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1 silueta nebulosa y amenazadora
• distorted and threatening appearanceDiccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > silueta nebulosa y amenazadora
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2 deformar
v.1 to deform (huesos, objetos).El calor deformó el plástico The heat deformed the plastic.2 to distort, to deface, to twist.Sus mentiras deforman los resultados Her lies distort the results.* * *1 to become distorted, go out of shape* * *verb1) to deform2) distort* * *1. VT1) [+ cuerpo] to deform2) [+ objeto] to distort, deformel impacto deformó el chasis — the impact distorted o deformed the chassis
si sigues tirando del jersey, lo deformarás — if you keep pulling at your sweater you'll pull it out of shape
no te pongas mis zapatos que me los deformas — don't wear my shoes, you'll put them out of shape
3) [+ imagen, realidad] to distort2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) < imagen> to distort; <chapa/riel> to distortb) <verdad/realidad> to distortc) (Anat, Med) to deform2.deformarse v prona) imagen to become distortedb) puerta/riel to distort, become distortedc) (Anat, Med) to become deformed* * *= distort, mar, misrepresent, strain, disfigure, falsify, warp, deform.Ex. Commentators who assert their views premised upon a unity of aims for SLIS not only fail to appreciate existential realities, they also distort perceptions about what is the best speed of curriculum evolution.Ex. Unfortunately, much of Metcalfe's writing is marred by what appears to be a deep-rooted prejudice against the classified approach, particularly as exemplified by Ranganathan.Ex. When it is clear that material is biased or misrepresents a group, librarians should correct the situation, either by refusing the material or by giving equal representation to opposing points of view.Ex. His small foreign-made car strained with the added burden of an interior packed to capacity with personal belongings and a heavily laden U-Haul trailor attached to the rear.Ex. Whichever he chooses he will still have to sift out and categorize the numerous errors that disfigure all the early texts of the play.Ex. These multipliers are low in comparison with those applied by commercial publishers, though the comparison is substantially falsified by the high costs for the institutions of originating publications in a number of parallel language versions.Ex. Metallic shelves cannot be damaged by woodworms or rodents and they are not likely to warp under the weight of bound volumes and are fire-proof.Ex. As you probably have noticed, squash balls aren't very bouncy at all, they deform when they hit a wall or the floor.----* deformarse = deflect.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) < imagen> to distort; <chapa/riel> to distortb) <verdad/realidad> to distortc) (Anat, Med) to deform2.deformarse v prona) imagen to become distortedb) puerta/riel to distort, become distortedc) (Anat, Med) to become deformed* * *= distort, mar, misrepresent, strain, disfigure, falsify, warp, deform.Ex: Commentators who assert their views premised upon a unity of aims for SLIS not only fail to appreciate existential realities, they also distort perceptions about what is the best speed of curriculum evolution.
Ex: Unfortunately, much of Metcalfe's writing is marred by what appears to be a deep-rooted prejudice against the classified approach, particularly as exemplified by Ranganathan.Ex: When it is clear that material is biased or misrepresents a group, librarians should correct the situation, either by refusing the material or by giving equal representation to opposing points of view.Ex: His small foreign-made car strained with the added burden of an interior packed to capacity with personal belongings and a heavily laden U-Haul trailor attached to the rear.Ex: Whichever he chooses he will still have to sift out and categorize the numerous errors that disfigure all the early texts of the play.Ex: These multipliers are low in comparison with those applied by commercial publishers, though the comparison is substantially falsified by the high costs for the institutions of originating publications in a number of parallel language versions.Ex: Metallic shelves cannot be damaged by woodworms or rodents and they are not likely to warp under the weight of bound volumes and are fire-proof.Ex: As you probably have noticed, squash balls aren't very bouncy at all, they deform when they hit a wall or the floor.* deformarse = deflect.* * *deformar [A1 ]vt1 ‹imagen› to distort2 ‹chapa/riel› to distort, to twist ( o push etc) … out of shapela percha ha deformado la chaqueta the hanger has pulled the jacket out of shape3 ‹verdad/realidad› to distortla artritis le ha deformado los dedos her fingers have been deformed by o become misshapen with arthritis1 «imagen» to become distorted2 «puerta/riel» to distort, become distorted, bend ( o twist etc) out of shapelos zapatos se me deformaron con la lluvia my shoes got wet in the rain and lost their shape* * *
deformar ( conjugate deformar) verbo transitivo
b) (Anat, Med) to deform
deformarse verbo pronominal
b) (Anat, Med) to become deformed
deformar verbo transitivo
1 (una parte del cuerpo) to deform
(una prenda) to put out of shape
2 (la verdad, realidad, una imagen) to distort
' deformar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
desfigurar
English:
deform
- distort
- misrepresent
* * *♦ vt1. [cuerpo, figura, miembro] to deform;[prenda] to pull out of shape; [metal] to twist; [madera] to warp2. [imagen] to distort3. [la verdad, la realidad] to distort* * *v/t2 MED deform* * *deformar vt1) : to deform, to disfigure2) : to distort -
3 distorsionado
adj.distorted, garbled, twisted, altered.past part.past participle of spanish verb: distorsionar.* * *ADJ1) [sonido, imagen] distorted2) [relato, realidad ] distorted* * *= distorted, twisted.Ex. Reciprocal RT references work both ways and are marked with a kind of blob in the shape of a distorted inverted comma.Ex. He gave a twisted, rather foolish smile, and continued talking.* * *= distorted, twisted.Ex: Reciprocal RT references work both ways and are marked with a kind of blob in the shape of a distorted inverted comma.
Ex: He gave a twisted, rather foolish smile, and continued talking.* * *distorsionado, -a adj1. [sonido, imagen] distorted2. [relato, interpretación, versión] distorted, twisted -
4 deformado
adj.deformed, distorted, misshapen, out of shape.past part.past participle of spanish verb: deformar.* * *1→ link=deformar deformar► adjetivo1→ link=deforme deforme* * *ADJ [cuerpo, rostro] deformed; [imagen, vista] distorted* * *= deformed, warped, malformed, distorted, disfigured.Ex. Most of these experiments resulted in badly deformed still-births = La mayoría de estos experimentos dieron como resultado bebés que nacieron muertos y muy deformados.Ex. This article points to a warped sense of morality in which there is no such concept as 'theft' in some people's lexicon.Ex. Occasionally we find inverted headings, giving a small measure of grouping in the alphabetical section: NAILS; NAILS, INGROWN; NAILS, malformed.Ex. Reciprocal RT references work both ways and are marked with a kind of blob in the shape of a distorted inverted comma.Ex. In addition, he parodies romantic conventions by casting one of the story's lovers as a disfigured, humpbacked character reminiscent of Quasimodo in Victor Hugo's Notre-Dame of Paris.----* con el pie deformado = clubfooted.* * *= deformed, warped, malformed, distorted, disfigured.Ex: Most of these experiments resulted in badly deformed still-births = La mayoría de estos experimentos dieron como resultado bebés que nacieron muertos y muy deformados.
Ex: This article points to a warped sense of morality in which there is no such concept as 'theft' in some people's lexicon.Ex: Occasionally we find inverted headings, giving a small measure of grouping in the alphabetical section: NAILS; NAILS, INGROWN; NAILS, malformed.Ex: Reciprocal RT references work both ways and are marked with a kind of blob in the shape of a distorted inverted comma.Ex: In addition, he parodies romantic conventions by casting one of the story's lovers as a disfigured, humpbacked character reminiscent of Quasimodo in Victor Hugo's Notre-Dame of Paris.* con el pie deformado = clubfooted.* * *deformado, -a adj1. [cuerpo, figura, miembro] deformed2. [objeto] misshapen3. [imagen] distorted4. [verdad, realidad] distorted -
5 imagen distorsionada
(n.) = distorted picture, distorted imageEx. This has the effect of giving children an incomplete and distorted picture of a culture highlighting the exotic, the rural and the fantastic aspects rather than the common characteristics.Ex. This is necessary since television advertising has imbedded many distorted images in children's minds.* * *(n.) = distorted picture, distorted imageEx: This has the effect of giving children an incomplete and distorted picture of a culture highlighting the exotic, the rural and the fantastic aspects rather than the common characteristics.
Ex: This is necessary since television advertising has imbedded many distorted images in children's minds. -
6 desfigurado
adj.disfigured, misshapen, deformed, distorted.past part.past participle of spanish verb: desfigurar.* * *1→ link=desfigurar desfigurar► adjetivo1 (persona) disfigured2 (estatua etc) defaced* * *ADJ [persona] disfigured; [sonido, voz, sentido, realidad] distorted; [foto] blurred* * *- da adjetivo disfigured* * *= disfigured, defaced.Ex. In addition, he parodies romantic conventions by casting one of the story's lovers as a disfigured, humpbacked character reminiscent of Quasimodo in Victor Hugo's Notre-Dame of Paris.Ex. He inherited a deplorable 'library' with a randomly-chosen collection of tattered, torn, defaced books.* * *- da adjetivo disfigured* * *= disfigured, defaced.Ex: In addition, he parodies romantic conventions by casting one of the story's lovers as a disfigured, humpbacked character reminiscent of Quasimodo in Victor Hugo's Notre-Dame of Paris.
Ex: He inherited a deplorable 'library' with a randomly-chosen collection of tattered, torn, defaced books.* * *desfigurado -dadisfiguredquedó desfigurado he was left disfiguredlos miraba con el rostro desfigurado por el terror he stared at them, his face contorted with terrortiene las facciones desfiguradas por la hinchazón the swelling has distorted his features* * *
Del verbo desfigurar: ( conjugate desfigurar)
desfigurado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
desfigurado
desfigurar
desfigurado◊ -da adjetivo
disfigured
desfigurar ( conjugate desfigurar) verbo transitivo
1 [quemaduras/cicatriz] ‹ persona› to disfigure
2 ‹ hechos› to distort, twist;
‹ realidad› to distort
desfigurar verbo transitivo
1 (deformar físicamente) to disfigure
2 (alterar, distorsionar) to distort: el espejo desfiguraba sus facciones, the mirror distorted her features
* * *desfigurado, -a adjdisfigured;el accidente lo dejó desfigurado the accident left him disfigured;el rostro desfigurado por el pánico her face contorted with o in panic -
7 desfigurar
v.to disfigure (rostro, cuerpo).El calor deformó el plástico The heat deformed the plastic.* * *1 (cara) to disfigure2 (estatua etc) to deface3 figurado (realidad, hechos, etc) to distort1 (descomponerse) to become distorted* * *VT1) (=transformar) [+ cara] to disfigure; [+ cuerpo] to deform; [+ cuadro, monumento] to deface; [+ voz, sonido] to distort, disguise; [+ sentido] to twist; [+ suceso] to misrepresent2) (Fot) to blur* * *verbo transitivo1) < persona> to disfigure* * *= misrepresent, deface, disfigure.Ex. When it is clear that material is biased or misrepresents a group, librarians should correct the situation, either by refusing the material or by giving equal representation to opposing points of view.Ex. Do not write or scribble in books or otherwise deface them.Ex. Whichever he chooses he will still have to sift out and categorize the numerous errors that disfigure all the early texts of the play.* * *verbo transitivo1) < persona> to disfigure* * *= misrepresent, deface, disfigure.Ex: When it is clear that material is biased or misrepresents a group, librarians should correct the situation, either by refusing the material or by giving equal representation to opposing points of view.
Ex: Do not write or scribble in books or otherwise deface them.Ex: Whichever he chooses he will still have to sift out and categorize the numerous errors that disfigure all the early texts of the play.* * *desfigurar [A1 ]vtA ‹persona› to disfigurelas quemaduras le desfiguraron el rostro the burns disfigured himese maquillaje la desfigura she looks hideous with that makeup onla sombra le desfiguraba las facciones the shadow distorted her featureslos hoteles han desfigurado la costa the hotels have disfigured o completely ruined the coastlineB ‹hechos› to distort, twist; ‹realidad› to distort( refl):se le desfiguró la cara en el accidente his face was disfigured in the accident* * *
desfigurar ( conjugate desfigurar) verbo transitivo
1 [quemaduras/cicatriz] ‹ persona› to disfigure
2 ‹ hechos› to distort, twist;
‹ realidad› to distort
desfigurar verbo transitivo
1 (deformar físicamente) to disfigure
2 (alterar, distorsionar) to distort: el espejo desfiguraba sus facciones, the mirror distorted her features
' desfigurar' also found in these entries:
English:
deface
- disfigure
* * *♦ vt1. [aspecto físico] to disfigure;el accidente le desfiguró la cara his face was disfigured in the accident;el espeso humo desfiguraba las siluetas de los bomberos the thick smoke blurred the outline of the firemen's figures;los chalets adosados han desfigurado el viejo pueblo the semi-detached houses have ruined the look of the old town2. [realidad, verdad] to distort* * *v/t disfigure* * *desfigurar vt1) : to disfigure, to mar2) : to distort, to misrepresent -
8 tergiversado
adj.distorted, altered, falsified, forged.past part.past participle of spanish verb: tergiversar.* * *= distorted.Ex. Reciprocal RT references work both ways and are marked with a kind of blob in the shape of a distorted inverted comma.* * *= distorted.Ex: Reciprocal RT references work both ways and are marked with a kind of blob in the shape of a distorted inverted comma.
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9 deformarse
1 to become distorted, go out of shape* * *VPR1) [cuerpo, miembro] to become deformed2) [madera, puerta] to become warped, become twistedse le deformó el sombrero con la lluvia — her hat lost its shape in the rain, the rain made her hat lose its shape
3) [imagen] to distort, become distorted* * *(v.) = deflectEx. On deflecting one of these levers to the right he runs through the book before him, each page in turn being projected at a speed which just allows a recognizing glance at each.* * *(v.) = deflectEx: On deflecting one of these levers to the right he runs through the book before him, each page in turn being projected at a speed which just allows a recognizing glance at each.
* * *
■deformarse verbo reflexivo
1 (una parte del cuerpo) to become deformed
2 (una prenda) to go out of shape
3 (distorsionarse) to become distorted
' deformarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
viciarse
- deformar
* * *vpr1. [hueso, cuerpo, miembro] to become deformed;[prenda] to go out of shape; [metal] to get twisted out of shape; [madera] to warp;se me ha deformado el jersey al lavarlo my sweater lost its shape when I washed it2. [imagen] to become distorted* * *vr -
10 distorsionar
v.to distort.Su inseguridad distorsionó los hechos His insecurity distorted the facts.El golpe distorsionó la pared The blow distorted the wall.* * *1 to distort* * *verb* * *VT to distort* * *verbo transitivo to distort* * *= distort, pervert.Ex. Commentators who assert their views premised upon a unity of aims for SLIS not only fail to appreciate existential realities, they also distort perceptions about what is the best speed of curriculum evolution.Ex. Humans have an extraordinary capacity for perverting well-intended laws to evil purposes.* * *verbo transitivo to distort* * *= distort, pervert.Ex: Commentators who assert their views premised upon a unity of aims for SLIS not only fail to appreciate existential realities, they also distort perceptions about what is the best speed of curriculum evolution.
Ex: Humans have an extraordinary capacity for perverting well-intended laws to evil purposes.* * *distorsionar [A1 ]vt1 ( Tec) to distort2 ‹verdad/realidad› to distort, twisttiene una imagen distorsionada de la realidad she has a distorted view of realitytenía la cara distorsionada por el dolor her face was contorted with pain* * *
distorsionar ( conjugate distorsionar) verbo transitivo
to distort
distorsionar verbo transitivo to distort, deform: está distorsionando la realidad, she's distorting the truth
' distorsionar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
desfigurar
- falsificar
- pervertir
English:
bend
- distort
- misrepresent
- twist
* * *distorsionar vt1. [imágenes, sonidos] to distort2. [palabras] to twist;[hechos, realidad] to distort, to misrepresent;la prensa distorsionó los hechos the press distorted o misrepresented the facts* * *v/t1 verdad distort2 MED sprain* * *distorsionar vt: to distort -
11 descompuesto
adj.1 out of order, bad, broken, busted.2 rotten, flyblown, decomposed, fly-blown.past part.past participle of spanish verb: descomponer.* * *1→ link=descomponer descomponer► adjetivo1 (podrido) decomposed, decayed, rotten2 (estropeado) out of order, broken down3 figurado (alterado) upset4 figurado (atrevido) insolent, impudent\estar descompuesto,-a to have diarrhoea (US diarrhea)* * *1.PP de descomponer2. ADJ1) (=estropeado) esp Méx [reloj] broken; [motor] broken down; [sistema] disorganized, chaotic; [cuarto] untidy; [aspecto] slovenly2) (Med)estar descompuesto — to have diarrhoea o (EEUU) diarrhea
3) [cifra] decomposed4) [roca] loose5) (=alterado) [rostro] distorted6) [persona] (=descarado) brazen, forward; (=furioso) angryponerse descompuesto — to get angry, lose one's composure
7) LAm * (=medio borracho) tipsy* * *- ta adjetivo2) < expresión> changed, altered3) (esp AmL) [estar] <máquina/aparato> broken; < teléfono> out of order4)a) ( indispuesto)b) ( del estómago)está descompuesto — he has diarrhea*/an upset stomach
* * *= rotting.Ex. He is a modernist abandoning himself to romanticism and finding beauty in rotting corpses and reeking cities.----* descompuesto del estómago = upset stomach.* estómago descompuesto = upset stomach.* tener la cara descompuesta = look like + death warmed (over/up).* * *- ta adjetivo2) < expresión> changed, altered3) (esp AmL) [estar] <máquina/aparato> broken; < teléfono> out of order4)a) ( indispuesto)b) ( del estómago)está descompuesto — he has diarrhea*/an upset stomach
* * *= rotting.Ex: He is a modernist abandoning himself to romanticism and finding beauty in rotting corpses and reeking cities.
* descompuesto del estómago = upset stomach.* estómago descompuesto = upset stomach.* tener la cara descompuesta = look like + death warmed (over/up).* * *descompuesto -taA ‹alimento› rotten, decomposed ( frml); ‹cadáver› decomposedB ‹expresión› changed, alteredtenía el rostro descompuesto he looked very upsetC( esp AmL) ‹máquina/aparato› había varios coches descompuestos en la carretera on the road there were several cars which had broken downla lavadora/radio está descompuesta the washing machine/radio is brokenel teléfono está descompuesto the telephone is out of orderD1(indispuesto): se pasó los primeros meses del embarazo descompuesta she felt queasy o sick o nauseous for the first months of the pregnancy2(del estómago): está descompuesto he has an upset stomach/diarrhea** * *
Del verbo descomponer: ( conjugate descomponer)
descompuesto es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
descomponer
descompuesto
descomponer ( conjugate descomponer) verbo transitivo
1 ‹alimento/cadáver› to rot, cause … to decompose o rot
2 (esp AmL) ‹máquina/aparato› to break;
‹ peinado› to mess up
3 ‹ persona›
descomponerse verbo pronominal
1 [ luz] to split;
[ sustancia] to break down, separate
2 [cadáver/alimento] to rot, decompose (frml)
3 (esp AmL) [máquina/aparato] to break down
4 [ persona] ( sentir malestar) to feel sick;
( del estómago) to have an attack of diarrhea( conjugate diarrhea)
6 (CS) [ tiempo] to become unsettled;
[ día] to cloud over
descompuesto◊ -ta adjetivo
1 ‹ alimento› rotten, decomposed (frml);
‹ cadáver› decomposed
2 ‹ expresión› changed, altered
3 (esp AmL) [estar] ‹máquina/aparato› broken;
‹ teléfono› out of order
4
( del estómago) to have diarrhea( conjugate diarrhea)/an upset stomach
descomponer verbo transitivo
1 (dividir) to break up, split
2 (pudrir) to rot, decompose
3 (poner nervioso) to get on sb's nerves
4 (el rostro) to distort
descompuesto,-a adjetivo
1 (podrido) rotten, decomposed
2 (desencajado) contorted, distorted
3 fam (con diarrea) having diarrhoea, US diarrhea
' descompuesto' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
descompuesta
- podrido
English:
bilious
- broken-down
- order
- upset
* * *descompuesto, -a♦ participiover descomponer♦ adj1. [putrefacto] [fruta, comida] rotten;[cadáver] decomposed2. [alterado] [rostro] distorted, twisted4. Andes, CAm, PRico [borracho] tipsy5. Méx, RP [averiado] [máquina] out of order;[vehículo] broken down;mi moto está descompuesta my motorbike has broken down* * *I part → descomponerII adj2 persona upset3 L.Am.tipsy4 L.Am.máquina broken down* * *descompuesto, -ta adj1) : broken down, out of order2) : rotten, decomposed -
12 desencajarse
1 (desunirse) to come apart, come loose* * *VPR [cara] to become distorted o contorted; [ojos] to look wild* * *(v.) = work + looseEx. The vibration may cause the chips to work loose over a period of time, and if they have to be pushed back into their sockets, it is very easy to bend or break one of the 'legs'.* * *(v.) = work + looseEx: The vibration may cause the chips to work loose over a period of time, and if they have to be pushed back into their sockets, it is very easy to bend or break one of the 'legs'.
* * *
■desencajarse verbo reflexivo
1 (pieza) to come out
(hueso) to become dislocated
2 (el rostro) to become distorted
' desencajarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
desencajar
* * *vpr1. [desajustarse] [piezas, mecanismo] to come out of place;[hueso] to dislocate;se le ha desencajado la mandíbula he's dislocated his jaw;el cajón se ha desencajado the drawer has come off its runners;la puerta se ha desencajado the door doesn't fit properly in its frame2. [rostro] to become contorted, to contort* * *v/r1 de pieza come out2:se le ha desencajado la mandíbula he has dislocated his jaw -
13 desvirtuar
v.1 to spoil.su victoria quedó totalmente desvirtuada his victory was rendered meaninglessesta actuación desvirtúa el espíritu del acuerdo this action violates the spirit of the agreementEllos desvirtuaron su regalo They spoiled his gift.2 to distort, to misrepresent, to twist, to camouflage.Ricardo desvirtuó la verdad Richard distorted the truth.* * *1 to impair, spoil, distort2 figurado to contradict, belie* * *1.VT [+ argumento, razonamiento] to detract from; [+ efecto] to counteract; [+ sentido] to distortla cláusula secreta desvirtuó el objetivo del tratado — the secret clause nullified the aim of the treaty
2.See:* * *verbo transitivo <verdad/hechos> to distort* * *= distort.Ex. Commentators who assert their views premised upon a unity of aims for SLIS not only fail to appreciate existential realities, they also distort perceptions about what is the best speed of curriculum evolution.* * *verbo transitivo <verdad/hechos> to distort* * *= distort.Ex: Commentators who assert their views premised upon a unity of aims for SLIS not only fail to appreciate existential realities, they also distort perceptions about what is the best speed of curriculum evolution.
* * *desvirtuar [ A18 ]vtA (tergiversar, alterar) ‹verdad/hechos› to distortla traducción desvirtúa totalmente el sentido del original the translation completely distorts o alters the sense of the originalel periódico desvirtuó sus declaraciones the newspaper misrepresented what he had said o distorted his wordsB1 (anular) ‹argumento› to disprove; ‹sospecha› to prove … to be unfounded2 (debilitar) ‹argumento› to detract from* * *
desvirtuar verbo transitivo to distort, adulterate: ese comunicado desvirtúa la realidad de lo que pasó, that communiqué distorts the actual facts of the incident
* * *desvirtuar vt1. [estropear] to spoil;el comercialismo desvirtúa la producción literaria commercialism has a detrimental effect on literary writing;su victoria quedó totalmente desvirtuada his victory was rendered meaningless;esta actuación desvirtúa el espíritu del acuerdo this action violates the spirit of the agreement2. [distorsionar] to distort;la prensa ha desvirtuado mis palabras the press have twisted my words;desvirtuó los hechos en su declaración al juez he distorted the facts in his statement to the judge* * *v/t detract from; fig ( distorsionar) distort* * *desvirtuar {3} vt1) : to impair, to spoil2) : to detract from3) : to distort, to misrepresent -
14 deforme
adj.deformed, disfigured (cuerpo).pres.subj.3rd person singular (él/ella/ello) Present Subjunctive of Spanish verb: deformar.* * *► adjetivo* * *ADJ1) (=de forma anormal) [espécimen, cuerpo] deformed; [cabeza, sombra] misshapen2) (=feo) ugly* * *adjetivo deformed* * *adjetivo deformed* * *deformed* * *
Del verbo deformar: ( conjugate deformar)
deformé es:
1ª persona singular (yo) pretérito indicativo
deforme es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) imperativo
Multiple Entries:
deformar
deforme
deformar ( conjugate deformar) verbo transitivo
b) (Anat, Med) to deform
deformarse verbo pronominal
b) (Anat, Med) to become deformed
deforme adjetivo
deformed
deformar verbo transitivo
1 (una parte del cuerpo) to deform
(una prenda) to put out of shape
2 (la verdad, realidad, una imagen) to distort
deforme adj (persona) deformed
(objeto) misshapen
' deforme' also found in these entries:
English:
clubfoot
- deformed
- misshapen
* * *deforme adj[cuerpo] deformed, disfigured; [imagen] distorted; [objeto] misshapen* * *adj1 MED deformed2 zapatos out of shape, misshapen* * *deforme adj: deformed, misshapen -
15 demudar
v.1 to change, to alter.2 to turn pale.* * *1 (gen) to change, alter1 (palidecer) to turn pale2 (alterarse) to change one's expression* * *1.VT [+ rostro] to change, alter2.See:* * *1.2.tenía el rostro demudado por el dolor — her face was distorted by o contorted with pain
demudarse v pronse le demudó la expresión/el rostro al verla entrar — his expression changed when he saw her come in
* * *1.2.tenía el rostro demudado por el dolor — her face was distorted by o contorted with pain
demudarse v pronse le demudó la expresión/el rostro al verla entrar — his expression changed when he saw her come in
* * *demudar [A1 ]vt‹expresión› to alter, changetenía el rostro demudado por el dolor her face was distorted by o contorted with pain«rostro/expresión/persona»: se le demudó la expresión/quedó demudado al verla entrar his expression changed when he saw her come in* * *♦ vtto change, to alter;la noticia le demudó el rostro her expression changed when she heard the news* * ** * *demudar vt: to change, to alter -
16 distorsionarse
• be distorted• become distorted• get distorted• get triggered• get ugly -
17 acepillado
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18 cepillado
adj.brushed.m.1 brush.2 brushing, act of brushing, smoothing, planing.past part.past participle of spanish verb: cepillar.* * *1 brushing2 (de carpintería) planing* * *noun m.* * *SM1) [de ropa, dientes, pelo] brushing2) [de madera] planing* * *a) (de ropa, de pelo, de dientes) brush, brushingb) ( de madera) planing* * *= planing.Ex. The outermost cell layer is heavily distorted and damaged from planing of the surfaces prior to gluing.----* acero cepillado = brushed steel.* * *a) (de ropa, de pelo, de dientes) brush, brushingb) ( de madera) planing* * *= planing.Ex: The outermost cell layer is heavily distorted and damaged from planing of the surfaces prior to gluing.
* acero cepillado = brushed steel.* * *1 (de ropa, pelo, dientes) brush, brushingdale un buen cepillado al abrigo antes de guardarlo give the coat a good brush o brushing before you put it away2 (de madera) planing* * *cepillado nm1. [con cepillo] brush, brushing2. [en carpintería] planing -
19 criticar a
(n.) = fulminate about, level + criticism atEx. In his latest book Wilson Follett fulminates for two pages about librarians imposing these ridiculous distorted headings on the public.Ex. As is the way with these things there were two conflicting criticisms levelled at the joint code.* * *(n.) = fulminate about, level + criticism atEx: In his latest book Wilson Follett fulminates for two pages about librarians imposing these ridiculous distorted headings on the public.
Ex: As is the way with these things there were two conflicting criticisms levelled at the joint code. -
20 de baja calidad
(adj.) = poor in detail, low-grade [lowgrade], low-quality, third rate [third-rate], low-end, trashy [trashier -comp., trashiest -sup.]Ex. This process is slow and the resulting picture is poor in detail.Ex. The amount of stuffing in the balls was varied to suit the nature of the work; large, soft balls with weak ink were used for low-grade work; small, hard balls and strong ink for work of better quality.Ex. Low-quality information can be downright misleading or distorted.Ex. The quality of the material published has often been regarded as second or third rate, a criticism less justified today.Ex. Therefore real time interaction is feasible on both low-end and high-end machines.Ex. Wilensky has argued that 'the good, the mediocre and the trashy are becoming fused in one massive middle mush' and that 'intellectuals are increasingly tempted to play to mass audiences'.* * *(adj.) = poor in detail, low-grade [lowgrade], low-quality, third rate [third-rate], low-end, trashy [trashier -comp., trashiest -sup.]Ex: This process is slow and the resulting picture is poor in detail.
Ex: The amount of stuffing in the balls was varied to suit the nature of the work; large, soft balls with weak ink were used for low-grade work; small, hard balls and strong ink for work of better quality.Ex: Low-quality information can be downright misleading or distorted.Ex: The quality of the material published has often been regarded as second or third rate, a criticism less justified today.Ex: Therefore real time interaction is feasible on both low-end and high-end machines.Ex: Wilensky has argued that 'the good, the mediocre and the trashy are becoming fused in one massive middle mush' and that 'intellectuals are increasingly tempted to play to mass audiences'.
См. также в других словарях:
Distorted (EP) — Distorted EP by Distorted Released September 2001 Genre Death/doom Oriental metal Progressive metal … Wikipedia
distorted — distorted; un·distorted; … English syllables
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distorted — index defective, fallacious, false (inaccurate), faulty, mendacious Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
Distorted — For other uses, see Distorted (disambiguation). Distorted Origin Bat Yam, Israel Genres Death/Doom Oriental metal Progressive metal Years active 1996–present … Wikipedia
Distorted — Distort Dis*tort , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Distorted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Distorting}.] 1. To twist of natural or regular shape; to twist aside physically; as, to distort the limbs, or the body. [1913 Webster] Whose face was distorted with pain.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
distorted — distortedly, adv. distortedness, n. /di stawr tid/, adj. 1. not truly or completely representing the facts or reality; misrepresented; false: She has a distorted view of life. 2. twisted; deformed; misshapen. 3. mentally or morally twisted, as… … Universalium
distorted — adjective 1) a distorted face Syn: twisted, warped, contorted, buckled, deformed, malformed, misshapen, disfigured, crooked, out of shape 2) a distorted version Syn: misrepresented … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary
distorted — adj. Distorted is used with these nouns: ↑image, ↑impression, ↑perception, ↑perspective, ↑picture, ↑reflection, ↑sound, ↑view, ↑vision … Collocations dictionary
distorted — distort ► VERB 1) pull or twist out of shape. 2) give a misleading account of. 3) change the form of (an electrical signal or sound wave) during transmission or amplification. DERIVATIVES distorted adjective distortion noun. ORIGIN Latin… … English terms dictionary
distorted — adjective 1. so badly formed or out of shape as to be ugly deformed thalidomide babies his poor distorted limbs an ill shapen vase a limp caused by a malformed foot misshapen old fingers • Syn: ↑deformed, ↑ … Useful english dictionary