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1 ladybird
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2 ladybird
nAGRIC mariquita de San Antonio f, vaquita de San Antonio f -
3 ladybird
s.mariquita (Estados Unidos) ladybug -
4 ladybug
tr['leɪdɪbʌg]1 SMALLAMERICAN ENGLISH/SMALL mariquitaladybug ['leɪdi.bʌg] n: mariquita fn.• mariquita s.f.BrE ladybird noun (AmE) mariquita f, catarina f (Méx), petaca f (Col), chinita f (Chi), San Antonio m (Ur), vaca f de San Antón (Arg)N (=beetle) mariquita f, vaca f de San Antón ** * *BrE ladybird noun (AmE) mariquita f, catarina f (Méx), petaca f (Col), chinita f (Chi), San Antonio m (Ur), vaca f de San Antón (Arg) -
5 mariquita
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6 Canada
Multiple Entries: Canadá cañada
Canadá sustantivo masculino: tb
cañada sustantivo femeninoa) (Geog) gully;( más profunda) ravine
Canadá sustantivo masculino Canada ' cañada' also found in these entries: Spanish: Canadá - esquimal English: Canada - dime - glen - ladybird - away - before - pennytr['kænədə]1 Canadá, el Canadán.• Canadá s.m.'kænədənoun (el) Canadá m['kænǝdǝ]N Canadá m* * *['kænədə]noun (el) Canadá m -
7 lady
'leidi1) (a more polite form of woman: Tell that child to stand up and let that lady sit down; The lady in the flower shop said that roses are expensive just now; Ladies' shoes are upstairs in this shop; (also adjective) a lady doctor.) señora, dama2) (a woman of good manners and refined behaviour: Be quiet! Ladies do not shout in public.) dama3) (in the United Kingdom, used as the title of, or a name for, a woman of noble rank: Sir James and Lady Brown; lords and ladies.) lady•- ladylike- Ladyship
- ladybird
lady n señora / mujerLadies and gentlemen... Señoras y señores...tr['leɪdɪ]1 (title) lady nombre femenino1) : señora f, dama f2) woman: mujer fn.• dama s.f.• doña s.f.• señora s.f.'leɪdi1)a) ( woman) señora f, dama f (frml)ladies and gentlemen — señoras y señores, damas y caballeros
ladies first! — primero las damas or señoras!
an old lady — una señora mayor; (before n)
lady mayoress — (BrE) alcaldesa f
b) ( refined woman) señora f, dama fc) (AmE colloq) (as form of address) señorad) ( appreciative use) mujer f2) ( noblewoman or wife of a knight) lady f3) ( Relig)['leɪdɪ]1. N1) (=woman) señora f, dama f frmladies' clothing — ropa f de señora
ladies' hairdresser — peluquero(-a) m / f de señoras
ladies first — las damas or las señoras primero
ladies and gentlemen! — ¡señoras y señores!, ¡damas y caballeros!
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an old lady — una señora mayor•
this is the young lady who served me — esta es la señorita or la joven que me sirviónow listen here, young lady! — ¡escúchame, jovencita!
2) (=educated woman, noblewoman) dama f•
she's no lady — no es lo que se dice una dama•
she's a real lady — es toda una dama3) (in titles)what seems to be the trouble, lady? — ¿qué ocurre, señora?
5) † (=wife) señora f, esposa f•
your good lady — su esposa, su señora6) (Rel)7)the ladies — (=lavatory) el servicio (de señoras), el baño (de señoras) (LAm)
Ladies — Señoras, Damas
2.CPDladies' room N — servicio m de señoras, baño m de señoras (LAm)
Lady Chapel N — (Rel) capilla f de la Virgen
Lady Day N — (Brit) día m de la Anunciación (25 de marzo)
lady doctor N — doctora f, médico f
lady friend N — amiga f
lady mayoress N — alcaldesa f
lady's fingers NPL — (Bot) (with sing or pl vb) quingombó m
lady's maid N — doncella f
* * *['leɪdi]1)a) ( woman) señora f, dama f (frml)ladies and gentlemen — señoras y señores, damas y caballeros
ladies first! — primero las damas or señoras!
an old lady — una señora mayor; (before n)
lady mayoress — (BrE) alcaldesa f
b) ( refined woman) señora f, dama fc) (AmE colloq) (as form of address) señorad) ( appreciative use) mujer f2) ( noblewoman or wife of a knight) lady f3) ( Relig) -
8 chinita
См. также в других словарях:
Ladybird — La dy*bird , n. [Equiv. to, bird of Our Lady.] (Zo[ o]l.) Any one of numerous species of small beetles of the genus {Coccinella} and allied genera (family {Coccinellid[ae]}); called also {ladybug}, {ladyclock}, {lady cow}, {lady fly},… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
ladybird — sweetheart, 1590s, from SWEET (Cf. sweet) (adj.) + HEART (Cf. heart) (n.) … Etymology dictionary
Ladybird — Drame de Ken Loach, avec Crissy Rock (Maggie), Vladimir Vega (Jorge), Sandie Lavelle (Mairead), Mauricio Venegas (Adrian). Scénario: Rona Munro Photographie: Barry Ackroyd Décor: Martin Johnson Musique: George Fenton Montage:… … Dictionnaire mondial des Films
ladybird — ► NOUN ▪ a small beetle with a domed back, typically red or yellow with black spots … English terms dictionary
Ladybird — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. Lady Bird Johnson (1912 2007) est la veuve de Lyndon B. Johnson et une ancienne première dame des États Unis. Ladybird est un film réalisé par Ken Loach… … Wikipédia en Français
ladybird — This bright little insect (also called lady cow or Bishop Barnaby) is said to bring luck if it alights on someone, and should never be harmed. Children encourage it to fly away with some variant of the rhyme: Ladybird, ladybird, fly away… … A Dictionary of English folklore
ladybird — UK [ˈleɪdɪˌbɜː(r)d] / US [ˈleɪdɪˌbɜrd] noun [countable] Word forms ladybird : singular ladybird plural ladybirds British a small insect that has a round red or yellow body with small black spots on it … English dictionary
ladybird — la·dy·bird (lāʹdē bûrd ) n. See ladybug. * * * the name of a series of small books started in 1940, which are designed to help children to learn to read. The books have a picture of a ladybird (= a round, red insect with black spots) on the front … Universalium
ladybird — [[t]le͟ɪdibɜː(r)d[/t]] ladybirds N COUNT A ladybird is a small round beetle that is red with black spots. [BRIT] (in AM, use ladybug) … English dictionary
Ladybird Books — is a London based publishing company, trading as a stand alone imprint within the Penguin Group of companies. The Ladybird imprint publishes mass market children s books.HistoryThe company traces its origins to 1867, when Henry Wills opened a… … Wikipedia
Ladybird Ladybird — (sometimes rendered as Ladybug Ladybug , particularly in the US) is a nursery rhyme. The rhymeThis traditional verse relates to Ladybirds, brightly colored insects commonly viewed as lucky. The English version goes back at least as far as 1744,… … Wikipedia