-
1 partido
Del verbo partir: ( conjugate partir) \ \
partido es: \ \el participioMultiple Entries: partido partir
partido 1
◊ -da adjetivo1 ‹ labios› chapped; ‹ barbilla› cleft 2 (Mat): nueve partido por tres da … nine divided by three gives …
partido 2 sustantivo masculino 1 ( de tenis) match; un partido de béisbol a baseball game; partido amistoso friendly game o match; partido de desempate deciding game, decider; partido en casa/fuera de casa home/away match 2 (Pol) party; tomar partido to take sides 3 ( provecho): sacarle partido a algo to make the most of sth 4 ( para casarse):
partir ( conjugate partir) verbo transitivo ‹nuez/avellana› to crack; ‹rama/palo› to break ‹ cabeza› to split open verbo intransitivo 1 2a) partido DE algo ‹de una premisa/un supuesto› to start from sthb)◊ a partir de from;a partido de ahora/ese momento from now on/that moment on; a partido de hoy (as o starting) from today partirse verbo pronominal ‹ diente› to break, chip
partido,-a sustantivo masculino
1 Pol party
2 Dep match, game
partido de vuelta, return match
3 (beneficio, oportunidades, jugo) advantage, benefit: sácale partido a la vida, make the most of life 4 ser un buen partido, to be a good catch Locuciones: tomar partido por, to side with
partir
I verbo transitivo
1 (romper, quebrar) to break: me parte el corazón verte tan desalentada, it's heartbreaking to see you so depressed
partir una nuez, to shell a walnut
2 (dividir) to split, divide (con un cuchillo) to cut
II vi (irse) to leave, set out o off Locuciones: a partir de aquí/ahora, from here on/now on
a partir de entonces no volvimos a hablarnos, we didn't speak to each other from then on ' partido' also found in these entries: Spanish: acabar - adhesión - antológica - antológico - arrojadiza - arrojadizo - bajón - baño - barrer - beneficio - centenaria - centenario - continuismo - convoy - correligionaria - correligionario - cotización - cualquiera - decidir - depurar - desempate - desmembrarse - despeje - dirección - dirigir - dirigente - disputada - disputado - engranaje - entrar - épica - épico - ser - escaño - europeísta - fila - fracturar - fruto - ganarse - grupúsculo - imperante - independiente - izquierda - izquierdo - judicial - laborista - liberal - lucha - mayoría - mayoritaria English: about - amid - brain - brokenhearted - call off - cancel - capital - cardholder - centre - close - closely - decider - derby - disappoint - double - equal - eventual - fair - fixture - football match - fortunately - friendly - game - GOP - grass roots - heart-broken - hooligan - hot up - international - job - join - kick-off - labour - Liberal Party - line - machine - majority - match - member - membership - minority - office - opponent - opposing - ostracize - party line - pep talk - play - profit - quite -
2 partido system
-
3 partido system
амер.издольщина (в овцеводческих хозяйствах юго-западных штатов)Англо-русский словарь по экономике и финансам > partido system
-
4 Social Democratic Party / Partido Social Democrático
(PSD)One of the two major political parties in democratic Portugal. It was established originally as the Popular Democratic Party / Partido Popular Democrático (PPD) in May 1974, following the Revolution of 25 April 1974 that overthrew the Estado Novo. The PPD had its roots in the "liberal wing" of the União Nacional, the single, legal party or movement allowed under the Estado Novo during the last phase of that regime, under Prime Minister Marcello Caetano. A number of future PPD leaders, such as Francisco Sá Carneiro and Francisco Balsemão, hoped to reform the Estado Novo from within, but soon became discouraged. After the 1974 Revolution, the PPD participated in two general elections (April 1975 and April 1976), which were crucial for the establishment and consolidation of democracy, and the party won sufficient votes to become the second largest political party after the Socialist Party (PS) in the number of seats held in the legislature, the Assembly of the Republic. The PPD voting results in those two elections were 26.4 percent and 24.4 percent, respectively.After the 1976 elections, the party changed its name from Partido Popular Democrático to Partido Social Democrático (PSD). As political opinion swung from the left to the center and center-right, and with the leadership of Francisco Sá Carneiro, the PSD gained greater popularity and strength, and from 1979 on, the party played an important role in government. After Sá Carneiro died in the air crash of December 1980, he was replaced as party chief and then prime minister by Francisco Balsemão, and then by Aníbal Cavaco Silva. As successors, these two leaders guided the PSD to a number of electoral victories, especially beginning in 1985. After 1987, the PSD held a majority of seats in parliament, a situation that lasted until 1995, when the Socialist Party (PS) won the election.The PSD's principal political program has featured the de-Marxi-fication of the 1976 Constitution and the economic system, a free-market economy with privatization of many state enterprises, and close ties with the European Economic Community (EEC) and subsequently the European Union (EU). After the PSD lost several general elections in 1995 and 1999, and following the withdrawal from office of former prime minister Cavaco Silva, a leadership succession crisis occurred in the party. The party leadership shifted from Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa to Manuel Durão Barroso, and, in 2004, Pedro Santana Lopes.During 2000 and 2001, as Portugal's economic situation worsened, the PS's popularity waned. In the December 2001 municipal elections, the PSD decisively defeated the PS and, as a result, Prime Minister António Guterres resigned. Parliamentary elections in March 2002 resulted in a Social Democratic victory, although its margin of victory over the PS was small (40 percent to 38 percent). Upon becoming premier in the spring of 2002, then, PSD leader Durão Barroso, in order to hold a slim majority of seats in the Assembly of the Republic, was obliged to govern in a coalition with the Popular Party (PP), formerly known as the Christian Democratic Party (CDS). Although the PSD had ousted the PS from office, the party confronted formidable economic and social problems. When Durão Barroso resigned to become president of the EU Commission, Pedro Santana Lopes became the PSD's leader, as prime minister in July 2004. Under Santana Lopes's leadership, the PSD lost the parliamentary elections of 2005 to the PS. Since then, the PSD has sought to regain its dominant position with the Portuguese electorate. It made some progress in doing so when its former leader, Cavaco Silva, was elected president of the Republic of 2006.Historical dictionary of Portugal > Social Democratic Party / Partido Social Democrático
-
5 Socialist Party / Partido Socialista
(PS)Although the Socialist Party's origins can be traced back to the 1850s, its existence has not been continuous. The party did not achieve or maintain a large base of support until after the Revolution of 25 April 1974. Historically, it played only a minor political role when compared to other European socialist parties.During the Estado Novo, the PS found it difficult to maintain a clandestine existence, and the already weak party literally withered away. Different groups and associations endeavored to keep socialist ideals alive, but they failed to create an organizational structure that would endure. In 1964, Mário Soares, Francisco Ramos da Costa, and Manuel Tito de Morais established the Portuguese Socialist Action / Acção Socialista Português (ASP) in Geneva, a group of individuals with similar views rather than a true political party. Most members were middle-class professionals committed to democratizing the nation. The rigidity of the Portuguese Communist Party (PCP) led some to join the ASP.By the early 1970s, ASP nuclei existed beyond Portugal in Paris, London, Rome, Brussels, Frankfurt, Sweden, and Switzerland; these consisted of members studying, working, teaching, researching, or in other activities. Extensive connections were developed with other foreign socialist parties. Changing conditions in Portugal, as well as the colonial wars, led several ASP members to advocate the creation of a real political party, strengthening the organization within Portugal, and positioning this to compete for power once the regime changed.The current PS was founded clandestinely on 19 April 1973, by a group of 27 exiled Portuguese and domestic ASP representatives at the Kurt Schumacher Academy of the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung in Bad Munstereifel, West Germany. The founding philosophy was influenced by nondogmatic Marxism as militants sought to create a classless society. The rhetoric was to be revolutionary to outflank its competitors, especially the PCP, on its left. The party hoped to attract reform-minded Catholics and other groups that were committed to democracy but could not support the communists.At the time of the 1974 revolution, the PS was little more than an elite faction based mainly among exiles. It was weakly organized and had little grassroots support outside the major cities and larger towns. Its organization did not improve significantly until the campaign for the April 1975 constituent elections. Since then, the PS has become very pragmatic and moderate and has increasingly diluted its socialist program until it has become a center-left party. Among the party's most consistent principles in its platform since the late 1970s has been its support for Portugal's membership in the European Economic Community (EEC) and the European Union (EU), a view that clashed with those of its rivals to the left, especially the PCP. Given the PS's broad base of support, the increased distance between its leftist rhetoric and its more conservative actions has led to sharp internal divisions in the party. The PS and the Social Democratic Party (PSD) are now the two dominant parties in the Portuguese political party system.In doctrine and rhetoric the PS has undergone a de-Marxification and a movement toward the center as a means to challenge its principal rival for hegemony, the PSD. The uneven record of the PS in general elections since its victory in 1975, and sometimes its failure to keep strong legislative majorities, have discouraged voters. While the party lost the 1979 and 1980 general elections, it triumphed in the 1983 elections, when it won 36 percent of the vote, but it still did not gain an absolute majority in the Assembly of the Republic. The PSD led by Cavaco Silva dominated elections from 1985 to 1995, only to be defeated by the PS in the 1995 general elections. By 2000, the PS had conquered the commanding heights of the polity: President Jorge Sampaio had been reelected for a second term, PS prime minister António Guterres was entrenched, and the mayor of Lisbon was João Soares, son of the former socialist president, Mário Soares (1986-96).The ideological transformation of the PS occurred gradually after 1975, within the context of a strong PSD, an increasingly conservative electorate, and the de-Marxification of other European Socialist parties, including those in Germany and Scandinavia. While the PS paid less attention to the PCP on its left and more attention to the PSD, party leaders shed Marxist trappings. In the 1986 PS official program, for example, the text does not include the word Marxism.Despite the party's election victories in the mid- and late-1990s, the leadership discovered that their grasp of power and their hegemony in governance at various levels was threatened by various factors: President Jorge Sampaio's second term, the constitution mandated, had to be his last.Following the defeat of the PS by the PSD in the municipal elections of December 2001, Premier Antônio Guterres resigned his post, and President Sampaio dissolved parliament and called parliamentary elections for the spring. In the 17 March 2002 elections, following Guterres's resignation as party leader, the PS was defeated by the PSD by a vote of 40 percent to 38 percent. Among the factors that brought about the socialists' departure from office was the worsening post-September 11 economy and disarray within the PS leadership circles, as well as charges of corruption among PS office holders. However, the PS won 45 percent of the vote in parliamentary elections of 2005, and the leader of the party, José Sócrates, a self-described "market-oriented socialist" became prime minister.Historical dictionary of Portugal > Socialist Party / Partido Socialista
-
6 side
partido, flanco, aba, banda, beira, lado, encosta -
7 Portuguese Communist Party
(PCP)The Portuguese Communist Party (PCP) has evolved from its early anarcho-syndicalist roots at its formation in 1921. This evolution included the undisciplined years of the 1920s, during which bolshevization began and continued into the 1930s, then through the years of clandestine existence during the Estado Novo, the Stalinization of the 1940s, the "anarcho-liberal shift" of the 1950s, the emergence of Maoist and Trotskyist splinter groups of the 1960s, to legalization after the Revolution of 25 April 1974 as the strongest and oldest political party in Portugal. Documents from the Russian archives have shown that the PCP's history is not a purely "domestic" one. While the PCP was born on its own without Soviet assistance, once it joined the Communist International (CI), it lost a significant amount of autonomy as CI officials increasingly meddled in PCP internal politics by dictating policy, manipulating leadership elections, and often financing party activities.Early Portuguese communism was a mix of communist ideological strands accustomed to a spirited internal debate, a lively external debate with its rivals, and a loose organizational structure. The PCP, during its early years, was weak in grassroots membership and was basically a party of "notables." It was predominantly a male organization, with minuscule female participation. It was also primarily an urban party concentrated in Lisbon. The PCP membership declined from 3,000 in 1923 to only 40 in 1928.In 1929, the party was reorganized so that it could survive clandestinely. As its activity progressed in the 1930s, a long period of instability dominated its leadership organs as a result of repression, imprisonments, and disorganization. The CI continued to intervene in party affairs through the 1930s, until the PCP was expelled from the CI in 1938-39, apparently because of its conduct during police arrests.The years of 1939-41 were difficult ones for the party, not only because of increased domestic repression but also because of internal party splits provoked by the Nazi-Soviet pact and other foreign actions. From 1940 to 1941, two Communist parties struggled to attract the support of the CI and accused each other of "revisionism." The CI was disbanded in 1943, and the PCP was not accepted back into the international communist family until its recognition by the Cominform in 1947.The reorganization of 1940-41 finally put the PCP under the firm control of orthodox communists who viewed socialism from a Soviet perspective. Although Soviet support was denied the newly reorganized party at first, the new leaders continued its Stalinization. The enforcement of "democratic centralism" and insistence upon the "dictatorship of the proletariat" became entrenched. The 1940s brought increased growth, as the party reached its membership apex of the clandestine era with 1,200 members in 1943, approximately 4,800 in 1946, and 7,000 in 1947.The party fell on hard times in the 1950s. It developed a bad case of paranoia, which led to a witch hunt for infiltrators, informers, and spies in all ranks of the party. The lower membership figures who followed the united antifascist period were reduced further through expulsions of the "traitors." By 1951, the party had been reduced to only 1,000 members. It became a closed, sectarian, suspicious, and paranoiac organization, with diminished strength in almost every region, except in the Alentejo, where the party, through propaganda and ideology more than organizational strength, was able to mobilize strikes of landless peasants in the early 1950s.On 3 January 1960, Álvaro Cunhal and nine other political prisoners made a spectacular escape from the Peniche prison and fled the country. Soon after this escape, Cunhal was elected secretary-general and, with other top leaders, directed the PCP from exile. Trotskyite and Maoist fractions emerged within the party in the 1960s, strengthened by the ideological developments in the international communist movement, such as in China and Cuba. The PCP would not tolerate dissent or leftism and began purging the extreme left fractions.The PCP intensified its control of the labor movement after the more liberal syndical election regulations under Prime Minister Mar- cello Caetano allowed communists to run for leadership positions in the corporative unions. By 1973, there was general unrest in the labor movement due to deteriorating economic conditions brought on by the colonial wars, as well as by world economic pressures including the Arab oil boycott.After the Revolution of 25 April 1974, the PCP enjoyed a unique position: it was the only party to have survived the Estado Novo. It emerged from clandestinity as the best organized political party in Portugal with a leadership hardened by years in jail. Since then, despite the party's stubborn orthodoxy, it has consistently played an important role as a moderating force. As even the Socialist Party (PS) was swept up by the neoliberal tidal wave, albeit a more compassionate variant, increasingly the PCP has played a crucial role in ensuring that interests and perspectives of the traditional Left are aired.One of the most consistent planks of the PCP electoral platform has been opposition to every stage of European integration. The party has regularly resisted Portuguese membership in the European Economic Community (EEC) and, following membership beginning in 1986, the party has regularly resisted further integration through the European Union (EU). A major argument has been that EU membership would not resolve Portugal's chronic economic problems but would only increase its dependence on the world. Ever since, the PCP has argued that its opposition to membership was correct and that further involvement with the EU would only result in further economic dependence and a consequent loss of Portuguese national sovereignty. Further, the party maintained that as Portugal's ties with the EU increased, the vulnerable agrarian sector in Portugal would risk further losses.Changes in PCP leadership may or may not alter the party's electoral position and role in the political system. As younger generations forget the uniqueness of the party's resistance to the Estado Novo, public images of PCP leadership will change. As the image of Álvaro Cunhal and other historical communist leaders slowly recedes, and the stature of Carlos Carvalhas (general secretary since 1992) and other moderate leaders is enhanced, the party's survival and legitimacy have strengthened. On 6 March 2001, the PCP celebrated its 80th anniversary.See also Left Bloc.Historical dictionary of Portugal > Portuguese Communist Party
-
8 party
plural - parties; noun1) (a meeting of guests for entertainment, celebration etc: a birthday party; She's giving/having a party tonight; (also adjective) a party dress.) fiesta, reunión2) (a group of people with a particular purpose: a party of tourists.) grupo3) (a group of people with the same ideas and purposes, especially political: a political party.) partidoparty n1. fiesta2. grupo3. partidotr['pɑːtɪ]1 (celebration) fiesta2 SMALLPOLITICS/SMALL partido3 (group) grupo4 SMALLLAW/SMALL parte nombre femenino, interesado,-a1 (dress) de fiesta; (mood, atmosphere) festivo,-a2 SMALLPOLITICS/SMALL (member, leader) del partido1 (go to parties) ir a fiestas; (have fun) divertirse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be party to a crime ser cómplice de un delitoto be party to something hacerse cómplice de algoguilty party el/la culpableinnocent party el/la inocenteparty politics política de partidoparty political broadcast emisión nombre femenino de propaganda política, espacio de propaganda electoralparty piece numeritoparty wall pared nombre femenino medianera1) : partido m (político)2) participant: parte f, participante mf3) group: grupo m (de personas)4) gathering: fiesta fto throw a party: dar una fiestaadj.• de gala adj.• de partido adj.n.• banda s.f.• bandería s.f.• bando s.m.• fiesta s.f.• garufa s.f.• guateque s.m.• pandilla s.f.• parranda s.f.• partido (Gobierno) s.m.• reunión s.f.• sarao s.m.• tertulia s.f.
I 'pɑːrti, 'pɑːti1) ( event) fiesta fI was invited to a tea/dinner party — me invitaron a un té/a una cena
to have o (colloq) throw a party — dar* or hacer* una fiesta; (before n) < mood> festivo; < game> de salón; < dress> de fiesta
2) ( Pol) partido m; (before n) <member, leader> del partidoparty politics — política f de partido; (pej) partidismo m
3) ( group) grupo m; ( in hunting) partida f4) ( person or body involved) parte fthe guilty/innocent party — el culpable/inocente
to be (a) party to a crime — ser* cómplice de un crimen
II
['pɑːtɪ]1. N1) (=celebration) fiesta fhouse 3.2) (Pol) partido m•
to join a party — afiliarse a un partido, hacerse miembro de un partido3) (=group) grupo mwe were only a small party — éramos pocos, éramos un grupo pequeño
4) (in dispute, contract) parte fthe parties concerned — los interesados, las partes interesadas
third 4., warring•
to be (a) party to sth, I will not be a party to any violence — no me voy a prestar a la violencia2.VI * (=go to parties) ir a fiestas; (=have a good time) irse de juerga *, irse de marcha (Sp) *let's party! — ¡vámonos de juerga! *, ¡vámonos de marcha! (Sp) *
where shall we party tonight? — ¿a qué fiesta vamos esta noche?
3.CPDparty animal N — fiestero(-a) m / f, juerguista mf
party dress N — vestido m de fiesta
party food N — (=nibbles) canapés mpl
party game N — (for children) juego m de fiestas; (for adults) juego m de sociedad
party line N — (Telec) línea f compartida
the party line — (Pol) la línea del partido
party member N — miembro m del partido
party mood N — (=mood for enjoying o.s.) ganas fpl de fiesta
•
to be in the party mood — tener ganas de fiestaparty music N — música f de fiesta
party official N — (Pol) funcionario(-a) m / f de partido
party piece N — numerito m (de fiesta) *
party politics NPL — (gen) política fsing de partido; pej partidismo msing pej, politiqueo msing pej
party pooper * N — aguafiestas mf inv
party spirit N — espíritu m festivo
party time N —
•
it's party time! — ¡es hora de fiesta!party trick N — truco m
party wall N — pared f medianera
* * *
I ['pɑːrti, 'pɑːti]1) ( event) fiesta fI was invited to a tea/dinner party — me invitaron a un té/a una cena
to have o (colloq) throw a party — dar* or hacer* una fiesta; (before n) < mood> festivo; < game> de salón; < dress> de fiesta
2) ( Pol) partido m; (before n) <member, leader> del partidoparty politics — política f de partido; (pej) partidismo m
3) ( group) grupo m; ( in hunting) partida f4) ( person or body involved) parte fthe guilty/innocent party — el culpable/inocente
to be (a) party to a crime — ser* cómplice de un crimen
II
-
9 split
split
1. verbpresent participle splitting: past tense, past participle split)1) (to cut or (cause to) break lengthwise: to split firewood; The skirt split all the way down the back seam.) rajar2) (to divide or (cause to) disagree: The dispute split the workers into two opposing groups.) dividir
2. noun(a crack or break: There was a split in one of the sides of the box.) grieta, raja- split second
- splitting headache
- the splits
split1 n raja / hendidurasplit2 vb1. partir2. rajarsemy trousers split when I bent down al agacharme, se me rajó el pantalón3. dividir / repartirtr[splɪt]1 (crack, cut, break) grieta, hendidura, raja3 (division - gen) división nombre femenino, ruptura, cisma nombre masculino; (- in politics) escisión nombre femenino, cisma nombre masculino, ruptura4 (division, sharing out) reparto2 (divided - gen) dividido,-a; (- in politics) dividido,-a, escindido,-a1 (crack, break) agrietar, hender; (cut) partir2 (tear - garment) rajar, desgarrar; (- seam) descoser3 SMALLPHYSICS/SMALL (atom) desintegrar4 (divide, separate) dividir (up, -); (political party etc) dividir, escindir5 (share) repartir, dividir■ we had to split the prize money between 10 people tuvimos que repartir el premio entre 10 personas1 (crack) agrietarse, henderse, rajarse; (in two parts) partirse2 (tear - garment) rajarse, desgarrarse; (- seams) descoserse3 (divide - gen) dividirse (up, -); (- in politics) dividirse, escindirse4 familiar (tell tales) acusar, soplar, chivarse (on, de)\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLin a split second en una fracción de segundo, en menos de un segundoto do the splits abrir las piernas en cruzto split hairs rizar el rizo, buscarle tres pies al gatoto split one's head open romperse la crisma, partirse la crismato split one's sides laughing partirse de risa, troncharse de risato split the difference partir la diferenciacream split / jam split pastelito relleno de nata / pastelito relleno de mermeladasplit decision decisión nombre femenino no unánimesplit infinitive SMALLLINGUISTICS/SMALL infinitivo con un adverbio intercalado entre el "to" y el verbosplit peas guisantes nombre masculino plural secossplit pin chavetasplit personality desdoblamiento de personalidadsplit ring llaverosplit shift horario partido1) cleave: partir, henderto split wood: partir madera2) burst: romper, rajarto split open: abrir3) divide, share: dividir, repartirsplit vi1) : partirse (dícese de la madera, etc.)2) burst, crack: romperse, rajarsesplit n1) crack: rajadura f2) tear: rotura f3) division: división f, escisión fadj.• dividido, -a adj.• grieta adj.• hendido, -a adj.• partido, -a adj.• raja adj.• separarse adj.n.• cisma s.m.• despatarrada s.f.• división s.f.• hendedura s.f.• hendidura s.f.• quebraja s.f.• raja s.f.• rendija s.f.• resquebrajadura s.f.• ruptura s.f.pret., p.p.(Preterito definido y participio pasivo de "to split")v.(§ p.,p.p.: split) = cachar v.• cascar v.• desdoblar v.• dividir v.• escindir v.• grietarse v.• hender v.• partir v.• resquebrajar v.• tronchar v.splɪt
I
1)a) (in garment, cloth - in seam) descosido m; (- part of design) abertura f, raja f, tajo m (CS)b) (in wood, glass) rajadura f, grieta f2)b) ( break up) ruptura f, separación fc) (share-out, distribution)a six-way split would give everyone $1,500 — si se dividiera la suma en seis partes, cada uno se llevaría $1.500
3) splits plto do the splits — abrirse* completamente de piernas, hacer* el spagat (Esp)
4) ( bottle) (AmE) botella individual de vino o champán
II
1)2)a) ( divided)split decision — decisión f no unánime
split shift — horario m (de trabajo) partido or no corrido
b) ( in factions) dividido
III
1.
1)a) ( break) \<\<wood/stone\>\> partirto split the atom — fisionar or desintegrar el átomo
to split something in two/in half — partir algo en dos/por la mitad
b) ( burst)she split her head open — se partió or se abrió la cabeza
to split one's sides (laughing) — partirse or troncharse or desternillarse de risa
c) ( divide into factions) \<\<nation/church\>\> dividir, escindir2) (divide, share) \<\<cost/food\>\> dividirdo you want to split a bottle? — ¿nos tomamos una botella a medias?
2.
vi1) (crack, burst) \<\<wood/rock\>\> partirse, rajarse; \<\<leather/seam\>\> abrirse*, romperse*his bag split (open) — se le rompió or rajó la bolsa
2) \<\<political party/church\>\> dividirse, escindirse3) ( leave) (sl) abrirse* (arg), largarse* (fam)4) ( denounce) (BrE colloq)to split ON somebody — acusar or (Méx fam) rajar a alguien, chivarse de alguien (Esp fam)
•Phrasal Verbs:- split up[splɪt] (vb: pt, pp split)1. N1) (=crack) (in wood, rock) hendidura f, grieta f2) (=rift) ruptura f, escisión f•
there are threats of a split in the progressive party — se oyen voces or hay amenazas de escisión en el partido progresista3) (=division) división f•
the split between the rich and the poor — la división entre ricos y pobres•
a three- way split — una división en tres partes4)• to do the splits — (Gymnastics) hacer el spagat; (accidentally) abrirse completamente de piernas, espatarrarse *
5) (Culin)6) (Sew) (in skirt) abertura f2. ADJ1) (=cracked) [wood, rock] partido, hendido2) (=divided) dividido•
the party was split — el partido estaba escindido or dividido•
the votes are split 15-13 — los votos están repartidos 15 a 133. VT1) (=break) partir- split hairs- split one's sides laughing2) (=divide, share) repartir•
let's split the money between us — repartámonos el dinero•
to split sth into three parts — dividir algo en tres partes•
to split the vote — (Pol) repartirse los votos3) (fig) [+ government, group] dividir; [+ party] escindir, dividirthe dispute split the party — la disputa escindió or dividió el partido
4. VI1) (=come apart) [stone etc] henderse, rajarsethe jeans split the first time she wore them — los vaqueros se le abrieron por las costuras la primera vez que se los puso
2) (fig) [government, group] dividirse; [party] escindirse, dividirse3) * (=tell tales) chivatear **, soplar *to split on sb — chivatear contra algn **, soplar contra algn *
4) (esp US) * (=leave) largarse **, irse5.CPDsplit ends NPL — puntas fpl abiertas
split infinitive N — infinitivo en el que un adverbio o una frase se intercala entre "to" y el verbo
split personality N — personalidad f desdoblada
split pin N — (Brit) chaveta f, pasador m
split-screensplit screen N — pantalla f partida
split second N — fracción f de segundo
split-secondin a split second — en un instante, en un abrir y cerrar de ojos
split shift N — jornada f partida
split ticket N (US) —
•
to vote a split ticket — dar el voto fraccionado, votar a candidatos de diferentes partidos en la misma papeleta- split up* * *[splɪt]
I
1)a) (in garment, cloth - in seam) descosido m; (- part of design) abertura f, raja f, tajo m (CS)b) (in wood, glass) rajadura f, grieta f2)b) ( break up) ruptura f, separación fc) (share-out, distribution)a six-way split would give everyone $1,500 — si se dividiera la suma en seis partes, cada uno se llevaría $1.500
3) splits plto do the splits — abrirse* completamente de piernas, hacer* el spagat (Esp)
4) ( bottle) (AmE) botella individual de vino o champán
II
1)2)a) ( divided)split decision — decisión f no unánime
split shift — horario m (de trabajo) partido or no corrido
b) ( in factions) dividido
III
1.
1)a) ( break) \<\<wood/stone\>\> partirto split the atom — fisionar or desintegrar el átomo
to split something in two/in half — partir algo en dos/por la mitad
b) ( burst)she split her head open — se partió or se abrió la cabeza
to split one's sides (laughing) — partirse or troncharse or desternillarse de risa
c) ( divide into factions) \<\<nation/church\>\> dividir, escindir2) (divide, share) \<\<cost/food\>\> dividirdo you want to split a bottle? — ¿nos tomamos una botella a medias?
2.
vi1) (crack, burst) \<\<wood/rock\>\> partirse, rajarse; \<\<leather/seam\>\> abrirse*, romperse*his bag split (open) — se le rompió or rajó la bolsa
2) \<\<political party/church\>\> dividirse, escindirse3) ( leave) (sl) abrirse* (arg), largarse* (fam)4) ( denounce) (BrE colloq)to split ON somebody — acusar or (Méx fam) rajar a alguien, chivarse de alguien (Esp fam)
•Phrasal Verbs:- split up -
10 match
mæ
I noun(a short piece of wood or other material tipped with a substance that catches fire when rubbed against a rough or specially-prepared surface: He struck a match.) cerilla, fósforo- matchbox
II
1. noun1) (a contest or game: a football/rugby/chess match.)2) (a thing that is similar to or the same as another in some way(s) eg in colour or pattern: These trousers are not an exact match for my jacket.) partido, encuentro3) (a person who is able to equal another: She has finally met her match at arguing.) juego, combinación4) (a marriage or an act of marrying: She hoped to arrange a match for her daughter.) igual
2. verb1) (to be equal or similar to something or someone in some way eg in colour or pattern: That dress matches her red hair.) hacer juego con, combinar con2) (to set (two things, people etc) to compete: He matched his skill against the champion's.) enfrentar•- matched- matchless
- matchmaker
match1 n1. cerilla2. partidomatch2 vb1. igualar2. hacer juego / combinartr[mæʧ]1 SMALLSPORT/SMALL (football, hockey, etc) partido, encuentro; (boxing, wrestling) combate nombre masculino; (tennis) partido, match nombre masculino2 (equal) igual nombre masulino o femenino■ when it comes to chess, she's no match for you ella no puede competir contigo al ajedrez3 (marriage) casamiento, matrimonio4 (clothes, colour, etc) juego, combinación nombre femenino1 (equal) igualar2 (go well with) hacer juego (con), combinar (con)3 (be like, correspond to) corresponder a, ajustarse a1 (go together) hacer juego, combinar■ do these colours match? ¿estos colores combinan?2 (tally) coincidir, concordar3 (people) llevarse bien, avenirse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto match somebody against somebody enfrentar alguien a alguiento meet one's match encontrar la horma de su zapatomatch point (in tennis) pelota de partido————————tr[mæʧ]1 (light) cerilla, fósforomatch ['mæʧ] vt1) pit: enfrentar, oponer2) equal, fit: igualar, corresponder a, coincidir con3) : combinar con, hacer juego conher shoes match her dress: sus zapatos hacen juego con su vestidomatch vi1) correspond: concordar, coincidir2) : hacer juegowith a tie to match: con una corbata que hace juegomatch n1) equal: igual mfhe's no match for her: no puede competir con ella2) fight, game: partido m, combate m (en boxeo)3) marriage: matrimonio m, casamiento mhe lit a match: encendió un fósforo5)to be a good match : hacer buena pareja (dícese de las personas), hacer juego (dícese de la ropa)n.(§ pl.: matches) = cerilla (Fósforo) s.f.• cerillo s.m.• combate s.m.• concurso s.m.• fósforo (Cerilla) s.m.• igual s.m.• matrimonio s.m.• partido (Deporte) s.m.• torneo s.m.v.• aparear v.• casar v.• coincidir v.• emparejar v.• empatar v.• equiparar v.• hacer juego (Textil) v.• hermanar v.• igualar v.• matizar v.• parear v.mætʃ
I
1) ( for fire) fósforo m, cerilla f (Esp), cerillo m (esp AmC, Méx)2) ( Sport)boxing/wrestling match — combate m or match m de boxeo/de lucha libre
tennis match — partido m de tenis
football/hockey match — (BrE) partido m de fútbol/de hockey
3) ( equal) (no pl)to be a/no match for somebody — estar*/no estar* a la altura de alguien, poder*/no poder* competir con alguien
to meet one's match — encontrar* la horma de su zapato
4) (no pl) ( something similar)they are a good match — \<\<couple\>\> hacen buena pareja
that shirt is a perfect match for my suit — esa camisa va or queda perfecta con mi traje
II
1.
1) ( equal) igualar2)a) ( correspond to) ajustarse a, corresponder adoes it match the description? — ¿se ajusta or corresponde a la descripción?
b) ( harmonize with) hacer* juego conit matches my shoes — hace juego con mis zapatos, queda bien con mis zapatos
c) (make correspond, find equivalent for)to be well matched — \<\<competitors\>\> ser* del mismo nivel, ser* muy parejos (esp AmL); \<\<couple\>\> hacer* buena pareja
d) matching pres p haciendo juego, a juego (Esp)
2.
via) ( go together) \<\<clothes/colors\>\> hacer* juego, combinar, pegar* (fam)a coat and a scarf to match — un abrigo y una bufanda haciendo juego or (Esp) a juego
b) ( tally) coincidir, concordar*Phrasal Verbs:- match up
I
[mætʃ]N (for lighting) fósforo m, cerilla f, cerillo m (Mex)a box of matches — una caja de fósforos or cerillas
II [mætʃ]1. N1) (esp Brit) (Tennis, Cricket) partido m ; (Ftbl) partido m, encuentro m ; (Boxing) combate m ; (Fencing) asalto mshooting 3., shouting 2., test 4.boxing match — combate m de boxeo
2) (=complement)the skirt is a good match for the jumper — la falda hace juego or queda bien con el jersey
I'm looking for a match for these curtains — estoy buscando un color que haga juego con estas cortinas
the two of them make or are a good match — hacen una buena pareja
3) (=equal)to be a match/no match for sb — estar/no estar a la altura de algn
he's a match for anybody — puede competir con el más pintado, está a la altura del más pintado
4) (=marriage) casamiento m, matrimonio m ; (=potential partner) partido m2. VT1) (=pair off) emparejarthey're well matched — [couple] hacen buena pareja
the teams were well matched — los equipos estaban muy igualados or (esp LAm) eran muy parejos
they match your skills with employers' requirements — emparejan tus aptitudes con los requisitos de las empresas
the children were asked to match the pictures with the words — se pidió a los niños que emparejaran las imágenes con las palabras
evenlythey matched fibres to the suspect's clothes — encontraron fibras que se correspondían con la ropa del sospechoso
2) (=equal) igualarthe results did not match our expectations — los resultados no estuvieron a la altura de nuestras expectativas
3) (=correspond to) ajustarse a, corresponder aa man matching the police description — un hombre que se ajustaba a or que correspondía a la descripción de la policía
4) (=put in opposition to) enfrentarto match sth/sb against sth/sb — enfrentar algo/a algn a or con algo/algn
she matched her wits against his strength — enfrentó or midió su ingenio con la fuerza de él
Scotland has been matched against France in the final — Escocia se enfrentará a or con Francia en la final
5) (=tone with) [+ clothes, colours] combinar con, hacer juego con6) (also: match up) (=find sth similar to)can you match (up) this material? — (with sth exactly same) ¿puedes encontrar algo que iguale este tejido?; (with sth which goes well) ¿puedes encontrar algo que vaya bien con este tejido?
3. VI1) (=go together) [colours] combinar bien; [clothes] hacer juegowith a skirt to match — con una falda a tono or que hace juego
he has a vicious tongue and a temper to match — tiene una lengua viperina y un genio de mil demonios *
2) (=be the same) corresponderse, coincidir4.CPDmatch point N — (Tennis) bola f de partido, match point m
match report N — informe m sobre el partido
- match up* * *[mætʃ]
I
1) ( for fire) fósforo m, cerilla f (Esp), cerillo m (esp AmC, Méx)2) ( Sport)boxing/wrestling match — combate m or match m de boxeo/de lucha libre
tennis match — partido m de tenis
football/hockey match — (BrE) partido m de fútbol/de hockey
3) ( equal) (no pl)to be a/no match for somebody — estar*/no estar* a la altura de alguien, poder*/no poder* competir con alguien
to meet one's match — encontrar* la horma de su zapato
4) (no pl) ( something similar)they are a good match — \<\<couple\>\> hacen buena pareja
that shirt is a perfect match for my suit — esa camisa va or queda perfecta con mi traje
II
1.
1) ( equal) igualar2)a) ( correspond to) ajustarse a, corresponder adoes it match the description? — ¿se ajusta or corresponde a la descripción?
b) ( harmonize with) hacer* juego conit matches my shoes — hace juego con mis zapatos, queda bien con mis zapatos
c) (make correspond, find equivalent for)to be well matched — \<\<competitors\>\> ser* del mismo nivel, ser* muy parejos (esp AmL); \<\<couple\>\> hacer* buena pareja
d) matching pres p haciendo juego, a juego (Esp)
2.
via) ( go together) \<\<clothes/colors\>\> hacer* juego, combinar, pegar* (fam)a coat and a scarf to match — un abrigo y una bufanda haciendo juego or (Esp) a juego
b) ( tally) coincidir, concordar*Phrasal Verbs:- match up -
11 game
ɡeim
1. noun1) (an enjoyable activity, which eg children play: a game of pretending.) juego2) (a competitive form of activity, with rules: Football, tennis and chess are games.) juego3) (a match or part of a match: a game of tennis; winning (by) three games to one.) partido, partida4) ((the flesh of) certain birds and animals which are killed for sport: He's very fond of game; (also adjective) a game bird.) caza mayor; caza menor
2. adjective(brave; willing; ready: a game old guy; game for anything.) valiente; animoso; dispuesto, listo- gamely- games
- gamekeeper
- game point
- game reserve
- game warden
- the game is up
game n1. juegodo you know the rules of the game? ¿conoces las reglas del juego?2. partido / partida3. cazatr[geɪm]1 juego2 (match) partido3 (of cards, chess, etc) partida4 (hunting) caza5 figurative use presa1 dispuesto,-a, listo,-a1 SMALLBRITISH ENGLISH/SMALL educación f sing física\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be game for estar listo,-a para, estar preparado,-a parato be game for anything estar dispuesto,-a a todothe game is up figurative use se acabó el juegoto give the game away figurative use enseñar las cartasto play the game figurative use jugar limpiotwo can play at that game figurative use donde las dan las tomanwhat's her game? ¿a qué juega?, ¿qué pretende?board games juegos nombre masculino plural de mesagame bird ave nombre femenino de cazagame of chance juego de azargame reserve coto de cazagames console consola de videojuegosthe Olympic Games los Juegos nombre masculino plural Olímpicosgame ['geɪm] adj1) ready: listo, dispuestowe're game for anything: estamos listos para lo que sea2) lame: cojogame n1) amusement: juego m, diversión f2) contest: juego m, partido m, concurso m3) : caza fbig game: caza mayoradj.• de caza adj.n.• caza s.f.• deporte s.m.• encuentro s.m.• juego s.m.• partido s.m.v.• jugar por dinero v.
I geɪm1) ca) ( amusement) juego mto play the game — jugar* limpio
b) ( type of sport) deporte m2) ca) ( complete match) ( Sport) partido m; (in board games, cards) partida fb) games pl ( competition) juegos mplthe Olympic Games — los Juegos Olímpicos, las Olimpíadas or Olimpiadas
3) c (part - of tennis, squash match) juego m; (- of bridge rubber) manga f4) c (underhand scheme, ploy) juego mwhat's your game? — ¿qué es lo que pretendes?
to be ahead of the game — llevar la delantera
to beat somebody at her/his own game — ganarle or vencer* a alguien con sus propias armas
to give the game away — \<\<person\>\> descubrir* el pastel (fam)
her blushes gave the game away — el sonrojarse la delató
5)to be on the game — (BrE sl) hacer* la calle (fam)
6) u ( in hunting) caza fto be fair game — ser* blanco legítimo; (before n)
game birds — aves fpl de caza
7) u ( Culin) caza f
II
to be game (FOR something): we're going swimming, are you game? vamos a nadar ¿te apuntas?; I'm game if you are si tú te animas, yo también; she's game for anything — se apunta a todo
I [ɡeɪm]1. N1) (lit)a) (=entertainment) juego m- play the gamevideob) (=match) [of football, rugby, cricket, tennis] partido m; (within tennis set) juego m; [of cards, chess, snooker] partida fto have or play a game of football — jugar un partido de fútbol
to have or play a game of chess — echar or jugar una partida de ajedrez
•
they were (one) game all — (Tennis) iban iguales or empatados a un juego•
game, set and match — juego, set y partidoball I, 1., 1), board, card I, 1., 1)•
game to Johnston — juego a Johnstonc) (=type of sport) deporte mthe Olympic Games — los Juegos Olímpicos, las Olimpiadas
3) (=style of play)•
to be off one's game — no estar en forma•
to put sb off his/her game — afectar la forma de jugar de algn, hacer jugar mal a algn4) (Hunting) (=large animals) caza f mayor; (=birds, small animals) caza f menor; big 3., fair I, 1., 1)5) (fig)a) (=scheme) juego mwhat's your game? — ¿qué estás tramando?
- beat sb at his/her own game- give the game awaywaiting 2.the faces of the two conspirators gave the game away — la expresión de su rostro delató a los dos conspiradores, la expresión del rostro de los dos conspiradores hizo que se descubriera el pastel *
b) (=joke) juego mfundon't play games with me! — ¡no juegues conmigo!
c) * (=business) negocio mhow long have you been in this game? — ¿cuánto tiempo llevas metido en este negocio?, ¿cuánto tiempo hace que trabajas en esto?
- be ahead of the gamed) * (=prostitution)e) * (=trouble) lata * fit was a game getting here! — ¡menuda lata para llegar aquí! *
2.ADJ (=willing)are you game? — ¿te animas?, ¿te apuntas?
I'm game if you are — si tú te animas, yo también
to be game for anything — apuntarse a cualquier cosa or a todo
3.VI (=gamble) jugar (por dinero)4.CPDgame fish N — pez de agua dulce pescado como deporte
game fishing N — pesca deportiva de peces de agua dulce
game pie N — empanada elaborada con una pieza de caza mayor o menor
game plan N — (Sport) plan m de juego; (fig) estrategia f
game preserve, game reserve N — coto m de caza
game show host N — (on radio, TV) presentador(a) m / f de concursos
games console N — consola f de videojuegos
games master N — profesor m de deportes
games mistress N — profesora f de deportes
game theory N — teoría f de juegos
game warden N — guarda mf de coto or de caza
II
[ɡeɪm]ADJ (=lame)* * *
I [geɪm]1) ca) ( amusement) juego mto play the game — jugar* limpio
b) ( type of sport) deporte m2) ca) ( complete match) ( Sport) partido m; (in board games, cards) partida fb) games pl ( competition) juegos mplthe Olympic Games — los Juegos Olímpicos, las Olimpíadas or Olimpiadas
3) c (part - of tennis, squash match) juego m; (- of bridge rubber) manga f4) c (underhand scheme, ploy) juego mwhat's your game? — ¿qué es lo que pretendes?
to be ahead of the game — llevar la delantera
to beat somebody at her/his own game — ganarle or vencer* a alguien con sus propias armas
to give the game away — \<\<person\>\> descubrir* el pastel (fam)
her blushes gave the game away — el sonrojarse la delató
5)to be on the game — (BrE sl) hacer* la calle (fam)
6) u ( in hunting) caza fto be fair game — ser* blanco legítimo; (before n)
game birds — aves fpl de caza
7) u ( Culin) caza f
II
to be game (FOR something): we're going swimming, are you game? vamos a nadar ¿te apuntas?; I'm game if you are si tú te animas, yo también; she's game for anything — se apunta a todo
-
12 liberal
'libərəl1) (generous: She gave me a liberal helping of apple pie; She was very liberal with her money.) generoso2) (tolerant; not criticizing or disapproving: The headmaster is very liberal in his attitude to young people.) liberal, tolerante3) ((also noun) (especially with capital) in politics, (a person belonging to a party) favouring liberty for the individual.) liberal•- liberally
liberal adj liberal
liberal adjetivo liberal ■ sustantivo masculino y femenino Liberal
liberal
I adjetivo
1 Pol liberal
Partido Liberal, Liberal Party
2 (comprensivo) liberal, open-minded
3 (espléndido, generoso) generous, liberal
II mf liberal ' liberal' also found in these entries: Spanish: ancha - ancho - comulgar - progre - tesis - esquema - letra - licenciado - profesión English: broad-minded - liberal - liberal arts - Liberal Party - - mindedtr['lɪbərəl]1 SMALLPOLITICS/SMALL liberal1 SMALLPOLITICS/SMALL liberal nombre masulino o femenino\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLLiberal Party (el) Partido Liberalliberal ['lɪbrəl, 'lɪbərəl] adj1) tolerant: liberal, tolerante2) generous: generoso3) abundant: abundante4)liberal arts : humanidades fpl, artes fpl liberalesliberal n: liberal mfadj.• franco, -a adj.• garboso, -a adj.• generoso, -a adj.• liberal (Gobierno) adj.• tolerante adj.n.• liberal s.m.
I 'lɪbərəl1)a) ( tolerant) <ideas/attitude> liberal; < interpretation> librethe Liberal Democratic Party — ( in UK) el Partido Democrático Liberal
2) ( generous) <sponsor/backer> generoso
II
a) ( progressive thinker) liberal mfb) Liberal ( party member) liberal mf['lɪbǝrǝl]Liberal Democrat — ( in UK) demócrata mf liberal
1. ADJ1) (=tolerant) [person, view, education, regime] liberal2) (=generous) [quantity, amount] abundante, generoso; [portion] generoso3) (Brit)(Pol) (=of the Liberal Party)Liberal — [MP] del partido liberal; [government, policy] liberal
4) (=free) [interpretation, translation] libre2. N1) (=broad-minded person) liberal mf2) (Brit)(Pol)3.CPDthe liberal arts NPL — (esp US) (Univ) las humanidades, las artes liberales
Liberal Democrat N — (Brit) (Pol) demócrata mf liberal
the Liberal Democratic Party N — (Brit) el Partido Democrático Liberal
the Liberal Party N — (Brit) el Partido Liberal
liberal studies NPL — (esp Brit) asignatura de letras complementaria para aquellos que estudian ciencias
* * *
I ['lɪbərəl]1)a) ( tolerant) <ideas/attitude> liberal; < interpretation> librethe Liberal Democratic Party — ( in UK) el Partido Democrático Liberal
2) ( generous) <sponsor/backer> generoso
II
a) ( progressive thinker) liberal mfb) Liberal ( party member) liberal mfLiberal Democrat — ( in UK) demócrata mf liberal
-
13 side
1. noun1) ((the ground beside) an edge, border or boundary line: He walked round the side of the field; He lives on the same side of the street as me.) lado2) (a surface of something: A cube has six sides.) cara3) (one of the two of such surfaces which are not the top, bottom, front, or back: There is a label on the side of the box.) lado4) (either surface of a piece of paper, cloth etc: Don't waste paper - write on both sides!) cara, lado, plana5) (the right or left part of the body: I've got a pain in my side.) costado, lado6) (a part or division of a town etc: He lives on the north side of the town.) parte, lado7) (a slope (of a hill): a mountain-side.) ladera, falda8) (a point of view; an aspect: We must look at all sides of the problem.) aspecto, punto de vista9) (a party, team etc which is opposing another: Whose side are you on?; Which side is winning?) lado, parte, bando
2. adjective(additional, but less important: a side issue.) secundario- - side- - sided
- sidelong
- sideways
- sideburns
- side effect
- sidelight
- sideline
- sidelines
- side road
- sidestep
- side-street
- sidetrack
- sidewalk
- from all sides
- on all sides
- side by side
- side with
- take sides
side n1. lado2. carahave you listened to the other side of the record? ¿has escuchado la otra cara del disco?3. lado / costadomy right side hurts, doctor doctor, me duele el costado derecho4. mano5. equipowhich side do you want to win? ¿qué equipo quieres que gane?6. parte / ladotr[saɪd]■ the right/wrong side of the material el derecho/revés de la tela2 (of hill, mountain) ladera, falda4 (edge - gen) borde nombre masculino; (- of lake, river, etc) orilla; (- of page) margen nombre masculino5 (aspect) aspecto, faceta, lado; (position, opinion, point of view) lado, parte nombre femenino, punto de vista■ whose side are you on? ¿de qué parte estás?, ¿de parte de quién estás?■ I'm on your side estoy de tu parte, estoy de tu lado7 SMALLSPORT/SMALL equipo8 (line of descent) parte nombre femenino, lado1 lateral\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLby the side of junto aon/from all sides por los cuatro costadoson/from every side por los cuatro costadoson the side (in addition to main job) como trabajo extra■ he makes a bit of money on the side by giving private classes gana algún dinero extra dando clases particularesside by side juntos,-as, uno,-a al lado del/de la otro,-ato be on the right/wrong side of fifty tener menos/más de cincuenta añosto be on the big/small side ser más bien grande/pequeño,-ato come down on somebody's side (gen) ponerse de parte de alguien 2 (in judgement) fallar a favor de alguiento get on the wrong side of somebody ganarse la antipatía de alguiento have something on one's side tener ventaja en algoto keep on the right side of somebody tratar de llevarse bien con alguiento let the side down fallar a alguien, hacer quedar mal a alguiento put something on/to one side guardar algo, reservar algo, dejar algo a un ladoto take somebody on(to) one side llamar a alguien aparteto take sides with somebody ponerse de parte de alguienside dish guarnición nombre femenino, acompañamientoside drum tambor nombre masculinoside effect efecto secundarioside issue tema secundarioside street calle nombre femenino lateralside view vista de perfilside ['saɪd] n1) : lado m, costado m (de una persona), ijada f (de un animal)2) : lado m, cara f (de una moneda, etc.)3) : lado m, parte fhe's on my side: está de mi parteto take sides: tomar partidoadj.• indirecto, -a adj.• ladero, -a adj.• lateral adj.• secundario, -a adj.n.• cara s.f.• costado s.m.• equipo s.m.• falda s.f.• flanco s.m.• lado s.m.• orilla s.f.v.• tomar partido v.
I saɪd1) (surface - of cube, record, coin, piece of paper) lado m, cara f; (- of building, cupboard) lado m, costado m; (- of mountain, hill) ladera f, falda f1,000 words is about three sides — 1.000 palabras son más o menos tres carillas
the right/wrong side of the fabric — el derecho/revés de la tela; coin I
2) (boundary, edge)he left it on the side of his plate — lo dejó en el plato, a un lado or (RPl) a un costado
they were playing by the side of the pool — estaban jugando junto a or al lado de la piscina
he flew in from Washington to be at her side — voló desde Washington para estar con ella or para acompañarla
they sat side by side — estaban sentados uno junto al otro or uno al lado del otro
to stay o keep on the right side of somebody — no predisponer* a algn en contra de uno
4) (contrasted area, part, half) lado mthe driver's/passenger's side — el lado del conductor/pasajero
on both sides/either side of something — a ambos lados/a cada lado de algo
to move to one side — hacerse* a un lado
to put something on o to one side: I'll put it to one side until I have more time lo voy a dejar hasta que tenga más tiempo; he swam to the other side of the river nadó hasta la otra orilla or hasta el otro lado del río; she walked past on the other side of the street pasó por la acera de enfrente; he's the right/wrong side of 40 tiene menos/más de 40 años; she received support from all sides recibió apoyo de todos los sectores; on the side: he repairs cars on the side — arregla coches como trabajo extra; track I 6) a)
5)a) ( faction)to take sides — tomar partido
to take somebody's side — ponerse* de parte or del lado de algn
whose side are you on? — ¿tú de parte de quién estás?
b) ( Sport) equipo m6) (area, aspect) lado m, aspecto myou must listen to both sides of the story — hay que oír las dos versiones or las dos campanas
it's a little on the short/expensive side — es un poco corto/caro
7) ( line of descent)on her father's side — por parte de su padre or por el lado paterno
•Phrasal Verbs:
II
adjective (before n, no comp)a) <door/entrance/wall> laterala side street — una calle lateral, una lateral
b) (incidental, secondary) < issue> secundarioc) ( Culin)[saɪd]side dish — acompañamiento m, guarnición f
1. N1) [of person] lado m, costado m•
at or by sb's side — (lit) al lado de algn; (fig) en apoyo a algnthe assistant was at or by his side — el ayudante estaba a su lado
•
to sleep on one's side — dormir de costado•
to split one's sides — desternillarse de risa2) [of animal] ijar m, ijada f3) (=edge) [of box, square, building etc] lado m ; [of boat, vehicle] costado m ; [of hill] ladera f, falda f ; [of lake] orilla f ; [of road, pond] borde m•
on the other side of the road — al otro lado de la calle•
he was driving on the wrong side of the road — iba por el lado contrario de la carretera4) (=face, surface) [of box, solid figure, paper, record etc] cara fwhat's on the other side? — [of record] ¿qué hay a la vuelta?
•
right side up — boca arriba•
wrong side up — boca abajo5) (=aspect) lado m, aspecto mto see only one side of the question — ver solo un lado or aspecto de la cuestión
on one side..., on the other... — por una parte..., por otra...
6) (=part) lado m•
from all sides — de todas partes, de todos ladoson all sides — por todas partes, por todos lados
•
on both sides — por ambos lados•
to look on the bright side — ser optimista•
from every side — de todas partes, de todos lados•
the left-hand side — el lado izquierdo•
on the mother's side — por parte de la madre•
to make a bit (of money) on the side * — ganar algún dinero extra, hacer chapuzas (Sp)•
to move to one side — apartarse, ponerse de ladoto take sb on or to one side — apartar a algn
to put sth to or on one side (for sb) — guardar algo (para algn)
leaving that to one side for the moment,... — dejando eso a un lado por ahora,...
•
it's the other side of Illescas — está más allá de Illescas•
to be on the right side of 30 — no haber cumplido los 30 añosto keep on the right side of sb — congraciarse or quedar bien con algn
•
the right-hand side — el lado derecho•
to be on the safe side... — para estar seguro..., por si acaso...•
it's this side of Segovia — está más acá de Segovia•
from side to side — de un lado a otro•
to be on the wrong side of 30 — haber cumplido los 30 años- be on the wrong side of sb- get out of bed on the wrong side7) (fig)•
the weather's on the cold side — el tiempo es algo frío•
it's a bit on the large side — es algo or (LAm) tantito grande•
the results are on the poor side — los resultados son más bien mediocres8) (=team) (Sport) equipo m•
to choose sides — seleccionar el equipo•
to let the side down — (Sport) dejar caer a los suyos; (fig) decepcionar•
he's on our side — (fig) es de los nuestroswhose side are you on? — ¿a quiénes apoyas?
to be on the side of sth/sb — ser partidario de algo/algn
to have age/justice on one's side — tener la juventud/la justicia de su lado
•
our side won — ganaron los nuestros•
to pick sides — seleccionar el equipo•
to take sides (with sb) — tomar partido (con algn)9) (Pol) (=party) partido m10) (Brit) * (=conceit, superiority) tono m, postín * mthere's no side about or to him, he's got no side — no presume, no se da aires de superioridad
2.•
to side against sb — tomar el partido contrario a algn, alinearse con los que se oponen a algn•
to side with sb — ponerse de parte de algn3.CPDside effect N — efecto m secundario
side entrance N — entrada f lateral
side glance N — mirada f de soslayo
side issue N — cuestión f secundaria
side order N — plato m de acompañamiento
•
served with a side order of sth — servido con acompañamiento or guarnición de algoserved with a side order of potato salad — servido con acompañamiento or guarnición de ensaladilla de patatas
side plate N — platito m (para el pan, ensalada etc)
side-saddleside saddle N — silla f de amazona
side street N — calle f lateral
side table N — trinchero m
side whiskers NPL — patillas fpl
* * *
I [saɪd]1) (surface - of cube, record, coin, piece of paper) lado m, cara f; (- of building, cupboard) lado m, costado m; (- of mountain, hill) ladera f, falda f1,000 words is about three sides — 1.000 palabras son más o menos tres carillas
the right/wrong side of the fabric — el derecho/revés de la tela; coin I
2) (boundary, edge)he left it on the side of his plate — lo dejó en el plato, a un lado or (RPl) a un costado
they were playing by the side of the pool — estaban jugando junto a or al lado de la piscina
he flew in from Washington to be at her side — voló desde Washington para estar con ella or para acompañarla
they sat side by side — estaban sentados uno junto al otro or uno al lado del otro
to stay o keep on the right side of somebody — no predisponer* a algn en contra de uno
4) (contrasted area, part, half) lado mthe driver's/passenger's side — el lado del conductor/pasajero
on both sides/either side of something — a ambos lados/a cada lado de algo
to move to one side — hacerse* a un lado
to put something on o to one side: I'll put it to one side until I have more time lo voy a dejar hasta que tenga más tiempo; he swam to the other side of the river nadó hasta la otra orilla or hasta el otro lado del río; she walked past on the other side of the street pasó por la acera de enfrente; he's the right/wrong side of 40 tiene menos/más de 40 años; she received support from all sides recibió apoyo de todos los sectores; on the side: he repairs cars on the side — arregla coches como trabajo extra; track I 6) a)
5)a) ( faction)to take sides — tomar partido
to take somebody's side — ponerse* de parte or del lado de algn
whose side are you on? — ¿tú de parte de quién estás?
b) ( Sport) equipo m6) (area, aspect) lado m, aspecto myou must listen to both sides of the story — hay que oír las dos versiones or las dos campanas
it's a little on the short/expensive side — es un poco corto/caro
7) ( line of descent)on her father's side — por parte de su padre or por el lado paterno
•Phrasal Verbs:
II
adjective (before n, no comp)a) <door/entrance/wall> laterala side street — una calle lateral, una lateral
b) (incidental, secondary) < issue> secundarioc) ( Culin)side dish — acompañamiento m, guarnición f
-
14 Conservative
- tiv1) (disliking change: Older people tend to be conservative in their attitudes; conservative opinions.) conservador2) (in politics, wanting to avoid major changes and to keep business and industry in private hands.) conservadorconservative adj n conservador1 SMALLPOLITICS/SMALL conservador,-raconservative [kən'sərvət̬iv] adj1) : conservador2) cautious: moderado, cautelosoa conservative estimate: un cálculo moderado: conservador m, -dora fadj.• conservador adj.• conservativo, -a adj.• moderado, -a adj.n.• conservador, -ora s.m.,f.• conservativo s.m.• moderado s.m.
I kən'sɜːrvətɪv, kən'sɜːvətɪva) ( traditional) conservadorb) Conservative ( in UK) (before n) conservadorc) ( cautious) cauteloso, prudente
II
a) ( traditionalist) conservador, -dora m,fb) Conservative ( in UK) conservador, -dora m,fthe Conservatives — los conservadores, el Partido Conservador
••
Cultural note:
El Partido Conservador es uno de los principales partidos políticos británicos. Se sitúa a la derecha del espectro político que apoya el sistema capitalista, la libre empresa y la privatización de la industria y los servicios públicos. Surgió alrededor de 1830 como resultado de la evolución del Tory Party y a menudo se le denomina aún por este nombre[kǝn'sɜːvǝtɪv] (Brit)1.ADJ (Pol) conservadorConservative Party — Partido m Conservador
2.N (Pol) conservador(a) m / f* * *
I [kən'sɜːrvətɪv, kən'sɜːvətɪv]a) ( traditional) conservadorb) Conservative ( in UK) (before n) conservadorc) ( cautious) cauteloso, prudente
II
a) ( traditionalist) conservador, -dora m,fb) Conservative ( in UK) conservador, -dora m,fthe Conservatives — los conservadores, el Partido Conservador
••
Cultural note:
El Partido Conservador es uno de los principales partidos políticos británicos. Se sitúa a la derecha del espectro político que apoya el sistema capitalista, la libre empresa y la privatización de la industria y los servicios públicos. Surgió alrededor de 1830 como resultado de la evolución del Tory Party y a menudo se le denomina aún por este nombre -
15 democratic
1) (belonging to, governed by or typical of democracy: a democratic country.) democrático2) (believing in equal rights and privileges for all: The boss is very democratic.) democráticodemocratic adj democráticotr[demə'krætɪk]1 democrático,-a\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLDemocratic party SMALLAMERICAN ENGLISH/SMALL partido demócratademocratic [.dɛmə'kræt̬ɪk] adj: democrático♦ democratically [-t̬ɪkli] advadj.• democrático, -a adj.'demə'krætɪka) <country/election> democráticob) Democratic ( in US) demócrata
••
Cultural note:
El Partido Demócrata, creado en 1792, es uno de los dos principales partidos políticos de Estados Unidos. El otro es el Partido Republicano (Republican Party). El Partido Demócrata está considerado como el propulsor de políticas más liberales, especialmente referidas a temas que afectan a la sociedad. Por esta razón, consigue el apoyo de sindicatos y grupos minoritarios[ˌdemǝ'krætɪk]ADJ1) [country, society, government, election] democrático2) (US)(Pol)Democratic — [candidate, nomination, convention] demócrata
liberal 3., social 3.the Democratic Republic of... — la República Democrática de...
3) (=egalitarian) [style, ethos, boss, atmosphere] democrático* * *['demə'krætɪk]a) <country/election> democráticob) Democratic ( in US) demócrata
••
Cultural note:
El Partido Demócrata, creado en 1792, es uno de los dos principales partidos políticos de Estados Unidos. El otro es el Partido Republicano (Republican Party). El Partido Demócrata está considerado como el propulsor de políticas más liberales, especialmente referidas a temas que afectan a la sociedad. Por esta razón, consigue el apoyo de sindicatos y grupos minoritarios -
16 replay
1. ri:'plei verb(to play (a football match etc) again (eg because neither team won): The match ended in a draw - it will have to be replayed.) volver a jugar, jugar de nuevo
2. 'ri:plei noun(a replayed football match etc.) partido de desempatereplay1 n partido de desempatereplay2 vb jugar el partido de desempate1 (of film sequence) repetición nombre femenino de la jugada2 (match) partido de desempate1 (tape, film) volver a poner2 (match) volver a jugar
I 'riː'pleɪ1) ( Sport) \<\<game/match\>\> volver* a jugar, repetir*2) (Audio, Video) volver* a poner
II 'riːpleɪ [ˌriː'pleɪ] (esp Brit)1.VT (Sport) [+ match] volver a jugar; (Mus) volver a tocar; [+ tape] volver a poner2.[ˌriː'pleɪ]VI (Sport) volver a jugar3.['riːpleɪ]N [of match] repetición f de un partido action 3.* * *
I ['riː'pleɪ]1) ( Sport) \<\<game/match\>\> volver* a jugar, repetir*2) (Audio, Video) volver* a poner
II ['riːpleɪ] -
17 whip
wip
1. noun1) (a long cord or strip of leather attached to a handle, used for punishing people, driving horses etc: He carries a whip but he would never use it on the horse.) látigo2) (in parliament, a member chosen by his party to make sure that no one fails to vote on important questions.) oficial disciplinario de partido
2. verb1) (to strike with a whip: He whipped the horse to make it go faster; The criminals were whipped.) azotar, fustigar2) (to beat (eggs etc).) batir (huevos); montar (nata, i2etc/i2)3) (to move fast especially with a twisting motion like a whip: Suddenly he whipped round and saw me; He whipped out a revolver and shot her.) moverse/girarse rápidamente/bruscamente•- whiplash- whipped cream
- whip up
whip1 n látigo / fusta / azotewhip2 vb1. azotar / golpear con la fusta2. batir / montartr[wɪp]2 SMALLPOLITICS/SMALL (person) oficial encargado,-a de la disciplina de un partido; (instruction) llamada a los miembros de un partido para que asistan a la cámara3 SMALLCOOKERY/SMALL (desert) batido2 (wind) azotar5 (act quickly) hacer algo deprisa1 (move quickly) ir volando\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto crack the whip hacer restallar el látigoto get a fair crack of the whip tener la misma oportunidadto have the whip hand estar en una posición de control, llevar la batuta1) snatch: sacar (rápidamente), arrebatarshe whipped the cloth off the table: arrebató el mantel de la mesa2) lash: azotar3) defeat: vencer, derrotar4) incite: incitar, despertarto whip up enthusiasm: despertar el entusiasmo5) beat: batir (huevos, crema, etc.)whip viflap: agitarsewhip n1) : látigo m, azote m, fusta f (de jinete)2) : miembro m de un cuerpo legislativo encargado de disciplinav.• azotar v.• batir v.• flagelar v.• fustigar v.• guasquear v.• vapulear v.• zurrar v.• zurriagar v.n.• anguila s.f.• azote s.m.• fusta s.f.• látigo s.m.• rebenque s.m.• zurriaga s.f.• zurriago s.m.
I hwɪp, wɪp1) ( in horse riding) fusta f, fuete m (AmL exc CS); ( of tamer) látigo m; ( for punishment) azote mto crack the whip — hacer* restallar el látigo
3) ( Culin) batido m
II
- pp- transitive verb1)a) ( lash) \<\<horse\>\> pegarle* a ( con la fusta), fustigar*; \<\<person\>\> azotar; \<\<child\>\> darle* una paliza or un azote ab) ( defeat) (colloq) darle* una paliza a (fam)c) ( beat) \<\<egg whites\>\> batir; \<\<cream\>\> batir or (Esp) montarwhipped cream — crema f batida or (Esp) nata f montada
2)a) ( take quickly) (+ adv compl)b) ( steal) (BrE colloq) birlar (fam), volar* (Méx, Ven fam)3) ( bind) \<\<rope\>\> reforzar*•Phrasal Verbs:- whip up[wɪp]1. N1) (for training, driving animals) látigo m ; (=riding crop) fusta f, fuete m (LAm); (for punishment) azote mcrack 3., 4)2) (Brit)(Parl)a) (=person) diputado encargado de la disciplina del partido en el parlamentochief whip — diputado jefe encargado de la disciplina del partido en el parlamento
b) (=call)(two-line/three-line) whip — citación (con subrayado dobleiple) para que un diputado acuda a votar en una cuestión importante
See:see cultural note LEADER OF THE HOUSE in leader3) (Culin) batido m (de claras de huevo o nata)2. VT1) (with whip, stick) [+ horse] fustigar; [+ person] azotar; [+ child] dar un azote a, dar una paliza ashape 1., 5)to whip into a frenzy —
2) liter [wind] azotar3) (Culin) [+ cream] montar; [+ mixture, egg white] batir4) * (=defeat) dar una paliza a *5) * (=remove)he whipped the letter out of my hand — me quitó la carta de la mano de un tirón, me arrebató la carta
6) (=rush)7) (Brit) * (=steal) mangar *, birlar *8) (=strengthen) [+ rope] reforzar9) (Sew) [+ hem, seam] sobrehilar3. VI1) (=speed, rush)2) (=lash)3) (=flap) batirthe rigging was whipping against the mast of the yacht — las jarcias batían contra el mástil del yate
4.CPDwhip hand N —
- have the whip hand- have the whip hand over sb- whip in- whip off- whip on- whip out- whip upWHIP En el Parlamento británico la disciplina de partido está a cargo de un grupo de parlamentarios llamados whips, encabezados por el Chief Whip. Están encargados de informar al resto de miembros del partido de los asuntos del Parlamento, comunicar a los líderes las opiniones de los parlamentarios y asegurarse de que todos ellos asistan a la Cámara de los Comunes ( House of Commons) y acudan a las votaciones importantes, lo que puede ser crucial cuando el gobierno no tiene mayoría absoluta. Tanto el gobierno como la oposición tienen sus propios whips y por lo general todos ellos ostentan también altos cargos en la Administración del Estado, si pertenecen al partido del gobierno.* * *
I [hwɪp, wɪp]1) ( in horse riding) fusta f, fuete m (AmL exc CS); ( of tamer) látigo m; ( for punishment) azote mto crack the whip — hacer* restallar el látigo
3) ( Culin) batido m
II
- pp- transitive verb1)a) ( lash) \<\<horse\>\> pegarle* a ( con la fusta), fustigar*; \<\<person\>\> azotar; \<\<child\>\> darle* una paliza or un azote ab) ( defeat) (colloq) darle* una paliza a (fam)c) ( beat) \<\<egg whites\>\> batir; \<\<cream\>\> batir or (Esp) montarwhipped cream — crema f batida or (Esp) nata f montada
2)a) ( take quickly) (+ adv compl)b) ( steal) (BrE colloq) birlar (fam), volar* (Méx, Ven fam)3) ( bind) \<\<rope\>\> reforzar*•Phrasal Verbs:- whip up -
18 catch
kæ
1. past tense, past participle - caught; verb1) (to stop and hold (something which is moving); to capture: He caught the cricket ball; The cat caught a mouse; Did you catch any fish?; I tried to catch his attention.) coger, atrapar2) (to be in time for, or get on (a train, bus etc): I'll have to catch the 9.45 (train) to London.) coger, llegar a tiempo, alcanzar3) (to surprise (someone) in the act of: I caught him stealing (my vegetables).) pillar, sorprender, coger, pescar4) (to become infected with (a disease or illness): He caught flu.) contagiarse de, contraer5) (to (cause to) become accidentally attached or held: The child caught her fingers in the car door.) engancharse6) (to hit: The punch caught him on the chin.) dar con, darse con7) (to manage to hear: Did you catch what she said?) oir, entender, captar8) (to start burning: I dropped a match on the pile of wood and it caught (fire) immediately.) prender (fuego)
2. noun1) (an act of catching: He took a fine catch behind the wicket.) parada2) (a small device for holding (a door etc) in place: The catch on my suitcase is broken.) pestillo3) (the total amount (of eg fish) caught: the largest catch of mackerel this year.) presa, captura4) (a trick or problem: There's a catch in this question.) trampa•- catching- catchy
- catch-phrase
- catch-word
- catch someone's eye
- catch on
- catch out
- catch up
catch vb coger / atraparhe caught the ball, but then he dropped it cogió la pelota, pero luego se le cayótr[kæʧ]1 (of ball) parada2 (of fish) presa3 familiar (difficulty) pega, trampa4 (fastener on door) pestillo■ bet you can't catch me! ¡a que no me coges!2 (surprise) pillar, sorprender, coger, pescar; (catch up with) alcanzar, pillar3 (train, plane - take) coger, tomar; (- be in time for) alcanzar4 familiar (manage to see, hear, attend) pescar5 (hear, understand) oír, entender, captar■ sorry, I didn't quite catch that perdona, no lo he entendido bien6 (entangle, get stuck - clothes, hair) engancharse; (- fingers) pillarse7 (become infected with) contagiarse de, contraer8 (hit) dar con, darse con9 (mood, likeness, etc) captar, reflejar1 (take hold of) coger2 (sleeve etc) engancharse (on, en)3 (burn) prender\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be a good catch (boyfriend, girlfriend) ser un buen partidoto be caught out by something ser sorprendido,-a por algoto be caught up in something verse envuelto,-a en algo, estar envuelto,-a en algoto catch a cold resfriarse, coger un resfriadoto catch hold of something agarrar algo, echar mano a algoto catch it ganarse una broncato catch one's breath sostener la respiraciónto catch one's death (of cold) coger una pulmonía dobleto catch somebody napping coger a alguien desprevenido,-ato catch somebody red-handed coger a alguien con las manos en la masa, coger a alguien in fragantito catch somebody with their trousers down coger a alguien in fragantito catch somebody's attention/eye atraer la atención de alguien, captar la atención de alguiento catch sight of something/somebody / catch a glimpse of something/somebody entrever algo/a alguiento get caught up in something verse envuelto,-a en algo1) capture, trap: capturar, agarrar, atrapar, coger2) : agarrar, pillar fam, tomar de sorpresathey caught him red-handed: lo pillaron con las manos en la masa3) grasp: agarrar, captar4) entangle: enganchar, enredar5) : tomar (un tren, etc.)6) : contagiarse deto catch a cold: contagiarse de un resfriado, resfriarsecatch vi1) grasp: agarrar2) hook: engancharse3) ignite: prender, agarrarcatch n1) catching: captura f, atrapada f, parada f (de una pelota)2) : redada f (de pescado), presa f (de caza)he's a good catch: es un buen partido3) latch: pestillo m, pasador m4) difficulty, trick: problema m, trampa f, truco mn.• pesca s.f.• redada s.f.adj.• engañoso, -a adj.• llamativo, -a adj.n.• aldabilla s.f.• botín s.m.• cerradero s.m.• garra s.f.• lance s.m.• pestillo s.m.• pieza s.f.• presa s.f.• trampa s.f.v.(§ p.,p.p.: caught) = atrapar v.• captar v.• capturar v.• coger v.• comprender v.• enganchar v.• entrecoger v.• pescar v.• pillar v.• prender v.• tomar v.
I
1. kætʃ(past & past p caught) transitive verb1) \<\<ball/object\>\> agarrar, coger* (esp Esp)he caught her by the arm — la agarró or (esp Esp) cogió del brazo
2) ( capture) \<\<mouse/lion\>\> atrapar, coger* (esp Esp); \<\<fish\>\> pescar*, coger* (esp Esp); \<\<thief\>\> atrapar3)a) ( take by surprise) agarrar, pillar (fam), pescar* (fam)to catch somebody in the act — agarrar (or pillar etc) a alguien infraganti or con las manos en la masa
you won't catch me going there again! — (colloq) a mí no me vuelven a ver el pelo por ahí! (fam)
we got caught in the rain — nos sorprendió or (fam) nos pilló or pescó la lluvia
b) ( intercept) \<\<person\>\> alcanzar*catch you later — (AmE colloq) nos vemos
4)a) \<\<train/plane\>\> ( take) tomar, coger* (esp Esp); ( be in time for) alcanzar*I only just caught it — lo alcancé con el tiempo justo, por poco lo pierdo
b) (manage to see, hear)we could catch a movie before dinner — (AmE) podríamos ir al cine antes de cenar
5) (entangle, trap)I caught my skirt on a nail — se me enganchó or (Méx tb) se me atoró or (Chi) se me pescó la falda en un clavo
I caught my finger in the drawer — me pillé or (AmL tb) me agarré el dedo en el cajón
I got caught in a traffic jam — me agarró or (esp Esp) me cogió un atasco
6)a) ( attract)did you catch what she said? — ¿oíste or entendiste lo que dijo?
c) \<\<mood/likeness\>\> captar, reflejar7) ( become infected with) \<\<disease\>\> contagiarse deto catch a cold — resfriarse*, agarrar or (esp Esp) coger* or (fam) pescar* or pillar un resfriado
I caught (the) measles from him — me contagió or (fam) me pegó el sarampión
8) ( hit)to catch it o (AmE also) catch hell (colloq): you'll really catch it if he sees you! — si te ve, te mata!
9)a) ( hold back)b) ( restrain)to catch oneself — contenerse*
2.
vi1)a) ( grasp) agarrar, coger* (esp Esp), cachar (Méx)b) (bite, take hold) \<\<mechanism\>\> engranarc) ( become hooked) engancharse2) ( ignite) \<\<fire\>\> prender, agarrar (AmL)•Phrasal Verbs:- catch on- catch up
II
1)a) ( Sport) atrapada f, parada f, atajada f (CS)b) ( potential partner)he's/she's a good catch — (colloq) es un buen partido
c) ( of fish) pesca f2) ( fastening device - on door) pestillo m, pasador m (AmL); (- on window, box, necklace) cierre msafety catch — seguro m
3) ( hidden drawback) trampa fI knew there'd be a catch in o to it somewhere — ya sabía yo que tenía que haber gato encerrado
4) ( in voice) temblor m[kætʃ] (vb: pt, pp caught)with a catch in her voice — con la voz entrecortada or temblorosa
1. N1) [of ball etc] cogida f, parada f ; [of trawler] pesca f ; [of single fish] presa f, pesca f, captura fgood catch! — (Sport) ¡la cogiste! ¡bien hecho!, ¡bien agarrada! (LAm)
he's a good catch * — (as husband etc) es un buen partido
2) (=fastener) cierre m ; (Brit) (on door) pestillo m ; (Brit) (on box, window) cerradura f ; (=small flange) fiador m3) (=trick) trampa f ; (=snag) pega fwhere's the catch? — ¿cuál es la trampa?
a question with a catch to it — una pregunta capciosa or de pega
the catch is that... — la dificultad es que...
4)5) (=game) catch-can m, lucha f2. VT1) (=grasp) asir; [+ ball] coger, agarrar (LAm); [+ fish] pescar; [+ thief] coger, atraparcatch! — ¡cógelo!, ¡toma!
to be caught between two alternatives — estar entre la espada y la pared, no saber a qué carta quedarse
to catch sb's attention or eye — llamar la atención de algn
- be caught like a rat in a trap2) (=take by surprise) pillar or coger or (LAm) tomar de sorpresato catch sb doing sth — sorprender or pillar a algn haciendo algo
to catch o.s. doing sth — sorprenderse a sí mismo haciendo algo
you won't catch me doing that — yo sería incapaz de hacer eso, nunca me verás haciendo eso
they caught him in the act — le cogieron or pillaron con las manos en la masa
3) (=contact, get hold of)when can I catch you next? — ¿cuándo podemos quedar otra vez para esto?
(I'll) catch you later! * — ¡nos vemos!
4) [+ bus, train etc] coger, tomar (LAm)5) (=hear) oír; (=understand) comprender, entender6) (=see, hear, visit) [+ TV programme, film] ver; [+ radio programme] oír, escuchar; [+ exhibition, concert] ir ato catch the post — (=be in time for) llegar antes de la recogida del correo
7) (Med) [+ disease] coger, pillar, contagiarse deyou'll catch your death (of cold)! * — ¡(te) vas a agarrar un buen resfriado!
- catch a cold8) (=capture) [+ atmosphere, likeness] saber captar, plasmar9) (=trap)10) (=hit)11) (=receive, come into contact with)12)13)to catch it * — merecerse una regañina ( from de)
you'll catch it! * — ¡las vas a pagar!, ¡te va a costar caro!
3. VI1) (=hook) engancharse (on en); (=tangle) enredarse2) [fire, wood] prender, encenderse; (Culin) [rice, vegetables etc] quemarse4.CPDcatch phrase N — muletilla f, frase f de moda
catch question N — pregunta f capciosa, pregunta f de pega
- catch at- catch on- catch up* * *
I
1. [kætʃ](past & past p caught) transitive verb1) \<\<ball/object\>\> agarrar, coger* (esp Esp)he caught her by the arm — la agarró or (esp Esp) cogió del brazo
2) ( capture) \<\<mouse/lion\>\> atrapar, coger* (esp Esp); \<\<fish\>\> pescar*, coger* (esp Esp); \<\<thief\>\> atrapar3)a) ( take by surprise) agarrar, pillar (fam), pescar* (fam)to catch somebody in the act — agarrar (or pillar etc) a alguien infraganti or con las manos en la masa
you won't catch me going there again! — (colloq) a mí no me vuelven a ver el pelo por ahí! (fam)
we got caught in the rain — nos sorprendió or (fam) nos pilló or pescó la lluvia
b) ( intercept) \<\<person\>\> alcanzar*catch you later — (AmE colloq) nos vemos
4)a) \<\<train/plane\>\> ( take) tomar, coger* (esp Esp); ( be in time for) alcanzar*I only just caught it — lo alcancé con el tiempo justo, por poco lo pierdo
b) (manage to see, hear)we could catch a movie before dinner — (AmE) podríamos ir al cine antes de cenar
5) (entangle, trap)I caught my skirt on a nail — se me enganchó or (Méx tb) se me atoró or (Chi) se me pescó la falda en un clavo
I caught my finger in the drawer — me pillé or (AmL tb) me agarré el dedo en el cajón
I got caught in a traffic jam — me agarró or (esp Esp) me cogió un atasco
6)a) ( attract)did you catch what she said? — ¿oíste or entendiste lo que dijo?
c) \<\<mood/likeness\>\> captar, reflejar7) ( become infected with) \<\<disease\>\> contagiarse deto catch a cold — resfriarse*, agarrar or (esp Esp) coger* or (fam) pescar* or pillar un resfriado
I caught (the) measles from him — me contagió or (fam) me pegó el sarampión
8) ( hit)to catch it o (AmE also) catch hell (colloq): you'll really catch it if he sees you! — si te ve, te mata!
9)a) ( hold back)b) ( restrain)to catch oneself — contenerse*
2.
vi1)a) ( grasp) agarrar, coger* (esp Esp), cachar (Méx)b) (bite, take hold) \<\<mechanism\>\> engranarc) ( become hooked) engancharse2) ( ignite) \<\<fire\>\> prender, agarrar (AmL)•Phrasal Verbs:- catch on- catch up
II
1)a) ( Sport) atrapada f, parada f, atajada f (CS)b) ( potential partner)he's/she's a good catch — (colloq) es un buen partido
c) ( of fish) pesca f2) ( fastening device - on door) pestillo m, pasador m (AmL); (- on window, box, necklace) cierre msafety catch — seguro m
3) ( hidden drawback) trampa fI knew there'd be a catch in o to it somewhere — ya sabía yo que tenía que haber gato encerrado
4) ( in voice) temblor mwith a catch in her voice — con la voz entrecortada or temblorosa
-
19 republican
1) (of a republic: a republican form of government.) republicano2) ((also noun) (a person) who supports a republican form of government: He is not a monarchist - he is a republican; my republican friends.) republicanorepublican adj n republicanotr[rɪ'pʌblɪkən]1 republicano,-a1 republicano,-arepublican [ri'pʌblɪkən] adj: republicano: republicano m, -na fadj.• republicano, -a adj.n.• republicano s.m.
I rɪ'pʌblɪkəna) ( of a republic) republicanob) Republican ( in US) republicano
II
a) ( supporter of republic) republicano, -na m,fb) Republican ( in US) republicano, -na m,f
••
Cultural note:
Uno de los dos principales partidos políticos de EEUU. Aunque el Partido Republicano fue fundado, en 1854, por los que deseaban abolir la esclavitud, se considera más conservador que el Partido Demócrata (Democratic Party), el otro partido[rɪ'pʌblɪkǝn]1.ADJ republicano2.N republicano(-a) m / f3.CPDRepublican Party N — (in US) Partido m Republicano
* * *
I [rɪ'pʌblɪkən]a) ( of a republic) republicanob) Republican ( in US) republicano
II
a) ( supporter of republic) republicano, -na m,fb) Republican ( in US) republicano, -na m,f
••
Cultural note:
Uno de los dos principales partidos políticos de EEUU. Aunque el Partido Republicano fue fundado, en 1854, por los que deseaban abolir la esclavitud, se considera más conservador que el Partido Demócrata (Democratic Party), el otro partido -
20 advantage
1) ((a) gain or benefit: There are several advantages in being self-employed.) ventaja2) (in tennis, the first point gained after deuce.) ventaja•- advantageously
- have an/the advantage over
- have an/the advantage
- take advantage of
advantage n ventajatr[əd'vɑːntɪʤ]1 ventaja2 (benefit) provecho\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be to somebody's advantage ir en beneficio de alguiento turn something to one's advantage sacar buen partido de algoadvantage [əd'væntɪʤ, æd-] n1) superiority: ventaja f, superioridad f2) gain: provecho m, partido m3)to take advantage of : aprovecharse den.• aprovechamiento s.m.• beneficio s.m.• comodidad s.f.• delantera s.f.• pro s.m.• provecho s.m.• ventaja s.f.əd'væntɪdʒ, əd'vɑːntɪdʒa) c ( superior factor) ventaja fto have an advantage over somebody — tener* ventaja sobre alguien
b) u ( gain)to turn something to (one's) advantage — sacar* provecho or partido de algo
to take advantage of something — aprovechar algo; (pej) aprovecharse de algo
to take advantage of somebody — ( exploit) aprovecharse de alguien
c) ( in tennis) (no pl) ventaja f[ǝd'vɑːntɪdʒ]N1) ventaja f"languages and shorthand an advantage" — (in job advert) "serán méritos or se valorarán idiomas y taquigrafía"
•
to have an advantage over sb — llevar ventaja a algnI'm sorry, you have the advantage of me — (fig) lo siento, pero no recuerdo su nombre
•
to take advantage of sb — (unfairly) aprovecharse de algn, sacar partido de algn; (sexually) abusar de algn•
it's to our advantage — es ventajoso para nosotros•
to turn sth to (one's) advantage — sacar buen partido de algo2) (Sport)advantage González — (Tennis) ventaja González
* * *[əd'væntɪdʒ, əd'vɑːntɪdʒ]a) c ( superior factor) ventaja fto have an advantage over somebody — tener* ventaja sobre alguien
b) u ( gain)to turn something to (one's) advantage — sacar* provecho or partido de algo
to take advantage of something — aprovechar algo; (pej) aprovecharse de algo
to take advantage of somebody — ( exploit) aprovecharse de alguien
c) ( in tennis) (no pl) ventaja f
См. также в других словарях:
partido — partido, da sustantivo masculino 1. Agrupación de personas, constituida en organización política, con unas ideas e intereses comunes: partidos conservadores, partidos progresistas, el partido del gobierno, el partido de la oposición, afiliarse a… … Diccionario Salamanca de la Lengua Española
partido — partido, da (Del part. de partir). 1. adj. Franco, liberal y que reparte con otros lo que tiene. 2. Dicho de una jornada laboral o de un horario: Distribuido en dos partes. 3. Heráld. Dicho de un escudo, de una pieza o de un animal heráldico:… … Diccionario de la lengua española
Partido — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda La palabra partido puede referirse a: un partido, competición entre dos deportistas o dos equipos de deportistas; un partido político, agrupación política de personas que comparten ideología o están reunidos por… … Wikipedia Español
partido — adj. 1. Dividido em partes. 2. Saído. 3. [Heráldica] Diz se do escudo dividido perpendicularmente. • s. m. 4. União de muitas pessoas para um determinado fim; parcialidade, fação, bando. 5. Rancho. 6. Expediente, recurso, resolução. 7. Trato ou… … Dicionário da Língua Portuguesa
Partido — steht für: eine Verwaltungseinheit in der Provinz Buenos Aires in Argentinien, siehe Partido (Verwaltungseinheit) eine Stadt in der Dominikanischen Republik, siehe Partido (Stadt) in der spanischen Sprache für Partei Diese Seite ist eine … Deutsch Wikipedia
Partido — ► adjetivo 1 Que reparte con otros lo que tiene: ■ es muy partido con los necesitados. SINÓNIMO generoso 2 HERÁLDICA Se aplica al escudo que está dividido en sentido vertical en dos partes iguales. ► sustantivo masculino 3 Conjunto de personas… … Enciclopedia Universal
partido — I. pp de partir II. 1 s m Agrupación de personas con los mismos intereses, opiniones o aficiones: Tú eres de mi partido , Somos del partido de los madrugadores 2 Tomar partido Decidirse por alguna cosa, luchar por ella o defenderla: tomar partido … Español en México
partido — (m) (Básico) evento deportivo durante el cual dos grupos de personas rivalizan para obtener un premio Ejemplos: Ayer vimos en la tele el último partido de fútbol del campeonato de Europa. Han cancelado el partido de rugby por el tiempo.… … Español Extremo Basic and Intermediate
partido — sustantivo masculino 1) bando, bandería, parcialidad. 2) resolución, determinación, decisión. Generalmente se emplea con el verbo tomar: habrá que tomar un partido u otro. 3) provecho, ventaja … Diccionario de sinónimos y antónimos
partido — {{#}}{{LM P29266}}{{〓}} {{SynP29972}} {{[}}partido{{]}} ‹par·ti·do› {{《}}▍ s.m.{{》}} {{<}}1{{>}} Conjunto de personas que siguen o defienden unas ideas o intereses determinados, especialmente si están agrupadas en una organización política.… … Diccionario de uso del español actual con sinónimos y antónimos
Partido — A partido is an administrative subdivision of the province|Buenos Aires|Argentina. A partido is formally a single municipality, though it usually comprises one or more population centers (towns and cities).All the other provinces of Argentina… … Wikipedia