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1 aplacar
v.1 to placate.2 to soothe, to calm, to deaden, to dim.María aplacó su dolor con terapia Mary placated her pain with therapy.El gobierno aplacó una rebelión ayer Government calmed a rebellion yesterday* * *1 to placate, calm, soothe* * *1.VT (=apaciguar) [+ persona] to appease, placate; [+ hambre] to satisfy; [+ sed] to quench, satisfy2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) < ira> to soothe2.* * *= abate, keep + the edge off + Algo, defuse, still, appease.Ex. As the sobbing abated, the secretary's voice regained some steadiness.Ex. 'I can certainly understand your concern,' she ventured, speaking with a certain amiable casualness which she hoped would keep the edge off his annoyance, 'but we're really trying to protect the taxpayer's investment and the library's materials'.Ex. This article gives examples of how problem behaviour can be defused in a library.Ex. And arming himself with patience and piety he tarried awhile until the hubbub was stilled.Ex. They've been working their butts off since the program was launched to appease the crowd.----* aplacar la ansiedad = allay + anxiety.* aplacar la sed = slake + Posesivo + thirst.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) < ira> to soothe2.* * *= abate, keep + the edge off + Algo, defuse, still, appease.Ex: As the sobbing abated, the secretary's voice regained some steadiness.
Ex: 'I can certainly understand your concern,' she ventured, speaking with a certain amiable casualness which she hoped would keep the edge off his annoyance, 'but we're really trying to protect the taxpayer's investment and the library's materials'.Ex: This article gives examples of how problem behaviour can be defused in a library.Ex: And arming himself with patience and piety he tarried awhile until the hubbub was stilled.Ex: They've been working their butts off since the program was launched to appease the crowd.* aplacar la ansiedad = allay + anxiety.* aplacar la sed = slake + Posesivo + thirst.* * *aplacar [A2 ]vt1 ‹ira/enojo› to soothepara aplacar a los dioses to placate o appease the godsfue necesaria su intervención para aplacar los ánimos he had to intervene to calm people down2 ‹sed› to quench; ‹hambre› to satisfy; ‹dolor› to soothe1 «persona» to calm down; «furia» to subside2 «tempestad» to abate, die down* * *
aplacar ( conjugate aplacar) verbo transitivo
‹ hambre› to satisfy;
‹ dolor› to soothe
aplacar verbo transitivo to placate, calm
' aplacar' also found in these entries:
English:
appease
- placate
* * *♦ vt1. [persona, ánimos] to placate;aplacaron su ira they appeased his anger2. [hambre] to satisfy;[sed] to quench; [dolor] to ease* * *v/t2 a alguien calm down, placate fml* * *aplacar {72} vtapaciguar: to appease, to placate -
2 bomba lapa
* * *(n.) = limpet bombEx. A second limpet bomb on another vehicle was reported to have been defused.* * ** * *(n.) = limpet bombEx: A second limpet bomb on another vehicle was reported to have been defused.
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3 bomba magnética
f.magnetic pump.* * *(n.) = limpet bombEx. A second limpet bomb on another vehicle was reported to have been defused.* * *(n.) = limpet bombEx: A second limpet bomb on another vehicle was reported to have been defused.
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4 calmar
v.1 to relieve.2 to calm, to soothe.Los medicamentos calmaron al lunático The medicines calmed the lunatic.Sus comentarios calmaron su ánimo His comments calmed her mood.3 to alleviate.* * *1 (persona) to calm (down)2 (dolor) to relieve, soothe1 (estar en calma) to fall calm1 (persona) to calm down2 (dolor etc) to abate, ease off* * *verbto calm, soothe- calmarse* * *1. VT1) (=relajar) [+ persona] to calm (down); [+ ánimos] to calm; [+ nervios] to calm, steadyestas pastillas le ayudarán a calmar la ansiedad — these pills will help reduce o relieve your anxiety
2) (=aliviar) [+ dolor, picor] to relieve; [+ tos] to soothe; [+ sed] to quench2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( tranquilizar) < persona> to calm... down; < nervios> to calm2.calmarse v prona) persona to calm downb) mar to become calm* * *= settle down, defuse, quell, soothe, settle, ease, lull, still, assuage, put + Nombre + at ease, appease, quieten.Ex. Faced by this situation a teacher who launches into the presentation of a new book without first doing something to settle the children down should hardly expect to succeed.Ex. This article gives examples of how problem behaviour can be defused in a library.Ex. The something that had ached in Zach Ponderal all week and which he thought he had finally quelled, started aching again.Ex. When she tried to soothe herself with other images -- images of John, the baby, the house -- she found that they had lost their power.Ex. Very young children settle easily to storytelling before bed but are less well disposed just after getting up in the morning.Ex. Ulysses uses words to comfort and lull his mariners, to ease all minds about the hard decision he has made and to persuade all that his choice to leave is correct.Ex. Ulysses uses words to comfort and lull his mariners, to ease all minds about the hard decision he has made and to persuade all that his choice to leave is correct.Ex. And arming himself with patience and piety he tarried awhile until the hubbub was stilled.Ex. The dullard's envy of brilliant men is always assuaged by the suspicion that they will come to bad end.Ex. The osteopath was accused of being off-hand with a female patient and not putting her at ease.Ex. They've been working their butts off since the program was launched to appease the crowd.Ex. Sadly, you can't quieten the console using methods other than turning up the volume on your TV or wearing headphones.----* calmar la ansiedad = allay + anxiety.* calmar la euforia = dampen + Posesivo + excitement.* calmar la excitación = dampen + Posesivo + excitement.* calmarse = cool off, subside, take it + easy, chill out, quieten down, wind down.* conseguir calmarse = regain + Posesivo + composure.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( tranquilizar) < persona> to calm... down; < nervios> to calm2.calmarse v prona) persona to calm downb) mar to become calm* * *= settle down, defuse, quell, soothe, settle, ease, lull, still, assuage, put + Nombre + at ease, appease, quieten.Ex: Faced by this situation a teacher who launches into the presentation of a new book without first doing something to settle the children down should hardly expect to succeed.
Ex: This article gives examples of how problem behaviour can be defused in a library.Ex: The something that had ached in Zach Ponderal all week and which he thought he had finally quelled, started aching again.Ex: When she tried to soothe herself with other images -- images of John, the baby, the house -- she found that they had lost their power.Ex: Very young children settle easily to storytelling before bed but are less well disposed just after getting up in the morning.Ex: Ulysses uses words to comfort and lull his mariners, to ease all minds about the hard decision he has made and to persuade all that his choice to leave is correct.Ex: Ulysses uses words to comfort and lull his mariners, to ease all minds about the hard decision he has made and to persuade all that his choice to leave is correct.Ex: And arming himself with patience and piety he tarried awhile until the hubbub was stilled.Ex: The dullard's envy of brilliant men is always assuaged by the suspicion that they will come to bad end.Ex: The osteopath was accused of being off-hand with a female patient and not putting her at ease.Ex: They've been working their butts off since the program was launched to appease the crowd.Ex: Sadly, you can't quieten the console using methods other than turning up the volume on your TV or wearing headphones.* calmar la ansiedad = allay + anxiety.* calmar la euforia = dampen + Posesivo + excitement.* calmar la excitación = dampen + Posesivo + excitement.* calmarse = cool off, subside, take it + easy, chill out, quieten down, wind down.* conseguir calmarse = regain + Posesivo + composure.* * *calmar [A1 ]vt1 (tranquilizar) ‹persona› to calm … down; ‹nervios› to calmesto calmó las tensiones/los ánimos this eased the tension/calmed people down2 (aliviar) ‹dolor› to relieve, ease; ‹hambre› to appease ( liter), to take the edge off; ‹sed› to quench■ calmarse1 «persona» to calm downahora que están los ánimos más calmados now that feelings aren't running so high, now that people have calmed down2 «mar» to become calm* * *
calmar ( conjugate calmar) verbo transitivo
‹ nervios› to calm;
‹ sed› to quench;
‹ hambre› to take the edge off
calmarse verbo pronominal
calmar verbo transitivo
1 (a una persona) to calm (down)
2 (un dolor) to soothe, relieve
' calmar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
aliviar
- apaciguar
- sed
- tranquilizar
- pacificar
English:
calm
- deaden
- defuse
- heat
- lull
- settle
- steady
- assuage
- dull
- ease
- hush
- kill
- quieten
- relieve
- soothe
* * *♦ vt1. [mitigar] to relieve;[dolor] to relieve, to ease; [hinchazón] to relieve; [quemadura] to soothe; [sed] to quench; [hambre] to take the edge off2. [tranquilizar] [persona] to calm (down), to soothe;[situación] to defuse;tómate esto para calmar los nervios take this to calm your nerves* * *v/t1 calm (down)2 sed quench* * *calmar vttranquilizar: to calm, to soothe* * *calmar vb1. (nervios) to calm / to calm down2. (dolor) to relieve -
5 comportamiento problemático
(n.) = problem behaviourEx. This article gives examples of how problem behaviour can be defused in a library.* * *(n.) = problem behaviourEx: This article gives examples of how problem behaviour can be defused in a library.
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6 desactivado
adj.deactivated, de-activated.past part.past participle of spanish verb: desactivar.* * *= deactivated weapon, deactivated.Ex. Deactivated weapons are any firearms which have been converted, in such a manner that they can no longer discharge any shot.Ex. Deactivated accounts will be re-activated upon receipt of payment.----* activado y desactivado = off and on, on and off.* * *= deactivated weapon, deactivated.Ex: Deactivated weapons are any firearms which have been converted, in such a manner that they can no longer discharge any shot.
Ex: Deactivated accounts will be re-activated upon receipt of payment.* activado y desactivado = off and on, on and off.* * *desactivado, -a♦ adj1. [bomba, explosivo] defused2. [mecanismo, alarma] disconnected3. [situación peligrosa] defused;[conflicto] pacified; [plan de emergencia] cancelled♦ nm[de bomba, explosivo] defusing, deactivation -
7 desactivar
v.1 to defuse.2 to deactivate, to defuse, to disable, to disarm.* * *1 to defuse* * *1.VT [+ bomba] to defuse, deactivate; [+ alarma] to deactivate, neutralize2.See:* * ** * *= set off, turn off, deactivate, defuse.Ex. Trapping must be turned off by hand when the document has been picked up by the borrower.Ex. Low-level magnetic fields are used to deactivate and reactivate targets without damaging the contents of magnetic media such as audio and video tapes.Ex. A second limpet bomb on another vehicle was reported to have been defused.----* desactivar un mecanismo = disable + mechanism.* desactivar un programa de protección = unlock + protection program(me).* * ** * *= set off, turn off, deactivate, defuse.Ex: Trapping must be turned off by hand when the document has been picked up by the borrower.Ex: Low-level magnetic fields are used to deactivate and reactivate targets without damaging the contents of magnetic media such as audio and video tapes.Ex: A second limpet bomb on another vehicle was reported to have been defused.* desactivar un mecanismo = disable + mechanism.* desactivar un programa de protección = unlock + protection program(me).* * *desactivar [A1 ]vt‹bomba/explosivo› to defuse, deactivate; ‹situación› to defuse* * *
desactivar ( conjugate desactivar) verbo transitivo ‹bomba/explosivo› to defuse, deactivate
desactivar verbo transitivo
1 (un explosivo) to defuse
2 (un plan, una organización) to deactivate
' desactivar' also found in these entries:
English:
defuse
- disarm
* * *desactivar vt1. [bomba, explosivo] to defuse2. [mecanismo, alarma] to disconnect3. [situación peligrosa] to defuse;[plan de emergencia] to call off4. Informát to disable, to deactivate* * ** * *desactivar vt: to deactivate, to defuse -
8 distender
v.1 to ease.2 to distend, to swell, to dilate, to swell up.* * *1 (aflojar) to loosen2 MEDICINA to strain, pull3 figurado to ease1 (aflojarse) to slacken2 MEDICINA to be strained3 figurado to ease* * *1.VT to distend, stretchdistender las relaciones entre ambos países — to ease o steady relations between the two countries
2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo <cuerda/arco> to slacken; <relaciones/ambiente> to ease2.distenderse v pron1) relaciones/ambiente to ease2) vientre to become distended* * *= defuse.Ex. This article gives examples of how problem behaviour can be defused in a library.* * *1.verbo transitivo <cuerda/arco> to slacken; <relaciones/ambiente> to ease2.distenderse v pron1) relaciones/ambiente to ease2) vientre to become distended* * *= defuse.Ex: This article gives examples of how problem behaviour can be defused in a library.
* * *distender [E8 ]vt1 ‹cuerda/arco› to slacken2 ‹relaciones/ambiente› to easeA «relaciones/ambiente» to easeB «vientre» to become distended* * *♦ vt1. [situación, relaciones] to ease;[ambiente] to ease, to relax2. [cuerda, arco] to slacken* * *v/t1 MED strain2 fig: relaciones, ambiente ease* * *distender {56} vt: to distend, to stretch -
9 mitigar
v.1 to alleviate, to reduce (aplacar) (miseria, daño, efecto).2 to mitigate, to relieve, to lighten, to alleviate.Su amor suaviza el dolor Her love mitigates the pain.* * *1 to mitigate, relieve* * *VT [gen] to mitigate frm; [+ dolor] to relieve, ease; [+ sed] to quench; [+ ira] to calm, appease; [+ temores] to allay; [+ calor] to reduce; [+ soledad] to alleviate, relieve* * *verbo transitivo < dolor> to relieve, ease; <pena/surfrimiento> to alleviate, mitigate (frml); < sed> to quench* * *= blunt, bring + relief, temper, mitigate, attenuate, deflate, defuse, take + the sting out of + Algo, take + the bite out of, assuage, appease.Ex. It is arguable that such exhortation and implied criticism blunts receptivity and that it is ultimately counterproductive.Ex. The recent emergence of microcomputers brought some relief to this dilemma.Ex. This advantage must be tempered by the fact that the standard centrally produced record may not always be consistent with local requirements.Ex. Confusion caused by repetition of descriptive information in access points can be mitigated by careful screen design.Ex. In the emerging technological environment of distributed systems, however, the informal or even formal links between source and user are attenuated or broken.Ex. These developments deflate some traditional assumptions about and privileges associated with scientific and technical knowledge.Ex. This article gives examples of how problem behaviour can be defused in a library.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. The aim of this paper is to chart a different course of interpretation through Husserl's earliest work; a course which doesn't take all of the bite out of Heidegger's critique of technology.Ex. The dullard's envy of brilliant men is always assuaged by the suspicion that they will come to bad end.Ex. They've been working their butts off since the program was launched to appease the crowd.----* mitigar el daño = minimise + damage, alleviate + damage.* mitigar el efecto = mitigate + effect.* mitigar el efecto de Algo = minimise + effect.* mitigar el riesgo = minimise + risk.* mitigar una dificultad = alleviate + difficulty.* mitigar un problema = alleviate + problem.* * *verbo transitivo < dolor> to relieve, ease; <pena/surfrimiento> to alleviate, mitigate (frml); < sed> to quench* * *= blunt, bring + relief, temper, mitigate, attenuate, deflate, defuse, take + the sting out of + Algo, take + the bite out of, assuage, appease.Ex: It is arguable that such exhortation and implied criticism blunts receptivity and that it is ultimately counterproductive.
Ex: The recent emergence of microcomputers brought some relief to this dilemma.Ex: This advantage must be tempered by the fact that the standard centrally produced record may not always be consistent with local requirements.Ex: Confusion caused by repetition of descriptive information in access points can be mitigated by careful screen design.Ex: In the emerging technological environment of distributed systems, however, the informal or even formal links between source and user are attenuated or broken.Ex: These developments deflate some traditional assumptions about and privileges associated with scientific and technical knowledge.Ex: This article gives examples of how problem behaviour can be defused in a library.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: The aim of this paper is to chart a different course of interpretation through Husserl's earliest work; a course which doesn't take all of the bite out of Heidegger's critique of technology.Ex: The dullard's envy of brilliant men is always assuaged by the suspicion that they will come to bad end.Ex: They've been working their butts off since the program was launched to appease the crowd.* mitigar el daño = minimise + damage, alleviate + damage.* mitigar el efecto = mitigate + effect.* mitigar el efecto de Algo = minimise + effect.* mitigar el riesgo = minimise + risk.* mitigar una dificultad = alleviate + difficulty.* mitigar un problema = alleviate + problem.* * *mitigar [A3 ]vtto mitigatepara mitigar los efectos de la crisis económica to mitigate the effects of the economic crisismitigar la pena to alleviate the griefno mitiga el dolor it does not relieve o ease o calm the painmitigó el hambre que tenían it relieved their hunger* * *
mitigar ( conjugate mitigar) verbo transitivo ‹ dolor› to relieve, ease;
‹pena/sufrimiento› to alleviate, mitigate (frml);
‹ sed› to quench
mitigar verbo transitivo to mitigate, alleviate: estos regalos ayudarán a mitigar el disgusto, these gifts will help alleviate the pain
' mitigar' also found in these entries:
English:
assuage
- ease
- mitigate
- relieve
- soften
* * *mitigar vt[aplacar] [efecto] to mitigate; [miseria] to alleviate; [daño] to reduce; [ánimos] to calm; [sed] to quench, to slake; [hambre] to take the edge off; [choque, golpe] to soften; [dudas, sospechas] to allay* * *v/t* * *mitigar {52} vtaliviar: to mitigate, to alleviate♦ mitigación nf -
10 paliar
v.1 to ease, to relieve.2 to excuse, to justify.3 to palliate, to buffer, to diminish, to dim.* * *1 to palliate, alleviate* * *VT1) (=mitigar) [+ dolor] to relieve, alleviate, palliate frm; [+ efectos] to lessen, mitigate, palliate frm; [+ importancia] to diminish2) (=disimular) [+ defecto] to conceal, gloss over; [+ ofensa] to mitigate, excuse* * ** * *= mitigate, attenuate, defuse.Ex. Confusion caused by repetition of descriptive information in access points can be mitigated by careful screen design.Ex. In the emerging technological environment of distributed systems, however, the informal or even formal links between source and user are attenuated or broken.Ex. This article gives examples of how problem behaviour can be defused in a library.----* encontrar el modo de paliar un problema = find + way (a)round + problem.* paliar el daño = minimise + damage.* paliar el efecto = mitigate + effect.* paliar las diferencias = bridge + the gap, bridge + the gulf.* paliar problemas = minimise + problems.* paliar un problema = solve + problem.* * ** * *= mitigate, attenuate, defuse.Ex: Confusion caused by repetition of descriptive information in access points can be mitigated by careful screen design.
Ex: In the emerging technological environment of distributed systems, however, the informal or even formal links between source and user are attenuated or broken.Ex: This article gives examples of how problem behaviour can be defused in a library.* encontrar el modo de paliar un problema = find + way (a)round + problem.* paliar el daño = minimise + damage.* paliar el efecto = mitigate + effect.* paliar las diferencias = bridge + the gap, bridge + the gulf.* paliar problemas = minimise + problems.* paliar un problema = solve + problem.* * *vt‹dolor› to ease, alleviate, palliate ( frml); ‹efectos› to mitigate, lessen, alleviate, palliate ( frml)* * *
paliar verbo transitivo to alleviate: la ayuda humanitaria apenas es suficiente para paliar el hambre, the humanitarian aid was hardly enough to alleviate the hunger
' paliar' also found in these entries:
English:
alleviate
- ease
* * *paliar vt[atenuar] [dolor] to ease, to relieve; [cansancio] to relieve* * ** * *paliar vtmitigar: to alleviate, to palliate
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