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1 tatters
'tætəz(torn and ragged pieces: tatters of clothing.) harapos, andrajos, jirones- tattered- in tatters
tr['tætəz]\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLin tatters (clothes) harapiento,-a, andrajoso,-a, hecho,-a jirones 2 (nerves, reputation, etc) hecho,-a pedazos, destrozado,-an.• andrajos s.m.pl.'tætərz, 'tætəzto be in tatters — \<\<clothes\>\> estar* hecho jirones
['tætǝz]NPL (=rags) andrajos mpl, harapos mpl ; (=shreds) jirones mplto be in tatters — [clothes] estar hecho jirones; (fig) [reputation] estar hecho trizas; [marriage] andar muy mal
* * *['tætərz, 'tætəz]to be in tatters — \<\<clothes\>\> estar* hecho jirones
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2 tatters
adj.in tatters -> hecho jirones, andrajoso, derrotado, desarrapado.pl.plural de TATTER3ps.tercera persona del presente singular del verbo: TATTER. -
3 in tatters
(in a torn and ragged condition: His clothes were in tatters.) hecho jirones, hecho trozos, destrozado(clothes) harapiento,-a, andrajoso,-a, hecho,-a jirones 2 (nerves, reputation, etc) hecho,-a pedazos, destrozado,-aadj.• desandrajado, -a adj. -
4 tatter
tatter ['tæt̬ər] n1) shred: tira f, jirón m (de tela)2) tatters npl: andrajos mpl, harapos mplto be in tatters: estar por los suelosn.• andrajo s.m.• arambel s.m.• argamandel s.m.• arrapiezo s.m.• colgajo s.m.• gualdrapa s.f.• guiñapo s.m.• harapo s.m.• jirón s.m.• pingajo s.m.• pingo s.m.• trapajo s.m. -
5 jirón
jirón sustantivo masculino 1 ( de tela) shred;◊ hecho jirones in tatters o shreds2 (Per) ( avenida) avenue, street
jirón sustantivo masculino
1 (trozo desgarrado de tela) shred, strip: tenía el vestido hecho jirones, her dress was in shreds o tatters
2 (parte desgarrada de algo) bit, scrap ' jirón' also found in these entries: Spanish: jr -
6 rag
ræɡ(a piece of old, torn or worn cloth: I'll polish my bike with this old rag.) trapo- ragged- raggedly
- raggedness
- rags
rag n trapotr[ræg]1 broma pesada1 gastar bromas a\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLrag week semana en la que los estudiantes universitarios recaudan fondos con fines benéficos————————tr[ræg]1 harapo, andrajo, pingajo2 (for cleaning) trapo3 familiar (newspaper) periodicucho\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLin rags harapiento,-a, andrajoso,-afrom rags to riches de la pobreza a la riquezato lose one's rag perder los estribosto be like a red rag to a bull enfurecer a alguien, sacar a alguien de sus casillasrag doll muñeca de traporag trade la industria de la confecciónrag ['ræg] n1) cloth: trapo m2) rags npltatters: harapos mpl, andrapos mpln.• andrajo s.m.• colgajo s.m.• estraza s.f.• estropajo s.m.• función estudiantil benéfica s.f.• harapo s.m.• jirón s.m.• paño s.m.• pingajo s.m.• pingo s.m.• trapajo s.m.• trapo s.m.v.• regañar v.ræg1)a) c ( piece of cloth) trapo mlike a red rag to a bull — (colloq)
mentioning that to him is like a red rag to a bull — mencionarle eso es pincharlo para que se enfurezca
to lose one's rag — (BrE colloq) explotar (fam), perder* los estribos; chew
b) rags pl ( tattered clothes) harapos mpl, andrajos mpldressed in rags — harapiento, andrajoso
2) c ( newspaper) (colloq & pej) periodicucho m (pey)3) c (BrE) ( rag week) semana durante la cual los estudiantes recaudan fondos para obras benéficas
I [ræɡ]1. N1) (=piece of cloth) trapo mrags (=old clothes) harapos mpl, trapos mpl viejosto be in rags — andar or estar en harapos
- put on one's glad rags- chew the rag- lose one's rag2) * (=newspaper) periodicucho * m, periódico m de mala muerte *2.CPD
II [ræɡ]1.N (=practical joke) broma f pesada; (Univ) (=parade) fiesta f benéfica (de estudiantes)2.VT (=tease) tomar el pelo a *3.VI guasearse, bromearI was only ragging — lo dije en broma, era solo una broma
4.CPDRAG WEEK Los universitarios británicos suelen organizar cada año lo que llaman rag week. Es costumbre que, durante esa semana, los estudiantes se disfracen y salgan así vestidos a la calle, pidiendo dinero a los transeúntes con el fin de recaudar fondos para fines benéficos.* * *[ræg]1)a) c ( piece of cloth) trapo mlike a red rag to a bull — (colloq)
mentioning that to him is like a red rag to a bull — mencionarle eso es pincharlo para que se enfurezca
to lose one's rag — (BrE colloq) explotar (fam), perder* los estribos; chew
b) rags pl ( tattered clothes) harapos mpl, andrajos mpldressed in rags — harapiento, andrajoso
2) c ( newspaper) (colloq & pej) periodicucho m (pey)3) c (BrE) ( rag week) semana durante la cual los estudiantes recaudan fondos para obras benéficas -
7 ragged
1) (dressed in old, worn or torn clothing: a ragged beggar.) harapiento, andrajoso2) (torn: ragged clothes.) roto; deshilachado3) (rough or uneven; not straight or smooth: a ragged edge.) desigual; accidentadotr['rægɪd]1 (person) andrajoso,-a, harapiento,-a2 (clothes) roto,-a, deshilachado,-a3 (edge) irregular4 figurative use desigualragged ['rægəd] adj1) uneven: irregular, desigual2) torn: hecho jirones3) tattered: andrajoso, harapientoadj.• andrajoso, -a adj.• desastrado, -a adj.• desbragado, -a adj.• desharrapado, -a adj.• estropajoso, -a adj.• harapiento, -a adj.• haraposo, -a adj.• mellado, -a adj.• pañoso, -a adj.• poco suave adj.• roto, -a adj.• rotoso, -a adj.• trapajoso, -a adj.• zarrapastroso, -a adj.'rægəd, 'rægɪdadjective <clothes/appearance> harapiento, andrajoso; < coastline> recortado; < edge> irregular['ræɡɪd]1. ADJ1) (=in tatters) [dress, clothes] andrajoso, hecho jirones; [person] andrajoso, harapiento; [cuff] deshilachado- run sb raggedthey ran themselves ragged — sudaron tinta or la gota gorda
2) (=untidy) [beard] descuidado, desgreñado; [animal's coat] desgreñado3) (=uneven) [edge] mellado, irregular; [rock] recortado; [hole, line] irregular; [coastline] accidentado, recortadoragged clouds — jirones mpl de nubes
4) (=disorganized) [performance] desigual, irregular; [queue] desordenado; [line, procession] confuso, desordenadothe orchestra sounded rather ragged in places — la orquesta tocaba de forma algo irregular en algunas partes
5) (Typ)ragged left — margen m izquierdo irregular
2.CPDragged robin N — (Bot) flor f del cuclillo
* * *['rægəd, 'rægɪd] -
8 andrajos
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9 desquiciado
Del verbo desquiciar: ( conjugate desquiciar) \ \
desquiciado es: \ \el participioMultiple Entries: desquiciado desquiciar
desquiciado
◊ -da adjetivo ‹mundo/persona› crazy;tengo los nervios desquiciados my nerves are in tatters
desquiciar verbo transitivo
1 (una puerta) to unhinge
2 (a una persona) to unhinge, drive mad -
10 destrozado
Del verbo destrozar: ( conjugate destrozar) \ \
destrozado es: \ \el participioMultiple Entries: destrozado destrozar
destrozar ( conjugate destrozar) verbo transitivo ‹cristal/jarrón› to smash; ‹ juguete› to pull … apart; ‹ coche› to wreck; ‹ libro› to pull apart ‹ corazón› to break; destrozarse verbo pronominal [jarrón/cristal] to smash
destrozado,-a adjetivo
1 (un objeto) torn-up, ruined, smashed: estos pantalones están destrozados, these trousers are in shreds
2 (muy cansado, agotado) worn out, exhausted
3 (muy triste) shattered, devastated
destrozar verbo transitivo
1 (romper) to tear up, wreck, ruin
2 (una tela, un papel) to tear to shreds, rip up
3 (apenar, desgarrar) to shatter, devastate: me destroza verte así, it breaks my heart to see you this way
4 (los planes, la convivencia, etc) to ruin ' destrozado' also found in these entries: Spanish: acabada - acabado - destrozada - deshecho English: bumper - heart-broken - shattered - tatters - war-torn - broken - shred - tattered -
11 gualdrapa
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12 reputación
reputación sustantivo femenino reputation;
reputación sustantivo femenino reputation ' reputación' also found in these entries: Spanish: empañar - empañarse - ensuciar - hipotecar - menoscabar - tacha - crear - destruir - fama - jugar - mancha - manchar - menguar - reivindicar English: blemish - blob - build up - damage - destroy - disreputable - guard - injure - injury - make - name - redeem - reputation - repute - spotless - stain - stained - taint - tainted - tatters - undamaged - untarnished - involve - live -
13 trizas
trizas sustantivo femenino plural: el jarrón se cayó y se hizo trizas the vase fell and smashed (to bits o smithereens); tengo los nervios hechos trizas my nerves are in shreds o tatters ' trizas' also found in these entries: Spanish: triza English: apart - flag - hack - pull - shattered - dash - tear
См. также в других словарях:
tatters — ► PLURAL NOUN ▪ irregularly torn pieces of cloth, paper, etc. ● in tatters Cf. ↑in tatters ORIGIN Old Norse, rags … English terms dictionary
tatters — noun VERB + TATTERS ▪ lie in (figurative) ▪ Her marriage now lay in tatters. ▪ hang in ▪ Everywhere wallpaper hung in tatters. ▪ leave sth in … Collocations dictionary
tatters — tat|ters [ˈtætəz US ərz] n [plural] [Date: 1400 1500; Origin: From a Scandinavian language] 1.) in tatters a) if a plan or someone s ↑reputation is in tatters, it is ruined ▪ Tonight, the peace agreement lies in tatters. ▪ His credibility is in… … Dictionary of contemporary English
tatters — [[t]tæ̱tə(r)z[/t]] 1) N PLURAL: usu in N Clothes that are in tatters are badly torn in several places, so that pieces can easily come off. His jersey was left in tatters. Syn: in rags 2) N PLURAL: usu in N (emphasis) If you say that something… … English dictionary
tatters — noun (plural) 1 clothing or pieces of cloth that are old and torn 2 in tatters a) a plan, policy etc that is in tatters is ruined or badly damaged: The government s income policy was in tatters. b) clothes that are in tatters are old and torn … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
tatters — tat|ters [ tætərz ] noun plural old torn pieces of clothing: SHREDS in tatters 1. ) something such as a plan or an agreement that is in tatters has been spoiled and will probably fail 2. ) in very bad condition … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
Tatters — Recorded in several forms as shown below, this medieval surname is English. It is occupational either for a maker of head chains or ropes (tethers) or a metonymic for a jailer or warder. It is also possible that it was job descriptive for a… … Surnames reference
tatters — Scottish Vernacular Dictionary Ripped to pieces eg I hid a Gladys this mornin and it s left me airse in tatters … English dialects glossary
tatters — plural noun irregularly torn pieces of cloth, paper, etc. Phrases in tatters destroyed; ruined. Derivatives tattery adjective Origin ME: from ON tỏtrar rags … English new terms dictionary
tatters — UK [ˈtætə(r)z] / US [ˈtætərz] noun [plural] old torn pieces of clothing • in tatters … English dictionary
tatters — [ˈtætəz] noun in tatters 1) spoiled and likely to fail; 2) torn and in very bad condition[/ex] … Dictionary for writing and speaking English