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41 mergo
mergo, si, sum, 3, v. a. [cf. Sanscr. madsh-, majan, to dip; Zend, masga, marrow; Germ. Mark; Engl. marrow], to dip, dip in, immerse; absol. also to plunge into water, to sink.I.Lit. (class.):B.eos (pullos) mergi in aquam jussit,
Cic. N. D. 2, 3, 7:aves, quae se in mari mergunt,
id. ib. 2, 49, 124:putealibus undis,
Ov. Ib. 391:Stygia undā,
id. M. 10, 697:prodigia indomitis merge sub aequoribus,
Tib. 2, 5, 80:ab hoc (the sword-fish) perfossas naves mergi,
Plin. 32, 2, 6, § 15:mersa navis omnes destituit,
Curt. 4, 8, 8:mersa carina,
Luc. 3, 632:cum coepisset mergi,
Vulg. Matt. 14, 30:in immensam altitudinem mergi, ac sine ulla respirandi vice perpeti maria,
Sen. Dial. 4, 12, 4:naves,
Eutr. 2, 20:partem classis,
Vell. 2, 42, 2:pars maxima classis mergitur,
Luc. 3, 753 sq.:nec me deus aequore mersit,
Verg. A. 6, 348:sub aequora,
Ov. M. 13, 948; Luc. 3, 753:ter matutino Tiberi mergetur,
bathe, Juv. 6, 523.— Poet., of overwhelming waters, to engulf, swallow up, overwhelm, etc.:sic te mersuras adjuvet ignis aquas,
Ov. Ib. 340:mersa rate,
Juv. 14, 302.—Transf.1.To sink down, sink in, to plunge, thrust, or drive in, to fix in, etc. ( poet. and post-Aug. prose):2.palmitem per jugum mergere, et alligare,
to thrust, push, Plin. 17, 22, 35, § 180:aliquem ad Styga,
Sen. Thyest. 1007:manum in ora (ursae),
to thrust into, Mart. 3, 19, 4:mersisque in corpore rostris Dilacerant (canes) falsi dominum sub imagine cervi,
Ov. M. 3, 249: fluvius in Euphratem mergitur, runs or empties into, Plin. 6, 27, 31, § 128: visceribus ferrum. to thrust into, Claud. ap. Eutr. 1, 447.—Of heavenly bodies, etc.:Bootes, Qui vix sero alto mergitur Oceano,
sinks into, Cat. 66, 68.—In partic., to hide, conceal:II.mersitque suos in cortice vultus,
Ov. M. 10, 498:vultum,
Sen. Herc. Oet. 1348:diem or lucem, of the setting of the sun,
id. Thyest. 771:terra caelum mergens, i. e. occidentalis, because there the sky seems to sink into the sea,
Luc. 4, 54. —Of those on board a vessel: mergere Pelion et templum, i. e. to sail away from until they sink below the horizon:condere,
Val. Fl. 2, 6.—Trop., to plunge into, sink, overwhelm, cover, bury, immerse, drown:aliquem malis,
Verg. A. 6, 512:funere acerbo,
to bring to a painful death, id. ib. 11, 28:mergi in voluptates,
to plunge into, yield one's self up to sensual delights, Curt. 10, 3, 9:se in voluptates,
Liv. 23, 18:mergit longa atque insignis honorum pagina,
Juv. 10, 57.—Esp. in part. pass.:Alexander mersus secundis rebus,
overwhelmed with prosperity, Liv. 9, 18:vino somnoque mersi jacent,
dead drunk and buried in sleep, id. 41, 3; Luc. 1, 159; cf.:lumina somno,
Val. Fl. 8, 66:cum mergeretur somno,
Vulg. Act. 20, 9.—Esp. of those whose fortune is swallowed up in debts or debauchery: mersus foro, bankrupt, Plaut [p. 1137] Ep. 1, 2, 13:aere paterno Ac rebus mersis in ventrem,
Juv. 11, 39:censum domini,
Plin. 9, 17, 31, § 67:mergentibus sortem usuris,
sinking, destroying his capital, Liv. 6, 14:ut mergantur pupilli,
be robbed of their fortune, ruined, Dig. 27, 4, 3:mersis fer opem rebus,
bring aid to utter distress, Ov. M. 1, 380.—Of drinking to excess:potatio quae mergit,
Sen. Ep. 12. -
42 caer en desuso
to fall into disuse* * *(v.) = fall into + disuse, fall out of + fashion, go out of + use, lapse, fall into + disfavour, die out, drop from + sight, go out of + favour, pass away, fall into + desuetude, fall into + desuetude, pass into + desuetude, sink into + desuetude, sink into + oblivionEx. However, from the sixties, competition for the railway worker's leisure time from public libraries, service clubs and the humble television meant that many branch libraries fell into disuse.Ex. Rotundas were widely used for all but the most formal texts in the fifteenth century, but fell out of fashion during the sixteenth century, surviving longest in Spain.Ex. The English, French, and Dutch bastardas went out of use by the mid sixteenth century.Ex. The Act was finally allowed to lapse in 1695 and the Stationers' Company was unable to protect its members' rights against those who chose to infringe them.Ex. The printed catalogue has fallen into disfavour, and been replaced by card catalogues, and, more recently, on-line catalogues.Ex. These changes accelerated through much of the nineteenth century, with the older material such as the chivalric romance dying out about the 1960s.Ex. The older material, such as the chivalric romances, dropped from sight.Ex. The author follows the history through to the point, in the latter part of the nineteenth century, when mirror-image monograms went out of favour and were replaced by straightforward monograms.Ex. These tools are useable for analytical studies of how technologies emerge, mature and pass away.Ex. Probably only one in a hundred girls who give birth clandestinely even knows that an edict of King Henry II, now fallen into desuetude, once made their action punishable by death.Ex. Probably only one in a hundred girls who give birth clandestinely even knows that an edict of King Henry II, now fallen into desuetude, once made their action punishable by death.Ex. To make a very long story unacceptably short, espionage passed into desuetude after the Reagan years.Ex. It is clear now that after a time, with her marriage sinking into desuetude, Vivien entered into a sexual relationship with Russell.Ex. Our deliberate and passionate ambition is to avoid the traps of soulless, dead villages turned into museums, slowly sinking into oblivion.* * *(v.) = fall into + disuse, fall out of + fashion, go out of + use, lapse, fall into + disfavour, die out, drop from + sight, go out of + favour, pass away, fall into + desuetude, fall into + desuetude, pass into + desuetude, sink into + desuetude, sink into + oblivionEx: However, from the sixties, competition for the railway worker's leisure time from public libraries, service clubs and the humble television meant that many branch libraries fell into disuse.
Ex: Rotundas were widely used for all but the most formal texts in the fifteenth century, but fell out of fashion during the sixteenth century, surviving longest in Spain.Ex: The English, French, and Dutch bastardas went out of use by the mid sixteenth century.Ex: The Act was finally allowed to lapse in 1695 and the Stationers' Company was unable to protect its members' rights against those who chose to infringe them.Ex: The printed catalogue has fallen into disfavour, and been replaced by card catalogues, and, more recently, on-line catalogues.Ex: These changes accelerated through much of the nineteenth century, with the older material such as the chivalric romance dying out about the 1960s.Ex: The older material, such as the chivalric romances, dropped from sight.Ex: The author follows the history through to the point, in the latter part of the nineteenth century, when mirror-image monograms went out of favour and were replaced by straightforward monograms.Ex: These tools are useable for analytical studies of how technologies emerge, mature and pass away.Ex: Probably only one in a hundred girls who give birth clandestinely even knows that an edict of King Henry II, now fallen into desuetude, once made their action punishable by death.Ex: Probably only one in a hundred girls who give birth clandestinely even knows that an edict of King Henry II, now fallen into desuetude, once made their action punishable by death.Ex: To make a very long story unacceptably short, espionage passed into desuetude after the Reagan years.Ex: It is clear now that after a time, with her marriage sinking into desuetude, Vivien entered into a sexual relationship with Russell.Ex: Our deliberate and passionate ambition is to avoid the traps of soulless, dead villages turned into museums, slowly sinking into oblivion. -
43 caer en la oscuridad
(v.) = fall into + obscurity, sink into + oblivion, sink into + obscurity, fade into + obscurity, fade into + oblivionEx. The acid rain literature illustrated the 1st paradigm, where journals from the unadjusted literature were thrust forward in the adjusted literature, and no unadjusted journal fell into obscurity.Ex. Our deliberate and passionate ambition is to avoid the traps of soulless, dead villages turned into museums, slowly sinking into oblivion.Ex. Some of them enjoy loyal followings within Russia while others briefly shone before sinking into obscurity.Ex. But he may be put under house arrest, a dire fate for a man who is terrified of fading into obscurity.Ex. The music industry as we know it is slowly fading into oblivion.* * *(v.) = fall into + obscurity, sink into + oblivion, sink into + obscurity, fade into + obscurity, fade into + oblivionEx: The acid rain literature illustrated the 1st paradigm, where journals from the unadjusted literature were thrust forward in the adjusted literature, and no unadjusted journal fell into obscurity.
Ex: Our deliberate and passionate ambition is to avoid the traps of soulless, dead villages turned into museums, slowly sinking into oblivion.Ex: Some of them enjoy loyal followings within Russia while others briefly shone before sinking into obscurity.Ex: But he may be put under house arrest, a dire fate for a man who is terrified of fading into obscurity.Ex: The music industry as we know it is slowly fading into oblivion. -
44 desuso
m.disuse.caer en desuso to become obsolete, to fall into disusepres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: desusar.* * *1 disuse■ eso está en desuso that's obsolete, that's outdated\caer en desuso to fall into disuse* * *SM disusecaer en desuso — to fall into disuse, become obsolete
* * *masculino disuse* * *= disfavour, disuse, desuetude.Ex. It seems a pity that the notation of these headings remains in disfavour.Ex. After a period of disuse at the beginning of the nineteenth century, Caslon roman was revived, and has been available ever since from Caslon's successors.Ex. After many years of desuetude, manual typewriters are gaining in popularity among writers.----* caer en desuso = fall into + disuse, fall out of + fashion, go out of + use, lapse, fall into + disfavour, die out, drop from + sight, go out of + favour, pass away, pass into + desuetude, sink into + desuetude, sink into + oblivion.* en desuso = obsolete, disused.* * *masculino disuse* * *= disfavour, disuse, desuetude.Ex: It seems a pity that the notation of these headings remains in disfavour.
Ex: After a period of disuse at the beginning of the nineteenth century, Caslon roman was revived, and has been available ever since from Caslon's successors.Ex: After many years of desuetude, manual typewriters are gaining in popularity among writers.* caer en desuso = fall into + disuse, fall out of + fashion, go out of + use, lapse, fall into + disfavour, die out, drop from + sight, go out of + favour, pass away, pass into + desuetude, sink into + desuetude, sink into + oblivion.* en desuso = obsolete, disused.* * *disusecaer en desuso to fall into disuseuna expresión/costumbre caída en desuso an expression/a custom which has fallen into disuse* * *
desuso sustantivo masculino
disuse;◊ caer en desuso to fall into disuse
desuso sustantivo masculino disuse
♦ Locuciones: caer en desuso, to fall into disuse
en desuso, obsolete, outdated
' desuso' also found in these entries:
English:
die out
- disuse
- foe
- gay
- lapse
- stewardess
- use
- victuals
- dead
- die
- disused
* * *desuso nmdisuse;un término en desuso a term which is no longer in common use;una ley vigente, pero en desuso a law which is still on the statute books, but no longer enforced;caer en desuso to become obsolete, to fall into disuse;el sombrero fue cayendo en desuso people gradually stopped wearing hats* * *m disuse;caer en desuso fall into disuse* * *desuso nm: disuse, obsolescencecaer en desuso: to fall into disuse -
45 oscuridad
f.darkness, blackness, dark, obscurity.* * *1→ link=obscuridad obscuridad* * *noun f.1) darkness2) obscurity* * *SF1) (=ausencia de luz)2) [de texto, explicación] obscurity3) (=anonimato) obscurity* * *1) (de la noche, de lugar) darkness, darkestaba sentada en la oscuridad — she was sitting in the dark o in darkness
2) ( anonimato) obscurity; (de texto, definición) obscurity, obscureness* * *= darkness, obscurity, murkiness, blackness.Ex. At every instant the darkness of the line being drawn is made equal to the darkness of the point on the picture being observed by the photocell.Ex. Obscurity in the law is against the public interest.Ex. Given the murkiness surrounding the identification of which spaces are public and which are private, it seems rather futile to attempt to define public space by a single characteristic = Dada la falta de claridad que rodea la identificación de qué espacios son públicos y cuáles son privados o semiprivados, parece bastante inútil intentar definir lo que es un espacio público con una sola característica.Ex. Blackness is like putting you on a chessboard, where things are strictly black and white, and there is no in-between.----* al amparo de la oscuridad = under cover of darkness.* caer en la oscuridad = fall into + obscurity, sink into + oblivion, sink into + obscurity, fade into + obscurity, fade into + oblivion.* como barcos que se cruzan (en la oscuridad) = like passing ships (in the night).* oscuridad absoluta = pitch darkness, pitch blackness.* oscuridad total = pitch blackness, pitch darkness.* * *1) (de la noche, de lugar) darkness, darkestaba sentada en la oscuridad — she was sitting in the dark o in darkness
2) ( anonimato) obscurity; (de texto, definición) obscurity, obscureness* * *= darkness, obscurity, murkiness, blackness.Ex: At every instant the darkness of the line being drawn is made equal to the darkness of the point on the picture being observed by the photocell.
Ex: Obscurity in the law is against the public interest.Ex: Given the murkiness surrounding the identification of which spaces are public and which are private, it seems rather futile to attempt to define public space by a single characteristic = Dada la falta de claridad que rodea la identificación de qué espacios son públicos y cuáles son privados o semiprivados, parece bastante inútil intentar definir lo que es un espacio público con una sola característica.Ex: Blackness is like putting you on a chessboard, where things are strictly black and white, and there is no in-between.* al amparo de la oscuridad = under cover of darkness.* caer en la oscuridad = fall into + obscurity, sink into + oblivion, sink into + obscurity, fade into + obscurity, fade into + oblivion.* como barcos que se cruzan (en la oscuridad) = like passing ships (in the night).* oscuridad absoluta = pitch darkness, pitch blackness.* oscuridad total = pitch blackness, pitch darkness.* * *A1 (falta de luz) darkle tiene miedo a la oscuridad he's afraid of the dark¡qué oscuridad! ¿por qué no enciendes la luz? it's so dark in here! why don't you switch on the light?2 (sitio) darknessla encontré llorando en la oscuridad I found her sitting in the dark o sitting in darkness cryingB1 (anonimato) obscurityesa película lo sacó de la oscuridad that film rescued him from obscurity2 (de un texto, una definición) obscurity, obscureness3 (circunstancias turbias) suspicious circumstances (pl)* * *
oscuridad sustantivo femenino (de la noche, de lugar) darkness, dark;◊ ¡qué oscuridad! it's so dark in here!
oscuridad sustantivo femenino
1 (falta de luz) darkness, dark
2 (falta de información) obscurity, obscureness
' oscuridad' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
miedo
- surgir
- julepe
English:
cloak
- dark
- darkness
- fear
- flare
- in
- obscurity
- plunge
- blunder
- cover
- gloom
* * *oscuridad, obscuridad nf1. [falta de luz] darkness;me da miedo la oscuridad I'm afraid of the dark;¿cómo puedes trabajar con esta oscuridad? how can you work in the dark like this?se perdieron en la oscuridad they got lost in the dark3. [falta de claridad] obscurity4. [falta de fama] obscurity;con ese disco salieron de la oscuridad that record brought them out of obscurity* * *f darkness* * *oscuridad nf1) : darkness2) : obscurity* * *oscuridad n (falta de luz) darkness -
46 einsinken
v/i (unreg., trennb., ist -ge-)* * *to cave in* * *ein|sin|kenvi sep irreg aux sein(im Morast, Schnee) to sink in ( in +acc or dat -to); (Boden etc) to subside, to cave iner sank bis zu den Knien im Schlamm ein —
ein Stück eingesunkenen Bodens — an area where the ground has caved in or subsided
eingesunkene Schläfen/Wangen — sunken or hollow temples/cheeks
* * *ein|sin·ken* * *unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb sink inin etwas (Dat.) einsinken — sink into something
* * *einsinken v/i (irr, trennb, ist -ge-)1.in +akk) sink in(to);bis zu den Knien einsinken sink in up to one’s knees2. Boden, Dach etc: subside, cave in;in den Knien einsinken sink to one’s knees* * *unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb sink inin etwas (Dat.) einsinken — sink into something
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47 hundirse en la miseria
(v.) = sink into + depression, sink into + povertyEx. This was a crushing blow to European economies, which were already sinking into depression.Ex. The poorest layer of the population is predominantly black, although an increasing number of white households are rapidly sinking into poverty.* * *(v.) = sink into + depression, sink into + povertyEx: This was a crushing blow to European economies, which were already sinking into depression.
Ex: The poorest layer of the population is predominantly black, although an increasing number of white households are rapidly sinking into poverty. -
48 oubli
oubli [ubli]masculine nouna. ( = omission) oversightb. ( = trou de mémoire) lapse of memory* * *ublinom masculin1) génl'oubli de quelque chose — gén forgetting something; ( de devoir) neglect of something
2) ( omission) omission3) ( anonymat après la mort) obliviontomber dans l'oubli — to be completely forgotten, to sink into oblivion
* * *ubli nm1) (= fait d'oublier)L'oubli de cette obligation peut coûter cher. — Neglecting this duty could cost you dear.
2) (cas d'oubli) oversightC'est dû à un oubli. — It's due to an oversight.
Il s'agit d'un oubli regrettable. — It's an unfortunate oversight., It's a regrettable oversight.
3) (= omission) (dans une liste, un texte)Il y a trop d'oublis. — There are too many omissions.
4) (= absence de souvenirs) oblivion5) (hors de la mémoire collective) obliviontomber dans l'oubli — to sink into oblivion, to be completely forgotten
6)7) (pardon) [offense] forgiveness* * *oubli nm1 ( fait d'oublier) l'oubli de qch gén forgetting sth; ( de devoir) neglect of sth; l'oubli des autres forgetting other people; elle cherche l'oubli dans la boisson she drinks to forget; le temps apporte l'oubli time passes and men forget;2 ( omission) c'est un simple oubli it's just an oversight; cet ouvrage contient de regrettables oublis there are some regrettable omissions in this work;3 ( anonymat après la mort) oblivion littér; tirer qch/qn de l'oubli to rescue sth/sb from oblivion; tomber dans l'oubli to be completely forgotten, to sink into oblivion.oubli de soi(-même) selflessness.[ubli] nom masculinl'oubli d'un accent sur un mot coûte un point forgetting ou neglecting to put an accent on a word will lose you one point2. [lacune] omissionil y a beaucoup d'oublis dans sa liste she left a lot of items off her list, there are a lot of gaps in her list3. (soutenu) [isolement]arracher quelque chose à ou tirer quelque chose de l'oubli to snatch ou to rescue something from oblivion4. [consolation]5. (littéraire) [indifférence]l'oubli de soi selflessness, self-denial -
49 zagłęb|ić
pf — zagłęb|iać impf Ⅰ vt to plunge [dłoń]; to sink [zęby]- zagłębić rękę w wodzie/kieszeni to plunge one’s hands into the water/a pocket- zagłębić w czymś zęby to sink one’s teeth into sth- zagłębić wiosło w wodzie to dig one’s oar into the waterⅡ zagłębić się — zagłębiać się 1. (zanurzyć się) zagłębić się w coś a. w czymś [ostrze, wiertło] to sink into sth- zagłębić się w fotelu to sink into an armchair- zagłębił się w zimnej wodzie he went into the cold water2. (zająć się) [osoba] to bury oneself- zagłębić się w pracy to bury oneself in one’s work- zagłębiać się w szczegóły to go into detail- bez zagłębiania się w szczegóły without going into detail3. (wejść) zagłębić się w las/pustynię to go deep into the forest/desertThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > zagłęb|ić
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50 olvido
m.1 oversight (descuido).2 oblivion, obscurity.3 forgetfulness.4 Olvido.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: olvidar.* * *1 (desmemoria) oblivion2 (descuido) forgetfulness, absent-mindedness3 (lapsus) oversight, lapse (of memory)\relegar al olvido to cast into oblivion* * *noun m.* * *SM1) [absoluto] oblivionenterrar o hundir en el olvido — to cast into oblivion liter
2) (=estado) forgetfulness3) (=descuido) slip, oversight* * *a) (abandono, indiferencia) obscuritycaer en el olvido — to fall o sink into obscurity o oblivion
b) ( descuido) oversightfue un olvido — it was an oversight, I forgot
* * *= neglect, forgetfulness, oblivion, burial, erasure.Ex. Left hand truncation, which involves the neglect of prefixes or the elimination of characters from the beginning of a word, is also possible in many systems.Ex. The means for breaking this forgetfulness tendency should be rigorously explored = Se debería analizar rigurosamente la manera de acabar con esta tendencia al olvido.Ex. The article is entitled 'On being an elephant in the age of oblivion, computer-based information systems and organisational memory'.Ex. The present dynamic environment will provide great opportunities to librarians who respond creatively and actively, but will cause the professional burial of those who fail to respond.Ex. This method has the advantage of simplicity and ease of erasure.----* arrojar al olvido = throw into + oblivion.* caer en el olvido = fall into + obscurity, fall into + oblivion, fade into + obscurity, fade into + oblivion, blow over.* de la fama al olvido = riches to rags.* pasar al olvido = blow over.* relegar al olvido = consign to + oblivion.* tendencia al olvido = forgetfulness.* * *a) (abandono, indiferencia) obscuritycaer en el olvido — to fall o sink into obscurity o oblivion
b) ( descuido) oversightfue un olvido — it was an oversight, I forgot
* * *= neglect, forgetfulness, oblivion, burial, erasure.Ex: Left hand truncation, which involves the neglect of prefixes or the elimination of characters from the beginning of a word, is also possible in many systems.
Ex: The means for breaking this forgetfulness tendency should be rigorously explored = Se debería analizar rigurosamente la manera de acabar con esta tendencia al olvido.Ex: The article is entitled 'On being an elephant in the age of oblivion, computer-based information systems and organisational memory'.Ex: The present dynamic environment will provide great opportunities to librarians who respond creatively and actively, but will cause the professional burial of those who fail to respond.Ex: This method has the advantage of simplicity and ease of erasure.* arrojar al olvido = throw into + oblivion.* caer en el olvido = fall into + obscurity, fall into + oblivion, fade into + obscurity, fade into + oblivion, blow over.* de la fama al olvido = riches to rags.* pasar al olvido = blow over.* relegar al olvido = consign to + oblivion.* tendencia al olvido = forgetfulness.* * *1 (abandono, indiferencia) obscuritydespués de este éxito cayó en el olvido after this success he disappeared into obscurity o oblivionun escritor relegado al olvido a writer condemned to obscurityla obra fue rescatada del olvido the play was rescued from oblivion o obscurity2 (descuido) oversightfue un olvido it was an oversight o I forgotun olvido así es imperdonable an omission o oversight of that kind is unforgivable* * *
Del verbo olvidar: ( conjugate olvidar)
olvido es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
olvidó es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo
Multiple Entries:
olvidar
olvido
olvidar ( conjugate olvidar) verbo transitivo
1 ‹pasado/nombre› to forget;◊ había olvidado que … I had forgotten that …;
olvido hacer algo to forget to do sth
2 ( dejar en un lugar) to forget, leave … behind;
olvidarse verbo pronominal
1 ( en general) to forget;
olvidose DE algo to forget sth;
olvidose DE hacer algo to forget to do sth;
(+ me/te/le etc)◊ ¡ah! se me olvidaba ah! I almost forgot;
se me olvidó decírtelo I forgot to tell you
2 ( dejar en un lugar) to forget, leave … behind
olvido sustantivo masculino
olvidar verbo transitivo
1 (desterrar de la memoria) to forget
2 (dejar por descuido) to leave (behind): olvidé el paraguas en casa, I left my umbrella at home
olvido sustantivo masculino
1 (ausencia de recuerdo, indiferencia) oblivion
2 (despiste) oversight
' olvido' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
constancia
- fragor
- olvidarse
- pestillo
- relegar
- rescatar
- caer
- lapso
- lapsus
- olvidar
English:
attendant
- clean
- limbo
- oblivion
- omit
- slip
- blow
- keep
- line
- word
* * *olvido nmenterrar en el olvido to cast into oblivion;2. [descuido] oversight;ha sido un olvido imperdonable it was an unforgivable oversight* * *m1 oblivion;caer en el olvido fall into oblivion2 ( omisión) oversight* * *olvido nm1) : forgetfulness2) : oblivion3) descuido: oversight -
51 मस्ज् _masj
मस्ज् 6 P. (मज्जति, मग्न; caus. मज्जयति; desid. मिम- ङ्क्षति)1 To bathe, plunge, dip or throw oneself into water; यद्गोप्रतरकल्पो$भूत् संमर्दस्तत्र मज्जताम् R.15.11; Bv.2.95.-2 To sink, sink into or down, sink under, plunge (with loc. or acc.); सीदन्नन्धे तमसि विधुरो मज्जती- वान्तरात्मा U.3.38; Māl.9.2; सो$संवृतं नाम तमः सह तेनैव मज्जति Ms.4.81; R.16.72.-3 To be drowned, perish (in water).-4 To sink into misfortune.-5 To despond, be discouraged or disheartened. -Caus. (मज्जयति)-1 To cause to sink, immerse, dip, drown.-2 To deluge, inundate, overwhelm.-3 To thrust, to pass into; ततो मर्मसु मर्मज्ञो मज्जयन् निशितान् शरान् Rām.6.45.15. -
52 sumergir
v.to submerge.sumergir en el caos to plunge into chaosel libro sumerge al lector en otra época the book immerses the reader in another age* * *1 (meter bajo líquido) to submerge, submerse, immerse1 (meterse bajo líquido) to submerge (en, in), go underwater2 figurado to become immersed (en, in)* * *1.VT [completamente] to immerse; [parcialmente] to dip (en in)2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( en líquido) to immerse, submergeb)2.sumergir a alguien EN algo — en pobreza/guerra to plunge somebody into something; ( en ambiente) to immerse somebody in something
sumergirse v prona) submarino/buzo to dive, submergeb) en ambiente to immerse oneself* * *= dip, immerse, submerge, plunge.Ex. Two sheets were made each time the two-sheet mould was dipped by the maker into the vat, and they were turned out together on to a single felt by the coucher.Ex. The whole box was then immersed for about ten minutes in a pit of molten metal.Ex. Though the liaison is valuable there is a danger of the National Archives' representatives being too submerged in the President's ambit to be fully impartial.Ex. Watering the fern is best done by plunging the entire plant into a large container of room-temperature water.----* sumergirse = dive, go under, plunge, dive in.* sumergirse en = immerse + Reflexivo + in, sink into.* sumergirse en la clandestinidad = go into + hiding.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( en líquido) to immerse, submergeb)2.sumergir a alguien EN algo — en pobreza/guerra to plunge somebody into something; ( en ambiente) to immerse somebody in something
sumergirse v prona) submarino/buzo to dive, submergeb) en ambiente to immerse oneself* * *= dip, immerse, submerge, plunge.Ex: Two sheets were made each time the two-sheet mould was dipped by the maker into the vat, and they were turned out together on to a single felt by the coucher.
Ex: The whole box was then immersed for about ten minutes in a pit of molten metal.Ex: Though the liaison is valuable there is a danger of the National Archives' representatives being too submerged in the President's ambit to be fully impartial.Ex: Watering the fern is best done by plunging the entire plant into a large container of room-temperature water.* sumergirse = dive, go under, plunge, dive in.* sumergirse en = immerse + Reflexivo + in, sink into.* sumergirse en la clandestinidad = go into + hiding.* * *sumergir [I7 ]vt1 (en un líquido) to immerse, submergese sumerge en el ácido you submerge o immerse it in the acidsumergí la cabeza en el agua I put my head under the water2 (en una situación) sumergir a algn EN algo:han sumergido al país en la miseria they have plunged the country into povertyel autor sumerge al lector en la vida rural the author immerses the reader in rural life1 «submarino/buzo» to dive, submerge2 (en un ambiente) to immerse oneself sumergirse EN algo to immerse oneself IN sthse sumerge en su trabajo he immerses himself in his workse sumergen en el mundo de la droga they get into o get involved in the drug scene* * *
sumergir ( conjugate sumergir) verbo transitivo ( en líquido) to immerse, submerge
sumergirse verbo pronominal
sumergir verbo transitivo to immerse, submerge, submerse
' sumergir' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
sumir
English:
duck
- immerse
- plunge
- submerge
* * *♦ vt1. [hundir] to submerge;[con fuerza] to plunge; [bañar] to dip;sumergir en el caos to plunge into chaos2. [abstraer] to immerse;el libro sumerge al lector en otra época the book immerses the reader in another age* * *v/t submerge, immerse* * *sumergir {35} vt: to submerge, to immerse, to plunge♦ sumergirse vr* * * -
53 тонуть
гл.1. to sink; 2. to be/to get drownedРусский глагол тонуть относится как к одушевленным, так и к неодушевленным существительным. В английском языке эти две категории существительных употребляются с разными глаголами.1. to sink — тонуть, идти ко дну. Wood doesn't sink in water. — Дерево в воде не тонет. The boat sank. —Лодка потонула./Лодка пошла ко дну. His heart sank at the thought of the danger. — При мысли об этой опасности V него упало сердце. Their feet sank into the deep snow as (hey walked on. — Они шли вперед. то и дело проваливаясь в снег. The car sank into the mud. — Машина увязла в грязи. They watched the sun sink into the sea. — Они наблюдали, как солнечный диск исчезал в море на горизонте. The porch of the old house began to sink. — Крылечко старого дома начало оседать. Do you think the cork will float or sink? — Как ты думаешь, пробка потонет или будет плавать?2. to be/to get drowned — тонуть, утонуть, утопиться ( относится только к живым существам): Не fell overboard and was nearly drowned. — Он упал за борт и чугь не утонул. The drowning man was fortunately rescued. — Утопающего, к счастью, спасли. Не was drowned in the bog. — Он утонул в трясине. -
54 miseria
f.1 poverty (pobreza).2 misfortune (desgracia).3 meanness.4 baseness, wretchedness (vileza).5 pittance (poco dinero).le pagan una miseria they pay him next to nothing6 extreme poverty, poverty, grinding poverty, abjectedness.7 meager quantity, very small amount, peanuts, pittance.8 hardship.* * *1 (pobreza) extreme poverty2 (desgracia) misery, wretchedness3 (tacañería) meanness* * *noun f.1) misery2) poverty* * *SF1) (=pobreza) poverty, destitution2) (=insignificancia)3) (=tacañería) meanness, stinginess4) † (=parásitos) fleas pl, lice pl* * *1) ( pobreza) poverty, destitution2) ( cantidad insignificante) miserable amount, paltry amount3) ( desgracia) misfortuneestar a la miseria — (RPl fam) to be in a bad way (colloq)
llorar miseria(s) — (CS fam) to complain about not having any money
* * *= destitution, penury, pittance, squalor, sordidness, poverty, chump change.Ex. In sociology, fire appears twice in the energy facet; Y:4351 denotes fire as a cause of destitution, while Y:831 denotes fire as an item of social equipment, used for cooking etc.Ex. The practice found in some libraries of using the index to the scheme as an index to the catalogue is a makeshift expedient, by penury out of ignorance, and must be condemned.Ex. The article 'Devastating an industry for a pittance of revenue' states the irrefutable case against taxing books and learned journals.Ex. The article 'Private affluence and public squalor?' discusses the implications for libraries and information if public services are forced to open up their markets to free trade and thereby to private companies.Ex. The author makes the most of the sordidness of the first sexual encounters of the protagonist, Stella, and the tawdriness of the theater company where she finds her first job.Ex. The economically told chronicle of Slake's adventures is an eloquent study of poverty, of fear, and finally of hope as circumstances converge to force Slake from his temporary limbo.Ex. The trick is they don't plan on paying their artists more than chump change in royalties.----* en la miseria = down-and-out, in chapter 11, penniless.* hundirse en la miseria = sink into + depression, sink into + poverty.* miseria absoluta = grinding misery.* miseria más absoluta = abject poverty.* pasar miseria = the wolves + be + at the door.* salir de la miseria = haul + Reflexivo + out of + Posesivo + bog.* vivir en la miseria = live in + squalor, walk + the streets of misery, live in + penury.* * *1) ( pobreza) poverty, destitution2) ( cantidad insignificante) miserable amount, paltry amount3) ( desgracia) misfortuneestar a la miseria — (RPl fam) to be in a bad way (colloq)
llorar miseria(s) — (CS fam) to complain about not having any money
* * *= destitution, penury, pittance, squalor, sordidness, poverty, chump change.Ex: In sociology, fire appears twice in the energy facet; Y:4351 denotes fire as a cause of destitution, while Y:831 denotes fire as an item of social equipment, used for cooking etc.
Ex: The practice found in some libraries of using the index to the scheme as an index to the catalogue is a makeshift expedient, by penury out of ignorance, and must be condemned.Ex: The article 'Devastating an industry for a pittance of revenue' states the irrefutable case against taxing books and learned journals.Ex: The article 'Private affluence and public squalor?' discusses the implications for libraries and information if public services are forced to open up their markets to free trade and thereby to private companies.Ex: The author makes the most of the sordidness of the first sexual encounters of the protagonist, Stella, and the tawdriness of the theater company where she finds her first job.Ex: The economically told chronicle of Slake's adventures is an eloquent study of poverty, of fear, and finally of hope as circumstances converge to force Slake from his temporary limbo.Ex: The trick is they don't plan on paying their artists more than chump change in royalties.* en la miseria = down-and-out, in chapter 11, penniless.* hundirse en la miseria = sink into + depression, sink into + poverty.* miseria absoluta = grinding misery.* miseria más absoluta = abject poverty.* pasar miseria = the wolves + be + at the door.* salir de la miseria = haul + Reflexivo + out of + Posesivo + bog.* vivir en la miseria = live in + squalor, walk + the streets of misery, live in + penury.* * *A (pobreza) poverty, destitutionvivir sumido en la más absoluta miseria to live in abject povertyB(cantidad insignificante): gana una miseria she earns a pittancemira la miseria que me diste look at the miserable o paltry o measly amount you gave me ( colloq)C (desgracia) misfortunelas miserias de la guerra the miseries of warestar/quedar a la miseria ( RPl fam): el auto quedó a la miseria the car was a write-off o was wrecked o ( AmE) was totaled ( colloq)está a la miseria he's in a very bad way o in a terrible state ( colloq)* * *
miseria sustantivo femenino
1 ( pobreza) poverty, destitution
2 ( cantidad insignificante) miserable amount, paltry amount;
3 ( desgracia) misfortune;
miseria sustantivo femenino
1 (pobreza) extreme poverty: sobrecogía la miseria de sus aposentos, I was moved by the extreme poverty of her living conditions
2 (cantidad despreciable) pittance, miserable amount: vendí la casa por una miseria, I sold the house for a pittance
3 (más en pl) (desgracias, penalidades) miseries: ¡cuánta miseria se reflejaba en sus rostros!, what misery was reflected in their faces!
' miseria' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
sordidez
- villa
English:
bread line
- chicken
- misery
- peanut
- penury
- pittance
- plunge
- poverty
- squalor
- starvation
- untold
- wake
- want
- wretchedness
- abject
- down
- shantytown
* * *miseria nf1. [pobreza] poverty;viven en la miseria they live in poverty3. [tacañería] meanness4. [vileza] baseness, wretchedness5. [poco dinero] pittance;le pagan una miseria he gets paid a pittance, they pay him next to nothing;CSur Famllorar miseria to plead poverty6. CompRP Fama la miseria: es alérgica y está a la miseria she's allergic and she's in a really bad way;después de tantos días sin agua, esa planta quedó a la miseria after so many days without water the plant was in a real state o half dead* * *f1 poverty2 fig ( sufrimiento) misery* * *miseria nf1) pobreza: poverty2) : misery, suffering3) : pittance, meager amount* * * -
55 sumirse en
v.to drown oneself in, to relapse into.* * *(v.) = sink intoEx. This town library was in the latter part of the 17th century permitted to sink 'into careless guardianship and ultimate neglect' = A finales del siglo XVII no se hizo nada por evitar que esta biblioteca municipal se sumiese "en la negligencia y en el abandono total".* * *(v.) = sink intoEx: This town library was in the latter part of the 17th century permitted to sink 'into careless guardianship and ultimate neglect' = A finales del siglo XVII no se hizo nada por evitar que esta biblioteca municipal se sumiese "en la negligencia y en el abandono total".
-
56 врязвам
incise, engrave, cut (в into)печ. (правя абзац) indentврязвам се cut (в into)(вдавам се) run/jut out (в into)брегът се врязва в морето the shore juts out into the seaврязвам се в паметта engrave itself on the memory, sink into the memory, be stamped on the memory* * *вря̀звам,\врязвам се cut (в into); ( вдавам се) run/jut out (в into); \врязвам се в паметта engrave itself on the memory, sink into the memory, be stamped on the memory.* * *incise (абзац); inscribe (надпис); intaglio* * *1. (вдавам се) run/jut out (в into) 2. incise, engrave, cut (в into) 3. ВРЯЗВАМ ce cut (в into) 4. ВРЯЗВАМ се в паметта engrave itself on the memory, sink into the memory, be stamped on the memory 5. брегът се врязва в морето the shore juts out into the sea 6. печ. (правя абзац) indent -
57 впадать
1) General subject: confluence, debouch, discharge (река), disembogue (о реке), disgorge, empty (о реке), empty (о реке, тж. to empty oneself), fall (о реке), fall flowing into, go into (в истерику и т. п.), join (о ручье, речке), lapse (в отчаяние и т. п.), meet (о реке), mouth (о реке), relapse (в какое-либо состояние), sink, sink to sink into a state /into a condition/, flow in, run into, fly into (в гнев, ярость и т.п.)2) Engineering: outfall (о притоке)4) Religion: backslide5) Railway term: fall in6) Fishery: run -
58 verkommen
(unreg.)I v/i1. Haus, Betrieb etc.: go to rack and ruin, go to the dogs umg.; Garten: run wild; das Land ist zu einem Hort der Korruption verkommen the country has degenerated into a hotbed of corruption3. Lebensmittel: go bad; weitS. (nicht verbraucht werden) go to waste; so viel Talent darf man nicht verkommen lassen one shouldn’t let so much talent go to waste; keine Angst - ich lass dich nicht verkommen don’t worry - I’ll look after youII P.P. verkommen IIII Adj. Person: seedy; moralisch: depraved; Gebäude: dilapidated; Gegend, Betrieb etc.: run-down; Garten: overgrown, wild; so ein verkommenes Subjekt! what a seedy character!; der Garten ist völlig verkommen auch the garden is a wilderness* * ** * *ver|kọm|men I [fɛɐ'kɔmən] ptp verko\#mmenvi irreg aux sein1) (Mensch) to go to pieces; (moralisch) to become dissolute, to go to the bad (Brit); (Kind) to run wild2) (Gebäude, Auto) to become dilapidated, to fall to pieces; (Stadt, Land) to become run-down; (Gelände, Anlage etc) to run wild3) (=nicht genutzt werden Lebensmittel, Begabung, Fähigkeiten etc) to go to waste; (= verderben Lebensmittel) to go bad4) (Sw = übereinkommen) to agreeIIadjMensch depraved; Auto, Gebäude dilapidated; Garten wild* * *(having become immoral or inferior: the degenerate son of well-respected parents.) degenerate* * *ver·kom·men *1vi irreg Hilfsverb: sein1. (verwahrlosen) to decay; Mensch to go to rack [ or esp AM wrack] and ruin [or fam to the dogs]; Gebäude to decay, to become run-down, to fall into disrepairim Elend \verkommen to sink into misery, to become destitute5. (versumpfen) to stay out late [or be out on the town,] drinkingver·kom·men21. (verwahrlost) degenerate2. (im Verfall begriffen) decayed, dilapidated* * *Iunregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; mit sein2) (verfallen) <building etc.> go to rack and ruin, fall into disrepair, become dilapidated; < garden> run wild; < area> become run down3) (herabsinken) degenerate (zu into)4) (verderben) < food> go badIIAdjektiv depraved* * *verkommen (irr)A. v/idas Land ist zu einem Hort der Korruption verkommen the country has degenerated into a hotbed of corruptionso viel Talent darf man nicht verkommen one shouldn’t let so much talent go to waste;keine Angst - ich lass dich nicht verkommen don’t worry – I’ll look after youC. adj Person: seedy; moralisch: depraved; Gebäude: dilapidated; Gegend, Betrieb etc: run-down; Garten: overgrown, wild;so ein verkommenes Subjekt! what a seedy character!;der Garten ist völlig verkommen auch the garden is a wilderness* * *Iunregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; mit sein2) (verfallen) <building etc.> go to rack and ruin, fall into disrepair, become dilapidated; < garden> run wild; < area> become run down3) (herabsinken) degenerate (zu into)4) (verderben) < food> go badIIAdjektiv depraved* * *adj.degenerate adj.depraved adj. v.to go wrong expr.to reprobate v. -
59 sumergirse en
v.to become absorbed in, to drown oneself in.* * *(v.) = immerse + Reflexivo + in, sink intoEx. The indexer must become conversant with the subject content of the document, in just the same way as an abstractor must immerse himself in the text.Ex. This town library was in the latter part of the 17th century permitted to sink 'into careless guardianship and ultimate neglect' = A finales del siglo XVII no se hizo nada por evitar que esta biblioteca municipal se sumiese "en la negligencia y en el abandono total".* * *(v.) = immerse + Reflexivo + in, sink intoEx: The indexer must become conversant with the subject content of the document, in just the same way as an abstractor must immerse himself in the text.
Ex: This town library was in the latter part of the 17th century permitted to sink 'into careless guardianship and ultimate neglect' = A finales del siglo XVII no se hizo nada por evitar que esta biblioteca municipal se sumiese "en la negligencia y en el abandono total". -
60 sumirse
1 (hundirse) to sink2 figurado to immerse oneself (en, in), lose oneself (en, in)* * *VPR1) (=hundirse) to sink2) [agua] to run away3)sumirse en el estudio — to throw o.s. into one's studies
4) [boca, pecho] to sink, be sunken, become hollow5) LAm (=encogerse) to cower, cringe; (=desanimarse) to lose heart; (=callar) to fall silent from fear, clam up6)sumirse el sombrero — LAm to pull one's hat down over one's eyes
* * *(v.) = lapseEx. The first weeks are vital, and after that the shop must be constantly on the lookout for ways of stimulating further interest and re-awakening those who lapse.* * *(v.) = lapseEx: The first weeks are vital, and after that the shop must be constantly on the lookout for ways of stimulating further interest and re-awakening those who lapse.
* * *vpr1.sumirse en [depresión, desesperación, sueño] to sink into2.sumirse en [estudio, tema] to immerse oneself in3.sumirse en [sumergirse en] to be submerged in* * *v/r figsink (en into)
См. также в других словарях:
sink into — index enter (penetrate) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
sink into — phr verb Sink into is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑tooth Sink into is used with these nouns as the object: ↑apathy, ↑bog, ↑chair, ↑coma, ↑couch, ↑gloom, ↑oblivion, ↑obscurity, ↑recession, ↑ … Collocations dictionary
sink into poverty — fall into poverty, have one s financial situation deteriorate until one is poor … English contemporary dictionary
sink into oblivion — be forgotten … English contemporary dictionary
sink into the grave — die, pass away … English contemporary dictionary
sink into something — … Useful english dictionary
sink — ► VERB (past sank; past part. sunk) 1) become submerged in liquid. 2) (with reference to a ship) go or cause to go to the bottom of the sea. 3) disappear and not be seen or heard of again. 4) drop downwards. 5) lower oneself or drop down gently … English terms dictionary
sink — sink1 W3 [sıŋk] v past tense sank [sæŋk] past participle sunk [sʌŋk] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(in water)¦ 2¦(boat)¦ 3¦(move lower)¦ 4¦(fall/sit down)¦ 5¦(get worse)¦ 6 your heart sinks 7¦(lower amount/value)¦ … Dictionary of contemporary English
sink — sink1 [ sıŋk ] (past tense sank [ sæŋk ] ; past participle sunk [ sʌŋk ] ) verb ** ▸ 1 go below water s surface ▸ 2 when sun gets lower ▸ 3 move to lower level ▸ 4 fall/sit/lie down ▸ 5 go down in value/amount ▸ 6 invest money ▸ 7 push something… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
sink — [[t]sɪ̱ŋk[/t]] ♦♦♦ sinks, sinking, sank, sunk 1) N COUNT A sink is a large fixed container in a kitchen, with taps to supply water. It is mainly used for washing dishes. The sink was full of dirty dishes. ...the kitchen sink. 2) N COUNT A sink is … English dictionary
sink */*/ — I UK [sɪŋk] / US verb Word forms sink : present tense I/you/we/they sink he/she/it sinks present participle sinking past tense sank UK [sæŋk] / US past participle sunk UK [sʌŋk] / US 1) [intransitive] to disappear below the surface of the water… … English dictionary