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21 tired
1) (wearied; exhausted: She was too tired to continue; a tired child.) cansado2) ((with of) no longer interested in; bored with: I'm tired of (answering) stupid questions!) cansado (de)tired adj cansadotr[taɪəd]1 (weary) cansado,-a2 (fed up) harto,-a (of, de)\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto get tired cansarsetired ['taɪrd] adj: cansado, agotado, fatigadoto get tired: cansarseadj.• acalorado, -a adj.• cansado, -a adj.• despernado, -a adj.• rendido, -a adj.taɪrd, 'taɪəda) ( weary) cansadob) ( fed up)to be tired OF something/somebody/-ING — estar* cansado or harto de algo/alguien /+ inf
to get/grow tired of something/somebody/-ing — cansarse or hartarse de algo/alguien /+ inf
d) (old, faded) <lettuce/salad> mustio; <sofa/chair> (viejo y) gastado['taɪǝd]ADJ1) [person, eyes] cansado; [voice] cansinoto be/feel tired — estar/sentirse cansado
my legs/eyes are tired — tengo las piernas cansadas/los ojos cansados
•
to get tired — cansarse•
to look tired — tener cara de cansancio•
to be tired of sb/sth — estar cansado or aburrido de algn/algosick 1., 3)to get or grow tired of (doing) sth — cansarse or aburrirse de (hacer) algo
2) (fig) (=worn-out) [coat] raído, gastado; [car, chair] cascado; [cliché, ritual, excuse] manido, trilladoit's a tired old cliché — es un tópico muy manido or trillado
* * *[taɪrd, 'taɪəd]a) ( weary) cansadob) ( fed up)to be tired OF something/somebody/-ING — estar* cansado or harto de algo/alguien /+ inf
to get/grow tired of something/somebody/-ing — cansarse or hartarse de algo/alguien /+ inf
d) (old, faded) <lettuce/salad> mustio; <sofa/chair> (viejo y) gastado -
22 to get on
1 (vehicle) subir a, subirse a; (bicycle, horse, etc) montar a1 (make progress) progresar, avanzar, ir■ how is she getting on? ¿cómo le van las cosas?2 (succeed) tener éxito3 (be friendly) llevarse bien, avenirse, entenderse4 (continue) seguir, continuar■ get on with what you are doing! ¡seguid con lo que estáis haciendo!5 (grow old) hacerse mayor, envejecerse
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См. также в других словарях:
continue — con|tin|ue W1S1 [kənˈtınju:] v [Date: 1300 1400; : French; Origin: continuer, from Latin continuare, from continuus; CONTINUOUS] 1.) [I and T] to not stop happening, existing, or doing something →↑continuous, continual ↑continual, discontinue… … Dictionary of contemporary English
continue */*/*/ — UK [kənˈtɪnjuː] / US [kənˈtɪnju] verb Word forms continue : present tense I/you/we/they continue he/she/it continues present participle continuing past tense continued past participle continued 1) a) [intransitive/transitive] to keep doing… … English dictionary
continue — con|tin|ue [ kən tınju ] verb *** 1. ) intransitive or transitive to keep doing something without stopping: Doctors advised him to continue the treatment for another six weeks. continue doing something: He continued typing while he spoke.… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
continue — verb 1 (I, T) to keep happening, existing, or doing something for a longer period of time without stopping: He will be continuing his education in the US. | The fighting continued for a week. (+ with): Continuing with this argument is very… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
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continue*/*/*/ — [kənˈtɪnjuː] verb 1) [I/T] to keep doing something, or to keep happening without stopping Doctors advised him to continue the treatment for another six weeks.[/ex] She decided to continue with her studies for another two years.[/ex] He continued… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
continue — 1. verb /kənˈtɪnju/ a) to proceed with (doing an activity); to prolong (an activity). Shall I continue speaking, or will you just interrupt me again? b) To make last; to prolong. Do you want me to continue to unload these boxes? … Wiktionary
continue — con·tin·ue || kÉ™n tɪnjuË v. go on, keep doing something; stay … English contemporary dictionary
insist on doing something — inˈsist on doing sth derived to continue doing sth even though other people think it is annoying • They insist on playing their music late at night. Main entry: ↑insistderived … Useful english dictionary