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the+other+world

  • 121 en balde

    in vain
    * * *
    = in vain, vainly, to no avail, of no avail
    Ex. In vain I walked from one end of London to the other, and trod the 'stony-hearted streets' from morning to night, day after day.
    Ex. A recitation of the best thought out principles for a cataloging code is easily drowned out by the clatter of a bank of direct access devices vainly searching for misplaced records.
    Ex. So when the user looked to no avail under all of these entries, he understandably concluded the library did not own the volume.
    Ex. All medicines were tried but of no avail, he remained in his state of absolute forgetfulness of the world.
    * * *
    = in vain, vainly, to no avail, of no avail

    Ex: In vain I walked from one end of London to the other, and trod the 'stony-hearted streets' from morning to night, day after day.

    Ex: A recitation of the best thought out principles for a cataloging code is easily drowned out by the clatter of a bank of direct access devices vainly searching for misplaced records.
    Ex: So when the user looked to no avail under all of these entries, he understandably concluded the library did not own the volume.
    Ex: All medicines were tried but of no avail, he remained in his state of absolute forgetfulness of the world.

    Spanish-English dictionary > en balde

  • 122 en vano

    in vain
    * * *
    = vainly, in vain, helplessly, to no avail, futilely, without any avail, of no avail
    Ex. A recitation of the best thought out principles for a cataloging code is easily drowned out by the clatter of a bank of direct access devices vainly searching for misplaced records.
    Ex. In vain I walked from one end of London to the other, and trod the 'stony-hearted streets' from morning to night, day after day.
    Ex. Before saying anything, she glanced long into the humid eyes of the woman sitting helplessly in front of her.
    Ex. So when the user looked to no avail under all of these entries, he understandably concluded the library did not own the volume.
    Ex. She pleaded, futilely, in broken French, until an elderly man, hearing the commotion, came to her rescue.
    Ex. I have been searching for a solution to this problem without any avail -- Maybe someone here can offer a suggestion?.
    Ex. All medicines were tried but of no avail, he remained in his state of absolute forgetfulness of the world.
    * * *
    = vainly, in vain, helplessly, to no avail, futilely, without any avail, of no avail

    Ex: A recitation of the best thought out principles for a cataloging code is easily drowned out by the clatter of a bank of direct access devices vainly searching for misplaced records.

    Ex: In vain I walked from one end of London to the other, and trod the 'stony-hearted streets' from morning to night, day after day.
    Ex: Before saying anything, she glanced long into the humid eyes of the woman sitting helplessly in front of her.
    Ex: So when the user looked to no avail under all of these entries, he understandably concluded the library did not own the volume.
    Ex: She pleaded, futilely, in broken French, until an elderly man, hearing the commotion, came to her rescue.
    Ex: I have been searching for a solution to this problem without any avail -- Maybe someone here can offer a suggestion?.
    Ex: All medicines were tried but of no avail, he remained in his state of absolute forgetfulness of the world.

    Spanish-English dictionary > en vano

  • 123 falsedad

    f.
    1 falseness.
    2 falsehood, lie (mentira).
    * * *
    1 (hipocresía) falseness, hypocrisy; (doblez) duplicity
    2 (mentira) falsehood, lie
    * * *
    noun f.
    2) lie
    * * *
    SF
    1) [de acusación, teoría] falseness, falsity; [de persona] falseness, insincerity
    2) (=mentira) lie, falsehood frm
    * * *
    a) ( de afirmación) falseness; ( de persona) insincerity, falseness
    b) ( mentira) lie, falsehood (frml)
    * * *
    = falsehood, factoid, inauthencity, falsity, fallacy, mendacity, untruth, deceptiveness.
    Ex. If one probes more deeply into the question of truth and falsehood, one gets into difficult philosophical issues, which we prefer to leave to others.
    Ex. Most of the textbooks contain catalogues of decontextualized cultural factoids rather than strategies for identifying and understanding cultural differences.
    Ex. Critics of the digital world show fear of depersonalization, inauthenticty, subjugation to the mechanical and the substitution of quantity over quality.
    Ex. Although the legal profession intuitively knows the falsity of this assumption, researchers are still confident in implementing systems that use only the text of laws as their main source of knowledge.
    Ex. The article was titled 'Serial pricing and copyrights: prophecies, strategies and fallacies'.
    Ex. In light of his ongoing record of mendacity, it is puzzling why anyone would continue to take him seriously.
    Ex. Untruth brings about ill reputation and indignity.
    Ex. In some cases, public figures are famous because of their lies; in other cases, their renown obscures the universality of deceptiveness.
    * * *
    a) ( de afirmación) falseness; ( de persona) insincerity, falseness
    b) ( mentira) lie, falsehood (frml)
    * * *
    = falsehood, factoid, inauthencity, falsity, fallacy, mendacity, untruth, deceptiveness.

    Ex: If one probes more deeply into the question of truth and falsehood, one gets into difficult philosophical issues, which we prefer to leave to others.

    Ex: Most of the textbooks contain catalogues of decontextualized cultural factoids rather than strategies for identifying and understanding cultural differences.
    Ex: Critics of the digital world show fear of depersonalization, inauthenticty, subjugation to the mechanical and the substitution of quantity over quality.
    Ex: Although the legal profession intuitively knows the falsity of this assumption, researchers are still confident in implementing systems that use only the text of laws as their main source of knowledge.
    Ex: The article was titled 'Serial pricing and copyrights: prophecies, strategies and fallacies'.
    Ex: In light of his ongoing record of mendacity, it is puzzling why anyone would continue to take him seriously.
    Ex: Untruth brings about ill reputation and indignity.
    Ex: In some cases, public figures are famous because of their lies; in other cases, their renown obscures the universality of deceptiveness.

    * * *
    1 (de una afirmación) falseness; (de una persona) insincerity, falseness, hypocrisy
    2 (mentira) lie, falsehood ( frml)
    * * *

    falsedad sustantivo femenino

    ( de persona) insincerity, falseness
    b) ( mentira) lie

    falsedad sustantivo femenino
    1 falseness, (insinceridad) hypocrisy
    2 (mentira) lie: su declaración estaba llena de falsedades, his declaration was riddled with lies
    ' falsedad' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    supuesta
    - supuesto
    - doblez
    English:
    falsehood
    - spuriousness
    - untruthfulness
    - dishonesty
    * * *
    1. [falta de verdad, autenticidad] falseness
    2. [mentira] falsehood, lie
    * * *
    f
    1 falseness
    2 ( mentira) lie
    * * *
    1) : falseness, hypocrisy
    2) mentira: falsehood, lie
    * * *

    Spanish-English dictionary > falsedad

  • 124 habitar

    v.
    1 to live in, to inhabit.
    una especie que habita las zonas montañosas a species found in mountainous areas
    2 to live.
    una región sin habitar an unpopulated area
    * * *
    1 to live in, inhabit
    1 to live
    * * *
    verb
    * * *
    1.
    VT [+ zona, territorio] to inhabit, live in; [+ casa] to live in, occupy, be the occupant of
    2.
    VI (=vivir) to live
    * * *
    1.
    verbo transitivo < vivienda> to live in; <isla/planeta> to inhabit
    2.
    habitar vi (frml) to dwell (frml)
    * * *
    = inhabit, populate, people, dwell, live in.
    Ex. On the other hand, the large majority of us who inhabit this world do not like change: we tend to view it with suspicion and distrust.
    Ex. In areas populated largely by older people, the library might provide more reading rooms, stocked with newspapers and magazines as well as books.
    Ex. Micronesia is comprised of seven island nations peopled by distinctly unique cultural groups.
    Ex. He will dwell in the church that is built by martyrs fighting for justice, by children starving of hunger, by mothers and fathers walking the streets of misery.
    Ex. The apartment is brand new with all mods and cons and never lived in before.
    * * *
    1.
    verbo transitivo < vivienda> to live in; <isla/planeta> to inhabit
    2.
    habitar vi (frml) to dwell (frml)
    * * *
    = inhabit, populate, people, dwell, live in.

    Ex: On the other hand, the large majority of us who inhabit this world do not like change: we tend to view it with suspicion and distrust.

    Ex: In areas populated largely by older people, the library might provide more reading rooms, stocked with newspapers and magazines as well as books.
    Ex: Micronesia is comprised of seven island nations peopled by distinctly unique cultural groups.
    Ex: He will dwell in the church that is built by martyrs fighting for justice, by children starving of hunger, by mothers and fathers walking the streets of misery.
    Ex: The apartment is brand new with all mods and cons and never lived in before.

    * * *
    habitar [A1 ]
    vt
    to live in
    la casa lleva dos años sin habitar the house hasn't been lived in for two years
    éste es el único apartamento que no está habitado this is the only unoccupied apartment
    ■ habitar
    vi
    ( frml); to dwell ( frml)
    cuando el hombre habitaba en cavernas when man dwelled in caves ( frml)
    * * *

    habitar ( conjugate habitar) verbo transitivo vivienda to live in;
    isla/planeta to inhabit
    verbo intransitivo (frml) to dwell (frml)
    habitar
    I verbo intransitivo to live: los tuareg habitan en medio del desierto, the Tuareg live in the desert
    II verbo transitivo to live in, to inhabit
    ' habitar' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    poblar
    - residir
    English:
    dwell
    - inhabit
    - occupy
    - reside
    * * *
    vi
    to live;
    una región sin habitar an unpopulated area
    vt
    to live in, to inhabit;
    una especie que habita las zonas montañosas a species found in mountainous areas
    * * *
    I v/i live (en in)
    II v/t inhabit, live in
    * * *
    : to inhabit
    : to reside, to dwell
    * * *
    habitar vb to live

    Spanish-English dictionary > habitar

  • 125 imaginación

    f.
    imagination, fancy, fantasy, mind's eye.
    * * *
    1 imagination, fantasy
    \
    son imaginaciones tuyas you're imagining things
    * * *
    noun f.
    * * *
    SF

    no se me pasó por la imaginación que... — it never even occurred to me that...

    2) pl imaginaciones (=lo imaginado)
    * * *
    a) ( facultad) imagination
    * * *
    = imagination, fancy.
    Ex. The other part of the picture reveals title indexes to be only crude subject indexes, which for effective use demand imagination and searching skills on the part of the user.
    Ex. This is the world of fancies, Santa Claus, 'human' animals like Winnie-the-Pooh and Peter Rabbit, and Daleks and is often shown by the way in which a young child is able to carry on a sustained relationship with an imaginary friend or animal.
    ----
    * con imaginación = imaginatively.
    * con la imaginación = in imagination.
    * con poca imaginación = unimaginatively.
    * dale alas a tu imaginación = let + your imagination fly!.
    * da rienda suelta a tu imaginación = let + your imagination fly!.
    * despertar la imaginación = fire + the imagination.
    * ejercitar la imaginación = stretch + imagination.
    * estimular la imaginación = spark + imagination.
    * falto de imaginación = unimaginative.
    * imaginación desbocada = wild imagination.
    * imaginación desbordante = wild imagination.
    * imaginaciones = imaginings.
    * imaginación fértil = vivid imagination.
    * imaginación ferviente = wild imagination.
    * imaginación muy despierta = vivid imagination.
    * imaginación muy viva = vivid imagination.
    * la imaginación no tiene límites = your imagination is the limit.
    * literatura de imaginación = fiction.
    * necesitar imaginación = take + imagination.
    * producto de la imaginación = work of imagination.
    * * *
    a) ( facultad) imagination
    * * *
    = imagination, fancy.

    Ex: The other part of the picture reveals title indexes to be only crude subject indexes, which for effective use demand imagination and searching skills on the part of the user.

    Ex: This is the world of fancies, Santa Claus, 'human' animals like Winnie-the-Pooh and Peter Rabbit, and Daleks and is often shown by the way in which a young child is able to carry on a sustained relationship with an imaginary friend or animal.
    * con imaginación = imaginatively.
    * con la imaginación = in imagination.
    * con poca imaginación = unimaginatively.
    * dale alas a tu imaginación = let + your imagination fly!.
    * da rienda suelta a tu imaginación = let + your imagination fly!.
    * despertar la imaginación = fire + the imagination.
    * ejercitar la imaginación = stretch + imagination.
    * estimular la imaginación = spark + imagination.
    * falto de imaginación = unimaginative.
    * imaginación desbocada = wild imagination.
    * imaginación desbordante = wild imagination.
    * imaginaciones = imaginings.
    * imaginación fértil = vivid imagination.
    * imaginación ferviente = wild imagination.
    * imaginación muy despierta = vivid imagination.
    * imaginación muy viva = vivid imagination.
    * la imaginación no tiene límites = your imagination is the limit.
    * literatura de imaginación = fiction.
    * necesitar imaginación = take + imagination.
    * producto de la imaginación = work of imagination.

    * * *
    1 (facultad) imagination
    dar rienda suelta a la imaginación to give free rein to one's imagination, to let one's imagination run riot
    ¡ni (se) me pasó por la imaginación! it never even crossed my mind!
    2
    (figuración): es pura imaginación tuya it's all in your mind, it's a figment of your imagination
    yo no he oído nada, son imaginaciones tuyas I didn't hear anything, you're imagining things
    * * *

    imaginación sustantivo femenino
    imagination;
    ¡ni (se) me pasó por la imaginación! it never even crossed my mind!;

    son imaginaciones tuyas you're imagining things
    imaginación sustantivo femenino imagination: no son más que imaginaciones, it is only your imagination

    ' imaginación' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    calenturienta
    - calenturiento
    - cota
    - fantástica
    - fantástico
    - freno
    - representar
    - revivir
    - emplear
    - fantasía
    - figuración
    - fruto
    - vivaz
    - vivo
    English:
    catch
    - figment
    - imagination
    - imaginatively
    - imaginativeness
    - lack
    - run away
    - stir
    - unleash
    - vivid
    - wild
    - fancy
    - riot
    - run
    - unimaginative
    * * *
    1. [facultad] imagination;
    un niño con mucha imaginación a child with a very vivid imagination, a very imaginative child;
    pasar por la imaginación de alguien to occur to sb, to cross sb's mind;
    no me pasó por la imaginación it never occurred to me o crossed my mind;
    se deja llevar por la imaginación he lets his imagination run away with him;
    dar rienda suelta a la imaginación to let one's imagination run wild
    2. [idea falsa]
    imaginaciones delusions, imaginings;
    son imaginaciones tuyas you're just imagining things, it's all in your mind
    * * *
    f imagination;
    ni me pasó por la imaginación it never crossed my mind
    * * *
    imaginación nf, pl - ciones : imagination
    * * *
    imaginación n imagination

    Spanish-English dictionary > imaginación

  • 126 juguetear con

    v.
    to fidget with, to fiddle with, to lark about with, to monkey around with.
    * * *
    (v.) = twiddle, toy with, fidget with, fuss with
    Ex. Meek took her glasses off and twiddled them as her supervisor related the following incident.
    Ex. The article is entitled 'Malays toying with Americans: the rare voices of Malay scribes in two Houghton Library manuscripts'.
    Ex. Actually to do something about a young crackhead fidgeting with a gun takes more than high-flown language -- it takes bravery.
    Ex. Editors are a bridge between the abstract writer and the printer: on the one hand they fuss with the content and intellectual quality of the abstract, and on the other hand they prepare copy that conforms to the constraints of the publishing world.
    * * *
    (v.) = twiddle, toy with, fidget with, fuss with

    Ex: Meek took her glasses off and twiddled them as her supervisor related the following incident.

    Ex: The article is entitled 'Malays toying with Americans: the rare voices of Malay scribes in two Houghton Library manuscripts'.
    Ex: Actually to do something about a young crackhead fidgeting with a gun takes more than high-flown language -- it takes bravery.
    Ex: Editors are a bridge between the abstract writer and the printer: on the one hand they fuss with the content and intellectual quality of the abstract, and on the other hand they prepare copy that conforms to the constraints of the publishing world.

    Spanish-English dictionary > juguetear con

  • 127 malicioso

    adj.
    1 malicious, wrongful, tortious.
    2 malicious, sly, bitchy, catty.
    3 suspicious.
    4 evil-minded, dirty.
    m.
    maliciously-minded person.
    * * *
    1 (malintencionado) malicious, spiteful
    2 (malpensado) suspicious-minded
    nombre masculino,nombre femenino
    1 (malicioso) malicious person
    2 (malpensado) person with a suspicious mind
    * * *
    ADJ
    1) (=malintencionado) malicious, spiteful
    2) (=pícaro) mischievous
    3) (=astuto) sly, crafty
    4) (=malo) wicked, evil
    * * *
    - sa adjetivo
    a) ( malintencionado) malicious, spiteful
    b) ( pícaro) mischievous
    * * *
    = malicious, vicious, spiteful, devious, bitchy [bitchier -comp., bitchiest -sup.], ill-natured, dastardly.
    Ex. Perhaps the major problem will be the malicious attempt to cause confusion.
    Ex. For in the eyes of many, even the most desultory reading of fiction was preferable to the ' vicious' entertainments designed to satisfy the 'lower impulses in human nature'.
    Ex. Selection of books for review sometimes causes controversy as to why some are reviewed and others not and the reviews themselves can create minor storms in the book world if it is felt they are prejudiced or spiteful.
    Ex. The article is entitled 'The devious, the distraught and the deranged: designing and applying personal safety into library protection'.
    Ex. She worked at a local clothing company for a while and found the other staff and managers to all be very cliquey, bitchy and rather shallow.
    Ex. Always snivelling, coughing, spitting; a stupid, tedious, ill-natured fellow, who was for ever fatiguing people.
    Ex. A dastardly livery driver raped a 30-year-old woman passenger on Jan. 31, cops said.
    ----
    * intención maliciosa = malicious intent.
    * * *
    - sa adjetivo
    a) ( malintencionado) malicious, spiteful
    b) ( pícaro) mischievous
    * * *
    = malicious, vicious, spiteful, devious, bitchy [bitchier -comp., bitchiest -sup.], ill-natured, dastardly.

    Ex: Perhaps the major problem will be the malicious attempt to cause confusion.

    Ex: For in the eyes of many, even the most desultory reading of fiction was preferable to the ' vicious' entertainments designed to satisfy the 'lower impulses in human nature'.
    Ex: Selection of books for review sometimes causes controversy as to why some are reviewed and others not and the reviews themselves can create minor storms in the book world if it is felt they are prejudiced or spiteful.
    Ex: The article is entitled 'The devious, the distraught and the deranged: designing and applying personal safety into library protection'.
    Ex: She worked at a local clothing company for a while and found the other staff and managers to all be very cliquey, bitchy and rather shallow.
    Ex: Always snivelling, coughing, spitting; a stupid, tedious, ill-natured fellow, who was for ever fatiguing people.
    Ex: A dastardly livery driver raped a 30-year-old woman passenger on Jan. 31, cops said.
    * intención maliciosa = malicious intent.

    * * *
    1 (malintencionado) ‹persona/comentario› malicious, spiteful
    2 (pícaro) ‹comentario/mirada/sonrisa› mischievous
    * * *

    malicioso
    ◊ -sa adjetivo



    malicioso,-a
    I adjetivo
    1 (pícaro) mischievous
    2 (malintencionado) malicious
    II sustantivo masculino y femenino malicious person
    ' malicioso' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    maliciosa
    - puñetera
    - puñetero
    - pícaro
    English:
    bitchy
    - catty
    - ill-natured
    - mischievous
    - spiteful
    - cunning
    - malicious
    - sly
    - vicious
    * * *
    malicioso, -a adj
    1. [malintencionado] malicious
    2. [astuto, agudo] cunning, crafty
    * * *
    adj
    1 ( malintencionado) malicious
    2 ( astuto) cunning, sly
    * * *
    malicioso, -sa adj
    1) : malicious
    2) pícaro: mischievous
    * * *
    malicioso adj spiteful

    Spanish-English dictionary > malicioso

  • 128 mordaz

    adj.
    1 caustic, biting.
    2 sarcastic, bitter, biting, bitterly severe.
    3 mordant, biting, sour, stinging.
    * * *
    1 mordant, sarcastic
    * * *
    adj.
    sarcastic, biting
    * * *
    ADJ [crítica, persona] sharp, scathing; [estilo] incisive; [humor] caustic
    * * *
    adjetivo <estilo/lenguaje> scathing, caustic; < crítica> sharp, scathing
    * * *
    = trenchant, scathing, searing, stinging, caustic, salty [saltier -comp., saltiest -sup.], pungent, sarcastic, blistering, spiky [spikier -comp., spikiest -sup.], vitriolic, waspish.
    Ex. However, both BTI and LCSH occasionally use headings of this kind, though one could argue strongly that these are out of place in direct entry methods, and they come in for trenchant criticism from Metcalfe.
    Ex. Fish is particularly scathing about reactionaries in the academic world who resort to a version of scaremongering about 'political correctness,' deconstruction, and other bogies.
    Ex. His searing and rigorously logical analysis of the '1949 ALA Rules for Entry' is one of my favorite pieces of writing on cataloging.
    Ex. In a stinging rebuke to the American Library Association, Nat Hentoff has criticized the ALA for failing to take action to defend volunteer librarians in Cuba who are being subjected to a brutal crackdown.
    Ex. While her characters are frequently intrinsic to theme and plot, her most caustic scenes deflate academic ambition and pretension.
    Ex. Serious questions which face us may often be better understood when a modicum of salty satire is applied.
    Ex. The studies reported here addressed the question of whether the pungent element in chilies, capsaicin, suppresses taste and flavor intensity.
    Ex. 'Listen!' he growled, in a tone so dry, sarcastic and acrid that not another word was needed to indicate that he was not about to be upstaged by a 24 year old.
    Ex. Lodge Kerrigan's 'Clean, Shaven' is a blistering piece of cinematic inventiveness and a young director's low-budget first feature.
    Ex. This adaptation of David Leavitt's novel wobbles between comedy and melodrama, ultimately fudging the novel's spiky empathy.
    Ex. This magazine had a particular interest in curious stories of libraries and bookmen, and was abundant in criticism both humorous and vitriolic.
    Ex. Harwood is excellent -- saucy and coquettish and really waspish in her subsequent vitriolic exchanges with the irate Marcello.
    ----
    * crítica mordaz = hatchet job.
    * de forma mordaz = pungently.
    * mordaz en sus comentarios = sharp of tongue.
    * * *
    adjetivo <estilo/lenguaje> scathing, caustic; < crítica> sharp, scathing
    * * *
    = trenchant, scathing, searing, stinging, caustic, salty [saltier -comp., saltiest -sup.], pungent, sarcastic, blistering, spiky [spikier -comp., spikiest -sup.], vitriolic, waspish.

    Ex: However, both BTI and LCSH occasionally use headings of this kind, though one could argue strongly that these are out of place in direct entry methods, and they come in for trenchant criticism from Metcalfe.

    Ex: Fish is particularly scathing about reactionaries in the academic world who resort to a version of scaremongering about 'political correctness,' deconstruction, and other bogies.
    Ex: His searing and rigorously logical analysis of the '1949 ALA Rules for Entry' is one of my favorite pieces of writing on cataloging.
    Ex: In a stinging rebuke to the American Library Association, Nat Hentoff has criticized the ALA for failing to take action to defend volunteer librarians in Cuba who are being subjected to a brutal crackdown.
    Ex: While her characters are frequently intrinsic to theme and plot, her most caustic scenes deflate academic ambition and pretension.
    Ex: Serious questions which face us may often be better understood when a modicum of salty satire is applied.
    Ex: The studies reported here addressed the question of whether the pungent element in chilies, capsaicin, suppresses taste and flavor intensity.
    Ex: 'Listen!' he growled, in a tone so dry, sarcastic and acrid that not another word was needed to indicate that he was not about to be upstaged by a 24 year old.
    Ex: Lodge Kerrigan's 'Clean, Shaven' is a blistering piece of cinematic inventiveness and a young director's low-budget first feature.
    Ex: This adaptation of David Leavitt's novel wobbles between comedy and melodrama, ultimately fudging the novel's spiky empathy.
    Ex: This magazine had a particular interest in curious stories of libraries and bookmen, and was abundant in criticism both humorous and vitriolic.
    Ex: Harwood is excellent -- saucy and coquettish and really waspish in her subsequent vitriolic exchanges with the irate Marcello.
    * crítica mordaz = hatchet job.
    * de forma mordaz = pungently.
    * mordaz en sus comentarios = sharp of tongue.

    * * *
    ‹estilo/lenguaje› scathing, caustic, incisive; ‹crítica› sharp, scathing
    * * *

    mordaz adjetivo ‹estilo/lenguaje scathing, caustic;
    crítica sharp, scathing
    mordaz adjetivo biting, scathing: me gusta leer sus mordaces comentarios acerca de los programas de la tele, I like reading his biting commentary on TV programmes
    ' mordaz' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    corrosiva
    - corrosivo
    - afilado
    English:
    abrasive
    - acid
    - barbed
    - biting
    - caustic
    - cutting
    - damning
    - denunciation
    - incisive
    - pointed
    - scathing
    - sharp
    - dry
    - dryness
    * * *
    mordaz adj
    caustic
    * * *
    adj biting, sharp
    * * *
    mordaz adj
    : caustic, scathing

    Spanish-English dictionary > mordaz

См. также в других словарях:

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