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1 often
'ofn(many times: I often go to the theatre; I should see him more often.) a menudo, con frecuenciaoften adv a menudo / muchas veceshow often? ¿cada cuánto? / ¿con qué frecuencia?how often do you wash the car? ¿cada cuánto lavas el coche?tr['ɒfən, 'ɒftən]1 (frequently) a menudo, con frecuencia■ how often do you go to the dentist? ¿cada cuánto vas al dentista?\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLmore often than not la mayoría de las vecesoften ['ɔfən, 'ɔftən] adv: muchas veces, a menudo, seguidoadv.• a menudo adv.• con frecuencia adv.• muchas veces adv.• mucho adv.'ɔːfən, 'ɔːftən, 'ɒfən, 'ɒftənadverb a menudoI see her quite often — la veo bastante a menudo or (AmL tb) seguido
how often do you see her? — ¿con qué frecuencia la ves?, ¿cada cuánto la ves?
he's right more often than not — la mayoría or las más de las veces tiene razón
you'll do that once too often and you'll hurt yourself — si sigues haciendo eso, vas a acabar haciéndote daño
['ɒfǝn]ADV a menudo, con frecuencia, seguido (LAm)I've often wondered why you turned the job down — me he preguntado muchas veces or a menudo or con frecuencia por qué no aceptaste el trabajo
do you often argue? — ¿discutís mucho?, ¿discutís muy a menudo?
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we visit her as often as possible — la visitamos tanto como nos es posiblewomen consult doctors twice as often as men — las mujeres consultan a un médico dos veces más que los hombres
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every so often — (of time) de vez en cuando; (of distance, spacing) de trecho en trecho, cada cierta distanciawe see each other every so often — nos vemos de vez en cuando, nos vemos alguna que otra vez
how often do you see him? — ¿cada cuánto lo ves?, ¿con qué or cuánta frecuencia lo ves?
how often have I warned you that this would happen? — ¿cuántas veces te he advertido de que iba a pasar esto?
how often she had asked herself that very question! — ¡cuántas veces se había hecho esa misma pregunta!
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he saw her less often now that she had a job — la veía con menos frecuencia ahora que tenía un trabajo•
more often than not — la mayoría de las veces, las más de las veces•
he's read it so often he knows it off by heart — lo ha leído tantas veces que se lo sabe de memoria•
(all) too often — con demasiada frecuencia, demasiado a menudo, demasiadas vecesOFTEN•
very often — muchísimas veces, muy a menudo
In statements
► When often means "on many occasions", you can usually translate it using con frecuencia or a menudo:
He often came to my house Venía con frecuencia or a menudo a mi casa
She doesn't often get angry No se enfada con frecuencia or a menudo
You are late too often Llegas tarde con demasiada frecuencia or demasiado a menudo ► In informal contexts, particularly when often can be substituted by a lot or much with no change of meaning, mucho is an alternative translation:
He doesn't often come to see me No viene mucho a verme
He often hangs out in this bar Para mucho en este bar ► Muc has veces is another possible translation, but it should be used with the present only if the time, place or activity is restricted in some way:
I've often heard him talk about the need for this law Le he oído muchas veces hablar de la necesidad de esta ley
It can often be difficult to discuss this subject with one's partner Muchas veces es difícil hablar con la pareja sobre este tema ► When often describes a predictable, habitual or regular action, you can often translate it using the present or imperfect of soler as applicable:
In England it is often cold in winter En Inglaterra suele hacer frío en invierno
I often have a glass of sherry before dinner Suelo tomar un jerez antes de cenar
We often went out for a walk in the evening Solíamos salir por la tarde a dar un paseo ► Use soler also when often means "in many cases":
This heart condition is often very serious Esta enfermedad cardíaca suele ser muy grave
In questions
► You can usually use con frecuencia in questions, though there are other possibilities:
How often do you go to Madrid? ¿Con qué frecuencia vas a Madrid?
Do you often go to Spain? ¿Vas a España con frecuencia?, ¿Vas a menudo or mucho a España? For further uses and examples, see main entry* * *['ɔːfən, 'ɔːftən, 'ɒfən, 'ɒftən]adverb a menudoI see her quite often — la veo bastante a menudo or (AmL tb) seguido
how often do you see her? — ¿con qué frecuencia la ves?, ¿cada cuánto la ves?
he's right more often than not — la mayoría or las más de las veces tiene razón
you'll do that once too often and you'll hurt yourself — si sigues haciendo eso, vas a acabar haciéndote daño
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2 lose touch (with)
(to stop communicating (with): I used to see him quite often but we have lost touch.) -
3 lose touch (with)
(to stop communicating (with): I used to see him quite often but we have lost touch.) -
4 tag along
( often with behind or with) (to follow or go (with someone), often when one is not wanted: We never get away from him - everywhere we go, he insists on tagging along (with us)!) pegar(se) a alguienv + advdo you mind if I tag along? — ¿les importa si los acompaño or (fam) si me les pego?
VI + ADV* * *v + advdo you mind if I tag along? — ¿les importa si los acompaño or (fam) si me les pego?
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5 fit in
( often with with) (to be able to live, exist etc in agreement or harmony: She doesn't fit in with the other children.) llevarse bien, integrarsev.• encuadrar v.1) v + adva) ( have enough room) caber*b) (go) ir*c) ( accord) \<\<detail/event\>\> concordar*, cuadrarto fit in with something — concordar* or cuadrar con algo
d) ( belong)she doesn't fit in here — esto no es para ella, ella no encaja aquí
e) (adjust, conform to)to fit in with somebody/something: he'll have to fit in with our plans tendrá que amoldarse a nuestros planes; she never fitted in with the rest — nunca se integró con los demás
2) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( find space for) acomodarb) ( fix in place) colocar*c) ( find time for)I can fit you in at ten o'clock — puedo atenderla or hacerle un hueco a las diez
she hoped to fit in some sightseeing — esperaba tener un poco de tiempo para salir a conocer el lugar
1. VI + ADVthat fits in with what he told me — eso concuerda or cuadra or se corresponde con lo que me dijo él
2) (=adapt)to fit in with sb's plans — amoldarse or adaptarse a los planes de algn
I'll fit in with whatever dates you've agreed on — me amoldaré or me adaptaré a las fechas que hayáis acordado
she was trying to arrange her work to fit in with her home life — intentaba organizar el trabajo de forma que se adaptara a su vida doméstica
3) (=belong) [person]she was great with the children and fitted in beautifully — con los niños era genial, y se adaptó perfectamente
will we all fit in? — ¿cabremos todos?
2. VT + ADV1) (=make room for)can you fit another book/passenger in? — ¿te cabe otro libro/pasajero más?
you could fit an illustration in here — aquí podrías poner una ilustración, aquí tienes sitio para poner una ilustración
2) (=make time for)we could fit in a round of golf before lunch — nos da tiempo a hacer un recorrido de golf antes de comer
* * *1) v + adva) ( have enough room) caber*b) (go) ir*c) ( accord) \<\<detail/event\>\> concordar*, cuadrarto fit in with something — concordar* or cuadrar con algo
d) ( belong)she doesn't fit in here — esto no es para ella, ella no encaja aquí
e) (adjust, conform to)to fit in with somebody/something: he'll have to fit in with our plans tendrá que amoldarse a nuestros planes; she never fitted in with the rest — nunca se integró con los demás
2) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( find space for) acomodarb) ( fix in place) colocar*c) ( find time for)I can fit you in at ten o'clock — puedo atenderla or hacerle un hueco a las diez
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6 get along
( often with with) (to be friendly or on good terms (with someone): I get along very well with him; The children just cannot get along together.) llevarse bien (con alguien)get along (with s.o.)expr.• llevarse bien (con alguien) expr.v.• frisarse v.• industriarse v.• manejarse v.get along* (To leave)expr.• marcharse v.v + adv1) ( be on one's way)I must be getting along now — me tengo que ir, tengo que ponerme en camino
2) (manage, cope)3) ( progress) \<\<work/patient\>\> marchar, andar*4) ( be on good terms)1. VI + ADV1) (=leave) marcharse, irseit's time we were getting along — ya es hora de que nos marchemos or nos vayamos
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get along with you! — (=go) ¡vete ya!, ¡lárgate!; (expressing disbelief) * ¡venga ya!, ¡anda ya!; (joking) ¡no digas bobadas!2) (=manage) arreglárselas *, apañárselas *to get along without sth/sb — arreglárselas sin algo *, apañárselas sin algo *
3) (=progress)how is he getting along? — ¿qué tal está?, ¿cómo le va? (LAm)
4) (=be on good terms) llevarse bien2.VT + ADV* * *v + adv1) ( be on one's way)I must be getting along now — me tengo que ir, tengo que ponerme en camino
2) (manage, cope)3) ( progress) \<\<work/patient\>\> marchar, andar*4) ( be on good terms) -
7 lash out
( often with at) (to hit out violently: He lashed out with his fists.) arremeterv + adv (+ prep + o)1) (physically, verbally) atacar*to lash out at/against somebody — ( physically) emprenderla a golpes (or patadas etc) con alguien, arremeter contra alguien; ( verbally) arremeter contra alguien
2) ( spend freely) (BrE colloq)to lash out (on something): we decided to lash out and buy a decent camera decidimos tirar la casa por la ventana y comprarnos una cámara decente (fam); I had lashed out on a new dress — había gastado un montón en comprarme un vestido nuevo (fam)
1. VI + ADV1)to lash out — (with fists) repartir golpes a diestro y siniestro; (with feet) soltar patadas, tirar coces
to lash out at or against sb — (lit, fig) arremeter contra algn
2) * (=spend)2.VT + ADV* (=spend)he had to lash out £50 — tuvo que desembolsar 50 libras
* * *v + adv (+ prep + o)1) (physically, verbally) atacar*to lash out at/against somebody — ( physically) emprenderla a golpes (or patadas etc) con alguien, arremeter contra alguien; ( verbally) arremeter contra alguien
2) ( spend freely) (BrE colloq)to lash out (on something): we decided to lash out and buy a decent camera decidimos tirar la casa por la ventana y comprarnos una cámara decente (fam); I had lashed out on a new dress — había gastado un montón en comprarme un vestido nuevo (fam)
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8 be the matter
( often with with) (to be the/a trouble, difficulty or thing that is wrong: Is anything the matter?; What's the matter with you?) ser el problema -
9 drop out
( often with of) (to withdraw from a group, from a course at university, or from the normal life of society: There are only two of us going to the theatre now Mary has dropped out; She's dropped out of college.) abandonarv.• abandonar v.v + advto drop out (of something): to drop out of school abandonar los estudios; to drop out of a course dejar de asistir a un curso; to drop out (of a competition/race) ( before event) no presentarse (a un concurso/una carrera); ( during event) abandonar (un curso/una carrera); to drop out of politics abandonar or dejar la política; to drop out (of society) — marginarse, convertirse* en un marginado
VI + ADV [contents etc] derramarse, salirse; (fig) (from competition) retirarseto drop out of society/university — abandonar la sociedad/la universidad
* * *v + advto drop out (of something): to drop out of school abandonar los estudios; to drop out of a course dejar de asistir a un curso; to drop out (of a competition/race) ( before event) no presentarse (a un concurso/una carrera); ( during event) abandonar (un curso/una carrera); to drop out of politics abandonar or dejar la política; to drop out (of society) — marginarse, convertirse* en un marginado
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10 hit out
( often with against or at) (to attempt to hit: The injured man hit out blindly at his attackers.) lanzar un ataque, atacarv + adva) ( strike)to hit out (at something/somebody) — pegarle* (a algo/alguien)
b) ( attack verbally)to hit out at o against something/somebody — atacar* algo/a alguien, arremeter contra algo/alguien
VI + ADV asestar un golpe; (wildly) repartir golpes (at a)to hit out at sb — asestar un golpe a algn; (fig) atacar a algn
* * *v + adva) ( strike)to hit out (at something/somebody) — pegarle* (a algo/alguien)
b) ( attack verbally)to hit out at o against something/somebody — atacar* algo/a alguien, arremeter contra algo/alguien
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11 measure up
( often with to) (to reach a certain required standard: John's performance doesn't measure up (to the others).) dar la talla, estar a la altura demeasure up vito measure up to : estar a la altura dev + adv estar* a la altura de las circunstanciasto measure up to something — estar* a la altura de algo
1. VT + ADV1) [+ wood, material] medir2) (=evaluate) [+ sb's intentions] averiguar; [+ situation] evaluar2. VI + ADV1) (=take measurements) tomar medidas2) (=fulfil expectations) dar la talla, estar a la altura* * *v + adv estar* a la altura de las circunstanciasto measure up to something — estar* a la altura de algo
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12 muscle in
( often with on) (to gain entry, or gain a share of something by force: The large firms have muscled in on all the important contracts.) entrometerse, inmiscuirsev + adv (colloq) meterse por medio ( con prepotencia)to muscle in on something: a rival company muscled in on their market — una compañía de la competencia se introdujo en su sector del mercado
VI + ADV* * *v + adv (colloq) meterse por medio ( con prepotencia)to muscle in on something: a rival company muscled in on their market — una compañía de la competencia se introdujo en su sector del mercado
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13 own up
( often with to) (to admit that one has done something: He owned up to having broken the window.) confesarv + advno one owned up — nadie reconoció or admitió tener la culpa
come on, own up — anda, reconócelo or confiésalo
to own up to something/-ing: no one would own up to having left the window open — nadie quiso reconocer or admitir que había sido quien dejó la ventana abierta
VI + ADV confesar ( to sth algo)own up! — ¡confiésalo!
* * *v + advno one owned up — nadie reconoció or admitió tener la culpa
come on, own up — anda, reconócelo or confiésalo
to own up to something/-ing: no one would own up to having left the window open — nadie quiso reconocer or admitir que había sido quien dejó la ventana abierta
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14 put aside
( often with for) (to keep (something) for a particular person or occasion: Would you put this book aside for me and I'll collect it later; We have put aside the dress you ordered.) reservar, guardarv.• deponer v.(§pres: -pongo, -pones...) pret: -pus-pp: -puestofut/c: -pondr-•)• descartar v.v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( lay to one side) dejar a un ladob) ( reserve) \<\<money\>\> guardar, ahorrar; \<\<goods/time\>\> reservarc) \<\<differences\>\> dejar de ladoVT + ADV1) (=lay down) dejar a un lado, poner a un ladohe put the letter aside to read later — dejó or puso a un lado la carta para leerla más tarde
2) (=save) [+ money] ahorrar, guardar; [+ time] reservar; [+ food] apartar3) (in shop) [+ goods] guardar, reservar, apartarcould you put one aside for me? — ¿me podría guardar or reservar or apartar uno?
4) (=ignore) [+ differences, feelings] dejar de lado; [+ fears] apartar, desechar5) (=sacrifice) [+ career, personal interest] sacrificar* * *v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( lay to one side) dejar a un ladob) ( reserve) \<\<money\>\> guardar, ahorrar; \<\<goods/time\>\> reservarc) \<\<differences\>\> dejar de lado -
15 smarten
( often with up) verb (to make or become smarter: He has smartened up a lot in appearance lately.) arreglar(se)tr['smɑːtən]1 (person, house) arreglar (up, -)\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto smarten up one's act/ideas despabilarse, espabilarseto smarten oneself (up) arreglarsev.• embellecer v.• hermosear v.['smɑːtn]VT = smarten up -
16 talk back
( often with to) (to answer rudely: Don't talk back to me!) contestar, replicarv + adv( be disrespectful) contestar or responder (mal)VI + ADV (gen) replicarthis is where voters get the chance to talk back — ahora es cuando los votantes tienen la oportunidad de replicar (rudely)
how dare you talk back to me? — ¿cómo te atreves a replicarme or llevarme la contraria?
* * *v + adv( be disrespectful) contestar or responder (mal) -
17 all set
( often with to) (ready or prepared (to do something); just on the point of (doing something): We were all set to leave when the phone rang.) listo, preparadoadv.• listo adv. -
18 fall short
( often with of) (to be not enough or not good enough etc: The money we have falls short of what we need.) no llegar, no alcanzarexpr.• no alcanzar expr. -
19 take a bet
( often with on) (to bet: Are you willing to take a bet on whether he'll come or not?) apostarse algov.• topar v. -
20 let fly
( often with at) (to throw, shoot or send out violently: He let fly (an arrow) at the target.) arremeter contra alguien
См. также в других словарях:
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be with someone often with negative — informal follow someone s meaning. → with … English new terms dictionary
have to one's name often with negative — in one s possession. → name … English new terms dictionary
in so many words often with negative — precisely in the way mentioned. → word … English new terms dictionary
often — oftenness, n. /aw feuhn, of euhn; awf teuhn, of /, adv. 1. many times; frequently: He visits his parents as often as he can. 2. in many cases. adj. 3. Archaic. frequent. [1300 50; ME oftin, var. before vowels of ofte OFT] Syn. 1, 2. repeatedly,… … Universalium
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often — often, frequently, oft, oftentimes may be used with little or no distinction to mean again and again in more or less close succession. But often stresses the number of times a thing occurs, without regard to the interval of recurrence; frequently … New Dictionary of Synonyms
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Often — Of ten, a. Frequent; common; repeated. [R.] Thine often infirmities. 1 Tim. v. 23. [1913 Webster] And weary thee with often welcomes. Beau. & Fl. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English