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281 dormirse
1 to fall asleep, nod off2 figurado to go to sleep3 figurado (dejar de esforzarse) to let things slide* * ** * *VPR1) [persona]a) (=quedarse dormido) to fall asleep, go to sleepno te duermas — don't fall asleep, don't go to sleep
se me durmió en los brazos — she fell asleep o went to sleep in my arms
¡duérmete! — go to sleep!
b) (=despertarse tarde) to oversleep2) [brazo, pierna] to go to sleep3) * (=descuidarse)si te duermes, te quedarás sin trabajo — if you don't stay on your toes, you'll lose your job
duérmete y no conseguirás nada — if you waste time like this, you won't get anywhere
no te duermas, respóndeme — wake up, give me an answer
* * *(v.) = go to + sleep, fall + asleepEx. Instead of throwing his monkeys out and jumping up and down in his crib and laughing like a hyena, he just laid down and went to sleep.Ex. We might be bored and fall asleep.* * *(v.) = go to + sleep, fall + asleepEx: Instead of throwing his monkeys out and jumping up and down in his crib and laughing like a hyena, he just laid down and went to sleep.
Ex: We might be bored and fall asleep.* * *
■dormirse verbo reflexivo to fall asleep: se le durmió un pie, her foot went to sleep
' dormirse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
adormecerse
- desvelarse
- laurel
- dormir
English:
fall
- nod off
- sleep
- asleep
- dead
- doze
- drop
- nod
* * *vpr1. [persona] [empezar a soñar] to fall asleep;no puedo dormirme I can't get (off) to sleep;terminó durmiéndose al amanecer he eventually fell asleep at dawn;yo con el fútbol/la ópera me duermo soccer/opera sends me to sleep2. [persona] [no despertarse] to oversleep, to sleep in;se durmió y llegó tarde she overslept and arrived late3. [brazo, mano] to go to sleep;se me ha dormido la pierna my leg has gone to sleep4. [despistarse]si te duermes, te quedarás sin entradas if you don't get a move on, you'll be left without tickets;¡no te duermas y haz algo! don't just stand there, do something!* * *v/rno podía dormirme I couldn’t get to sleep;se me durmió la pierna my leg has gone to sleep2 (no despertarse) oversleep* * *vr: to fall asleep* * *dormirse vb2. (una parte del cuerpo) to go to sleep
См. также в других словарях:
fell out — (Slang) went to sleep (Example: After working the night shift, I fell out ) … English contemporary dictionary
fell out of the blue — fell down like thunder on a clear day, surprised the heck out of everyone … English contemporary dictionary
(the) bottom fell out of something — the bottom fell out (of (something)) something suddenly lost value. When the bottom fell out of the real estate market, a lot of people lost a lot of money. Usage notes: usually used in the past tense … New idioms dictionary
(the) bottom fell out of — the bottom fell out (of (something)) something suddenly lost value. When the bottom fell out of the real estate market, a lot of people lost a lot of money. Usage notes: usually used in the past tense … New idioms dictionary
(the) bottom fell out — the bottom fell out (of (something)) something suddenly lost value. When the bottom fell out of the real estate market, a lot of people lost a lot of money. Usage notes: usually used in the past tense … New idioms dictionary
bottom fell out — When something causes a plan, project or venture to collapse or fail, the bottom falls out of it. When heavy rain was announced, the bottom fell out of their plans for a beach party … English Idioms & idiomatic expressions
The Boy Who Fell Out of the Sky — is a book by Ken Dornstein about his older brother David Dornstein. who was killed in the PanAm 103 bombing. [http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/19/books/19grim.html?ex=1303099200 en=c6af5a1e4d2d2193 ei=5088 partner=rssnyt emc=rss] ,… … Wikipedia
bottom fell out — See the bottom fell out … English idioms
the bottom fell out — the project stopped, the business failed, the wheels fall off When the price of oil dropped, the bottom fell out of the oil industry in Alberta … English idioms
Fell out of the ugly tree, and hit every branch on the way down — very ugly … Dictionary of Australian slang
fell out of the ugly tree, and hit every branch on the way down — Australian Slang very ugly … English dialects glossary