-
41 decimate
'desimeit((of disease, battle etc) to reduce greatly in number: The population was decimated by the plague.) diezmartr['desɪmeɪt]1 diezmarv.• diezmar v.'desəmeɪt, 'desɪmeɪttransitive verb diezmar['desɪmeɪt]VT (lit, fig) diezmar* * *['desəmeɪt, 'desɪmeɪt]transitive verb diezmar -
42 pestilence
'pestiləns(any type of deadly epidemic disease, especially bubonic plague.) pestilencia, pestetr['pestɪləns]1 architecture pestilenciapestilence ['pɛstələnts] n: pestilencia f, peste fn.• pestilencia s.f.'pestələns, 'pestɪlənscount & mass noun (liter) pestilencia f['pestɪlǝns]N pestilencia f, peste f* * *['pestələns, 'pestɪləns]count & mass noun (liter) pestilencia f -
43 ravage
'rævi‹(of enemies, invaders etc) to cause great damage or destruction in, or to plunder (a town, country etc). devastartr['rævɪʤ]1 devastar, asolar1 estragos nombre masculino pluralravage n: destrozo m, destrucción fthe ravages of war: los estragos de la guerran.• destrozo s.m.• estrago s.m.• ruina s.f.• zafarrancho s.m.v.• asolar v.• destrozar v.• pillar v.'rævɪdʒtransitive verb ( plunder) saqueara country ravaged by war — un país asolado or devastado por la guerra
['rævɪdʒ]a body ravaged by disease — un cuerpo en que la enfermedad ha (or había etc) hecho estragos
1.Nravages estragos mpl2.the region was ravaged by floods — las inundaciones causaron estragos en la región, la región fue asolada por las inundaciones
* * *['rævɪdʒ]transitive verb ( plunder) saqueara country ravaged by war — un país asolado or devastado por la guerra
a body ravaged by disease — un cuerpo en que la enfermedad ha (or había etc) hecho estragos
-
44 sweep
swi:p
1. past tense, past participle - swept; verb1) (to clean (a room etc) using a brush or broom: The room has been swept clean.) barrer2) (to move as though with a brush: She swept the crumbs off the table with her hand; The wave swept him overboard; Don't get swept away by (= become over-enthusiastic about) the idea!; She swept aside my objections.) barrer, limpiar, recoger; arrastrar, llevarse; rechazar, descartar3) (to move quickly over: The disease/craze is sweeping the country.) azotar, asolar, arrasar4) (to move swiftly or in a proud manner: High winds sweep across the desert; She swept into my room without knocking on the door.) deslizarse, pasar rápidamente; pasar majestuosamente
2. noun1) (an act of sweeping, or process of being swept, with a brush etc: She gave the room a sweep.) barrido2) (a sweeping movement: He indicated the damage with a sweep of his hand.) gesto/movimiento amplio3) (a person who cleans chimneys.) deshollinador4) (a sweepstake.) apuesta de caballos•- sweeper- sweeping
- sweeping-brush
- at one/a sweep
- sweep someone off his feet
- sweep off his feet
- sweep out
- sweep the board
- sweep under the carpet
- sweep up
sweep vb1. barrerthe floor is dirty, I'm going to sweep it el suelo está sucio, voy a barrerlo2. arrastrartr[swiːp]1 (with broom) barrido5 (by police, rescuers) peinado, rastreo6 familiar (chimney cleaner) deshollinador,-ra1 (room, floor) barrer; (chimney) deshollinar2 (with hand) quitar de un manotazo3 (move over) azotar, barrer4 (remove by force) arrastrar, llevarse■ the swimmers were swept out to sea by the current la corriente arrastró a los nadadores mar adentro5 (pass over) recorrer6 figurative use (spread through) recorrer, extenderse por7 (touch lightly) rozar, pasar por1 (with broom) barrer2 (move quickly) pasar rápidamente3 (extend) recorrer, extenderse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto sweep somebody off his/her feet hacerle perder la cabeza a alguiento sweep something under the carpet ocultar algoto make a clean sweep of things barrer con todo, hacer tabla rasato sweep the board llevarse todos los premios1) : barrer (el suelo, etc.), limpiar (suciedad, etc.)he swept the books aside: apartó los libros de un manotazosweep vi1) : barrer, limpiar2) : extenderse (en una curva), describir una curvathe sun swept across the sky: el sol describía una curva en el cielosweep n1) : barrido m, barrida f (con una escoba)2) : movimiento m circular3) scope: alcance mn.• barredura s.f.• deshollinador s.m.• escobada s.f.• escobazo s.m.• recorrido s.m.• redada s.f.• turbión s.f.v.(§ p.,p.p.: swept) = abalear v.• copar v.• deshollinar v.• dragar v.• escobar v.• rastrear v.• rozar v.swiːp
I
1) ( act) (no pl) barrido m, barrida fgive it a sweep — dale un barrido or una barrida, bárrelo
2)a) c ( movement)b) c (curve - of road, river) curva fc) ( range) (no pl) alcance m, extensión f3) c ( search) peinado m, rastreo m4) c ( chimney sweep) deshollinador, -dora m,f
II
1.
(past & pp swept) transitive verb1)a) ( clean) \<\<floor/path\>\> barrer; \<\<chimney\>\> deshollinarb) ( remove) \<\<leaves/dirt\>\> barrer; \<\<mines\>\> barrershe swept the leaves into a pile — barrió la terraza (or el patio etc) y amontonó las hojas
to sweep something under the rug o (BrE) carpet — correr un velo sobre algo
2) (touch lightly, brush) \<\<surface\>\> rozar*3)a) (pass over, across)severe storms swept the coast — grandes tormentas azotaron or barrieron la costa
the epidemic is sweeping the country — la epidemia se extiende como un reguero de pólvora por el país
b) ( remove by force) arrastrar4)a) ( scan) recorrerb) ( search) \<\<area\>\> peinar, rastrear
2.
vi1) (+ adv compl)a) ( move rapidly)the car swept by o past — el coche pasó rápidamente
b) ( move proudly)he swept past as if I wasn't there — pasó por mi lado con la cabeza en alto, como si yo no existiera
2) (+ adv compl)a) ( spread)fire swept through the hotel — el fuego se propagó or se extendió por todo el hotel
b) ( extend)•Phrasal Verbs:- sweep up[swiːp] (vb: pt, pp swept)1. VT1) [+ place, area]a) (=clean) [+ floor, room, street] barrer; [+ chimney] deshollinarhave you had your chimney swept lately? — ¿te han deshollinado la chimenea recientemente?
b) (=touch) rozarc) (=spread through) [disease, idea, craze] arrasar; [rumours] correr por, extenderse pord) (=lash) [storm, rain, waves] azotar, barrertorrential storms swept the country — tormentas torrenciales azotaron or barrieron el país
the beach was swept by great waves — olas gigantescas azotaron or barrieron la playa
e) (=scan) [searchlight, eyes] recorrerf) (=search) peinar2) (=move)a) (with brush)•
she was sweeping crumbs into a dustpan — estaba recogiendo las migas con una escoba y un recogedor•
he swept the leaves off the path — barrió las hojas del camino- sweep sth under the carpetb) (with hand, arm)•
she swept her hair back with a flick of her wrist — se echó el pelo hacia atrás con un movimiento rápido de muñeca•
he swept the stamps into a box — recogió los sellos en una cajato sweep sb into one's arms — coger or tomar a algn en brazos
•
I swept the rainwater off the bench with my hand — quité el agua de la lluvia del banco con la manoc) (forcefully)to be swept along by or on a wave of sth — (fig) dejarse llevar por una ola de algo
•
landslides that swept cars into the sea — corrimientos de tierra que arrastraron coches hasta el marthe election which swept Labour into office or power — las elecciones en la que los laboristas arrasaron haciéndose con el poder
•
the water swept him off his feet — la fuerza del agua lo derribó- sweep all before one3) (=win decisively) [+ election] arrasar en- sweep the board2. VI1) (=clean) barrer2) (=spread)a) [violence, disease, storm]•
the violence which swept across Punjab — la violencia que arrasó el Punjab•
the storm which swept over the country — la tormenta que arrasó el país•
plague swept through the country — la peste arrasó el paísb) [fire, smoke]•
the fire swept rapidly through the forest — el fuego se propagó or extendió rápidamente por el bosquethick smoke swept through their home — una densa humareda se propagó or extendió por la casa
c) [emotion]•
a great wave of anger swept over me — me invadió una gran oleada de ira•
panic swept through the city — en la ciudad cundió el pánico3) (=move)a) [crowd, procession]•
an angry crowd swept along the main thoroughfare — una multitud airada avanzaba por la calle principalb) (majestically) [person, car]•
to sweep past/in/out — pasar/entrar/salir majestuosamentec) (quickly) [vehicle, convoy]•
the convoy swept along the road — la caravana pasó por la carretera a toda velocidad- sweep into power4) (=stretch) [land, water]•
the bay sweeps away to the south — la bahía se extiende (majestuosamente) hacia el sursweep up•
the hills/woods sweep down to the sea — las colinas/los bosques bajan (majestuosamente) hacia el mar3. N1) (with broom, brush) barrido m, barrida fthe floor/the kitchen could do with a sweep — al suelo/a la cocina le hace falta un barrido or una barrida
•
to give sth a sweep — darle un barrido or una barrida a algo3) (=movement) [of pendulum] movimiento m ; [of scythe] golpe m ; [of beam] trayectoria f ; (fig) [of events, progress, history] marcha f•
with a sweep of his arm — con un amplio movimiento del brazowith one sweep of his scythe, he cleared all the nettles — con un golpe de guadaña hizo desaparecer todas las ortigas
with a sweep of her hand she indicated the desk — extendió la mano indicando el pupitre con un gesto amplio
4) (=search) (for criminals, drugs) batida f, rastreo mto make a sweep: they made a sweep for hidden arms — dieron una batida or hicieron un rastreo buscando armas ocultas
to make a sweep of sth — (with binoculars, torch) hacer una pasada por algo; (with team of people) rastrear algo
5)•
clean sweep —a) (=change)there will be a clean sweep of all those involved in this cover-up — se hará tabla rasa con todos los que estén involucrados en esta tapadera
b) (in competition, series of competitions)•
to make a clean sweep — arrasar ganándolo todo; (Cards) ganar todas las bazas•
it was the first club to make a clean sweep of all three trophies — fue el primer club que arrasó llevándose or ganando el total de los tres trofeos6) (=curve, line) [of coastline, river] curva f ; [of land] extensión f ; [of staircase] trazado m ; [of long skirt, curtains] vuelo m ; [of wings] envergadura f7) (=range)a) (lit) [of telescope, gun, lighthouse, radar] alcance mwith a sweep of 180° — con un alcance de 180°
b) (fig) [of views, ideas] espectro mrepresentatives from a broad sweep of left-wing opinion — representantes de un amplio espectro de la izquierda
8) (=wave) [of emotion] ola f9) = sweepstake- sweep up* * *[swiːp]
I
1) ( act) (no pl) barrido m, barrida fgive it a sweep — dale un barrido or una barrida, bárrelo
2)a) c ( movement)b) c (curve - of road, river) curva fc) ( range) (no pl) alcance m, extensión f3) c ( search) peinado m, rastreo m4) c ( chimney sweep) deshollinador, -dora m,f
II
1.
(past & pp swept) transitive verb1)a) ( clean) \<\<floor/path\>\> barrer; \<\<chimney\>\> deshollinarb) ( remove) \<\<leaves/dirt\>\> barrer; \<\<mines\>\> barrershe swept the leaves into a pile — barrió la terraza (or el patio etc) y amontonó las hojas
to sweep something under the rug o (BrE) carpet — correr un velo sobre algo
2) (touch lightly, brush) \<\<surface\>\> rozar*3)a) (pass over, across)severe storms swept the coast — grandes tormentas azotaron or barrieron la costa
the epidemic is sweeping the country — la epidemia se extiende como un reguero de pólvora por el país
b) ( remove by force) arrastrar4)a) ( scan) recorrerb) ( search) \<\<area\>\> peinar, rastrear
2.
vi1) (+ adv compl)a) ( move rapidly)the car swept by o past — el coche pasó rápidamente
b) ( move proudly)he swept past as if I wasn't there — pasó por mi lado con la cabeza en alto, como si yo no existiera
2) (+ adv compl)a) ( spread)fire swept through the hotel — el fuego se propagó or se extendió por todo el hotel
b) ( extend)•Phrasal Verbs:- sweep up -
45 visit
'vizit
1. verb1) (to go to see (a person or place): We visited my parents at the weekend; They visited the ruins at Pompeii while they were on holiday.) visitar2) (to stay in (a place) or with (a person) for a time: Many birds visit (Britain) only during the summer months.) visitar, ir
2. noun(an act of going to see someone or something for pleasure, socially, professionally etc, or going to stay for a time: We went on a visit to my aunt's; the children's visit to the museum.) visita- visitorvisit1 n visitamy aunt paid us a visit nos vino a ver mi tía / mi tía nos hizo una visitavisit2 vb visitar / ir a verhave you visited the aquarium? ¿has visitado el acuario?tr['vɪzɪt]1 (person) visitar, hacer una visita a2 (place) visitar, ir a1 estar de visita1 visita\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto pay somebody a visit hacer una visita a alguiento visit with somebody SMALLAMERICAN ENGLISH/SMALL charlar con alguienvisit ['vɪzət] vt1) : visitar, ir a ver2) afflict: azotar, afligirvisited by troubles: afligido con problemasvisit vi: hacer (una) visitavisit n: visita fv.• hacer visitas v.• visitar v.n.• morada s.f.• visita s.f.'vɪzət, 'vɪzɪt
I
noun visita fto pay a visit to somebody — hacerle* una visita a alguien, ir* a ver a alguien
this is my first visit to Rome — esta es la primera vez que visito Roma, esta es la primera visita que hago a Roma
II
1.
1) \<\<museum/town\>\> visitar; \<\<friend\>\> visitar, ir*/venir* a ver2) (liter) (usu pass) ( inflict)to visit something ON somebody — infligirle* algo a alguien
2.
via) ( pay a call) hacer* una visita; ( stay) estar* de visitato go visiting — ir* de visita
c) ( chat) (AmE colloq)['vɪzɪt]1.N (gen) visita fto go on or make a visit to — [+ person, place] ir de visita a, visitar a
to pay sb a visit, pay a visit to sb — hacer una visita or visitar a algn, pasar a ver a algn (esp LAm)
on a private/an official visit — de or en visita privada/oficial
he was taken ill on or during a visit to Amsterdam — cayó enfermo durante una visita a Amsterdam
a visit to the lavatory or toilet — una visita al servicio, una visita al señor Roca *
2. VT1) (=go and see) [+ person] visitar, hacer una visita a; [+ place] ir a, visitarto visit a patient — ir a ver a un paciente, visitar a un paciente
we're hoping to visit Tarragona — esperamos poder ir a or visitar Tarragona
when we first visited the town — la primera vez que fuimos a or visitamos la ciudad
2) (=stay with) [+ person] visitar, pasar un tiempo con; (=stay in) [+ town, area] visitar, pasar un tiempo en3) frm (=inflict, afflict)to visit a punishment on sb — castigar a algn con algo, mandar un castigo a algn
they were visited with the plague — †† sufrieron el azote de la peste
3. VI1) (=make a visit) hacer una visita; (=make visits) hacer visitas2) (US)to visit with sb — (=go and see) visitar a algn; (=chat with) charlar con algn
* * *['vɪzət, 'vɪzɪt]
I
noun visita fto pay a visit to somebody — hacerle* una visita a alguien, ir* a ver a alguien
this is my first visit to Rome — esta es la primera vez que visito Roma, esta es la primera visita que hago a Roma
II
1.
1) \<\<museum/town\>\> visitar; \<\<friend\>\> visitar, ir*/venir* a ver2) (liter) (usu pass) ( inflict)to visit something ON somebody — infligirle* algo a alguien
2.
via) ( pay a call) hacer* una visita; ( stay) estar* de visitato go visiting — ir* de visita
c) ( chat) (AmE colloq) -
46 bubonic
tr[bjʊː'bɒnɪk]1 SMALLMEDICINE/SMALL bubónico,-a\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLbubonic plague peste nombre femenino bubónicaadj.• bubónico, -a adj. -
47 acosar
acosar ( conjugate acosar) verbo transitivo ( sexualmente) to harass;◊ me acosaron con preguntas they plagued o bombarded me with questions
acosar verbo transitivo
1 to harass
2 fig (asediar) to pester: la oposición acosó al Presidente del Gobierno con sus preguntas, the opposition pestered the Prime Minister with questions ' acosar' also found in these entries: Spanish: arrinconar - asediar - hostigar English: assault - beset - harass - hound - mob - molest - persecute - plague - ply - stalk - bait - goad - harry - worry -
48 afligir
afligir ( conjugate afligir) verbo transitivo afligirse verbo pronominal to get upset
afligir verbo transitivo to afflict ' afligir' also found in these entries: Spanish: afectar English: afflict - distress - plague -
49 apestar
apestar ( conjugate apestar) verbo intransitivo (fam) to stink (colloq); apestar a algo to stink o reek of sth (colloq) verbo transitivo (fam) to stink out (colloq)
apestar
I vi (oler mal) to stink [a, of]
II verbo transitivo
1 (transmitir mal olor a algo) fam to stink out
2 (transmitir la peste) to infect with the plague ' apestar' also found in these entries: English: reek - stink - pong -
50 asolar
asolar ( conjugate asolar) verbo transitivo [guerra/huracán/sequía] to devastate
asolar verbo transitivo to devastate, destroy ' asolar' also found in these entries: English: devastate - plague - blight -
51 plagado
Del verbo plagar: ( conjugate plagar) \ \
plagado es: \ \el participio
plagado
◊ -da adjetivo: [estar] plagado DE algo ‹de faltas/errores› riddled with sth;‹de turistas/insectos› swarming with sth
plagado,-a adjetivo escribió un libro plagado de mentiras, he wrote a book riddled with lies
las calles estaban plagadas de basura, the streets were full of garbage ' plagado' also found in these entries: Spanish: plagada English: riddled - alive - over - plague -
52 the Black Death
noun (the plague that killed large numbers of people in Europe in the 14th to 18th centuries) peste negra -
53 purple
См. также в других словарях:
Plague — may refer to:In medicine: * Plague (disease), a specific disease caused by Yersinia pestis . There are three major manifestations ** Bubonic plague ** Septicemic plague ** Pneumonic plague * Any bubo causing disease * A pandemic caused by such a… … Wikipedia
Plague — Plague, n. [L. plaga a blow, stroke, plague; akin to Gr. ?, fr. ? to strike; cf. L. plangere to strike, beat. Cf. {Plaint}.] 1. That which smites, wounds, or troubles; a blow; a calamity; any afflictive evil or torment; a great trail or vexation … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
plague — [plāg] n. [ME plage < MFr < L plaga, a blow, misfortune, in LL(Ec), plague < Gr plēgē, plaga < IE * plaga, a blow < base * plag , to strike > FLAW2] 1. anything that afflicts or troubles; calamity; scourge 2. any contagious… … English World dictionary
Plague — Plague, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Plagued}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Plaguing}.] 1. To infest or afflict with disease, calamity, or natural evil of any kind. [1913 Webster] Thus were they plagued And worn with famine. Milton. [1913 Webster] 2. Fig.: To vex;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
plague — plague; plague·some; pseu·do·plague; … English syllables
plague — [n1] disease that is widespread affliction, contagion, curse, epidemic, hydra, infection, infestation, influenza, invasion, outbreak, pandemic, pestilence, rash, ravage, scourge; concept 306 plague [n2] annoyance, curse affliction, aggravation,… … New thesaurus
plague — I verb afflict, aggravate, aggrieve, annoy, badger, bait, bedevil, beset, bother, browbeat, bullyrag, cross, devil, discommode, discompose, displease, disquiet, distress, disturb, exagitare, exasperate, exercere, fret, gall, gibe, grate, harry,… … Law dictionary
plague — vb pester, tease, tantalize, harry, harass, *worry, annoy Analogous words: gall, fret, chafe (see ABRADE): *bait, badger, hector, hound, ride: torment, *afflict, try Contrasted words: *relieve, mitigate, lighten, assuage, alleviate … New Dictionary of Synonyms
plague — ► NOUN 1) a contagious disease spread by bacteria and characterized by fever and delirium. 2) an unusually and unpleasantly large quantity of insects or animals. ► VERB (plagues, plagued, plaguing) 1) cause continual trouble or distress to. 2) … English terms dictionary
plague — plaguer, n. /playg/, n., v., plagued, plaguing. n. 1. an epidemic disease that causes high mortality; pestilence. 2. an infectious, epidemic disease caused by a bacterium, Yersinia pestis, characterized by fever, chills, and prostration,… … Universalium
Plague — The plague is an infectious disease due to a bacteria called Yersinia pestis. Y. pestis mainly infects rats and other rodents. Rodents are the prime reservoir for the bacteria. Fleas function as the prime vectors carrying the bacteria from one… … Medical dictionary