-
1 errado
• erred• mistaken• off the rails -
2 cometer un disparate
(v.) = make + a blunder, make + a bloomer, put + Posesivo + foot in it, put + Posesivo + foot in + Posesivo + mouth, stick + Posesivo + foot in it, drop + a clanger, drop + a bollock, blunderEx. Since its independence 61 years ago our nation has erred, but this time they have made a blunder.Ex. He is well-known for making bloomers in public engagements.Ex. She somehow manages to put her foot in it and get laughed at every time, usually as a direct consequence of her unsureness of her own capabilities.Ex. She put her foot in her mouth when she asked a fat woman who was not pregnant when her baby was due.Ex. She's just always shooting her mouth off and sticking her foot in it.Ex. After dropping a clanger, you are left with a sense of shame and you just want to disappear and hide away.Ex. But we are all only human and I have recently ' dropped a bollock' as we English say.Ex. Michael Howard has blundered again, and again he has done so by trying to imitate Blair while lacking his finesse.* * *(v.) = make + a blunder, make + a bloomer, put + Posesivo + foot in it, put + Posesivo + foot in + Posesivo + mouth, stick + Posesivo + foot in it, drop + a clanger, drop + a bollock, blunderEx: Since its independence 61 years ago our nation has erred, but this time they have made a blunder.
Ex: He is well-known for making bloomers in public engagements.Ex: She somehow manages to put her foot in it and get laughed at every time, usually as a direct consequence of her unsureness of her own capabilities.Ex: She put her foot in her mouth when she asked a fat woman who was not pregnant when her baby was due.Ex: She's just always shooting her mouth off and sticking her foot in it.Ex: After dropping a clanger, you are left with a sense of shame and you just want to disappear and hide away.Ex: But we are all only human and I have recently ' dropped a bollock' as we English say.Ex: Michael Howard has blundered again, and again he has done so by trying to imitate Blair while lacking his finesse. -
3 cometer un error garrafal
(v.) = commit + blunder, make + a bloomer, make + a blunder, drop + a clanger, drop + a bollock, blunderEx. Library staff should be provided with the opportunity to see blunders which they occasionally commit as well as the laudable 'savoir faire' with which they dispatch some reference question.Ex. He is well-known for making bloomers in public engagements.Ex. Since its independence 61 years ago our nation has erred, but this time they have made a blunder.Ex. After dropping a clanger, you are left with a sense of shame and you just want to disappear and hide away.Ex. But we are all only human and I have recently ' dropped a bollock' as we English say.Ex. Michael Howard has blundered again, and again he has done so by trying to imitate Blair while lacking his finesse.* * *(v.) = commit + blunder, make + a bloomer, make + a blunder, drop + a clanger, drop + a bollock, blunderEx: Library staff should be provided with the opportunity to see blunders which they occasionally commit as well as the laudable 'savoir faire' with which they dispatch some reference question.
Ex: He is well-known for making bloomers in public engagements.Ex: Since its independence 61 years ago our nation has erred, but this time they have made a blunder.Ex: After dropping a clanger, you are left with a sense of shame and you just want to disappear and hide away.Ex: But we are all only human and I have recently ' dropped a bollock' as we English say.Ex: Michael Howard has blundered again, and again he has done so by trying to imitate Blair while lacking his finesse. -
4 equivocarse
1 to make a mistake, be mistaken, be wrong (de dirección, camino etc) to go wrong, get wrong* * *to make a mistake, be wrong* * *VPR (=no tener razón) to be wrong, be mistaken; (=cometer un error) to make a mistakete equivocas, eso no es así — you're wrong o mistaken, it isn't like that
si crees que voy a dejarte ir, te equivocas — if you think I'm going to let you go, you're wrong o mistaken
•
equivocarse con algn — to be wrong about sbla consideraba honesta, pero me equivoqué con ella — I thought she was honest, but I was wrong about her
•
equivocarse de algo, nos equivocamos de hora y llegamos tarde — we got the time wrong, and we arrived lateperdone, me he equivocado de número — sorry, (I've got the) wrong number
* * *(v.) = commit + error, err, mistake, make + error, bark up + the wrong tree, get + it + (all) wrong, slip upEx. Let us perform a simple thought experiment: assume that a cataloger has committed a simple transposition error and transcribed YEATS, WILLIAM BUTLER as YEATS, WILLIAM BUTLER.Ex. Wherein had she erred? Try as she might she could think of nothing.Ex. A flat 'no' to a question such as 'Is this book recommended for Professor Shaw's course?' leaves uncertainty as to whether one was mistaken in the professor or in the suggestion that it was for a course.Ex. This has been taken a step further by using a screen editor to 'prevent the human indexer or coder from making syntactic errors in the first place'.Ex. The article ' Barking up the wrong tree' argues that the belief, by many book publishers, that they can use the Internet to bypass booksellers and sell their books direct to purchasers, is fallacious.Ex. There are risks in assuming that the enquirer has got it all wrong.Ex. He knew that if he slipped up again, he could be shipped to a higher-security prison and lose many of his privileges.* * *(v.) = commit + error, err, mistake, make + error, bark up + the wrong tree, get + it + (all) wrong, slip upEx: Let us perform a simple thought experiment: assume that a cataloger has committed a simple transposition error and transcribed YEATS, WILLIAM BUTLER as YEATS, WILLIAM BUTLER.
Ex: Wherein had she erred? Try as she might she could think of nothing.Ex: A flat 'no' to a question such as 'Is this book recommended for Professor Shaw's course?' leaves uncertainty as to whether one was mistaken in the professor or in the suggestion that it was for a course.Ex: This has been taken a step further by using a screen editor to 'prevent the human indexer or coder from making syntactic errors in the first place'.Ex: The article ' Barking up the wrong tree' argues that the belief, by many book publishers, that they can use the Internet to bypass booksellers and sell their books direct to purchasers, is fallacious.Ex: There are risks in assuming that the enquirer has got it all wrong.Ex: He knew that if he slipped up again, he could be shipped to a higher-security prison and lose many of his privileges.* * *
■equivocarse verbo reflexivo
1 (confundirse, errar) to make a mistake: me equivoqué de calle, I took the wrong street
te equivocas de persona, you've got the wrong person
2 (estar en un error) to be mistaken: te equivocas, you are mistaken
no te equivocas, you are right
' equivocarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
despistarse
- patinar
- resbalar
- confundir
- equivocar
- tiro
English:
astray
- blunder
- flub
- fluff
- goof
- misdiagnose
- mistake
- trial
- wrong
- err
- safely
- slip
* * *vpr[estar en un error] to be wrong; [cometer un error] to make a mistake;yo creo que te equivocas I think you're mistaken;te equivocas si crees que me voy a asustar you're mistaken if you think you're going to frighten me;se equivocó al girar she took the wrong turning;te equivocas con tu profesor, no es tan mala persona you're wrong about your teacher, he's not such a bad person;se equivocó de nombre/puerta he got the wrong name/door;equivocarse de fecha/día to get the date/day wrong;te equivocaste de profesión, deberías haber sido actor you're in the wrong profession, you should have been an actor;equivocarse en algo to make a mistake in sth;¿en qué nos equivocamos con él? where did we go wrong with him?;se equivocó en la suma she got the total wrong* * *v/r make a mistake;te has equivocado you are wrong o mistaken;equivocarse de número TELEC get the wrong number;equivocarse de camino take the wrong road;si no me equivoco if I’m not mistaken* * *vr: to make a mistake, to be wrong* * *equivocarse vb1. (confundirse) to be wrong / to make a mistake2. (de camino, dirección, etc) to go wrong / to get wrong -
5 errar
v.1 to choose wrongly.2 to wander.3 to make a mistake.María erró en sus cálculos Mary made a mistake in her calculations.4 to miss.5 to mistake, to miss, to fail, to miscalculate.María erró sus cálculos Mary mistook her calculations.6 to go astray, to err from the path of righteousness.El huérfano erró The orphan went astray.7 to roam around, to ramble, to roam about.* * *(e changes to ye in stressed syllables)Present IndicativePresent SubjunctiveImperative* * *verb1) to miss2) wander3) be mistaken* * *1. VT1) (=equivocar) [+ tiro] to miss with, aim badly; [+ blanco] to miss; [+ vocación] to miss, mistake2) [en obligación] to fail ( in one's duty to)2. VI1) (=vagar) to wander, rove2) (=equivocarse) to be mistakenerrar es cosa humana, de los hombres es errar — to err is human
3.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo <tiro/golpe> to miss2.erró su vocación — she chose the wrong vocation/career
errar vi1) ( fallar)(le) erré otra vez — missed again! (colloq), I've missed again
le erraste feo — (RPl fam) you were way out o off the mark (colloq)
* * *= miss + the mark, ramble, err, roam (about/around), mistake, range, rove, miss + the point.Ex. Such considerations suggest that exhortations directed at SLIS to transform their curricula in unspecified radical fashion miss the mark.Ex. Because by now comparative librarianship has a well-developed methodology, he does not have to waste his effort by rambling.Ex. Wherein had she erred? Try as she might she could think of nothing.Ex. Unless children are given time to roam about unhindered among books of many kinds, left alone to choose for themselves, and to do what any avid adult reader does, then maybe we labor in vain.Ex. A flat 'no' to a question such as 'Is this book recommended for Professor Shaw's course?' leaves uncertainty as to whether one was mistaken in the professor or in the suggestion that it was for a course.Ex. We will be bringing scholars from all over the world both to range widely in our multiform collections and put things together rather than just take them apart.Ex. The production is extremely lively: Wandering musicians rove the tiny stage and aisles, competing with birdsong and baroque concertos over the tannoy.Ex. Even those states who are pushing for legalized sports betting are missing the point when it comes to making a profit through sports betting.* * *1.verbo transitivo <tiro/golpe> to miss2.erró su vocación — she chose the wrong vocation/career
errar vi1) ( fallar)(le) erré otra vez — missed again! (colloq), I've missed again
le erraste feo — (RPl fam) you were way out o off the mark (colloq)
* * *= miss + the mark, ramble, err, roam (about/around), mistake, range, rove, miss + the point.Ex: Such considerations suggest that exhortations directed at SLIS to transform their curricula in unspecified radical fashion miss the mark.
Ex: Because by now comparative librarianship has a well-developed methodology, he does not have to waste his effort by rambling.Ex: Wherein had she erred? Try as she might she could think of nothing.Ex: Unless children are given time to roam about unhindered among books of many kinds, left alone to choose for themselves, and to do what any avid adult reader does, then maybe we labor in vain.Ex: A flat 'no' to a question such as 'Is this book recommended for Professor Shaw's course?' leaves uncertainty as to whether one was mistaken in the professor or in the suggestion that it was for a course.Ex: We will be bringing scholars from all over the world both to range widely in our multiform collections and put things together rather than just take them apart.Ex: The production is extremely lively: Wandering musicians rove the tiny stage and aisles, competing with birdsong and baroque concertos over the tannoy.Ex: Even those states who are pushing for legalized sports betting are missing the point when it comes to making a profit through sports betting.* * *vt‹tiro/golpe› to misserró el remate he missed the shot, he shot wide/higherró su vocación she chose the wrong vocation/career■ errarviAerró en su decisión he was mistaken in his decision, he made the wrong decisionle erraste feo ( RPl fam); you were way out o way off the mark ( colloq), you were miles out ( colloq)errar es humano to err is humansu imaginación erraba por lugares lejanos his thoughts wandered o drifted o strayed to far-off places* * *
errar ( conjugate errar) verbo transitivo ‹tiro/golpe› to miss;◊ erró su vocación she chose the wrong vocation/career
verbo intransitivo [ tirador] to miss;
erró en su decisión he made the wrong decision
errar
I verbo transitivo
1 (un tiro, golpe) to miss
2 (una elección) to get wrong
II verbo intransitivo
1 (vagar) to wander
2 (cometer fallos) to make a mistake
' errar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
equivocarse
- engañar
- fallar
- tiro
- yerra
English:
aimlessly
- err
- miss
- muff
- roam
* * *♦ vt1. [tiro, golpe] to miss2. [no acertar en]errar el cálculo/la respuesta to get the figures/answer wrong;errar el rumbo to choose the wrong course;errar la vocación to mistake one's vocation;RPle erraron con el diagnóstico he was misdiagnosed;RP Famerrar el biscochazo to be wide of the mark♦ vi1. [vagar] [persona, imaginación, mirada] to wander;erró de pueblo en pueblo she wandered from town to town2. [equivocarse] to make a mistake;erró en la elección de carrera he chose the wrong course;RPerrarle to make a mistake;le erré en las cuentas I made a mistake in the accounts;le erró, no le tendría que haber dicho nada he made a mistake, he shouldn't have told him anything3. [al tirar] to miss* * *I v/t miss;errar el tiro/golpe miss;errar el cálculo miscalculate, make a mistake in one’s figuresII v/i miss;errar es humano to err is human* * *errar {32} vtfallar: to misserrar vi1) desacertar: to be wrong, to be mistaken2) vagar: to wander* * *errar vb1. (fallar) to miss2. (equivocarse) to be wrong3. (vagar) to wander -
6 meter la pata
familiar to put one's foot in it* * ** * *(v.) = bark up + the wrong tree, be caught out, put + Posesivo + foot in it, put + Posesivo + foot in + Posesivo + mouth, shoot + Reflexivo + in the foot, stick + Posesivo + foot in it, screw up, make + a bloomer, slip up, make + a blunder, drop + a clanger, drop + a bollock, blunderEx. The article ' Barking up the wrong tree' argues that the belief, by many book publishers, that they can use the Internet to bypass booksellers and sell their books direct to purchasers, is fallacious.Ex. All librarians can tell tales of being caught out in this way, to learn of their error only when the answer has been produced: information on dance-halls when dinosaurs was asked for, or on the grey starling when something on Grace Darling was what was wanted = Todos los bibliotecarios pueden contar historias de cuando han metido la pata de este modo para aprender del error sólo cuando se ha producido la respuesta: información sobre los salones de baile cuando se preguntaba por los dinosaurios, o sobre el estornino gris cuando se quería algo sobre Grace Darling.Ex. She somehow manages to put her foot in it and get laughed at every time, usually as a direct consequence of her unsureness of her own capabilities.Ex. She put her foot in her mouth when she asked a fat woman who was not pregnant when her baby was due.Ex. In other words, we have become our worst enemy, continually shooting ourselves in the foot.Ex. She's just always shooting her mouth off and sticking her foot in it.Ex. Although we're lucky to have them, eager beavers can screw up if you give them the opportunity.Ex. He is well-known for making bloomers in public engagements.Ex. He knew that if he slipped up again, he could be shipped to a higher-security prison and lose many of his privileges.Ex. Since its independence 61 years ago our nation has erred, but this time they have made a blunder.Ex. After dropping a clanger, you are left with a sense of shame and you just want to disappear and hide away.Ex. But we are all only human and I have recently ' dropped a bollock' as we English say.Ex. Michael Howard has blundered again, and again he has done so by trying to imitate Blair while lacking his finesse.* * *(v.) = bark up + the wrong tree, be caught out, put + Posesivo + foot in it, put + Posesivo + foot in + Posesivo + mouth, shoot + Reflexivo + in the foot, stick + Posesivo + foot in it, screw up, make + a bloomer, slip up, make + a blunder, drop + a clanger, drop + a bollock, blunderEx: The article ' Barking up the wrong tree' argues that the belief, by many book publishers, that they can use the Internet to bypass booksellers and sell their books direct to purchasers, is fallacious.
Ex: All librarians can tell tales of being caught out in this way, to learn of their error only when the answer has been produced: information on dance-halls when dinosaurs was asked for, or on the grey starling when something on Grace Darling was what was wanted = Todos los bibliotecarios pueden contar historias de cuando han metido la pata de este modo para aprender del error sólo cuando se ha producido la respuesta: información sobre los salones de baile cuando se preguntaba por los dinosaurios, o sobre el estornino gris cuando se quería algo sobre Grace Darling.Ex: She somehow manages to put her foot in it and get laughed at every time, usually as a direct consequence of her unsureness of her own capabilities.Ex: She put her foot in her mouth when she asked a fat woman who was not pregnant when her baby was due.Ex: In other words, we have become our worst enemy, continually shooting ourselves in the foot.Ex: She's just always shooting her mouth off and sticking her foot in it.Ex: Although we're lucky to have them, eager beavers can screw up if you give them the opportunity.Ex: He is well-known for making bloomers in public engagements.Ex: He knew that if he slipped up again, he could be shipped to a higher-security prison and lose many of his privileges.Ex: Since its independence 61 years ago our nation has erred, but this time they have made a blunder.Ex: After dropping a clanger, you are left with a sense of shame and you just want to disappear and hide away.Ex: But we are all only human and I have recently ' dropped a bollock' as we English say.Ex: Michael Howard has blundered again, and again he has done so by trying to imitate Blair while lacking his finesse. -
7 meter un pifiaso
(v.) = drop + a bollock, drop + a clanger, make + a blunder, make + a bloomer, blunderEx. But we are all only human and I have recently ' dropped a bollock' as we English say.Ex. After dropping a clanger, you are left with a sense of shame and you just want to disappear and hide away.Ex. Since its independence 61 years ago our nation has erred, but this time they have made a blunder.Ex. He is well-known for making bloomers in public engagements.Ex. Michael Howard has blundered again, and again he has done so by trying to imitate Blair while lacking his finesse.* * *(v.) = drop + a bollock, drop + a clanger, make + a blunder, make + a bloomer, blunderEx: But we are all only human and I have recently ' dropped a bollock' as we English say.
Ex: After dropping a clanger, you are left with a sense of shame and you just want to disappear and hide away.Ex: Since its independence 61 years ago our nation has erred, but this time they have made a blunder.Ex: He is well-known for making bloomers in public engagements.Ex: Michael Howard has blundered again, and again he has done so by trying to imitate Blair while lacking his finesse. -
8 meter una pifia
(v.) = drop + a bollock, drop + a clanger, make + a blunder, make + a bloomer, blunderEx. But we are all only human and I have recently ' dropped a bollock' as we English say.Ex. After dropping a clanger, you are left with a sense of shame and you just want to disappear and hide away.Ex. Since its independence 61 years ago our nation has erred, but this time they have made a blunder.Ex. He is well-known for making bloomers in public engagements.Ex. Michael Howard has blundered again, and again he has done so by trying to imitate Blair while lacking his finesse.* * *(v.) = drop + a bollock, drop + a clanger, make + a blunder, make + a bloomer, blunderEx: But we are all only human and I have recently ' dropped a bollock' as we English say.
Ex: After dropping a clanger, you are left with a sense of shame and you just want to disappear and hide away.Ex: Since its independence 61 years ago our nation has erred, but this time they have made a blunder.Ex: He is well-known for making bloomers in public engagements.Ex: Michael Howard has blundered again, and again he has done so by trying to imitate Blair while lacking his finesse. -
9 tirarse una plancha
(v.) = put + Posesivo + foot in it, put + Posesivo + foot in + Posesivo + mouth, stick + Posesivo + foot in it, drop + a clanger, drop + a bollock, make + a blunder, make + a bloomer, blunderEx. She somehow manages to put her foot in it and get laughed at every time, usually as a direct consequence of her unsureness of her own capabilities.Ex. She put her foot in her mouth when she asked a fat woman who was not pregnant when her baby was due.Ex. She's just always shooting her mouth off and sticking her foot in it.Ex. After dropping a clanger, you are left with a sense of shame and you just want to disappear and hide away.Ex. But we are all only human and I have recently ' dropped a bollock' as we English say.Ex. Since its independence 61 years ago our nation has erred, but this time they have made a blunder.Ex. He is well-known for making bloomers in public engagements.Ex. Michael Howard has blundered again, and again he has done so by trying to imitate Blair while lacking his finesse.* * *(v.) = put + Posesivo + foot in it, put + Posesivo + foot in + Posesivo + mouth, stick + Posesivo + foot in it, drop + a clanger, drop + a bollock, make + a blunder, make + a bloomer, blunderEx: She somehow manages to put her foot in it and get laughed at every time, usually as a direct consequence of her unsureness of her own capabilities.
Ex: She put her foot in her mouth when she asked a fat woman who was not pregnant when her baby was due.Ex: She's just always shooting her mouth off and sticking her foot in it.Ex: After dropping a clanger, you are left with a sense of shame and you just want to disappear and hide away.Ex: But we are all only human and I have recently ' dropped a bollock' as we English say.Ex: Since its independence 61 years ago our nation has erred, but this time they have made a blunder.Ex: He is well-known for making bloomers in public engagements.Ex: Michael Howard has blundered again, and again he has done so by trying to imitate Blair while lacking his finesse. -
10 tropezar
v.to trip or stumble.tropecé con el bordillo y me caí I tripped on the curb o (British) curb and fell over (United States)* * *1 (trompicar) to trip, stumble* * *verb* * *1. VI1) [con los pies] to trip, stumbletropezó y por poco se cae — he tripped o stumbled and nearly fell
¡cuidado, no tropieces! — mind you don't trip up!
2) (=chocar)tropezar con o contra algo — to bump into sth
tropezar con o contra un árbol — to bump into a tree
3) (=enfrentarse)tropezar con algo — to run into sth, encounter sth
tropezamos con una dificultad — we ran into o encountered a difficulty
tropezó con muchos obstáculos durante su carrera política — she came up against o encountered numerous obstacles in her political career
4) (=encontrarse)tropezar con algn — to bump into sb, run into sb
he tropezado con María en la facultad — I bumped o ran into María in the department
5) (=reñir)6) (=cometer un error) to err, make a mistakeha tropezado muchas veces en la vida — she has erred many times o made many mistakes in her life
2.See:* * *1.verbo intransitivoa) (al caminar, correr) to stumble, triptropezar CON algo — <con piedra/escalón> to trip over something; con árbol/muro to walk (o run etc) into something
b) ( encontrarse)tropezar CON algo — con dificultad/problema to come up against something
2.tropezar CON alguien — to run o bump into somebody (colloq)
tropezarse v pron ( encontrarse)tropezarse CON alguien — to run o bump into somebody (colloq)
* * *= stumble.Ex. For some people the best way of progressing through the Internet may be by stumbling at the obstacles but persevering in the effort to move forward.----* tropezar con = bump into, run into, trip on, run up against, cross + Posesivo + path.* tropezar con dificultades = run into + difficulties.* tropezar con problemas = run into + problems.* tropezar los unos con los otros = trip over + each other.* tropezar una persona con otra = fall over + each other's feet.* * *1.verbo intransitivoa) (al caminar, correr) to stumble, triptropezar CON algo — <con piedra/escalón> to trip over something; con árbol/muro to walk (o run etc) into something
b) ( encontrarse)tropezar CON algo — con dificultad/problema to come up against something
2.tropezar CON alguien — to run o bump into somebody (colloq)
tropezarse v pron ( encontrarse)tropezarse CON alguien — to run o bump into somebody (colloq)
* * *= stumble.Ex: For some people the best way of progressing through the Internet may be by stumbling at the obstacles but persevering in the effort to move forward.
* tropezar con = bump into, run into, trip on, run up against, cross + Posesivo + path.* tropezar con dificultades = run into + difficulties.* tropezar con problemas = run into + problems.* tropezar los unos con los otros = trip over + each other.* tropezar una persona con otra = fall over + each other's feet.* * *tropezar [A6 ]viA1 (con los pies) to stumble, trip tropezar CON algo to trip OVER sthB1 tropezar CON algo ‹con una dificultad/un problema› to come up AGAINST sthtropezó con muchos inconvenientes she came up against o encountered a lot of difficultiestropezó con la oposición de los vecinos she came up against o she met with opposition from the neighbors* * *
tropezar ( conjugate tropezar) verbo intransitivo
tropezar CON algo ‹con piedra/escalón› to trip over sth;
‹con árbol/muro› to walk (o run etc) into sth
tropezar CON algn to run o bump into sb (colloq)
tropezarse verbo pronominal ( encontrarse) tropezarse CON algn to run o bump into sb (colloq)
tropezar verbo intransitivo
1 (dar un traspié) to trip, stumble
(con algo) tropezó con la caja, he tripped over the box
(chocar) to bump
2 (con dificultades, etc) tropezamos con muchos problemas, we ran into a lot of problems
' tropezar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
encontrar
- tropezón
- tropiece
- tropieza
English:
blunder
- encounter
- fall over
- meet with
- run up against
- stumble
- trip
- run
* * *♦ vitropezar dos veces con la misma piedra to make the same mistake twice;el hombre es el único animal que tropieza dos veces con la misma piedra man is the only animal that doesn't learn from its mistakestropezaron con la negativa de la dirección a colaborar they came up against management's refusal to collaboratetropezó con una farola she bumped into a lamppost5. [equivocarse] to slip up, to make a mistake* * *v/i1 trip, stumble2 ( chocar):tropezar con tb fig bump into* * *tropezar {29} vi1) : to trip, to stumble2) : to slip up, to blunder3)tropezar con : to run into, to bump into4)tropezar con : to come up against (a problem)* * *tropezar vb -
11 errado
adj.wrong, mistaken, off the rails, erred.past part.past participle of spanish verb: errar.* * *1→ link=errar errar► adjetivo1 mistaken, wrong, erroneous* * *ADJ1) (=equivocado) mistaken, wrongno andas errado al decir que... — you're not mistaken when you say that...
2) [tiro] wide of the mark* * *- da adjetivo1) ( desacertado)2) (esp AmL)a) [estar] < persona> mistaken, wrongestán muy errados en estos cálculos — they're way off the mark o miles out with these calculations (colloq)
* * *- da adjetivo1) ( desacertado)2) (esp AmL)a) [estar] < persona> mistaken, wrongestán muy errados en estos cálculos — they're way off the mark o miles out with these calculations (colloq)
* * *errado -daA(desacertado): un total de 45 puntos con cinco tiros errados a total of 45 points and five missesun golpe errado a mishitterminó con un remate errado de Sánchez it ended with Sánchez shooting wide/high, it ended with Sánchez missing his shotB ( esp AmL)1 [ ESTAR] ‹persona› mistaken, wrongestás errado, ella no tuvo nada que ver en el asunto you're mistaken o wrong, she had nothing to do with itestán muy errados en estos cálculos they're way off the mark o a long way out o miles out with these calculations ( colloq)2 [ SER] ‹decisión› wrong; ‹política› misguidedla errada política económica de este gobierno the misguided economic policy of this governmentfue una decisión errada mandarlos a ese colegio I/they made the o a wrong decision (in) sending them to that school* * *
Del verbo errar: ( conjugate errar)
errado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
errado
errar
errado◊ -da adjetivo
1 ( desacertado):
2 (esp AmL)
‹ política› misguided
errar ( conjugate errar) verbo transitivo ‹tiro/golpe› to miss;◊ erró su vocación she chose the wrong vocation/career
verbo intransitivo [ tirador] to miss;
erró en su decisión he made the wrong decision
errado,-a adjetivo wrong
errar
I verbo transitivo
1 (un tiro, golpe) to miss
2 (una elección) to get wrong
II verbo intransitivo
1 (vagar) to wander
2 (cometer fallos) to make a mistake
' errado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
errada
* * *errado, -a adj1. [tiro, golpe] missed2. [persona, razonamiento] mistaken;[vocación, camino, rumbo] wrong; [cálculo, respuesta] incorrect* * *adj2 DEP:un disparo errado a mishit* * *errado, -da adj: wrong, mistaken
См. также в других словарях:
Erred — Err Err ([ e]r), v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Erred}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Erring} (?; 277, 85).] [F. errer, L. errare; akin to G. irren, OHG. irran, v. t., irr[=o]n, v. i., OS. irrien, Sw. irra, Dan. irre, Goth, a[ i]rzjan to lead astray, airzise astray.] 1 … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
erred — ÉœË v. make a mistake, be wrong, misjudge … English contemporary dictionary
erred — past of err … Useful english dictionary
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