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1 lioso
m.troublemaker, rabble-rouser, peace-breaker, peacebreaker.* * *► adjetivo1 confusing* * *ADJ gossipy* * *- sa adjetivo (fam) confusing, muddling* * *- sa adjetivo (fam) confusing, muddling* * *lioso -sa( fam); confusing, muddling* * *
lioso
lioso,-a adj fam (tema, situación) confusing
' lioso' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
enredo
- liosa
* * *lioso, -a adjFam1. [complicado] [asunto] complicated;[explicación, historia] convoluted, involved* * *adj confusing* * *1) : confusing, muddled2) : troublemaking -
2 a paso de tortuga
at a snail's pace* * ** * *Ex. For our small academic center, we're trying to do something for free, and muddling along at a snail's pace.* * *Ex: For our small academic center, we're trying to do something for free, and muddling along at a snail's pace.
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3 arreglárselas a duras penas
(v.) = muddle throughEx. The average user is not only frustrated by a library, but is working under the false notion that most of what he needs can be found by muddling through the card catalog.* * *(v.) = muddle throughEx: The average user is not only frustrated by a library, but is working under the false notion that most of what he needs can be found by muddling through the card catalog.
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4 hacer Algo con dificultad
(v.) = muddle through, plod (along/through)Ex. The average user is not only frustrated by a library, but is working under the false notion that most of what he needs can be found by muddling through the card catalog.Ex. He or she has to plod through the menu each time, and so it is useful if mnemonics and/or abbreviated commands can be provided.* * *(v.) = muddle through, plod (along/through)Ex: The average user is not only frustrated by a library, but is working under the false notion that most of what he needs can be found by muddling through the card catalog.
Ex: He or she has to plod through the menu each time, and so it is useful if mnemonics and/or abbreviated commands can be provided. -
5 ir tirando
v.to get by.* * *(espabilarse) to manage, get by 2 (tener buena salud) to be okay————————to get by* * *to get by, manage* * *(v.) = get along + in the world, shuffle along, tick over, muddle along, keep + the wolves from the doorEx. The public library's sole reason for being is to help people get along in the world, to help school children get better grades, to help preachers write better sermons that will keep the congregation awake, to help newspapermen find facts.Ex. So I say, we're just a bunch of poor, old, Midwestern pig farmers shuffling along trying to do what we can = Por eso digo que somos tan sólo un puñado de criadores de cerdos, viejos y pobres, de la región central de los Estados Unidos que vamos tirando como podemos.Ex. It seems to me that the Dewey engine is still ticking over, though there's an occasional knocking and it could no doubt do with a good tuning.Ex. For our small academic center, we're trying to do something for free, and muddling along at a snail's pace.Ex. Some can afford this as they are semi-retired or have other sources of income to keep the wolves from the door.* * *(v.) = get along + in the world, shuffle along, tick over, muddle along, keep + the wolves from the doorEx: The public library's sole reason for being is to help people get along in the world, to help school children get better grades, to help preachers write better sermons that will keep the congregation awake, to help newspapermen find facts.
Ex: So I say, we're just a bunch of poor, old, Midwestern pig farmers shuffling along trying to do what we can = Por eso digo que somos tan sólo un puñado de criadores de cerdos, viejos y pobres, de la región central de los Estados Unidos que vamos tirando como podemos.Ex: It seems to me that the Dewey engine is still ticking over, though there's an occasional knocking and it could no doubt do with a good tuning.Ex: For our small academic center, we're trying to do something for free, and muddling along at a snail's pace.Ex: Some can afford this as they are semi-retired or have other sources of income to keep the wolves from the door. -
6 lentamente
adv.slowly, heavily, lazily, lingeringly.* * *► adverbio1 slowly* * *adv.* * *ADV slowlyel tráfico circulaba muy lentamente — the traffic was very slow-moving o was going very slowly
la libra ha subido lentamente en el último año — the pound has edged upwards in the last year, the pound has risen slowly in the last year
* * *= at a snail's pace, slowly.Ex. For our small academic center, we're trying to do something for free, and muddling along at a snail's pace.Ex. However, lengthy and complex consultative committees can hinder revision, and make for a slowly changing scheme.----* arder lentamente = smoulder [smolder, -USA].* avanzar lentamente = creep, creep along.* muy lentamente = very slowly.* que arde lentamente = smouldering [smoldering, -USA].* que avanza lentamente = crawling.* * *= at a snail's pace, slowly.Ex: For our small academic center, we're trying to do something for free, and muddling along at a snail's pace.
Ex: However, lengthy and complex consultative committees can hinder revision, and make for a slowly changing scheme.* arder lentamente = smoulder [smolder, -USA].* avanzar lentamente = creep, creep along.* muy lentamente = very slowly.* que arde lentamente = smouldering [smoldering, -USA].* que avanza lentamente = crawling.* * *slowly* * *lentamente advslowly -
7 poco a poco
slowly, gradually, bit by bit* * ** * *= gradually, piecemeal, slowly, incrementally, at a snail's pace, little by little, bit by bitEx. The indexing changes gradually with time, as the natural language of the documents covered by the index evolves.Ex. The current practice of promotion and projection of public library services tends to be amateurish, piecemeal, unsustained and difficult to evaluate.Ex. However, lengthy and complex consultative committees can hinder revision, and make for a slowly changing scheme.Ex. These changes occurring incrementally reflected the growing complexity of chemical methodology.Ex. For our small academic center, we're trying to do something for free, and muddling along at a snail's pace.Ex. Little by little his heath improved and he was able to walk further and further each day.Ex. I love movies like that -- where slowly, gradually, bit by bit, all the characters realize that the villain was really disastrously mendacious and criminal.* * *= gradually, piecemeal, slowly, incrementally, at a snail's pace, little by little, bit by bitEx: The indexing changes gradually with time, as the natural language of the documents covered by the index evolves.
Ex: The current practice of promotion and projection of public library services tends to be amateurish, piecemeal, unsustained and difficult to evaluate.Ex: However, lengthy and complex consultative committees can hinder revision, and make for a slowly changing scheme.Ex: These changes occurring incrementally reflected the growing complexity of chemical methodology.Ex: For our small academic center, we're trying to do something for free, and muddling along at a snail's pace.Ex: Little by little his heath improved and he was able to walk further and further each day.Ex: I love movies like that -- where slowly, gradually, bit by bit, all the characters realize that the villain was really disastrously mendacious and criminal. -
8 embrollador
adj.1 troublemaking.2 muddling, confusing.m.entangler, confounder.* * *► adjetivo1 confusing, muddling► nombre masculino,nombre femenino1 troublemaker -
9 mezclar
v.1 to mix.mezcló la pintura roja con la amarilla she mixed the red and yellow paint togetherElla mezcla medicamentos She mixes drugs.Ella mezcla las piezas del juego She mixes the game pieces.2 to mix up.3 to confuse.Ella mezcla las ideas She confuses ideas.* * *1 (incorporar, unir) to mix, blend2 (desordenar) to mix up3 (persona) to involve (en, in)1 (personas) to mix ( con, with)2 (cosas) to get mixed up3 (entremeterse) to interfere (en, in)* * *verb1) to mix, blend2) involve•* * *1. VT1) (=combinar) [+ ingredientes, colores] to mix, mix together; [+ estilos] to mix, combine; [+ personas] to mixun artista que mezcla estilos diferentes en su obra — an artist who mixes o combines different styles in his work
han mezclado a niños de distintos niveles en la misma clase — they have mixed children of different abilities in the same class
he mezclado el agua caliente con la fría — I've mixed the hot and cold water together, I've mixed the hot water with the cold
la banda sonora mezcla la música tradicional con el rock — the soundtrack is a mixture of traditional and rock music
la harina y el azúcar se mezclan por partes iguales — equal quantities of flour and sugar are mixed (together)
la comida china mezcla sabores salados y dulces — Chinese food combines o mixes savoury and sweet flavours
2) (=confundir, desordenar) [+ fotos, papeles] to mix up, mess up; [+ idiomas] to mix up, muddle up; [+ naipes] to shuffle¿quién me ha mezclado todos los papeles? — who's mixed o messed up all my papers?
cuando habla mezcla los dos idiomas — when he talks he mixes o muddles up the two languages
3) [+ café, tabaco, whisky] to blend4) (Mús) [+ sonido] to mix5) (=implicar)mezclar a algn en algo — to involve sb in sth, get sb involved in sth
no quiero que me mezcles en ese asunto — I don't want you to involve me o get me involved in that business
2.VI * [con bebidas alcohólicas] to mix (one's) drinks3.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) ( combinar) to mixb) <café/vino/tabaco> to blend2) <documentos/ropa> to mix up, get... mixed up3) ( involucrar)2.mezclar a alguien en algo — to get somebody mixed up o involved in something
mezclarse v pron1) personaa) (con un fondo, una multitud) to mergeb) ( involucrarse)mezclarse en algo — to get mixed up o involved in something
mezclarse en cuestiones políticas — to get mixed up o involved in politics
c) ( tener trato con)2) razas/culturas to mix* * *= collate, interfile, merge, mix, blend, fuse, mingle (with), cross + the line, remix, mix up, admix, knot into, weave together, mash up, commingle.Ex. Contents page bulletins which comprise copies of contents pages of periodicals collated and dispatched to users are also reliant upon titles.Ex. File boxes can be used and filed on shelves, if appropriate, interfiled with the books.Ex. During the construction of a thesaurus, the computer can be enlisted to sort, merge, edit and compare terms.Ex. Plaster was mixed with water and poured over the type, and allowed to set; when it had hardened it was lifted off the page (the oil preventing it from sticking to the type), and baked hard in an oven.Ex. In her last appraisal they had observed how she blended many attractive personal qualities with intelligence, energy, and determination.Ex. The experiment is financed externally and aims to fuse the functions of the 2 library types.Ex. Not so long ago, the far off lands existed, to most people, in their imagination where they mingled with fairy tales and imaginary stories.Ex. This is a critical distinction, and the line between policy and operations should not be crossed.Ex. Once music is digitized you can filter it, bend it, archive it, rearrange it, remix it, mess with it.Ex. This recipe will teach kids the basics of mixing up a flaky crust -- the first and most important step in baking an apple pie.Ex. This ready-to-eat nutritious food is made by admixing condensed milk with rolled oats, honey, dates, wheat germ, coconuts, and walnuts.Ex. The issues entangled in Van Gogh's work - issues of the market, gender, and class - were also knotted into the work of many avant-garde artists of the late 19th c.Ex. She does this by weaving together, in a highly structured pattern, pieces from a variety of texts.Ex. The name comes from pop music, where DJs have made a hobby out of mashing up multiple, disparate songs to create new sounds.Ex. By mixing the marital property (your paycheck) with the separate property (your inheritance), you have ' commingled' them, and they cannot be considered separate property anymore.----* cuenco para mezclar = mixing bowl.* imposible de mezclar = unmixable.* mezclarse = socialise [socialize, -USA], run together.* mezclarse con = blend into, blend in with.* sin mezclar = unmixed.* volver a mezclar = remix.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) ( combinar) to mixb) <café/vino/tabaco> to blend2) <documentos/ropa> to mix up, get... mixed up3) ( involucrar)2.mezclar a alguien en algo — to get somebody mixed up o involved in something
mezclarse v pron1) personaa) (con un fondo, una multitud) to mergeb) ( involucrarse)mezclarse en algo — to get mixed up o involved in something
mezclarse en cuestiones políticas — to get mixed up o involved in politics
c) ( tener trato con)2) razas/culturas to mix* * *= collate, interfile, merge, mix, blend, fuse, mingle (with), cross + the line, remix, mix up, admix, knot into, weave together, mash up, commingle.Ex: Contents page bulletins which comprise copies of contents pages of periodicals collated and dispatched to users are also reliant upon titles.
Ex: File boxes can be used and filed on shelves, if appropriate, interfiled with the books.Ex: During the construction of a thesaurus, the computer can be enlisted to sort, merge, edit and compare terms.Ex: Plaster was mixed with water and poured over the type, and allowed to set; when it had hardened it was lifted off the page (the oil preventing it from sticking to the type), and baked hard in an oven.Ex: In her last appraisal they had observed how she blended many attractive personal qualities with intelligence, energy, and determination.Ex: The experiment is financed externally and aims to fuse the functions of the 2 library types.Ex: Not so long ago, the far off lands existed, to most people, in their imagination where they mingled with fairy tales and imaginary stories.Ex: This is a critical distinction, and the line between policy and operations should not be crossed.Ex: Once music is digitized you can filter it, bend it, archive it, rearrange it, remix it, mess with it.Ex: This recipe will teach kids the basics of mixing up a flaky crust -- the first and most important step in baking an apple pie.Ex: This ready-to-eat nutritious food is made by admixing condensed milk with rolled oats, honey, dates, wheat germ, coconuts, and walnuts.Ex: The issues entangled in Van Gogh's work - issues of the market, gender, and class - were also knotted into the work of many avant-garde artists of the late 19th c.Ex: She does this by weaving together, in a highly structured pattern, pieces from a variety of texts.Ex: The name comes from pop music, where DJs have made a hobby out of mashing up multiple, disparate songs to create new sounds.Ex: By mixing the marital property (your paycheck) with the separate property (your inheritance), you have ' commingled' them, and they cannot be considered separate property anymore.* cuenco para mezclar = mixing bowl.* imposible de mezclar = unmixable.* mezclarse = socialise [socialize, -USA], run together.* mezclarse con = blend into, blend in with.* sin mezclar = unmixed.* volver a mezclar = remix.* * *mezclar [A1 ]vtA1 (combinar) to mixmezclar todo hasta formar una pasta mix all the ingredients into a paste, mix all the ingredients together to form a pastemezclando diferentes estilos se obtiene esta decoración this kind of decoration is achieved by mixing o combining different stylesmezclar la harina y la mantequilla con los dedos rub the butter into the flour with your fingertipsmezclar algo CON algo to mix sth WITH sthesta pintura se puede mezclar con agua this paint can be mixed with watermezclar los huevos con el azúcar mix the eggs and the sugar together2 ‹café/vino/tabaco› to blendB ‹papeles/documentos/ropa› to mix up, get … mixed uphas mezclado todas las fotos you've got(ten) the photographs all mixed o muddled upmezcla los dos idiomas she gets the two languages mixed o muddled upmezclar algo CON algo to get sth mixed up WITH sthmezcló estos recibos con los del mes pasado she got these receipts muddled o mixed up with last month'sC (involucrar) mezclar a algn EN algo to get sb mixed up o involved IN sth, involve sb IN sthno la mezcles en esto don't get her involved in this, don't involve her in thisA «persona»1 (con un fondo, una multitud) to merge2 (involucrarse) mezclarse EN algo to get mixed up o involved IN sthevita mezclarse en cuestiones políticas she avoids getting mixed up o involved in politics3 (tener trato con) mezclarse CON algn to mix WITH sbse mezcla con toda clase de gente she mixes with all kinds of peopleno te mezcles con ese tipo de gente don't associate o mix with people like thatB «razas/culturas» to mix* * *
mezclar ( conjugate mezclar) verbo transitivo
1
mezclar algo con algo to mix sth with sth
2 ‹documentos/ropa› to mix up, get … mixed up;
mezclar algo con algo to get sth mixed up with sth
3 ( involucrar) mezclar a algn en algo to get sb mixed up o involved in sth
mezclarse verbo pronominal
1
b) ( tener trato con) mezclarse con algn to mix with sb
2 [razas/culturas] to mix
mezclar verbo transitivo
1 (combinar, amalgamar) to mix, blend: no me gusta mezclar a los amigos, I don't like to mix my friends
2 (algo ordenado antes) to mix up: mezcló sus cosas con las tuyas, he got his things mixed up with yours
3 (involucrar) to involve, mix up
' mezclar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
batir
- combinarse
English:
blend
- merge
- mix
- scramble
- toss
- combine
- dub
- jumble
- mingle
- mixer
- mixing bowl
* * *♦ vt1. [combinar, unir] to mix;[tabaco, whisky] to blend;mezclar algo con algo to mix sth with sth;mezcló la pintura roja con la amarilla she mixed the red and yellow paint together, she mixed the red paint with the yellow2. [culturas, pueblos] to mix3. [confundir, desordenar] to mix up;no mezcles las piezas don't mix the pieces up;creo que estás mezclando los países I think you're mixing up o muddling up the countriesno me mezcles en tus asuntos don't involve me in your affairs, don't get me mixed up in your affairs* * *mezclar a alguien en algo get s.o. mixed up o involved in sth* * *mezclar vt1) : to mix, to blend2) : to mix up, to muddle3) involucrar: to involve* * *mezclar vb1. (en general) to mix2. (desordenar) to mix up -
10 embarullador
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11 embrollante
ADJ muddling, confusing -
12 atolondrado
• at a loss• bewildered• confused person• harebell• harehound• hart's tongue• harvest• hayseed• hazard• mindless• muddle• muddle-headedness• muddlehead• muddling• perpetuity due• perplexedly• rattled• reckless• scatter brained -
13 barroso
• clayish• muddling• muddy• muddy-coloured• Mudejar
См. также в других словарях:
Muddling — Muddle Mud dle, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Muddled}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Muddling}.] [From {Mud}.] 1. To make turbid, or muddy, as water. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] He did ill to muddle the water. L Estrange. [1913 Webster] 2. To cloud or stupefy; to render… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Muddling Through — „Muddling Through“ (deutsch: „Sich Durchwursteln ) ist in der Organisationstheorie eine Konzeption von Steuerung, deren Ergebnisse sich durch wechselseitig untereinander erfolgende Abstimmungsprozesse aller beteiligten Akteure ergeben. Bei dieser … Deutsch Wikipedia
Muddling spoon — A muddling spoon is a long handled spoon used in bartending. It resembles an iced tea spoon, but typically has a smaller head. Muddling spoons are not the same as muddlers, though both are used to make mixed (typically) alcoholic drinks. v … Wikipedia
muddling — mud·dle || mÊŒdl n. mess, disorganization; confusion v. confuse; mess up; soil; disturb; cause disorder; struggle through, push on … English contemporary dictionary
muddling — present part of muddle … Useful english dictionary
Muddling-through-Strategie — Entscheidungstheorie, die von nur wenigen Annahmen ausgeht. Es werden nicht alle möglichen Strategiealternativen gesucht und bewertet, sondern es wird nur eine relativ kleine Zahl von Alternativen betrachtet. Auch die daraus abgeleiteten… … Lexikon der Economics
Inkrementelles Entscheidungsmodell — Unter „Muddling Through“ (Deutsch: „Sich Durchwursteln ) versteht man eine Steuerungskonzeption, die zur Gänze auf zentrale bzw. zentralistische Planung verzichtet, bei der sich die Systemsteuerung gleichsam als Ergebnis einer untereinander… … Deutsch Wikipedia
Charles E. Lindblom — Born 1917 (age 93–94) Citizenship American Fields … Wikipedia
Anexo:Primera temporada de Friends — Friends: Primera Temporada Programa Friends País de origen Estados Unidos … Wikipedia Español
The Pilot — Episodio de Friends Título Piloto (Hispanoamérica)[1] En el que Monica tiene una compañera (España)[2] … Wikipedia Español
Charles E. Lindblom — Charles Edward Lindblom (* 1917) ist Sterling Professor für Politikwissenschaft und Wirtschaftswissenschaft an der Yale University. Er war Präsident der American Political Science Association und der Association for Comparative Economic Studies… … Deutsch Wikipedia