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81 ataviarse
VPR to dress up, get o.s. up (con, de in)* * *(v.) = tog out, tog upEx. Coach Franny Kelly and all players are requested to be togged out and on he pitch by 8pm on both nights.Ex. Many guards view the detainees as criminals and get togged up in riot gear prepared to use force in situations best controlled by simply talking to people.* * *(v.) = tog out, tog upEx: Coach Franny Kelly and all players are requested to be togged out and on he pitch by 8pm on both nights.
Ex: Many guards view the detainees as criminals and get togged up in riot gear prepared to use force in situations best controlled by simply talking to people.* * *
■ataviarse verbo reflexivo to attire oneself
' ataviarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
arreglar
* * *vprto dress up;se atavió mucho para salir she got all dressed up to go out;se atavió con sus mejores galas she dressed herself up in all her finery* * *v/r dress up* * *vr: to dress up -
82 atrapar
v.1 to catch.La policía atrapa ladrones The police catches thieves.2 to latch onto, to grab.Finalmente atrapó un novio She finally latch onto a boyfriend.3 to entrap.* * *1 to seize, capture, catch* * *verb1) to trap, capture2) catch* * *VT1) [en trampa] to trap; (=apresar) to capture; [+ resfriado etc] to catch2) (=engañar) to take in, deceive* * *verbo transitivo <conejo/ladrón> to catch* * *= lock, trap, catch, tether, entrap, ensnare, hunt down, snare, bust.Ex. If the analogy with the fairy story is taken a little further it can be noted that no author really believes in dragons, wicked queens, fair maidens locked in high towers and the like.Ex. If the borrower being processed has been set to be trapped, DOBIS/LIBIS displays the message: 'You have trapped a borrower'.Ex. 'And of course,' said the director, brightening as his idea gave birth to another one in her mind, 'it will be interesting to know how efficient electronic systems are at catching thieves'.Ex. The book reached the limits of its potential as an information carrier long ago and libraries unfortunately allowed themselves to become tethered by those limitations.Ex. Librarians have been known to devote time to entrap and arrest individuals who use the library toilets for sexual purposes = Hay casos de bibliotecarios que han dedicado tiempo a atrapar y detener a individuos que utilizan los servicios de la biblioteca con fines sexuales.Ex. The novel has many trappings that will ensnare the average reader but skulking at the bottom of its well of intrigue is a timeless terror more attuned to the mature sensibilities of an adult audience.Ex. Clinton promised that those responsible would be hunted down and punished.Ex. In fact, the Indians had been snaring animals long before the white man came to North America.Ex. On Saturday, a trooper stood on a street corner dressed in plain clothes and helped bust 30 people for not wearing their seat belts.----* atrapado en = enmeshed in.* atrapar contra = pin + Nombre + against.* * *verbo transitivo <conejo/ladrón> to catch* * *= lock, trap, catch, tether, entrap, ensnare, hunt down, snare, bust.Ex: If the analogy with the fairy story is taken a little further it can be noted that no author really believes in dragons, wicked queens, fair maidens locked in high towers and the like.
Ex: If the borrower being processed has been set to be trapped, DOBIS/LIBIS displays the message: 'You have trapped a borrower'.Ex: 'And of course,' said the director, brightening as his idea gave birth to another one in her mind, 'it will be interesting to know how efficient electronic systems are at catching thieves'.Ex: The book reached the limits of its potential as an information carrier long ago and libraries unfortunately allowed themselves to become tethered by those limitations.Ex: Librarians have been known to devote time to entrap and arrest individuals who use the library toilets for sexual purposes = Hay casos de bibliotecarios que han dedicado tiempo a atrapar y detener a individuos que utilizan los servicios de la biblioteca con fines sexuales.Ex: The novel has many trappings that will ensnare the average reader but skulking at the bottom of its well of intrigue is a timeless terror more attuned to the mature sensibilities of an adult audience.Ex: Clinton promised that those responsible would be hunted down and punished.Ex: In fact, the Indians had been snaring animals long before the white man came to North America.Ex: On Saturday, a trooper stood on a street corner dressed in plain clothes and helped bust 30 people for not wearing their seat belts.* atrapado en = enmeshed in.* atrapar contra = pin + Nombre + against.* * *atrapar [A1 ]vt‹mariposas/conejo› to catchatraparon al ladrón they caught the thiefquedaron atrapados en el interior del local they were trapped inside the building* * *
atrapar ( conjugate atrapar) verbo transitivo
to catch
atrapar verbo transitivo to catch
' atrapar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
agarrar
- cazar
- coger
- pillar
English:
catch
- ensnare
- hunt down
- snare
- trap
* * *atrapar vt1. [agarrar, alcanzar] to catch;la policía atrapó a los atracadores the police caught the bank robbers;el portero atrapó la pelota the goalkeeper caught the ballhe atrapado un resfriado I've come down with a cold* * *v/t catch, trap* * *atrapar vt: to trap, to capture* * * -
83 barca de remos
rowboat (AmE), rowing boat (BrE)* * *(n.) = rowboatEx. An example is a scene of two men, dressed in yellow slickers, in a rowboat rescuing people during a flood.* * *rowboat (AmE), rowing boat (BrE)* * *(n.) = rowboatEx: An example is a scene of two men, dressed in yellow slickers, in a rowboat rescuing people during a flood.
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84 brillar
v.1 to shine (also figurative).brillar por su ausencia to be conspicuous by its/one's absenceEl alumbrado luce The lighting shines.2 to shine on.Nos brilló una gran luz A great light shone on us.* * *1 (luz, sol, luna, pelo, zapatos) to shine3 figurado to be outstanding* * *verb1) to shine2) sparkle3) glitter* * *VI1) (=relucir) [luz, sol] to shine; [estrella, ojos] to shine, sparkle; [metal, superficie, pelo] [gen] to shine; [por estar mojado, grasiento] to glisten; [joyas, lentejuelas] to sparkle, glitterle brillaban los ojos de alegría — her eyes shone o sparkled with happiness
¡cómo te brillan los zapatos! — what shiny shoes!
2) (=sobresalir) to shinebrillar por su ausencia —
* * *1.verbo intransitivoa) sol/luz to shine; estrella to shine, sparkle; zapatos/suelo/metal to shine, gleam; diamante to sparkleb) ( destacarse) persona to shine2.brilla por su astucia/inteligencia — she's particularly shrewd/intelligent
brillar vt (Col) to polish* * *= glow, gleam, glitter, shimmer, shine, flare, glisten.Ex. In the case of the card catalog complete sequences exist whether or not someone is actually viewing them, while on a CRT (cathode-ray tube) screen they exist only so long as the phosphors continue to glow.Ex. Tears gleamed in Washington's eyes.Ex. The article 'Job opportunities glitter for librarians who surf the net' describes a range of Internet resources which post details of library and information science job vacancies in the USA and elsewhere.Ex. Dressed to the nines, the three characters shimmer like tropical fish beached in the desert.Ex. A light box would be provided for this purpose so that the cards could be accurately stacked on top of each other to allow the light from the light box to shine through any holes that the three cards had in common.Ex. The visual manifestation of the recent Hale-Bopp comet reminds us how telling are those rare objects which suddenly flare in the sky.Ex. Whatever the fiord's mood, teeming with rain or with sun glistening on deep water, it will inspire you.----* brillar por Uno mismo = shine on + Posesivo + own.* ojos + brillar de rabia = eyes + glint with + rage.* * *1.verbo intransitivoa) sol/luz to shine; estrella to shine, sparkle; zapatos/suelo/metal to shine, gleam; diamante to sparkleb) ( destacarse) persona to shine2.brilla por su astucia/inteligencia — she's particularly shrewd/intelligent
brillar vt (Col) to polish* * *= glow, gleam, glitter, shimmer, shine, flare, glisten.Ex: In the case of the card catalog complete sequences exist whether or not someone is actually viewing them, while on a CRT (cathode-ray tube) screen they exist only so long as the phosphors continue to glow.
Ex: Tears gleamed in Washington's eyes.Ex: The article 'Job opportunities glitter for librarians who surf the net' describes a range of Internet resources which post details of library and information science job vacancies in the USA and elsewhere.Ex: Dressed to the nines, the three characters shimmer like tropical fish beached in the desert.Ex: A light box would be provided for this purpose so that the cards could be accurately stacked on top of each other to allow the light from the light box to shine through any holes that the three cards had in common.Ex: The visual manifestation of the recent Hale-Bopp comet reminds us how telling are those rare objects which suddenly flare in the sky.Ex: Whatever the fiord's mood, teeming with rain or with sun glistening on deep water, it will inspire you.* brillar por Uno mismo = shine on + Posesivo + own.* ojos + brillar de rabia = eyes + glint with + rage.* * *brillar [A1 ]vi1 «sol/luz» to shine; «estrella» to shine, sparkle; «zapatos/suelo/metal» to shine, gleam; «diamante» to sparklele brillaba el pelo her hair shoneal verlo le brillaron los ojos de alegría when she saw him her eyes lit up with joypara que su vajilla brille, use … for sparkling dishes, use …te brilla la nariz your nose is shiny2 «inteligencia/cualidad» to shinenunca brilló en sus estudios he never shined ( AmE) o ( BrE) shone as a student, he was never a brilliant student■ brillarvt( Col) to polish* * *
brillar ( conjugate brillar) verbo intransitivo
[ estrella] to shine, sparkle;
[zapatos/suelo/metal] to shine, gleam;
[diamante/ojos] to sparkle
verbo transitivo (Col) to polish
brillar verbo intransitivo
1 (emitir luz) to shine
(emitir destellos) to sparkle
(centellear) to glitter
2 (destacar) to be conspicuous: Juan brilló por su ausencia, Juan was conspicuous by his absence
' brillar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
ausencia
English:
beam
- blaze
- flare
- gleam
- glisten
- glow
- shimmer
- shine
- sparkle
- twinkle
- conspicuous
- glare
- glimmer
* * *brillar vi1. [luz, astro, metal, zapatos, pelo] to shine;[ojos, diamante] to sparkle2. [sobresalir] to shine;brilla por su simpatía she's remarkable for her kindness;brillar por su ausencia to be conspicuous by its/one's absence;la higiene brilla por su ausencia there is a notable lack of hygiene;brillar con luz propia to be outstanding* * *v/i figshine* * *brillar vi: to shine, to sparkle* * *brillar vb -
85 capturar
v.1 to capture.María captura ladrones de noche Mary captures thieves at night.2 to grab.Ella capturó el sentido de la frase She grabbed the meaning of the phrase.* * *1 to capture, seize* * *verb1) to capture2) seize* * *VT [+ prisionero, animal] to capture; [+ droga] to seize* * *verbo transitivo <delincuente, enemigo, animal> to capture; < alijo> to seize, confiscate; < peces> to catch* * *= capture, capture, bust.Ex. In those early days, so the story goes, the library movement was in danger of being captured by an aristocratic intellectual class designing to make the public library an elitist center for scholarly research.Ex. The National Agricultural Text Digitizing Project (NATDP) is a cooperative effort by the National Agricultural Library and 42 university libraries to test a new method of capturing this literature in digital form for publication on CD-ROM.Ex. On Saturday, a trooper stood on a street corner dressed in plain clothes and helped bust 30 people for not wearing their seat belts.----* capturar datos = capture + data.* capturar el espíritu = capture + the spirit.* capturar el momento = catch + the moment.* capturar registros = capture + records.* * *verbo transitivo <delincuente, enemigo, animal> to capture; < alijo> to seize, confiscate; < peces> to catch* * *= capture, capture, bust.Ex: In those early days, so the story goes, the library movement was in danger of being captured by an aristocratic intellectual class designing to make the public library an elitist center for scholarly research.
Ex: The National Agricultural Text Digitizing Project (NATDP) is a cooperative effort by the National Agricultural Library and 42 university libraries to test a new method of capturing this literature in digital form for publication on CD-ROM.Ex: On Saturday, a trooper stood on a street corner dressed in plain clothes and helped bust 30 people for not wearing their seat belts.* capturar datos = capture + data.* capturar el espíritu = capture + the spirit.* capturar el momento = catch + the moment.* capturar registros = capture + records.* * *capturar [A1 ]vt1 ‹delincuente› to arrest, capture; ‹enemigo› to capture; ‹animal› to capture2 ‹alijo/drogas› to seize, confiscate* * *
capturar ( conjugate capturar) verbo transitivo ‹delincuente/enemigo/animal› to capture;
‹ alijo› to seize, confiscate;
‹ peces› to catch
capturar verbo transitivo
1 (a un criminal, enemigo, etc) to capture, seize
2 (una presa) to catch
' capturar' also found in these entries:
English:
capture
- catch
- recapture
* * *capturar vt[persona, animal] to capture* * *v/t capture; peces catch* * *capturar vt: to capture, to seize* * *capturar vb1. (en general) to capture -
86 comenzar rápido
(v.) = be quick off the mark, be quick off the blocksEx. Why is it that women are so much more quick off the mark than men to be appropriately dressed when the weather turns good?.Ex. They were quick off the blocks and were sitting pretty with a two-goal cushion over their rivals after only fifteen minutes.* * *(v.) = be quick off the mark, be quick off the blocksEx: Why is it that women are so much more quick off the mark than men to be appropriately dressed when the weather turns good?.
Ex: They were quick off the blocks and were sitting pretty with a two-goal cushion over their rivals after only fifteen minutes. -
87 como grogui
= drowsily, groggilyEx. Drowsily he slithered out of bed, opened his closet door and got dressed like he had done every morning before.Ex. As he groggily pulled the sweat-soaked sheet from his body, he rolled his head sideways to see the clock radio displaying 7:00 a.m.* * *= drowsily, groggilyEx: Drowsily he slithered out of bed, opened his closet door and got dressed like he had done every morning before.
Ex: As he groggily pulled the sweat-soaked sheet from his body, he rolled his head sideways to see the clock radio displaying 7:00 a.m. -
88 con cara de cansado
(adj.) = bleary-eyedEx. She was seen Sunday morning at 6 AM, only half dressed, barefoot and bleary-eyed outside a friend's house in London.* * *(adj.) = bleary-eyedEx: She was seen Sunday morning at 6 AM, only half dressed, barefoot and bleary-eyed outside a friend's house in London.
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89 con cara de sueño
(adj.) = bleary-eyedEx. She was seen Sunday morning at 6 AM, only half dressed, barefoot and bleary-eyed outside a friend's house in London.* * *(adj.) = bleary-eyedEx: She was seen Sunday morning at 6 AM, only half dressed, barefoot and bleary-eyed outside a friend's house in London.
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90 con los ojos hinchados
(adj.) = bleary-eyedEx. She was seen Sunday morning at 6 AM, only half dressed, barefoot and bleary-eyed outside a friend's house in London.* * *(adj.) = bleary-eyedEx: She was seen Sunday morning at 6 AM, only half dressed, barefoot and bleary-eyed outside a friend's house in London.
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91 con sueño
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92 culebrón
1 television serial, soap opera* * *masculino soap opera, soap (colloq)* * *= soap opera.Ex. There was no support for a hypothesis that there would be more provocatively dressed women in sporting event adverts than in those accompanying soap operas or prime time shows = No se confirmó la hipótesis de que habría más mujeres vestidas de una forma provocativa en los anuncios de los acontecimientos deportivos que en los que se emiten con las telenovelas o con los programas de mayor audiencia.* * *masculino soap opera, soap (colloq)* * *= soap opera.Ex: There was no support for a hypothesis that there would be more provocatively dressed women in sporting event adverts than in those accompanying soap operas or prime time shows = No se confirmó la hipótesis de que habría más mujeres vestidas de una forma provocativa en los anuncios de los acontecimientos deportivos que en los que se emiten con las telenovelas o con los programas de mayor audiencia.
* * *soap opera, soap ( colloq)* * *
culebrón sustantivo masculino (fam) soap opera, soap (colloq)
culebrón sustantivo masculino soap opera
' culebrón' also found in these entries:
English:
soap opera
- soap
* * *culebrón nmEsp Fam1. [televisivo] soap opera2. [historia interminable] saga;el culebrón de las pensiones the pensions saga* * *m TV soap* * *culebrón n soap opera -
93 darle vueltas a un asunto
(v.) = chew + the cudEx. On a happier note, I was chewing the cud in a taxi cab on the way to work this morning when suddently a well-dressed old man wiggled his hand at me.* * *(v.) = chew + the cudEx: On a happier note, I was chewing the cud in a taxi cab on the way to work this morning when suddently a well-dressed old man wiggled his hand at me.
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94 de forma provocativa
(adj.) = provocativelyEx. There was no support for a hypothesis that there would be more provocatively dressed women in sporting event adverts than in those accompanying soap operas or prime time shows = No se confirmó la hipótesis de que habría más mujeres vestidas de una forma provocativa en los anuncios de los acontecimientos deportivos que en los que se emiten con las telenovelas o con los programas de mayor audiencia.* * *(adj.) = provocativelyEx: There was no support for a hypothesis that there would be more provocatively dressed women in sporting event adverts than in those accompanying soap operas or prime time shows = No se confirmó la hipótesis de que habría más mujeres vestidas de una forma provocativa en los anuncios de los acontecimientos deportivos que en los que se emiten con las telenovelas o con los programas de mayor audiencia.
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95 de modo provocador
(adj.) = provocativelyEx. There was no support for a hypothesis that there would be more provocatively dressed women in sporting event adverts than in those accompanying soap operas or prime time shows = No se confirmó la hipótesis de que habría más mujeres vestidas de una forma provocativa en los anuncios de los acontecimientos deportivos que en los que se emiten con las telenovelas o con los programas de mayor audiencia.* * *(adj.) = provocativelyEx: There was no support for a hypothesis that there would be more provocatively dressed women in sporting event adverts than in those accompanying soap operas or prime time shows = No se confirmó la hipótesis de que habría más mujeres vestidas de una forma provocativa en los anuncios de los acontecimientos deportivos que en los que se emiten con las telenovelas o con los programas de mayor audiencia.
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96 disfrazado
adj.1 disguised, in disguise.2 larval.past part.past participle of spanish verb: disfrazar.* * *ADJ disguised (de as)ir disfrazado de algo — [para ocultar algo] to masquerade as sth; [para fiesta] to dress up as sth
* * *= in disguise, costumed, masked.Ex. The author addresses the question of whether a metadata specialist is really a cataloguer in disguise.Ex. Comic books are typically associated with costumed superheroes = Los tebeos generalmente se asocian a superhéroes disfrazados.Ex. He represents the downtrodden by day, but at night he is a masked vigilante stalking the dark streets of the city, an avenger of justice.----* disfrazado de = under the guise of, in the guise of.* lobo disfrazado de cordero = wolf in sheep's clothing.* * *= in disguise, costumed, masked.Ex: The author addresses the question of whether a metadata specialist is really a cataloguer in disguise.
Ex: Comic books are typically associated with costumed superheroes = Los tebeos generalmente se asocian a superhéroes disfrazados.Ex: He represents the downtrodden by day, but at night he is a masked vigilante stalking the dark streets of the city, an avenger of justice.* disfrazado de = under the guise of, in the guise of.* lobo disfrazado de cordero = wolf in sheep's clothing.* * *disfrazado -damasculine, femininedesfile de disfrazados costume o ( BrE) fancy dress parade* * *disfrazado adj dressed up -
97 disfrazarse de
v.to disguise oneself as.* * *(v.) = dress up as, dress asEx. Elton then started to metamorphose from 'sensitive guy' singer into someone famous for wearing naff sunglasses and dressing up as a duck.Ex. For the parade, Gracie was dressed as a pirate, while Clifford was the parrot.* * *(v.) = dress up as, dress asEx: Elton then started to metamorphose from 'sensitive guy' singer into someone famous for wearing naff sunglasses and dressing up as a duck.
Ex: For the parade, Gracie was dressed as a pirate, while Clifford was the parrot. -
98 elegantemente
adv.elegantly, neatly, handsomely, jauntily.* * *► adverbio1 elegantly, smartly* * *ADV [hablar] elegantly; [moverse] gracefully; [vestir] stylishly, smartly; [decorar] tastefully, elegantly* * ** * *= gracefully, elegantly.Ex. He continued: 'There are two ways you can react to this: you can accept it gracefully or you can accept it unpleasantly'.Ex. Some are elegantly bound but others will surely not stand up to the wear and tear of everyday use.----* vestirse elegantemente = dress up.* * ** * *= gracefully, elegantly.Ex: He continued: 'There are two ways you can react to this: you can accept it gracefully or you can accept it unpleasantly'.
Ex: Some are elegantly bound but others will surely not stand up to the wear and tear of everyday use.* vestirse elegantemente = dress up.* * *iba muy elegantemente vestido (bien vestido) he was very smartly dressed; (con garbo, estilo) he was very elegantly o stylishly dresseduna habitación elegantemente amueblada an elegantly furnished roomlo expresó muy elegantemente he expressed it very elegantly o in elegant terms* * *elegantemente adv1. [vestir] smartly, elegantly;[decorar] elegantly2. [moverse, caminar] gracefully, elegantly3. [comportarse] graciously;[responder] with grace, graciously -
99 embarrancar
v.1 to run aground.2 to bog down.* * *1 MARÍTIMO to run aground2 figurado to get bogged down1 MARÍTIMO to run aground2 figurado to get bogged down* * *1. VT VI1) (Náut) to run aground2) (Aut) to run into a ditch2.See:* * *verbo intransitivo, embarrancarse verbo pronominal (Náut) to run aground; vehículo to get bogged down* * *= beach, run + aground.Ex. Dressed to the nines, the three characters shimmer like tropical fish beached in the desert.Ex. This article examines the political shoals, currents, and rip tides associated with off campus library programmes and suggests that awareness and involvement are key ways to avoid running aground.* * *verbo intransitivo, embarrancarse verbo pronominal (Náut) to run aground; vehículo to get bogged down* * *= beach, run + aground.Ex: Dressed to the nines, the three characters shimmer like tropical fish beached in the desert.
Ex: This article examines the political shoals, currents, and rip tides associated with off campus library programmes and suggests that awareness and involvement are key ways to avoid running aground.* * *embarrancar [A2 ]vi1 ( Náut) to run aground2 «vehículo» to get bogged down, get stuck in the mudel proyecto de ley está embarrancado the bill has got(ten) bogged down1 ( Náut) to run aground2 «vehículo» to get bogged down, get stuck in the mud* * *♦ vi1. [barco] to run aground2. [en dificultad] to get bogged down* * *v/i MAR run aground* * *embarrancar {72} vi1) : to run aground2) : to get bogged down -
100 empezar rápido
(v.) = be quick off the mark, be quick off the blocksEx. Why is it that women are so much more quick off the mark than men to be appropriately dressed when the weather turns good?.Ex. They were quick off the blocks and were sitting pretty with a two-goal cushion over their rivals after only fifteen minutes.* * *(v.) = be quick off the mark, be quick off the blocksEx: Why is it that women are so much more quick off the mark than men to be appropriately dressed when the weather turns good?.
Ex: They were quick off the blocks and were sitting pretty with a two-goal cushion over their rivals after only fifteen minutes.
См. также в других словарях:
dressed — [drest] adj 1.) get dressed to put your clothes on ▪ Go and get dressed! 2.) having your clothes on or wearing a particular type of clothes ▪ Aren t you dressed yet? half/fully dressed ▪ She lay down fully dressed on the bed. smartly/well… … Dictionary of contemporary English
dressed — [ drest ] adjective * 1. ) wearing clothes of a particular type: dressed in: She was dressed in a black suit. dressed as: He went to the party dressed as a cowboy. well/badly/neatly etc. dressed: Emma was immaculately dressed. 2. ) someone who is … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
dressed-up — adj. attired in fancy or formal clothing. [Narrower terms: {dressed to kill(predicate)}] Syn: dressed to the nines(predicate), dolled up, spruced up, spiffed up. [WordNet 1.5] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
dressed up — adjective 1. ) wearing formal clothes: He was all dressed up, like he was going somewhere fancy. 2. ) something that is dressed up is made to look better than it really is … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
dressed — adj. 1. same as {attired}. Syn: appareled, attired, clad, garbed, garmented, habilimented, robed. [WordNet 1.5 +PJC] 2. covered with medication or a bandage; of wounds. Syn: bandaged. [WordNet 1.5 +PJC] 3. trim and smooth; of lumber or stone. Syn … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
dressed — dressed; un·dressed; … English syllables
dressed — [[t]dre̱st[/t]] ♦♦♦ 1) ADJ: usu v link ADJ If you are dressed, you are wearing clothes rather than being naked or wearing your night clothes. If you get dressed, you put on your clothes. He was fully dressed, including shoes... He went into his… … English dictionary
dressed — adjective 1 get dressed to put your clothes on: Go and get dressed! 2 having your clothes on: Aren t you dressed yet? | fully dressed (=with all your clothes on) 3 wearing a particular type of clothes (+ in/as): The older woman was dressed in a… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
dressed */ — UK [drest] / US adjective 1) wearing clothes of a particular type dressed in: She was dressed in a black suit. dressed as: He went to the party dressed as a cowboy. well/badly/neatly etc dressed: Emma was immaculately dressed. 2) someone who is… … English dictionary
Dressed — Dress Dress (dr[e^]s), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Dressed} (dr[e^]st) or {Drest}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Dressing}.] [OF. drecier to make straight, raise, set up, prepare, arrange, F. dresser, (assumed) LL. directiare, fr. L. dirigere, directum, to direct;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
dressed up — 1) ADJ GRADED: usu v link ADJ If someone is dressed up, they are wearing special clothes, in order to look smarter than usual or in order to disguise themselves. You re all dressed up. Are you going somewhere?... You don t have to get dressed up… … English dictionary