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121 nice
سَارٌّ \ delightful: very pleasant; charming. enjoyable: (of things, not people) pleasant. good: pleasing: good news; a good film. great: fine; very pleasing: We had a great time in Paris. joyful: very happy: A marriage is a joyful event. nice: pleasant: a nice day (a fine day); a nice time (an enjoyable time). pleasant: pleasing; satisfying; nice; friendly: a pleasant taste; a pleasant companion. sweet: pleasant: a sweet smell; a sweet smile; a sweet little girl (pretty and charming). -
122 pleasant
سَارٌّ \ delightful: very pleasant; charming. enjoyable: (of things, not people) pleasant. good: pleasing: good news; a good film. great: fine; very pleasing: We had a great time in Paris. joyful: very happy: A marriage is a joyful event. nice: pleasant: a nice day (a fine day); a nice time (an enjoyable time). pleasant: pleasing; satisfying; nice; friendly: a pleasant taste; a pleasant companion. sweet: pleasant: a sweet smell; a sweet smile; a sweet little girl (pretty and charming). -
123 sweet
سَارٌّ \ delightful: very pleasant; charming. enjoyable: (of things, not people) pleasant. good: pleasing: good news; a good film. great: fine; very pleasing: We had a great time in Paris. joyful: very happy: A marriage is a joyful event. nice: pleasant: a nice day (a fine day); a nice time (an enjoyable time). pleasant: pleasing; satisfying; nice; friendly: a pleasant taste; a pleasant companion. sweet: pleasant: a sweet smell; a sweet smile; a sweet little girl (pretty and charming). -
124 divertirse
1 to enjoy oneself, have a good time■ ¡diviértete! enjoy yourself!* * *to have a good time, have fun* * *VPR1) (=pasarlo bien) to have a good time, enjoy o.s.¡que te diviertas! — have a good time!, enjoy yourself!
2) (=distraerse) to amuse o.s.cantamos solo por o para divertirnos — we sing just for fun
* * *(v.) = have + fun, amuse, derive + enjoyment, disport + ReflexivoEx. But for now, having fun and feeling famous will do quite well enough.Ex. In the same way we can note when we are absorbed, when not, when we are amused or saddened, when a character specially interested us, when a passage of writing held our attention for its own sake, and so on.Ex. The skill of the author lies in being able to tell the story in such a way that the reader will suspend disbelief and derive enjoyment from what is basically a simple story skilfully told.Ex. In all three novels, a lovestricken swain believes that he is disporting himself with the handsome object of his affections, when actually he lies abed with the grotesquely ugly maidservant of his mistress.* * *(v.) = have + fun, amuse, derive + enjoyment, disport + ReflexivoEx: But for now, having fun and feeling famous will do quite well enough.
Ex: In the same way we can note when we are absorbed, when not, when we are amused or saddened, when a character specially interested us, when a passage of writing held our attention for its own sake, and so on.Ex: The skill of the author lies in being able to tell the story in such a way that the reader will suspend disbelief and derive enjoyment from what is basically a simple story skilfully told.Ex: In all three novels, a lovestricken swain believes that he is disporting himself with the handsome object of his affections, when actually he lies abed with the grotesquely ugly maidservant of his mistress.* * *
■divertirse verbo reflexivo to enjoy oneself, have a good time: ¡que os divirtáis!, have a good time!
' divertirse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
distracción
- distraerse
- entretenerse
- salir
- disfrutar
- divertir
- entretener
- vacilar
English:
amuse
- arson
- fun
- laugh
- life
- play around
- enjoy
- kick
- party
* * *vprto enjoy oneself;se divierte con cualquier cosa she's easily amused;me divierto mucho contigo I enjoy being with you, I have a good time when I'm with you;se divirtieron muchísimo en la excursión they had a great time on the trip, they really enjoyed the trip;hacer el vándalo es su manera de divertirse being a vandal is his way of amusing himself o his idea of fun;¡que te diviertas! have a nice time!, enjoy yourself!* * *v/r have fun, enjoy o.s.;¡que te diviertas! have fun!, enjoy yourself!* * *vr: to have fun, to have a good time* * *divertirse vb to have fun / to enjoy yourself¡que os divirtáis! have fun ! / enjoy yourselves! -
125 chachi *
1.ADJ great *, brill *¡qué chachi! — that's great!, that's brill! *
¡estás chachi! — you look great! *
2.ADV great *, brill *nos lo pasamos chachi — we had a great * time
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126 reventarse
1 (estallar) to burst2 familiar (cansarse) to tire oneself out* * *VPR1) (=romperse)a) [por presión] [tubería] to burst; [pantalón, vestido] to splitb) [por explosión] [depósito, tanque] to explode, blow up2) * (=agotarse)se revienta a trabajar — he's slogging o sweating his guts out *, he's working his butt off (EEUU) **
4) Méx * to have a great time* * *
■reventarse verbo reflexivo
1 (un globo, una rueda) to burst
2 (un tomate, huevo, etc) to smash
3 (un caballo, etc) to die of exhaustion
4 (una persona) to work one's guts out
' reventarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
reventar
English:
burst
* * *vpr1. [explotar] to explode;[rueda, tuberías] to burst;no te revientes los granos don't squeeze your spots;Andes, RPvenía mirando para otro lado y me reventé contra la puerta I was looking the other way and banged into the door* * *v/r1 de pelota burst2:se reventó a trabajar fig he worked his butt off fam -
127 chanchi
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128 vacilar
v.1 to hesitate.El chico vaciló brevemente The boy hesitated briefly.2 to falter.3 to flicker (fluctuar) (light).La llama vaciló en el viento The flame flickered in the wind.4 to wobble, to sway.5 to swank, to show off (informal) (chulear).6 to tease, to pull the leg of, to ride, to spoof.María vaciló a Ricardo todo el día Mary teased Richard the whole day.* * *1 (oscilar) to sway, vacillate2 (estar poco firme) to wobble3 (al andar) to sway, stagger, wobble; (al hablar) to falter4 (luz) to flicker6 familiar (tomar el pelo) to joke, tease■ ¡no me vaciles! don't tease me!7 familiar (presumir) to show off\hacer vacilar figurado to shakesin vacilar without hesitationmemoria que vacila shaky memory* * *verb* * *1. VI1) (=dudar) to hesitate, waver; (=ser indeciso) to vacillate; (=esperar) to hold back from doing sthes un hombre que vacila mucho — he is a very indecisive man, he is a man who dithers a lot
2) (por falta de estabilidad) [mueble] to be unsteady, wobble[persona] (al andar) to totter, reel; (al hablar) to falter; [memoria] to fail; [moralidad] to be collapsing3) [luz] to flicker4) (=variar)un sabor que vacila entre agradable y desagradable — a taste which varies o ranges between nice and nasty
5) *(=guasearse)vacilar con algn — to tease sb, take the mickey out of sb **
6) (Méx)* (=divertirse) to have fun, lark about *; (=ir de juerga) to go on a spree7) * (=presumir) to talk big *, show off, swank *2. VT1) (=burlarse de) to take the mickey out of **, make fun of¡no me vaciles! — stop messing me about! *
2) (CAm)* (=engañar) to trick* * *1.verbo intransitivo1)a) ( dudar) to hesitateno vaciles más, hazlo — stop dithering and do it
vacilar en + inf — to hesitate to + inf
b) fe/determinación to waverc) luz to flicker3) (Esp, Méx fam) ( bromear) to joke, to kid (colloq)4) (AmL exc CS fam) ( divertirse) to have fun2.vacilar vt (Esp, Méx fam) to tease* * *= shake, waver, falter, vacillate, hang back, oscillate, baulk [balk, -USA], wobble.Ex. This attitude had to go and by the 1830s it was shaking.Ex. The first decision in establishing headings for the works of corporate bodies is the one over which code makers have wavered.Ex. The project faltered because the data became increasingly difficult to input and manipulate.Ex. Australia's treatment of information technology has vacillated between laissez faire and an interventionist strategy.Ex. This article explores the implications of these threats, maintaining that publishers cannot afford to hang back, but must innovate or atrophy.Ex. This dichotomy in Muslim history, which has oscillated between periods of piousness & decadence, demonstrates further disunity in the Muslim world.Ex. While many scholars concede that military interventions are sometimes permissible, they balk when it comes to deciding whether they are ever a moral duty.Ex. This adaptation of David Leavitt's novel wobbles between comedy and melodrama, ultimately fudging the novel's spiky empathy.----* sin vacilar = unswervingly.* vacilar entre... y/o... = hover between... and/or....* * *1.verbo intransitivo1)a) ( dudar) to hesitateno vaciles más, hazlo — stop dithering and do it
vacilar en + inf — to hesitate to + inf
b) fe/determinación to waverc) luz to flicker3) (Esp, Méx fam) ( bromear) to joke, to kid (colloq)4) (AmL exc CS fam) ( divertirse) to have fun2.vacilar vt (Esp, Méx fam) to tease* * *= shake, waver, falter, vacillate, hang back, oscillate, baulk [balk, -USA], wobble.Ex: This attitude had to go and by the 1830s it was shaking.
Ex: The first decision in establishing headings for the works of corporate bodies is the one over which code makers have wavered.Ex: The project faltered because the data became increasingly difficult to input and manipulate.Ex: Australia's treatment of information technology has vacillated between laissez faire and an interventionist strategy.Ex: This article explores the implications of these threats, maintaining that publishers cannot afford to hang back, but must innovate or atrophy.Ex: This dichotomy in Muslim history, which has oscillated between periods of piousness & decadence, demonstrates further disunity in the Muslim world.Ex: While many scholars concede that military interventions are sometimes permissible, they balk when it comes to deciding whether they are ever a moral duty.Ex: This adaptation of David Leavitt's novel wobbles between comedy and melodrama, ultimately fudging the novel's spiky empathy.* sin vacilar = unswervingly.* vacilar entre... y/o... = hover between... and/or....* * *vacilar [A1 ]viA1 (dudar) to hesitaterespondió sin vacilar he replied without hesitating o without hesitationvacila entre aceptar la propuesta y seguir aquí she's hesitating over whether to accept the offer or stay here, she can't make up her mind whether to accept the offer or stay hereno vaciles más, hazlo stop dithering and do itvacilar EN algo:no vaciló en la elección he made his choice without hesitationno vacilaron en aceptar they did not hesitate to accept, they accepted without hesitation2 «fe/determinación» to waver3 «luz» to flicker1 «mueble» to wobble, rock2«persona»: vaciló pero enseguida recuperó el equilibrio she staggered/tottered but she regained her balance immediatelyvacilaba al andar, como si estuviese borracho he swayed from side to side as he walked, as if he were drunkD( AmL exc CS fam) (divertirse): vacilamos un montón en la fiesta we had a great time o a lot of fun at the party■ vacilarvt(Esp, Méx fam) to teaselo estuvieron vacilando toda la noche they were teasing him o pulling his leg all evening¡no me vaciles! be serious!* * *
vacilar ( conjugate vacilar) verbo intransitivo
1
no vaciló en aceptar he did not hesitate to accept, he accepted without hesitation
2 ( oscilar) [ persona] to stagger, totter
3 (AmL exc CS fam) ( divertirse) to have fun
vacilar verbo intransitivo
1 (titubear, dudar) to hesitate: vaciló en responder, he hesitated before answering
2 (una voz) to falter
(una luz) to flicker
3 argot (hacer burla soterradamente) to tease: ¿me estás vacilando?, are you winding me up?
4 argot (presumir, fanfarronear) to boast, show off
' vacilar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
titubear
English:
dilly-dally
- falter
- hang back
- hesitate
- hold back
- little
- shilly-shally
- shrink
- straight
- vacillate
- waver
- dither
* * *♦ vi1. [dudar] to hesitate;contestó sin vacilar she replied without hesitation;vacilaba entre ambas opciones he hesitated o wavered between the two options;no vaciles más y subscríbete why wait? get your subscription today2. [voz, principios, régimen] to falter3. [fluctuar] [luz] to flicker;[pulso] to be irregular4. [oscilar] [mueble, persona] to wobbleuna moto de esas vacila mucho a bike like that is really cool♦ vtFam1. Esp, Carib, Méxme estás vacilando you're pulling my legvacílate ese carro get a load of that car, check out that car* * *I v/i3 Méx fam ( divertirse) have funII v/t fammake fun of* * *vacilar vi1) : to hesitate, to vacillate, to waver2) : to be unsteady, to wobble3) : to flicker* * *¡no me vaciles! come off it!
См. также в других словарях:
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