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1 outbreak
(a sudden beginning (usually of something unpleasant): the outbreak of war.) estallidooutbreak n estallidotr['aʊtbreɪk]outbreak ['aʊt.breɪk] n: brote m (de una enfermedad), comienzo m (de guerra), ola f (de violencia), erupción f (de granos)n.• brote s.m.• erupción s.f.• estallido s.m.• rompimiento s.m.there were outbreaks of violence/protest — hubo brotes de violencia/protesta
['aʊtbreɪk]N [of war] declaración f ; [of hostilities] comienzo m ; [of disease] brote m ; [of crimes] ola f ; [of violence] arranque m ; [of spots] erupción f* * *there were outbreaks of violence/protest — hubo brotes de violencia/protesta
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2 outbreak
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3 outbreak
s.1 comienzo (of hostilities); brote (of epidemic, violence); estallido (of war, conflict)2 epidemia, brote de enfermedad, erupción, brote.3 acceso, arranque, estallido.4 despliegue súbito, desencadenamiento. -
4 polar outbreak
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5 salmonella outbreak
s.brote de salmonelosis. -
6 brote
Del verbo brotar: ( conjugate brotar) \ \
broté es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) pretérito indicativo
brote es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) imperativoMultiple Entries: brotar brote
brotar ( conjugate brotar) verbo intransitivo [ hoja] to appear, sprout; [ flor] to come out brotarse verbo pronominal (AmL) to come out in spots
brote sustantivo masculinoa) (Bot) shoot;
brotar verbo intransitivo
1 (germinar, retoñar) to sprout
2 (surgir una plaga, la violencia) to break out
3 (manar) to spring, gush (lágrimas) to well up
brote sustantivo masculino
1 Bot (retoño) bud, shoot
2 (de agua) gushing
3 (de enfermedad, violencia, etc) outbreak ' brote' also found in these entries: Spanish: tierno English: breakout - bud - flare-up - outbreak - rash - shoot - sprout - bean - eruption - flare - out -
7 estallido
estallido sustantivo masculino ( de neumático) bursting; ( de cristal) shattering
estallido sustantivo masculino explosion (de un suceso, una guerra) outbreak
un nuevo estallido de violencia, a further explosion of violence ' estallido' also found in these entries: Spanish: saltar English: bang - burst - outbreak - report - crack - eruption - explosion - out -
8 scattered
adjective (occasional; not close together: Scattered showers are forecast for this morning; The few houses in the valley are very scattered.) dispersotr['skætəd]1 esparcido,-a, disperso,-a\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLscattered population población nombre femenino diseminadascattered showers chubascos nombre masculino plural aisladosadj.• despeinado, -a adj.• disperso, -a adj.• divagador adj.• esparcido, -a adj.• intermitente adj.• irregular adj.'skætərd, 'skætədadjective (before n) < fighting> aislado, disperso; <applause/outbreak> aislado; < community> diseminadoscattered showers — chubascos mpl aislados
['skætǝd]ADJ dispersoscattered showers — chubascos mpl dispersos
* * *['skætərd, 'skætəd]adjective (before n) < fighting> aislado, disperso; <applause/outbreak> aislado; < community> diseminadoscattered showers — chubascos mpl aislados
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9 stem
I
1. stem noun1) (the part of a plant that grows upward from the root, or the part from which a leaf, flower or fruit grows; a stalk: Poppies have long, hairy, twisting stems.)2) (the narrow part of various objects, eg of a wine-glass between the bowl and the base: the stem of a wine-glass / of a tobacco-pipe.)3) (the upright piece of wood or metal at the bow of a ship: As the ship struck the rock, she shook from stem to stern.)
2. verb((with from) to be caused by: Hate sometimes stems from envy.)- - stemmed
II stem past tense, past participle - stemmed; verb(to stop (a flow, eg of blood).)stem n tallotr[stem]1 (stop - gen) frenar, detener, parar; (- bleeding) contener, parar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLfrom stem to stern SMALLMARITIME/SMALL de proa a popa: detener, contener, pararto stem the tide: detener el cursostem vito stem from : provenir de, ser el resultado destem n: tallo m (de una planta)n.• botón s.m.• cabillo s.m.• caña s.f.• espiga s.f.• fuste s.m.• pedúnculo (Botánica) s.m.• pie s.m.• pie de una copa s.m.• roda s.f.• tallo s.m.• tema s.m.• tronco s.m.• vástago s.m.v.• estancar v.• represar v.stem
I
2)a) ( of glass) pie mb) ( of pipe) boquilla f, caña f3) ( Ling) raíz f4) ( Naut)
II
1.
- mm- transitive verb \<\<flow/bleeding\>\> contener*, parar; \<\<outbreak/decline\>\> detener*, poner* freno a
2.
vito stem FROM something — provenir* or ser* producto de algo
I [stem]1. N1) [of plant] tallo m ; [of tree] tronco m ; [of leaf] pedúnculo m ; [of glass] pie m ; [of pipe] tubo m, cañón m ; (Mech) vástago m ; [of word] tema m2) (Naut) roda f, tajamar m2.VI3.CPDstem cell research N — investigación f con células madre
II
[stem]VT (=check, stop) [+ blood] restañar; [+ attack, flood] detener* * *[stem]
I
2)a) ( of glass) pie mb) ( of pipe) boquilla f, caña f3) ( Ling) raíz f4) ( Naut)
II
1.
- mm- transitive verb \<\<flow/bleeding\>\> contener*, parar; \<\<outbreak/decline\>\> detener*, poner* freno a
2.
vito stem FROM something — provenir* or ser* producto de algo
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10 epidemic
epi'demik(an outbreak of a disease that spreads rapidly and attacks very many people: an epidemic of measles/influenza.) epidemiaepidemic n epidemiatr[epɪ'demɪk]1 epidemia1 epidémico,-aepidemic [.ɛpə'dɛmɪk] adj: epidémicoepidemic n: epidemia fadj.• epidémico, -a adj.n.• epidemia s.f.• peste s.f.
I 'epə'demɪk, ˌepɪ'demɪknoun epidemia f
II
adjective epidémico[ˌepɪ'demɪk]1.ADJ epidémico2.N epidemia f ; (fig) ola f* * *
I ['epə'demɪk, ˌepɪ'demɪk]noun epidemia f
II
adjective epidémico -
11 fresh
freʃ1) (newly made, gathered, arrived etc: fresh fruit (= fruit that is not tinned, frozen etc); fresh flowers.) fresco2) ((of people etc) healthy; not tired: You are looking very fresh this morning.) fresco3) (another; different; not already used, begun, worn, heard etc: a fresh piece of paper; fresh news.) nuevo, reciente4) ((of weather etc) cool; refreshing: a fresh breeze; fresh air.) fresco5) ((of water) without salt: The swimming-pool has fresh water in it, not sea water.) dulce•- freshen- freshly
- fresh-water
fresh adj1. fresco2. nuevo / otrotr[freʃ]1 (food) fresco,-a2 (water) dulce3 (air) puro,-a5 (complexion) sano,-a6 (clothes) limpio,-a7 figurative use (new) nuevo,-a8 (made recently) reciente, fresco,-a9 (original) nuevo,-a10 (refreshed, alert) fresco,-a, lleno,-a de vigor11 (bold, forward, cheeky) fresco,-a, carota■ don't get fresh with me! ¡basta de familiaridades!\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLas fresh as a daisy fresco,-a como una rosain the fresh air al aire librefresh from / fresh out of recién salido,-a de, recién llegado,-a deto be fresh out of something habérsele acabado algo a unoto make a fresh start volver a empezar, empezar de nuevofresh ['frɛʃ] adj1) : dulcefreshwater: agua dulce2) pure: puro3) : frescofresh fruits: frutas frescas4) clean, new: limpio, nuevofresh clothes: ropa limpiafresh evidence: evidencia nueva5) refreshed: fresco, descansado6) impertinent: descarado, impertinenteadj.• de buen color adj.• dulce (agua) adj.• flamante adj.• fresco, -a adj.• puro, -a adj.
I freʃadjective -er, -est1)a) (not stale, frozen or canned) < food> frescob) (vigorous, not tired) <complexion/face/appearance> fresco, lozanoit was still fresh in his memory o mind — lo tenía fresco en la memoria
c) (newly arrived, produced) (pred)fresh off the press/production line — recién salido de la imprenta/la línea de montaje
2) ( not salty)fresh water — agua f‡ dulce
3)a) (new, clean) <clothes/linen> limpiob) (new, additional) <supplies/initiative/evidence> nuevoto make a fresh start — volver* a empezar, empezar* de nuevo
4)a) < winds> fuerteb) ( cool) fresco5)a) ( taking liberties) (colloq & dated) frescob) ( cheeky) (AmE) descarado, impertinente
II
fresh ground coffee — café m recién molido
[freʃ]we're fresh out of tomatoes — (esp AmE colloq) acabamos de vender los últimos tomates
1. ADJ(compar fresher) (superl freshest)1) (=not stale, not preserved) [fruit, milk etc] fresco; [bread] recién hecho; [smell, taste] a frescoI need some fresh air — necesito un poco de aire fresco, necesito salir a respirar aire fresco
2) (=not salt) [water] dulce3) (=cool) [breeze] fresco; [wind] fuerte4) (=healthy) [face, complexion] lozano, saludable5) (=rested) [person] descansadoit's better done in the morning when you're fresh — se hace mejor por la mañana, cuando estás descansado
6) (=clean and new) [sheet of paper] en blanco; [shirt, sheets] limpio"fresh paint" — (esp US) "recién pintado"
to make a fresh start — volver a empezar, empezar de nuevo
7) (=further) [outbreak, supplies] nuevo8) (=recent) [footprints, tracks] recientemilk fresh from the cow — leche f recién ordeñada
9) * (=cheeky) [person] impertinente, descaradoto get fresh with sb — (=be cheeky with) ponerse impertinente con algn, ponerse chulo con algn *; (=take liberties with) propasarse con algn
don't get fresh with me! — ¡no te pongas impertinente conmigo!, ¡no te pongas chulo conmigo! *
2.ADVfresh ground black pepper — pimienta f negra recién molida
I picked the beans fresh this morning — acabo de recoger or coger las judías esta mañana
to be fresh out of sth: we're fresh out of pan scrubs — [shopkeeper] acabamos de vender los últimos estropajos, se nos han acabado los estropajos; [householder] se nos han acabado los estropajos
* * *
I [freʃ]adjective -er, -est1)a) (not stale, frozen or canned) < food> frescob) (vigorous, not tired) <complexion/face/appearance> fresco, lozanoit was still fresh in his memory o mind — lo tenía fresco en la memoria
c) (newly arrived, produced) (pred)fresh off the press/production line — recién salido de la imprenta/la línea de montaje
2) ( not salty)fresh water — agua f‡ dulce
3)a) (new, clean) <clothes/linen> limpiob) (new, additional) <supplies/initiative/evidence> nuevoto make a fresh start — volver* a empezar, empezar* de nuevo
4)a) < winds> fuerteb) ( cool) fresco5)a) ( taking liberties) (colloq & dated) frescob) ( cheeky) (AmE) descarado, impertinente
II
fresh ground coffee — café m recién molido
we're fresh out of tomatoes — (esp AmE colloq) acabamos de vender los últimos tomates
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12 kill
kil
1. verb(to cause the death of: He killed the rats with poison; The outbreak of typhoid killed many people; The flat tyre killed our hopes of getting home before midnight.) matar, asesinar
2. noun(an act of killing: The hunter was determined to make a kill before returning to the camp.) matanza- killer- kill off
- kill time
kill vb matartr[kɪl]1 matar, asesinar3 (hurt) doler mucho\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLI'll do it if it kills me lo haré pase lo que paseto be in at the kill estar presente en el momento de la verdadto kill oneself matarse, suicidarseto kill oneself laughing morirse de risato kill time pasar el rato, matar el tiempoto kill two birds with one stone matar dos pájaros de un tiroto move in for the kill entrar a matarkill ['kɪl] vt1) : matar2) end: acabar con, poner fin a3)to kill time : matar el tiempokill n1) killing: matanza f2) prey: presa fn.• matanza s.f.v.• acabar con v.• achurar v.• chinchar v.• degollar v.• matar v.
I
1. kɪl1) ( cause death of) \<\<person/animal\>\> matar, dar* muerte a (frml)she was killed in a car crash — se mató or murió en un accidente de coche
2)a) ( destroy) \<\<hopes\>\> acabar conb) ( spoil) \<\<flavor/taste\>\> estropearc) ( deaden) \<\<pain\>\> calmard) ( use up)3) (colloq)a) ( cause discomfort) matar (fam)my feet/shoes are killing me — los pies/zapatos me están matando (fam)
b) (tire out, exhaust) matar (fam)don't kill yourself! — (iro) cuidado, no te vayas a herniar! (iró)
2.
vi matarPhrasal Verbs:- kill off
II
a) c ( act)to be in at the kill — estar* presente en el momento culminante
b) u (animal, animals killed) presa f[kɪl]1. VTI'll kill you for this! — ¡te voy a matar!
to be killed in action or battle — morir en combate, morir luchando
to kill o.s. — matarse; (=commit suicide) suicidarse
he certainly doesn't kill himself (with work)! — (fig) hum ¡desde luego ese a trabajar no se mata!
- kill two birds with one stone2) (fig) [+ story] suprimir; [+ rumour] acabar con; [+ proposal, bill] echar abajo; [+ feeling, hope] destruir; [+ pain] calmar; [+ flavour, taste] matar; [+ sound] amortiguar; [+ engine] parar, apagar; [+ lights] apagar3) * hacer morir de risa *2.VIthou shalt not kill — (Bible) no matarás
- be dressed to kill3.N (Hunting, Bullfighting) muerte f ; (=animal killed) pieza f ; (=number of animals killed) caza fto go in for the kill — (lit) entrar a matar
to be in at the kill — (lit) asistir a la matanza
- kill off* * *
I
1. [kɪl]1) ( cause death of) \<\<person/animal\>\> matar, dar* muerte a (frml)she was killed in a car crash — se mató or murió en un accidente de coche
2)a) ( destroy) \<\<hopes\>\> acabar conb) ( spoil) \<\<flavor/taste\>\> estropearc) ( deaden) \<\<pain\>\> calmard) ( use up)3) (colloq)a) ( cause discomfort) matar (fam)my feet/shoes are killing me — los pies/zapatos me están matando (fam)
b) (tire out, exhaust) matar (fam)don't kill yourself! — (iro) cuidado, no te vayas a herniar! (iró)
2.
vi matarPhrasal Verbs:- kill off
II
a) c ( act)to be in at the kill — estar* presente en el momento culminante
b) u (animal, animals killed) presa f -
13 malaria
mə'leəriə(a fever caused by the bite of a certain type of mosquito.) malaria
malaria sustantivo femenino malaria
malaria f Med malaria ' malaria' also found in these entries: Spanish: paludismo - fiebre English: chronic - contract - malaria - outbreak - laytr[mə'leərɪə]1 malaria, paludismomalaria [mə'lɛriə] n: malaria f, paludismo mn.• malaria s.f.• paludismo s.m.mə'leriəmass noun malaria f, paludismo m[mǝ'lɛǝrɪǝ]1.N malaria f, paludismo m2.CPDmalaria control N — lucha f contra la malaria
* * *[mə'leriə]mass noun malaria f, paludismo m -
14 storm
sto:m
1. noun1) (a violent disturbance in the air causing wind, rain, thunder etc: a rainstorm; a thunderstorm; a storm at sea; The roof was damaged by the storm.) tormenta2) (a violent outbreak of feeling etc: A storm of anger greeted his speech; a storm of applause.) torrente
2. verb1) (to shout very loudly and angrily: He stormed at her.) vociferar, bramar2) (to move or stride in an angry manner: He stormed out of the room.) marcharse hecho una furia3) ((of soldiers etc) to attack with great force, and capture (a building etc): They stormed the castle.) asaltar, tomar por asalto•- stormy- stormily
- storminess
- stormbound
- stormtrooper
- a storm in a teacup
- take by storm
storm n tormentatr[stɔːm]1 (thunderstorm) tormenta; (at sea) tempestad nombre femenino, temporal nombre masculino; (with wind) borrasca2 figurative use (uproar) revuelo, escándalo; (of missiles, insults) lluvia, torrente nombre masculino1 (attack) asaltar, tomar por asalto2 (say angrily) bramar1 (go or move angrily) andar airado,-a2 (shout angrily) echar pestes, vociferar, rabiar, despotricar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto ride out the storm / weather the storm capear el temporala storm in a teacup una tempestad en un vaso de aguastorm cloud nubarrón nombre masculinostorm door contrapuertastorm trooper soldado de las tropas de asaltostorm troops tropas nombre femenino plural de asaltostorm warning aviso de tormentastorm window contraventanastorm ['stɔrm] vi1) : llover o nevar tormentosamente2) rage: ponerse furioso, vociferar3)to storm out : salir echando pestesstorm vtattack: asaltarstorm n1) : tormenta f, tempestad f2) uproar: alboroto m, revuelo m, escándalo ma storm of abuse: un torrente de abusosn.• borrasca s.f.• chubasco s.m.• tempestad s.f.• temporal s.m.• tormenta s.f.v.• asaltar v.• tomar por asalto v.v.• bramar v.• enfurecerse v.• rabiar v.stɔːrm, stɔːm
I
1) ( Meteo) tormenta fa storm at sea — una tempestad, un temporal
a storm in a teacup — (BrE) una tormenta en un vaso de agua
to take something by storm — \<\<city/fortress\>\> tomar algo por asalto, asaltar algo
she took New York's audiences by storm — cautivó al público neoyorquino, tuvo un éxito clamoroso en Nueva York
to weather o ride (out) the storm — capear el temporal
2) ( of abuse) torrente m; ( of protest) ola f, tempestad f; ( uproar) escándalo m, revuelo m
II
1.
1) ( move violently) (+ adv compl)she stormed into the office — irrumpió en la oficina, entró en la oficina como un vendaval
furious, he stormed out of the meeting — abandonó la reunión furioso
2) ( express anger) despotricar*, vociferar
2.
vt1) (attack, capture) \<\<city/fortress\>\> tomar por asalto, asaltar; \<\<house\>\> irrumpir en2) ( say angrily) bramar[stɔːm]1. N1) (gen) tormenta f, tempestad f ; (=gale) vendaval m ; (=hurricane) huracán m ; (Naut) borrasca f, tormenta f- brave the storm- ride out a storm2) (=uproar) escándalo m, bronca fa storm of criticism — un aluvión or vendaval de críticas
3)to take by storm: to take a town by storm — (Mil) tomar una ciudad por asalto
2.VT (Mil) asaltar, tomar por asaltoangry ratepayers stormed the town hall — los contribuyentes enfurecidos asaltaron or invadieron el ayuntamiento
3. VI1) (=move angrily)2) (=speak angrily) bramar, vociferar"you're fired!" he stormed — -¡quedá despedido! -bramó or vociferó
to storm at sb — tronar contra algn, enfurecerse con algn
he stormed on for an hour about the government — pasó una hora lanzando improperios contra el gobierno
4.CPDstorm centre, storm center (US) N — centro m de la tempestad; (fig) foco m de los disturbios, centro m de la agitación
storm cloud N — nubarrón m
storm damage N — daños mpl causados por temporales
storm door N — contrapuerta f
storm signal N — señal f de temporal
storm trooper N — (Mil) guardia mf de asalto
storm troops NPL — (Mil) tropas fpl de asalto, guardia fsing de asalto
storm window N — contraventana f
* * *[stɔːrm, stɔːm]
I
1) ( Meteo) tormenta fa storm at sea — una tempestad, un temporal
a storm in a teacup — (BrE) una tormenta en un vaso de agua
to take something by storm — \<\<city/fortress\>\> tomar algo por asalto, asaltar algo
she took New York's audiences by storm — cautivó al público neoyorquino, tuvo un éxito clamoroso en Nueva York
to weather o ride (out) the storm — capear el temporal
2) ( of abuse) torrente m; ( of protest) ola f, tempestad f; ( uproar) escándalo m, revuelo m
II
1.
1) ( move violently) (+ adv compl)she stormed into the office — irrumpió en la oficina, entró en la oficina como un vendaval
furious, he stormed out of the meeting — abandonó la reunión furioso
2) ( express anger) despotricar*, vociferar
2.
vt1) (attack, capture) \<\<city/fortress\>\> tomar por asalto, asaltar; \<\<house\>\> irrumpir en2) ( say angrily) bramar -
15 uproar
((an outbreak of) noise, shouting etc: The whole town was in (an) uproar after the football team's victory.) alboroto, jaleo, algarabía- uproariously
tr['ʌprɔːSMALLr/SMALL]1 alboroto, tumulto■ the whole town was in an uproar about the new rates toda la ciudad estaba alborotada por los nuevos impuestos municipalesuproar ['ʌp.ror] ncommotion: alboroto m, jaleo m, escándalo mn.• alboroto s.m.• escándalo s.m.• tole s.m.• tumulto s.m.['ʌprɔː(r)]N alboroto m, jaleo mthis caused an uproar, at this there was (an) uproar — (=shouting) en esto se armó un alboroto; (=protesting) en esto estallaron ruidosas las protestas
the hall was in (an) uproar — (=shouting, disturbance) había alboroto en la sala; (=protesting) se oían protestas airadas en la sala
* * * -
16 comienzo
Del verbo comenzar: ( conjugate comenzar) \ \
comienzo es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativoMultiple Entries: comenzar comienzo
comenzar ( conjugate comenzar) verbo transitivo to begin, commence (frml) verbo intransitivo to begin; comienzo haciendo algo/por hacer algo to begin by doing sth; comienzo a hacer algo to start doing o to do sth; comienzoon a disparar they started firing o to fire; comienzo por algo to begin with sth
comienzo sustantivo masculino beginning; al comienzo at first, in the beginning; dar comienzo to begin; dar comienzo a algo [ persona] to begin sth; [ceremonia/acto] to mark the beginning of sth;
comenzar verbo transitivo & verbo intransitivo to begin, start (a realizar una acción) comenzó a decir barbaridades, he started talking nonsense (una serie de acciones) comenzamos por mostrar nuestro desacuerdo, we started by showing our disagreement ➣ Ver nota en begin y start
comienzo sustantivo masculino beginning, start Locuciones: a comienzos de, at the beginning of
dar comienzo, to begin o start ' comienzo' also found in these entries: Spanish: apertura - iniciar - origen - principio - iniciación English: beginning - conception - off - onset - opening - outbreak - outset - start - turn - commence - home - out - usher -
17 conflagración
conflagración sustantivo femenino Mil revolt, uprising, outbreak ' conflagración' also found in these entries: English: conflagration -
18 enfermedad
enfermedad sustantivo femenino illness;◊ contraer una enfermedad to contract an illness/a disease (frml);después de una larga enfermedad after a long illness; está con permiso por enfermedad he's off sick; enfermedades de la piel skin diseases; enfermedad mental mental illness; enfermedad nerviosa nervous disorder
enfermedad sustantivo femenino illness
una enfermedad crónica, a chronic disease ➣ Ver nota en disease
' enfermedad' also found in these entries: Spanish: adolecer - aguda - agudo - baja - brote - cañón - combatir - contagiar - contagiosa - contagioso - contraer - cura - darse - defensa - desarrollarse - esteroide - ETS - evitar - extracorpórea - extracorpóreo - fiebre - galopante - larvada - larvado - lisura - padecer - pegar - pegarse - pescar - pillar - recobrarse - rehacerse - reliquia - remedio - renacer - restablecimiento - rondar - sacrificar - secuela - seguimiento - sufrir - terminal - tos - transmitir - vivir - abatir - afectado - amarillo - antecedente - arrastrar English: acute - ailment - bends - bout - carrier - carry - catch - catching - clear up - come down - come on - come through - communicable - condition - congenital - critical - cure - dangerous - develop - disease - dormant - downhill - exposure - fight - flare up - get - get over - go down with - have - heal - illness - infect - infection - infectious - infirmity - life-threatening - lingering - major - outbreak - Parkinson's - pay - prevalent - prevent - pull through - rampant - recover - serious - seriousness - severe - severity -
19 guerra
guerra sustantivo femenino 1 (Mil, Pol) war; estar en guerra to be at war; hacerle la guerra a algn to wage war on o against sb; guerra bacteriológica or biológica germ o biological warfare; guerra civil civil war; guerra fría cold war; guerra mundial world war; guerra nuclear nuclear war; guerra química chemical warfare 2 (fam) ( problemas) trouble, hassle (colloq);
guerra sustantivo femenino war: nos declararon la guerra, they declared war on us
estamos en guerra, we are at war
guerra bacteriológica, germ warfare
guerra civil/mundial, civil/world war
guerra fría, cold war Locuciones: familiar dar guerra, (dar problemas, trabajo) to give problems (dar la lata) to be a pain
enterrar el hacha de guerra, to bury the hatchet
en pie de guerra, on the warpath
nombre de guerra, nom de guerre ' guerra' also found in these entries: Spanish: adscribirse - bacteriológica - bacteriológico - buque - cuando - declararse - desastre - desnaturalizar - durante - enterrar - estado - estallido - fantasma - guerrilla - haber - hacer - hornada - intensificación - ración - sangrienta - sangriento - secuela - umbral - unirse - venir - vencedor - vencedora - asolar - barco - borde - botín - caído - consejo - continuar - corresponsal - crimen - crucero - declaración - declarar - desencadenar - durar - embromar - entrar - estallar - estragos - ganar - horror - lisiado - marina - miseria English: act up - alleged - assume - atrocity - badly - battle-cry - blissful - brink - capture - ceasefire - civil war - cold war - court martial - danger - declaration - declare - diminish - drag on - ensue - escalate - fight - flatten - for - full-scale - germ warfare - go on - guerilla - guerrilla - in - intervene - long - monstrosity - monument - neutrality - nuclear war - orphan - outbreak - over - P.O.W. - pen name - play up - prewar - prisoner - ravage - refugee - shell-shocked - shellshock - start - stem - through -
20 violencia
violencia sustantivo femenino violence;
violencia sustantivo femenino violence ' violencia' also found in these entries: Spanish: brotar - brote - escalada - estallido - fuerte - fuerza - ímpetu - impetuosidad - agarrar - extinguir - no - partidario - repudiar - señal - torturar English: against - break out - clash - domestic - erupt - flare up - flare-up - force - gouge - jam on - mindless - outbreak - rough - screen - slam down - tide - untouched - violence - violently - wanton - resort
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
Outbreak — Título Estallido (España) Epidemia (Hispanoamérica) Ficha técnica Dirección Wolfgang Petersen Producción Gail Katz Arnold Kopelson … Wikipedia Español
outbreak — out break , n. 1. A bursting forth; eruption; insurrection; mutiny; revolt. Mobs and outbreaks. J. H. Newman. [1913 Webster] The flash and outbreak of a fiery mind. Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. A sudden beginning of a violent event; as, the outbreak… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
outbreak — (n.) eruption (of disease, hostilities, etc.), c.1600, from OUT (Cf. out) + BREAK (Cf. break) (v.). Outbreak was a verb in Middle English (c.1300) … Etymology dictionary
outbreak — I noun affray, aggression, agitation, assault, attack, bloodshed, blow up, brawl, breach, breach of the peace, burst, cataclysm, commotion, conflict, convulsion, declaration of war, disruption, disturbance, ebullition, eruption, explosion,… … Law dictionary
outbreak — [n] sudden happening beginning, blowup, brawl, break, breaking, burst, bursting, commencement, commotion, convulsion, crack, crash, dawn, detonation, discharge, disorder, disruption, ebullition, effervescence, epidemic, eruption, explosion, fit,… … New thesaurus
outbreak — ► NOUN ▪ a sudden or violent occurrence of war, disease, etc … English terms dictionary
outbreak — [out′brāk΄] n. 1. a breaking out; sudden occurrence, as of disease or war 2. an insurrection or riot … English World dictionary
Outbreak — For other uses, see Outbreak (disambiguation). Outbreak is a term used in epidemiology to describe an occurrence of disease greater than would otherwise be expected at a particular time and place. It may affect a small and localized group or… … Wikipedia
outbreak — 01. With tensions mounting between the different ethnic groups, the U.N. fears the [outbreak] of a civil war. 02. Decreased tourist revenues are believed to be the result of the SARS [outbreak] in Canada. 03. The Queen s visit has been postponed… … Grammatical examples in English
Outbreak — Filmdaten Deutscher Titel Outbreak – Lautlose Killer Originaltitel Outbreak … Deutsch Wikipedia
outbreak — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ large, major, serious, severe ▪ fresh (esp. BrE), further (esp. BrE), new ▪ recent … Collocations dictionary