-
1 flood tide
-
2 flood-tide
noun (the rising tide.) marea creciente -
3 flood tide
flujo altamar; marea creciente -
4 flood tide
-
5 flood tide
s.marea creciente, creciente, marea alta, creciente del mar. -
6 duration of flood tide
English-Spanish dictionary of Geography > duration of flood tide
-
7 flood
1.
noun1) (a great overflow of water: If it continues to rain like this, we shall have floods.) inundación2) (any great quantity: a flood of fan mail.) torrente, avalancha
2. verb(to (cause something to) overflow with water: She left the water running and flooded the kitchen.) inundar
3. -lit verb(to light with floodlights.) iluminar- floodlit
- flood-tide
flood1 n inundaciónflood2 vb inundar / inundarsetr[flʌd]1 (overflow of water) inundación nombre femenino2 (of river) riada1 (river) desbordarse2 figurative use (cover, fill) invadir, inundar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto flood the market inundar el mercado, saturar el mercadoto be in floods of tears llorar a maresflood ['flʌd] vt: inundar, anegarflood n1) inundation: inundación f2) torrent: avalancha f, diluvio m, torrente ma flood of tears: un mar de lágrimasn.• arriada s.f.• arroyada s.f.• diluvio s.m.• inundación s.f.• llena s.f.• riada s.f.• riolada s.f.v.• anegar v.• aplayarse v.• desbordar v.• enaguazar v.• inundar v.flʌd
I
a) ( of water) (often pl) inundación f; ( caused by river) inundación f, riada fto be in full flood — \<\<river\>\> estar* desbordado; \<\<speaker\>\> estar* en pleno discurso or (pey) en plena perorata; (before n)
b) (of complaints, calls, letters) avalancha f, diluvio m; ( of people) avalancha f, riada f
II
1.
a) \<\<field/town\>\> inundar, anegar*b) ( Auto) \<\<engine\>\> ahogar*c) ( overwhelm) inundarwe've been flooded with applications — nos han inundado de solicitudes, nos han llovido las solicitudes
to flood the market with imports — ( Busn) inundar el mercado de productos importados
2.
via) \<\<river/sewers\>\> desbordarse; \<\<mine/basement\>\> inundarseb) ( Auto) ahogarse*c) (+ adv compl) \<\<people/crowd\>\>to flood in — \<\<sunshine/light\>\> entrar a raudales
d) \<\<emotion\>\>memories came flooding back — los recuerdos se agolparon en su (or mi etc) memoria
Phrasal Verbs:[flʌd]1.N [of water] inundación f ; (in river) avenida f ; [of words, tears] torrente m ; (=flood tide) pleamar fthe Flood — (Rel) el Diluvio
2.VT (Aut) (gen) inundarto flood the market with sth — inundar or saturar el mercado de algo
we have been flooded with applications — nos han llovido las solicitudes, nos han inundado de solicitudes
3.VI [river] desbordarse4.CPDflood control N — medidas fpl para controlar las inundaciones
flood damage N — daños mpl causados por las inundaciones
flood defences (Brit) N — protecciones fpl contra las inundaciones
flood tide N — pleamar f, marea f creciente
- flood in* * *[flʌd]
I
a) ( of water) (often pl) inundación f; ( caused by river) inundación f, riada fto be in full flood — \<\<river\>\> estar* desbordado; \<\<speaker\>\> estar* en pleno discurso or (pey) en plena perorata; (before n)
b) (of complaints, calls, letters) avalancha f, diluvio m; ( of people) avalancha f, riada f
II
1.
a) \<\<field/town\>\> inundar, anegar*b) ( Auto) \<\<engine\>\> ahogar*c) ( overwhelm) inundarwe've been flooded with applications — nos han inundado de solicitudes, nos han llovido las solicitudes
to flood the market with imports — ( Busn) inundar el mercado de productos importados
2.
via) \<\<river/sewers\>\> desbordarse; \<\<mine/basement\>\> inundarseb) ( Auto) ahogarse*c) (+ adv compl) \<\<people/crowd\>\>to flood in — \<\<sunshine/light\>\> entrar a raudales
d) \<\<emotion\>\>memories came flooding back — los recuerdos se agolparon en su (or mi etc) memoria
Phrasal Verbs: -
8 tide
* -
9 flood
12 nAUTO ahogado mCINEMAT luz de inundación fHYDROL crecida f, inundación f, torrente mMECH ahogado mPRINT exceso de tinta mVEH ahogado mWATER, WATER TRANSP inundación f, marea entrante f3 vtAUTO ahogarHYDROL anegarVEH ahogarWATER TRANSP tanks anegar, inundar4 viWATER TRANSP tide entrar, subir -
10 flood
* -
11 flood stream
-
12 marea
Del verbo marear: ( conjugate marear) \ \
marea es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativoMultiple Entries: marea marear
marea sustantivo femenino tide;◊ cuando baja/sube la marea when the tide goes out/comes in;marea creciente rising tide, flood tide; marea menguante falling tide, ebb tide; marea negra oil slick
marear ( conjugate marear) verbo transitivo ( con pérdida de equilibrio) to make … dizzy marearse verbo pronominal (— en barco) to get seasick; (— en avión) to get airsick; ( perder el equilibrio) to feel dizzy; ( con alcohol) to get tipsy
marea sustantivo femenino tide
marea alta/baja, high/low tide
marear verbo transitivo
1 (producir náuseas) to make sick (producir desfallecimiento) to make dizzy
2 fam (molestar) to confuse, puzzle: me marea con tanta orden contradictoria, he confuses me with all his contradictory orders ' marea' also found in these entries: Spanish: crecer - efecto - flujo - locuacidad - marear - subir - viento - alto - ascendente - bajar - bajo - reflujo English: come in - giddy - out - rising - slick - thick - tidal - tide - turn - ebb - oil - water -
13 rise
1. past tense - rose; verb1) (to become greater, larger, higher etc; to increase: Food prices are still rising; His temperature rose; If the river rises much more, there will be a flood; Her voice rose to a scream; Bread rises when it is baked; His spirits rose at the good news.) aumentar; subir2) (to move upwards: Smoke was rising from the chimney; The birds rose into the air; The curtain rose to reveal an empty stage.) elevarse3) (to get up from bed: He rises every morning at six o'clock.) levantarse4) (to stand up: The children all rose when the headmaster came in.) levantarse5) ((of the sun etc) to appear above the horizon: The sun rises in the east and sets in the west.) levantarse6) (to slope upwards: Hills rose in the distance; The ground rises at this point.) elevarse7) (to rebel: The people rose (up) in revolt against the dictator.) levantarse/sublevarse contra8) (to move to a higher rank, a more important position etc: He rose to the rank of colonel.) ascender, subir9) ((of a river) to begin or appear: The Rhône rises in the Alps.) nacer10) ((of wind) to begin; to become stronger: Don't go out in the boat - the wind has risen.) levantarse; hacerse/soplar más fuerte11) (to be built: Office blocks are rising all over the town.) alzarse, erigirse12) (to come back to life: Jesus has risen.) resucitar
2. noun1) ((the) act of rising: He had a rapid rise to fame; a rise in prices.) ascenso, subida2) (an increase in salary or wages: She asked her boss for a rise.) aumento3) (a slope or hill: The house is just beyond the next rise.) subida, cuesta4) (the beginning and early development of something: the rise of the Roman Empire.) grandeza, auge•- rising
3. adjectivethe rising sun; rising prices; the rising generation; a rising young politician.) saliente; creciente, en aumento, en alza- early- late riser
- give rise to
- rise to the occasion
rise1 n aumento / subidarise2 vb1. subir2. aumentar / subirthe price of petrol has risen by 12% this year el precio de la gasolina ha subido un 12% este año3. crecer4. salirtr[raɪz]1 ascenso, subida2 (increase) aumento3 (slope) subida, cuesta1 ascender, subir2 (increase) aumentar3 (stand up) ponerse de pie4 (get up) levantarse5 (sun) salir6 (river) nacer7 (level of river) crecer8 (mountains) elevarse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto give rise to dar origen ato rise to the occasion ponerse a la altura de las circunstancias1) get up: levantarseto rise to one's feet: ponerse de pie2) : elevarse, alzarsethe mountains rose to the west: las montañas se elevaron al oeste3) : salir (dícese del sol y de la luna)4) : subir (dícese de las aguas, del humo, etc.)the river rose: las aguas subieron de nivel5) increase: aumentar, subir6) originate: nacer, proceder7)to rise in rank : ascender8)to rise up rebel: sublevarse, rebelarserise n1) ascent: ascensión f, subida f2) origin: origen m3) elevation: elevación f4) increase: subida f, aumento m, alzamiento m5) slope: pendiente f, cuesta fn.n.• alza s.f.• crecimiento s.m.• cuesta s.f.• elevación s.f.• levantamiento s.m.• origen s.m.• peralte s.m.• salida s.f.• subida s.f.• subido s.m.v.(§ p.,p.p.: rose, risen) = crecer v.• encumbrar v.• enriscar v.• leudar v.• levantarse v.• nacer v.• salir v.(§pres: salgo, sales...) fut/c: saldr-•)• subir v.• surgir v.
I raɪz1)a) (upward movement - of tide, level) subida f; (- in pitch) elevación fto get a rise out of somebody — (colloq) conseguir* que alguien se fastidie
to take the rise out of somebody — (colloq) tomarle el pelo a alguien (fam)
b) (increase - in prices, interest rates) subida f, aumento m, alza f‡ (frml), suba f (RPl); (- in pressure, temperature) aumento m, subida f; (- in number, amount) aumento mto be on the rise — ir* en aumento, estar* aumentando
c) ( in pay) (BrE) aumento m, incremento m (frml)a pay rise — un aumento or (frml) un incremento salarial
d) ( improvement) mejora f2) ( advance) ascenso m, ascensión fthe rise and fall of somebody/something — la grandeza y decadencia de alguien/algo, el auge y (la) caída de alguien/algo
to give rise to something — \<\<to belief\>\> dar* origen or lugar a algo; \<\<to dispute\>\> ocasionar or causar algo; \<\<to ideas\>\> suscitar algo
3) ( slope) subida f, cuesta f
II
1)a) (come, go up) subir; \<\<mist\>\> levantarse; \<\<sun/moon\>\> salir*; \<\<river\>\> crecer*; \<\<dough\>\> crecer*, subir; \<\<cake\>\> subir; \<\<fish\>\> picar*a few eyebrows rose when... — más de uno se mostró sorprendido cuando...
to rise to the surface — salir* or subir a la superficie
the color rose to her cheeks — se le subieron los colores, se ruborizó
b) ( increase) \<\<price/temperature/pressure\>\> subir, aumentar; \<\<wind\>\> arreciar; \<\<wage/number/amount\>\> aumentar; \<\<tension\>\> crecer*, aumentarto rise in price — subir or aumentar de precio
c) \<\<sound\>\> ( become louder) aumentar de volumen; ( become higher) subir de tonod) ( improve) \<\<standard\>\> mejorartheir spirits rose — se les levantó el ánimo, se animaron
2)a) ( slope upward) \<\<ground/land\>\> elevarseb) ( extend upwards) \<\<building/hill\>\> levantarse, alzarse*, erguirse* (liter)3)a) ( stand up) \<\<person/audience\>\> (frml) ponerse* de pie, levantarse, pararse (AmL)to rise to one's feet — ponerse* de pie, levantarse
b) ( out of bed) levantarserise and shine! — (colloq) vamos, arriba y a espabilarse! (fam)
4) (in position, status)5) ( adjourn) (BrE) \<\<court/parliament\>\> levantar la sesión6) ( revolt)to rise (up) (AGAINST somebody/something) — levantarse or alzarse* (contra alguien/algo)
7) ( originate) \<\<river\>\> (frml) nacer*•Phrasal Verbs:- rise to[raɪz] (vb: pt rose) (pp risen)1. N1) (=upward movement) subida f, ascenso m ; [of tide] subida f ; [of river] crecida f ; (in tone, pitch) subida f, elevación f- get a rise out of sb- take the rise out of sb2) (=increase) (in number, rate, value) aumento m ; (in price, temperature) subida f, aumento m ; (Brit) (in salary) aumento m (de sueldo)he was given a 30% pay rise — le dieron un aumento de sueldo del 30%
•
a rise in interest rates — un aumento de los tipos de interés•
prices are on the rise — los precios están subiendo3) (fig) (=advancement) ascenso m, subida f ; (=emergence) desarrollo mhis meteoric rise to fame — su ascenso meteórico or su subida meteórica a la fama
Napoleon's rise to power — el ascenso or la subida de Napoleón al poder
the rise and fall of — [of organization] el auge y (la) decadencia de; [of person] el ascenso y (la) caída de
4) (=small hill) colina f, loma f ; (=upward slope) cuesta f (arriba), pendiente f ; [of stairs] subida f5) (=origin) [of river] nacimiento mto give rise to — [+ innovation] dar origen a; [+ problems, impression] causar; [+ interest, ideas] suscitar; [+ speculation, doubts, suspicion, fear] suscitar, dar lugar a
2. VI1) (=get up) (from bed) levantarse; (=stand up) ponerse de pie, levantarse; (=rear up) [building, mountain] elevarse, alzarseto rise early — madrugar, levantarse temprano
the mountains rose up before him — las montañas se elevaban or se alzaban frente a él
ash II, 1.rise and shine! — ¡levántate y espabila!
2) (=get higher) [sun, moon] salir; [smoke, mist, balloon] subir, ascender, elevarse liter; [dust, spray, theatre curtain] levantarse; [water, tide, level, aircraft, lift] subir; [dough, cake] aumentar, subir; [river] crecer; [hair] ponerse de puntathe plane rose to 4,000 metres — el avión subió a 4.000 metros
to rise above — (fig) [+ differences, poverty] superar; [+ prejudice] estar por encima de
to rise to the bait — (lit, fig) picar or morder el anzuelo
to rise to the surface — (lit) salir a la superficie; (fig) [tensions, contradictions] surgir, aflorar
challenge, occasionit is a time when these tensions may rise to the surface — es un momento en el que puede que surjan or afloren estas tensiones
3) (=increase) [price, temperature, pressure] subir, aumentar; [number, amount, tension] aumentar; [barometer, stocks, shares] subir; [wind] arreciar, levantarse; [sound] hacerse más fuerteit has risen 20% in price — su precio ha subido or aumentado en un 20%
her voice rose in anger — levantó or alzó la voz enfadada
4) [ground] subir (en pendiente)5) (in rank) ascenderprominenceto rise from or through the ranks — (Mil) ascender de soldado raso
6) (=improve) [standards] mejorar7) (=come forth)from the people, a cheer rose up — la gente empezó a vitorear todos a una
she could feel a blush rising to her cheeks — sentía que se le subía el color a las mejillas, sentía que se le subían los colores
8) (=originate) [river] nacerthe people rose (up) against their oppressors — el pueblo se sublevó or levantó contra sus opresores
to rise (up) in revolt — sublevarse, rebelarse
10) (=adjourn) [parliament, court] levantar la sesiónthe House rose at 2a.m. — se levantó la sesión parlamentaria a las 2 de la madrugada
* * *
I [raɪz]1)a) (upward movement - of tide, level) subida f; (- in pitch) elevación fto get a rise out of somebody — (colloq) conseguir* que alguien se fastidie
to take the rise out of somebody — (colloq) tomarle el pelo a alguien (fam)
b) (increase - in prices, interest rates) subida f, aumento m, alza f‡ (frml), suba f (RPl); (- in pressure, temperature) aumento m, subida f; (- in number, amount) aumento mto be on the rise — ir* en aumento, estar* aumentando
c) ( in pay) (BrE) aumento m, incremento m (frml)a pay rise — un aumento or (frml) un incremento salarial
d) ( improvement) mejora f2) ( advance) ascenso m, ascensión fthe rise and fall of somebody/something — la grandeza y decadencia de alguien/algo, el auge y (la) caída de alguien/algo
to give rise to something — \<\<to belief\>\> dar* origen or lugar a algo; \<\<to dispute\>\> ocasionar or causar algo; \<\<to ideas\>\> suscitar algo
3) ( slope) subida f, cuesta f
II
1)a) (come, go up) subir; \<\<mist\>\> levantarse; \<\<sun/moon\>\> salir*; \<\<river\>\> crecer*; \<\<dough\>\> crecer*, subir; \<\<cake\>\> subir; \<\<fish\>\> picar*a few eyebrows rose when... — más de uno se mostró sorprendido cuando...
to rise to the surface — salir* or subir a la superficie
the color rose to her cheeks — se le subieron los colores, se ruborizó
b) ( increase) \<\<price/temperature/pressure\>\> subir, aumentar; \<\<wind\>\> arreciar; \<\<wage/number/amount\>\> aumentar; \<\<tension\>\> crecer*, aumentarto rise in price — subir or aumentar de precio
c) \<\<sound\>\> ( become louder) aumentar de volumen; ( become higher) subir de tonod) ( improve) \<\<standard\>\> mejorartheir spirits rose — se les levantó el ánimo, se animaron
2)a) ( slope upward) \<\<ground/land\>\> elevarseb) ( extend upwards) \<\<building/hill\>\> levantarse, alzarse*, erguirse* (liter)3)a) ( stand up) \<\<person/audience\>\> (frml) ponerse* de pie, levantarse, pararse (AmL)to rise to one's feet — ponerse* de pie, levantarse
b) ( out of bed) levantarserise and shine! — (colloq) vamos, arriba y a espabilarse! (fam)
4) (in position, status)5) ( adjourn) (BrE) \<\<court/parliament\>\> levantar la sesión6) ( revolt)to rise (up) (AGAINST somebody/something) — levantarse or alzarse* (contra alguien/algo)
7) ( originate) \<\<river\>\> (frml) nacer*•Phrasal Verbs:- rise to -
14 recede
ri'si:d1) (to go or move back: When the rain stopped, the floods receded; His hair is receding from his forehead.) recular, retroceder2) (to become distant: The coast receded behind us as we sailed away.) retroceder, alejarsetr[rɪ'siːd]1 (move back) retirarse2 (be left behind) retroceder, irse retrocediendo3 (fears, danger) alejarse; (memories, possibilities) desvanecerse1) withdraw: retirarse, retroceder2) fade: desvanecerse, alejarse3) slant: inclinarse4)to have a receding hairline : tener entradasv.• alejarse v.• retirarse v.• retroceder v.rɪ'siːda) ( move back) \<\<tide\>\> retirarseb) ( become less likely) \<\<danger\>\> alejarse; \<\<prospect\>\> desvanecerse*[rɪ'siːd]VI [tide, flood] bajar; [person etc] volverse atrás; [view] alejarse; [danger] disminuir; [chin] retroceder* * *[rɪ'siːd]a) ( move back) \<\<tide\>\> retirarseb) ( become less likely) \<\<danger\>\> alejarse; \<\<prospect\>\> desvanecerse* -
15 stem
I
1. stem noun1) (the part of a plant that grows upward from the root, or the part from which a leaf, flower or fruit grows; a stalk: Poppies have long, hairy, twisting stems.)2) (the narrow part of various objects, eg of a wine-glass between the bowl and the base: the stem of a wine-glass / of a tobacco-pipe.)3) (the upright piece of wood or metal at the bow of a ship: As the ship struck the rock, she shook from stem to stern.)
2. verb((with from) to be caused by: Hate sometimes stems from envy.)- - stemmed
II stem past tense, past participle - stemmed; verb(to stop (a flow, eg of blood).)stem n tallotr[stem]1 (stop - gen) frenar, detener, parar; (- bleeding) contener, parar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLfrom stem to stern SMALLMARITIME/SMALL de proa a popa: detener, contener, pararto stem the tide: detener el cursostem vito stem from : provenir de, ser el resultado destem n: tallo m (de una planta)n.• botón s.m.• cabillo s.m.• caña s.f.• espiga s.f.• fuste s.m.• pedúnculo (Botánica) s.m.• pie s.m.• pie de una copa s.m.• roda s.f.• tallo s.m.• tema s.m.• tronco s.m.• vástago s.m.v.• estancar v.• represar v.stem
I
2)a) ( of glass) pie mb) ( of pipe) boquilla f, caña f3) ( Ling) raíz f4) ( Naut)
II
1.
- mm- transitive verb \<\<flow/bleeding\>\> contener*, parar; \<\<outbreak/decline\>\> detener*, poner* freno a
2.
vito stem FROM something — provenir* or ser* producto de algo
I [stem]1. N1) [of plant] tallo m ; [of tree] tronco m ; [of leaf] pedúnculo m ; [of glass] pie m ; [of pipe] tubo m, cañón m ; (Mech) vástago m ; [of word] tema m2) (Naut) roda f, tajamar m2.VI3.CPDstem cell research N — investigación f con células madre
II
[stem]VT (=check, stop) [+ blood] restañar; [+ attack, flood] detener* * *[stem]
I
2)a) ( of glass) pie mb) ( of pipe) boquilla f, caña f3) ( Ling) raíz f4) ( Naut)
II
1.
- mm- transitive verb \<\<flow/bleeding\>\> contener*, parar; \<\<outbreak/decline\>\> detener*, poner* freno a
2.
vito stem FROM something — provenir* or ser* producto de algo
-
16 go down
1) ((with well/badly) to be approved or disapproved of: The story went down well (with them).) ser bien/mal acogido, ser bien/mal recibido2) ((of a ship) to sink: They were lost at sea when the ship went down.) hundirse3) ((of the sun or moon) to go below the horizon.) ponerse, esconderse4) (to be remembered: Your bravery will go down in history.) pasar (a la historia), quedar (para la posteridad), ser recordado5) ((of places) to become less desirable: This part of town has gone down in the last twenty years.) volverse menos solicitado; decaergo down vb bajarv.• bajar v.• descender v.• ladear v.v + adv1)a) ( descend) \<\<person\>\> bajar; \<\<sun\>\> ponerse*; \<\<curtain\>\> ( Theat) caer*, bajarto go down on one's knees/hands and knees — ponerse* de rodillas/a gatas
b) ( fall) \<\<boxer/horse\>\> caerse*; \<\<plane\>\> caer*, estrellarsec) ( sink) \<\<ship\>\> hundirsed) \<\<computer\>\> dejar de funcionar, descomponerse* (AmL)e) ( be defeated) ( Sport) perder*to go down (to somebody): Italy went down 2-1 to Uruguay Italia perdió 2 a 1 frente a Uruguay; to go down fighting — caer* luchando, morir* con las botas puestas
2)a) ( decrease) \<\<temperature/exchange rate\>\> bajar; \<\<population/unemployment\>\> disminuir*to go down in value — perder* valor
b) ( decline) \<\<standard/quality\>\> empeorarshe's gone down in my estimation — ha perdido or bajado mucho en mi estima
c) (abate, subside) \<\<wind/storm\>\> amainar; \<\<floods/swelling\>\> bajard) ( deflate) \<\<tire\>\> perder* aire, desinflarse3) ( extend)to go down to something: this road goes down to the beach este camino baja a or hasta la playa; the skirt goes down to her ankles — la falda le llega a los tobillos
4)a) ( toward the south) ir* ( hacia el sur)b) ( to another place) (BrE) ir*5)a) ( be swallowed)it just won't go down — no me pasa, no lo puedo tragar
b) \<\<present/proposal/remarks\>\>how did the announcement go down? — ¿qué tipo de acogida tuvo el anuncio?, ¿cómo recibieron el anuncio?
6) (be recorded, written)to go down in history as somebody/something — pasar a la historia como alguien/algo
1.VI + PREP bajar, descender2. VI + ADV1) (=descend) [sun] ponerse; [person] (=go downstairs) bajar2) (=fall) [person, horse] caerse3) (=crash) [plane] estrellarse, caer4) (=sink) [ship, person] hundirse5) (=decrease, decline) [price, temperature] bajar, descender; [tide, flood, water level] bajarthe house has gone down in value — la casa ha perdido valor or se ha devaluado
this neighbourhood has really gone down — este barrio ha perdido mucho, este barrio ya no es lo que era
she's really gone down since I last saw her — [sick person] ha dado un buen bajón * or ha empeorado mucho desde la última vez que la vi; [elderly person] ha perdido muchas facultades desde la última vez que la vi
6) (=deflate) [balloon, airbed] desinflarse, deshincharse (Sp)7) (=be defeated) perder8) (Comput) (=break down) bloquearse, dejar de funcionar9) (=be remembered)go down as•
to go down in history/to posterity — pasar a la historia/a la posteridad10) (Brit) (Univ) (at end of term) marcharse; (at end of degree) terminar la carrera, dejar la universidad11) (=be swallowed)•
it went down the wrong way — se me atragantó12) (=be accepted, approved)•
to go down well/ badly — ser bien/mal recibido•
I wonder how that will go down with her parents — me pregunto cómo les sentará eso a sus padres13) (Theat) [curtain] bajar; [lights] apagarse* * *v + adv1)a) ( descend) \<\<person\>\> bajar; \<\<sun\>\> ponerse*; \<\<curtain\>\> ( Theat) caer*, bajarto go down on one's knees/hands and knees — ponerse* de rodillas/a gatas
b) ( fall) \<\<boxer/horse\>\> caerse*; \<\<plane\>\> caer*, estrellarsec) ( sink) \<\<ship\>\> hundirsed) \<\<computer\>\> dejar de funcionar, descomponerse* (AmL)e) ( be defeated) ( Sport) perder*to go down (to somebody): Italy went down 2-1 to Uruguay Italia perdió 2 a 1 frente a Uruguay; to go down fighting — caer* luchando, morir* con las botas puestas
2)a) ( decrease) \<\<temperature/exchange rate\>\> bajar; \<\<population/unemployment\>\> disminuir*to go down in value — perder* valor
b) ( decline) \<\<standard/quality\>\> empeorarshe's gone down in my estimation — ha perdido or bajado mucho en mi estima
c) (abate, subside) \<\<wind/storm\>\> amainar; \<\<floods/swelling\>\> bajard) ( deflate) \<\<tire\>\> perder* aire, desinflarse3) ( extend)to go down to something: this road goes down to the beach este camino baja a or hasta la playa; the skirt goes down to her ankles — la falda le llega a los tobillos
4)a) ( toward the south) ir* ( hacia el sur)b) ( to another place) (BrE) ir*5)a) ( be swallowed)it just won't go down — no me pasa, no lo puedo tragar
b) \<\<present/proposal/remarks\>\>how did the announcement go down? — ¿qué tipo de acogida tuvo el anuncio?, ¿cómo recibieron el anuncio?
6) (be recorded, written)to go down in history as somebody/something — pasar a la historia como alguien/algo
-
17 pleamar
pleamar sustantivo femenino high tide ' pleamar' also found in these entries: English: flood - foreshore -
18 spring
fuente; manantial*
См. также в других словарях:
Flood tide — Flood Flood (fl[u^]d), n. [OE. flod a flowing, stream, flood, AS. fl[=o]d; akin to D. vloed, OS. fl[=o]d, OHG. fluot, G. flut, Icel. fl[=o][eth], Sw. & Dan. flod, Goth. fl[=o]dus; from the root of E. flow. [root]80. See {Flow}, v. i.] 1. A great… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Flood tide — may refer to: * The rising tide of an ocean * Flood Tide a novel by Clive Cussler * Flood Tide , an anthology of short fiction in the Merovingen Nights science fiction series … Wikipedia
flood tide — flood′ tide n. oce the inflow of the tide; rising tide • Etymology: 1710–20 … From formal English to slang
flood tide — n. the incoming or rising tide: cf. EBB TIDE … English World dictionary
flood tide — n the flow of the sea in towards the land →↑ebb tide … Dictionary of contemporary English
flood tide — ► NOUN ▪ an incoming tide … English terms dictionary
flood tide — flood ,tide noun count 1. ) the rising of the level of the ocean each day until it reaches its highest point and begins to fall again 2. ) a sudden increase in something … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
flood tide — noun 1. the highest point of anything conceived of as growing or developing or unfolding the climax of the artist s career in the flood tide of his success • Syn: ↑climax • Derivationally related forms: ↑climactic (for: ↑ … Useful english dictionary
Flood Tide — Infobox Book | name = Flood Tide image caption = Hardcover 1st Edition author = Clive Cussler cover artist = Paul Bacon country = United States language = English series = Dirk Pitt Novels genre = Adventure, Techno thriller novel publisher =… … Wikipedia
flood tide — UK / US noun [countable] Word forms flood tide : singular flood tide plural flood tides 1) the rising of the level of the sea each day until it reaches its highest point and begins to fall again 2) a sudden increase in something … English dictionary
flood tide — rising or incoming tide; the period between low water and the succeeding high water. Flow enters an estuary during a flood tide. Also called rising tide … Dictionary of ichthyology