-
1 coronar
v.1 to crown (person).El pueblo coronó al rey The village crowned the king.La cereza corona el pastel The cherry crowns the cake.María corona sus metas Mary crowns her goals.2 to complete.3 to reach (cima).* * *1 to crown1 to crown* * *verb* * *VT1) [+ persona] to crown2)3) (=completar) to crown, culminate, endcoronó su trayectoria deportiva con una gran victoria en Wimbledon — he crowned o culminated o ended his sporting career with a great win at Wimbledon
4) (Ajedrez, Damas) to queen* * *1.verbo transitivo1) < soberano> to crown2) <montaña/cima> to reach the top of3)a) ( rematar) to crownb) ( en damas) to crown2.coronarse v pron1) (Per fam) ( meter la pata) to put one's foot in it2) (Ven fam) ( tenerlo todo) to be set up (colloq)* * *= enthrone.Ex. Modern life ' enthrones reason over impulse'.----* coronar con = crown with.* * *1.verbo transitivo1) < soberano> to crown2) <montaña/cima> to reach the top of3)a) ( rematar) to crownb) ( en damas) to crown2.coronarse v pron1) (Per fam) ( meter la pata) to put one's foot in it2) (Ven fam) ( tenerlo todo) to be set up (colloq)* * *= enthrone.Ex: Modern life ' enthrones reason over impulse'.
* coronar con = crown with.* * *coronar [A1 ]vtA ‹soberano› to crownfue coronado rey he was crowned kingB ‹montaña/cima› to reach the top ofC1 (rematar, completar) to crownal final el éxito coronó su carrera his career was finally crowned with successuna cúpula corona el edificio the building is crowned by a dome2 (en damas) to crownA «niño» (en el parto) to crownsi consigues ese puesto estás coronado if you get that job you'll be all set up o you'll have it made o you'll be laughing ( colloq)* * *
coronar ( conjugate coronar) verbo transitivo
coronar verbo transitivo to crown
' coronar' also found in these entries:
English:
crown
- top
* * *♦ vt1. [persona] to crown2. [cima] to reach;[puerto de montaña] to reach the top of;coronaron el Everest they reached the summit of Mount Everest;coronó el puerto con cinco minutos de ventaja sobre el pelotón he reached the top of the pass five minutes ahead of the packla tarta está coronada con dos muñequitos the cake is topped with two little figures, there are two little figures on top of the cake4. [terminar] to complete;[culminar] to crown, to cap;con el puesto de ministro corona su trayectoria profesional being made a minister is the crowning point o culmination of his career♦ vi[en damas] to crown a piece; [en ajedrez] to queen a pawn♦ See also the pronominal verb coronarse* * *v/t crown;coronado por el éxito crowned with success* * *coronar vt1) : to crown2) : to reach the top of, to culminate -
2 exaltar
v.1 to promote, to raise.2 to exalt.Los fanáticos exaltaron a Ricardo The fanatics exalted Richard.3 to exacerbate, to overexcite.Su actitud exaltó su ira His attitude exacerbated her anger.4 to elate, to magnify.La sorpresa exaltó a Ricardo The surprise elated Richard.* * *1 (elevar) to raise, promote1 (excitarse) to get overexcited, get worked up, get carried away* * *1. VT1) (=acalorar) [+ persona, manifestante] to work up, excite; [+ emoción] to intensify; [+ imaginación] to fire2) (=elevar) to exalt3) (=enaltecer) to raise (a to)2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivola intervención policial exaltó a los manifestantes — the police intervention angered the demonstrators
2) (frml) ( alabar) to extol (frml)2.exaltarse v pron to get worked up* * *= glorify, exalt, put + Nombre + on a pedestal, hold out as, laud, glamourise [glamorize, -USA], enthrone, aggrandise [aggrandize, -USA], celebrate.Ex. Many traditional treatments, on the other hand, have tended to glorify him portraying him as an unblemished hero.Ex. He is famous for his works of lyrical beauty and ethical depth, which exalt everyday miracles and the living past.Ex. Native American children should have books that do not demean or embarrass them or their heritage nor put them on a pedestal.Ex. Community information services seem light years away from the kind of electronic wizardry that is held out as the brave new information world of tomorrow.Ex. Libraries are also lauded for providing other public services with economic benefits.Ex. Librarians now have recognized that automated information retrieval is a logical extension of good reference service and is not usually categorized or glamorized as a separate function.Ex. Modern life ' enthrones reason over impulse'.Ex. He established Samarkand as his imperial capital in the 1360s and set about aggrandising it with plunder from his conquests.Ex. Were we to allow ourselves to be enticed by it, we should be celebrating our Bicentennial by a return to the pre-Panizzi days in cataloging.----* exaltarse = fire up, get + (all) worked up.* * *1.verbo transitivola intervención policial exaltó a los manifestantes — the police intervention angered the demonstrators
2) (frml) ( alabar) to extol (frml)2.exaltarse v pron to get worked up* * *= glorify, exalt, put + Nombre + on a pedestal, hold out as, laud, glamourise [glamorize, -USA], enthrone, aggrandise [aggrandize, -USA], celebrate.Ex: Many traditional treatments, on the other hand, have tended to glorify him portraying him as an unblemished hero.
Ex: He is famous for his works of lyrical beauty and ethical depth, which exalt everyday miracles and the living past.Ex: Native American children should have books that do not demean or embarrass them or their heritage nor put them on a pedestal.Ex: Community information services seem light years away from the kind of electronic wizardry that is held out as the brave new information world of tomorrow.Ex: Libraries are also lauded for providing other public services with economic benefits.Ex: Librarians now have recognized that automated information retrieval is a logical extension of good reference service and is not usually categorized or glamorized as a separate function.Ex: Modern life ' enthrones reason over impulse'.Ex: He established Samarkand as his imperial capital in the 1360s and set about aggrandising it with plunder from his conquests.Ex: Were we to allow ourselves to be enticed by it, we should be celebrating our Bicentennial by a return to the pre-Panizzi days in cataloging.* exaltarse = fire up, get + (all) worked up.* * *exaltar [A1 ]vtA (excitar) ‹personas› to excite; ‹pasiones› to arousela intervención policial exaltó aún más a los manifestantes when the police intervened the demonstrators became even more agitated, the police intervention angered the demonstrators still furtherexaltó sus hazañas he extolled their feats ( frml)se exaltaron las buenas relaciones existentes entre ambos países much was made of the good relationship between the two countriesto get worked uptranquilízate y no te exaltes calm down, don't get overexcited o worked up* * *
exaltar ( conjugate exaltar) verbo transitivo
1
‹ pasiones› to arouse
2 (frml) ( alabar) to extol (frml)
exaltarse verbo pronominal
to get worked up
exaltar verbo transitivo to praise
' exaltar' also found in these entries:
English:
eulogize
- exalt
- glorify
* * *♦ vtla decisión exaltó la cólera de los aficionados the decision enraged the fans2. [ensalzar] to praise, to exalt;exaltó la cocina argentina he praised Argentinian cuisine to the skies* * *v/t excite, get worked up* * *exaltar vt1) ensalzar: to exalt, to extol2) : to excite, to agitate -
3 favorecer
v.1 to favor.esta política favorece a los más pobres this policy works in favor of the poorestles favoreció la suerte luck was on their sideEl sol favoreció a Ricardo The sun favored Richard.2 to suit (sentar bien).ese corte de pelo te favorece that haircut suits you3 to prefer, to be partial to.María favorece los colores claros Mary prefers light colors.* * *1 (ayudar) to favour (US favor), help2 (agraciar) to flatter, suit* * *verb1) to favor2) suit* * *1. VT1) (=beneficiar) to be favourable o (EEUU) favorable to, favour, favor (EEUU)la devaluación ha favorecido a las compañías exportadoras — devaluation has been favourable to o has favoured exporting companies
la suerte no me favoreció — luck was not on my side, fortune did not favour me liter
2) (=ayudar a) [+ desarrollo, creación, crecimiento] to contribute tolas nuevas medidas fiscales favorecerán la creación de empresas — the new tax measures will contribute to o encourage o favour the creation of new companies
puede favorecer la aparición de piedras en el riñón — it can contribute to the development of kidney stones
3) (=tratar con favores)favorecer a algn — to help out sb, do sb favours
utilizó sus influencias para favorecer a sus amigos — she used her influence to help out her friends o to do favours for her friends
4) (=sentar bien) [vestido] to suit, look good on; [peinado] to suitlas faldas largas no te favorecen — long skirts don't suit you o look good on you
2.VI (=sentar bien) to be flattering, look good* * *1.verbo transitivoa) (ayudar, beneficiar) to favor*b) peinado/color ( sentar bien) to suit2.favorecerse v pron (Col fam) to protect oneself* * *= favour [favor, -USA], feather-bed, advantage, enthrone.Ex. Current trends favour cataloguing practices which can be applied to a variety of library materials.Ex. Consequently, it came as no surprise when the new Conservative Government was elected in 1979 on a ticket to cut public expenditure and stop feather-bedding consumers.Ex. When students were tested at the end of the course, those students taught using flexible learning techniques did not seem to have been either advantaged or disadvantaged by their use when compared with the students taught using conventional techniques.Ex. Modern life ' enthrones reason over impulse'.----* favorecer a Alguien = be in + Posesivo + favour.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) (ayudar, beneficiar) to favor*b) peinado/color ( sentar bien) to suit2.favorecerse v pron (Col fam) to protect oneself* * *= favour [favor, -USA], feather-bed, advantage, enthrone.Ex: Current trends favour cataloguing practices which can be applied to a variety of library materials.
Ex: Consequently, it came as no surprise when the new Conservative Government was elected in 1979 on a ticket to cut public expenditure and stop feather-bedding consumers.Ex: When students were tested at the end of the course, those students taught using flexible learning techniques did not seem to have been either advantaged or disadvantaged by their use when compared with the students taught using conventional techniques.Ex: Modern life ' enthrones reason over impulse'.* favorecer a Alguien = be in + Posesivo + favour.* * *favorecer [E3 ]vt1 (beneficiar) to favor*hoy no me ha favorecido la suerte luck hasn't been on my side todayuna política para favorecer la agricultura a policy to help agriculture2 (contribuir a) to encourageactitudes que favorecen que se extienda la enfermedad attitudes which encourage the spread of the diseasepara favorecer la integración de los discapacitados en la sociedad to encourage the integration of the disabled into society3 «peinado/color» (sentar bien) to suit, look good onel retrato la favorece mucho the portrait is very flattering to her* * *
favorecer ( conjugate favorecer) verbo transitivo
favorecer verbo transitivo
1 to favour, US favor: ese gobierno favorece a las grandes empresas, the government is on the side of big business
2 (un sombrero, vestido) to flatter
' favorecer' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
enchufar
- beneficiar
- propiciar
English:
favor
- favour
- flatter
- further
- stereotype
- suit
- become
- favorable
* * *favorecer vt1. [beneficiar] to favour;[ayudar] to help, to assist;esta política favorece a los más pobres this policy works in favour of the poorest;el árbitro favoreció al equipo visitante the referee was biased in favour of the visitors;a pesar de ser peores, les favoreció la suerte y ganaron el partido despite being worse players, luck was on their side and they won the game2. [sentar bien] to suit;ese corte de pelo te favorece that haircut suits you* * *v/t1 favor, Brfavour* * *favorecer {53} vt1) : to favor2) : to look well on, to suit* * *favorecer vb1. (hacer más fácil) to favour / to help2. (dar belleza) to suit -
4 nombrar rey
-
5 vida moderna, la
(n.) = modern lifeEx. Modern life 'enthrones reason over impulse'. -
6 vida moderna
-
7 სამეფო ტახტზე აყავს
venthrones, enthroning
См. также в других словарях:
enthrones — en·throne || ɪn θrəʊn v. crown, invest with sovereignty, place upon a throne; exalt (also inthrone) … English contemporary dictionary
Holy Synod of the Coptic Orthodox Church — Part of the series on Copts Culture … Wikipedia
Lest Darkness Fall — First edition c … Wikipedia
The Holy Synod of the Coptic Orthodox Church — of Alexandria is the highest authority in the Church of Alexandria [ [http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/nycodes/c103/a32.html Caselaw] ] and it formulates the rules and regulations regarding matters of church s organisation, faith, service s order. [ … Wikipedia
Thai Prophecy Verse — (th: เพลงยาวพยากรณ์กรุงศรีอยุธยา, RTGS: Phleng yao phayakon krung si ayutthaya, the verse prophesying the future of Krung Si Ayutthaya) is a poetry forecasting the future of Thailand. It was composed on a par with Maha Supina Jataka in Tripitaka … Wikipedia
Chrysanthemum Throne — The Takamikura throne in Kyoto Imperial Palace is used mainly for accession ceremonies (1917) The Chrysanthemum Throne (皇位, kōi … Wikipedia
Kirill I of Moscow — Kirill Patriarch of Moscow and all Rus Kirill I, Patriarch of Moscow and all Rus , at his enthronement on 1 February 2009 Church … Wikipedia
enthrone — [[t]ɪnθro͟ʊn[/t]] enthrones, enthroning, enthroned 1) VERB: usu passive When kings, queens, emperors, or bishops are enthroned, they officially take on their role during a special ceremony. [FORMAL] [be V ed] Emperor Akihito of Japan has been… … English dictionary
enthrone — UK [ɪnˈθrəʊn] / US [ɪnˈθroʊn] verb [transitive] Word forms enthrone : present tense I/you/we/they enthrone he/she/it enthrones present participle enthroning past tense enthroned past participle enthroned to make someone the new king, queen, or… … English dictionary
MOSES — (Heb. מֹשֶׁה; LXX, Mōusēs; Vulg. Moyses), leader, prophet, and lawgiver (set in modern chronology in the first half of the 13th century B.C.E.). Commissioned to take the Israelites out of Egypt, Moses led them from his 80th year to his death at… … Encyclopedia of Judaism