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1 lose heart
(to become discouraged.) caer el mundo a los pies, descorazonarse, desanimarseexpr.• perder el entusiasmo expr.v.• desmayar v.• flaquear v. -
2 lose heart
v.desalentarse, deprimirse, desanimarse, abatirse. -
3 to lose heart
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4 heart
1. noun1) (the organ which pumps blood through the body: How fast does a person's heart beat?; (also adjective) heart disease; a heart specialist.) corazón2) (the central part: I live in the heart of the city; in the heart of the forest; the heart of a lettuce; Let's get straight to the heart of the matter/problem.) corazón; centro; meollo3) (the part of the body where one's feelings, especially of love, conscience etc are imagined to arise: She has a kind heart; You know in your heart that you ought to go; She has no heart (= She is not kind).) corazón4) (courage and enthusiasm: The soldiers were beginning to lose heart.) valor; (lose heart= descorazonarse)5) (a symbol supposed to represent the shape of the heart; a white dress with little pink hearts on it; heart-shaped.) corazón, en forma de corazón6) (one of the playing-cards of the suit hearts, which have red symbols of this shape on them.) corazones; copas (cartas españolas)•- - hearted- hearten
- heartless
- heartlessly
- heartlessness
- hearts
- hearty
- heartily
- heartiness
- heartache
- heart attack
- heartbeat
- heartbreak
- heartbroken
- heartburn
- heart failure
- heartfelt
- heart-to-heart
2. noun(an open and sincere talk, usually in private: After our heart-to-heart I felt more cheerful.) conversación íntima/sincera- at heart
- break someone's heart
- by heart
- from the bottom of one's heart
- have a change of heart
- have a heart!
- have at heart
- heart and soul
- lose heart
- not have the heart to
- set one's heart on / have one's heart set on
- take heart
- take to heart
- to one's heart's content
- with all one's heart
heart n1. corazón2. corazón / centro / mediotr[hɑːt]1 SMALLANATOMY/SMALL corazón nombre masculino2 (centre of feeling) corazón nombre masculino4 (of lettuce etc) cogollo; (of place) corazón nombre masculino, centro; (of question) fondo, quid nombre masculino, meollo\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLa change of heart un cambio de opiniónafter my own heart de los/las que me gustanat heart en el fondoby heart de memoriahave a heart! ¡ten piedad!his «(her etc)» heart sank se le cayó el alma a los piesto get to the heart of something llegar al fondo de algoto have one's heart in one's mouth tener el alma en un hiloto have one's heart in something volcarse en cuerpo y alma en algoto have one's heart in the right place ser buena personato lose heart descorazonarse, desanimarseto pour one's heart out abrir el corazónto take something to heart tomarse algo muy a pechoto wear one's heart on one's sleeve ir con el corazón en la manoheart attack infarto de miocardioheart transplant trasplante nombre masculino de corazónheart ['hɑrt] n1) : corazón m2) center, core: corazón m, centro mthe heart of the matter: el meollo del asunto3) feelings: corazón m, sentimientos mpla broken heart: un corazón destrozadoto have a good heart: tener buen corazónto take something to heart: tomarse algo a pecho4) courage: valor m, corazón mto take heart: animarse, cobrar ánimos5) hearts npl: corazones mpl (en juegos de naipes)6)by heart : de memoriaadj.• cardíaco, -a adj.n.• alma s.f.• cogollo s.m.• corazón s.m.• entraña s.f.• ombligo s.m.• pecho s.m.• riñón s.m.hɑːrt, hɑːt1) ( Anat) corazón mcross my heart (and hope to die)! — te lo juro!, que me muera ahora mismo si no es verdad!; (before n) < disease> del corazón, cardíaco; < operation> de(l) corazón
heart rate — ritmo m cardíaco
2) ( seat of emotions)to have a good/kind heart — tener* buen corazón, ser* de buen corazón
to have a cold heart — ser* duro de corazón
in one's heart of hearts — en lo más profundo de su (or mi etc) corazón, en su (or mi etc) fuero interno
have a heart! — (colloq) no seas malo! (fam), ten compasión! (hum)
to be all heart — ser* todo corazón
to be close o near o dear to somebody's heart — significar* mucho para alguien
after somebody's own heart: he's a man/writer after my own heart es un hombre/escritor con el que me identifico; to break somebody's heart: it breaks my heart to see her cry me parte el alma verla llorar; to die of a broken heart morirse* de pena; to cry one's heart out llorar a lágrima viva; to eat one's heart out morirse* de envidia; to find it in one's heart to + inf: can you find it in your heart to forgive me? ¿podrás perdonarme?; to have a heart of gold tener* un corazón de oro, ser* todo corazón; her/his heart is in the right place es de buen corazón, es una buena persona; to learn/know something by heart aprender/saber* algo de memoria; my/her/his heart wasn't in it lo hacía sin ganas or sin poner entusiasmo; to one's heart's content: here you can eat/swim to your heart's content aquí puedes comer/nadar todo lo que quieras; to open one's heart to somebody abrirle* el corazón a alguien; to set one's heart on something: she's set her heart on being chosen for the team su mayor ilusión es que la elijan para formar parte del equipo; he has his heart set on a new bike lo que más quiere es una bicicleta nueva; to take something to heart tomarse algo a pecho; to wear one's heart on one's sleeve demostrar* sus (or mis etc) sentimientos; with all one's heart, with one's whole heart de todo corazón; to win somebody's heart — ganarse or conquistarse a alguien
3) (courage, morale) ánimos mplto lose heart — descorazonarse, desanimarse
my heart was in my mouth — tenía el corazón en un puño or en la boca, tenía el alma en vilo
my/her heart sank — se me/le cayó el alma a los pies
not to have the heart to do something: I didn't have the heart to tell him no tuve valor para decírselo; to be in good heart tener* la moral muy alta; to do somebody's heart good — alegrarle el corazón a alguien
4)a) ( central part)the heart of the city/country — el corazón or centro de la ciudad/del país
the heart of the matter — el meollo or el quid del asunto
b) (of cabbage, lettuce) cogollo martichoke hearts — corazones mpl de alcachofas or (RPl) de alcauciles
5) ( heart-shaped object) corazón m[hɑːt]1. N1) (=organ, symbol of love) corazón m•
she waited with beating heart — le palpitaba el corazón mientras esperaba, esperaba con el corazón palpitante•
to clasp sb to one's heart — abrazar a algn estrechamente•
to have a weak heart — padecer or sufrir del corazón2) (=seat of emotions) corazón m•
with all one's heart — de todo corazón, con toda su alma•
at heart — en el fondo•
this is an issue which is close to his heart — este es un asunto que le toca muy de cerca•
this is an issue which is dear to his heart — este es un asunto que le toca muy de cerca•
his words came from the heart — sus palabras salieron del corazón•
he knew in his heart that it was a waste of time — él en el fondo sabía que era una pérdida de tiempo•
you will always have a place in my heart — siempre te llevaré dentro (de mi corazón)- break sb's heart- break one's heart over- die of a broken heart- cut sb to the heart- give one's heart toto have no heart — no tener corazón or entrañas
with heavy hearts, we turned our steps homeward — apesadumbrados or compungidos, encaminamos nuestros pasos de regreso a casa
- lose one's heart to- open one's heart to sb- cry one's heart out- sing one's heart out- let one's heart rule one's headto set one's heart on sth —
I've set my heart on that coat I saw yesterday — quiero a toda costa (comprarme) ese abrigo que vi ayer
- throw o.s. into sth heart and soul- take sth to heart- wear one's heart on one's sleeve- win sb's hearteat out 2., sick 1., 1)she won the hearts of the people — se ganó el corazón or el afecto de la gente
3) (=courage)I did not have the heart or I could not find it in my heart to tell her — no tuve valor para decírselo
- be in good heart- lose heart- have one's heart in one's mouth- put new heart into sb- take heartwe may take heart from the fact that... — que nos aliente el hecho de que...
4) (=centre) [of lettuce, celery] cogollo m ; [of place, earth etc] corazón m, seno m, centro m5) (=memory)•
to learn/know/recite sth by heart — aprender/saber/recitar algo de memoria6) hearts (Cards) corazones mpl ; (in Spanish pack) copas fpl2.CPDheart attack N — (Med) ataque m al corazón, infarto m (de miocardio)
heart complaint N — enfermedad f cardíaca
heart condition N — condición f cardíaca
heart disease N — enfermedad f cardíaca
heart failure N — (=attack) fallo m del corazón, paro m cardíaco; (chronic) insuficiencia f cardíaca
heart monitor N — monitor m cardíaco
heart murmur N — soplo m en el corazón
heart operation N — operación f cardíaca
heart rate N — ritmo m del corazón
heart surgeon N — cirujano(-a) m / f cardiólogo(-a)
heart surgery N — cirugía f cardíaca
heart transplant N — trasplante m del corazón
heart trouble N — problemas mpl de corazón, afecciones fpl cardíacas
to have heart trouble — padecer or sufrir del corazón
* * *[hɑːrt, hɑːt]1) ( Anat) corazón mcross my heart (and hope to die)! — te lo juro!, que me muera ahora mismo si no es verdad!; (before n) < disease> del corazón, cardíaco; < operation> de(l) corazón
heart rate — ritmo m cardíaco
2) ( seat of emotions)to have a good/kind heart — tener* buen corazón, ser* de buen corazón
to have a cold heart — ser* duro de corazón
in one's heart of hearts — en lo más profundo de su (or mi etc) corazón, en su (or mi etc) fuero interno
have a heart! — (colloq) no seas malo! (fam), ten compasión! (hum)
to be all heart — ser* todo corazón
to be close o near o dear to somebody's heart — significar* mucho para alguien
after somebody's own heart: he's a man/writer after my own heart es un hombre/escritor con el que me identifico; to break somebody's heart: it breaks my heart to see her cry me parte el alma verla llorar; to die of a broken heart morirse* de pena; to cry one's heart out llorar a lágrima viva; to eat one's heart out morirse* de envidia; to find it in one's heart to + inf: can you find it in your heart to forgive me? ¿podrás perdonarme?; to have a heart of gold tener* un corazón de oro, ser* todo corazón; her/his heart is in the right place es de buen corazón, es una buena persona; to learn/know something by heart aprender/saber* algo de memoria; my/her/his heart wasn't in it lo hacía sin ganas or sin poner entusiasmo; to one's heart's content: here you can eat/swim to your heart's content aquí puedes comer/nadar todo lo que quieras; to open one's heart to somebody abrirle* el corazón a alguien; to set one's heart on something: she's set her heart on being chosen for the team su mayor ilusión es que la elijan para formar parte del equipo; he has his heart set on a new bike lo que más quiere es una bicicleta nueva; to take something to heart tomarse algo a pecho; to wear one's heart on one's sleeve demostrar* sus (or mis etc) sentimientos; with all one's heart, with one's whole heart de todo corazón; to win somebody's heart — ganarse or conquistarse a alguien
3) (courage, morale) ánimos mplto lose heart — descorazonarse, desanimarse
my heart was in my mouth — tenía el corazón en un puño or en la boca, tenía el alma en vilo
my/her heart sank — se me/le cayó el alma a los pies
not to have the heart to do something: I didn't have the heart to tell him no tuve valor para decírselo; to be in good heart tener* la moral muy alta; to do somebody's heart good — alegrarle el corazón a alguien
4)a) ( central part)the heart of the city/country — el corazón or centro de la ciudad/del país
the heart of the matter — el meollo or el quid del asunto
b) (of cabbage, lettuce) cogollo martichoke hearts — corazones mpl de alcachofas or (RPl) de alcauciles
5) ( heart-shaped object) corazón m -
5 heart
adj.cardiaco, del corazón.s.1 corazón (organ)2 corazón (seat of the emotions)3 (entusiasmo, coraje)to take/lose heart animarse/desanimarsehe tried to convince them but his heart wasn't in it trató de convencerlos, pero sin mucho empeñoI didn't have the heart to tell him no tuve coraje para decírseloby heart de memoria5 (centro)the heart of the matter el meollo del asuntoin the heart of the forest en el corazón del bosque6 (naipes)hearts corazones7 ánimo, fibra, aliento, arrojo.8 cerne. -
6 lose
lu:zpast tense, past participle - lost; verb1) (to stop having; to have no longer: She has lost interest in her work; I have lost my watch; He lost hold of the rope.) perder2) (to have taken away from one (by death, accident etc): She lost her father last year; The ship was lost in the storm; He has lost his job.) perder3) (to put (something) where it cannot be found: My secretary has lost your letter.) perder4) (not to win: I always lose at cards; She lost the race.) perder5) (to waste or use more (time) than is necessary: He lost no time in informing the police of the crime.) perder•- loser- loss
- lost
- at a loss
- a bad
- good loser
- lose oneself in
- lose one's memory
- lose out
- lost in
- lost on
lose vb perdertr[lʊːz]1 (in general) perder2 (immerse) sumergir (in, en)3 (clock) atrasar1 (in general) perder2 (clock) atrasarse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto have nothing to lose familiar no tener nada que perderto lose one's head perder la cabezato lose one's heart (to somebody) enamorarse (de alguien)to lose one's life perder la vida, perecerto lose one's way perderseto lose sight of something perder algo de vistato lose weight adelgazar, perder peso1) : perderI lost my umbrella: perdí mi paraguasto lose blood: perder sangreto lose one's voice: quedarse fónicoto have nothing to lose: no tener nada que perderto lose no time: no perder tiempoto lose weight: perder peso, adelgazarto lose one's temper: perder los estribos, enojarse, enfadarseto lose sight of: perder de vista2) : costar, hacer perderthe errors lost him his job: los errores le costaron su empleo3) : atrasarmy watch loses 5 minutes a day: mi reloj atrasa 5 minutos por día4)to lose oneself : perderse, ensimismarselose vi1) : perderwe lost to the other team: perdimos contra el otro equipo2) : atrasarsethe clock loses time: el reloj se atrasav.(§ p.,p.p.: lost) = palmar v.• perder v.luːz
1.
1) transitive verb (past & past p lost)2) ( mislay) perder*I've lost my key — he perdido or se me ha perdido la llave
to lose one's way — perderse*
3) ( be deprived of) \<\<sight/territory/right\>\> perder*4)a) ( fail to keep) \<\<customers/popularity/speed\>\> perder*we are losing our best teachers to industry — los mejores profesores se nos están yendo a trabajar a la industria
b) ( rid oneself of) \<\<inhibitions\>\> perder*to lose weight — adelgazar*, perder* peso
5)a) ( shake off) \<\<pursuer\>\> deshacerse* deb) ( lose sight of) perder* de vista6) ( confuse) confundiryou've lost me there! — no entiendo, no te sigo
7) ( cause to lose) costar*, hacer* perdertheir hesitation lost them the contract — la falta de decisión les costó or les hizo perder el contrato
8)a) ( miss) \<\<train/flight/connection\>\> perder*b) ( let pass) \<\<time/opportunity\>\> perder*9) ( fail to win) \<\<game/battle/election\>\> perder*
2.
vi1)a) ( be beaten) \<\<team/contestant/party\>\> perder*to lose TO somebody — perder* frente a alguien
b) losing pres p <team/party> perdedorto be on the losing side — ser* de los perdedores
2)a) ( suffer losses) perder*to lose on a deal — salir* perdiendo en un negocio
b) ( be less effective) perder*the poem loses in translation — el poema pierde con la traducción or al ser traducido
3) \<\<watch/clock\>\> atrasar, atrasarse
3.
v reflPhrasal Verbs:- lose out[luːz] (pt, pp lost)1. VT1) (=mislay, fail to find) perder2) (=be deprived of) perderwhat have you got to lose? — ¿qué tienes tú que perder?, ¿qué vas a perder?
he lost £1,000 on that deal — perdió 1.000 libras en ese trato
breath 1., 1), voice 1., 1)•
to lose the use of an arm — perder el uso de un brazo3) (=fail to keep) perder•
she's lost her figure/her looks — ha perdido la línea/su belleza- lose itinterest 1., 1), rag I, 1., 1), sight 1., 2), temper 1., 1)4) (=fail to win) [+ game, war, election] perder5) (=miss)to lose one's way — (lit) perderse; (fig) perder el rumbo
6) (=waste) perder•
there was not a moment to lose — no había ni un momento que perder•
I wouldn't lose any sleep over it! — ¡no pierdas el sueño por ello!, ¡no te preocupes por ello!•
to lose no time in doing sth, she lost no time in making up her mind — se decidió enseguida, no le costó nada decidirseI lost no time in telling him exactly what I thought of him — no vacilé en decirle exactamente lo que pensaba de él
7) * (=get rid of) [+ unwanted companion] deshacerse de; [+ pursuers] zafarse de•
to lose weight — perder peso, adelgazarI lost two kilos — perdí or adelgacé dos kilos
8) (=fall behind) [watch, clock] atrasarse9) (=cause loss of)it lost him the job/the match — le costó el puesto/el partido, le hizo perder el puesto/el partido
that deal lost me £5,000 — ese negocio me costó or me hizo perder 5.000 libras
10) * (=confuse) confundiryou've lost me there — ahora sí que me has confundido, ahora sí que no te entiendo
11)to lose o.s. in sth — (a book, music, memories) ensimismarse en algo
2. VI1) [player, team] perder•
you can't lose — no tienes pérdida, tienes que forzosamente salir ganando2) [watch, clock] atrasarse- lose out* * *[luːz]
1.
1) transitive verb (past & past p lost)2) ( mislay) perder*I've lost my key — he perdido or se me ha perdido la llave
to lose one's way — perderse*
3) ( be deprived of) \<\<sight/territory/right\>\> perder*4)a) ( fail to keep) \<\<customers/popularity/speed\>\> perder*we are losing our best teachers to industry — los mejores profesores se nos están yendo a trabajar a la industria
b) ( rid oneself of) \<\<inhibitions\>\> perder*to lose weight — adelgazar*, perder* peso
5)a) ( shake off) \<\<pursuer\>\> deshacerse* deb) ( lose sight of) perder* de vista6) ( confuse) confundiryou've lost me there! — no entiendo, no te sigo
7) ( cause to lose) costar*, hacer* perdertheir hesitation lost them the contract — la falta de decisión les costó or les hizo perder el contrato
8)a) ( miss) \<\<train/flight/connection\>\> perder*b) ( let pass) \<\<time/opportunity\>\> perder*9) ( fail to win) \<\<game/battle/election\>\> perder*
2.
vi1)a) ( be beaten) \<\<team/contestant/party\>\> perder*to lose TO somebody — perder* frente a alguien
b) losing pres p <team/party> perdedorto be on the losing side — ser* de los perdedores
2)a) ( suffer losses) perder*to lose on a deal — salir* perdiendo en un negocio
b) ( be less effective) perder*the poem loses in translation — el poema pierde con la traducción or al ser traducido
3) \<\<watch/clock\>\> atrasar, atrasarse
3.
v reflPhrasal Verbs:- lose out -
7 to lose one's heart (to somebody)
enamorarse (de alguien)English-spanish dictionary > to lose one's heart (to somebody)
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8 to lose one's heart to
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9 where
where1 adv dónde / adóndewhere are you going for your holidays? ¿dónde vas de vacaciones?where2 conj donde / en quetr[weəSMALLr/SMALL]1 (direct question - place) dónde; (- direction) adónde■ where is it? ¿dónde está?■ where did you go? ¿adónde fuiste?■ where does she live? ¿dónde vive?■ where are you from ¿de dónde eres?2 (indirect question) dónde, adónde3 (at, in or which) donde, en que; (to which) adonde, a donde1 donde2 (when) cuandowhere ['hwɛr] adv: dónde, adóndewhere is he?: ¿dónde está?where did they go?: ¿adónde fueron?where conj: donde, adondeshe knows where the house is: sabe donde está la casashe goes where she likes: va adonde quierawhere pron: dondeChicago is where I live: Chicago es donde vivoadv.• adonde adv.• adónde adv.• donde adv.• dónde adv.• en dónde adv.conj.• adónde conj.• donde conj.• dónde conj.• en dónde conj.
I hwer, weə(r)1) dónde; ( indicating direction) adónde, dóndewhere's Lewes? — ¿dónde está or queda Lewes?
where are you taking me? — ¿(a)dónde me llevan?
where are you from? — ¿de dónde eres?
where it's at — (colloq)
Aspen's OK for skiing, but Hartlepool is really where it's at — Aspen no está mal para esquiar, pero adonde hay que ir es a Hartlepool
2) ( as relative) donde
II
a) donde; ( indicating direction) adonde, dondeb) ( in cases where) cuandowhere her private life is concerned... — cuando se trata de su vida privada...
where appropriate — cuando or allí donde sea apropiado
c) ( contrasting) cuando[wɛǝ(r)]where others would lose heart, she remains optimistic — cuando otros perderían el ánimo, ella permanece optimista
1. ADVERB1) (in direct and indirect questions, reported speech)
Where in direct questions as well as after report verbs and expressions of (un)certainty and doubt (e.g. no sé) usually translates as dónde (with an accent), sometimes preceded by a preposition: dóndewhere am I? — ¿dónde estoy?
where are you going (to)? — ¿a dónde or adónde vas?, ¿dónde vas?
where have you come from? — ¿de dónde has venido?
where can I have put my keys (down)? — ¿dónde or en dónde puedo haber puesto las llaves?
where should we be if...? — ¿a dónde or adónde habríamos ido a parar si...?
where did we go wrong? — ¿en qué nos equivocamos?
can you tell me where there's a chemist's? — ¿puede decirme dónde hay una farmacia?
a) (=the place that)
Where in other statements is usually translated as donde (without an accent), again often preceded by a preposition: dondethat's just where you're wrong! — ¡en eso te equivocas!, ¡ahí es donde te equivocas!
that's where I disagree with you — en eso no estoy de acuerdo contigo, ahí es donde no estoy de acuerdo contigo
where this book is dangerous is in suggesting that... — el aspecto peligroso de este libro es la sugerencia de que...
b) (after noun) dondethis is the hotel where we stayed — este es el hotel donde or en el que estuvimos
the beach where we picnicked — la playa donde or a la que or adonde fuimos de picnic
2. CONJUNCTION1) (=if)where husband and wife both work, benefits are... — en el caso de que los dos esposos trabajen, los beneficios son...
2) (=whereas) mientras que, cuandosometimes a teacher will be listened to where a parent might not — a veces a un maestro se le hace caso, mientras que or cuando a un padre tal vez no
* * *
I [hwer, weə(r)]1) dónde; ( indicating direction) adónde, dóndewhere's Lewes? — ¿dónde está or queda Lewes?
where are you taking me? — ¿(a)dónde me llevan?
where are you from? — ¿de dónde eres?
where it's at — (colloq)
Aspen's OK for skiing, but Hartlepool is really where it's at — Aspen no está mal para esquiar, pero adonde hay que ir es a Hartlepool
2) ( as relative) donde
II
a) donde; ( indicating direction) adonde, dondeb) ( in cases where) cuandowhere her private life is concerned... — cuando se trata de su vida privada...
where appropriate — cuando or allí donde sea apropiado
c) ( contrasting) cuandowhere others would lose heart, she remains optimistic — cuando otros perderían el ánimo, ella permanece optimista
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10 desanimarse
■desanimarse verbo reflexivo to lose heart, get discouraged ' desanimarse' also found in these entries: Spanish: desanimar English: heart -
11 abandonarse
■abandonarse verbo reflexivo
1 (descuidarse) to let oneself go: se ha abandonado mucho desde la muerte de su marido, she's really let herself go since her husband's death
2 (entregarse) to abandon oneself o to give oneself over: no te abandones al desaliento, don't lose heart ' abandonarse' also found in these entries: Spanish: darse - entregarse - abandonar - dejar - entregar English: let -
12 abatirse
■abatirse verbo reflexivo
1 (desmoralizarse) to lose heart, become depressed: se abate con facilidad, he has a tendency to get depressed
2 (caer sobre) to swoop down [sobre, on]: la desgracia se abatió sobre un pueblo de Burgos, misfortune hit a town in Burgos ' abatirse' also found in these entries: Spanish: derrumbarse - desfallecer - abatir English: swoop -
13 achicarse
■achicarse verbo reflexivo
1 (apocarse) to lose heart
2 (mermar) to get smaller ' achicarse' also found in these entries: Spanish: achicar English: chicken - shrink -
14 desalentarse
■desalentarse verbo reflexivo to get discouraged, lose heart -
15 desfallecer
desfallecer ( conjugate desfallecer) verbo intransitivo [ fuerzas] to fade, fail; [ ánimos] to flag;
desfallecer verbo intransitivo
1 (de hambre, cansancio) to feel faint (perder el conocimiento) to faint
2 (perder el ánimo, abatirse) to lose heart ' desfallecer' also found in these entries: Spanish: abandonar English: droop - flag -
16 desinflarse
■desinflarse verbo reflexivo
1 (perder el aire) to go flat
2 (perder el ánimo) to lose heart ' desinflarse' also found in these entries: Spanish: desinflar English: go down -
17 desmoralizar
desmoralizar ( conjugate desmoralizar) verbo transitivo to demoralize, dishearten desmoralizarse verbo pronominal to get demoralized o disheartened, to lose heart
desmoralizar verbo transitivo to demoralize ' desmoralizar' also found in these entries: English: demoralize -
18 flaquear
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19 vencer
vencer ( conjugate vencer) verbo transitivo ‹rival/competidor› to defeat, beat;c) ( dominar):verbo intransitivo 1 [ejército/equipo] to win, be victorious;◊ ¡venceremos! we shall overcome!2 vencerse verbo pronominal (AmL) [pasaporte/garantía] to expire;◊ se me venció el carnet my card expired o ran out
vencer
I verbo transitivo
1 Mil to defeat Dep to beat
1 (resistir, dominar) to restrain
vencer la tentación, to overcome the temptation
2 (superar) vencer un obstáculo/una dificultad, to surmount an obstacle/a difficulty
3 (ser dominado por) les venció la desesperación, they were overcome by despair
nos venció el sueño, we were overcome by sleep
II verbo intransitivo
1 (una letra, factura) to fall due
2 (un plazo, contrato) to expire
3 Mil Dep to win Locuciones: dejarse vencer: no te dejes vencer, sigue adelante, don't lose heart, go ahead ' vencer' also found in these entries: Spanish: aplastar - batir - ganar - machacar - poder - apabullar - arrollar - imponer - superar English: beat - conquer - defeat - establishment - expire - get over - mature - overcome - run out - surmount - warranty - wear down - grim - lapse - over - rout - run - vanquish -
20 vencido
Del verbo vencer: ( conjugate vencer) \ \
vencido es: \ \el participioMultiple Entries: vencer vencido
vencer ( conjugate vencer) verbo transitivo ‹rival/competidor› to defeat, beat;c) ( dominar):verbo intransitivo 1 [ejército/equipo] to win, be victorious;◊ ¡vencidoemos! we shall overcome!2 vencerse verbo pronominal (AmL) [pasaporte/garantía] to expire;◊ se me venció el carnet my card expired o ran out
vencido -da adjetivo 1 ‹ejército/país› defeated, vanquished (liter); ‹equipo/jugador› losing ( before n), beaten;◊ darse por vencido to give up o in2◊ estos antibióticos están vencidos (AmL) these antibiotics are past their expiration (AmE) o (BrE) expiry date■ sustantivo masculino, femenino:
vencer
I verbo transitivo
1 Mil to defeat Dep to beat
1 (resistir, dominar) to restrain
vencer la tentación, to overcome the temptation
2 (superar) vencer un obstáculo/una dificultad, to surmount an obstacle/a difficulty
3 (ser dominado por) les venció la desesperación, they were overcome by despair
nos venció el sueño, we were overcome by sleep
II verbo intransitivo
1 (una letra, factura) to fall due
2 (un plazo, contrato) to expire
3 Mil Dep to win Locuciones: dejarse vencer: no te dejes vencer, sigue adelante, don't lose heart, go ahead
vencido,-a
I adjetivo
1 Mil defeated Dep beaten
2 (plazo) expired, out-of-date
3 (pase, vale, carné) out-of-date
4 (letra, deuda) due, payable
II sustantivo masculino y femenino defeated person
los vencidos, the defeated Locuciones: familiar a la tercera va la vencida, third time lucky ' vencido' also found in these entries: Spanish: combate - darse - mas - vencida English: arrears - give in - give up - give up on - mature - overdue - stick at - out
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См. также в других словарях:
lose heart — To become discouraged • • • Main Entry: ↑heart * * * lose heart phrase to stop believing that you can succeed He never lost heart, even though his rival was way ahead. Thesaurus: to lose hope, or to give up hopesynonym … Useful english dictionary
lose heart — {v. phr.} To feel discouraged because of failure; to lose hope of success. * /The team had won no games and it lost heart./ Contrast: TAKE HEART … Dictionary of American idioms
lose heart — {v. phr.} To feel discouraged because of failure; to lose hope of success. * /The team had won no games and it lost heart./ Contrast: TAKE HEART … Dictionary of American idioms
lose heart — If you lose heart, you stop believing that you can succeed in something, or lose your confidence, courage or conviction … The small dictionary of idiomes
lose heart — ► lose heart become discouraged. Main Entry: ↑lose … English terms dictionary
lose heart — index languish Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
lose heart — become discouraged She has begun to lose heart in her studies to learn the piano … Idioms and examples
lose heart — to stop believing that you can succeed. Don t lose heart, there ll be plenty more chances for promotion … New idioms dictionary
lose heart to — lose (your) heart (to (someone/something)) to fall in love. I lost my heart to airplanes when I was eight years old, and I ve wanted to be a pilot ever since … New idioms dictionary
lose\ heart — v. phr. To feel discouraged because of failure; to lose hope of success. The team had won no games and it lost heart. Contrast: take heart … Словарь американских идиом
lose heart — Synonyms and related words: abandon hope, become suicidal, despair, despair of, despond, droop, falter, give up, give up hope, give way, hit rock bottom, languish, lose hope, plumb the depths, reach the depths, sink, sink into despair, touch… … Moby Thesaurus