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1 old broom
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2 old broom
s.escoba vieja, escobajo. -
3 palo
palo sustantivo masculino 1 (de valla, portería) post; ( de herramienta) handle; (de tienda, carpa) tent pole; de tal palo, tal astilla a chip off the old block, like father like son (o like mother like daughter etc) ( de hockey) hockey stickd) (Náut) mast;2 ( madera) wood; 3 (fam) ( golpe) blow (with a stick);◊ lo molieron a palos they beat him till he was black and blue4 ( en naipes) suit
palo sustantivo masculino
1 stick: este queso está más seco que un palo, this cheese is as dry as dust
su hermano está como un palo, his brother is as thin as a rake
2 (estacazo) blow
3 fam (disgusto, golpe) blow: su muerte ha sido un palo para ella, his death was a real blow to her
me da palo tener que decírselo yo, I'm really cut up about having to tell her (decepción) disappointment: menudo palo nos dio cuando nos dijeron que no cantaría, it was a real disappointment to us when we heard that he wasn't going to sing (rollo) drag
4 (madera) una cuchara/pata de palo, a wooden spoon/ leg
5 Náut (mástil) mast
palo mayor, mainmast
6 Dep (de portería) woodwork
7 Golf club
8 Naipes suit Locuciones: moler a palos a alguien, to beat sb up
a palo seco, on its own
de tal palo, tal astilla, like father, like son ' palo' also found in these entries: Spanish: astilla - caballito - estaca - garrote - hisopo - jarabe - tranca - trinquete - vara - verga - bolo - cachiporra - corazón - empuñar - espada - extremo - helado - oro - partir - pata - pica - pique - rombo - trébol - triunfo English: broomstick - carrot - chip - club - drive - end - father - golf club - like - pointed - Pole - ram - rosewood - shaft - stake - stick - stout - stroke - suit - taper - wave - wooden - broom - dead - golf - pole - spar - wood
См. также в других словарях:
broom — [bru:m, brum] n ↑broom [: Old English; Origin: brom broom plant ;] [Sense: 1; Origin: because broom branches were used for making brushes] 1.) a large brush with a long handle, used for sweeping floors 2.) [U] a large bush with small yellow… … Dictionary of contemporary English
broom — ► NOUN 1) a long handled brush used for sweeping. 2) a shrub with many yellow flowers and small or few leaves. ● a new broom sweeps clean Cf. ↑a new broom sweeps clean ORIGIN Old English, related to BRAMBLE(Cf. ↑ … English terms dictionary
Old Town, Edinburgh — Old and New Towns of Edinburgh * UNESCO World Heritage Site … Wikipedia
Old Hat (horse) — Old Hat Sire Boston Doge Grandsire The Doge Dam Fine Feathers Damsire Double Jay Sex Mare Fo … Wikipedia
Broom-Hilda — Infobox Comic strip title=Broom Hilda caption= Broom Hilda and logo creator=Russell Myers status=Still in publication syndicate=Tribune Media Services (formerly Chicago Tribune Syndication) comictype=print genre=Humor first=April 19, 1970… … Wikipedia
Broom — A broom is a cleaning tool consisting of stiff fibres attached to, and roughly parallel to, a cylindrical handle, the broomstick. In the context of witchcraft, broomstick is likely to refer to the broom as a whole. A smaller whisk broom or brush… … Wikipedia
broom — Many people in 19th century Suffolk, Sussex, and Wiltshire thought that during the month of *May the broom meant bad luck, even death; one must not bring its flowers into the house, nor *sweep the floor with broom twigs: If you sweep the… … A Dictionary of English folklore
Broom Fell — Infobox Mountain Name = Broom Fell Photo = Broom Fell.png Caption = Broom Fell as seen from the west. Elevation = 511 m (1,676 ft) Location = Cumbria, ENG Range = Lake District, North Western Fells Prominence = c. 25 m Parent peak = Lord s Seat… … Wikipedia
broom — I. noun Etymology: Middle English, from Old English brōm; akin to Old High German brāmo bramble Date: before 12th century 1. any of various leguminous shrubs (especially genera Cytisus and Genista) with long slender branches, small leaves, and… … New Collegiate Dictionary
broom — [OE] Broom was originally the name of the yellow flowered bush; its application to the long handled brush did not come about until the 15th century (the underlying notion is of a brush made from broom twigs tied to a handle). The plant name… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
Broom — This name is of Anglo Saxon origin, and is either a locational or a topographical surname. If the former, it derives from any one of the various places called Broom (in Bedfordshire, Durham and Worcestershire), Broome (in Norfolk, Shropshire and… … Surnames reference