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1 violence
noun (great roughness and force, often causing severe physical injury or damage: I was amazed at the violence of his temper; She was terrified by the violence of the storm.) violenciaviolence n violenciatr['vaɪələns]1 violencia\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto do violence to something formal use ir en contra de algoviolence ['vaɪlənts, 'vaɪə-] n: violencia fn.• furia s.f.• violencia s.f.'vaɪələnsmass noun violencia fto use violence — hacer* uso de la fuerza or de la violencia
['vaɪǝlǝns]N (gen) violencia fcrimes of violence — delitos mpl violentos
to resort to violence — recurrir a la violencia or a la fuerza
robbery with violence — robo m con violencia
* * *['vaɪələns]mass noun violencia fto use violence — hacer* uso de la fuerza or de la violencia
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2 rage
rei‹
1. noun1) ((a fit of) violent anger: He flew into a rage; He shouted with rage.) rabia, ira, furia2) (violence; great force: the rage of the sea.) furia
2. verb1) (to act or shout in great anger: He raged at his secretary.) enfurecerse, rabiar2) ((of wind, storms etc) to be violent; to blow with great force: The storm raged all night.) bramar; embravecerse (el mar)3) ((of battles, arguments etc) to be carried on with great violence: The battle raged for two whole days.) hacer estragos; desarollarse ferozmente4) ((of diseases etc) to spread quickly and affect many people: Fever was raging through the town.) arrasar, hacer estragos•- raging- all the rage
- the rage
rage n ira / furia / cóleratr[reɪʤ]1 rabia, furor nombre masculino, cólera1 (person) rabiar, estar hecho,-a una furia\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be in a rage estar furioso,-ato be all the rage hacer furorto fly into a rage montar en cólera1) : estar furioso, rabiarto fly into a rage: enfurecerse2) : bramar, hacer estragosthe wind was raging: el viento bramabaflu raged through the school: la gripe hizo estragos por el colegiorage n1) anger: furia f, ira f, cólera f2) fad: moda f, furor mn.• arrebatamiento s.m.• arrebato s.m.• embravecimiento s.m.• furia s.f.• furor s.m.• mania s.f.• moda s.f.• rabia s.f.• saña s.f.v.• bramar v.• enfurecer v.• ensangrentar v.• rabiar v.
I reɪdʒ1)a) u ( violent anger) furia f, cólera fb) c ( fit of fury)to be in a rage — estar* furioso
2) u ( fashion) (colloq) furor m, moda fto be (all) the rage — hacer* furor, ser* el último grito (de la moda)
II
a) \<\<storm/sea\>\> rugir*, bramar; \<\<fire\>\> arder furiosamentethe battle/fire raged for three days — la encarnizada batalla/el furioso incendio se prolongó durante tres días
b) \<\<person\>\> expresar su (or mi etc) furia, rabiarc) raging pres p < storm> rugiente; < sea> embravecido; < headache> enloquecedor; < argument> enconado, airado, virulento[reɪdʒ]1. N•
he attacked her in a drunken rage — la agredió en un ataque de furia or cólera or ira causado por la bebida•
in a fit of rage — en un ataque de furia or cólera or ira•
to fly or go into a rage — montar en cólera, ponerse hecho una furia•
to be in a rage — estar furiosoroad 2.•
she was trembling with rage — temblaba de furia or cólera or ira2) (=fashion) furor m•
to be all the rage — hacer furor2.VI [person] estar furioso; [fire] propagarse con furia; [epidemic] propagarse causando estragos; [battle] proseguir con furia; [wind, storm] bramar; [sea] enfurecerse, embravecerseshe was raging, but she kept her tone cool — estaba furiosa pero conservaba un tono calmado
•
to rage against sth — protestar furiosamente contra algothe sound of the sea raging against the rocks — el sonido del mar chocando enfurecido or embravecido contra las rocas
•
to rage at sth — estar furioso ante algo•
controversy is raging over her new economic policy — hay una encendida polémica en torno a su nueva política económica•
an infection was raging through her body — una infección se propagaba por su cuerpo causando estragos3.VT"it's none of your business," he raged — -no es asunto tuyo -dijo enfurecido
* * *
I [reɪdʒ]1)a) u ( violent anger) furia f, cólera fb) c ( fit of fury)to be in a rage — estar* furioso
2) u ( fashion) (colloq) furor m, moda fto be (all) the rage — hacer* furor, ser* el último grito (de la moda)
II
a) \<\<storm/sea\>\> rugir*, bramar; \<\<fire\>\> arder furiosamentethe battle/fire raged for three days — la encarnizada batalla/el furioso incendio se prolongó durante tres días
b) \<\<person\>\> expresar su (or mi etc) furia, rabiar -
3 abate
ə'beit(to become less: The storm abated.) disminuir, amainarDel verbo abatir: ( conjugate abatir) \ \
abate es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativoMultiple Entries: abate abatir
abatir ( conjugate abatir) verbo transitivo 1 ( derribar) ‹pájaro/avión› to bring down; ‹muro/edificio› to knock down; ‹ árbol› to fell; 2 (deprimir, entristecer): no te dejes abate por las preocupaciones don't let your worries get you down 3 ‹ asiento› to recline abatirse verbo pronominal 1 ( deprimirse) to get depressed 2 (frml) abatese sobre algo/algn [pájaro/avión] to swoop down on sth/sb; [ desgracia] to befall sth/sb (frml);
abate sustantivo masculino father, abbé
abatir verbo transitivo
1 (derribar, derrumbar) to knock down, pull down: los enemigos abatieron tres de nuestros aviones, the enemy shot down three of our planes
2 (tumbar el respaldo) to fold down
3 (desalentar) to depress, dishearten: las malas noticias no nos abatieron, the bad news didn't discourage us ' abate' also found in these entries: Spanish: abatirse - apaciguarse - amainar - apaciguar - mermar - remitir English: abate - go - subsidetr[ə'beɪt]v.• abatir v.• abolir (Jurisprudencia) v.• aflojar v.• aminorar v.• apaciguar v.• calmar v.• declinar v.• desbravar v.• descontar v.• desenconar v.• disminuir v.• mitigar v.• omitir v.• rebajar v.• suprimir v.• terminar v.ə'beɪt
1.
(frml) intransitive verb \<\<storm/wind\>\> amainar, calmarse; \<\<anger\>\> aplacarse*, calmarse; \<\<noise/violence\>\> disminuir*; \<\<pain\>\> calmarse, ceder
2.
vt ( calm) \<\<anger\>\> aplacar*, mitigar*; \<\<pain\>\> calmar, mitigar*[ǝ'beɪt]1.VI [wind, storm] amainar; [fever] bajar; [flood] retirarse, bajar; [noise] disminuir; [anger] aplacarse; [pain, symptoms] remitir; [enthusiasm] moderarseinflationary pressures are abating — ceden or remiten las presiones inflacionistas
2.VT (Jur) [+ noise, pollution] (=eliminate) eliminar; (=reduce) disminuir* * *[ə'beɪt]
1.
(frml) intransitive verb \<\<storm/wind\>\> amainar, calmarse; \<\<anger\>\> aplacarse*, calmarse; \<\<noise/violence\>\> disminuir*; \<\<pain\>\> calmarse, ceder
2.
vt ( calm) \<\<anger\>\> aplacar*, mitigar*; \<\<pain\>\> calmar, mitigar* -
4 sweep
swi:p
1. past tense, past participle - swept; verb1) (to clean (a room etc) using a brush or broom: The room has been swept clean.) barrer2) (to move as though with a brush: She swept the crumbs off the table with her hand; The wave swept him overboard; Don't get swept away by (= become over-enthusiastic about) the idea!; She swept aside my objections.) barrer, limpiar, recoger; arrastrar, llevarse; rechazar, descartar3) (to move quickly over: The disease/craze is sweeping the country.) azotar, asolar, arrasar4) (to move swiftly or in a proud manner: High winds sweep across the desert; She swept into my room without knocking on the door.) deslizarse, pasar rápidamente; pasar majestuosamente
2. noun1) (an act of sweeping, or process of being swept, with a brush etc: She gave the room a sweep.) barrido2) (a sweeping movement: He indicated the damage with a sweep of his hand.) gesto/movimiento amplio3) (a person who cleans chimneys.) deshollinador4) (a sweepstake.) apuesta de caballos•- sweeper- sweeping
- sweeping-brush
- at one/a sweep
- sweep someone off his feet
- sweep off his feet
- sweep out
- sweep the board
- sweep under the carpet
- sweep up
sweep vb1. barrerthe floor is dirty, I'm going to sweep it el suelo está sucio, voy a barrerlo2. arrastrartr[swiːp]1 (with broom) barrido5 (by police, rescuers) peinado, rastreo6 familiar (chimney cleaner) deshollinador,-ra1 (room, floor) barrer; (chimney) deshollinar2 (with hand) quitar de un manotazo3 (move over) azotar, barrer4 (remove by force) arrastrar, llevarse■ the swimmers were swept out to sea by the current la corriente arrastró a los nadadores mar adentro5 (pass over) recorrer6 figurative use (spread through) recorrer, extenderse por7 (touch lightly) rozar, pasar por1 (with broom) barrer2 (move quickly) pasar rápidamente3 (extend) recorrer, extenderse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto sweep somebody off his/her feet hacerle perder la cabeza a alguiento sweep something under the carpet ocultar algoto make a clean sweep of things barrer con todo, hacer tabla rasato sweep the board llevarse todos los premios1) : barrer (el suelo, etc.), limpiar (suciedad, etc.)he swept the books aside: apartó los libros de un manotazosweep vi1) : barrer, limpiar2) : extenderse (en una curva), describir una curvathe sun swept across the sky: el sol describía una curva en el cielosweep n1) : barrido m, barrida f (con una escoba)2) : movimiento m circular3) scope: alcance mn.• barredura s.f.• deshollinador s.m.• escobada s.f.• escobazo s.m.• recorrido s.m.• redada s.f.• turbión s.f.v.(§ p.,p.p.: swept) = abalear v.• copar v.• deshollinar v.• dragar v.• escobar v.• rastrear v.• rozar v.swiːp
I
1) ( act) (no pl) barrido m, barrida fgive it a sweep — dale un barrido or una barrida, bárrelo
2)a) c ( movement)b) c (curve - of road, river) curva fc) ( range) (no pl) alcance m, extensión f3) c ( search) peinado m, rastreo m4) c ( chimney sweep) deshollinador, -dora m,f
II
1.
(past & pp swept) transitive verb1)a) ( clean) \<\<floor/path\>\> barrer; \<\<chimney\>\> deshollinarb) ( remove) \<\<leaves/dirt\>\> barrer; \<\<mines\>\> barrershe swept the leaves into a pile — barrió la terraza (or el patio etc) y amontonó las hojas
to sweep something under the rug o (BrE) carpet — correr un velo sobre algo
2) (touch lightly, brush) \<\<surface\>\> rozar*3)a) (pass over, across)severe storms swept the coast — grandes tormentas azotaron or barrieron la costa
the epidemic is sweeping the country — la epidemia se extiende como un reguero de pólvora por el país
b) ( remove by force) arrastrar4)a) ( scan) recorrerb) ( search) \<\<area\>\> peinar, rastrear
2.
vi1) (+ adv compl)a) ( move rapidly)the car swept by o past — el coche pasó rápidamente
b) ( move proudly)he swept past as if I wasn't there — pasó por mi lado con la cabeza en alto, como si yo no existiera
2) (+ adv compl)a) ( spread)fire swept through the hotel — el fuego se propagó or se extendió por todo el hotel
b) ( extend)•Phrasal Verbs:- sweep up[swiːp] (vb: pt, pp swept)1. VT1) [+ place, area]a) (=clean) [+ floor, room, street] barrer; [+ chimney] deshollinarhave you had your chimney swept lately? — ¿te han deshollinado la chimenea recientemente?
b) (=touch) rozarc) (=spread through) [disease, idea, craze] arrasar; [rumours] correr por, extenderse pord) (=lash) [storm, rain, waves] azotar, barrertorrential storms swept the country — tormentas torrenciales azotaron or barrieron el país
the beach was swept by great waves — olas gigantescas azotaron or barrieron la playa
e) (=scan) [searchlight, eyes] recorrerf) (=search) peinar2) (=move)a) (with brush)•
she was sweeping crumbs into a dustpan — estaba recogiendo las migas con una escoba y un recogedor•
he swept the leaves off the path — barrió las hojas del camino- sweep sth under the carpetb) (with hand, arm)•
she swept her hair back with a flick of her wrist — se echó el pelo hacia atrás con un movimiento rápido de muñeca•
he swept the stamps into a box — recogió los sellos en una cajato sweep sb into one's arms — coger or tomar a algn en brazos
•
I swept the rainwater off the bench with my hand — quité el agua de la lluvia del banco con la manoc) (forcefully)to be swept along by or on a wave of sth — (fig) dejarse llevar por una ola de algo
•
landslides that swept cars into the sea — corrimientos de tierra que arrastraron coches hasta el marthe election which swept Labour into office or power — las elecciones en la que los laboristas arrasaron haciéndose con el poder
•
the water swept him off his feet — la fuerza del agua lo derribó- sweep all before one3) (=win decisively) [+ election] arrasar en- sweep the board2. VI1) (=clean) barrer2) (=spread)a) [violence, disease, storm]•
the violence which swept across Punjab — la violencia que arrasó el Punjab•
the storm which swept over the country — la tormenta que arrasó el país•
plague swept through the country — la peste arrasó el paísb) [fire, smoke]•
the fire swept rapidly through the forest — el fuego se propagó or extendió rápidamente por el bosquethick smoke swept through their home — una densa humareda se propagó or extendió por la casa
c) [emotion]•
a great wave of anger swept over me — me invadió una gran oleada de ira•
panic swept through the city — en la ciudad cundió el pánico3) (=move)a) [crowd, procession]•
an angry crowd swept along the main thoroughfare — una multitud airada avanzaba por la calle principalb) (majestically) [person, car]•
to sweep past/in/out — pasar/entrar/salir majestuosamentec) (quickly) [vehicle, convoy]•
the convoy swept along the road — la caravana pasó por la carretera a toda velocidad- sweep into power4) (=stretch) [land, water]•
the bay sweeps away to the south — la bahía se extiende (majestuosamente) hacia el sursweep up•
the hills/woods sweep down to the sea — las colinas/los bosques bajan (majestuosamente) hacia el mar3. N1) (with broom, brush) barrido m, barrida fthe floor/the kitchen could do with a sweep — al suelo/a la cocina le hace falta un barrido or una barrida
•
to give sth a sweep — darle un barrido or una barrida a algo3) (=movement) [of pendulum] movimiento m ; [of scythe] golpe m ; [of beam] trayectoria f ; (fig) [of events, progress, history] marcha f•
with a sweep of his arm — con un amplio movimiento del brazowith one sweep of his scythe, he cleared all the nettles — con un golpe de guadaña hizo desaparecer todas las ortigas
with a sweep of her hand she indicated the desk — extendió la mano indicando el pupitre con un gesto amplio
4) (=search) (for criminals, drugs) batida f, rastreo mto make a sweep: they made a sweep for hidden arms — dieron una batida or hicieron un rastreo buscando armas ocultas
to make a sweep of sth — (with binoculars, torch) hacer una pasada por algo; (with team of people) rastrear algo
5)•
clean sweep —a) (=change)there will be a clean sweep of all those involved in this cover-up — se hará tabla rasa con todos los que estén involucrados en esta tapadera
b) (in competition, series of competitions)•
to make a clean sweep — arrasar ganándolo todo; (Cards) ganar todas las bazas•
it was the first club to make a clean sweep of all three trophies — fue el primer club que arrasó llevándose or ganando el total de los tres trofeos6) (=curve, line) [of coastline, river] curva f ; [of land] extensión f ; [of staircase] trazado m ; [of long skirt, curtains] vuelo m ; [of wings] envergadura f7) (=range)a) (lit) [of telescope, gun, lighthouse, radar] alcance mwith a sweep of 180° — con un alcance de 180°
b) (fig) [of views, ideas] espectro mrepresentatives from a broad sweep of left-wing opinion — representantes de un amplio espectro de la izquierda
8) (=wave) [of emotion] ola f9) = sweepstake- sweep up* * *[swiːp]
I
1) ( act) (no pl) barrido m, barrida fgive it a sweep — dale un barrido or una barrida, bárrelo
2)a) c ( movement)b) c (curve - of road, river) curva fc) ( range) (no pl) alcance m, extensión f3) c ( search) peinado m, rastreo m4) c ( chimney sweep) deshollinador, -dora m,f
II
1.
(past & pp swept) transitive verb1)a) ( clean) \<\<floor/path\>\> barrer; \<\<chimney\>\> deshollinarb) ( remove) \<\<leaves/dirt\>\> barrer; \<\<mines\>\> barrershe swept the leaves into a pile — barrió la terraza (or el patio etc) y amontonó las hojas
to sweep something under the rug o (BrE) carpet — correr un velo sobre algo
2) (touch lightly, brush) \<\<surface\>\> rozar*3)a) (pass over, across)severe storms swept the coast — grandes tormentas azotaron or barrieron la costa
the epidemic is sweeping the country — la epidemia se extiende como un reguero de pólvora por el país
b) ( remove by force) arrastrar4)a) ( scan) recorrerb) ( search) \<\<area\>\> peinar, rastrear
2.
vi1) (+ adv compl)a) ( move rapidly)the car swept by o past — el coche pasó rápidamente
b) ( move proudly)he swept past as if I wasn't there — pasó por mi lado con la cabeza en alto, como si yo no existiera
2) (+ adv compl)a) ( spread)fire swept through the hotel — el fuego se propagó or se extendió por todo el hotel
b) ( extend)•Phrasal Verbs:- sweep up -
5 renew
rə'nju:1) (to begin, do, produce etc again: He renewed his efforts; We must renew our attack on drug abuse.) renovar2) (to cause (eg a licence) to continue for another or longer period of time: My television licence has to be renewed in October.) renovar3) (to make new or fresh or as if new again: The panels on the doors have all been renewed.) renovar•- renewal
renew vb1. renovar2. reanudartr[rɪ'njʊː]1 (gen) renovar; (contract, permit, etc) prorrogar2 (start again) reanudar3 (replace) sustituir, cambiarrenew [ri'nu:, -'nju:] vt1) revive: renovar, reavivarto renew the sentiments of youth: renovar los sentimientos de la juventud2) resume: reanudar3) extend: renovarto renew a subscription: renovar una suscripciónv.• reanudar v.• refrescar v.• renovar v.rɪ'nuː, rɪ'njuːa) \<\<hope/promise\>\> renovar*; \<\<efforts/friendship\>\> reanudar; \<\<library book\>\> renovarthey renewed their attack on the Romans/minister — volvieron a atacar a los Romanos/a arremeter contra el ministro
b) renewed past p renovadorenewed outbreaks of rioting/violence — nuevos brotes de disturbios/violencia
[rɪ'njuː]VT1) (=restore) renovarskin renews itself every 28 days — la piel se renueva or se regenera cada 28 días
2) (=resume) [+ negotiations, relations] reanudarthe storm renewed itself with a vengeance — la tormenta volvió aún peor, se recrudeció la tormenta
to renew the attack — (Mil) volver al ataque
acquaintanceto renew one's efforts (to do sth) — volver a esforzarse (por hacer algo), reanudar sus esfuerzos (por hacer algo) frm
3) (=extend date of) [+ contract, passport, subscription, library book] renovar; [+ lease, loan] renovar, prorrogar4) (=reaffirm) [+ promise, vow] renovar5) (=replace) [+ component] cambiar; [+ supplies] reponer* * *[rɪ'nuː, rɪ'njuː]a) \<\<hope/promise\>\> renovar*; \<\<efforts/friendship\>\> reanudar; \<\<library book\>\> renovarthey renewed their attack on the Romans/minister — volvieron a atacar a los Romanos/a arremeter contra el ministro
b) renewed past p renovadorenewed outbreaks of rioting/violence — nuevos brotes de disturbios/violencia
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6 fury
'fjuəriplural - furies; noun(very great anger; rage: She was in a terrible fury.) furia- furious- like fury
fury n furia / rabiatr['fjʊərɪ]1 (rage) furia, rabia, ira1 las Furias nombre femenino plural\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto do something like fury hacer algo con furia, hacer algo como un,-a loco,-ato be in a fury estar furioso,-ato fly into a fury ponerse hecho,-a una furia1) rage: furia f, ira f2) violence: furia f, furor mn.• arrebatamiento s.m.• arrebato s.m.• braveza s.f.• embravecimiento s.m.• encarnizamiento s.m.• frenesí s.m.• furia s.f.• furor s.m.• rabia s.f.• saña s.f.'fjʊri, 'fjʊərishe came home in a fury — volvió a casa furiosa or hecha una furia
they worked/ran like fury — trabajaron/corrieron como locos
['fjʊǝrɪ]N [of person] furia f, furor m ; [of storm etc] furia flike fury * — con encono
* * *['fjʊri, 'fjʊəri]she came home in a fury — volvió a casa furiosa or hecha una furia
they worked/ran like fury — trabajaron/corrieron como locos
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7 threaten
verb (to make or be a threat (to): She threatened to kill herself; He threatened me with violence / with a gun; A storm is threatening.) amenazarthreaten vb amenazartr['ɵretən]1 amenazar (with/to, con)1 amenazarthreaten ['ɵrɛtən] v: amenazarv.• amagar v.• amenazar v.• aparejar v.• conminar v.• roncar v.• rondar v.'θretṇ
1.
a) ( menace) \<\<person/life/stability/peace\>\> amenazar*to threaten somebody WITH something — amenazar* a alguien con algo
they were threatened with dismissal — los amenazaron con despedirlos or con el despido
the hospital is threatened with closure — la amenaza de cierre se cierne sobre el hospital, el hospital corre peligro de que lo cierren
species threatened with extinction — especies fpl amenazadas de extinción
b) ( give warning of) \<\<action/violence\>\> amenazar* conto threaten to + INF — \<\<person\>\> amenazar* con + inf; \<\<problem/unrest\>\> amenazar* + inf
2.
vi \<\<danger/storm\>\> amenazar*['θretn]1. VT1) (=menace verbally) amenazarthey were threatened with the sack — los amenazaron con el despido, amenazaron con despedirlos
2) (=pose a threat to) [+ environment, community, way of life] amenazarsome schools have been threatened with closure — la amenaza de cierre se cierne sobre algunos colegios
3) (=promise) [+ rain, bad weather] amenazarit's threatening to rain — amenaza lluvia, amenaza (con) llover
2.VI [sky, clouds] amenazar* * *['θretṇ]
1.
a) ( menace) \<\<person/life/stability/peace\>\> amenazar*to threaten somebody WITH something — amenazar* a alguien con algo
they were threatened with dismissal — los amenazaron con despedirlos or con el despido
the hospital is threatened with closure — la amenaza de cierre se cierne sobre el hospital, el hospital corre peligro de que lo cierren
species threatened with extinction — especies fpl amenazadas de extinción
b) ( give warning of) \<\<action/violence\>\> amenazar* conto threaten to + INF — \<\<person\>\> amenazar* con + inf; \<\<problem/unrest\>\> amenazar* + inf
2.
vi \<\<danger/storm\>\> amenazar* -
8 subside
1) ((of land, streets, buildings etc) to sink lower: When a building starts to subside, cracks usually appear in the walls.) hundirse; ceder2) ((of floods) to become lower and withdraw: Gradually the water subsided.) bajar, decrecer3) ((of a storm, noise or other disturbance) to become quieter: They stayed anchored in harbour till the wind subsided.) amainar, calmarse•tr[səb'saɪd]1 (land, building, road) hundirse2 figurative use (person) dejarse caer3 (storm, wind) amainar; (floods) decrecer, bajar; (pain, fever) disminuir; (noise, applause) irse apagando; (anger, excitement) calmarse1) sink: hundirse, descender2) abate: calmarse (dícese de las emociones), amainar (dícese del viento, etc.)v.• amainar v.v.• amainar el viento v.• calmarse v.• hundirse v.səb'saɪd1) \<\<land/road/foundations\>\> hundirse2) ( abate) \<\<storm/wind\>\> amainar; \<\<floods/swelling\>\> decrecer*, bajar; \<\<excitement\>\> decaer*; \<\<anger\>\> calmarse, pasarse; \<\<laughter\>\> apagarse*; \<\<pain/noise\>\> remitir[sǝb'saɪd]VI [floods] bajar, descender; [road, land, house] hundirse; [wind] amainar; [anger, laughter, excitement] apagarse; [threat] disminuir, alejarse; [violence, pain] disminuir* * *[səb'saɪd]1) \<\<land/road/foundations\>\> hundirse2) ( abate) \<\<storm/wind\>\> amainar; \<\<floods/swelling\>\> decrecer*, bajar; \<\<excitement\>\> decaer*; \<\<anger\>\> calmarse, pasarse; \<\<laughter\>\> apagarse*; \<\<pain/noise\>\> remitir -
9 disturb
di'stə:b1) (to interrupt or take attention away from: I'm sorry, am I disturbing you?) molestar, disturbar2) (to worry or make anxious: This news has disturbed me very much.) perturbar, preocupar3) (to stir up or throw into confusion: A violent storm disturbed the surface of the lake.) agitar•disturb vb1. molestar / interrumpir"Do not disturb" "No molestar"2. perturbar / inquietar3. despertarthe baby's asleep, don't disturb him el bebé está dormido, no lo despiertestr[dɪ'stɜːb]1 (interrupt - concentration) interrumpir, distraer, hacer perder; (sleep) despertar; (silence) romper; (calm) perturbar■ if he's asleep, don't disturb him si está durmiendo, no lo despiertes2 (inconvenience) molestar, estorbar; (burst in on) sorprender3 (disarrange - papers etc) desordenar, tocar; (- lake, grass) agitar, mover4 (worry, trouble) perturbar, inquietar, preocupar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALL'Do not disturb' "Se ruega no molestar"to disturb the peace alterar el orden públicodisturb [dɪ'stərb] vt1) bother: molestar, perturbarsorry to disturb you: perdone la molestia2) disarrange: desordenar3) worry: inquietar, preocupar4)to disturb the peace : alterar el orden públicov.• alborotar v.• baquetear v.• desacomodar v.• desasosegar v.• descomponer v.• desconcertar v.• desentablar v.• desgreñar v.• destemplar v.• incomodar v.• inquietar v.• molestar v.• perturbar v.• trabucar v.• trastornar v.• turbar v.dɪ'stɜːrb, dɪ'stɜːb1)a) ( interrupt)the calm was disturbed by the arrival of the tourists — la llegada de los turistas vino a perturbar la calma
b) ( inconvenience) molestarI'm sorry to disturb you, but... — perdone que lo moleste, pero...
c) ( burst in upon) \<\<thief\>\> sorprender2) ( disarrange)3) ( trouble) perturbar, inquietar, llenar de inquietud[dɪs'tɜːb]VT1) (=bother) [+ person, animal] molestartry not to disturb Joseph, he's asleep — intenta no despertar a Joseph, está durmiendo
2) (=interrupt) [+ order, balance] alterar; [+ meeting, sleep] interrumpir; [+ silence] rompera car alarm disturbed her sleep — una alarma de coche interrumpió su sueño or la despertó
to disturb the peace — (Jur) alterar el orden público
they disturbed a burglar breaking into their house — sorprendieron a un ladrón que estaba intentando entrar en su casa
her constant questions disturbed his concentration — sus constantes preguntas le impedían concentrarse
3) (=worry) preocupar; (=upset) afectar4) (=disarrange) [+ papers] desordenar; [+ water, sediment] agitarsomebody had been in her room and disturbed her things — alguien había estado en su cuarto y había revuelto sus cosas
the police asked if anything had been disturbed — la policía preguntó si había algo fuera de su sitio
* * *[dɪ'stɜːrb, dɪ'stɜːb]1)a) ( interrupt)the calm was disturbed by the arrival of the tourists — la llegada de los turistas vino a perturbar la calma
b) ( inconvenience) molestarI'm sorry to disturb you, but... — perdone que lo moleste, pero...
c) ( burst in upon) \<\<thief\>\> sorprender2) ( disarrange)3) ( trouble) perturbar, inquietar, llenar de inquietud
См. также в других словарях:
the calm/lull before the storm — a period of quiet that comes before a time of activity, excitement, violence, etc. The college was quiet that morning, but it was the calm before the storm. Thousands of students would arrive later. • • • Main Entry: ↑storm … Useful english dictionary
Eye of the Storm — Eye of the Storm … Википедия
Storm — Storm, n. [AS. storm; akin to D. storm, G. sturm, Icel. stormr; and perhaps to Gr. ? assault, onset, Skr. s? to flow, to hasten, or perhaps to L. sternere to strew, prostrate (cf. {Stratum}). [root]166.] 1. A violent disturbance of the atmosphere … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Storm center — Storm Storm, n. [AS. storm; akin to D. storm, G. sturm, Icel. stormr; and perhaps to Gr. ? assault, onset, Skr. s? to flow, to hasten, or perhaps to L. sternere to strew, prostrate (cf. {Stratum}). [root]166.] 1. A violent disturbance of the… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Storm door — Storm Storm, n. [AS. storm; akin to D. storm, G. sturm, Icel. stormr; and perhaps to Gr. ? assault, onset, Skr. s? to flow, to hasten, or perhaps to L. sternere to strew, prostrate (cf. {Stratum}). [root]166.] 1. A violent disturbance of the… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Storm path — Storm Storm, n. [AS. storm; akin to D. storm, G. sturm, Icel. stormr; and perhaps to Gr. ? assault, onset, Skr. s? to flow, to hasten, or perhaps to L. sternere to strew, prostrate (cf. {Stratum}). [root]166.] 1. A violent disturbance of the… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
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Storm scud — Storm Storm, n. [AS. storm; akin to D. storm, G. sturm, Icel. stormr; and perhaps to Gr. ? assault, onset, Skr. s? to flow, to hasten, or perhaps to L. sternere to strew, prostrate (cf. {Stratum}). [root]166.] 1. A violent disturbance of the… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Storm-and-stress period — Storm Storm, n. [AS. storm; akin to D. storm, G. sturm, Icel. stormr; and perhaps to Gr. ? assault, onset, Skr. s? to flow, to hasten, or perhaps to L. sternere to strew, prostrate (cf. {Stratum}). [root]166.] 1. A violent disturbance of the… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
The Bollandists — The Bollandists † Catholic Encyclopedia ► The Bollandists An association of ecclesiastical scholars engaged in editing the Acta Sanctorum. This work is a great hagiographical collection begun during the first years of the seventeenth… … Catholic encyclopedia