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61 expulsar
v.1 to throw out.El cohete expulsó la obstrucción The rocket threw out the obstruction.2 to send off (sport).3 to emit, to give off (humo).4 to expel, to cast out, to kick out, to put out.Los rebeldes fueron expulsados ayer The rebels were expelled yesterday.* * *1 (expeler) to expel, eject, throw out; (humo etc) to belch out2 DEPORTE to send off3 (alumno) to expel; (de universidad) to send down, US expel* * *verb1) to expel, eject2) dismiss* * *VT1) (=hacer salir) [+ alumno, inmigrante] to expel; [+ jugador] to send off, eject (EEUU); [+ intruso, alborotador] to eject, throw out (de from)la expulsaron del partido — she was expelled from the party, she was thrown out of the party
2) [+ gases, humo] to expel* * *verbo transitivo1)a) ( de institución) to expel; ( de local) to throw... out, eject (frml)b) ( de territorio) < individuo> to expel; <grupo/pueblo> to expel, drive outc) (Dep) to send off* * *= pass out, push out, eject, drive out, expel, evict, exhaust.Ex. Put a set of premises into such a device and turn the crank, and it will readily pass out conclusion after conclusion.Ex. There is today culture of all sorts at all levels (high culture, middle-brow culture and mass culture) and there is no evidence to show that the one sort pushes out the other.Ex. Newsprint machines, on the other hand, have grown ever larger and faster, and there are newsprint Fourdriniers working today which can eject a web 1,000 cm. wide at speeds of up to 1,000 metres per minute (which is 60 k.p.h.).Ex. The development of user-friendly interfaces to data bases may drive out the unspecialised information broker in the long run.Ex. These policies indiscriminately suspend, expel, & punish harshly students who break rules under these policies.Ex. This printing press was evicted from its premises in 1984 to make way for a seminar room.Ex. As a general rule of thumb, you want front and side fans to intake, rear and top to exhaust.----* expulsar temporalmente = suspend.* * *verbo transitivo1)a) ( de institución) to expel; ( de local) to throw... out, eject (frml)b) ( de territorio) < individuo> to expel; <grupo/pueblo> to expel, drive outc) (Dep) to send off* * *= pass out, push out, eject, drive out, expel, evict, exhaust.Ex: Put a set of premises into such a device and turn the crank, and it will readily pass out conclusion after conclusion.
Ex: There is today culture of all sorts at all levels (high culture, middle-brow culture and mass culture) and there is no evidence to show that the one sort pushes out the other.Ex: Newsprint machines, on the other hand, have grown ever larger and faster, and there are newsprint Fourdriniers working today which can eject a web 1,000 cm. wide at speeds of up to 1,000 metres per minute (which is 60 k.p.h.).Ex: The development of user-friendly interfaces to data bases may drive out the unspecialised information broker in the long run.Ex: These policies indiscriminately suspend, expel, & punish harshly students who break rules under these policies.Ex: This printing press was evicted from its premises in 1984 to make way for a seminar room.Ex: As a general rule of thumb, you want front and side fans to intake, rear and top to exhaust.* expulsar temporalmente = suspend.* * *expulsar [A1 ]vtA3 (de un territorio) ‹individuo› to expel; ‹grupo/pueblo› to expel, drive outB ‹aire› to expel; ‹cálculo› to pass, expel; ‹placenta› to expel, push out* * *
expulsar ( conjugate expulsar) verbo transitivo
1
( de local) to throw … out, eject (frml)
c) (Dep) to send off
2 ‹aire/cálculo› to expel
expulsar verbo transitivo
1 to expel [de, from]
2 Dep ( a un jugador) to send off
' expulsar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
irradiar
- largar
- echar
- tirar
English:
deport
- disbar
- eject
- expel
- oust
- send down
- send off
- throw out
- cast
- drive
- send
- spout
- suspend
* * *expulsar vt1. [de local] to throw out;[de clase] to send out; [de colegio, país, territorio] to expel; [de organización, club] to expel, to throw out2. Dep to send off3. [emitir] [humo] to emit, to give off;[lava, objeto, sustancia] to expel; [disquete] to eject;contenga la respiración y expulse el aire hold your breath, then breathe out;expulsar la placenta to expel the placenta* * *v/t1 expel, throw out fam2 DEP expel from the game, Brsend off* * *expulsar vt: to expel, to eject* * *expulsar vb -
62 éjecter
éjecter [eʒεkte]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verba. to eject• se faire éjecter (de son travail) to get the sack (inf) ; (d'une boîte de nuit) to get kicked out (inf)2. reflexive verb* * *eʒɛkte1) ( dans un accident) to throw [somebody/something] out2) (colloq) ( expulser) to chuck (colloq) [somebody] out [personne] (de of)3) Technologie to eject* * *eʒɛkte vt1) TECHNIQUE to eject2) * [indésirable] to kick out * to chuck out ** * *éjecter verb table: aimer vtr1 ( dans un accident) to throw [sb/sth] out, to eject;2 ○( expulser) to chuck○ [sb] out [personne] (de of); se faire éjecter to get chucked○ ou thrown out (de of);3 Tech to eject.[eʒɛkte] verbe transitif3. (familier) [renvoyer] to kick ou to chuck ou to boot outse faire éjecter d'une boîte de nuit to get kicked ou chucked ou booted out of a night club————————s'éjecter verbe pronominal (emploi réfléchi) -
63 disturbance
1) (a noisy or disorderly happening: He was thrown out of the meeting for causing a disturbance.) forstyrrelse; uro2) (an interruption: I've done quite a lot of work, despite several disturbances.) afbrydelse3) (an act of disturbing: He was arrested for disturbance of the peace.) forstyrre almindelig ro og orden* * *1) (a noisy or disorderly happening: He was thrown out of the meeting for causing a disturbance.) forstyrrelse; uro2) (an interruption: I've done quite a lot of work, despite several disturbances.) afbrydelse3) (an act of disturbing: He was arrested for disturbance of the peace.) forstyrre almindelig ro og orden -
64 copiar
v.1 to copy (gen) & (computing).Ricardo copia los cuadernos Richard copies the text books.Ricardo copió durante la prueba Richard cheated during the exam.copió lo que yo iba diciendo he took down what I was saying2 to cheat, to copy.3 to imitate, to follow, to copy, to emulate.Anita copia a su madre Little Mary imitates her mother.4 to copy to disk, to copy, to copy to the hard disk, to copy to the hard drive.Ricardo copió sus archivos Richard copied his files to disk.* * *1 (gen) to copy2 EDUCACIÓN to cheat, copy3 (escribir) to take down\copiar al pie de la letra to copy word for word* * *verb* * *1. VT1) (=reproducir) to copy (de from)[+ estilo] to imitate2) [+ dictado] to take downcopiar por las dos caras — (Téc) to make a double-sided copy
2.VI [en un examen] to cheat* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) <cuadro/dibujo/texto> to copyb) ( escribir al dictado) to take down2)a) ( imitar) to copyb) <respuesta/examen> to copy2.copiar vi to copy* * *= copy down, load into, parallel, transcribe, transfer, translate, mimic, copy, pull down, shadow, pull off, take + a clue from, take + a lead from.Ex. Then, consulting his notes again, he said that the only other thing he had copied down was the name of Rosemary Stewart.Ex. Multiple copies of the catalogue or index in the conventional sense are not required, but the data base can be copied and loaded into various computer systems.Ex. It directly or indirectly incorporated or paralleled several prevailing objectives and concepts of the communication and behavioral sciences and other contributory disciplines.Ex. With a limited number of exceptions the title proper is transcribed exactly as to order, wording and spelling.Ex. Scope notes, on the order hand, may be present in a thesaurus but are unlikely to be transferred to an index.Ex. The structure outlined in the guidelines is not intended to translate directly into a structure for machine-readable authority records.Ex. These variations mimic the changes in air pressure at the microphone.Ex. Shareware, public domain software, and demos can legally be copied and distributed.Ex. It allows users to access categories of relevant information at the desktop that have been organized and pulled down from appropriate Web sites by the program.Ex. This shadowing project encourages children to read the books shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal, to 'shadow' it and decide on their own choice of winner.Ex. One of its main advantages is the potential to pull off descriptive entries onto disc to create annotated booklists.Ex. Taking a clue from the video-game arcades, the scores of the top 10 players are stored and displayed to later players.Ex. Scotland should take a lead from Irish on gun control.----* copiar a = upload.* copiar de = download.* copiar registros = download + records, capture + records.* copiarse = cheat (on).* copiar tal cual = lift + wholesale and unmodified.* copiar un fichero = load + file.* copiar y pegar = copy and paste.* volver a copiar = recopy.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) <cuadro/dibujo/texto> to copyb) ( escribir al dictado) to take down2)a) ( imitar) to copyb) <respuesta/examen> to copy2.copiar vi to copy* * *= copy down, load into, parallel, transcribe, transfer, translate, mimic, copy, pull down, shadow, pull off, take + a clue from, take + a lead from.Ex: Then, consulting his notes again, he said that the only other thing he had copied down was the name of Rosemary Stewart.
Ex: Multiple copies of the catalogue or index in the conventional sense are not required, but the data base can be copied and loaded into various computer systems.Ex: It directly or indirectly incorporated or paralleled several prevailing objectives and concepts of the communication and behavioral sciences and other contributory disciplines.Ex: With a limited number of exceptions the title proper is transcribed exactly as to order, wording and spelling.Ex: Scope notes, on the order hand, may be present in a thesaurus but are unlikely to be transferred to an index.Ex: The structure outlined in the guidelines is not intended to translate directly into a structure for machine-readable authority records.Ex: These variations mimic the changes in air pressure at the microphone.Ex: Shareware, public domain software, and demos can legally be copied and distributed.Ex: It allows users to access categories of relevant information at the desktop that have been organized and pulled down from appropriate Web sites by the program.Ex: This shadowing project encourages children to read the books shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal, to 'shadow' it and decide on their own choice of winner.Ex: One of its main advantages is the potential to pull off descriptive entries onto disc to create annotated booklists.Ex: Taking a clue from the video-game arcades, the scores of the top 10 players are stored and displayed to later players.Ex: Scotland should take a lead from Irish on gun control.* copiar a = upload.* copiar de = download.* copiar registros = download + records, capture + records.* copiarse = cheat (on).* copiar tal cual = lift + wholesale and unmodified.* copiar un fichero = load + file.* copiar y pegar = copy and paste.* volver a copiar = recopy.* * *copiar [A1 ]vtA1 ‹cuadro/dibujo/texto› to copycopió el artículo a máquina he typed out a copy of the article2 (escribir el dictado) to take downB1 (imitar) to copyme copiaron la idea/el invento they copied my idea/inventionle copia todo al hermano he copies o imitates his brother in everything2 ‹respuesta› to copylo pillaron copiando el examen he was caught copying in the exam■ copiarvito copy* * *
copiar ( conjugate copiar) verbo transitivo
to copy;
le copia todo al hermano he copies his brother in everything;
le copié la respuesta a Ana I copied the answer from Ana
verbo intransitivo
to copy
copiar verbo transitivo
1 (una persona, máquina) to copy [de, from]
2 Educ (en un examen) to cheat
3 (imitar) to imitate
' copiar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
dictado
- chuleta
- falsificar
- imitar
- pie
English:
ape
- cheat
- copy
- crib
- duplicate
- impersonate
- mark down
- write
* * *♦ vt1. [transcribir] to copy;copie este texto a máquina type up (a copy of) this text2. [anotar] to copy;copió lo que yo iba diciendo he took down what I was saying3. [imitar] to copy;copia siempre todo lo que hago she always copies everything I do4. [en examen] to copy;copió la respuesta she copied the answer5. Informát to copy;copiar y pegar algo to copy and paste sth♦ vi[en examen] to copy;lo expulsaron por copiar he was thrown out of the exam for copying* * *v/t copy* * *copiar vt: to copy* * *copiar vb2. (escribir) to copy out -
65 proprement
proprement [pʀɔpʀəmɑ̃]adverb• mange proprement ! don't make such a mess!* * *pʀɔpʀəmɑ̃1) ( au sens strict) purelyproprement dit — ( sans considérations annexes) as such (après n); ( au sens restreint) in the strict sense of the word (après n)
2) ( absolument) absolutely3) ( véritablement) really4) ( littéralement) literally5) ( spécifiquement) specifically6) ( comme il faut)le professeur l'a proprement remis à sa place — he was well and truly put in his place by the teacher
7) ( avec soin) neatly8) ( honnêtement) [gagner sa vie] honestly; [agir] decently* * *pʀɔpʀəmɑ̃ adv1) (avec propreté) [manger] properly2) (avec soin) [écrire, travailler] neatly3)le village proprement dit — the actual village, the village itself
* * *proprement adv1 ( au sens strict) purely; les institutions proprement financières purely financial institutions; à proprement parler strictly speaking; proprement dit ( sans considérations annexes) as such ( après n); ( au sens restreint) in the strict sense of the word ( après n); quant au procès/au village proprement dit as for the trial/the village itself ou proper; la psychiatrie/physique proprement dite psychiatry/physics proper;2 ( absolument) [honteux, insupportable, scandaleux] absolutely;3 ( véritablement) really; c'est proprement de la bassesse that's really low; il s'est proprement moqué de toi he made a proper fool of you;4 ( littéralement) literally; l'air est devenu proprement irrespirable the air has become literally unbreathable;5 ( spécifiquement) specifically; une question proprement européenne a specifically European issue; une maladie proprement infantile a disease of childhood;6 ( comme il faut) well and truly; le professeur l'a proprement remis à sa place he was well and truly put in his place by the teacher;7 ( avec soin) [écrire, s'habiller, vêtu] neatly; faire son travail or travailler proprement to do a neat job; il tient son cahier très proprement he keeps his exercise book very neat; mange proprement! eat cleanly!;[prɔprəmɑ̃] adverbe1. [avec propreté] cleanlyil s'est fait proprement éjecter (familier) he was thrown out unceremoniously ou well and truly thrown outl'aspect proprement éducatif du projet leur a échappé they missed the specifically educational significance of the project————————à proprement parler locution adverbiale————————la maison proprement dite the house proper, the actual house, the house itself -
66 throw
throw [θrəυ]1. n1) броса́ние; бросо́к2) да́льность броска́; расстоя́ние, на кото́рое мо́жно метну́ть диск и т.п.3) риск, риско́ванное де́ло4) спорт. бросо́к ( в борьбе)5) геол. вертика́льное перемеще́ние, сброс6) гонча́рный круг7) тех. ход (поршня, шатуна); разма́х8) амер. покрыва́ло ( на кровати)9) амер. разг. шарф, лёгкая наки́дкаthe book is sold at $5 a throw кни́га продаётся по 5 до́лларов (за экземпля́р)
2. v (threw; thrown)1) броса́ть, кида́ть; мета́ть; набра́сывать (тж. throw on);to throw oneself броса́ться, кида́ться
;to throw oneself at smb., smth. набра́сываться на кого́-л., что-л.
;to throw stones at smb. швыря́ть в кого́-л. камня́ми; перен. осужда́ть кого́-л.
;to throw a glance бро́сить взгляд
;to throw kisses at smb. посыла́ть кому́-л. возду́шные поцелу́и
2) бы́стро, неожи́данно приводи́ть, вверга́ть в како́е-л. состоя́ние (into, out of);to throw into confusion приводи́ть в смяте́ние
;he was thrown out of work его́ вы́кинули с рабо́ты
4) положи́ть на о́бе лопа́тки ( в борьбе)5) сбра́сывать ( всадника)6) разг. смуща́ть, приводи́ть в замеша́тельство7) выбра́сывать како́е-л. коли́чество очко́в ( при игре в кости)8) навести́ ( мост)11) спорт. разг. наме́ренно прои́грывать соревнова́ние13) отели́ться, ожереби́ться и т.п.throw about разбра́сывать, раски́дывать;to throw one's money about сори́ть деньга́ми
;throw aside отбра́сывать, отстраня́ть;а) броса́ть, отбра́сывать;б) тра́тить впусту́ю ( деньги и т.п.);в) упусти́ть, не воспо́льзоваться;to throw away an advantage упусти́ть возмо́жность
;г) сбра́сывать ( карту);а) походи́ть на пре́дков; проявля́ть атависти́ческие черты́;б) (обыкн. pass.) вы́нудить кого-л. воспо́льзоваться свои́ми сбереже́ниями и т.п.; отбра́сывать наза́д;в) замедля́ть разви́тие;г) (ре́зко) отверга́ть;а) сбра́сывать; броса́ть;to throw oneself down бро́ситься, лечь на зе́млю
;to throw down one's arms сдава́ться
;to throw down one's tools забастова́ть
;б) сноси́ть, разруша́ть ( здание);в) ниспроверга́ть;г) хим. вызыва́ть оседа́ние;д) амер. отклоня́ть ( предложение и т.п.); отверга́ть;to throw down one's brief юр. отка́зываться от дальне́йшего веде́ния де́ла
;а) вставля́ть ( замечание);б) добавля́ть;в) тех. включа́ть;г) броса́ть ( в крикете);а) отверга́ть;б) сверга́ть;в) сбра́сывать; избавля́ться;to throw off an illness попра́виться, вы́лечиться
;г) изверга́ть;д) легко́ и бы́стро наброса́ть ( эпиграмму и т.п.);е) охот. спуска́ть соба́к;ж) начина́ть (что-л.);з) тех. выключа́ть;а) наки́нуть, наде́ть ( пальто и т.п.);б) подбра́сывать, подбавля́ть;to throw on coals подбра́сывать у́голь ( в топку)
;а) выбра́сывать;б) выгоня́ть; увольня́ть;в) пристра́ивать;to throw out a new wing пристро́ить но́вое крыло́ (к зда́нию)
;г) мимохо́дом выска́зывать ( предложение);д) парл. отверга́ть ( законопроект);е) сбить, запу́тать (напр., в расчётах);ж) спорт. перегоня́ть;з) испуска́ть, излуча́ть ( свет);и) воен. выставля́ть, высыла́ть;а) броса́ть; покида́ть ( друзей);б) отка́зываться (от плана, намерения и т.п.);в) тех. переключа́ть;а) на́спех составля́ть, компили́ровать;б) своди́ть вме́сте, ста́лкивать ( о людях);а) подбра́сывать;в) возводи́ть, бы́стро стро́ить (дом, баррикады);г) броса́ть, оставля́ть;д) отка́зываться от уча́стия;е) изверга́ть; разг. рвать;he threw up его́ вы́рвало
ж) выделя́ть, оттеня́ть;з) амер. упрека́ть, критикова́ть◊to throw the great cast поста́вить всё на ка́рту
;to throw a fit прийти́ в я́рость; закати́ть исте́рику
;to throw oneself at the head of smb. ве́шаться кому́-л. на ше́ю
;to throw the cap over the mill пуска́ться во все тя́жкие
;to throw the bull амер. трепа́ться; бессо́вестно врать
;to throw good money after bad, to throw the handle after the blade рискова́ть после́дним; упо́рствовать в безнадёжном де́ле
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67 soplar
v.1 to blow out (vela, fuego).Ella sopla el polvo de la mesa She blows the dust from the table.2 to blow off (ceniza, polvo).3 to blow up (globo).4 to blow (vidrio) (echar aire).5 to prompt (informal) (en examen).me sopló las respuestas he whispered the answers to me6 to pinch(informal) (steal). (peninsular Spanish)7 to booze (informal) (beber). (peninsular Spanish)8 to be blowing.Un viento anormal sopla An abnormal wind is blowing.9 to whisper.Me sopló la respuesta He whispered the answer to me.10 to billow, to puff up with the wind.11 to get it on, to get it up, to function sexually.* * *1 (viento etc) to blow2 familiar (denunciar) to squeal2 (vidrio) to blow3 figurado (inspirar) to inspire1 (dedos, manos) to blow* * *verb* * *1. VT1) (=echar aire sobre) [+ polvo] to blow away, blow off; [+ superficie, sopa, fuego] to blow on; [+ vela] to blow out; [+ globo] to blow up; [+ vidrio] to blow2) (=inspirar) to inspire3) (=decir confidencialmente)soplar a algn — (=ayudar a recordar) to prompt sb
4) * (=delatar) to split on *5) * (=birlar) to pinch *6) * (=cobrar) to charge, sting *¿cuánto te soplaron? — how much did they sting you for?
7) * [+ golpe]le sopló un buen mamporro — she whacked o clouted him one *
2. VI1) [persona, viento] to blow¡sopla! — * [indicando sorpresa] well I'm blowed! *
2) * (=delatar) to split *, squeal *3) * [beber] to drink, booze3.See:* * *1.verbo intransitivo1)a) ( con la boca) to blowb) viento to blow2) (fam) ( en examen) to whisper ( answers in an exam)2.soplar vt1)a) < vela> to blow out; <fuego/brasas> to blow onb) < vidrio> to blow2)b) (arg) ( a la policía) to give... awayalguien debió soplarles el lugar donde se escondían — someone must have squealed and told the police where they were hiding (sl)
3) (fam)me soplaron 10.000 pesetas — they stung me (for) 10,000 pesetas
b) <pieza/ficha> to take3.soplarse v pron2) (AmL fam) ( vencer) to beat3) (Méx, Per fam) ( aguantar) < persona> to put up with; <discurso/película> to sit through, suffer4) (Méx, RPl fam) ( matar) to do... in (colloq)* * *= puff, blow.Ex. He designed everything for dramatic effect, and even in his last days when he puffed audibly his breathing still supported his voice and gave it energy = Lo hacia todo dándole un efecto dramático e incluso en sus últimos días cuando respiraba resoplando de forma audible su respiración no afectaba a su manera de hablar y además le daba energía.Ex. Leforte blew forth a long breath, as if trying to repulse the oppressive heat of the September morning.----* cristal soplado = blown glass.* soplado por el viento = wind-blown.* soplar viento = wind + blow.* * *1.verbo intransitivo1)a) ( con la boca) to blowb) viento to blow2) (fam) ( en examen) to whisper ( answers in an exam)2.soplar vt1)a) < vela> to blow out; <fuego/brasas> to blow onb) < vidrio> to blow2)b) (arg) ( a la policía) to give... awayalguien debió soplarles el lugar donde se escondían — someone must have squealed and told the police where they were hiding (sl)
3) (fam)me soplaron 10.000 pesetas — they stung me (for) 10,000 pesetas
b) <pieza/ficha> to take3.soplarse v pron2) (AmL fam) ( vencer) to beat3) (Méx, Per fam) ( aguantar) < persona> to put up with; <discurso/película> to sit through, suffer4) (Méx, RPl fam) ( matar) to do... in (colloq)* * *= puff, blow.Ex: He designed everything for dramatic effect, and even in his last days when he puffed audibly his breathing still supported his voice and gave it energy = Lo hacia todo dándole un efecto dramático e incluso en sus últimos días cuando respiraba resoplando de forma audible su respiración no afectaba a su manera de hablar y además le daba energía.
Ex: Leforte blew forth a long breath, as if trying to repulse the oppressive heat of the September morning.* cristal soplado = blown glass.* soplado por el viento = wind-blown.* soplar viento = wind + blow.* * *soplar [A1 ]viA1 (con la boca) to blowsopla fuerte blow hardapagó todas las velitas soplando una sola vez she blew out all the candles in one go o breathsi está caliente sopla if it's too hot, blow on it2 «viento» to blowesta noche sopla un viento muy fuerte there's a strong wind (blowing) tonight■ soplarvtA1 ‹vela› to blow out; ‹fuego/brasas› to blow onsopló el polvo que había sobre los libros she blew the dust off the bookssopla la leche para que se enfríe blow on the milk to cool it down2 ‹vidrio› to blowB1 ( fam) ‹respuesta› (en un examen) to whisper2 ( arg) (a la policía) to give … awayalguien debió soplarles el lugar donde se escondían someone must have squealed o ( BrE) grassed and told the police where they were hiding (sl)C ( fam)por esta porquería me soplaron 6 euros they stung me (for) 6 euros for this piece of junk ( colloq)2 ‹pieza/ficha› to take■ soplarseme tuve que soplar el discurso I had to sit through o suffer the speech* * *
soplar ( conjugate soplar) verbo intransitivo
1
2 (fam) ( en examen) to whisper ( answers in an exam)
verbo transitivo
1
‹fuego/brasas› to blow on
2 (fam) ‹ respuesta› ( en examen) to whisper
3 (fam) ( robar) to swipe (colloq), to pinch (BrE colloq);
( cobrar) to sting (colloq)
soplarse verbo pronominal (Méx, Per fam) ( aguantar) ‹ persona› to put up with;
‹discurso/película› to sit through, suffer
soplar
I verbo intransitivo
1 (viento, persona) to blow: sopla por este tubo, blow into this tube
2 familiar to drink alcohol
II verbo transitivo
1 (algo caliente) to blow on
2 (una vela) to blow out
3 (un fuego) to fan
4 (un globo) to blow up
(vidrio) to blow
5 (apartar con un soplo) to blow away
6 (una respuesta, un cotilleo) to whisper: me sopló el resultado, he passed the result on to me
7 fam (hurtar) to pilfer: me han soplado los rotuladores, I have had my markers pinched
' soplar' also found in these entries:
English:
blow
- bluster
- puff
- tell
* * *♦ vt1. [vela, fuego] to blow out2. [para enfriar] to blow on3. [ceniza, polvo] to blow off4. [globo] to blow up5. [vidrio] to blow6. [ficha] to takeme sopló las respuestas he whispered the answers to me8. Fam [denunciar]le sopló a la policía la hora del atraco he informed the police of the time of the robbery♦ vi1. [echar aire] to blow;sopla más fuerte blow harder;el viento soplaba con fuerza the wind was blowing hard;ver de qué lado sopla el viento to see which way the wind blows4. CompRP Famno ser soplar y hacer botellas to be no easy thing* * *II v/t1 vela blow out2 polvo blow away3:soplar algo a la policía tip the police off about sth* * *soplar vi: to blowsoplar vt: to blow on, to blow out, to blow off* * *soplar vb -
68 chance
chance [tʃɑ:ns]chances ⇒ 1 (a), 5 (a) hasard ⇒ 1 (b) occasion ⇒ 1 (c) risques ⇒ 1 (d), 5 (b) fortuit ⇒ 2 hasarder ⇒ 41 noun(a) (possibility, likelihood) chance f;∎ is there any chance of seeing you again? serait-il possible de vous revoir?;∎ there was little chance of him finding work il y avait peu de chances qu'il trouve du travail;∎ we have an outside chance of success nous avons une très faible chance de réussir;∎ she's got a good or strong chance of being accepted elle a de fortes chances d'être acceptée ou reçue;∎ there's a fifty-fifty chance he won't turn up il y a une chance sur deux qu'il ne vienne pas;∎ familiar no chance! des clous!;∎ he's in with a chance of getting the job il a une chance d'obtenir le poste(b) (fortune, luck) hasard m;∎ games of chance les jeux mpl de hasard;∎ there was an element of chance in his success il y a eu une part de hasard dans sa réussite;∎ it was pure chance that I found it je l'ai trouvé tout à fait par hasard;∎ to leave things to chance laisser faire les choses;∎ to leave nothing to chance ne rien laisser au hasard;(c) (opportunity) occasion f;∎ I haven't had a chance to write to him je n'ai pas trouvé l'occasion de lui écrire;∎ give him a chance! donne-lui une chance!;∎ give her a chance to defend herself donnez-lui l'occasion de se défendre;∎ give peace a chance la paix est possible, donnez-lui ou laissez-lui sa chance;∎ it's a chance in a million c'est une occasion unique;∎ I'm offering you the chance of a lifetime je vous offre la chance de votre vie;∎ the poor man never had or stood a chance le pauvre homme n'avait aucune chance de s'en tirer;∎ some children simply don't get a chance in life pour certains enfants il n'y a tout simplement aucun avenir;∎ this is your last chance c'est votre dernière chance;∎ she deserves a second chance elle mérite une deuxième chance;∎ there are no second chances, there is no second chance tu n'as pas droit à l'erreur;∎ he was thrown out before he had a chance to protest il a été évincé avant même d'avoir eu l'occasion de protester;∎ familiar given half a chance she'd play tennis every day si elle pouvait elle jouerait au tennis tous les jours∎ I don't want to take the chance of losing je ne veux pas prendre le risque de perdre;∎ I'm taking no chances je ne veux pas prendre de risques;∎ he took a chance on a racehorse il a parié sur un cheval de course;∎ figurative take a chance on me donne-moi une chance(encounter, meeting) fortuit;∎ chance discovery découverte f accidentelle ou fortuite;∎ I was a chance witness to the robbery j'ai été un témoin accidentel du vol∎ or literary (happen) I chanced to be at the same table as Sir Sydney je me suis trouvé par hasard à la même table que Sir Sydney;∎ it chanced that no one else had heard of her il s'est trouvé que personne d'autre n'avait entendu parler d'elle∎ he chanced his savings on the venture il a risqué ses économies dans l'entreprise;∎ I can't chance her finding out about it je ne peux pas prendre le risque qu'elle l'apprenne;∎ she chanced going out despite the curfew elle s'est hasardée à sortir malgré le couvre-feu;∎ let's chance it or our luck tentons notre chance;(a) (possibility, likelihood) chances fpl;∎ (the) chances are (that) he'll never find out il y a de fortes ou grandes chances qu'il ne l'apprenne jamais;∎ what are her chances of making a full recovery? quelles sont ses chances de se rétablir complètement?∎ she was taking no chances elle ne prenait pas de risquespar hasard;∎ by pure or sheer chance we were both staying at the same hotel il se trouvait que nous logions au même hôtel;∎ would you by any chance know who that man is? sauriez-vous par hasard qui est cet homme? -
69 Б-184
ЗА БОРТОМ оказаться, остаться, очутиться PrepP; Invar ; subj-compl with copula (subjusu. human or concr)(to end up being) rejected, not included in sth.: X оказался за бортом - X was left out (of sth.); X was thrown out; person X was counted out; person X was left on the sidelines (out in the cold). В третий «Камень» Мандельштам вернул несколько стихотворений, которые раньше оставались за бортом... (Мандельштам 2). In the third edition of 'Stone' Mandelstam included a few poems he had left out in the previous editions... Ba). -
70 за бортом
• ЗА БОРТОМ оказаться, остаться, очутиться[PrepP; Invar; subj-compl with copula (subj: usu. human or concr)]=====⇒ (to end up being) rejected, not included in sth.:- person X was left on the sidelines < out in the cold>.♦ В третий " Камень" Мандельштам вернул несколько стихотворений, которые раньше оставались за бортом... (Мандельштам 2). In the third edition of Stone M[andelstam] included a few poems he had left out in the previous editions... (2a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > за бортом
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71 projeter
projeter [pʀɔʒ(ə)te]➭ TABLE 41. transitive verbb. ( = jeter) [+ gravillons] to throw up ; [+ étincelles] to throw offc. ( = envoyer) [+ ombre, reflet] to cast ; [+ film, diapositive] to show2. reflexive verb* * *pʀɔʒtele choc l'a projeté par terre/par-dessus bord — the shock sent him hurtling to the ground/overboard
4) ( prévoir) to plan5) Mathématique, Psychologie to project ( sur onto)* * *pʀɔʒ(ə)te vt1) (= envisager) to planIls projettent d'acheter une maison. — They're planning to buy a house.
2) (sur écran, mur) [images] to project, [film] to show3) [ombre, lueur] to throw, to cast4) (= jeter) to throwElle a été projetée hors de la voiture. — She was thrown out of the car.
* * *projeter verb table: jeter vtr1 ( lancer) en nous doublant, le camion a projeté des gravillons sur notre voiture when it passed us the truck threw some gravel up against the car; projeter du sable sur des bâtiments pour les nettoyer to sandblast buildings; le geyser projetait des gerbes d'eau the geyser was spouting jets of water; le volcan projetait de la fumée the volcano was belching smoke; projeter du vitriol au visage de qn to throw acid in sb's face; le choc l'a projeté par terre/par-dessus bord/hors de son véhicule the shock sent him hurtling to the ground/overboard/out of his vehicle; le feu/chalumeau projette des étincelles the fire/blowtorch throws out sparks;2 ( jeter) to cast [ombre, reflet] (sur on);3 Cin, Phot to show, to project [film, diapositives] (sur onto); un documentaire sera projeté a documentary will be shown;4 ( prévoir) to plan [voyage, vacances, mariage]; je projette de faire le tour du monde I'm planning to go round the world;[prɔʃte] verbe transitif2. [lancer] to throw, to hurlprojeter un cercle/une droite sur un plan to project a circle/a straight line onto a plane7. [voix] to project————————se projeter verbe pronominal intransitif[ombre] to be outlined ou silhouetted -
72 renverser
renverser [ʀɑ̃vεʀse]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verba. ( = faire tomber) [+ personne, chaise] [+ vase, bouteille] to knock over ; [+ liquide] to spill ; [+ piéton] to run overb. ( = mettre à l'envers) to turn upside downc. [+ obstacle] to knock down ; [+ ordre établi, tradition, royauté] to overthrow ; [+ ministre] to remove from office• renverser le gouvernement (par un coup d'État) to overthrow the government ; (par un vote) to defeat the governmentd. ( = pencher) renverser la tête en arrière to tip one's head backe. [+ ordre des mots, courant] to reversef. ( = étonner) (inf) to stagger2. reflexive verba.* * *ʀɑ̃vɛʀse
1.
1) ( faire tomber) to knock over [personne, meuble, bouteille]; [automobiliste, véhicule] to knock down [piéton, cycliste]; [manifestants] to topple [statue]; to overturn [voiture]; [vague] to overturn [bateau]2) ( répandre) to spill [liquide, contenu]3) ( mettre à l'envers) to turn [something] upside down [sablier, flacon]4) ( pencher)renverser la tête en arrière — to tip ou tilt one's head back
5) ( inverser) to reverse [ordre, situation, rôles]; Physique to invert, to reverse [image]; Électrotechnique to reverse [courant]6) Politique ( mettre fin à) ( par la force) to overthrow, to topple [régime, dirigeant]; ( par un vote) to vote [somebody/something] out of office [dirigeant, gouvernement]7) (colloq) ( stupéfier) [événement, nouvelle] to stagger, to astound [personne]
2.
se renverser verbe pronominal [véhicule] to overturn; [bateau] to capsize; [objet, bouteille] to fall over; [liquide, contenu] to spill* * *ʀɑ̃vɛʀse vt1) (= faire tomber) [chaise, verre] to knock over, to overturn, [liquide, contenu] to spill, to upsetJ'ai renversé mon verre. — I knocked my glass over.
Il a renversé de l'eau partout. — He has spilt water everywhere.
2) [piéton] to knock downElle a été renversée par une voiture. — She was knocked down by a car.
3) [gouvernement] to overthrow4) (= pencher)5)6) (= stupéfier) to bowl over, to stagger* * *renverser verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( faire tomber) to knock over [meuble, bouteille, vase, seau]; [automobiliste, véhicule] to knock down, to run over [piéton, cycliste]; [manifestants] to topple [statue]; [manifestants, vandales] to overturn [voiture]; [vague] to overturn [bateau]; il courait sans regarder devant lui et a renversé une vieille dame he was running without looking where he was going and knocked over an old lady;2 ( répandre) to spill [liquide, contenu]; renverser du vin sur la moquette to spill wine on the carpet; il m'a renversé du jus sur la manche he spilled some juice on my sleeve;3 ( mettre à l'envers) to turn [sth] upside down [sablier, flacon];4 ( pencher) renverser la tête en arrière to tip ou tilt one's head back; renverser le buste en arrière to lean back;5 ( inverser) to reverse [termes, ordre, situation, rôles, tendance]; Phys to invert, to reverse [image]; Math to invert [fraction]; Électrotech to reverse [courant];6 Pol ( mettre fin à) ( par la force) to overthrow, to topple [régime, gouvernement, dirigeant]; ( par un vote) to vote [sth] out of office [gouvernement, dirigeant, ministère];7 ○( stupéfier) [événement, nouvelle] to stagger, to astound [personne]; il avait l'air renversé par la nouvelle he seemed staggered by the news.B se renverser vpr [véhicule] to overturn; [bateau] to capsize; [objet, bouteille] to fall over; [liquide, contenu] to spill.[rɑ̃vɛrse] verbe transitif1. [répandre - liquide] to spill[faire tomber - bouteille, casserole] to spill, to knock over (separable), to upset ; [ - table, voiture] to overturn[retourner exprès] to turn upside down2. [faire tomber - personne] to knock down (separable)être renversé par quelqu'un to be knocked down ou run over by somebodyse faire renverser par une voiture to get ou be knocked over by a car3. [inverser] to reversele Suédois renversa la situation au cours du troisième set the Swedish player managed to turn the situation round during the third set4. [détruire - obstacle] to overcome ; [ - valeurs] to overthrow ; [ - régime] to overthrow, to topplele président a été renversé the President was thrown out of ou removed from officea. [par la force] to overthrow ou to topple a governmentb. [par un vote] to bring down ou to topple a government5. [incliner en arrière] to tilt ou to tip back (separable)————————se renverser verbe pronominal intransitif1. [bouteille] to fall over[liquide] to spill[véhicule] to overturn[marée] to turn2. [personne] to lean over backwards -
73 stehlen
das Stehlenthieving* * *steh|len ['ʃteːlən] pret stahl [ʃtaːl] ptp gestohlen [gə'ʃtoːlən]1. vtito stealjdm die Ruhe stéhlen — to disturb sb
jdm die Zeit stéhlen — to waste sb's time
See:→ Elster, Schau2. vrto stealsich in das/aus dem Haus stéhlen — to steal into/out of the house
sich aus der Verantwortung stéhlen —
See:→ auch gestohlen* * *1) ((American) to steal (cattle etc).) rustle2) (to take (another person's property), especially secretly, without permission or legal right: Thieves broke into the house and stole money and jewellery; He was expelled from the school because he had been stealing (money).) steal3) (to steal: He is always thieving my pencils.) thieve* * *steh·len<stahl, gestohlen>[ˈʃte:lən]I. vt▶ das/er/sie usw. kann mir gestohlen bleiben! (fam) to hell with it/him/her etc.! fam, he/she etc. can go take a running jump! fam▶ dem lieben Gott die Zeit \stehlen to laze the time away▶ jdm die Zeit \stehlen to take up [or waste] sb's timeII. vi to steales wird dort viel gestohlen there's a lot of stealing thereIII. vr* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives, intransitives Verb steal2.unregelmäßiges reflexives Verb steal; creep* * *stehlen; stiehlt, stahl, hat gestohlenA. v/t & v/i1. steal (jemandem etwas sth from sb); (plagiieren) auch umg lift (aus, von from);sie haben ihm sein ganzes Geld gestohlen they stole all his money (from him), they robbed him of all his money;er ist rausgeflogen, weil er gestohlen hat he was thrown out because he stole;ich glaube, sie stiehlt I think she steals (things)jemandem die Zeit stehlen fig waste sb’s time;er hat mir einen ganzen Tag gestohlen he wasted a whole day of my time;jemandem den Schlaf/die Ruhe stehlen rob ( oder deprive) sb of his ( oder her) sleep/peace and quiet;woher nehmen und nicht stehlen? umg where on earth can one get hold of such a thing (short of stealing it)?; → gestohlenB. v/r:* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives, intransitives Verb steal2.unregelmäßiges reflexives Verb steal; creep* * *v.(§ p.,pp.: stahl, gestohlen)= to cabbage v.to pilfer v.to steal (from) v.to thieve (from) v. -
74 hinaus-
(to get rid of by throwing or by force: He was thrown out of the meeting; The committee threw out the proposal.) throw out* * *<go, look, drive, ride, let, carry, etc.> out; (ins Freie) <go, look, carry, etc.> outsideaus etwas hinaus-gehen/hinaus-sehen — usw. go/look etc. out of something
etwas aus etwas hinaus-bringen/hinaus-werfen — usw. take/throw etc. something out of something
über etwas (Akk.) hinaus-gehen/hinaus-kommen — go/get beyond something
* * *<go, look, drive, ride, let, carry, etc.> out; (ins Freie) <go, look, carry, etc.> outsideaus etwas hinaus-gehen/hinaus-sehen — usw. go/look etc. out of something
etwas aus etwas hinaus-bringen/hinaus-werfen — usw. take/throw etc. something out of something
über etwas (Akk.) hinaus-gehen/hinaus-kommen — go/get beyond something
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75 sbalzare
I [zbal'tsare]1. vt1) (scaraventare) to throw, hurl2) (rimuovere: da una carica, sede) to remove, dismiss2. vi(aus essere) (temperatura: alzarsi bruscamente) to jump, rise, (abbassarsi bruscamente) to fall, plummetII [zbal'tsare] vtArte to emboss -
76 К-182
ВЫБИВАТЬСЯ/ВЫБИТЬСЯ (ВЫХОДИТЬ/ ВЫЙТИ) ИЗ КОЛЕЙ VP subj: human or abstr more often pfv past usu. this WO (of a person) to have one's customary life style, schedule etc disrupted (of s.o. 's life) to be disruptedX выбился из колеи - X was (thrown) out of joint (whack)X got out of his (its) groove person X's routine was upset person X's life became unsettled.(Войницкий:) С тех пор, как здесь живет профессор со своею супругой, жизнь выбилась из колеи... Сплю не вовремя, за завтраком и обедом ем разные кабули, пью вина... нездорово все это! (Чехов 3). (V.:) Ever since the professor and his wife came here to live, life has been out of joint....1 sleep at odd hours, eat all sorts of spicy sauces for lunch and dinner, drink wine-all bad for the health! (3a). -
77 выбиваться из колеи
• ВЫБИВАТЬСЯ/ВЫБИТЬСЯ (ВЫХОДИТЬ/ВЫЙТИ) ИЗ КОЛЕИ[VP; subj: human or abstr; more often pfv past; usu. this WO]=====⇒ (of a person) to have one's customary life style, schedule etc disrupted; (of s.o.'s life) to be disrupted:- person X's life became unsettled.♦ [Войницкий:] С тех пор, как здесь живет профессор со своею супругой, жизнь выбилась из колеи... Сплю не вовремя, за завтраком и обедом ем разные кабули, пью вина... нездорово все это! (Чехов 3). [V.:] Ever since the professor and his wife came here to live, life has been out of joint....I sleep at odd hours, eat all sorts of spicy sauces for lunch and dinner, drink wine - all bad for the health! (3a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > выбиваться из колеи
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78 выбиться из колеи
• ВЫБИВАТЬСЯ/ВЫБИТЬСЯ (ВЫХОДИТЬ/ВЫЙТИ) ИЗ КОЛЕИ[VP; subj: human or abstr; more often pfv past; usu. this WO]=====⇒ (of a person) to have one's customary life style, schedule etc disrupted; (of s.o.'s life) to be disrupted:- person X's life became unsettled.♦ [Войницкий:] С тех пор, как здесь живет профессор со своею супругой, жизнь выбилась из колеи... Сплю не вовремя, за завтраком и обедом ем разные кабули, пью вина... нездорово все это! (Чехов 3). [V.:] Ever since the professor and his wife came here to live, life has been out of joint....I sleep at odd hours, eat all sorts of spicy sauces for lunch and dinner, drink wine - all bad for the health! (3a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > выбиться из колеи
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79 выйти из колеи
• ВЫБИВАТЬСЯ/ВЫБИТЬСЯ (ВЫХОДИТЬ/ВЫЙТИ) ИЗ КОЛЕИ[VP; subj: human or abstr; more often pfv past; usu. this WO]=====⇒ (of a person) to have one's customary life style, schedule etc disrupted; (of s.o.'s life) to be disrupted:- person X's life became unsettled.♦ [Войницкий:] С тех пор, как здесь живет профессор со своею супругой, жизнь выбилась из колеи... Сплю не вовремя, за завтраком и обедом ем разные кабули, пью вина... нездорово все это! (Чехов 3). [V.:] Ever since the professor and his wife came here to live, life has been out of joint....I sleep at odd hours, eat all sorts of spicy sauces for lunch and dinner, drink wine - all bad for the health! (3a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > выйти из колеи
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80 выходить из колеи
• ВЫБИВАТЬСЯ/ВЫБИТЬСЯ (ВЫХОДИТЬ/ВЫЙТИ) ИЗ КОЛЕИ[VP; subj: human or abstr; more often pfv past; usu. this WO]=====⇒ (of a person) to have one's customary life style, schedule etc disrupted; (of s.o.'s life) to be disrupted:- person X's life became unsettled.♦ [Войницкий:] С тех пор, как здесь живет профессор со своею супругой, жизнь выбилась из колеи... Сплю не вовремя, за завтраком и обедом ем разные кабули, пью вина... нездорово все это! (Чехов 3). [V.:] Ever since the professor and his wife came here to live, life has been out of joint....I sleep at odd hours, eat all sorts of spicy sauces for lunch and dinner, drink wine - all bad for the health! (3a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > выходить из колеи
См. также в других словарях:
was thrown out — was kicked out, was flung out, was banished … English contemporary dictionary
Out of This Furnace — … Wikipedia
Thrown — Throw Throw, v. t. [imp. {Threw} (thr[udd]); p. p. {Thrown} (thr[=o]n); p. pr. & vb. n. {Throwing}.] [OE. [thorn]rowen, [thorn]rawen, to throw, to twist, AS. [thorn]r[=a]wan to twist, to whirl; akin to D. draaijen, G. drehen, OHG. dr[=a]jan, L.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
out|cast — out|cast1 «noun, adjective. OWT KAST, KAHST; verb. owt KAST, KAHST», noun, adjective, verb, cast, cast|ing. –n. 1. a person or animal cast out from home and friends: »Criminals are outcasts of society. That kitten was just a little outcast when… … Useful english dictionary
out — out1 W1S1 [aut] adv ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(from inside )¦ 2¦(outside)¦ 3¦(not at home)¦ 4¦(distant place)¦ 5¦(given to many people)¦ 6¦(get rid of something)¦ 7¦(not burning/shining)¦ 8¦(sun/moon etc)¦ 9¦(flowers)¦ 10¦(complet … Dictionary of contemporary English
out — out1 W1S1 [aut] adv ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(from inside )¦ 2¦(outside)¦ 3¦(not at home)¦ 4¦(distant place)¦ 5¦(given to many people)¦ 6¦(get rid of something)¦ 7¦(not burning/shining)¦ 8¦(sun/moon etc)¦ 9¦(flowers)¦ 10¦(complet … Dictionary of contemporary English
out — out1 [ aut ] function word *** Out can be used in the following ways: as an adverb: We went out into the yard. He took out a penknife. after the verb to be : You were out when I called. The house was silent and all the lights were out. in the… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
out — I UK [aʊt] / US adverb, preposition *** Summary: Out can be used in the following ways: as an adverb: We went out into the garden. ♦ He took out a penknife. after the verb to be : You were out when I called. ♦ The house was silent and all the… … English dictionary
Out of bounds — For other uses, see Out of bounds (disambiguation). A player who steps onto the sidelines during play is considered to be out of bounds In sports, out of bounds (or out of bounds) refers to being outside the playing boundaries of the field. Due… … Wikipedia
No Way Out (2005) — Promotional poster featuring John Bradshaw Layfield Theme song(s) Enemy by Fozzy Information … Wikipedia
To throw out — Throw Throw, v. t. [imp. {Threw} (thr[udd]); p. p. {Thrown} (thr[=o]n); p. pr. & vb. n. {Throwing}.] [OE. [thorn]rowen, [thorn]rawen, to throw, to twist, AS. [thorn]r[=a]wan to twist, to whirl; akin to D. draaijen, G. drehen, OHG. dr[=a]jan, L.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English