-
1 tumulto
m.1 riot, disturbance (disturbio).2 uproar, tumult (alboroto).3 turmoil, boisterousness, riot, commotion.* * *1 tumult, commotion* * *SM turmoil, tumult; (Pol) (=motín) riot, disturbance* * ** * *= uproar, tumult, crowd, maddening crowd, hustle and bustle, hurly-burly.Ex. The film tells of the uproar the librarian created when he extended an invitation to an advocate of theories on black inferiority to address a high school assembly.Ex. This volume of essays looks to the formative processes that have shaped human relations in the midst of this century's tumult of wars, revolutions, and international confrontation.Ex. The second example specifies, 'far adj3 crowd', that the two words, 'far' and 'crowd', must appear within 3 words of one another.Ex. Traffic in the morning, trash at the end of the day, and a chaos of people trying to navigate the maddening crowd in between.Ex. The article ' Hustle and bustle or solemn silence?' argues that changes in society require a re-examination of the library's role.Ex. No, the hurly-burly of politics holds no enchantment for me, I in fact have a deep rooted scepticism and I am disillusioned about politics.----* tumulto + acabar = tumult + die.* * ** * *= uproar, tumult, crowd, maddening crowd, hustle and bustle, hurly-burly.Ex: The film tells of the uproar the librarian created when he extended an invitation to an advocate of theories on black inferiority to address a high school assembly.
Ex: This volume of essays looks to the formative processes that have shaped human relations in the midst of this century's tumult of wars, revolutions, and international confrontation.Ex: The second example specifies, 'far adj3 crowd', that the two words, 'far' and 'crowd', must appear within 3 words of one another.Ex: Traffic in the morning, trash at the end of the day, and a chaos of people trying to navigate the maddening crowd in between.Ex: The article ' Hustle and bustle or solemn silence?' argues that changes in society require a re-examination of the library's role.Ex: No, the hurly-burly of politics holds no enchantment for me, I in fact have a deep rooted scepticism and I am disillusioned about politics.* tumulto + acabar = tumult + die.* * *(multitud) crowd; (alboroto) commotion, tumulthabía un tumulto de gente en la estación there was a crowd of people in the station, the station was crowded with peoplese encontraron en medio del tumulto they met in the midst of all the commotionla policía sofocó los tumultos the police quelled the disturbances* * *
tumulto sustantivo masculino ( multitud) crowd;
( alboroto) commotion, tumult
tumulto sustantivo masculino tumult, uproar
' tumulto' also found in these entries:
English:
melee
- tumult
- uproar
- up
* * *tumulto nm1. [alboroto] commotion, tumult;la presencia del cantante causó un tumulto the presence of the singer caused a commotion2. [disturbio] riot, disturbance3. [multitud] crowd, throng;intentó abrirse paso entre el tumulto de periodistas she tried to make her way through the throng of reporters;se formó un tumulto frente a la casa a crowd formed in front of the house* * *m uproar* * *tumulto nm1) alboroto: commotion, tumult2) motín: riot3) multitud: crowd -
2 acabar con
v.1 to put an end to, to make an end of, to end with, to finish with.Pedro acabó con el suplicio Peter put an end to the ordeal.2 to finish with, to be through with, to break up one's relation with, to break off with.La chica acabó con su novio The girl broke up with her boyfriend.3 to finish with, to destroy.Las drogas acabaron con el chico Drugs finished with=destroyed the boy.4 to destroy, to ruin, to wreck.La peste acabó con el pueblo The plague destroyed the town.5 to kill, to exterminate, to eliminate, to get rid of.María acabó con las cucarachas Mary killed the roaches.6 to finish off, to account for, to polish off.Acabó con toda la comida He finished off all the food.* * *(destruir) to destroy, put an end to 2 (terminar) to finish, finish off■ la revolución acabó con los privilegios de los aristócratas the revolution put an end to the privileges of the aristocrats■ ¡este chico acabará conmigo! this boy will be the death of me!* * *(v.) = put + paid to, quell, put to + rest, snuff out, stamp out, kill off, eat + Posesivo + way throughEx. Following in the footsteps of Beeching's axe which put paid to the branch-line era of the railways, many rural bus routes have now been threatened by rising petrol costs.Ex. The something that had ached in Zach Ponderal all week and which he thought he had finally quelled, started aching again.Ex. Careful investigation by the library board of the possibilities inherent in system membership usually puts to rest preconceived fears.Ex. The producer did a 'hatchet job' on the film, substantially dumbing down the project and snuffing out any subtlety or nuance.Ex. The existence of the Internet and World Wide Web has made it almost impossible to stamp out crimes committed by hackers.Ex. 'Hyperindividualised' news was always one of the reasons the internet was supposed to be going to kill off print.Ex. After demolishing the cakes and sandwiches, pots of tea and buns laid on the table, he proceeded to eat his way through the contents of the fridge.* * *(v.) = put + paid to, quell, put to + rest, snuff out, stamp out, kill off, eat + Posesivo + way throughEx: Following in the footsteps of Beeching's axe which put paid to the branch-line era of the railways, many rural bus routes have now been threatened by rising petrol costs.
Ex: The something that had ached in Zach Ponderal all week and which he thought he had finally quelled, started aching again.Ex: Careful investigation by the library board of the possibilities inherent in system membership usually puts to rest preconceived fears.Ex: The producer did a 'hatchet job' on the film, substantially dumbing down the project and snuffing out any subtlety or nuance.Ex: The existence of the Internet and World Wide Web has made it almost impossible to stamp out crimes committed by hackers.Ex: 'Hyperindividualised' news was always one of the reasons the internet was supposed to be going to kill off print.Ex: After demolishing the cakes and sandwiches, pots of tea and buns laid on the table, he proceeded to eat his way through the contents of the fridge. -
3 calmar
v.1 to relieve.2 to calm, to soothe.Los medicamentos calmaron al lunático The medicines calmed the lunatic.Sus comentarios calmaron su ánimo His comments calmed her mood.3 to alleviate.* * *1 (persona) to calm (down)2 (dolor) to relieve, soothe1 (estar en calma) to fall calm1 (persona) to calm down2 (dolor etc) to abate, ease off* * *verbto calm, soothe- calmarse* * *1. VT1) (=relajar) [+ persona] to calm (down); [+ ánimos] to calm; [+ nervios] to calm, steadyestas pastillas le ayudarán a calmar la ansiedad — these pills will help reduce o relieve your anxiety
2) (=aliviar) [+ dolor, picor] to relieve; [+ tos] to soothe; [+ sed] to quench2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( tranquilizar) < persona> to calm... down; < nervios> to calm2.calmarse v prona) persona to calm downb) mar to become calm* * *= settle down, defuse, quell, soothe, settle, ease, lull, still, assuage, put + Nombre + at ease, appease, quieten.Ex. Faced by this situation a teacher who launches into the presentation of a new book without first doing something to settle the children down should hardly expect to succeed.Ex. This article gives examples of how problem behaviour can be defused in a library.Ex. The something that had ached in Zach Ponderal all week and which he thought he had finally quelled, started aching again.Ex. When she tried to soothe herself with other images -- images of John, the baby, the house -- she found that they had lost their power.Ex. Very young children settle easily to storytelling before bed but are less well disposed just after getting up in the morning.Ex. Ulysses uses words to comfort and lull his mariners, to ease all minds about the hard decision he has made and to persuade all that his choice to leave is correct.Ex. Ulysses uses words to comfort and lull his mariners, to ease all minds about the hard decision he has made and to persuade all that his choice to leave is correct.Ex. And arming himself with patience and piety he tarried awhile until the hubbub was stilled.Ex. The dullard's envy of brilliant men is always assuaged by the suspicion that they will come to bad end.Ex. The osteopath was accused of being off-hand with a female patient and not putting her at ease.Ex. They've been working their butts off since the program was launched to appease the crowd.Ex. Sadly, you can't quieten the console using methods other than turning up the volume on your TV or wearing headphones.----* calmar la ansiedad = allay + anxiety.* calmar la euforia = dampen + Posesivo + excitement.* calmar la excitación = dampen + Posesivo + excitement.* calmarse = cool off, subside, take it + easy, chill out, quieten down, wind down.* conseguir calmarse = regain + Posesivo + composure.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( tranquilizar) < persona> to calm... down; < nervios> to calm2.calmarse v prona) persona to calm downb) mar to become calm* * *= settle down, defuse, quell, soothe, settle, ease, lull, still, assuage, put + Nombre + at ease, appease, quieten.Ex: Faced by this situation a teacher who launches into the presentation of a new book without first doing something to settle the children down should hardly expect to succeed.
Ex: This article gives examples of how problem behaviour can be defused in a library.Ex: The something that had ached in Zach Ponderal all week and which he thought he had finally quelled, started aching again.Ex: When she tried to soothe herself with other images -- images of John, the baby, the house -- she found that they had lost their power.Ex: Very young children settle easily to storytelling before bed but are less well disposed just after getting up in the morning.Ex: Ulysses uses words to comfort and lull his mariners, to ease all minds about the hard decision he has made and to persuade all that his choice to leave is correct.Ex: Ulysses uses words to comfort and lull his mariners, to ease all minds about the hard decision he has made and to persuade all that his choice to leave is correct.Ex: And arming himself with patience and piety he tarried awhile until the hubbub was stilled.Ex: The dullard's envy of brilliant men is always assuaged by the suspicion that they will come to bad end.Ex: The osteopath was accused of being off-hand with a female patient and not putting her at ease.Ex: They've been working their butts off since the program was launched to appease the crowd.Ex: Sadly, you can't quieten the console using methods other than turning up the volume on your TV or wearing headphones.* calmar la ansiedad = allay + anxiety.* calmar la euforia = dampen + Posesivo + excitement.* calmar la excitación = dampen + Posesivo + excitement.* calmarse = cool off, subside, take it + easy, chill out, quieten down, wind down.* conseguir calmarse = regain + Posesivo + composure.* * *calmar [A1 ]vt1 (tranquilizar) ‹persona› to calm … down; ‹nervios› to calmesto calmó las tensiones/los ánimos this eased the tension/calmed people down2 (aliviar) ‹dolor› to relieve, ease; ‹hambre› to appease ( liter), to take the edge off; ‹sed› to quench■ calmarse1 «persona» to calm downahora que están los ánimos más calmados now that feelings aren't running so high, now that people have calmed down2 «mar» to become calm* * *
calmar ( conjugate calmar) verbo transitivo
‹ nervios› to calm;
‹ sed› to quench;
‹ hambre› to take the edge off
calmarse verbo pronominal
calmar verbo transitivo
1 (a una persona) to calm (down)
2 (un dolor) to soothe, relieve
' calmar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
aliviar
- apaciguar
- sed
- tranquilizar
- pacificar
English:
calm
- deaden
- defuse
- heat
- lull
- settle
- steady
- assuage
- dull
- ease
- hush
- kill
- quieten
- relieve
- soothe
* * *♦ vt1. [mitigar] to relieve;[dolor] to relieve, to ease; [hinchazón] to relieve; [quemadura] to soothe; [sed] to quench; [hambre] to take the edge off2. [tranquilizar] [persona] to calm (down), to soothe;[situación] to defuse;tómate esto para calmar los nervios take this to calm your nerves* * *v/t1 calm (down)2 sed quench* * *calmar vttranquilizar: to calm, to soothe* * *calmar vb1. (nervios) to calm / to calm down2. (dolor) to relieve -
4 doler
v.1 to hurt.¿te duele? does it hurt?me duele la pierna my leg hurtsme duele la garganta I have a sore throatme duele la cabeza I have a headacheme duele ver tanta injusticia it pains me to see so much injusticele dolió en el alma it upset her terribly¡ahí le duele! (informal figurative) that has really got to him!2 to have pain in, to feel pain in.Me duele el estómago I feel pain in my stomach.Me duele I feel pain.3 to be sorry for, to grieve for, to regret.Me duele tu pena I regret your grief.4 to regret to.* * *1 to ache, hurt■ me duele la espalda my back hurts, my back aches2 (afligir) to distress, sadden, upset, hurt3 (sentir) to be sorry, be sad1 (arrepentirse) to repent (de, of), feel sorry (de, for)2 (lamentarse) to complain (de, of)3 (notar el efecto) to feel the effects (de, of)* * *verb1) to hurt, ache2) grieve•- dolerse* * *1. VI1) (Med) to hurt¿(te) duele? — does it hurt?
me duele la cabeza — my head hurts; [por migraña, resaca] I've got a headache
2) (=afligir) to hurtese comentario me dolió — I was hurt by that comment, that comment hurt
no me duele gastarme el dinero en esto — I don't mind spending money on this, spending money on this doesn't bother me
¡ahí le duele! — so that's where the problem is!
2.See:* * *1.verbo intransitivoa) inyección/herida/brazo to hurt; (+ me/te/le etc)le duele una muela/la cabeza — she has (a) toothache/a headache
¿dónde le duele? — where does it hurt?
b) ( apenar) (+ me/te/le etc)ahí te/le duele — (fam) that's what's wrong with you/him
c) ( importar)2.dolerse v prondolerse de algo — ( sentirse herido) to be hurt by something; ( arrepentirse) to regret something
* * *= feel + hurt, ache, begrudge, grudge.Ex. Managers feel hurt by employees disloyal to the goals of the organization.Ex. The something that had ached in Zach Ponderal all week and which he thought he had finally quelled, started aching again.Ex. She did not begrudge the money spent on her children's education.Ex. He did not grudge them the money, but he grudged terribly the risk which the spending of that money might bring on them.----* sentirse dolido = feel + hurt.* tocar donde duele = touch on + a sore spot.* * *1.verbo intransitivoa) inyección/herida/brazo to hurt; (+ me/te/le etc)le duele una muela/la cabeza — she has (a) toothache/a headache
¿dónde le duele? — where does it hurt?
b) ( apenar) (+ me/te/le etc)ahí te/le duele — (fam) that's what's wrong with you/him
c) ( importar)2.dolerse v prondolerse de algo — ( sentirse herido) to be hurt by something; ( arrepentirse) to regret something
* * *= feel + hurt, ache, begrudge, grudge.Ex: Managers feel hurt by employees disloyal to the goals of the organization.
Ex: The something that had ached in Zach Ponderal all week and which he thought he had finally quelled, started aching again.Ex: She did not begrudge the money spent on her children's education.Ex: He did not grudge them the money, but he grudged terribly the risk which the spending of that money might bring on them.* sentirse dolido = feel + hurt.* tocar donde duele = touch on + a sore spot.* * *doler [E9 ]vi1 [ Vocabulary notes (Spanish) ] «inyección/herida/brazo» to hurtno duele nada it doesn't hurt at all(+ me/te/le etc): le duele una muela/la cabeza she has (a) toothache/a headacheme dolía el estómago I had (a) stomachache, I had a pain in my stomach, my stomach hurtme duele la garganta I have a sore throatme duelen los pies my feet ache o hurt o are sore¿dónde le duele? where does it hurt?me duele todo el cuerpo I ache all overtodavía me duele un poquito it's still a little sore, it still hurts a little2 (apenar) (+ me/te/le etc):me duele tener que decirte esto I'm sorry o ( frml) it distresses me to have to tell you this, telling you this is very painfulme duele tu deslealtad I find your disloyalty very hurtfulme dolió mucho lo que me dijo what he said hurt me deeply, I was deeply hurt by what he said, I found what he said extremely hurtfullo que más me duele es que no me haya llamado what hurts most is that she hasn't phonedle dolió que no lo invitaran he was hurt o upset that they didn't invite himahí te/le duele ( fam); that's what's wrong with you/him■ dolersedolerse DE algo:se dolía de que sus socios lo hubieran engañado he was aggrieved o hurt that o it saddened him that his partners should have deceived himse dolía de tantos años desperdiciados he deeply regretted all those wasted years* * *
doler ( conjugate doler) verbo intransitivo
(+ me/te/le etc)
le duele una muela/la cabeza she has (a) toothache/a headache;
me dolía el estómago I had (a) stomachache;
me duele la garganta I have a sore throat;
me duelen los pies my feet ache;
me duele todo (el cuerpo) I ache all over
me dolió muchísimo lo que me dijo I was deeply hurt by what he said
doler verbo intransitivo to hurt, ache: me duelen las muelas, I've got a toothache
me duele que me digas eso, it hurts to hear you say that
' doler' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
duele
- poder
English:
ache
- hurt
- pain
- rankle
* * *♦ vi1. [físicamente] to hurt;me duele la pierna my leg hurts;me duele la garganta I have a sore throat;me duele la cabeza/el estómago I have a headache/a stomachache;me duele todo el cuerpo I ache all over;aún me duele el pinchazo que me dieron I'm still sore from the injection they gave me;¿te sigue doliendo la herida? does the wound still hurt?;¿te duele? does it hurt?;no te preocupes, no te va a doler don't worry, it won't hurt;Fam¡ahí le duele! that has really got to him!;lo que necesitan es mano dura – ¡ahí le duele! what they need is a firm hand – you've put your finger on it!2. [moralmente] to hurt, to pain;lo que más me duele es su indiferencia what hurts o pains me most is her indifference;me duele ver tanta injusticia it pains o saddens me to see so much injustice;me duele tener que decirte esto, pero… I'm very sorry o I hate to have to tell you this, but…;le dolió en el alma it upset her terribly;no doler prendas a alguien: no me duelen prendas en reconocer que me he equivocado I don't mind admitting I was wrong* * *v/t tb fighurt;me duele el brazo my arm hurts;le duele la tripa he has a stomach-ache;me duele la garganta I have a sore throat, my throat hurts;le dolió que le mintieran fig she was hurt that they had lied to her;ahí le duele fig that’s his problem* * *doler {47} vi1) : to hurt, to ache2) : to grieve* * *doler vb2. (cabeza, muela, estómago) to ache -
5 sofocar
v.1 to suffocate, to stifle.El criminal sofoca a Ricardo The criminal suffocates Richard.2 to put out, to smother (incendio).3 to suppress, to quell.Miguel sofoca su ira Mike quells his anger.4 to mortify.5 to quench, to extinguish, to put out.Elsa sofocó el fuego Elsa quenched the fire.6 to embarrass, to make nervous.Su actitud sofocó a Ricardo Her attitude embarrassed Richard.* * *1 (ahogar) to suffocate, stifle, smother2 figurado (abochornar) to make blush1 (de calor etc) to suffocate2 figurado (ruborizarse) to blush3 familiar (enfadarse) to get upset, get angry* * *1. VT1) (=ahogar) [calor] to stifle; [fuego, humo] to suffocate2) (=apagar) [+ incendio] to smother, put out; [+ rebelión] to crush, put down; [+ epidemia] to stamp out3) (=enojar) to anger, upset4) (=avergonzar) to embarrass5) (=sonrojar) to make... blush2.See:* * *1. 2.sofocarse v pron ( acalorarse) to get upset o (colloq) worked up* * *= smother, quench, quell, strangle, snuff out, stifle, stamp out, weigh down.Ex. This article outlines the preparatory stages and describes some of the problems presented by the physical conditions in a city of tents either drenched by rain or smothered by dust = Este artículo esboza las etapas preparatorias y describe algunos de los problemas que presentan las condiciones físicas de una gran cantidad de tiendas de campaña empapadas por la lluvia o cubiertas por el polvo.Ex. By such mutual assistance, the wits and endeavours of the world may no longer be as so many scattered coals, or firebrands, which, for want of union are soon quenched, whereas, being but laid together, they would have yielded a comfortable light and heat.Ex. The something that had ached in Zach Ponderal all week and which he thought he had finally quelled, started aching again.Ex. Self-effacing nervousness causes the epiglottis to tighten, strangling the words in the throat and stiffening the diaphragm so that it is like pulled-out elastic unable to propel anything.Ex. The producer did a 'hatchet job' on the film, substantially dumbing down the project and snuffing out any subtlety or nuance.Ex. Excessive emphasis on the need to exact payment will stifle the flow of information.Ex. The existence of the Internet and World Wide Web has made it almost impossible to stamp out crimes committed by hackers.Ex. The passages describing the environment, though lushly written, are inclined to weigh down the narrative thrust of the novel.* * *1. 2.sofocarse v pron ( acalorarse) to get upset o (colloq) worked up* * *= smother, quench, quell, strangle, snuff out, stifle, stamp out, weigh down.Ex: This article outlines the preparatory stages and describes some of the problems presented by the physical conditions in a city of tents either drenched by rain or smothered by dust = Este artículo esboza las etapas preparatorias y describe algunos de los problemas que presentan las condiciones físicas de una gran cantidad de tiendas de campaña empapadas por la lluvia o cubiertas por el polvo.
Ex: By such mutual assistance, the wits and endeavours of the world may no longer be as so many scattered coals, or firebrands, which, for want of union are soon quenched, whereas, being but laid together, they would have yielded a comfortable light and heat.Ex: The something that had ached in Zach Ponderal all week and which he thought he had finally quelled, started aching again.Ex: Self-effacing nervousness causes the epiglottis to tighten, strangling the words in the throat and stiffening the diaphragm so that it is like pulled-out elastic unable to propel anything.Ex: The producer did a 'hatchet job' on the film, substantially dumbing down the project and snuffing out any subtlety or nuance.Ex: Excessive emphasis on the need to exact payment will stifle the flow of information.Ex: The existence of the Internet and World Wide Web has made it almost impossible to stamp out crimes committed by hackers.Ex: The passages describing the environment, though lushly written, are inclined to weigh down the narrative thrust of the novel.* * *sofocar [A2 ]vt‹fuego› to smother, put out; ‹motín/revolución› to stifle, put downeste calor me sofoca this heat is suffocating o stifling2 ( fam) (avergonzarse) to get embarrassed:3 (por el calor) to suffocate4 (por un esfuerzo) to get out of breath* * *
sofocar ( conjugate sofocar) verbo transitivo ‹ fuego› to smother, put out;
‹motín/revolución› to stifle, put down
sofocarse verbo pronominal ( acalorarse) to get upset o (colloq) worked up
sofocar verbo transitivo
1 (un incendio) to extinguish, smother: los bomberos sofocaron las llamas, the firemen smothered the flames
(una rebelión) to put out: el ejército sofocó la revuelta, the army crushed the rebellion
(una protesta) to stifle: los antidisturbios sofocaron la manifestación, the riot police brought the protest under control
(un grito, ruido) to muffle, stifle
(un sentimiento) to control
2 (asfixiar) to suffocate
3 (abochornar) to embarrass
' sofocar' also found in these entries:
English:
damp
- put down
- smother
- stamp out
- stifle
- douse
- over
- put
- quash
- quell
- quench
- stamp
- suppress
* * *♦ vt1. [ahogar, abrasar] to suffocate, to stifle2. [incendio] to put out, to smother3. [rebelión] to suppress, to quell4. [agobiar] [con trabajo] to overburden5. [avergonzar] to embarrass* * *v/t1 suffocate2 incendio put out* * *sofocar {72} vt1) ahogar: to suffocate, to smother2) extinguir: to extinguish, to put out (a fire)3) aplastar: to crush, to put downsofocar una rebelión: to crush a rebellion* * *sofocar vb2. (ahogar) to suffocate
См. также в других словарях:
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quelled — un·quelled; … English syllables
quelled — adjective subdued or overcome the quelled rebellion an uprising quenched almost before it started a squelched rumor • Syn: ↑quenched, ↑squelched • Similar to: ↑suppressed … Useful english dictionary
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quelled — kwel v. suppress, quash; subdue, overpower; relieve, ease; soothe, calm … English contemporary dictionary
unable to be quelled — index invincible Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
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