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1 grit
ɡrit
1. noun1) (very small pieces of stone: She's got a piece of grit in her eye.) arena, gravilla2) (courage: He's got a lot of grit.) valor, agallas
2. verb(to keep (the teeth) tightly closed together: He gritted his teeth to stop himself from crying out in pain.) apretar los dientes- grittytr[grɪt]1 (road) echar arenilla en\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto grit one's teeth apretar los dientesgrit n1) sand: arena f2) gravel: grava f3) courage: valor m, coraje m4) grits npl: sémola f de maízn.• redaños s.m.pl.n.• arena s.f.• arenilla s.f.• arenisca s.f.• arenisco s.m.v.• cerrar fuertemente los dientes v.• rechinar v.
I grɪtmass noun1)a) ( dirt) polvo mI got a piece of grit in my eye — se me metió una basurita (AmL) or (Esp) brizna en el ojo
b) ( gravel) arenilla f2) ( courage) (colloq) agallas fpl (fam)
II
a) (BrE) \<\<road\>\> echar arenilla enb) tooth a)[ɡrɪt]1. N1) (=gravel) grava f ; (for caged birds, poultry) arenilla f silícea, arena f ; (=dust) polvo m2) (fig) (=courage) valor m, ánimo m ; (=firmness of character) firmeza f ; (=endurance) aguante m3) grits (US) (Culin) sémola fsing2. VT1) [+ road] echar grava a2)* * *
I [grɪt]mass noun1)a) ( dirt) polvo mI got a piece of grit in my eye — se me metió una basurita (AmL) or (Esp) brizna en el ojo
b) ( gravel) arenilla f2) ( courage) (colloq) agallas fpl (fam)
II
a) (BrE) \<\<road\>\> echar arenilla enb) tooth a) -
2 apretado
Del verbo apretar: ( conjugate apretar) \ \
apretado es: \ \el participioMultiple Entries: apretado apretar
apretado
◊ -da adjetivo1 2 ‹calendario/programa› tight; ‹ victoria› narrow 3 (fam) ( tacaño) tight (colloq), tightfisted (colloq)
apretar ( conjugate apretar) verbo transitivo 1 ‹ acelerador› to put one's foot on, press; ‹ gatillo› to pull, squeeze ‹puño/mandíbulas› to clench; 2a) ( apretujar):◊ apretó al niño contra su pecho he clasped o clutched the child to his breast;me apretó el brazo con fuerza he squeezed o gripped my arm firmly verbo intransitivo 1 [ropa/zapatos] (+ me/te/le etc) to be too tight; 2 ( hacer presión) to press down (o in etc) apretarse verbo pronominal to squeeze o squash together
apretado,-a adjetivo
1 (muy ceñido) tight: íbamos todos apretados en el metro, we were all squashed together in the tube
2 (atareado) busy
apretar
I vtr (pulsar un botón) to press (el cinturón, un tornillo) to tighten (el gatillo) to pull: me aprietan los zapatos, these shoes are too tight for me
II verbo intransitivo el calor ha apretado en julio, it was really hot in July Locuciones: apretar el paso, to hasten, hurry
apretarle las clavijas a alguien, to put the screws on someone
donde aprieta el zapato, where the problem is ' apretado' also found in these entries: Spanish: apretar - apretada - justa - justo - calendario English: cramped - full - heavy - schedule - tight - dense - feel -
3 apretar
apretar ( conjugate apretar) verbo transitivo 1 ‹ acelerador› to put one's foot on, press; ‹ gatillo› to pull, squeeze ‹puño/mandíbulas› to clench; 2a) ( apretujar):◊ apretó al niño contra su pecho he clasped o clutched the child to his breast;me apretó el brazo con fuerza he squeezed o gripped my arm firmly verbo intransitivo 1 [ropa/zapatos] (+ me/te/le etc) to be too tight; 2 ( hacer presión) to press down (o in etc) apretarse verbo pronominal to squeeze o squash together
apretar
I vtr (pulsar un botón) to press (el cinturón, un tornillo) to tighten (el gatillo) to pull: me aprietan los zapatos, these shoes are too tight for me
II verbo intransitivo el calor ha apretado en julio, it was really hot in July Locuciones: apretar el paso, to hasten, hurry
apretarle las clavijas a alguien, to put the screws on someone
donde aprieta el zapato, where the problem is ' apretar' also found in these entries: Spanish: ajustar - estrujar - aprieta - estrechar - fuerte - gatillo - oprimir - puño English: clench - grip - loosely - pack - pack down - pinch - press - pull - push - screw up - squeeze - tighten - wedge - which - accelerate - foot - loosen - screw - speed - tooth -
4 aprieta
Del verbo apretar: ( conjugate apretar) \ \
aprieta es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativoMultiple Entries: apretar aprieta
apretar ( conjugate apretar) verbo transitivo 1 ‹ acelerador› to put one's foot on, press; ‹ gatillo› to pull, squeeze ‹puño/mandíbulas› to clench; 2a) ( apretujar):◊ apretó al niño contra su pecho he clasped o clutched the child to his breast;me apretó el brazo con fuerza he squeezed o gripped my arm firmly verbo intransitivo 1 [ropa/zapatos] (+ me/te/le etc) to be too tight; 2 ( hacer presión) to press down (o in etc) apretarse verbo pronominal to squeeze o squash together
aprieta,◊ aprietas, etc see apretar
apretar
I vtr (pulsar un botón) to press (el cinturón, un tornillo) to tighten (el gatillo) to pull: me aprietan los zapatos, these shoes are too tight for me
II verbo intransitivo el calor ha apretado en julio, it was really hot in July Locuciones: apretar el paso, to hasten, hurry
apretarle las clavijas a alguien, to put the screws on someone
donde aprieta el zapato, where the problem is ' aprieta' also found in these entries: Spanish: apretar - marcha - abarcar English: tight -
5 aprieto
Del verbo apretar: ( conjugate apretar) \ \
aprieto es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativoMultiple Entries: apretar aprieto
apretar ( conjugate apretar) verbo transitivo 1 ‹ acelerador› to put one's foot on, press; ‹ gatillo› to pull, squeeze ‹puño/mandíbulas› to clench; 2a) ( apretujar):◊ apretó al niño contra su pecho he clasped o clutched the child to his breast;me apretó el brazo con fuerza he squeezed o gripped my arm firmly verbo intransitivo 1 [ropa/zapatos] (+ me/te/le etc) to be too tight; 2 ( hacer presión) to press down (o in etc) apretarse verbo pronominal to squeeze o squash together
aprieto sustantivo masculino See Also→ apuro 2
apretar
I vtr (pulsar un botón) to press (el cinturón, un tornillo) to tighten (el gatillo) to pull: me aprietan los zapatos, these shoes are too tight for me
II verbo intransitivo el calor ha apretado en julio, it was really hot in July Locuciones: apretar el paso, to hasten, hurry
apretarle las clavijas a alguien, to put the screws on someone
donde aprieta el zapato, where the problem is
aprieto sustantivo masculino tight spot, fix: la pregunta puso al entrenador en un aprieto, the question put the trainer in a tight corner ' aprieto' also found in these entries: Spanish: apuro - poner - atolladero - con - ver English: fix - jam - mess - predicament - tight - bind -
6 grit
s.1 gravilla (gravel)2 coraje (courage, determination)3 valor, agallas, espíritu indomable.4 arena, granitos de arena, asperón, arenilla.vt.to grit one's teeth apretar los dientes3 apretar.4 cubrir con grava, echar arenilla en. (pt & pp gritted)
См. также в других словарях:
Gritted — Grit Grit, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Gritted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Gritting}.] To grind; to rub harshly together; to grate; as, to grit the teeth. [Collog.] [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
gritted — grɪt n. small rough granules or particles (i.e. sand); bravery, pluck; endurance v. grind the teeth together; abrade, grind; make a harsh grinding noise … English contemporary dictionary
grit (your) teeth — 1. to decide to deal with an unpleasant or difficult situation. You may as well grit your teeth and accept that air travel is going to get worse before it gets better. 2. to deal with something in a determined way. When a test came along, I just… … New idioms dictionary
through gritted teeth — If you do something through gritted teeth, you accept or agree with it against your will and it is obvious to others how you really feel … The small dictionary of idiomes
grit — grit1 [grıt] n [U] [Sense: 1 2; Origin: Old English greot] [Sense: 3; Origin: Old English grytt] 1.) very small pieces of stone or sand ▪ Make sure both surfaces are free from dust and grit. ▪ The council is responsible for putting grit on icy… … Dictionary of contemporary English
tooth — W2S2 [tu:θ] n plural teeth [ti:θ] ↑ear, ↑nose, ↑tooth, ↑eye ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(in mouth)¦ 2¦(on a tool etc)¦ 3¦(power)¦ 4 fight tooth and nail 5 get your teeth into something … Dictionary of contemporary English
clench — [[t]kle̱ntʃ[/t]] clenches, clenching, clenched 1) V ERG When you clench your fist or your fist clenches, you curl your fingers up tightly, usually because you are very angry. [V n] Alex clenched her fists and gritted her teeth... She pulled at… … English dictionary
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shoulder — [[t]ʃo͟ʊldə(r)[/t]] ♦♦ shoulders, shouldering, shouldered 1) N COUNT: oft poss N Your shoulders are between your neck and the tops of your arms. She led him to an armchair, with her arm round his shoulder... He glanced over his shoulder and saw… … English dictionary