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121 serious
['siəriəs]1) (grave or solemn: a quiet, serious boy; You're looking very serious.) grav2) ((often with about) in earnest; sincere: Is he serious about wanting to be a doctor?) serios3) (intended to make people think: He reads very serious books.) serios4) (causing worry; dangerous: a serious head injury; The situation is becoming serious.) serios, grav•- seriously
- take someone or something seriously
- take seriously -
122 serious
['siəriəs]1) (grave or solemn: a quiet, serious boy; You're looking very serious.) σοβαρός2) ((often with about) in earnest; sincere: Is he serious about wanting to be a doctor?) που δεν αστειεύεται3) (intended to make people think: He reads very serious books.) σοβαρός4) (causing worry; dangerous: a serious head injury; The situation is becoming serious.) σοβαρός•- seriously
- take someone or something seriously
- take seriously -
123 serious
['siəriəs]1) (grave or solemn: a quiet, serious boy; You're looking very serious.) sérieux2) ((often with about) in earnest; sincere: Is he serious about wanting to be a doctor?) sérieux3) (intended to make people think: He reads very serious books.) sérieux4) (causing worry; dangerous: a serious head injury; The situation is becoming serious.) sérieux•- seriously - take someone or something seriously - take seriously -
124 serious
['siəriəs]1) (grave or solemn: a quiet, serious boy; You're looking very serious.) sério2) ((often with about) in earnest; sincere: Is he serious about wanting to be a doctor?) sério3) (intended to make people think: He reads very serious books.) sério4) (causing worry; dangerous: a serious head injury; The situation is becoming serious.) sério, grave•- seriously - take someone or something seriously - take seriously -
125 chufla
f.joke (informal).estar de chufla to be kiddingtomarse las cosas a chufla to treat everything as a joke, not to take things seriouslypres.indicat.3rd person singular (él/ella/ello) present indicative of spanish verb: chuflar.imperat.2nd person singular (tú) Imperative of Spanish verb: chuflar.* * *\hacer chufla de algo/alguien familiar to make fun of something/somebody* * *SF joke, merry quip* * *femenino (Esp) jokeestar de chufla — to be cracking jokes (colloq)
* * *femenino (Esp) jokeestar de chufla — to be cracking jokes (colloq)
* * *( Esp)jokesiempre está de chufla he's always telling o ( colloq) cracking jokes* * *chufla nfFam joke;estar de chufla to be kidding;tomarse las cosas a chufla to treat everything as a joke, not to take things seriously* * *f joke;estar de chufla be joking -
126 hafif
"1. light (in weight). 2. light, easy, mild. 3. light, frivolous, flighty. 4. light, mild (food); light (meal, drink). 5. light, thin, slight. 6. light, gentle, mild. 7. light, mild, not heavy or strong. 8. light, slight, mild, not intense. 9. light (music). 10. light, mild (punishment, penalty, sentence, etc.). 11. light (sleep). 12. slight, gradual (incline, slope, etc.). 13. slight, small, little (sound, voice, noise), 14. light, relaxed, at ease, free from trouble. 15. light, slight, slightly evident. 16. slang penniless, broke. 17. lightly, slightly, mildly. -e almak /ı/ to take (someone, something) lightly, not to take (someone, something) seriously. -ten almak /ı/ 1. to try to calm (someone) (instead of quarreling with him). 2. to regard (someone, something) as unimportant. - atlatmak /ı/ to escape (something) lightly. - giyinmek to dress lightly. - hafif gently, slowly. - hapis cezası law imprisonment in a minimum-security prison. - müzik light music. - para cezası law a light fine. - sanayi light industry. - tertip 1. small-scale. 2. a little, slightly. - uyku a light sleep." -
127 badly
comparative - worse; adverb1) (not well, efficiently or satisfactorily: He plays tennis very badly.) mal2) (to a serious or severe extent: He badly needs a haircut; The dress is badly stained.) seriamente, desesperadamente; muybadly adv1. mal2. gravemente3. muy / muchotr['bædlɪ]1 mal2 (seriously) gravemente3 (very much) mucho,-a\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto go badly ir malto miss somebody badly echar mucho de menos a alguiento take something badly tomar algo muy a pechoto be badly off andar escaso,-a de dineroto come off badly salir malbadly ['bædli] adv1) : mal2) urgently: mucho, con urgencia3) severely: gravementeadj.• desacomodado, -a adj.adv.• con urgencia adv.• gravemente adv.• mal adv.'bædli1) ( poorly) <play/sing> malto do badly: our team did badly a nuestro equipo le fue mal; we're not doing badly — vamos bastante bien
2) ( improperly) < behaveeat> mal3) (as intensifier) < fail> miserablemente, estrepitosamente['bædlɪ]ADV1) (=poorly) malpay 2., 1)badly made/written/designed — mal hecho/escrito/diseñado
2) (=seriously, severely) gravementethey were badly beaten — (in contest) sufrieron una seria derrota; (physically) les dieron una paliza tremenda
3) (=unfavourably)to speak/think badly of sb — hablar/pensar mal de algn
"how did he take it?" - "badly" — -¿qué tal se lo tomó? -fatal
4) (=wrongly)5) (=very much) [want, need]badly-needed medical supplies — medicamentos mpl que se necesitan desesperadamente
6)to be badly off — (=poor) andar or estar mal de dinero
you're not that badly off, you only have to work 20 hours a week — no estás tan mal, solo tienes que trabajar 20 horas por semana
* * *['bædli]1) ( poorly) <play/sing> malto do badly: our team did badly a nuestro equipo le fue mal; we're not doing badly — vamos bastante bien
2) ( improperly) <behave/treat> mal3) (as intensifier) < fail> miserablemente, estrepitosamente -
128 bartola
a la bartola carelesslytumbarse a la bartola / echarse a la bartola to lounge about* * *SF- echarse o tenderse a la bartola* * *echarse or tumbarse a la bartola — (fam) ( acostarse) to hit the sack o hay (colloq); ( estar sin trabajar) to laze about
hacer algo a la bartola — (CS fam) to do something any old how (colloq)
* * *echarse or tumbarse a la bartola — (fam) ( acostarse) to hit the sack o hay (colloq); ( estar sin trabajar) to laze about
hacer algo a la bartola — (CS fam) to do something any old how (colloq)
* * *echarse or tenderse or tumbarse a la bartola ( fam) (acostarse) to hit the sack o hay ( colloq) (estar sin trabajar) to do nothing, take it easy ( colloq)está muy mal terminado, se ve que lo hicieron a la bartola it's very badly finished, you can see they've just done it any old how o they've just thrown it togethertomar algo a la bartola ( Chi fam): todo lo toma a la bartola she doesn't take anything seriously, she's very laid back about everything ( colloq)* * *
bartola sustantivo femenino:
* * *bartola nfFam Famhacer algo a la bartola to do sth any old how* * *:tumbarse a la bartola fam take it easy
См. также в других словарях:
take something seriously — take someone/something seriously phrase to think that someone/something is important and should be given careful attention Jonathan takes his gardening very seriously. Don’t take everything he says so seriously. Thesaurus: to value something or … Useful english dictionary
take someone seriously — take someone/something seriously phrase to think that someone/something is important and should be given careful attention Jonathan takes his gardening very seriously. Don’t take everything he says so seriously. Thesaurus: to value something or … Useful english dictionary
take someone or something seriously — take (someone or something) seriously : to treat (someone or something) as being very important and deserving attention or respect He takes his religious faith seriously. She s well qualified for the job, so she hopes the company will take her… … Useful english dictionary
take something to heart — phrase to think about something seriously, often so that you become upset by it You can’t take everything people say to heart. Thesaurus: to think carefully or a lot about thingssynonym Main entry: heart * * * take criticism seriously and be… … Useful english dictionary
take something to heart — take (something) to heart if you take criticism or advice to heart, you think about it seriously, often because it upsets you. Don t take it to heart he was only joking about your hair … New idioms dictionary
take something to heart — take criticism seriously and be affected by it. → heart … English new terms dictionary
take something to heart — to think about something seriously, often so that you become upset by it You can t take everything people say to heart … English dictionary
take someone/something seriously — regard someone or something as important and worthy of attention … Useful english dictionary
seriously — c.1500, from SERIOUS (Cf. serious) + LY (Cf. ly) (2). To take (something) seriously is from 1782 … Etymology dictionary
take it to heart — take something seriously, consider carefully; be affected emotionally, be deeply moved … English contemporary dictionary
take to heart — verb a) To take something seriously; to internalize or live according to something (e.g. advice.) He really took it to heart when I asked him to reconsider. b) To feel keenly; be greatly grieved at; be much affected by something … Wiktionary