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121 hastiado
adj.weary, bored, blasé, tired.past part.past participle of spanish verb: hastiar.* * *1→ link=hastiar hastiar► adjetivo1 disgusted (de, with), sick (de, of)* * *= sated, fed up, jaded, weary [wearier -comp., weariest -sup.].Ex. This article portrays archivists on the one hand as conscientious and orderly preservers of history, on the other as sated pragmatists who have lost their idealism.Ex. The article is entitled 'Tough luck: To be a professional sport climber in America probably means you're broke, fed up and still no match for the foreign competition'.Ex. He is notorious for poking fun at those who advance jaded, esoteric ideas about the importance of studying classical languages.Ex. Humanity is returning to the downsized, reengineered, total quality management weary business world.----* hastiado de la recesión económica = recession-weary.* * *= sated, fed up, jaded, weary [wearier -comp., weariest -sup.].Ex: This article portrays archivists on the one hand as conscientious and orderly preservers of history, on the other as sated pragmatists who have lost their idealism.
Ex: The article is entitled 'Tough luck: To be a professional sport climber in America probably means you're broke, fed up and still no match for the foreign competition'.Ex: He is notorious for poking fun at those who advance jaded, esoteric ideas about the importance of studying classical languages.Ex: Humanity is returning to the downsized, reengineered, total quality management weary business world.* hastiado de la recesión económica = recession-weary.* * *
Del verbo hastiar: ( conjugate hastiar)
hastiado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
hastiado
hastiar
hastiado,-a adjetivo sick, tired [de, of]
hastiar verbo transitivo to bore, sicken, disgust
' hastiado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
aburrida
- aburrido
- ahíta
- ahíto
- cansada
- cansado
- harta
- harto
- hastiada
- hastiarse
English:
jaded
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122 holgadamente
adv.1 widely, amply, fully, loosely.2 quietly, carelessly.3 at leisure, comfortably, easily, leisurely.* * *► adverbio1 (con amplio margen) easily2 (con comodidad) comfortably■ viven holgadamente they are well off, they are comfortably off* * *ADV1) (=ampliamente) loosely, comfortablycaben holgadamente — they fit in easily, they go in with room to spare
ganaron las elecciones holgadamente — they won the elections easily o comfortably
2) (=cómodamente)vivir holgadamente — to live comfortably, be comfortably off
* * *= comfortably.Ex. In this reading mood we feel anxious, tired, lazy, worried -- whatever causes us to reject demanding and 'new' literature and forces us to take up again books that are comfortably -- and comfortingly -- known and easily enjoyed.* * *= comfortably.Ex: In this reading mood we feel anxious, tired, lazy, worried -- whatever causes us to reject demanding and 'new' literature and forces us to take up again books that are comfortably -- and comfortingly -- known and easily enjoyed.
* * *1 (con holgura económica) comfortablyviven holgadamente they are well-off, they live comfortably2(con amplio margen): pudimos terminar el trabajo holgadamente we finished the job with plenty of time to spareen el asiento trasero caben tres holgadamente you can fit three in the back seat comfortablyaprobó el examen holgadamente she passed the exam easily* * *holgadamente advtriunfaron holgadamente they won easily;cumplió holgadamente lo que prometió he more than fulfilled his promise, he did what he had promised and more;la abstención sobrepasó holgadamente el 60 por ciento well over 60 percent abstained2. [con bienestar] comfortably, easily;viven holgadamente they live comfortably, they are comfortably off* * *holgadamente adv: comfortably, easilyvivir holgadamente: to be well-off -
123 imaginarse
VPR1) (=suponer) to imagine-no sabes lo cansados que estamos -sí, ya me imagino — "you've no idea how tired we are" - "yes, I can imagine"
¡pues, imagínate, se nos averió el coche en plena montaña! — just imagine, the car broke down right up in the mountains!
-¿lo habéis pasado bien? -imagínate — "did you have a good time?" - "what do you think? o we sure did"
imaginarse que — [en suposiciones] to imagine that, suppose that, guess that *; [en oraciones condicionales] to imagine that, suppose that
me imagino que tendrás ganas de descansar — I imagine o suppose o guess * you'll need a rest
no me imaginaba que tuvieras un hermano — I never imagined o guessed * you had a brother
me imagino que sí — I should think so, I (would) imagine so
2) (=visualizar) to imagine, pictureimagínatela cubierta de nieve — imagine o picture it covered in snow
me la imaginaba más joven — I had imagined o pictured her as being younger
* * *(v.) = pictureEx. One can now picture a future investigator in his laboratory, his hands are free, he is not anchored.* * *(v.) = pictureEx: One can now picture a future investigator in his laboratory, his hands are free, he is not anchored.
* * *
■imaginarse verbo reflexivo
1 to imagine: no soy capaz de imaginármelo, I can't imagine it
2 (suponer) to suppose: me imaginé que estarías aquí, I supposed you would be here ➣ Ver nota en imagine
' imaginarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
imaginar
- ver
English:
envisage
- envision
- fancy
- figure
- imagine
- picture
- suppose
- suspect
- think
- expect
- visualize
* * *vpr1. [suponer] to imagine;no te llamé porque me imaginé que estabas muy ocupada I didn't call you, because I thought you'd be very busy;me imagino que estarás cansado I imagine o suppose you must be tired;no te imaginas cómo me alegré you can't imagine how pleased I was;¡imagínate! just think o imagine!;me imagino que sí I suppose so;se puso muy contenta – me lo imagino she was very happy – I can well believe it;Fam¿te imaginas que viene? what if he were to come?2. [visualizar] to imagine, to picture;no me lo imagino vestido de indio I can't imagine o picture him dressed as an Indian;no me lo imaginaba así I hadn't imagined o pictured it like this* * *v/r imagine;¡ya me lo imagino! I can just imagine it!;¡imagínate! just imagine!* * *vr1) : to suppose, to imagine2) : to picture -
124 inquieto
adj.1 restless, bouncy, wriggly, antsy.2 uneasy, worried, anxious, pre-occupied.3 everchanging, changeable, restlessly active, skittish.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: inquietar.* * *► adjetivo1 (agitado) restless2 (preocupado) worried, anxious3 (interesado) eager, interested* * *(f. - inquieta)adj.1) restless2) troubled, uneasy* * *ADJ1) (=preocupado) anxious, worriedestar inquieto por algo — to be anxious about sth, be worried about sth
2) (=agitado) restless, unsettled* * *- ta adjetivoa) [estar] ( preocupado) worriedb) [ser] ( emprendedor) enterprising; ( vivo) lively, inquiring (before n)c) ( que se mueve mucho) restless* * *= restive, uneasy, fidgeting, restless, anxious, ill-at-ease, fidgety, frisky [friskier -comp., friskiest -sup.].Ex. We are increasingly restive about being held hostage to bindings that cost more than they are actually worth for library use.Ex. Hawthorne gave an uneasy laugh, which was merely the outlet for her disappointment.Ex. As children we learn in converse with our parents the significance of a sigh, or a firmly closed mouth, or fidgeting hands, or raised eyebrows.Ex. While scanning the area under supervision, the librarian may detect persons who appear restless or puzzled.Ex. In this reading mood we feel anxious, tired, lazy, worried -- whatever causes us to reject demanding and 'new' literature and forces us to take up again books that are comfortably -- and comfortingly -- known and easily enjoyed.Ex. One quite serious barrier to improvement is the reluctance of users to tell librarians of their feelings, but perhaps it is expecting too much of them to complain that they are ill-at-ease.Ex. Fidgety people are rarely well, they have generally `a headache,' or `spasms,' or `nerves,' or something of that sort.Ex. A man sitting alone on a park bench is suddenly joined by two women that get very frisky with him, but they have other things on their mind than just sex.----* estar inquieto = be disturbed.* persona inquieta = fidget.* * *- ta adjetivoa) [estar] ( preocupado) worriedb) [ser] ( emprendedor) enterprising; ( vivo) lively, inquiring (before n)c) ( que se mueve mucho) restless* * *= restive, uneasy, fidgeting, restless, anxious, ill-at-ease, fidgety, frisky [friskier -comp., friskiest -sup.].Ex: We are increasingly restive about being held hostage to bindings that cost more than they are actually worth for library use.
Ex: Hawthorne gave an uneasy laugh, which was merely the outlet for her disappointment.Ex: As children we learn in converse with our parents the significance of a sigh, or a firmly closed mouth, or fidgeting hands, or raised eyebrows.Ex: While scanning the area under supervision, the librarian may detect persons who appear restless or puzzled.Ex: In this reading mood we feel anxious, tired, lazy, worried -- whatever causes us to reject demanding and 'new' literature and forces us to take up again books that are comfortably -- and comfortingly -- known and easily enjoyed.Ex: One quite serious barrier to improvement is the reluctance of users to tell librarians of their feelings, but perhaps it is expecting too much of them to complain that they are ill-at-ease.Ex: Fidgety people are rarely well, they have generally `a headache,' or `spasms,' or `nerves,' or something of that sort.Ex: A man sitting alone on a park bench is suddenly joined by two women that get very frisky with him, but they have other things on their mind than just sex.* estar inquieto = be disturbed.* persona inquieta = fidget.* * *inquieto -ta1 [ ESTAR] (preocupado) worriedestaba inquieto porque no habían llamado he was worried o anxious because they hadn't calledse sentía inquieta en la casa tan sola she felt nervous o uneasy being all alone in the house3 (que se mueve mucho) restless* * *
Del verbo inquietar: ( conjugate inquietar)
inquieto es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
inquietó es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo
Multiple Entries:
inquietar
inquieto
inquieto◊ -ta adjetivo
( vivo) lively, inquiring ( before n)
inquietar verbo transitivo to worry
inquieto,-a adjetivo
1 (preocupado, desazonado) worried, [por, about]
2 (curioso, emprendedor) eager
3 (agitado) restless
' inquieto' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
espíritu
- inquieta
- mosca
- nerviosa
- nervioso
- vilo
English:
antsy
- anxious
- fidgety
- restless
- unsettled
- worried
- apprehensive
- disturbed
- fretful
- ill
- uneasy
* * *inquieto, -a adj1. [preocupado] worried, anxious ( por about);estoy inquieto por su ausencia I'm worried that he's not here2. [agitado, nervioso] restless;es un niño muy inquieto he's a very restless o fidgety child;el paciente está muy inquieto the patient is very unsettled3. [con afán de saber] curious;tiene una mente inquieta he has an inquiring mind* * *adj worried, anxious* * *inquieto, -ta adj1) : anxious, uneasy, worried2) : restless* * *inquieto adj1. (agitado, revuelto) restless2. (preocupado) worried -
125 ironía
f.irony, derision.* * *1 irony\con ironía ironicallyironías del destino quirks of fate* * *noun f.* * *SF1) [gen] ironycon ironía — ironically; (=con burla) sarcastically
2) (=comentario) sarcastic remark* * *a) ( situación irónica) ironyb) ( figura retórica) ironyc) ( burla) sarcasmcon ironía — ironically/sarcastically
* * *= irony.Ex. It thrives on ambiguity, irony, paradox, which bring the disparate and hitherto unconnected into relationship, revealing new shades of meaning, or refreshing the worn, the tired, the cliched.* * *a) ( situación irónica) ironyb) ( figura retórica) ironyc) ( burla) sarcasmcon ironía — ironically/sarcastically
* * *= irony.Ex: It thrives on ambiguity, irony, paradox, which bring the disparate and hitherto unconnected into relationship, revealing new shades of meaning, or refreshing the worn, the tired, the cliched.
* * *1 (situación irónica) ironyfue una cruel ironía que tuviese que pedirle ayuda a ella it was a cruel irony that he had to ask her for helplas ironías del destino the irony of fate2 (figura retórica) irony; (burla) sarcasmlo dijo con ironía he said it ironically/sarcasticallyya estoy harto de sus ironías I'm fed up with his sarcastic remarks* * *
ironía sustantivo femenino
irony
ironía sustantivo femenino irony
' ironía' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
captar
- lucida
- lucido
- sorna
- vaya
- dejo
- fino
- matiz
- penetrante
- refinado
- sutil
English:
feature
- irony
- subtle
- subtlety
* * *ironía nf1. [cualidad] irony;¡qué ironía! how ironic!;una ironía del destino an irony of fate;lo dijo con mucha ironía she said it very ironically2. [comentario] ironic remark;soltó unas ironías he made some ironic remarks* * *f irony* * *ironía nf: irony* * * -
126 jerigonza
f.1 gibberish.2 jargon, gibberish, double Dutch, gobbledydegook.3 cant.* * *1 peyorativo gibberish, jargon2 (argot) slang* * *SF1) (=galimatías) gibberish2) (=lenguaje) jargon3) (=estupidez) silly thing* * ** * *= lingo, gobbledygook [gobbledegook], mumbo jumbo, rigmarole [rigamarole].Ex. Every profession has its lingo, that is to say its list of frequently used terms familiar to practitioners of that profession.Ex. Tired of printing scientific gobbledygook that almost no one can read, one of the world's top science journals has ordered its authors to write plain English.Ex. This is all the legal mumbo jumbo that protects me from some random lawsuit for god only knows what.Ex. She sensed intelligence behind this rigmarole, but it was meaningless to her.* * ** * *= lingo, gobbledygook [gobbledegook], mumbo jumbo, rigmarole [rigamarole].Ex: Every profession has its lingo, that is to say its list of frequently used terms familiar to practitioners of that profession.
Ex: Tired of printing scientific gobbledygook that almost no one can read, one of the world's top science journals has ordered its authors to write plain English.Ex: This is all the legal mumbo jumbo that protects me from some random lawsuit for god only knows what.Ex: She sensed intelligence behind this rigmarole, but it was meaningless to her.* * *1 (mezcla de idiomas) mumbo jumbo ( colloq), gobbledygook ( colloq); (lenguaje en clave) secret language o code* * *jerigonza nf1. [galimatías] gibberish2. [jerga] jargon* * *f1 gobbledygook2 ( jerga) jargon* * *jerigonza nfgalimatías: mumbo jumbo, gibberish -
127 levantar una sesión
(v.) = adjourn + sessionEx. Jeanne Leforte felt tired but elated when the session adjourned.* * *(v.) = adjourn + sessionEx: Jeanne Leforte felt tired but elated when the session adjourned.
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128 ligeramente
adv.swiftly, lightly, easily; giddily, slightly, hastily.* * *► adverbio* * *adv.1) slightly2) lightly* * *ADV1) [con adjetivos] slightly2) (=con verbos)a) (=levemente) [oler, saber] slightly; [asar, cocer] lightly; [desplazarse, moverse, cambiar] slightlylas acciones han bajado ligeramente esta semana — the shares have dropped slightly o a little this week
b) (=rápidamente) [correr, andar] quickly; [tocar] lightly, gentlyc) (=sin sensatez) [actuar] flippantlyhay decisiones que no se pueden tomar ligeramente — there are some decisions which can't be taken lightly
* * *a) ( un poco) <cambiar/mejorar> slightlyb) ( superficialmente) < tocar> lightly, gently; < juzgar> casually, hastily* * *= lightly, marginally, slightly, midly, mildly, vaguely, gently, gently, subtly.Ex. To read a borrower label place the scanner on the left side of the label and move it from left to right across the bar codes, pressing lightly to keep it in direct contact with the label.Ex. Even for those items that are designated relevant some may be judged to be highly relevant, whilst others may be regarded as partially relevant or only marginally relevant.Ex. The other woman nodded, smiling slightly, and began to make concentric circles on a pad of paper.Ex. At the other end of the continuum is the form of hack writing typified by the poorest quality of adventure stories (often mildly pornographic).Ex. In a similar vein, the reference librarians interviewed were mildly cost conscious and believed that their requesters were most satisfied with their performance.Ex. Consequences of challenging her at this time began to shape themselves vaguely in his mind.Ex. Some authors of papers lament the lack of a philosophy and gently chide librarians for the 'simplicity of their pragmatism'.Ex. Some authors of papers lament the lack of a philosophy and gently chide librarians for the 'simplicity of their pragmatism'.Ex. The DaVinci Code movie deviates only subtly from the best-selling book on which it is based by making the lead character a man of some faith.----* balancearse ligeramente = bobble.* empujar ligeramente con el dedo o un instrumento = poke.* golpear ligeramente = tap, pat.* golpear ligeramente la punta de los dedos en sucesión sobre una superficie = tap + fingers.* ligeramente + Adjetivo = slightly + Adjetivo, vaguely + Adjetivo.* ligeramente + Nombre = a shade + Nombre.* mirar ligeramente = glance at.* revisar ligeramente = tinker with.* subir ligeramente = nudge up.* tirar ligeramente de = tug on.* tocar ligeramente = skim + the surface of, stroke, brush past, tip.* tratar ligeramente = skim + the surface of, touch on/upon.* tratar una cuestión ligeramente = touch on/upon + issue.* * *a) ( un poco) <cambiar/mejorar> slightlyb) ( superficialmente) < tocar> lightly, gently; < juzgar> casually, hastily* * *= lightly, marginally, slightly, midly, mildly, vaguely, gently, gently, subtly.Ex: To read a borrower label place the scanner on the left side of the label and move it from left to right across the bar codes, pressing lightly to keep it in direct contact with the label.
Ex: Even for those items that are designated relevant some may be judged to be highly relevant, whilst others may be regarded as partially relevant or only marginally relevant.Ex: The other woman nodded, smiling slightly, and began to make concentric circles on a pad of paper.Ex: At the other end of the continuum is the form of hack writing typified by the poorest quality of adventure stories (often mildly pornographic).Ex: In a similar vein, the reference librarians interviewed were mildly cost conscious and believed that their requesters were most satisfied with their performance.Ex: Consequences of challenging her at this time began to shape themselves vaguely in his mind.Ex: Some authors of papers lament the lack of a philosophy and gently chide librarians for the 'simplicity of their pragmatism'.Ex: Some authors of papers lament the lack of a philosophy and gently chide librarians for the 'simplicity of their pragmatism'.Ex: The DaVinci Code movie deviates only subtly from the best-selling book on which it is based by making the lead character a man of some faith.* balancearse ligeramente = bobble.* empujar ligeramente con el dedo o un instrumento = poke.* golpear ligeramente = tap, pat.* golpear ligeramente la punta de los dedos en sucesión sobre una superficie = tap + fingers.* ligeramente + Adjetivo = slightly + Adjetivo, vaguely + Adjetivo.* ligeramente + Nombre = a shade + Nombre.* mirar ligeramente = glance at.* revisar ligeramente = tinker with.* subir ligeramente = nudge up.* tirar ligeramente de = tug on.* tocar ligeramente = skim + the surface of, stroke, brush past, tip.* tratar ligeramente = skim + the surface of, touch on/upon.* tratar una cuestión ligeramente = touch on/upon + issue.* * *1 (un poco) slightlyse sintió ligeramente mareado he felt slightly dizzyquedó ligeramente sorprendida con el resultado she was somewhat o slightly surprised at the outcomesabe ligeramente a pescado it has a slight taste of fishtostar ligeramente en el horno brown lightly in the oven2 (superficialmente) ‹tocar› lightly, gently; ‹juzgar› casually, hastilyla bala sólo lo rozó ligeramente the bullet only grazed him slightlytemas que no se deben tratar ligeramente subjects which shouldn't be taken lightly o treated flippantly* * *
ligeramente adverbio
1 (con ligereza) lightly
2 (un poco) slightly: es ligeramente amarillo, it's slightly yellow
' ligeramente' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
afrutada
- afrutado
- sabrosa
- sabroso
- rozar
English:
bit
- dab
- faintly
- lightly
- marginally
- mildly
- nick
- slightly
- tenuously
- thinly
- bitter
- gently
- nudge
- vaguely
* * *ligeramente adv1. [levemente] lightly;[aumentar, bajar, doler] slightly;está ligeramente torcido it's not quite straight;estoy ligeramente cansado I'm a little tired2. [superficialmente] lightly;la pelota rozó ligeramente el larguero the ball just grazed the crossbar;lo juzgaste muy ligeramente you were very quick to judge him;estudiaron el asunto muy ligeramente they looked at the matter very superficially* * *ligeramente adv1) : slightly2) levemente: lightly, gently3) : casually, flippantly* * *ligeramente adv lightly
См. также в других словарях:
Tired Of Being Sorry — «Tired Of Being Sorry» Сингл Энрике Иглесиаса c альбома «Insomniac» Выпущен 29 сентября 2007 Формат … Википедия
Tired of Being Sorry — «Tired Of Being Sorry» Сингл Энрике Иглесиаса из альбома Insomniac Выпущен 29 сентября 2007 Формат … Википедия
Tired light — is a class of hypothetical redshift mechanisms that were proposed as an alternative explanation for the redshift distance relationship as alternatives to the Big Bang and the Steady State cosmologies, both of which proposed that Hubble s law was… … Wikipedia
tired — [ taırd ] adjective *** 1. ) needing to rest or sleep: She was too tired to do any more. My mother looked tired and ill. feel tired: He felt too tired to drive home. get tired: Kids can suddenly get very tired after playing for a time. a ) if a… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
tired — W2S1 [taıəd US taırd] adj 1.) feeling that you want to sleep or rest so tired (that) ▪ I m so tired I could sleep for a week. too tired to do sth ▪ He was too tired to argue. ▪ He looks tired out (=very tired) . ▪ No, Frank said in a tired voice … Dictionary of contemporary English
tired´ness — tired «tyrd», adjective. 1. weary; wearied; fatigued; exhausted: »The team was tired, but each boy continued to play as hard as he could. Figurative. His suit always looked a bit tired after he had worn it all week. 2. sick (of); … Useful english dictionary
tired´ly — tired «tyrd», adjective. 1. weary; wearied; fatigued; exhausted: »The team was tired, but each boy continued to play as hard as he could. Figurative. His suit always looked a bit tired after he had worn it all week. 2. sick (of); … Useful english dictionary
-tired — «tyrd», adjective. 1. weary; wearied; fatigued; exhausted: »The team was tired, but each boy continued to play as hard as he could. Figurative. His suit always looked a bit tired after he had worn it all week. 2. sick (of); … Useful english dictionary
tired of (doing) something — phrase no longer wanting something or wanting to do something because you are bored with it or annoyed by it We were tired of waiting for him to call. get/grow tired of doing something: She’s getting tired of going into that office every day.… … Useful english dictionary
Tired of Waiting for You — «Tired of Waiting for You» Sencillo de The Kinks del álbum Kinda Kinks Lado A Tired of Waiting for You Lado B Come on Now Publicación 15 de enero de 1965 … Wikipedia Español
Tired — may refer to: *Fatigue (medical), a feeling of exhaustion * Tired , a song by Rollins Band on Weight (album) from 1994 * Tired , a song by Willa Ford on Willa Was Here from 2001 * Tired , a song by LCD Soundsystem on LCD Soundsystem (album) from… … Wikipedia