-
1 sich vor Schmerzen krümmen
1. to convulse with/in pain2. to squirm with pain -
2 sich vor Lachen ausschütten
to convulse with/in laughter -
3 erschüttern
v/t1. (Boden, Gebäude etc.) shake2. fig. (Entschluss, Gesundheit, Vertrauen, Wirtschaft etc.) shake; jemanden in seinem Glauben erschüttern shake s.o.’s faith3. fig. (bestürzen) shock (deeply), shake (up); (rühren) move deeply; das kann mich nicht erschüttern that leaves me cold; mich kann nichts erschüttern oder ich lasse mich durch nichts erschüttern I am completely unflappable, nothing ever worries me; ihn kann nichts mehr erschüttern he’s seen ( oder been through) it all4. MED. (Gehirn) concuss* * *to stagger; to shake; to concuss; to jerk; to jolt; to convulse; to stir; to unsettle; to shock* * *er|schụ̈t|tern [ɛɐ'ʃʏtɐn] ptp erschü\#ttertvtBoden, Gebäude, Vertrauen, Glauben etc to shake; (fig ) Glaubwürdigkeit to cast doubt upon; (fig ) Gesundheit to unsettle, to upset; (= bewegen, Schock versetzen) to shake severelysie war von seinem Tod tief erschüttert — she was severely shaken by his death
seine Geschichte hat mich erschüttert — I was shattered (inf) by his story
erschüttert sein — to be shaken or shattered (inf) by sth
mich kann nichts mehr erschüttern — nothing surprises me any more
er lässt sich durch nichts erschüttern, ihn kann nichts erschüttern — he always keeps his cool (inf)
* * *1) (to give a shock to: The car accident had jarred her nerves.) jar2) (to shake violently: convulsed with laughter.) convulse3) (to shock, disturb or weaken: He was shaken by the accident; My confidence in him has been shaken.) shake4) (to astonish: I was staggered to hear he had died.) stagger* * *er·schüt·tern *[ɛɐ̯ˈʃʏtɐn]vt1. (zum Beben bringen)▪ etw \erschüttern to shake sth2. (in Frage stellen)3. (tief bewegen)▪ jdn \erschüttern to shake sb, to distress sbjdn kann nichts mehr \erschüttern nothing can shake [or distress] sb anymore* * *transitives Verb (auch fig.) shakeüber etwas (Akk.) erschüttert sein — be shaken by something
das kann mich nicht erschüttern — (ugs.) that doesn't worry me
* * *erschüttern v/t2. fig (Entschluss, Gesundheit, Vertrauen, Wirtschaft etc) shake;jemanden in seinem Glauben erschüttern shake sb’s faithdas kann mich nicht erschüttern that leaves me cold;ich lasse mich durch nichts erschüttern I am completely unflappable, nothing ever worries me;* * *transitives Verb (auch fig.) shakeüber etwas (Akk.) erschüttert sein — be shaken by something
das kann mich nicht erschüttern — (ugs.) that doesn't worry me
* * *v.to convulse v.to shake v.to shock v. -
4 verzerren
I v/t2. fig. (Ton, Bericht etc.) distort (auch ETECH. etc.)II v/refl become distorted; Gesicht: auch contort* * *to distort; to contort* * *ver|zẹr|ren ptp verze\#rrt1. vt (lit, fig)to distort; Gesicht etc to contort; Sehne, Muskel to strain, to pull2. vi(Lautsprecher, Spiegel etc) to distort3. vrto become distorted; (Gesicht etc) to become contorted (zu in)* * *(to twist or turn violently: His face was contorted with pain.) contort* * *ver·zer·ren *I. vt1. (verziehen)das Gesicht [vor Schmerzen] \verzerren to contort one's face [with pain]Hass verzerrte seine Züge hatred distorted his features▪ etw \verzerren to distort sthdieser Artikel verzerrt die wahren Ereignisse this article distorts the true events3. (überdehnen)▪ etw \verzerren to distort sthdieser Spiegel verzerrt die Gesichtszüge this mirror distorts featuresder Anrufer hat seine Stimme technisch verzerrt the caller used a technology to distort his voicedie Züge ihrer Schwester verzerrten sich zu einer grässlichen Fratze her sister's features became contorted in a hideous grin* * *1.transitives Verb1) contort <face etc.> (zu into)2) (akustisch, optisch) distort <sound, image>2.intransitives Verb <loudspeaker, mirror, etc.> distort3.reflexives Verb <face, features> become contorted (zu into)* * *A. v/tB. v/r become distorted; Gesicht: auch contort* * *1.transitives Verb1) contort <face etc.> (zu into)2) (akustisch, optisch) distort <sound, image>2.intransitives Verb <loudspeaker, mirror, etc.> distort3.reflexives Verb <face, features> become contorted (zu into)* * *(Tatsache) v.to warp v. v.to distort v. -
5 aufbäumen
v/refl (trennb., hat -ge-)1. Pferd: rear (up); Person: writhe ( unter + Dat under); sich vor Schmerzen aufbäumen writhe in pain ( oder agony)2. FLUG. buck* * *auf|bäu|men ['aufbɔymən]vr sep(Tier) to rearsich gegen jdn/etw áúfbäumen (fig) — to rebel or revolt against sb/sth
sich vor Schmerz áúfbäumen — to writhe with pain
* * *auf|bäu·menvr1. (sich ruckartig aufrichten)sich vor Schmerz \aufbäumen to writhe [or be convulsed] with pain; Pferd to rear [up]* * *reflexives Verb rear upsich gegen jemanden/etwas aufbäumen — (fig.) rise up against somebody/something
* * *aufbäumen v/r (trennb, hat -ge-)unter +dat under);sich vor Schmerzen aufbäumen writhe in pain ( oder agony)2. FLUG buck3. fig rebel, rise in protest (gegen against)* * *reflexives Verb rear upsich gegen jemanden/etwas aufbäumen — (fig.) rise up against somebody/something
* * *v.to rebel v. -
6 aufbäumen
auf|bäu·menvrsich \aufbäumen to convulse;A\aufbäumen revolt
См. также в других словарях:
convulse with laughter — shake with laughter … English contemporary dictionary
Convulse — Con*vulse , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Convulsed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Convulsing}.] [L. convulsus, p. p. of convellere to tear up, to shake; con + vellere to pluck, pull.] 1. To contract violently and irregulary, as the muscular parts of an animal body;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
convulse — [kən vuls′] vt. convulsed, convulsing [< L convulsus, pp. of convellere, to tear loose < com , together + vellere, to pluck: see REVULSION] 1. to shake or disturb violently; agitate 2. to cause convulsions, or spasms, in 3. to cause to… … English World dictionary
convulse — UK [kənˈvʌls] / US verb Word forms convulse : present tense I/you/we/they convulse he/she/it convulses present participle convulsing past tense convulsed past participle convulsed 1) a) [transitive, usually passive] if you are convulsed with a… … English dictionary
convulse — verb (convulsed; convulsing) Etymology: Latin convulsus, past participle of convellere to pluck up, convulse, from com + vellere to pluck more at vulnerable Date: 1614 transitive verb to shake or agitate violently; especially to shake with or as… … New Collegiate Dictionary
convulse — con·vulse kən vəls vb, con·vulsed; con·vuls·ing vt to shake or agitate violently esp to shake or cause to shake with or as if with irregular spasms <was convulsed with pain> vi to become affected with convulsions <some children will… … Medical dictionary
convulse — verb 1 (I) if a part of your body convulses, it moves violently and you are not able to control it: He sat down, his shoulders convulsing with sobs. 2 (I) if you convulse, your body shakes violently and you are not able to control it, especially… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
convulse — verb Convulse is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑body … Collocations dictionary
convulse — con|vulse [ kən vʌls ] verb 1. ) transitive MAINLY JOURNALISM to cause major problems or serious harm to someone or something: ethnic killings that have convulsed the region in recent weeks Problems in the Far Eastern economy convulsed the New… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
convulse — [[t]kənvʌ̱ls[/t]] convulses, convulsing, convulsed V ERG If someone convulses or if they are convulsed by or with something, their body moves suddenly in an uncontrolled way. Olivia s face convulsed in a series of twitches... [V n] He let out a… … English dictionary
convulse — con|vulse [kənˈvʌls] v [Date: 1600 1700; : Latin; Origin: , past participle of convellere to pull violently , from com ( COM ) + vellere to pull out ] 1.) [I] if your body or a part of it convulses, it moves violently and you are not able to… … Dictionary of contemporary English