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21 esencia irlandesa
(n.) = IrishnessEx. In one interview, piqued by this recurrent comment on his Irishness, he pointed out that he came not from idyllic emerald green surroundings.* * *(n.) = IrishnessEx: In one interview, piqued by this recurrent comment on his Irishness, he pointed out that he came not from idyllic emerald green surroundings.
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22 fiebre consumista
(n.) = shopping feverEx. Malls with hundreds of stores offering the latest designs and pleasant surroundings all under one roof can spark shopping fever.* * *(n.) = shopping feverEx: Malls with hundreds of stores offering the latest designs and pleasant surroundings all under one roof can spark shopping fever.
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23 fiebre de las compras
(n.) = shopping feverEx. Malls with hundreds of stores offering the latest designs and pleasant surroundings all under one roof can spark shopping fever.* * *(n.) = shopping feverEx: Malls with hundreds of stores offering the latest designs and pleasant surroundings all under one roof can spark shopping fever.
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24 fundirse con
(v.) = blend into, become + one with, blend in withEx. In practice, once the barriers are broken down in children antagonistic to reading, everything blends into the flux of a whole experience split into bits only by the dictates of a school timetable.Ex. Information services are becoming one with consumer electronics appliances, cable TV, and telephone service.Ex. The goal in using these approaches was not to deceive but to have the observers blend in with the library surroundings = La razón de usar estas estratagemas no era la de engañar a los usuarios, sino más bien conseguir que los observadores se integrasen en el entorno de la biblioteca.* * *(v.) = blend into, become + one with, blend in withEx: In practice, once the barriers are broken down in children antagonistic to reading, everything blends into the flux of a whole experience split into bits only by the dictates of a school timetable.
Ex: Information services are becoming one with consumer electronics appliances, cable TV, and telephone service.Ex: The goal in using these approaches was not to deceive but to have the observers blend in with the library surroundings = La razón de usar estas estratagemas no era la de engañar a los usuarios, sino más bien conseguir que los observadores se integrasen en el entorno de la biblioteca. -
25 grato
adj.agreeable, gratifying, pleasant, pleasurable.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: gratar.* * *► adjetivo1 pleasant, pleasing ( para, to)■ me es grato anunciarles que... I am pleased to inform you that...* * *(f. - grata)adj.pleasant, agreeable* * *ADJ1) (=placentero) pleasant, pleasing; (=satisfactorio) welcomeguarda muy gratos recuerdos de su visita a España — he holds very fond memories of his visit to Spain
nos es grato informarle que... — we are pleased to inform you that...
2) And (=agradecido) grateful* * *- ta adjetivo pleasantme es grato comunicarles que... — I am pleased to inform you that...
* * *= pleasant [pleasanter -comp., pleasantest -sup.], pleasurable, gratifying, welcome, welcome, fulfilling.Ex. This provides the user with a pleasant outlook and gives natural light.Ex. Work in a duly ordered community should be made attractive by the consciousness of usefulness, by variety, and by being exercised amidst pleasurable surroundings.Ex. OPACs are advantageous to users; they may be costly for the managers of libraries, but are gratifying to the librarians.Ex. The library is generally an accepted, welcome and non-threatening feature of the rural scene and librarians often build up close and trusted links with their readers.Ex. The library is generally an accepted, welcome and non-threatening feature of the rural scene and librarians often build up close and trusted links with their readers.Ex. The acquisition of reliable information is vitally important enabling people to enjoy fulfilling lives and be fully participating citizens.----* dejar un grato sabor de boca = leave + a good taste in + Posesivo + mouth.* persona no grata = persona non grata.* poco grato = unwelcome.* ser un grato alivio = be a welcome relief.* * *- ta adjetivo pleasantme es grato comunicarles que... — I am pleased to inform you that...
* * *= pleasant [pleasanter -comp., pleasantest -sup.], pleasurable, gratifying, welcome, welcome, fulfilling.Ex: This provides the user with a pleasant outlook and gives natural light.
Ex: Work in a duly ordered community should be made attractive by the consciousness of usefulness, by variety, and by being exercised amidst pleasurable surroundings.Ex: OPACs are advantageous to users; they may be costly for the managers of libraries, but are gratifying to the librarians.Ex: The library is generally an accepted, welcome and non-threatening feature of the rural scene and librarians often build up close and trusted links with their readers.Ex: The library is generally an accepted, welcome and non-threatening feature of the rural scene and librarians often build up close and trusted links with their readers.Ex: The acquisition of reliable information is vitally important enabling people to enjoy fulfilling lives and be fully participating citizens.* dejar un grato sabor de boca = leave + a good taste in + Posesivo + mouth.* persona no grata = persona non grata.* poco grato = unwelcome.* ser un grato alivio = be a welcome relief.* * *grato -tapleasantme es muy grata su compañía I find his company very pleasantlos gratos recuerdos de mi niñez the pleasant memories of my childhoodme es grato comunicarles que … I am pleased to inform you that …en respuesta a su grata (carta) del 3 de... in reply to your letter of... 3rd* * *
grato◊ -ta adjetivo
pleasant
grato,-a adjetivo pleasant
persona non grata, persona non grata
' grato' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
afortunada
- afortunado
- grata
- satisfactoria
- satisfactorio
English:
acceptable
- gratifying
- intensely
- pleasing
- welcome
- unwelcome
* * *grato, -a adj1. [agradable] pleasant;nos es grato comunicarle que… we are pleased to inform you that…2. Bol, Chile [agradecido] grateful* * *adj pleasant* * *grato, -ta adjagradable, placentero: pleasant, agreeable♦ gratamente adv* * *grato adj pleasant -
26 integrarse en
(v.) = blend into, blend in withEx. In practice, once the barriers are broken down in children antagonistic to reading, everything blends into the flux of a whole experience split into bits only by the dictates of a school timetable.Ex. The goal in using these approaches was not to deceive but to have the observers blend in with the library surroundings = La razón de usar estas estratagemas no era la de engañar a los usuarios, sino más bien conseguir que los observadores se integrasen en el entorno de la biblioteca.* * *(v.) = blend into, blend in withEx: In practice, once the barriers are broken down in children antagonistic to reading, everything blends into the flux of a whole experience split into bits only by the dictates of a school timetable.
Ex: The goal in using these approaches was not to deceive but to have the observers blend in with the library surroundings = La razón de usar estas estratagemas no era la de engañar a los usuarios, sino más bien conseguir que los observadores se integrasen en el entorno de la biblioteca. -
27 islandismo
= Irishness.Ex. In one interview, piqued by this recurrent comment on his Irishness, he pointed out that he came not from idyllic emerald green surroundings.* * *= Irishness.Ex: In one interview, piqued by this recurrent comment on his Irishness, he pointed out that he came not from idyllic emerald green surroundings.
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28 mezclarse con
v.1 to mix up with, to be mixed up with.María se mezcló con los activistas Mary mixed up with the activists.2 to blend in with, to blend with.El curry se mezcló con lo demás The curry blended in with the rest.* * *(v.) = blend into, blend in withEx. In practice, once the barriers are broken down in children antagonistic to reading, everything blends into the flux of a whole experience split into bits only by the dictates of a school timetable.Ex. The goal in using these approaches was not to deceive but to have the observers blend in with the library surroundings = La razón de usar estas estratagemas no era la de engañar a los usuarios, sino más bien conseguir que los observadores se integrasen en el entorno de la biblioteca.* * *(v.) = blend into, blend in withEx: In practice, once the barriers are broken down in children antagonistic to reading, everything blends into the flux of a whole experience split into bits only by the dictates of a school timetable.
Ex: The goal in using these approaches was not to deceive but to have the observers blend in with the library surroundings = La razón de usar estas estratagemas no era la de engañar a los usuarios, sino más bien conseguir que los observadores se integrasen en el entorno de la biblioteca. -
29 molestarse
1 (tomarse la molestia) to bother■ no se moleste en venir, ya se lo mandaremos a casa don't bother coming, we'll send it round to you2 (ofenderse) to take offence* * *VPR1) (=tomarse la molestia) to bother o.s.no se moleste, prefiero estar de pie — don't trouble o bother yourself, I prefer to stand
-¿quiere que abra la ventana? -por mí no se moleste — "shall I open the window?" - "don't mind me"
no te molestes por él, sabe arreglárselas solo — don't put yourself out for him, he can manage on his own
se molestó en llevarnos al aeropuerto — she took the trouble to drive us to the airport, she went to the trouble of driving us to the airport
no te molestes en venir a por mí — don't bother to come and pick me up, you needn't take the trouble to come and pick me up
ni siquiera te has molestado en responder a mis cartas — you didn't even bother to answer my letters
2) (=disgustarse) [con enfado] to get annoyed, get upset; [con ofensa] to take offence, take offense (EEUU)no deberías molestarte, lo hizo sin mala intención — you shouldn't get annoyed o upset/take offence, he didn't mean any harm
molestarse con algn — to get annoyed o cross with sb
molestarse por algo — to get annoyed at sth, get upset about sth
se molesta por nada — he gets annoyed at o upset about the slightest thing
¿te has molestado por ese comentario? — did that comment upset o offend you?
* * *(v.) = stir + uneasily, get + Posesivo + knickers in a twist, get + Posesivo + panties in a bundle, begrudge, grudge, piqueEx. She did stir uneasily when one day he exhorted her to be careful whom she was seen with, and when he advised her to remember that in her new and different setting people who fail to observe unwritten rules of acceptable behavior are in some people's eyes expendable.Ex. The trouble began when some journalists got their knickers in a twist over Reich's unusual theories -- one of these being the notion that every individual should have a healthy satisfying sex life.Ex. I cannot for the life of me understand what you see in the Serb's cause that gets your panties in a bundle.Ex. In fact, many successful working women begrudge their partner's lack of earning power.Ex. He did not grudge them the money, but he grudged terribly the risk which the spending of that money might bring on them.Ex. In one interview, piqued by this recurrent comment on his Irishness, he pointed out that he came not from idyllic emerald green surroundings.* * *(v.) = stir + uneasily, get + Posesivo + knickers in a twist, get + Posesivo + panties in a bundle, begrudge, grudge, piqueEx: She did stir uneasily when one day he exhorted her to be careful whom she was seen with, and when he advised her to remember that in her new and different setting people who fail to observe unwritten rules of acceptable behavior are in some people's eyes expendable.
Ex: The trouble began when some journalists got their knickers in a twist over Reich's unusual theories -- one of these being the notion that every individual should have a healthy satisfying sex life.Ex: I cannot for the life of me understand what you see in the Serb's cause that gets your panties in a bundle.Ex: In fact, many successful working women begrudge their partner's lack of earning power.Ex: He did not grudge them the money, but he grudged terribly the risk which the spending of that money might bring on them.Ex: In one interview, piqued by this recurrent comment on his Irishness, he pointed out that he came not from idyllic emerald green surroundings.* * *
■molestarse verbo reflexivo
1 (ofenderse) to take offence o US offense [por, at]
2 (hacer el esfuerzo) to bother: no se molestó en llamar, she didn't even bother to phone
' molestarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
chocar
- chorear
- fastidiar
- molestar
- resentirse
English:
annoy
- bother
- bridle
- trouble
* * *vpr1. [tomarse molestias] to bother;no te molestes, yo lo haré don't bother, I'll do it;molestarse en hacer algo to bother to do sth;se molestó en prepararnos una comida vegetariana she went to the trouble of preparing a vegetarian meal for us;te agradezco que te hayas molestado en llamar thank you for taking the trouble to phone;ni siquiera se molestó en acompañarme a la puerta he didn't even bother to show me to the door;molestarse por algo/alguien to put oneself out for sth/sb;por mí no te molestes, aquí estoy bien don't worry about me, I'm fine hereespero que no se molestara por lo que le dije I hope what I said didn't upset you* * *v/r1 get upset2 ( ofenderse) take offense, Brtake offence3 ( enojarse) get annoyed;molestarse en hacer algo take the trouble to do sth* * *vrmolestarse en : to take the trouble to* * *molestarse vb to bother -
30 o no
Ex. By setting I mean the physical surroundings in which the activity takes place and their appropriateness, or otherwise, to that activity.* * *Ex: By setting I mean the physical surroundings in which the activity takes place and their appropriateness, or otherwise, to that activity.
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31 objetos curiosos
Ex. In industrial societies even the poorest people acquire artefacts to embellish their surroundings; such ' bric-a-brac' may in some cases be the detritus of a previous age or a more affluent environment, and in some cases is destined to become 'collectable' in time to come.* * *Ex: In industrial societies even the poorest people acquire artefacts to embellish their surroundings; such ' bric-a-brac' may in some cases be the detritus of a previous age or a more affluent environment, and in some cases is destined to become 'collectable' in time to come.
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32 ofenderse
1 to get offended* * *VPR to take offence o (EEUU) offense* * *(v.) = take + things personally, piqueEx. They need to learn not to take things so personally and understand that you have to be extremely patient.Ex. In one interview, piqued by this recurrent comment on his Irishness, he pointed out that he came not from idyllic emerald green surroundings.* * *(v.) = take + things personally, piqueEx: They need to learn not to take things so personally and understand that you have to be extremely patient.
Ex: In one interview, piqued by this recurrent comment on his Irishness, he pointed out that he came not from idyllic emerald green surroundings.* * *
■ofenderse verbo reflexivo to get offended [con/ por, by], take offence o US offense [con/ por, at]
' ofenderse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
molestarse
- resentirse
- ofender
- picar
- sentir
English:
offence
- resent
- exception
- offense
- umbrage
* * *vprno te ofendas, pero creo que te equivocas don't be offended but I think you're wrong* * *v/r take offense ( por at)* * *vr: to take offense* * * -
33 ordenado
adj.1 tidy, clean, in order, neat.2 organized, orderly.3 organized, well-structured, well organized.4 ordained.past part.past participle of spanish verb: ordenar.* * *1→ link=ordenar ordenar► adjetivo1 (habitación) tidy, in order; (persona) tidy, well-organized2 RELIGIÓN ordained* * *(f. - ordenada)adj.* * *ADJ1) (=en orden) [habitación, escritorio] tidy; [oficina] well-organized, orderedllevan una vida normal y ordenada — they lead a normal, ordered o orderly life
los niños entraron de forma ordenada en el museo — the children entered the museum in an orderly fashion
2) [persona] [al colocar algo] tidy; [en el trabajo] organized3) (Rel) ordained, in holy orders* * *- da adjetivoa) [ESTAR] ( en orden) tidyb) [SER] < persona> ( metódico) organized, orderly; ( para la limpieza) tidy* * *= ordered, orderly, tidy [tidier -comp., tidiest -sup.], sorted, ordained, neat and tidy.Ex. Work in a duly ordered community should be made attractive by the consciousness of usefulness, by variety, and by being exercised amidst pleasurable surroundings.Ex. The maintenance of orderly shelf arrangement is often considered an unimportant chore.Ex. Their duty is to come in before school each morning and check that the book checking system is in order and that the library is tidy and presentable.Ex. This is an aid to producing properly sorted bibliographies in the format established in the MLA Style Manual.Ex. The records of ordained priests, mother superiors and religious brothers and sisters are a neglected but rich source of genealogical information.Ex. Singers and other entertainers in Burma have been warned to cut out saucy behaviour and be neat and tidy or face the consequences.----* bien ordenado = well-kept, well-ordered.* limpito y ordenado = spic(k)-and-span.* mantener Algo ordenado = keep + Nombre + tidy, keep + Nombre + in order.* mantener ordenado = keep + Nombre + neat and tidy.* no ordenado = unsorted.* ordenado por fecha = in date order.* ordenado por número de clasificación = in class number order.* resultado ordenado jerárquicamente = ranked output.* secuencia ordenada alfabéticamente por el nombre del autor = author sequence.* * *- da adjetivoa) [ESTAR] ( en orden) tidyb) [SER] < persona> ( metódico) organized, orderly; ( para la limpieza) tidy* * *= ordered, orderly, tidy [tidier -comp., tidiest -sup.], sorted, ordained, neat and tidy.Ex: Work in a duly ordered community should be made attractive by the consciousness of usefulness, by variety, and by being exercised amidst pleasurable surroundings.
Ex: The maintenance of orderly shelf arrangement is often considered an unimportant chore.Ex: Their duty is to come in before school each morning and check that the book checking system is in order and that the library is tidy and presentable.Ex: This is an aid to producing properly sorted bibliographies in the format established in the MLA Style Manual.Ex: The records of ordained priests, mother superiors and religious brothers and sisters are a neglected but rich source of genealogical information.Ex: Singers and other entertainers in Burma have been warned to cut out saucy behaviour and be neat and tidy or face the consequences.* bien ordenado = well-kept, well-ordered.* limpito y ordenado = spic(k)-and-span.* mantener Algo ordenado = keep + Nombre + tidy, keep + Nombre + in order.* mantener ordenado = keep + Nombre + neat and tidy.* no ordenado = unsorted.* ordenado por fecha = in date order.* ordenado por número de clasificación = in class number order.* resultado ordenado jerárquicamente = ranked output.* secuencia ordenada alfabéticamente por el nombre del autor = author sequence.* * *ordenado -da1 [ ESTAR] (en orden) tidytiene el escritorio muy ordenado his desk is very tidy2 [ SER] ‹persona› (metódico) organized, orderly; (para la limpieza) tidylleva una vida ordenada she leads an ordered existence* * *
Del verbo ordenar: ( conjugate ordenar)
ordenado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
ordenado
ordenar
ordenado◊ -da adjetivo
( para la limpieza) tidy
ordenar ( conjugate ordenar) verbo transitivo
1 ‹habitación/armario/juguetes› to straighten (up) (esp AmE), to tidy (up) (BrE);
‹ fichas› to put in order;
2
3 ‹ sacerdote› to ordain
ordenarse verbo pronominal
to be ordained
ordenado,-a adjetivo tidy
ordenar verbo transitivo
1 (un armario, los papeles, etc) to put in order, arrange: ordené los libros por autores, I arranged the books by author
(una habitación, la casa) to tidy up
2 (dar un mandato) to order: les ordenó que guardaran silencio, she ordered them to keep quiet
3 (a un sacerdote, caballero) to ordain
' ordenado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
arreglada
- arreglado
- decente
- escucha
- mezclar
- ordenada
- prolijo
English:
immaculate
- instruct
- methodical
- neat
- order
- orderly
- so
- tidy
- go
- must
- ordered
- settled
- shipshape
- spick-and-span
* * *ordenado, -a adj1. [lugar, persona] tidy;[vida] ordered2. [sacerdote] ordained* * *adj tidy* * *ordenado, -da adj: orderly, neat* * * -
34 planificado
adj.planned.past part.past participle of spanish verb: planificar.* * *= ordered, planned, staged, scheduled, formulated.Ex. Work in a duly ordered community should be made attractive by the consciousness of usefulness, by variety, and by being exercised amidst pleasurable surroundings.Ex. Every library, regardless of size or type, needs a planned, continuing training program.Ex. Long-range planning is essential and necessary as emergency measures, or as first steps in a staged plan of remodelling.Ex. Experiments using either a completely flexible approach or strictly scheduled library lessons show that a mixture of both is best.Ex. Budgeting in libraries, which is usually on a yearly cycle, is the primary means by which formulated plans can be carried out.----* distribuir de un modo planificado = zone.* no planificado = unplanned.* planificado con antelación = pre-planned.* planificado previamente = pre-planned.* * *= ordered, planned, staged, scheduled, formulated.Ex: Work in a duly ordered community should be made attractive by the consciousness of usefulness, by variety, and by being exercised amidst pleasurable surroundings.
Ex: Every library, regardless of size or type, needs a planned, continuing training program.Ex: Long-range planning is essential and necessary as emergency measures, or as first steps in a staged plan of remodelling.Ex: Experiments using either a completely flexible approach or strictly scheduled library lessons show that a mixture of both is best.Ex: Budgeting in libraries, which is usually on a yearly cycle, is the primary means by which formulated plans can be carried out.* distribuir de un modo planificado = zone.* no planificado = unplanned.* planificado con antelación = pre-planned.* planificado previamente = pre-planned. -
35 rejuvenedor
= rejuvenating.Ex. Warmed by an abundance of desert sunshine, the meeting will be held in a rejuvenating resort environment inspired by the beauty of its pristine natural surroundings.* * *= rejuvenating.Ex: Warmed by an abundance of desert sunshine, the meeting will be held in a rejuvenating resort environment inspired by the beauty of its pristine natural surroundings.
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36 remozador
= rejuvenating.Ex. Warmed by an abundance of desert sunshine, the meeting will be held in a rejuvenating resort environment inspired by the beauty of its pristine natural surroundings.* * *= rejuvenating.Ex: Warmed by an abundance of desert sunshine, the meeting will be held in a rejuvenating resort environment inspired by the beauty of its pristine natural surroundings.
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37 resentirse
pron.v.1 to be weakened.2 to be offended.* * *1 (sentirse) to suffer (de, from), feel the effects (de, of)■ me resiento del tobillo my ankle hurts, I have a sore ankle2 (flaquear) to be weakened3 figurado (enojarse) to become resentful, feel resentment\resentirse con/contra alguien figurado to bear somebody resentmentresentirse por algo figurado to take offence (US offense) at something* * *verb1) to suffer2) be hurt* * *VPR1) (=estar resentido)resentirse con o por algo — to resent sth, feel bitter about sth
2) (=debilitarse) to be weakened, suffercon los años se resintió su salud — his health suffered o was affected over the years
3) (=sentir)resentirse de — [+ defecto] to suffer from
* * *verbo pronominal1)a) ( sentir dolor)resentirse DE algo: aún se resiente de la lesión he is still suffering the effects of the injury; ya no me resiento de la espalda my back doesn't give me trouble any more (colloq); aún se resienten de la derrota — they're still smarting from the defeat
b) ( sufrir las consecuencias) to suffer2) (ofenderse, molestarse) to get upset* * *(v.) = smart, grudge, piqueEx. The Soviet hosts, meanwhile, still smarting over myriad implications of inferiority, found themselves in the novel position of being expected to instruct and enlighten Westerners.Ex. He did not grudge them the money, but he grudged terribly the risk which the spending of that money might bring on them.Ex. In one interview, piqued by this recurrent comment on his Irishness, he pointed out that he came not from idyllic emerald green surroundings.* * *verbo pronominal1)a) ( sentir dolor)resentirse DE algo: aún se resiente de la lesión he is still suffering the effects of the injury; ya no me resiento de la espalda my back doesn't give me trouble any more (colloq); aún se resienten de la derrota — they're still smarting from the defeat
b) ( sufrir las consecuencias) to suffer2) (ofenderse, molestarse) to get upset* * *(v.) = smart, grudge, piqueEx: The Soviet hosts, meanwhile, still smarting over myriad implications of inferiority, found themselves in the novel position of being expected to instruct and enlighten Westerners.
Ex: He did not grudge them the money, but he grudged terribly the risk which the spending of that money might bring on them.Ex: In one interview, piqued by this recurrent comment on his Irishness, he pointed out that he came not from idyllic emerald green surroundings.* * *resentirse [ I11 ]A1 (sentir dolor) resentirse DE algo:todavía se resiente de aquella lesión he is still feeling o suffering the effects of that injuryya no me resiento de la espalda my back doesn't give me trouble any more, my back doesn't play me up any more ( colloq)todavía se resienten de aquella derrota they're still smarting from that defeat2 (sufrir las consecuencias) to suffersu salud se resentía con el exceso de trabajo the excessive workload was telling on his health o was taking its toll on his health, his health was suffering because he was overworkingsu trabajo no se resentía his work didn't suffer, it didn't affect his workse resentiría el sabor the flavor would suffer o would be affected, it would spoil the flavorB (ofenderse, molestarse) to get upsetse resintió mucho porque no lo invitaron he was very put out o offended o upset that they didn't invite him* * *
resentirse ( conjugate resentirse) verbo pronominala) ( sentir dolor):
aún se resienten de la derrota they're still smarting from the defeat
resentirse verbo reflexivo
1 (volver a sentir dolor por una antigua dolencia) to suffer [de, from], to feel the (after-) effects [de, of]: aún se resiente del golpe en la cadera, she's still feeling the effects of having bumped her thigh
2 (debilitarse) to weaken
3 (ofenderse) to feel offended
resentirse por algo, to take offence at sthg o to feel bitter about sthg
' resentirse' also found in these entries:
English:
smart
- suffer
* * *resentirse vpr1. [debilitarse] to be weakened;[salud] to deteriorate;la calidad de su trabajo se resintió por la falta de motivación her work deteriorated through lack of motivationaún se resiente de aquel golpe she's still suffering from the effects of that blow;se resiente de la rodilla he's got a bad knee, his knee is giving him trouble3. [ofenderse] to be offended* * *v/r1 get upset;resentirse con alguien feel resentful toward s.o.resentirse de algo suffer from the effects of sth* * *resentirse {76} vr1) : to suffer, to be weakened2) ofenderse: to be upsetse resintió porque la insultaron: she got upset when they insulted her, she resented being insulted3)resentirse de : to feel the effects of -
38 revitalizador
adj.life-giving, life-sustaining.m.energizer, revitalizer.* * *1.ADJ revitalizing2.SM stimulant* * *= refreshing, energising [energizing, -USA], vitalising [vitalizing, -USA], rejuvenating.Ex. But there are outsiders whose presence in the classroom and refreshing unfamiliarity and enthusiasm for reading can help change the pace of everyday encounters between teacher and taught = Pero hay personas ajenas a la clase cuya presencia en el aula y su novedad y entusiasmo revitalizador por la lectura pueden contribuir a cambiar el ritmo del encuentro diario entre el profesor y los alumnos.Ex. The bulletin can effectively reflect the widest body of interest and become an active and energizing forum.Ex. A national scale post-master's internship programme should improve the quality of working librarians and provide vitalising forces in academic institutions.Ex. Warmed by an abundance of desert sunshine, the meeting will be held in a rejuvenating resort environment inspired by the beauty of its pristine natural surroundings.* * *= refreshing, energising [energizing, -USA], vitalising [vitalizing, -USA], rejuvenating.Ex: But there are outsiders whose presence in the classroom and refreshing unfamiliarity and enthusiasm for reading can help change the pace of everyday encounters between teacher and taught = Pero hay personas ajenas a la clase cuya presencia en el aula y su novedad y entusiasmo revitalizador por la lectura pueden contribuir a cambiar el ritmo del encuentro diario entre el profesor y los alumnos.
Ex: The bulletin can effectively reflect the widest body of interest and become an active and energizing forum.Ex: A national scale post-master's internship programme should improve the quality of working librarians and provide vitalising forces in academic institutions.Ex: Warmed by an abundance of desert sunshine, the meeting will be held in a rejuvenating resort environment inspired by the beauty of its pristine natural surroundings.* * *revitalizingstimulant -
39 sociedad industrial
f.industrial society.* * *(n.) = industrial societyEx. In industrial societies even the poorest people acquire artefacts to embellish their surroundings; such 'bric-a-brac' may in some cases be the detritus of a previous age or a more affluent environment, and in some cases is destined to become 'collectable' in time to come.* * *(n.) = industrial societyEx: In industrial societies even the poorest people acquire artefacts to embellish their surroundings; such 'bric-a-brac' may in some cases be the detritus of a previous age or a more affluent environment, and in some cases is destined to become 'collectable' in time to come.
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40 derredor
m.surroundings, circuit, surrounding part, vicinity.* * *1 surroundings plural\al/en derredor round, around■ miró en derredor y no pudo ver a nadie he looked round and couldn't see anybody Table 1 NOTA See also alrededor/Table 1* * *SMal o en derredor (de) — around, about
* * *al/en derredor — (loc adv) around
* * *al/en derredor — (loc adv) around
* * *al/en derredor ( loc adv) around* * *
derredor:
* * *derredor: al derredor, en derredor loc advaround* * *m:en oal derredor around* * *derredor nmal derredor oren derredor : around, round about
См. также в других словарях:
surroundings — index atmosphere, circumstances, climate, context, environment, locality, scene, section (vicinity) … Law dictionary
surroundings — [n] environment ambience, atmosphere, background, climate, community, environs, home, location, medium, milieu, neighborhood, setting, vicinity; concepts 198,673 … New thesaurus
surroundings — ► PLURAL NOUN ▪ the conditions or area around a person or thing … English terms dictionary
surroundings — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ beautiful, elegant, idyllic, lovely (esp. BrE), magnificent, pleasant ▪ comfortable, luxurious ▪ … Collocations dictionary
Surroundings — Vicinty redirects here. Vicinity Corporation provided the MapBlast web mapping service in the late 1990s. Surroundings are the area around a given physical or geographical point or place. The exact definition depends on the field. Surroundings… … Wikipedia
surroundings — sur|round|ings [səˈraundıŋz] n [plural] the objects, buildings, natural things etc that are around a person or thing at a particular time sb s surroundings ▪ He switched on the light and examined his surroundings. ▪ I need to work in pleasant… … Dictionary of contemporary English
surroundings — [[t]səra͟ʊndɪŋz[/t]] N PLURAL: oft poss N, in N with supp When you are describing the place where you are at the moment, or the place where you live, you can refer to it as your surroundings. Schumacher adapted effortlessly to his new… … English dictionary
surroundings — n. austere; elegant; pleasant; unpleasant surroundings * * * elegant pleasant unpleasant surroundings austere … Combinatory dictionary
surroundings — sur|round|ings [ sə raundıŋz ] noun plural ** all the things that are present in a place and that form the experience of being there: Our new surroundings are a lot more friendly than we expected. pleasant/comfortable/beautiful surroundings … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
surroundings */*/ — UK [səˈraʊndɪŋz] / US noun [plural] all the things that are present in a place and that form the experience of being there Our new surroundings are a lot more friendly than we expected. pleasant/comfortable/beautiful surroundings … English dictionary
surroundings — noun (plural) the objects, buildings, natural things etc that are around a person or thing at a particular time: It took me a few weeks to get used to my new surroundings … Longman dictionary of contemporary English