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1 encierro
m.1 sit-in (protesta).2 running of the bulls (bullfighting).3 prison, lockup, jail, jailhouse.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: encerrar.* * *1 (toril) bull pen; (recorrido) bull-running2 (prisión) locking up, confinement3 (protesta) sit-in4 RELIGIÓN retreat* * *noun m.1) enclosure2) confinement* * *SM1) [de manifestantes] sit-in; [en fábrica] sit-in, work-in2) (=reclusión)nunca sale de su habitación, no hay quien la saque de su encierro — she never leaves her room, no one can persuade her to come out
3) (Taur) (=fiesta) running of the bulls ; (=toril) bull penSee:ver nota culturelle SANFERMINES in sanfermines4) † (=cárcel) prison* * *a) (en fábrica, universidad) sit-inb) ( reclusión)c) (Taur) ( conducción) running of bulls through the streets; ( toros) bulls to be used in a bullfightd) ( para el ganado) enclosure, pen* * *= lockup.Ex. They concluded that 'our citizens may rationally prefer to check crime and disorder by ounces of educational prevention, than by pounds of cure in the shape of large 'lockups' and expensive suits before the law'.* * *a) (en fábrica, universidad) sit-inb) ( reclusión)c) (Taur) ( conducción) running of bulls through the streets; ( toros) bulls to be used in a bullfightd) ( para el ganado) enclosure, pen* * *= lockup.Ex: They concluded that 'our citizens may rationally prefer to check crime and disorder by ounces of educational prevention, than by pounds of cure in the shape of large 'lockups' and expensive suits before the law'.
* * *1 (en una fábrica, universidad) sit-in2(reclusión): a ver cuándo sales de tu encierro when are you going to get out and about a bit? ( colloq)salió de su encierro después de ocho meses she emerged after being holed up for eight months3 ( Taur) (conducción) running of bulls through the streets; (toros) bulls to be used in a bullfight4 (para el ganado) enclosure, pen* * *
Del verbo encerrar: ( conjugate encerrar)
encierro es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
Multiple Entries:
encerrar
encierro
encerrar ( conjugate encerrar) verbo transitivo
1 ‹ ganado› to shut up, pen;
‹ perro› to shut … in;
‹ persona› (en cárcel, calabozo) to lock up;◊ me encerró en mi habitación he shut me o locked me in my room;
me dejaron encerrada en la oficina I got locked in the office
2 ( conllevar) ‹peligro/riesgo› to involve, entail
encerrarse verbo pronominal ( refl) ( en habitación) to shut oneself in;
(en fábrica, universidad) [obreros/estudiantes] to lock oneself in
encierro sustantivo masculino
b) ( reclusión):
( toros) bulls to be used in a bullfight
encerrar verbo transitivo
1 to shut in: encerraron al perro en la cocina, they shut the dog in the kitchen
(con llave) to lock in
2 (entrañar) to contain, include: la Esfinge encierra la clave, the Sphinx holds the key
encierro sustantivo masculino
1 Pol (como protesta) sit-in: organizaron un encierro en la facultad, they organised a sit-in in the University
2 (confinamiento) confinement: durante su encierro no habló con nadie, during his confinement he didn't talk to anyone
3 (reclusión) su encierro es absolutamente voluntario, his seclusion is completely voluntary
4 (de toros) running of bulls (through the streets)
' encierro' also found in these entries:
English:
sit-in
- sit
* * *♦ nm1. [protesta] sit-in2. [retiro] retreat3. Taurom running of the bulls* * *m1 protesta sit-in2 de toros bull running* * *encierro nm1) : confinement2) : enclosure -
2 sanfermines
1 festival of San Fermín (held in Pamplona)* * *SANFERMINES The Sanfermines is a week-long festival starting on 7 July in Pamplona (Navarre) to honour San Fermín, the town's patron saint. One of its main events involves bulls and bullfighting. The bulls are led from their enclosure to the bullring early in the morning through the city's main streets; young men, dressed in traditional Navarrese red berets, white shirts and trousers with red sashes around their waists, run through the streets leading the fast-moving bulls. This activity, known as the encierro, in which people risk serious injury and even death, was popularized by writers such as Ernest Hemingway and now attracts visitors from all over the world. The festivities start with the txupinazo, a large rocket fired from Pamplona's main square, and for a full week Pamplona becomes one large street party punctuated by the daily encierro.* * ** * ** * *The fiestas de San Fermín, Pamplona's patron saint, are the festival for which the Navarrese capital has become world-famous. It begins on July 6 with the txupinazo, the firing of a rocket in the main square. The bull-running, or encierro, starts at 8 a.m. the following day and takes place every day until July 14. The bulls that will fight that evening are released, and those who wish to, usually young men, run in front of them. Accidents are frequent.* * *
sanfermines sustantivo masculino plural: festival in Pamplona in which bulls are run through the streets
* * *sanfermines nmpl= festival held in Pamplona in July during which bulls are run through the streets of the townSANFERMINESThe sanfermines of Pamplona, celebrations in honour of the local martyr Saint Fermín, are one of the most widely known of Spanish festivals, in no small part due to their being immortalized by Hemingway in “The Sun Also Rises” (1926). For a week on or around the feast of Saint Fermín (7 July) the people of Pamplona and visitors throw themselves wholeheartedly into non-stop celebration. The most eagerly awaited event, apart from the afternoon bullfights themselves, is the “encierro”, the legendary “running of the bulls” at daybreak, where bulls are let loose to run through the city streets on the way to the bullring, pursuing crowds of local and visiting men who try to outrun them. During the three minutes or so of the run there is constant danger that runners (especially inexperienced ones) might be injured, even fatally, and over the years there have been more than a dozen fatalities, and hundreds of runners have been gored. Yet the running of the bulls goes on year after year, offering a unique opportunity for those so inclined to test their nerve and swiftness of foot.
См. также в других словарях:
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