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101 en + Posesivo + mente
= on + Posesivo + mindEx. The school was sued for banning a young adult novel, 'Annie on my mind', about two high school girls who fall in love.* * *= on + Posesivo + mindEx: The school was sued for banning a young adult novel, 'Annie on my mind', about two high school girls who fall in love.
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102 ganarse a Alguien
(v.) = win + Nombre + heartEx. Well, if you really want to know how to make a man fall in love, the following are some top tips for winning his heart.* * *(v.) = win + Nombre + heartEx: Well, if you really want to know how to make a man fall in love, the following are some top tips for winning his heart.
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103 ganarse el corazón de Alguien
(v.) = win + Nombre + heartEx. Well, if you really want to know how to make a man fall in love, the following are some top tips for winning his heart.* * *(v.) = win + Nombre + heartEx: Well, if you really want to know how to make a man fall in love, the following are some top tips for winning his heart.
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104 ladearse
1 (inclinarse) to lean, lean over2 familiar (apartarse) to move* * ** * *VPR1) (=inclinarse) to lean (a towards)(=torcerse) to bend; (Dep) to swerve; (Aer) to bank, turn3)ladearse con — to be equal to, be even with
* * *
■ladearse verbo reflexivo
1 (torcerse, inclinarse) to lean, tilt
2 (hacerse a un lado, apartarse) to go off to one side, to move aside
' ladearse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
ladear
English:
bank
- lean
- tip
* * *vpr1. [cuadro] to tilt;[persona] to turn sideways* * *vr: to bend (over) -
105 templarse
1 (contenerse) to restrain oneself, control oneself* * *VPR1) [agua, ambiente] (=calentarse) to warm up, get warm; (=enfriarse) to cool down2) [persona] to be moderate, act with restraint6) Cono Sur (=enamorarse) to fall in love7) Cono Sur (=excederse) to go too far, overstep the mark8)templárselas — And to stand firm
* * *vpr1. [entibiarse] [lo frío] to warm (up);[lo caliente] to cool (down);deja que se temple el café un poco wait until the coffee cools down a little2. [calmarse] [nervios, ánimos] to calm down;[voz] to soften; [persona] to control oneself4. Ecuad, Guat, Hond [morir] to die* * *vr1) : to be moderate2) : to warm up, to cool down -
106 kepelet
be made to fall in love by magical means* * *be made to fall in love by magical means; be seduced -
107 fella
* * *I)(-da, -dr), v.2) to kill, slay (in battle); fella e-n frá landi, to slay or dethrone (a king); fella fénað sinn, to lose one’s sheep or cattle from cold or hunger;3) to cause to cease, abolish (fella blót ok blótdrykkjur); fella rœðu sína, to close one’s speech; fella niðr, to put an end to, abandon, give up (fella niðr þann átrúnað);4) fella heitstrenging á sik, to bring down on one’s head the curse of a broken vow;5) to tongue and groove, to fit; fella stokk á horn, to put a board on the horns of a savage bull;6) fig., fella ást (hug) til e-s, to turn one’s mind (love) towards one, to fall in love with; fella bœn at e-m, to address prayer to one, to beg of one; fella sik við e-t, to fit oneself to a thing: fella sik mjök við umrœðuna, to take a warm parl in the debate.f.1) framework, a framed board;2) mouse-trap.* * *u, f. [Engl. falling], framework, a framed board, Fas. i. 393. -
108 verlieben
ver·lie·ben *vrsich [in jdn] \verlieben to fall in love [with sb];sich hoffnungslos [in jdn] \verlieben to fall hopelessly [or be head over heels] in love [with sb]; ( für jdn schwärmen); Schulmädchen to have a crush on sb ( fam)zum V\verlieben aussehen/ sein to look perfect/be adorable -
109 rakastua
yks.nom. rakastua; yks.gen. rakastun; yks.part. rakastui; yks.ill. rakastuisi; mon.gen. rakastukoon; mon.part. rakastunut; mon.ill. rakastuttiinfall in love (verb)* * *• be charmed• fall in love -
110 влюбиться
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111 rinnamorare
rinnamorare v.tr. to make* fall in love again.◘ rinnamorarsi v.intr.pron. to fall* in love again. -
112 innamorare
[innamo'rare]1. vtto enchant, charmun viso che innamora — an enchanting o a delightful face
2. vr (innamorarsi)(uso reciproco) to fall in love (with each other)3. vip -
113 Words
Words are but the images of matter... to fall in love with them is all one as to fall in love with a picture. (Bacon, 1878, p. 120)Chamberlin, Tracy, Dewey, Binet and others have shown that the child's symbols are action-words, i.e., their content is action. There is also practically universal agreement on the fact that the first symbols of the child are in reality word-sentences designating action and object or subject, or all three at once. (Markey, 1928, p. 50)The child can very readily learn at the age of three that "right" and "left" each refers to a side of the body-but ah me, which one?... What is set up first is a conceptual organization. By the age of six the word "right" clearly and immediately means sidedness to the child. A considerable conceptual elaboration has already occurred, and the stimulus effectively arouses that structure; but it arouses no prompt, specific response.... With such facts, it becomes nonsense to explain man's conceptual development as exclusively consisting of verbal associations. (Hebb, 1949, p. 118)The use of language is not confined to its being the medium through which we communicate ideas to one another.... Words are the instrument by which we form all our abstractions, by which we fashion and embody our ideas, and by which we are enabled to glide along a series of premises and conclusions with a rapidity so great as to leave in memory no trace of the successive steps of this process; and we remain unconscious of how much we owe to this. (Roget, quoted in Minsky, 1986, p. 197)Any attempt at a philosophical arrangement under categories of the words of our language must reveal the fact that it is impossible to separate and circumscribe the several groups by absolutely distinct boundaries. Were we to disengage their interwoven ramifications, and seek to confine every word to its main or original meaning, we should find some secondary meaning has become so firmly associated with many words and phrases, that to sever the alliance would be to deprive our language of the richness due to an infinity of natural adaptations. (Roget, quoted in Minsky, 1986, p. 206)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Words
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114 С-132
ОТДАВАТЬ/ОТДАТЬ СЕРДЦЕ кому elev VP subj: human, usu. female usu. pfv) to love or fall in love with s.o.: X отдала сердце Y-y » X gave (lost) her heart to Y.Почувствовав к ней (богатой госпоже) любовь великую, сделал он ей изъяснение в любви и начал склонять её выйти за него замуж. Но она отдала уже своё сердце другому, одному знатному не малого чина военному... (Достоевский 1). Feeling great love for her (the wealthy lady), he made her a declaration of his love, and tried to persuade her to marry him. But she had already given her heart to another man, an officer of noble birth and high rank...(la). -
115 отдавать сердце
• ОТДАВАТЬ/ОТДАТЬ СЕРДЦЕ кому elev[VP; subj: human, usu. female; usu. pfv]=====⇒ to love or fall in love with s.o.:♦ Почувствовав к ней [богатой госпоже] любовь великую, сделал он ей изъяснение в любви и начал склонять её выйти за него замуж. Но она отдала уже своё сердце другому, одному знатному не малого чина военному... (Достоевский 1). Feeling great love for her [the wealthy lady], he made her a declaration of his love, and tried to persuade her to marry him. But she had already given her heart to another man, an officer of noble birth and high rank...(1a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > отдавать сердце
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116 отдать сердце
• ОТДАВАТЬ/ОТДАТЬ СЕРДЦЕ кому elev[VP; subj: human, usu. female; usu. pfv]=====⇒ to love or fall in love with s.o.:♦ Почувствовав к ней [богатой госпоже] любовь великую, сделал он ей изъяснение в любви и начал склонять её выйти за него замуж. Но она отдала уже своё сердце другому, одному знатному не малого чина военному... (Достоевский 1). Feeling great love for her [the wealthy lady], he made her a declaration of his love, and tried to persuade her to marry him. But she had already given her heart to another man, an officer of noble birth and high rank...(1a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > отдать сердце
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117 אהב
v. be in love; be loved————————v. be loved, liked————————v. to cause to love————————v. to fall in love————————v. to love, like, adore, desire, be fond of -
118 prendar
v.1 to enchant.2 to pawn, to give as a guarantee, to pledge.* * *1. VT1) [+ persona] (=cautivar) to captivate, enchant; (=ganar la voluntad de) to win over2) Méx (=empeñar) to pawn2.See:* * *prendar [A1 ]vtA ( liter); ‹persona› to captivatesu sonrisa lo prendó her smile captivated himprendar algo a favor de algn to leave sth as security with sbprendar DE algn; to fall in love WITH sbse prendó de ella en cuanto la vio he fell in love with her the moment he saw herquedaron prendados de su simpatía they were captivated by her charmquedé prendada de Venecia I fell in love with Veniceestá prendado de su mujer he adores his wife* * *♦ vtto enchant* * *v/t captivate* * *prendar vt1) : to charm, to captivate2) : to pawn, to pledge -
119 полюбить
(кого-л./что-л.)
come to love, grow fond (of); fall in love (with)* * ** * *любить; полюбить come to love, grow fond* * *cottonlove -
120 تدله
تَدَلّهَto go crazy or out of one's mind (with love or grief), be passionately stirred by love or grief; to love, fall in love with
См. также в других словарях:
fall in love — (with (someone)) to begin to love someone. The movie tells the story of a country doctor who falls in love with a beautiful waitress. I was thinking about falling in love for the first time and trying to remember my first boyfriend … New idioms dictionary
fall in love — (with (something)) to become strongly attracted to a place, activity, or thing. We spent three weeks in Georgetown and absolutely fell in love with it. I test drove the car and I just fell in love … New idioms dictionary
fall in love — verb begin to experience feelings of love towards (Freq. 7) She fell in love with her former student • Hypernyms: ↑fall • Verb Frames: Somebody s Somebody s PP Sam and Sue fall in love … Useful english dictionary
fall in love — to start to love someone fall in love with: Why do we fall in love with one person rather than another? … English dictionary
Fall in Love Like a Comic! — まんがみたいな恋したいっ! (Manga Mitaina Koishitai!) Genre Romantic c … Wikipedia
fall in love, fall out of love — see ↑love, 1 • • • Main Entry: ↑fall … Useful english dictionary
fall in love with someone — fall in love (with (someone)) to begin to love someone. The movie tells the story of a country doctor who falls in love with a beautiful waitress. I was thinking about falling in love for the first time and trying to remember my first boyfriend … New idioms dictionary
fall in love with — fall in love (with (someone)) to begin to love someone. The movie tells the story of a country doctor who falls in love with a beautiful waitress. I was thinking about falling in love for the first time and trying to remember my first boyfriend … New idioms dictionary
fall in love with something — fall in love (with (something)) to become strongly attracted to a place, activity, or thing. We spent three weeks in Georgetown and absolutely fell in love with it. I test drove the car and I just fell in love … New idioms dictionary
fall in love with — fall in love (with (something)) to become strongly attracted to a place, activity, or thing. We spent three weeks in Georgetown and absolutely fell in love with it. I test drove the car and I just fell in love … New idioms dictionary
fall in love with — she didn t mean to fall in love with him Syn: become infatuated with, give/lose one s heart to; informal fall for, be bowled over by, be swept off one s feet by, develop a crush on … Thesaurus of popular words