-
1 frustrate
1) (to make (someone) feel disappointed, useless etc: Staying at home all day frustrated her.) frustrar2) (to make useless: His efforts were frustrated.) frustrar•- frustrated
tr[frʌ'streɪt]1 (thwart) frustrar2 (upset) frustrarv.• desbaratar v.• desurdir v.• frustrar v.'frʌstreɪt, frʌs'treɪttransitive verb frustrar[frʌs'treɪt]VT [+ plan, effort, person] frustrar; [+ hope] defraudar* * *['frʌstreɪt, frʌs'treɪt]transitive verb frustrar -
2 frustrate
adj.1 frustrado, fallido, burlado.2 inútil, vano, nulo.3 desventajoso.vt.1 frustrar (person, plan)2 frustrarse. (pt & pp frustrated) -
3 baffle
'bæfl(to puzzle (a person): I was baffled by her attitude towards her husband.) desconcertar- baffling
baffle /'bafle/, ' baffle' also found in these entries: Spanish: turbar English: baffle - defeattr['bæfəl]1 (perplex) dejar perplejo,-a, desconcertar2 (frustrate) frustrar3 (hinder) poner trabas a1) perplex: desconcertar, confundir2) frustrate: frustrarbaffle n: deflector m, bafle m (acústico)n.• confusión s.f.• deflector s.m.• pantalla acústica s.f.v.• achunchar v.• confundir v.• desconcertar v.• deslumbrar v.• frustrar v.'bæfəla) ( perplex) desconcertar*b) ( frustrate) \<\<efforts\>\> frustrar['bæfl]1. VT1) (=perplex) desconcertarthe problem baffles me — el problema me tiene perplejo, no le veo solución alguna al problema
the police are baffled — la policía está desconcertada or perpleja
2.* * *['bæfəl]a) ( perplex) desconcertar*b) ( frustrate) \<\<efforts\>\> frustrar -
4 frustrar
frustrar ( conjugate frustrar) verbo transitivo ‹ persona› to frustrate; ‹ planes› to thwart; ‹ esperanzas› to dash; frustrarse verbo pronominal [ planes] to be thwarted, fail; [ esperanzas] to come to nothing
frustrar verbo transitivo to frustrate (una esperanza) to disappoint ' frustrar' also found in these entries: Spanish: estropear - impedir - tronchar English: defeat - disappoint - foil - frustrate - thwart - baffle - confound - cross -
5 frustrado
Del verbo frustrar: ( conjugate frustrar) \ \
frustrado es: \ \el participioMultiple Entries: frustrado frustrar
frustrado
◊ -da adjetivo‹actor/bailarina› frustrated ( before n)
frustrar ( conjugate frustrar) verbo transitivo ‹ persona› to frustrate; ‹ planes› to thwart; ‹ esperanzas› to dash; frustrarse verbo pronominal [ planes] to be thwarted, fail; [ esperanzas] to come to nothing
frustrado,-a adjetivo
1 (persona) frustrated
2 (tentativa, proyecto) unsuccessful
frustrar verbo transitivo to frustrate (una esperanza) to disappoint ' frustrado' also found in these entries: Spanish: frustrada English: abortive - foil - frustrated - sex-starved - unfulfilled -
6 frustrated
pp.participio pasado del verbo FRUSTRATE.pt.pretérito del verbo FRUSTRATE. -
7 blight
(a disease in plants that withers them: potato blight.) tizón, añublotr[blaɪt]1 (mildew) tizón nombre masculino, añublo1 (mildew) atizonar, añublar2 figurative use (ruin, spoil) echar a perder, estropear3 (harm) perjudicar, dañarblight ['blaɪt] vt: arruinar, infestarblight n1) : añublo m2) plague: peste f, plaga f3) decay: deterioro m, ruina fn.• añublo s.m.• mala suerte s.f.• plaga s.f.• quemadura s.f.• roya s.f.v.• arruinar v.• atizonar v.
I blaɪtmass nouna) (Agr, Hort) añublo m; ( loosely) peste fb) ( curse) plaga f, cáncer m
II
a) \<\<plant/crop\>\> arruinar, infestar; \<\<region\>\> asolar*b) \<\<career/health\>\> arruinar; \<\<hopes\>\> malograr[blaɪt]1. N1) (Bot) [of plants, cereals, fruit, trees] roya f2) (fig) plaga furban blight — desertización f urbana
to cast a blight on or over — arruinar
2. VT1) (Bot) (=wither) marchitar2) (fig) (=spoil) arruinar; (=frustrate) frustrar; [+ urban scene] desertizar* * *
I [blaɪt]mass nouna) (Agr, Hort) añublo m; ( loosely) peste fb) ( curse) plaga f, cáncer m
II
a) \<\<plant/crop\>\> arruinar, infestar; \<\<region\>\> asolar*b) \<\<career/health\>\> arruinar; \<\<hopes\>\> malograr -
8 dash
dæʃ
1. verb1) (to move with speed and violence: A man dashed into a shop.) correr2) (to knock, throw etc violently, especially so as to break: He dashed the bottle to pieces against the wall.) lanzar, arrojar3) (to bring down suddenly and violently or to make very depressed: Our hopes were dashed.) frustrar
2. noun1) (a sudden rush or movement: The child made a dash for the door.) carrera2) (a small amount of something, especially liquid: whisky with a dash of soda.) poco, poquito3) ((in writing) a short line (-) to show a break in a sentence etc.) raya, guión4) (energy and enthusiasm: All his activities showed the same dash and spirit.) viveza•- dashing- dash off
dash1 n guióndash2 vb ir deprisatr[dæʃ]interjection dash it!1 ¡mecachis!————————tr[dæʃ]1 (sudden run) carrera2 SMALLSPORT/SMALL carrera, sprint nombre masculino5 (style, panache) elegancia, garbo, salero; (energy, vitality) brío, dinamismo6 SMALLAMERICAN ENGLISH/SMALL (dashboard) salpicadero2 (hopes) truncar1 (rush) correr2 (waves) romper\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto cut a dash causar sensación, llamar la atenciónto make a dash for something precipitarse hacia algodash ['dæʃ] vt1) smash: romper, estrellar2) hurl: arrojar, lanzar3) splash: salpicar4) frustrate: frustrar5)to dash off : hacer (algo) rápidamentedash vi1) smash: romperse, estrellarse2) dart: lanzarse, irse apresuradamentedash n1) burst, splash: arranque m, salpicadura f (de aguas)2) : guión m largo (signo de puntuación)3) drop: gota f, pizca f4) verve: brío m5) race: carrera fa 100-meter dash: una carrera de 100 metros6)to make a dash for it : precipitarse (hacia), echarse a correr7) dashboardn.• apretón s.m.n.• fogosidad s.f.• guión s.m.• lucimiento s.m.• pizca s.f.• raya s.f.• sabor s.m.v.• batir v.• estrellar v.• lanzar v.• romper v.• salpicar v.dæʃ
I
1) ( sudden movement) (no pl)to make a dash for safety/shelter — correrse a ponerse a salvo/a cobijarse
to make a dash for it — (colloq) salir* a toda mecha (fam)
2) c ( small amount) poquito ma dash of milk/salt — un chorrito de leche/una pizca de sal
3) ca) ( punctuation mark) guión mb) ( in Morse code) raya f4) u (spirit, nerve) brío m5) c ( Sport)the 100 m dash — los 100m planos or (Esp) lisos or (RPl) llanos
II
1.
1) ( hurl) tirarshe dashed the plate to pieces — hizo añicos or trizas el plato
2) ( disappoint) \<\<hopes\>\> (usu pass) defraudar
2.
vi1) ( rush)I must dash — (colloq) tengo que irme corriendo
2) ( crash) \<\<waves\>\> romper*•Phrasal Verbs:- dash off[dæʃ]1. N1) (=small quantity) [of liquid] gota f, chorrito m ; [of salt, pepper] pizca f ; [of colour] toque mwith a dash of soda — con una gota or un chorrito de sifón
2) (=punctuation mark) (also Morse) raya f3) (=rush) carrera fto make a dash at or towards — precipitarse hacia
4) (US)(Sport)5) (=flair, style) brío m- cut a dash6) (Aut) = dashboard2. VT1) (=throw)to dash sth to the ground — tirar or arrojar algo al suelo
to dash sth to pieces — hacer añicos algo, estrellar algo
2) (fig) [+ hopes] frustrar, defraudar3. VI1) (=smash) estrellarse2) (=rush) ir de prisa, precipitarseto dash away/back — salir/volver corriendo
to dash in/out — entrar/salir disparado
to dash up — [person] llegar corriendo; [car] llegar a toda velocidad
4.EXCLdash it (all)! — † * ¡demontre! *, ¡porras! *
- dash off* * *[dæʃ]
I
1) ( sudden movement) (no pl)to make a dash for safety/shelter — correrse a ponerse a salvo/a cobijarse
to make a dash for it — (colloq) salir* a toda mecha (fam)
2) c ( small amount) poquito ma dash of milk/salt — un chorrito de leche/una pizca de sal
3) ca) ( punctuation mark) guión mb) ( in Morse code) raya f4) u (spirit, nerve) brío m5) c ( Sport)the 100 m dash — los 100m planos or (Esp) lisos or (RPl) llanos
II
1.
1) ( hurl) tirarshe dashed the plate to pieces — hizo añicos or trizas el plato
2) ( disappoint) \<\<hopes\>\> (usu pass) defraudar
2.
vi1) ( rush)I must dash — (colloq) tengo que irme corriendo
2) ( crash) \<\<waves\>\> romper*•Phrasal Verbs:- dash off -
9 defeat
di'fi:t
1. verb(to win a victory over: They defeated our team by three goals; We will defeat the enemy eventually.) vencer, derrotar
2. noun(the loss of a game, battle, race etc: His defeat in the last race depressed him; We suffered yet another defeat.) derrota- defeated- defeatism
- defeatist
defeat1 n derrotadefeat2 vb derrotar / vencertr[dɪ'fiːt]1 (of army, team) derrota; (of motion, bill) rechazo2 figurative use (of hopes, plans) fracaso2 figurative use (hopes, plans) frustrar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto defeat the object / defeat the purpose ir en contra del propósitodefeat [di'fi:t] vt1) frustrate: frustrar2) beat: vencer, derrotardefeat n: derrota f, rechazo m (de legislación), fracaso m (de planes, etc.)n.• derrota s.f.• desbarate s.m.• descalabro s.m.• vencimiento s.m.v.• abarrajar v.• arrollar v.• defraudar v.• derrotar v.• destrozar v.• vencer v.
I dɪ'fiːtmass & count nouna) ( by opponent) derrota fto accept o admit defeat — darse* por vencido
b) (of motion, bill) (Adm, Govt) rechazo m
II
1) \<\<opponent\>\> derrotar, vencer*2) \<\<hopes/plans\>\> frustrar3) (Adm, Govt) \<\<opposition\>\> derrotar; \<\<bill/motion\>\> rechazar*4) ( baffle) (colloq)[dɪ'fiːt]1.N [of army, team] derrota f ; [of ambition, plan] fracaso m ; [of bill, amendment] rechazo m2.VT [+ army, team, opponent] vencer, derrotar; [+ plan, ambition] hacer fracasar, frustrar; [+ hopes] frustrar, defraudar; (Pol) [+ party] derrotar; [+ bill, amendment] rechazar; (fig) vencer* * *
I [dɪ'fiːt]mass & count nouna) ( by opponent) derrota fto accept o admit defeat — darse* por vencido
b) (of motion, bill) (Adm, Govt) rechazo m
II
1) \<\<opponent\>\> derrotar, vencer*2) \<\<hopes/plans\>\> frustrar3) (Adm, Govt) \<\<opposition\>\> derrotar; \<\<bill/motion\>\> rechazar*4) ( baffle) (colloq) -
10 foil
I foil verb(to defeat; to disappoint: She was foiled in her attempt to become President.) frustrar
II foil noun1) (extremely thin sheets of metal that resemble paper: silver foil.) papel/hoja de aluminio2) (a dull person or thing against which someone or something else seems brighter: She acted as a foil to her beautiful sister.) contraste
III foil noun(a blunt sword with a button at the end, used in the sport of fencing.)foil n papel de aluminiotr[fɔɪl]1 (fencing) florete nombre masculino————————tr[fɔɪl]1 (metal paper) hoja de metal, papel nombre masculino de plata2 (contrast) contraste nombre masculino\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto act as a foil to realzar, hacer resaltartin foil papel nombre masculino de estaño————————tr[fɔɪl]1 (prevent, frustrate) frustrarfoil ['fɔɪl] vt: frustrar, hacer fracasarfoil n1) : lámina f de metal, papel m de aluminio2) contrast: contraste m, complemento m3) sword: florete m (en esgrima)n.• florete (Deporte) s.m.n.• hojuela s.f.• hojuela de metal s.f.• lamina s.f.v.• desbaratar v.• frustrar v.
I fɔɪl1) ua) ( metal sheet) lámina f de metalb) ( Culin) ( kitchen foil) papel m de aluminio or de plata2) c ( contrast)to be a foil for/to something: they are the perfect foil for each other — se complementan perfectamente
3) ( sword) florete m
II
transitive verb \<\<plan/attempt\>\> frustrarfoiled again! — (hum) otro intento frustrado!
I
[fɔɪl]N2) (fig)to act as a foil to sth/sb — servir de contraste con algo/algn
II
[fɔɪl]N (Fencing) florete m
III
[fɔɪl]VT (=thwart) [+ person] desbaratar los planes de; [+ attempt] frustrar* * *
I [fɔɪl]1) ua) ( metal sheet) lámina f de metalb) ( Culin) ( kitchen foil) papel m de aluminio or de plata2) c ( contrast)to be a foil for/to something: they are the perfect foil for each other — se complementan perfectamente
3) ( sword) florete m
II
transitive verb \<\<plan/attempt\>\> frustrarfoiled again! — (hum) otro intento frustrado!
-
11 mock
mok
1. verb(to laugh at or cause to seem ridiculous: They mocked her efforts at cooking.) burlarse
2. adjective(pretended or not real: a mock battle; He looked at me in mock horror.) ficticio, falso- mockery- mocking
- mockingly
mock1 adj simuladomock2 vb burlarse / mofarsetr[mɒk]1 (object) de imitación2 (event) de prueba1 (exam) examen nombre masculino de prueba1 (laugh at, make fun of) burlarse de, mofarse de2 (imitate) imitar, remedar1 burlarse (at, de)\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto make a mock of somebody/something poner a alguien/algo en ridículomock ['mɑk, 'mɔk] vt1) ridicule: burlarse de, mofarse de2) mimic: imitar, remedar (de manera burlona)mock adj1) simulated: simulado2) phony: falsoadj.• burlesco, -a adj.• fingido, -a adj.• simulado, -a adj.n.• burla s.f.• mofa s.f.v.• befar v.• burlar v.• burlarse v.• burlarse de v.• decepcionar v.• fisgar v.• mofar v.• remedar v.
I mɑːk, mɒktransitive verb burlarse or mofarse dehe mocked her accent — imitó or remedó su acento burlonamente
II
adjective (before n) <examination/interview> de práctica, de prueba; <anger/outrage> fingido, simulado[mɒk]1.VT (=ridicule) mofarse de, burlarse de; (=mimic) imitar, remedaryou shouldn't mock other people's beliefs — no hay que mofarse or burlarse de las creencias de la gente
2.VI mofarse, burlarseto mock at sth/sb — mofarse de algo/algn, burlarse de algo/algn
3.ADJ (=feigned) [solemnity, terror] fingido, simulado; (=imitation) [leather, fur] de imitación4. N1)2) mocks (Brit) (Scol) * exámenes mpl de prueba5.CPDmock battle N — simulacro m (de batalla)
mock orange N — (Bot) jeringuilla f, celinda f
mock trial N — juicio m de prueba
* * *
I [mɑːk, mɒk]transitive verb burlarse or mofarse dehe mocked her accent — imitó or remedó su acento burlonamente
II
adjective (before n) <examination/interview> de práctica, de prueba; <anger/outrage> fingido, simulado -
12 spite
1. noun(ill-will or desire to hurt or offend: She neglected to give him the message out of spite.) rencor
2. verb(to annoy, offend or frustrate, because of spite: He only did that to spite me!) fastidiar- spiteful- spitefully
- spitefulness
- in spite of
spite n despecho / rencorin spite of the cold, he was wearing sandals a pesar del frío, llevaba sandaliastr[spaɪt]1 (ill will) rencor nombre masculino, ojeriza1 fastidiar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLin spite of a pesar de, pese a■ in spite of the fact that she felt ill, she went to work a pesar de que se encontraba mal, se fue a trabajarin spite of oneself a pesar suyoout of spite por despechospite n1) : despecho m, rencor m2)in spite of : a pesar de (que), pese a (que)n.• despecho s.m.• rencor s.m.v.• causar pena a v.• despechar v.• mortificar v.
I spaɪtmass noun1) ( malice) maldad f; ( resentment) rencor m, resentimiento m2)in spite of — (as prep) a pesar de
in spite of everything — a pesar de todo, pese a todo
II
transitive verb molestar, fastidiar[spaɪt]1. N1) (=ill will) rencor m, ojeriza fto do sth out of or from spite — hacer algo por inquina
to have a spite against sb * — tener rencor a or hacia algn
2)in spite of — (=despite) a pesar de, pese a
in spite of the fact that — a pesar de que, pese a que
2.VT herir, dañar* * *
I [spaɪt]mass noun1) ( malice) maldad f; ( resentment) rencor m, resentimiento m2)in spite of — (as prep) a pesar de
in spite of everything — a pesar de todo, pese a todo
II
transitive verb molestar, fastidiar -
13 tozudez
tozudez sustantivo femenino stubborness, obstinacy ' tozudez' also found in these entries: English: frustrate -
14 trunca
Del verbo truncar: ( conjugate truncar) \ \
trunca es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativoMultiple Entries: trunca truncar
truncar ( conjugate truncar) verbo transitivo ‹ planes› to frustrate, thwart; ‹ ilusiones› to shatter
trunco,-a adj LAm truncated, mutilated, incomplete
truncar verbo transitivo
1 (una pirámide, un cono) to truncate
2 (una ilusión, esperanza) to shatter (una vida, carrera profesional, etc) to cut short -
15 truncado
Del verbo truncar: ( conjugate truncar) \ \
truncado es: \ \el participioMultiple Entries: truncado truncar
truncar ( conjugate truncar) verbo transitivo ‹ planes› to frustrate, thwart; ‹ ilusiones› to shatter
truncado,-a adjetivo truncated
truncar verbo transitivo
1 (una pirámide, un cono) to truncate
2 (una ilusión, esperanza) to shatter (una vida, carrera profesional, etc) to cut short ' truncado' also found in these entries: Spanish: truncada -
16 truncar
truncar ( conjugate truncar) verbo transitivo ‹ planes› to frustrate, thwart; ‹ ilusiones› to shatter
truncar verbo transitivo
1 (una pirámide, un cono) to truncate
2 (una ilusión, esperanza) to shatter (una vida, carrera profesional, etc) to cut short ' truncar' also found in these entries: Spanish: troncar - tronchar -
17 trunco
Del verbo truncar: ( conjugate truncar) \ \
trunco es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
truncó es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativoMultiple Entries: truncar trunco
truncar ( conjugate truncar) verbo transitivo ‹ planes› to frustrate, thwart; ‹ ilusiones› to shatter
truncar verbo transitivo
1 (una pirámide, un cono) to truncate
2 (una ilusión, esperanza) to shatter (una vida, carrera profesional, etc) to cut short
trunco,-a adj LAm truncated, mutilated, incomplete ' trunco' also found in these entries: Spanish: trunca -
18 throw a spanner in the works
(to frustrate or ruin (a plan, system etc).) meter un palo en la rueda, sabotearlo todo -
19 confound
vt.1 frustrar (frustrate)2 desconcertar, sorprender (surprise)confound it/him! ¡maldita sea!4 confundir, desorientar, anonadar, aturdir. (pt & pp confounded) -
20 frustrating
ger.gerundio del verbo FRUSTRATE.
См. также в других словарях:
Frustrate — Frus trate, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Frustrated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Frustrating}.] 1. To bring to nothing; to prevent from attaining a purpose; to disappoint; to defeat; to baffle; as, to frustrate a plan, design, or attempt; to frustrate the will or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
frustrate — frustrate, thwart, foil, baffle, balk, circumvent, outwit mean either to defeat a person attempting or hoping to achieve an end or satisfy a desire or, in some cases, to defeat another s desire. To frustrate is to make vain or ineffectual all… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
frustrate — [frus′trāt΄] vt. frustrated, frustrating [ME frustraten < L frustratus, pp. of frustrare, frustrari, to disappoint, deceive < frustra, in vain: for IE base see FRAUD] 1. to cause to have no effect; bring to nothing; counteract; nullify [to… … English World dictionary
Frustrate — Frus trate, a. [L. frustratus, p. p. of frustrare, frustrari, to deceive, frustrate, fr. frustra in vain, witout effect, in erorr, prob. for frudtra and akin to fraus, E. fraud.] Vain; ineffectual; useless; unprofitable; null; voil; nugatory; of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
frustrate — frus·trate / frəs ˌtrāt/ vt frus·trat·ed, frus·trat·ing: to make invalid or ineffectual: defeat the remedial purposes of the Workers Compensation Act should not be frustrated by rigid technical standards Palmer v. Bath Iron Works Corp., 559 A.2d… … Law dictionary
frustrate — (v.) mid 15c., from L. frustratus, pp. of frustrari to deceive, disappoint, frustrate, from frustra (adv.) in vain, in error, related to fraus injury, harm (see FRAUD (Cf. fraud)). Related: Frustrated; frustrating … Etymology dictionary
frustrate — [v] thwart, disappoint annul, arrest, baffle, balk, bar, beat, block, cancel, check, circumvent, confront, conquer, counter, counteract, cramp, cramp one’s style*, crimp, dash, dash one’s hope*, defeat, depress, discourage, dishearten, foil,… … New thesaurus
frustrate — ► VERB 1) prevent (a plan or action) from progressing or succeeding. 2) prevent (someone) from doing or achieving something. 3) cause to feel dissatisfied or unfulfilled. DERIVATIVES frustrated adjective frustrating adjective frustration noun … English terms dictionary
frustrate */ — UK [frʌˈstreɪt] / US [ˈfrʌˌstreɪt] verb [transitive] Word forms frustrate : present tense I/you/we/they frustrate he/she/it frustrates present participle frustrating past tense frustrated past participle frustrated 1) to make someone feel annoyed … English dictionary
frustrate — I. transitive verb (frustrated; frustrating) Etymology: Middle English, from Latin frustratus, past participle of frustrare to deceive, frustrate, from frustra in error, in vain Date: 15th century 1. a. to balk or defeat in an endeavor b. to… … New Collegiate Dictionary
frustrate — frus|trate [ frʌ,streıt ] verb transitive * to make someone feel annoyed and impatient by preventing them from doing or getting something: She has always been frustrated by her inability to draw. Activists and reformers are frustrated by the… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English