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lack+(noun)

  • 41 charm

    1. noun
    1) ((a) pleasant quality or attraction: Her charm made up for her lack of beauty.) encanto
    2) (a magical spell: The witch recited a charm.) encantamento
    3) (something believed to have the power of magic or good luck: She wore a lucky charm.) amuleto
    4) (a small ornament that is worn on a chain or bracelet.)
    2. verb
    1) (to attract and delight: He can charm any woman.) encantar
    2) (to influence by magic: He charmed the snake from its basket.) encantar
    - charmingly
    * * *
    [tʃa:m] n 1 fascinação, encanto, atrativo. she flashes her charms / ela ostenta seus encantos. 2 graça, beleza. 3 talismã, amuleto, fetiche. 4 feitiço, encantamento. 5 berloque. • vt+vi 1 cativar, encantar, fascinar, atrair, agradar. 2 enfeitiçar, encantar. 3 dar forças mágicas a, proteger por amuleto ou talismã. 4 dar prazer a. charm price preço psicológico. to charm along produzir como por magia. to charm away fazer desaparecer, tornar invisível. to work like a charm funcionar com muito sucesso, como por encanto.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > charm

  • 42 cramp

    [kræmp] 1. noun
    ((a) painful stiffening of the muscles: The swimmer got cramp and drowned.) câimbra
    2. verb
    1) (to put into too small a space: We were all cramped together in a tiny room.) apertar
    2) (to restrict; Lack of money cramped our efforts.) limitar
    * * *
    cramp1
    [kræmp] n 1 grampo, gancho. 2 sargento: ferramenta de carpinteiro. • vt 1 grampear, segurar com grampo. 2 prender com sargento.
    ————————
    cramp2
    [kræmp] n 1 cãibra. he was seized with a cramp / ele foi atacado de cãibra. 2 paralisia de certos músculos. 3 cramps cólicas. • vt provocar cãibras ou espasmos.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > cramp

  • 43 dearth

    [də:Ɵ]
    (a lack of: They suffer from a dearth of resources and of experienced men.)
    * * *
    [də:θ] n 1 carência, escassez. 2 privação, falta do necessário à vida.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > dearth

  • 44 depression

    [-ʃən]
    1) (a state of sadness and low spirits: She was treated by the doctor for depression.) depressão
    2) (lack of activity in trade: the depression of the 1930s.) depressão
    3) (an area of low pressure in the atmosphere: The bad weather is caused by a depression.) depressão
    4) (a hollow.) depressão
    * * *
    de.pres.sion
    [dipr'eʃən] n 1 depressão, ato de deprimir, abaixamento devido a pressão. 2 abatimento, desânimo, tristeza, enfraquecimento da vitalidade ou atividade, frouxidão. 3 crise econômica, baixa no mercado. 4 baixa de terreno, pequena cavidade, baixos.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > depression

  • 45 disorder

    [dis'o:də]
    1) (lack of order; confusion or disturbance: The strike threw the whole country into disorder; scenes of disorder and rioting.) desordem
    2) (a disease: a disorder of the lungs.) doença
    * * *
    dis.or.der
    [dis'ɔ:də] n 1 desordem, desarranjo, desalinho. 2 confusão, desconcerto. 3 tumulto, motim. 4 comoção, perturbação de ânimo, doença, enfermidade. • vt 1 desordenar, desarranjar. 2 desconcertar, perturbar o ânimo, transtornar, inquietar. 3 tornar doente, adoecer. mental disorder alienação mental.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > disorder

  • 46 disregard

    1. verb
    (to ignore: He disregarded my warnings.) não fazer caso
    2. noun
    (lack of concern: He has a complete disregard for his own safety.) descaso
    * * *
    dis.re.gard
    [d'isrig'a:d] n 1 descuido, negligência, pouco caso. 2 desatenção, desconsideração, desmazelo, indelicadeza, descortesia, desprezo, desdém. • vt desconsiderar, desatender, negligenciar, fazer pouco-caso de, tratar com desatenção, sem respeito, desdenhar, desprezar.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > disregard

  • 47 disrespect

    [disrə'spekt]
    (rudeness or lack of respect: He spoke of his parents with disrespect.) desrespeito
    - disrespectfully
    * * *
    dis.re.spect
    [disrisp'ekt] n desrespeito, falta de respeito, desconsideração, incivilidade, descortesia, irreverência, desacato, rudeza. • vt desrespeitar, faltar ao respeito, desconsiderar, desacatar.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > disrespect

  • 48 distress

    [di'stres] 1. noun
    1) (great sorrow, trouble or pain: She was in great distress over his disappearance; Is your leg causing you any distress?; The loss of all their money left the family in acute distress.) sofrimento
    2) (a cause of sorrow: My inability to draw has always been a distress to me.) pena
    2. verb
    (to cause pain or sorrow to: I'm distressed by your lack of interest.) afligir
    - distressingly
    * * *
    dis.tress
    [distr'es] n 1 aflição, angústia, mágoa, pesar, embaraço. 2 desgraça, infortúnio. 3 pobreza, miséria, necessidade. 4 aperto, perigo, situação difícil ou perigosa. 5 Jur embargo, penhora, seqüestração, seqüestro, coisa penhorada. • vt 1 afligir, angustiar, desolar. 2 enfadar, perseguir, esgotar inteiramente, ser importuno. 3 penhorar, embargar, seqüestrar. in distress em perigo, precisando de socorro.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > distress

  • 49 distrust

    1. noun
    (suspicion; lack of trust or faith: He has always had a distrust of electrical gadgets.) desconfiança
    2. verb
    (to have no trust in: He distrusts his own judgement.) desconfiar
    - distrustfully
    - distrustfulness
    * * *
    dis.trust
    [distr'∧st] n desconfiança, suspeita, receio, dúvida. • vt desconfiar, suspeitar, recear.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > distrust

  • 50 drag

    [dræɡ] 1. past tense, past participle - dragged; verb
    1) (to pull, especially by force or roughly: She was dragged screaming from her car.) arrastar
    2) (to pull (something) slowly (usually because heavy): He dragged the heavy table across the floor.) arrastar
    3) (to (cause to) move along the ground: His coat was so long it dragged on the ground at the back.) arrastar
    4) (to search (the bed of a lake etc) by using a net or hook: Police are dragging the canal to try to find the body.) dragar
    5) (to be slow-moving and boring: The evening dragged a bit.) arrastar-se
    2. noun
    1) (something which slows something down: He felt that his lack of education was a drag on his progress.) travão
    2) (an act of drawing in smoke from a cigarette etc: He took a long drag at his cigarette.) tragada
    3) (something or someone that is dull and boring: Washing-up is a drag.) chatice
    4) (a slang word for women's clothes when worn by men.) roupa de travesti
    * * *
    [dræg] n 1 carro de rojo, rastilho, arrasto, carro de transporte. 2 rede varredoura. 3 draga, fateixa de rocegar. 4 croque, gancho, ancinho, grade de arar, desterroar. 5 máquina ou dispositivo para adubar a terra. 6 máquina, aparelho que serve para arrastar ou puxar algo. 7 resistência ao avanço, sapata de roda de veículo, travão, qualquer coisa que retarda o progresso, ( upon) obstáculo, empecilho. 8 espécie de carruagem aberta, a quatro cavalos. 9 dragagem, ação de dragar, arrastar. 10 Hunt rasto de raposa, rasto artificial, montaria, caça grossa. 11 Amer sl influência, pressão. 12 sl coisa enfadonha. 13 sl inalação de fumaça. 14 sl roupa própria de pessoas de um sexo, usada por pessoas de outro. 15 sl festa de homossexuais. • vt+vi 1 arrastar(-se), levar a rastos, tirar, puxar à força, arrancar. 2 dragar, rocegar, desentupir (um porto). 3 gradar, desterroar. 4 garrar, arrastar (a âncora). 5 arrastar (falando de vestidos compridos). 6 pescar com a rede varredoura. 7 deter-se, tardar, prolongar-se, não adiantar, mover-se morosamente ou com dificuldade. the child drags / a criança é retardada no seu desenvolvimento. 8 passar. to drag along, drag on 1 arrastar com força. 2 puxar, arrastar. 3 arrastar-se, demorar. to drag away mover-se ou partir sem vontade. to drag by passar vagarosamente. to drag down 1 sentir-se fraco ou deprimido. 2 reduzir a um nível social mais baixo. to drag in introduzir um assunto sem interesse ou inoportuno. to drag into envolver (alguém ou algo) desnecessariamente. to drag one’s feet não se esforçar, retardar, fazer corpo mole. to drag out 1 protrair, prolongar, fazer durar. 2 forçar a dizer algo. to drag up 1 educar ou criar com negligência. 2 levantar um assunto desnecessariamente.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > drag

  • 51 exhibit

    [iɡ'zibit] 1. verb
    1) (to show; to display to the public: My picture is to be exhibited in the art gallery.) exibir/expor
    2) (to show (a quality etc): He exhibited a complete lack of concern for others.) demonstrar
    2. noun
    1) (an object displayed publicly (eg in a museum): One of the exhibits is missing.) objecto exposto
    2) (an object or document produced in court as part of the evidence: The blood-stained scarf was exhibit number one in the murder trial.) prova
    - exhibitor
    * * *
    ex.hib.it
    [igz'ibit] n 1 exibição, apresentação, exposição. 2 Jur prova documento, testemunho. 3 objetos expostos. • vt+vi 1 exibir, expor, apresentar. 2 mostrar, revelar. 3 Jur apresentar provas. 4 Med prescrever ou administrar.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > exhibit

  • 52 famine

    ['fæmin]
    ((a) great lack or shortage especially of food: Some parts of the world suffer regularly from famine.) fome
    * * *
    fam.ine
    [f'æmin] n 1 penúria, falta extrema de víveres. 2 escassez absoluta de qualquer produto, crise. 3 fome, inanição.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > famine

  • 53 hit

    [hit] 1. present participle - hitting; verb
    1) (to (cause or allow to) come into hard contact with: The ball hit him on the head; He hit his head on/against a low branch; The car hit a lamp-post; He hit me on the head with a bottle; He was hit by a bullet; That boxer can certainly hit hard!) bater
    2) (to make hard contact with (something), and force or cause it to move in some direction: The batsman hit the ball (over the wall).) bater
    3) (to cause to suffer: The farmers were badly hit by the lack of rain; Her husband's death hit her hard.) atingir
    4) (to find; to succeed in reaching: His second arrow hit the bull's-eye; Take the path across the fields and you'll hit the road; She used to be a famous soprano but she cannot hit the high notes now.) alcançar
    2. noun
    1) (the act of hitting: That was a good hit.) golpe
    2) (a point scored by hitting a target etc: He scored five hits.) ponto
    3) (something which is popular or successful: The play/record is a hit; ( also adjective) a hit song.) sucesso
    - hit-or-miss
    - hit back
    - hit below the belt
    - hit it off
    - hit on
    - hit out
    - make a hit with
    * * *
    [hit] n 1 golpe, pancada, estocada. 2 sucesso, sorte. 3 ataque, crítica. • vt+vi (ps and pp hit) 1 dar um golpe, dar uma pancada (at em). he hit me a blow / ele me deu uma pancada. 2 acertar, atingir. he was hit by the ball / ele foi atingido pela bola. his hand was hit by the knife / a sua mão foi ferida pela faca. a lucky hit um bom lance, um golpe feliz. he hit the town coll ele chegou à cidade. hit or miss a esmo. to hit against bater contra. to hit it off concordar. to hit it up injetar drogas. to hit off imitar ou descrever perfeitamente. to hit the bottle beber muito, em excesso. to hit the ceilving/ roof ficar com raiva. to hit the hay/ sack ir dormir, ir para a cama. to hit the jackpot acertar na sorte grande. to hit the nail on the head dar na trilha. to hit the road partir, pegar a estrada. to hit upon encontrar, topar com. to make a hit with someone a) ficar popular. b) impressionar alguém. you have hit my taste você acertou meu gosto.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > hit

  • 54 inability

    [inə'biləti]
    (the lack of power, means, ability etc (to do something): I was surprised at his inability to read.) incapacidade
    * * *
    in.a.bil.i.ty
    [inəb'iliti] n incapacidade, inaptidão, falta de poder.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > inability

  • 55 inexperience

    [inik'spiəriəns]
    (lack of experience or skilled knowledge: He seems good at the job in spite of his youth and inexperience.) inexperiência
    * * *
    in.ex.pe.ri.ence
    [iniksp'iəriəns] n inexperiência.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > inexperience

  • 56 ingratitude

    [in'ɡrætitju:d]
    (lack of gratitude: I felt hurt by his ingratitude.) ingratidão
    * * *
    in.grat.i.tude
    [ingr'ætitju:d] n ingratidão.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > ingratitude

  • 57 inhumanity

    [-'mæ-]
    noun (cruelty or lack of pity.) desumanidade
    * * *
    in.hu.man.i.ty
    [inhjum'æniti] n inumanidade, desumanidade, crueldade.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > inhumanity

  • 58 instability

    [instə'biləti]
    (lack of stability or steadiness eg of personality.) instabilidade
    * * *
    in.sta.bil.i.ty
    [instəb'iliti] n instabilidade, inconstância.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > instability

  • 59 lapse

    [læps] 1. verb
    1) (to cease to exist, often because of lack of effort: His insurance policy had lapsed and was not renewed.) caducar
    2) (to slip, fall, be reduced: As he could think of nothing more to say, he lapsed into silence; I'm afraid our standards of tidiness have lapsed.) cair
    2. noun
    1) (a mistake or failure (in behaviour, memory etc): a lapse of memory.) lapso
    2) (a passing away (of time): I saw him again after a lapse of five years.) intervalo
    * * *
    [læps] n 1 lapso, espaço de tempo, intervalo. 2 lapso, descuido, negligência. 3 passo falso, deslize, desvio. 4 declínio, queda. 5 apostasia. 6 prescrição. • vt+vi 1 escoar, decorrer, passar. the days lapsed away / os dias passaram. 2 errar, falhar. 3 decair, diminuir. the boy’s interest lapsed / o interesse do rapaz decaiu. 4 prescrever, caducar, ficar sem efeito. the title lapsed / o título prescreveu.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > lapse

  • 60 lethargy

    ['leƟə‹i]
    (lack of interest or energy.) letargia
    * * *
    leth.ar.gy
    [l'eθədʒi] n letargia, apatia, inércia, torpor.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > lethargy

См. также в других словарях:

  • lack — ► NOUN ▪ the state of being without or not having enough of something. ► VERB (also lack for) ▪ be without or deficient in. ORIGIN perhaps partly from Low German lak deficiency , Dutch laken lack …   English terms dictionary

  • lack — Ⅰ. lack UK US /læk/ noun [S or U] ► a situation in which there is not enough of something, or something is not available: serious/severe lack of sth »Many of these communities are having to cope with a severe lack of resources. » Lack of time is… …   Financial and business terms

  • lack´er|er — lack|er «LAK uhr», noun, transitive verb. = lacquer. (Cf. ↑lacquer) –lack´er|er, noun …   Useful english dictionary

  • lack|er — «LAK uhr», noun, transitive verb. = lacquer. (Cf. ↑lacquer) –lack´er|er, noun …   Useful english dictionary

  • lack-Latin — lackˈ Latin noun (obsolete; often Sir John Lack Latin) An ignorant priest adjective Uneducated, ignorant • • • Main Entry: ↑lack …   Useful english dictionary

  • lack´a|dai´si|cal|ness — lack|a|dai|si|cal «LAK uh DAY zuh kuhl», adjective. lacking interest or enthusiasm; languid; listless: »A lackadaisical sales staff. The new mayor has worked long and hard and is far from lackadaisical. SYNONYM(S): spiritless, lethargic, dreamy.… …   Useful english dictionary

  • lack´a|dai´si|cal|ly — lack|a|dai|si|cal «LAK uh DAY zuh kuhl», adjective. lacking interest or enthusiasm; languid; listless: »A lackadaisical sales staff. The new mayor has worked long and hard and is far from lackadaisical. SYNONYM(S): spiritless, lethargic, dreamy.… …   Useful english dictionary

  • lack|a|dai|si|cal — «LAK uh DAY zuh kuhl», adjective. lacking interest or enthusiasm; languid; listless: »A lackadaisical sales staff. The new mayor has worked long and hard and is far from lackadaisical. SYNONYM(S): spiritless, lethargic, dreamy. ╂[< lackadaisy …   Useful english dictionary

  • lack — noun absence or deficiency of something. verb (also lack for) be without or deficient in. Origin ME: corresp. to, and perh. partly from, MDu. and Mid. Low Ger. lak deficiency , MDu. laken lack …   English new terms dictionary

  • lack-all — lackˈ all noun (archaic) Someone who is destitute • • • Main Entry: ↑lack …   Useful english dictionary

  • lack-beard — lackˈ beard noun • • • Main Entry: ↑lack …   Useful english dictionary

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