-
1 trample
'træmpl(to tread heavily (on): The horses trampled the grass (underfoot).) pisotear, hollartrample vb pisoteardon't trample on the flowers! ¡no pisotees las flores!tr['træmpəl]1 pisotear1 pisotear (on/over, -)v.• patullar v.• pisar v.• pisotear v.'træmpəl
1.
transitive verb (stamp on, crush) pisotear
2.
via)to trample ON something — \<\<on coat/newspaper\>\> pisotear algo
police horses trampled on demonstrators — los caballos de la policía arrollaron or atropellaron a los manifestantes
b) ( ignore)['træmpl]to trample ON something — \<\<on rights\>\> pisotear or atropellar algo
1.VT (also: trample underfoot) pisar, pisotear2.VI (also: trample about, trample along) pisar fuerte, andar con pasos pesadosto trample on sth — pisar algo, pisotear algo
to trample on sb — (fig) tratar a algn sin miramientos
* * *['træmpəl]
1.
transitive verb (stamp on, crush) pisotear
2.
via)to trample ON something — \<\<on coat/newspaper\>\> pisotear algo
police horses trampled on demonstrators — los caballos de la policía arrollaron or atropellaron a los manifestantes
b) ( ignore)to trample ON something — \<\<on rights\>\> pisotear or atropellar algo
См. также в других словарях:
underfoot — un|der|foot [ˌʌndəˈfut US ər ] adv 1.) under your feet where you are walking wet/firm/soft etc underfoot ▪ The wet wood is very slippery underfoot. 2.) trample sb/sth underfoot a) to crush someone or something on the ground by stepping heavily on … Dictionary of contemporary English
underfoot — adverb 1 under your feet where you are walking: wet/dry/firm etc underfoot: The wet wood is very slippery underfoot. 2 trample sb/sth underfoot a) to crush someone or something on the ground by stepping heavily on them b) to completely destroy… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
trample — verb (intransitive always + adv/prep, transitive) 1 to step heavily on something so that you crush it with your feet (+ on/over/through etc): You trampled on my beautiful flowerbeds! | trample sb/sth underfoot: She dropped her jacket and it was… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
trample — tram|ple [ˈtræmpəl] v [I always + adverb/preposition, T] [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: tramp] 1.) to step heavily on something, so that you crush it with your feet trample on/over/through etc ▪ There was a small fence to stop people trampling on the… … Dictionary of contemporary English
foot — foot1 W1S1 [fut] n plural feet [fi:t] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(body part)¦ 2¦(measurement)¦ 3¦(bottom part)¦ 4 on foot 5 get/jump/rise etc to your feet 6 be on your feet 7 be/get back on your feet … Dictionary of contemporary English