleman; cavalier* * *Ka|va|lier [kava'liːɐ]m -s, -e1) (= galanter Mann) gentlemander Kavalier genießt und schweigt — one does not boast about one's conquests
* * *Ka·va·lier<-s, -e>[kavaˈli:ɐ̯]m gentleman▶ der \Kavalier genießt und schweigt a gentleman does not boast about his conquests* * *der; Kavaliers, Kavaliere gentleman* * *1. gentleman;der Kavalier genießt und schweigt a gentleman never boasts about his conquests2. obs, hum (Begleiter, Freund) cavalier, beau* * *der; Kavaliers, Kavaliere gentleman -
4 ausgehen
v/i (unreg., trennb., ist -ge-)1. (weggehen, auch zum Vergnügen) go out; zum Essen ausgehen eat out; mein Vater ist ausgegangen my father’s out ( oder isn’t in); sie gehen wenig aus they hardly ever go out, they don’t go out much2. ausgehen von (kommen) von einem Ort: start from ( oder at); Anregung, Vorschlag: come from; Gefühl, Wärme: radiate, emanate; die Sache ging von ihm aus it was his idea; der Plan ging von der Regierung aus the government initiated the plan; von ihm geht eine Ruhe / Begeisterungsfähigkeit aus he radiates calm / enthusiasm3. fig.: ausgehen von (als Grundlage nehmen) take s.th. as a starting point; fig. bei einer Entscheidung etc. von etw. ausgehen base a decision etc. on s.th.; wenn wir davon ausgehen, dass... on the assumption that..., assuming that...; ich gehe davon aus, dass... I’m assuming that..., I’m working on the assumption that...; Sie dürfen davon ausgehen, dass... you can assume ( oder take it as read, Am. given) that...; Sie gehen von falschen Voraussetzungen aus you’re starting from false assumptions4. (resultieren) end, turn out; gut etc. ausgehen turn out well etc.; der Film geht gut / tragisch aus the film has a happy ending / the film has a tragic ending, the film ends tragically ( oder in tragedy); wie ist die Sache ausgegangen? how did it work out ( oder end up)?; wie ist das Spiel ausgegangen? how did the match (Am. game) end?; das Spiel ging 1:3 aus the match (Am. game) ended 1-3; unentschieden ausgehen end in a draw5. Geld, Vorrat etc.: run out; allmählich: run low; uns ging das Geld / der Gesprächsstoff etc. aus we ran out of money / things to say to each other; mir geht bald die Geduld ( mit ihr) aus I’m running out of patience (with her); ihm ging die Luft ( oder der Atem, umg. die Puste) aus he ran out of breath (fig. steam)6. Licht, Feuer etc.: go out; Dial. Kino, Schule etc.: finish8. ( straf) frei ausgehen go unprosecuted ( oder unpunished); get off (scot-free) umg.; leer ausgehen come away empty-handed, end up with nothing* * *(ausfallen) to fall out;(enden) to eventuate; to go out;(erlöschen) to go out;(herstammen) to emanate;(weggehen) to go out;(zu Ende gehen) to run out* * *aus|ge|hen sep irreg aux sein1. vi1) (=weggehen zum Vergnügen) to go out; (= spazieren gehen) to go out (for a walk)er geht selten aus — he doesn't go out much
ihm gehen die Haare aus — his hair is falling out
ihm gehen die Zähne aus — he is losing his teeth
von dem Platz gehen vier Straßen aus — four streets lead or go off (from) the square
von der Rede des Ministers ging eine große Wirkung aus — the minister's speech had a great effect
4) (=abgeschickt werden Post) to be sent offdie áúsgehende Post — the outgoing mail
5) (= zugrunde legen) to start out (von from)gehen wir einmal davon aus, dass... — let us assume that..., let us start from the assumption that...
wovon gehst du bei dieser Behauptung aus? — on what are you basing your statement?
davon kann man nicht áúsgehen — you can't go by that
6)áúsgehen — to be intent on sth
auf Gewinn áúsgehen — to be intent on making a profit
auf Eroberungen áúsgehen (hum inf) — to be out to make a few conquests
7) (=einen bestimmten Ausgang haben ESP SPORT) to end; (= ausfallen) to turn outgut/schlecht áúsgehen — to turn out well/badly; (Film etc) to end happily/unhappily; (Abend, Spiel) to end well/badly
8) (LING = enden) to end9)straffrei or straflos áúsgehen — to receive no punishment, to get off scot-free (inf)
leer áúsgehen (inf) — to come away empty-handed
10) (=zu Ende sein Vorräte etc) to run out; (dial Vorstellung, Schule etc) to finishmir ging die Geduld aus — I lost (my) patience
mir ging das Geld aus — I ran out of money
ihm ist die Luft or die Puste or der Atem ausgegangen (inf) (lit) — he ran out of breath or puff (Brit inf); (fig) he ran out of steam (inf); (finanziell) he ran out of funds
11) (= aufhören zu brennen) to go out12) (inf = sich ausziehen lassen) to come offdie nassen Sachen gehen so schwer aus — these wet things are so hard to take off
2. vr (Aus)es geht sich aus — it works out all right; (Vorräte, Geld etc) there is enough
* * *1) ((with well/badly) to be approved or disapproved of: The story went down well (with them).) go down2) (to become extinguished: The light has gone out.) go out3) (to go to parties, concerts, meetings etc: We don't go out as much as we did when we were younger.) go out4) (to be frequently in the company of (a person, usually of the opposite sex): I've been going out with her for months.) go out5) ((of a supply) to come to an end: The food has run out.) run out6) ((with of) to have no more: We've run out of money.) run out* * *aus|ge·henvi irreg Hilfsverb: sein1. (aus dem Haus gehen, sich vergnügen) to go outer ging aus, um Einkäufe zu machen we went out for shopping▪ ausgegangen sein to have gone out, to be out2. (sich vergnügen) to go outzum Essen \ausgehen to dine outgroß \ausgehen to go out in great style3. (abgehen)von dem Platz gehen vier Straßen aus four streets lead from [or off] the square4. (herrühren, vorgebracht werden)▪ von jdm \ausgehen to come from sbvon wem geht diese Idee aus? whose idea is this?5. (ausgestrahlt werden)▪ etw geht von jdm/etw aus sb/sth radiates sthvon dem Feuer geht ein warmer Schein aus the fire spreads a warm lightgroße Ruhe geht von ihr aus she radiates a feeling of great calm6. (enden) to end▪ gut/schlecht \ausgehen to turn out well/badly; Buch, Film to have a happy/sad end[ing]; Spiel to end well/badlyunentschieden \ausgehen to end in a drawin der ganzen Straße gingen die Lichter aus the whole street went blackmir ist schon wieder das Kaminfeuer/die Zigarette ausgegangen my cigarette/the fire has gone out again8. (zum Ausgangspunkt nehmen)▪ von etw dat \ausgehen Annahme to start [out] from sth; Person to take sth as a starting point; (zugrunde legen) to take sth as a basis; (basieren) to be based on sth; (annehmen) to assume sthwovon gehst du bei deiner Theorie aus? what are you basing your theory on?diese Theorie geht von der falschen Voraussetzung aus this theory is based on the wrong assumptiondavon kannst du nicht \ausgehen you can't go by thatdavon [o von der Annahme] \ausgehen, dass... to assume [or start [out] from the assumption] that...es ist davon auszugehen, dass... it can be assumed that...von der Tatsache/Vorstellung ausgehen, dass... to start [out] from the fact/idea that...9. (sich erschöpfen) to run outdas Brot ist ausgegangen there's no more bread▪ etw geht jdm aus sb runs out of sthuns ist das Brot ausgegangen we've run out of breaduns geht langsam das Geld aus we're running out of moneydeine guten Ausreden gehen dir wohl auch nie aus! (fam) you're never at a loss for a good excusemir geht [allmählich] die Geduld aus I'm losing [my] patienceihm ist die Luft [o (fam) Puste] ausgegangen he ran out of steam fam; (finanziell) he ran out of funds10. (ausfallen) to fall outjdm gehen die Haare/Zähne aus sb's hair is/sb's teeth are falling outdas Kleid geht beim Waschen aus the dress fades when you wash it▪ sich \ausgehen to be enoughes geht sich aus there's enoughdie Milch geht sich für den Kaffee noch aus there's [or we have] just enough milk for the coffeees geht sich aus, dass wir den Bus erreichen we'll manage to catch the bus* * *unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; mit sein1) go out2) (fast aufgebraucht sein; auch fig.) run outihm geht der Atem od. die Luft od. (ugs.) die Puste aus — he is getting short or out of breath; he is running out of puff (Brit. coll.); (fig.): (er hat keine Kraft mehr) he is running out of steam; (fig.): (er ist finanziell am Ende) he is going broke (coll.)
3) (ausfallen) < hair> fall out4) (aufhören zu brennen) go out5) (enden) endgut/schlecht ausgehen — turn out well/badly; <story, film> end happily/unhappily
6) (herrühren)von jemandem/etwas ausgehen — come from somebody/something
7)von etwas ausgehen — (etwas zugrunde legen) take something as one's starting point
8)auf Abenteuer ausgehen — look for adventure
auf Eroberungen ausgehen — (scherzh.) set out or be aiming to make a few conquests; s. auch leer 1); straffrei
* * *ausgehen v/i (irr, trennb, ist -ge-)1. (weggehen, auch zum Vergnügen) go out;zum Essen ausgehen eat out;mein Vater ist ausgegangen my father’s out ( oder isn’t in);sie gehen wenig aus they hardly ever go out, they don’t go out much2.ausgehen von (kommen) von einem Ort: start from ( oder at); Anregung, Vorschlag: come from; Gefühl, Wärme: radiate, emanate;die Sache ging von ihm aus it was his idea;der Plan ging von der Regierung aus the government initiated the plan;von ihm geht eine Ruhe/Begeisterungsfähigkeit aus he radiates calm/enthusiasm3. fig:figvon etwas ausgehen base a decision etc on sth;wenn wir davon ausgehen, dass … on the assumption that …, assuming that …;ich gehe davon aus, dass … I’m assuming that …, I’m working on the assumption that …;Sie gehen von falschen Voraussetzungen aus you’re starting from false assumptions4. (resultieren) end, turn out;gut etcausgehen turn out well etc;der Film geht gut/tragisch aus the film has a happy ending/the film has a tragic ending, the film ends tragically ( oder in tragedy);wie ist die Sache ausgegangen? how did it work out ( oder end up)?;wie ist das Spiel ausgegangen? how did the match (US game) end?;das Spiel ging 1:3 aus the match (US game) ended 1-3;unentschieden ausgehen end in a drawuns ging das Geld/der Gesprächsstoff etcaus we ran out of money/things to say to each other;mir geht bald die Geduld (mit ihr) aus I’m running out of patience (with her);der Atem, umgaus he ran out of breath (fig steam)6. Licht, Feuer etc: go out; dial Kino, Schule etc: finish7. Haare, Federn etc: fall out;ihm gehen die Haare aus auch he’s losing his hair8.leer ausgehen come away empty-handed, end up with nothing9.auf etwas (akk)10.12. österr:* * *unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; mit sein1) go out2) (fast aufgebraucht sein; auch fig.) run outihm geht der Atem od. die Luft od. (ugs.) die Puste aus — he is getting short or out of breath; he is running out of puff (Brit. coll.); (fig.): (er hat keine Kraft mehr) he is running out of steam; (fig.): (er ist finanziell am Ende) he is going broke (coll.)
3) (ausfallen) < hair> fall out4) (aufhören zu brennen) go out5) (enden) endgut/schlecht ausgehen — turn out well/badly; <story, film> end happily/unhappily
6) (herrühren)von jemandem/etwas ausgehen — come from somebody/something
7)von etwas ausgehen — (etwas zugrunde legen) take something as one's starting point
8)auf Eroberungen ausgehen — (scherzh.) set out or be aiming to make a few conquests; s. auch leer 1); straffrei
* * *v.to go out v.to outgo v. -
5 tableau
1. masculine nouna. ( = peinture) painting• aller au tableau to go up to the blackboard ; ( = se faire interroger) to be asked questions (on a school subject)c. [de clés] rack• tu vois le tableau ! (inf) you can imagine!2. compounds• ajouter qch à son tableau de chasse to add sth to one's list of conquests ► tableau des conjugaisons conjugation table• être inscrit au tableau d'honneur to appear on the prize list (Brit) to make the honor roll (US) ► tableau de maître masterpiece* * *pl tableaux tablo nom masculin1) ( œuvre d'art) gén picture; ( peinture) painting2) ( description) picture3) ( spectacle) pictureen plus, il était ivre, tu vois un peu le tableau! — (colloq) on top of that he was drunk, you can just imagine!
4) ( présentation graphique) table, chart5) École blackboard6) ( affichant des renseignements) gén board; Chemin de Fer indicator board7) ( support mural) board8) Théâtre short scene•Phrasal Verbs:••jouer or miser sur les deux tableaux — to hedge one's bets
gagner/perdre sur tous les tableaux — to win/to lose on all counts
* * *tablotableaux pl nm1) ART painting2) fig (= description, situation) pictureLes résultats catastrophiques de l'an dernier assombrissent encore le tableau. — Last year's catastrophic results make the picture even darker.
3) (= panneau) board4) (= schéma) table, chart* * *2 ( description) picture; brosser un tableau sombre de la situation to paint a black picture of the situation; et pour achever or compléter le tableau and to cap it all;3 ( spectacle) picture; des enfants jouant dans un jardin, quel tableau charmant! children playing in a garden, what a charming picture!; le tableau général est plus sombre the overall picture is more gloomy; en plus, il était ivre, tu vois un peu le tableau○! on top of that he was drunk, you can just imagine!;4 ( présentation graphique) table, chart; ‘voir tableau’ ‘see table’; tableau des marées tide table; tableau des températures temperature chart; tableau synchronique/synoptique historical/synoptic chart; tableau à double entrée Ordinat two-dimensional array; présenter qch sous forme de tableau to present sth in tabular form;5 Scol blackboard; écrire qch au tableau to write sth on the blackboard; passer or aller au tableau to go (up) to the blackboard;6 ( affichant des renseignements) board; Rail indicator board; tableau des départs/arrivées departures/arrivals indicator; tableau horaire timetable;9 Théât short scene.tableau d'affichage notice board; tableau d'avancement promotion table, roster list; tableau blanc white board; tableau de bord Aut dashboard; Aviat, Rail instrument panel; ( en gestion) performance indicators (pl); tableau de chasse ( de chasseur) total number of kills; ( de séducteur) list of conquests; ( de pilote de chasse) total number of hits; tableau clinique patient's charts (pl); tableau de commande control panel; tableau comptable financial statement; tableau de conférence paperboard; tableau d'honneur honours board GB, honor roll US; être inscrit au tableau d'honneur to be on the honours board GB ou honor roll US; tableau de maître Art master painting; tableau de marche flow chart; tableau matriciel matrix; tableau noir blackboard; tableau papier paperboard; tableau de prix price list; tableau vivant tableau vivant.jouer or miser sur les deux tableaux to hedge one's bets; gagner/perdre sur tous les tableaux to win/to lose on all counts.1. ÉDUCATION3. [panneau d'information] boardtableau des arrivées/départs arrivals/departures board6. [description] picturevous nous faites un tableau très alarmant de la situation you've painted an alarming picture of the situation7. [diagramme] tabletableau horaire [des trains] timetable9. ÉLECTRICITÉ10. INFORMATIQUE array11. MATHÉMATIQUES table12. MÉDECINEa. [répétitions] rehearsal rosterb. [représentations] performances roster15. (locution)gagner sur les deux/tous les tableaux to win on both/all counts16. INFORMATIQUEtableau de bord nom masculintableau de chasse nom masculin3. (familier) [conquêtes amoureuses] conquests————————tableau d'honneur nom masculin -
6 Weibergeschichten
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7 Samarcanda
= Samarkand.Ex. He established Samarkand as his imperial capital in the 1360s and set about aggrandising it with plunder from his conquests.* * *= Samarkand.Ex: He established Samarkand as his imperial capital in the 1360s and set about aggrandising it with plunder from his conquests.
* * *Samarkand -
8 agrandar
v.1 to make bigger.2 to enlarge, to add to, to increase, to amplify.La máquina amplió la fotografía The machine enlarged the photograph.* * *1 (hacer grande) to enlarge, make larger2 (exagerar) to exaggerate1 (hacerse grande) to enlarge, become larger2 (acentuarse) to become more intense* * *1.VT (=hacer más grande) to make bigger, enlarge; (=exagerar) to exaggerate, magnify2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) < casa> to extend; <agujero/pozo> to make... larger o bigger; < fotocopia> to enlarge, blow up; < vestido> to let outb) ( exagerar) to exaggerate2.agrandarse v pron agujero/bulto to grow larger, get bigger* * *= widen, magnify, aggrandise [aggrandize, -USA].Ex. The quality of machine indexing can be enhanced by widening the indexing field.Ex. More libraries should make use of the Tieman tv-loop which enables the partially-sighted to magnify pages of printed text.Ex. He established Samarkand as his imperial capital in the 1360s and set about aggrandising it with plunder from his conquests.----* agrandar los horizontes = enlarge + horizons.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) < casa> to extend; <agujero/pozo> to make... larger o bigger; < fotocopia> to enlarge, blow up; < vestido> to let outb) ( exagerar) to exaggerate2.agrandarse v pron agujero/bulto to grow larger, get bigger* * *= widen, magnify, aggrandise [aggrandize, -USA].Ex: The quality of machine indexing can be enhanced by widening the indexing field.
Ex: More libraries should make use of the Tieman tv-loop which enables the partially-sighted to magnify pages of printed text.Ex: He established Samarkand as his imperial capital in the 1360s and set about aggrandising it with plunder from his conquests.* agrandar los horizontes = enlarge + horizons.* * *agrandar [A1 ]vt1 ‹casa› to extend; ‹agujero/pozo› to make … larger o bigger, enlarge; ‹original/fotocopia› to enlarge, blow upno te pongas mi suéter que me lo agrandas ( fam); don't wear my sweater, you'll stretch it2 (en costura) ‹vestido› to let out3 (exagerar) to exaggerateno hay que agrandar la importancia de lo que ha pasado don't get what has happened out of perspective, don't blow these events up out of proportion«agujero/bulto» to grow larger, get biggerse había agrandado aún más el abismo que los separaba the gulf between them had widened still furtherel equipo se agrandó con aquel triunfo the team grew in stature after that victory* * *
agrandar ( conjugate agrandar) verbo transitivo
‹agujero/pozo› to make … larger o bigger;
‹ fotocopia› to enlarge, blow up;
‹ vestido› to let out
agrandarse verbo pronominal [agujero/bulto] to grow larger, get bigger
agrandar verbo transitivo to enlarge, make larger
' agrandar' also found in these entries:
English:
enlarge
- let out
- let
* * *♦ vtto make bigger;ese maquillaje te agranda los ojos that make-up makes your eyes look bigger* * *v/t make bigger, enlarge* * *agrandar vt1) : to exaggerate2) : to enlarge* * *agrandar vb to enlarge -
9 ampliar
v.1 to expand.2 to enlarge, to blow up (photography).La máquina amplió la fotografía The machine enlarged the photograph.3 to further, to continue (estudios).4 to increase, to augment, to amplify, to enlarge.Su estrategia amplía las posibilidades His strategy increases the...* * *1 to enlarge, extend2 ARQUITECTURA to build an extension onto3 (fotografía) to enlarge4 (capital) to increase5 (estudios) to further6 (tema, idea) to develop, expand on* * *verb1) to expand, extend2) enlarge3) widen* * *1. VT1) [en tamaño] to extendqueremos ampliar el salón — we want to extend the living room, we want to make the living room bigger
lee mucho para ampliar su vocabulario — he reads a lot in order to extend o expand his vocabulary
2) [en número] to increaseno ampliarán la plantilla — they are not going to increase o expand the headcount o the payroll
3) [+ prórroga, período] to extendhan ampliado el plazo de matrícula — they have put back the closing date for enrolment, they have extended the period for enrolment
4) (Fot) to enlarge5) (Com) [+ empresa, compañía] to expand, grow; [+ capital] to increasedeseamos ampliar el campo de acción de la empresa — we want to extend o expand o broaden the company's area of business
6) [+ sonido] to amplify7) [+ idea, explicación] to elaborate on8) [+ poderes] to extend, widen2.See:* * *verbo transitivoa) <local/carretera> to extend; < negocio> to expandb) <capital/plantilla> to increasec) <conocimientos/vocabulario> to increase; < explicación> to expand (on); < campo de acción> to widen, broadend) <plazo/período> to extende) < fotografía> to enlarge, blow up* * *= augment, broaden, elaborate on, expand, extend, magnify, widen, add to, amplify, aggrandise [aggrandize, -USA].Ex. These sources which form the basis of the intellectual selection of terms may be augmented by the machine selection of terms.Ex. The program's purpose is to enable U.S. librarians and publishers to enrich and broaden their career experience through a short period of overseas service.Ex. The documents cited may support and provide precedent for, illustrate or elaborate on what the author has to say.Ex. As the quantity of knowledge expands the need to organise it becomes more pressing.Ex. The term author is normally extended to include writers, illustrator, performers, producers, translators, and others with some intellectual or artistic responsibility for a work.Ex. More libraries should make use of the Tieman tv-loop which enables the partially-sighted to magnify pages of printed text.Ex. The quality of machine indexing can be enhanced by widening the indexing field.Ex. In addition, Britain has one of the most extensive bodies of legislation in the world, which is added to daily and encrusted with myriad rules and regulations.Ex. The director amplified: 'The personal touch would probably take some sting out of the layoff, but if I did it this way I could avoid involved discussions'.Ex. He established Samarkand as his imperial capital in the 1360s and set about aggrandising it with plunder from his conquests.----* ampliar el alcance de = extend + the reach of.* ampliar el conocimiento = widen + knowledge, broaden + knowledge, deepen + understanding.* ampliar el horario de apertura = extend + hours.* ampliar el horizonte = broaden + perspective, widen + the scope.* ampliar el interés = broaden + interest.* ampliar la cobertura = broaden + coverage, broaden + the scope.* ampliar la experiencia = extend + experience, broaden + experience.* ampliar las fronteras de = push + the frontiers of, push + the boundaries of.* ampliar las fronteras del conocimiento = push back + the frontiers of knowledge.* ampliar los horizontes = broaden + horizons, extend + horizons, enlarge + horizons, widen + horizons, expand + Posesivo + horizons, expand + views.* ampliar los recursos = broaden + resources.* ampliar + Posesivo + educación = extend + Posesivo + education.* ampliar una búsqueda = broaden + search, expand + Posesivo + search.* ampliar una fotografía = enlarge + picture.* * *verbo transitivoa) <local/carretera> to extend; < negocio> to expandb) <capital/plantilla> to increasec) <conocimientos/vocabulario> to increase; < explicación> to expand (on); < campo de acción> to widen, broadend) <plazo/período> to extende) < fotografía> to enlarge, blow up* * *= augment, broaden, elaborate on, expand, extend, magnify, widen, add to, amplify, aggrandise [aggrandize, -USA].Ex: These sources which form the basis of the intellectual selection of terms may be augmented by the machine selection of terms.
Ex: The program's purpose is to enable U.S. librarians and publishers to enrich and broaden their career experience through a short period of overseas service.Ex: The documents cited may support and provide precedent for, illustrate or elaborate on what the author has to say.Ex: As the quantity of knowledge expands the need to organise it becomes more pressing.Ex: The term author is normally extended to include writers, illustrator, performers, producers, translators, and others with some intellectual or artistic responsibility for a work.Ex: More libraries should make use of the Tieman tv-loop which enables the partially-sighted to magnify pages of printed text.Ex: The quality of machine indexing can be enhanced by widening the indexing field.Ex: In addition, Britain has one of the most extensive bodies of legislation in the world, which is added to daily and encrusted with myriad rules and regulations.Ex: The director amplified: 'The personal touch would probably take some sting out of the layoff, but if I did it this way I could avoid involved discussions'.Ex: He established Samarkand as his imperial capital in the 1360s and set about aggrandising it with plunder from his conquests.* ampliar el alcance de = extend + the reach of.* ampliar el conocimiento = widen + knowledge, broaden + knowledge, deepen + understanding.* ampliar el horario de apertura = extend + hours.* ampliar el horizonte = broaden + perspective, widen + the scope.* ampliar el interés = broaden + interest.* ampliar la cobertura = broaden + coverage, broaden + the scope.* ampliar la experiencia = extend + experience, broaden + experience.* ampliar las fronteras de = push + the frontiers of, push + the boundaries of.* ampliar las fronteras del conocimiento = push back + the frontiers of knowledge.* ampliar los horizontes = broaden + horizons, extend + horizons, enlarge + horizons, widen + horizons, expand + Posesivo + horizons, expand + views.* ampliar los recursos = broaden + resources.* ampliar + Posesivo + educación = extend + Posesivo + education.* ampliar una búsqueda = broaden + search, expand + Posesivo + search.* ampliar una fotografía = enlarge + picture.* * *vt1 ‹local/carretera› to extend; ‹negocio› to expand2 ‹capital/plantilla› to increase3 ‹conocimientos/vocabulario› to increase, improve; ‹explicación› to expand (on); ‹campo de acción› to widen, broaden, extenduna versión ampliada y corregida an expanded and corrected versionpara ampliar sus estudios to further her studiesquiere ampliar sus horizontes he wants to broaden his horizons4 ‹plazo/período› to extend5 ‹fotografía› to enlarge, blow up* * *
ampliar ( conjugate ampliar) verbo transitivo
‹ negocio› to expand
‹ explicación› to expand (on);
‹ campo de acción› to widen, broaden;
ampliar verbo transitivo
1 (hacer más largo un plazo) to extend
2 (hacer más grande un edificio) to enlarge
3 (extender un negocio) to expand
4 (una fotografía) to enlarge, to blow up
5 (el campo de acción) to widen: los sindicatos proponen ampliar las sanciones a los defraudadores, the unions propose greater penalties for those committing fraud
' ampliar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
abrir
- extender
- refacción
English:
amplify
- blow up
- enlarge
- expand
- expand on
- extend
- magnify
- widen
- add
- blow
- broaden
- develop
- push
* * *ampliar vt1. [negocio] to expand;han ampliado el servicio a todo el país they have extended the service to cover the whole country;van a ampliar el catálogo de productos they are going to expand o extend their product range;ampliarán la plantilla del banco they are going to take on additional staff at the bank, they are going to increase staff numbers at the bank;no quieren ampliar más la Unión Europea they don't want to enlarge the European Union any further2. [local, vivienda] to extend;[aeropuerto] to expand;queremos ampliar el salón we want to make the living-room bigger4. [plazo] to extend5. [fotografía] to enlarge, to blow up;[fotocopia] to enlarge6. [estudios] to further, to continue;[conocimientos] to increase, to expand* * *v/tampliar estudios continue one’s education;ampliar sus horizontes broaden one’s horizons2 FOT enlarge, blow up* * *ampliar {85} vt1) : to expand, to extend2) : to widen3) : to enlarge (photographs)4) : to elaborate on, to develop (ideas)* * *ampliar vb1. (edificio, plazo) to extend2. (negocio, mercado) to expand3. (número, cantidad) to increase4. (una foto) to enlarge -
10 andanzas
f.pl.1 adventures.2 wanderings, walkabouts.* * *1 adventures* * *femenino plural adventures (pl)* * *= wanderings, high jinks [hijinks], hijinks [high jinks], antics.Ex. But I do believe that the research data indicate that the people who do now go into libraries could be helped more in their wanderings amongst the books.Ex. The novel has a striking emphasis on matters such high jinks, horseplay, capers, and antics.Ex. Again and again, the author races past important events in Evans' life in order to dwell on all his bedroom conquests and juvenile hijinks.Ex. The novel has a striking emphasis on matters such high jinks, horseplay, capers, and antics.* * *femenino plural adventures (pl)* * *= wanderings, high jinks [hijinks], hijinks [high jinks], antics.Ex: But I do believe that the research data indicate that the people who do now go into libraries could be helped more in their wanderings amongst the books.
Ex: The novel has a striking emphasis on matters such high jinks, horseplay, capers, and antics.Ex: Again and again, the author races past important events in Evans' life in order to dwell on all his bedroom conquests and juvenile hijinks.Ex: The novel has a striking emphasis on matters such high jinks, horseplay, capers, and antics.* * *adventures (pl)* * *
andanzas sustantivo femenino plural
adventures (pl)
andanzas fpl adventures: mi abuelo nos divertía relatándonos sus andanzas de juventud, we enjoyed hearing my grandfather's tales of his adventures as a young man
' andanzas' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
novelesco
* * *andanzas nfpl[peripecias] adventures* * *fpl adventures* * *andanzas nfpl: adventures -
11 barrabasadas
= high jinks [hijinks], hijinks [high jinks].Ex. The novel has a striking emphasis on matters such high jinks, horseplay, capers, and antics.Ex. Again and again, the author races past important events in Evans' life in order to dwell on all his bedroom conquests and juvenile hijinks.* * *= high jinks [hijinks], hijinks [high jinks].Ex: The novel has a striking emphasis on matters such high jinks, horseplay, capers, and antics.
Ex: Again and again, the author races past important events in Evans' life in order to dwell on all his bedroom conquests and juvenile hijinks. -
12 conquista amorosa
(n.) = bedroom conquestEx. Again and again, the author races past important events in Evans' life in order to dwell on all his bedroom conquests and juvenile hijinks.* * *(n.) = bedroom conquestEx: Again and again, the author races past important events in Evans' life in order to dwell on all his bedroom conquests and juvenile hijinks.
-
13 despojo
m.1 stripping, plundering.2 debris.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: despojar.* * *1 (botín) plunder, booty1 (sobras) leavings, scraps, leftovers2 (de un animal) offal sing3 (restos mortales) mortal remains* * *SM1) (=saqueo) plundering2) (Mil) (=botín) plunder, loot3) pl despojos [de comida] left-overs; [de animal] offal sing ; [de edificio] rubble sing ; [de mineral] debris sing* * *1) (frml) ( desposeimiento) dispossession (frml)2) despojos masculino plurala) ( restos) remains (pl)b) (presa, botín) spoils (pl), loot* * *= denudation, plunder.Ex. Ranganathan illustrates how these Main Subjects have developed by loose assemblage, dissection, denudation, distillation, etc..Ex. He established Samarkand as his imperial capital in the 1360s and set about aggrandising it with plunder from his conquests.----* despojos de la guerra, los = spoils of war, the.* * *1) (frml) ( desposeimiento) dispossession (frml)2) despojos masculino plurala) ( restos) remains (pl)b) (presa, botín) spoils (pl), loot* * *= denudation, plunder.Ex: Ranganathan illustrates how these Main Subjects have developed by loose assemblage, dissection, denudation, distillation, etc..
Ex: He established Samarkand as his imperial capital in the 1360s and set about aggrandising it with plunder from his conquests.* despojos de la guerra, los = spoils of war, the.* * *sufrió el despojo de todos sus bienes she was dispossessed o divested of all her goods ( frml)1 (restos) remains (pl)me han dejado apenas los despojos they've only left me the scraps o leftovers o remains2 (presa, botín) spoils (pl), lootCompuesto:mpl mortal remains (pl)* * *
Del verbo despojar: ( conjugate despojar)
despojo es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
despojó es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo
Multiple Entries:
despojar
despojo
despojar ( conjugate despojar) verbo transitivo (frml) despojo a algn de algo ‹de privilegios/poderes› to divest sb of sth (frml);
‹de título/posesiones› to dispossess (frml) o strip sb of sth
despojarse verbo pronominal (frml o liter) despojose de algo ‹ de ropa› to remove sth;
‹ de bienes› to relinquish sth
despojar verbo transitivo to strip [de, of]: le despojaron de todo cuanto tenía, they stripped him of everything he had
despojo sustantivo masculino
1 (resultado de despojar) plundering: los bandidos procedieron al despojo de la hacienda, the robbers started to plunder the ranch
2 pl (restos, cadáver) remains: los buitres se comieron los despojos, the vultures ate the remains
* * *despojo nm1. [acción] stripping, plundering2.despojos [de animales] = head, feet, intestines and other rarely eaten parts3.despojos [de comida] leftovers4.despojos [cadáver] remainsla juventud es despojo del tiempo youth eventually falls prey to time -
14 enaltecer
v.1 to praise.2 to exalt, to elate, to honor, to praise.Los fanáticos exaltaron a Ricardo The fanatics exalted Richard.* * *1 (ennoblecer) to do credit to, ennoble2 (alabar) to praise, extol* * *VT to extol* * *verbo transitivoa) (frml) ( honrar) to ennoble (frml)b) ( alabar) to praise, extol (frml)* * *= glorify, exalt, put + Nombre + on a pedestal, hold out as, aggrandise [aggrandize, -USA], edify.Ex. Many traditional treatments, on the other hand, have tended to glorify him portraying him as an unblemished hero.Ex. He is famous for his works of lyrical beauty and ethical depth, which exalt everyday miracles and the living past.Ex. Native American children should have books that do not demean or embarrass them or their heritage nor put them on a pedestal.Ex. Community information services seem light years away from the kind of electronic wizardry that is held out as the brave new information world of tomorrow.Ex. He established Samarkand as his imperial capital in the 1360s and set about aggrandising it with plunder from his conquests.Ex. The first tool for edifying one another is our example.* * *verbo transitivoa) (frml) ( honrar) to ennoble (frml)b) ( alabar) to praise, extol (frml)* * *= glorify, exalt, put + Nombre + on a pedestal, hold out as, aggrandise [aggrandize, -USA], edify.Ex: Many traditional treatments, on the other hand, have tended to glorify him portraying him as an unblemished hero.
Ex: He is famous for his works of lyrical beauty and ethical depth, which exalt everyday miracles and the living past.Ex: Native American children should have books that do not demean or embarrass them or their heritage nor put them on a pedestal.Ex: Community information services seem light years away from the kind of electronic wizardry that is held out as the brave new information world of tomorrow.Ex: He established Samarkand as his imperial capital in the 1360s and set about aggrandising it with plunder from his conquests.Ex: The first tool for edifying one another is our example.* * *enaltecer [E3 ]vt( frml)3 ‹terrorismo› to glorify* * *enaltecer vt1. [elogiar] to praise, to extol2. [engrandecer] to ennoble* * *v/t1 ennoble2 ( alabar) extol, praise* * *enaltecer {53} vt: to praise, to extol -
15 engrandecer
v.1 to exalt.La paciencia engrandece el espíritu Patience exalts the spirit.2 to increase, to enlarge (increase).El ejercicio engrandece los músculos Exercise enlarges the muscles.* * *1 (hacer grande) to enlarge, magnify2 (exaltar) to extol, exalt3 figurado (enaltecer) to enhance4 figurado (mente, espíritu) to widen, broaden* * *VT1) (=aumentar) to enlarge, magnify2) (=ensalzar) to speak highly of3) (=exagerar) to exaggerate* * *verbo transitivo ( ennoblecer) to ennoble (frml)* * *= aggrandise [aggrandize, -USA].Ex. He established Samarkand as his imperial capital in the 1360s and set about aggrandising it with plunder from his conquests.* * *verbo transitivo ( ennoblecer) to ennoble (frml)* * *= aggrandise [aggrandize, -USA].Ex: He established Samarkand as his imperial capital in the 1360s and set about aggrandising it with plunder from his conquests.
* * *engrandecer [E3 ]vtaquel gesto lo engrandeció ante todos with that gesture he grew in stature in everyone's eyes* * *
engrandecer ( conjugate engrandecer) verbo transitivo ( ennoblecer) to ennoble (frml)
engrandecer verbo transitivo
1 (ensalzar) to exalt, grow in stature: ese gesto de generosidad te engrandece, that act of generosity ennobles you
2 (hacer mayor) to increase: la concesión del Óscar engrandeció su fama, winning the oscar contributed to his reputation
' engrandecer' also found in these entries:
English:
exalt
* * *engrandecer vt2. [aumentar] to increase, to enlarge* * *v/t1 enlarge2 ( ensalzar) praise, extol* * *engrandecer {53} vt1) : to enlarge2) : to exaggerate3) : to exalt -
16 enriquecer
v.1 to bring wealth to, to make rich (hacer rico).La fábrica enriqueció a María The factory made Mary rich.2 to enrich (sustancia).La lectura enriquece el conocimiento Reading enriches knowledge.* * *1 (hacer rico) to make rich2 figurado to enrich1 to become rich, get rich* * *1.VT to make rich, enrich2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1) <país/población> to make... rich2) <espíritu/lengua/alimento> to enrich2.enriquecerse v pron1) ( hacerse rico) to get rich2) cultura/relación/lengua to be enriched* * *= enrich, enhance, aggrandise [aggrandize, -USA], fortify.Ex. The program's purpose is to enable U.S. librarians and publishers to enrich and broaden their career experience through a short period of overseas service.Ex. An introduction explaining the nature and scope of the indexing language will enhance its value.Ex. He established Samarkand as his imperial capital in the 1360s and set about aggrandising it with plunder from his conquests.Ex. Be sure the dry milk you are buying has been fortified with vitamins A and D.----* enriquecer la vida de Alguien = enrich + Posesivo + life.* enriquecerse = fatten + Posesivo + pockets, line + Posesivo + (own) pocket(s).* enriquecer uranio = enrich + uranium.* * *1.verbo transitivo1) <país/población> to make... rich2) <espíritu/lengua/alimento> to enrich2.enriquecerse v pron1) ( hacerse rico) to get rich2) cultura/relación/lengua to be enriched* * *= enrich, enhance, aggrandise [aggrandize, -USA], fortify.Ex: The program's purpose is to enable U.S. librarians and publishers to enrich and broaden their career experience through a short period of overseas service.
Ex: An introduction explaining the nature and scope of the indexing language will enhance its value.Ex: He established Samarkand as his imperial capital in the 1360s and set about aggrandising it with plunder from his conquests.Ex: Be sure the dry milk you are buying has been fortified with vitamins A and D.* enriquecer la vida de Alguien = enrich + Posesivo + life.* enriquecerse = fatten + Posesivo + pockets, line + Posesivo + (own) pocket(s).* enriquecer uranio = enrich + uranium.* * *enriquecer [E3 ]vtA ‹país/población› to make … richB ‹espíritu/persona› to enrich; ‹lengua/relación› to enrichenriquezca su vocabulario increase your word power, enhance o enrich your vocabularyC1 ‹alimento› to enrich2 ( Fís) to enrichA (hacerse rico) to get richse enriqueció con la venta de armas arms dealing made him rich, he got rich through arms dealingB «cultura/relación/lengua» to be enriched, be made richer; «espíritu/persona» to be enriched* * *
enriquecer ( conjugate enriquecer) verbo transitivo
1 ‹país/población› to make … rich
2 ‹espíritu/lengua/alimento› to enrich
enriquecerse verbo pronominal
1 ( hacerse rico) to get rich
2 [cultura/relación/lengua] to be enriched
enriquecer verbo transitivo
1 (con bienes materiales) to make rich
2 (mejorar) to enrich
' enriquecer' also found in these entries:
English:
enrich
* * *♦ vt1. [hacer rico] [persona, clase social, región] to make rich, to enrich2. [alimento, sustancia] to enrich3. [moralmente, espiritualmente, en valor artístico] to enrich;los viajes enriquecen la personalidad travelling makes you richer as a person* * *v/t make rich; figenrich* * *enriquecer {53} vt: to enrich -
17 ensalzar
v.to praise.* * *1 (enaltecer) to exalt2 (elogiar) to praise, extol (US extoll)* * *VT [+ persona] to praise; [+ virtudes] to extol* * ** * *= extol, glorify, exalt, put + Nombre + on a pedestal, glamourise [glamorize, -USA], aggrandise [aggrandize, -USA].Ex. In order to deal with the ever increasing mass of biomedical information ('journalistic blastoma'), IAIMS has extolled the use of quality filters, to sift the good from the bad.Ex. Many traditional treatments, on the other hand, have tended to glorify him portraying him as an unblemished hero.Ex. He is famous for his works of lyrical beauty and ethical depth, which exalt everyday miracles and the living past.Ex. Native American children should have books that do not demean or embarrass them or their heritage nor put them on a pedestal.Ex. Librarians now have recognized that automated information retrieval is a logical extension of good reference service and is not usually categorized or glamorized as a separate function.Ex. He established Samarkand as his imperial capital in the 1360s and set about aggrandising it with plunder from his conquests.* * ** * *= extol, glorify, exalt, put + Nombre + on a pedestal, glamourise [glamorize, -USA], aggrandise [aggrandize, -USA].Ex: In order to deal with the ever increasing mass of biomedical information ('journalistic blastoma'), IAIMS has extolled the use of quality filters, to sift the good from the bad.
Ex: Many traditional treatments, on the other hand, have tended to glorify him portraying him as an unblemished hero.Ex: He is famous for his works of lyrical beauty and ethical depth, which exalt everyday miracles and the living past.Ex: Native American children should have books that do not demean or embarrass them or their heritage nor put them on a pedestal.Ex: Librarians now have recognized that automated information retrieval is a logical extension of good reference service and is not usually categorized or glamorized as a separate function.Ex: He established Samarkand as his imperial capital in the 1360s and set about aggrandising it with plunder from his conquests.* * *ensalzar [A4 ]vt‹virtudes› to extol; ‹persona› to praise, sing the praises of* * *
ensalzar ( conjugate ensalzar) verbo transitivo ‹ virtudes› to extol;
‹ persona› to praise, sing the praises of
ensalzar vtr (alabar, elogiar) to praise: en la empresa ensalzaron su último trabajo, the company extolled his latest task
' ensalzar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
engrandecer
English:
exalt
- glorify
* * *ensalzar vt1. [alabar] to praise2. [enaltecer] to exalt, to glorify* * *v/t extol, praise* * *ensalzar {21} vt1) : to praise, to extol2) exaltar: to exalt -
18 exaltar
v.1 to promote, to raise.2 to exalt.Los fanáticos exaltaron a Ricardo The fanatics exalted Richard.3 to exacerbate, to overexcite.Su actitud exaltó su ira His attitude exacerbated her anger.4 to elate, to magnify.La sorpresa exaltó a Ricardo The surprise elated Richard.* * *1 (elevar) to raise, promote1 (excitarse) to get overexcited, get worked up, get carried away* * *1. VT1) (=acalorar) [+ persona, manifestante] to work up, excite; [+ emoción] to intensify; [+ imaginación] to fire2) (=elevar) to exalt3) (=enaltecer) to raise (a to)2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivola intervención policial exaltó a los manifestantes — the police intervention angered the demonstrators
2) (frml) ( alabar) to extol (frml)2.exaltarse v pron to get worked up* * *= glorify, exalt, put + Nombre + on a pedestal, hold out as, laud, glamourise [glamorize, -USA], enthrone, aggrandise [aggrandize, -USA], celebrate.Ex. Many traditional treatments, on the other hand, have tended to glorify him portraying him as an unblemished hero.Ex. He is famous for his works of lyrical beauty and ethical depth, which exalt everyday miracles and the living past.Ex. Native American children should have books that do not demean or embarrass them or their heritage nor put them on a pedestal.Ex. Community information services seem light years away from the kind of electronic wizardry that is held out as the brave new information world of tomorrow.Ex. Libraries are also lauded for providing other public services with economic benefits.Ex. Librarians now have recognized that automated information retrieval is a logical extension of good reference service and is not usually categorized or glamorized as a separate function.Ex. Modern life ' enthrones reason over impulse'.Ex. He established Samarkand as his imperial capital in the 1360s and set about aggrandising it with plunder from his conquests.Ex. Were we to allow ourselves to be enticed by it, we should be celebrating our Bicentennial by a return to the pre-Panizzi days in cataloging.----* exaltarse = fire up, get + (all) worked up.* * *1.verbo transitivola intervención policial exaltó a los manifestantes — the police intervention angered the demonstrators
2) (frml) ( alabar) to extol (frml)2.exaltarse v pron to get worked up* * *= glorify, exalt, put + Nombre + on a pedestal, hold out as, laud, glamourise [glamorize, -USA], enthrone, aggrandise [aggrandize, -USA], celebrate.Ex: Many traditional treatments, on the other hand, have tended to glorify him portraying him as an unblemished hero.
Ex: He is famous for his works of lyrical beauty and ethical depth, which exalt everyday miracles and the living past.Ex: Native American children should have books that do not demean or embarrass them or their heritage nor put them on a pedestal.Ex: Community information services seem light years away from the kind of electronic wizardry that is held out as the brave new information world of tomorrow.Ex: Libraries are also lauded for providing other public services with economic benefits.Ex: Librarians now have recognized that automated information retrieval is a logical extension of good reference service and is not usually categorized or glamorized as a separate function.Ex: Modern life ' enthrones reason over impulse'.Ex: He established Samarkand as his imperial capital in the 1360s and set about aggrandising it with plunder from his conquests.Ex: Were we to allow ourselves to be enticed by it, we should be celebrating our Bicentennial by a return to the pre-Panizzi days in cataloging.* exaltarse = fire up, get + (all) worked up.* * *exaltar [A1 ]vtA (excitar) ‹personas› to excite; ‹pasiones› to arousela intervención policial exaltó aún más a los manifestantes when the police intervened the demonstrators became even more agitated, the police intervention angered the demonstrators still furtherexaltó sus hazañas he extolled their feats ( frml)se exaltaron las buenas relaciones existentes entre ambos países much was made of the good relationship between the two countriesto get worked uptranquilízate y no te exaltes calm down, don't get overexcited o worked up* * *
exaltar ( conjugate exaltar) verbo transitivo
1
‹ pasiones› to arouse
2 (frml) ( alabar) to extol (frml)
exaltarse verbo pronominal
to get worked up
exaltar verbo transitivo to praise
' exaltar' also found in these entries:
English:
eulogize
- exalt
- glorify
* * *♦ vtla decisión exaltó la cólera de los aficionados the decision enraged the fans2. [ensalzar] to praise, to exalt;exaltó la cocina argentina he praised Argentinian cuisine to the skies* * *v/t excite, get worked up* * *exaltar vt1) ensalzar: to exalt, to extol2) : to excite, to agitate -
19 francachela
f.1 party (informal) (fiesta).2 banquet, big meal, big feed.* * *1 familiar feast* * *femenino (Esp) (fam)ir de francachela — ( de juerga) to go out on the town; ( de comilona) to have a blow-out (colloq)
* * *= high jinks [hijinks], horseplay, hijinks [high jinks].Ex. The novel has a striking emphasis on matters such high jinks, horseplay, capers, and antics.Ex. The novel has a striking emphasis on matters such high jinks, horseplay, capers, and antics.Ex. Again and again, the author races past important events in Evans' life in order to dwell on all his bedroom conquests and juvenile hijinks.* * *femenino (Esp) (fam)ir de francachela — ( de juerga) to go out on the town; ( de comilona) to have a blow-out (colloq)
* * *= high jinks [hijinks], horseplay, hijinks [high jinks].Ex: The novel has a striking emphasis on matters such high jinks, horseplay, capers, and antics.
Ex: The novel has a striking emphasis on matters such high jinks, horseplay, capers, and antics.Ex: Again and again, the author races past important events in Evans' life in order to dwell on all his bedroom conquests and juvenile hijinks.* * *( fam)ir de francachela to live it up, to go out on a binge o on the town2 (comilona) feast, blow-out ( colloq)* * *francachela nfFamestuvieron toda la noche de francachela they were out partying all night2. [comilona] spread* * *f fambinge fam -
20 jarana
f.1 rumpus, shindy (alboroto).2 noise, racket, din.3 spree, revel, high jinks, jinks.* * *2 (jaleo) racket, din\armar jarana to make a racketirse de jarana to go out on the town* * *SF1) * (=juerga) binge *andar/ir de jarana — to be/go out on the town
2) Méx (Mús) small guitar3) Perú (=baile) dance4) Caribe (=banda) dance band5) CAm (=deuda) debt6) And (=embuste) fib7) LAm (=broma) practical joke, hoaxla jarana sale a la cara — CAm a joke can come back on you
* * *1) (fam)a) ( bromas)basta de jarana — that's enough fun and games o fooling around (colloq)
b) ( juerga)salir de jarana — to go out on the town o out partying (colloq)
3)b) (Per) ( fiesta) party ( with folk music)* * *= fireworks, high jinks [hijinks], horseplay, hijinks [high jinks], revels, partying, beano.Ex. 'You know, Tom, if I ever find another job -- and I'm already looking -- there will be some fireworks around here before I leave, I can guarantee you that!'.Ex. The novel has a striking emphasis on matters such high jinks, horseplay, capers, and antics.Ex. The novel has a striking emphasis on matters such high jinks, horseplay, capers, and antics.Ex. Again and again, the author races past important events in Evans' life in order to dwell on all his bedroom conquests and juvenile hijinks.Ex. Virtually all of the revels at court and many of the temporary, purpose built banqueting houses used to celebrate diplomatic occasions between 1543 and 1559 were produced and built under the supervision of Sir Thomas Cawarden.Ex. The party raged into the early morning hours drawing the attention of police, who have increased patrols in the area because of end of the year partying.Ex. Things take a turn for the unexpected, however, when Herman suggests that the three of them head off for a beano by the sea.----* de jarana = out on the town, a (late) night out on the town.* irse de jarana = paint + the town red, go out on + the town.* salir de jarana = paint + the town red, go out on + the town.* * *1) (fam)a) ( bromas)basta de jarana — that's enough fun and games o fooling around (colloq)
b) ( juerga)salir de jarana — to go out on the town o out partying (colloq)
3)b) (Per) ( fiesta) party ( with folk music)* * *= fireworks, high jinks [hijinks], horseplay, hijinks [high jinks], revels, partying, beano.Ex: 'You know, Tom, if I ever find another job -- and I'm already looking -- there will be some fireworks around here before I leave, I can guarantee you that!'.
Ex: The novel has a striking emphasis on matters such high jinks, horseplay, capers, and antics.Ex: The novel has a striking emphasis on matters such high jinks, horseplay, capers, and antics.Ex: Again and again, the author races past important events in Evans' life in order to dwell on all his bedroom conquests and juvenile hijinks.Ex: Virtually all of the revels at court and many of the temporary, purpose built banqueting houses used to celebrate diplomatic occasions between 1543 and 1559 were produced and built under the supervision of Sir Thomas Cawarden.Ex: The party raged into the early morning hours drawing the attention of police, who have increased patrols in the area because of end of the year partying.Ex: Things take a turn for the unexpected, however, when Herman suggests that the three of them head off for a beano by the sea.* de jarana = out on the town, a (late) night out on the town.* irse de jarana = paint + the town red, go out on + the town.* salir de jarana = paint + the town red, go out on + the town.* * *A ( fam)12C* * *
jarana sustantivo femenino
1 (fam)a) ( bromas):◊ basta de jarana that's enough fun and games o fooling around (colloq)b) ( juerga):◊ salir de jarana to go out on the town o out partying (colloq)
2
jarana f fam (juerga) binge, spree
' jarana' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
pachanga
English:
revelry
* * *jarana nfFamirse de jarana to go out on the town2. [alboroto] rumpus;se organizó una gran jarana all hell broke loose* * *f fam1 partying fam ;irse de jarana go out on the town fam, go out partying fam2 ( alboroto) racket* * *jarana nf3) : small guitar
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