-
1 to have a frog in one's throat
-
2 frog
froɡ(a small jumping animal, without a tail, that lives on land and in water.) rana- frogmanfrog n ranatr[frɒg]1 rana\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto have a frog in one's throat tener carrasperafrog ['frɔg, 'frɑg] n1) : rana f2) fastener: alamar m3)to have a frog in one's throat : tener carrasperan.• alamar s.m.• rana s.f.frɔːg, frɒg1) ( Zool) rana ffrogs' legs — ancas fpl de rana
(to have) a frog in the o one's throat — tener* carraspera
2) ( French person) (sl & offensive) franchute mf (fam, a veces pey), gabacho, -cha m,f (Chi, Esp fam & pey)[frɒɡ]1.N rana f- have a frog in one's throat2.CPDfrogs' legs NPL — (Culin) ancas fpl de rana
* * *[frɔːg, frɒg]1) ( Zool) rana ffrogs' legs — ancas fpl de rana
(to have) a frog in the o one's throat — tener* carraspera
2) ( French person) (sl & offensive) franchute mf (fam, a veces pey), gabacho, -cha m,f (Chi, Esp fam & pey) -
3 Frog
froɡ(a small jumping animal, without a tail, that lives on land and in water.) rana- frogmanfrog n ranatr[frɒg]1 rana\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto have a frog in one's throat tener carrasperafrog ['frɔg, 'frɑg] n1) : rana f2) fastener: alamar m3)to have a frog in one's throat : tener carrasperan.• alamar s.m.• rana s.f.frɔːg, frɒg1) ( Zool) rana ffrogs' legs — ancas fpl de rana
(to have) a frog in the o one's throat — tener* carraspera
2) ( French person) (sl & offensive) franchute mf (fam, a veces pey), gabacho, -cha m,f (Chi, Esp fam & pey)* * *[frɔːg, frɒg]1) ( Zool) rana ffrogs' legs — ancas fpl de rana
(to have) a frog in the o one's throat — tener* carraspera
2) ( French person) (sl & offensive) franchute mf (fam, a veces pey), gabacho, -cha m,f (Chi, Esp fam & pey) -
4 leap
li:p
1. past tense, past participles - leapt; verb1) (to jump: He leapt into the boat.) saltar, brincar2) (to jump over: The dog leapt the wall.) saltar3) (to rush eagerly: She leaped into his arms.) tirarse
2. noun(an act of leaping: The cat jumped from the roof and reached the ground in two leaps.) salto, brinco- leap year
- by leaps and bounds
leap1 n1. salto2. subidaleap2 vb1. saltar2. subir muchotr[liːp]1 saltar, brincar■ those gaudy illustrations leap off the page at you esas ilustraciones chillonas saltan de la página1 salto, brinco2 figurative use salto■ these reforms are a leap forward for the country estas reformas significan un paso hacia adelante para el país\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLa leap in the dark un salto en el vacíoby leaps and bounds a pasos agigantadosleap year año bisiestoleap n: salto m, brinco mn.• balotada s.f.adj.• bisiesto, -a adj.n.• brinco s.m.• salto s.m.• vuelo s.m.• zancada s.f.• zapateta s.f.v.(§ p.,p.p.: leaped) = brincar v.• saltar v.
I
1. liːpthe dog leaped at his throat — el perro le saltó or (esp Méx) le brincó al cuello
he leaped out of bed — se levantó (de la cama) de un salto or (esp Méx) de un brinco
my heart leaped at the news — (liter) el corazón me dio un brinco al recibir la noticia
to leap AT something — \<\<at an opportunity/an offer/a chance\>\> no dejar pasar algo
to leap ON somebody/something: they leaped on him se le echaron encima, se abalanzaron sobre él; his critics leaped on this mistake — sus detractores se lanzaron sobre este error con ensañamiento
2.
vt \<\<fence/stream\>\> saltar
II
a) ( jump) salto m, brinco mby leaps and bounds — a pasos agigantados
b) ( in prices etc) subida f brusca[liːp] (vb: pp, pt leaped or leapt)1. N1) (=jump)a) (lit) salto m ; (showing exuberance) salto m, brinco mb) (fig) salto m•
his heart gave a leap — le dio un vuelco el corazón•
it doesn't take a great leap of the imagination to foresee what will happen — no se requiere un gran esfuerzo de imaginación para prever lo que va a pasar•
she successfully made the leap into films — dio el salto con éxito al mundo del cine2) (=increase) subida fa 6% leap in profits — una subida de un 6% en las ganancias
2. VI1) (=jump)a) (lit) saltar; (exuberantly) brincar, saltar•
to leap about — dar saltos, brincarto leap about with excitement — dar saltos or brincar de emoción
•
the dog leaped at the man, snarling — el perro saltó or se arrojó sobre el hombre gruñiendo•
he leapt down from his horse — se bajó del caballo de un salto•
he leapt from a moving train — saltó de un tren en marcha•
he leaped into the river — saltó or se tiró al río•
he leapt off/ onto the bus — bajó del/subió al autobús de un salto•
he suddenly leapt on top of me — de repente me saltó or se me tiró encima•
to leap out of a car — bajarse or saltar de un cocheshe leapt out of bed — se levantó de la cama de un salto, saltó de la cama
•
to leap to one's feet — levantarse de un saltob) (fig)•
she leapt at the chance to play the part — no dejó escapar la oportunidad de representar el papel•
he leapt on my mistake — se lanzó sobre mi errorthe tabloids are quick to leap on such cases — la prensa amarilla está a la que salta con estos casos
•
the headline leapt out at her — el titular le saltó a la vista•
he leapt to his brother's defence — enseguida saltó a defender a su hermano2) (=increase)3.VT [+ fence, ditch] saltar por encima de; [+ stream, river] cruzar de un salto4.CPD- leap up* * *
I
1. [liːp]the dog leaped at his throat — el perro le saltó or (esp Méx) le brincó al cuello
he leaped out of bed — se levantó (de la cama) de un salto or (esp Méx) de un brinco
my heart leaped at the news — (liter) el corazón me dio un brinco al recibir la noticia
to leap AT something — \<\<at an opportunity/an offer/a chance\>\> no dejar pasar algo
to leap ON somebody/something: they leaped on him se le echaron encima, se abalanzaron sobre él; his critics leaped on this mistake — sus detractores se lanzaron sobre este error con ensañamiento
2.
vt \<\<fence/stream\>\> saltar
II
a) ( jump) salto m, brinco mby leaps and bounds — a pasos agigantados
b) ( in prices etc) subida f brusca
См. также в других словарях:
have a frog in one's throat — ► have a frog in one s throat informal lose one s voice or find it hard to speak because of hoarseness. Main Entry: ↑frog … English terms dictionary
have a frog in one's throat — verb To feel the need to cough; to have a tickle in ones throat; to have a scratchy or uneven voice. I just woke up and I have a frog in my throat. Give me a minute … Wiktionary
have a frog in one's throat — informal lose one s voice or find it hard to speak because of hoarseness. → frog … English new terms dictionary
have a frog in one's throat — informal lose one s voice or find it hard to speak because of hoarseness … Useful english dictionary
frog in one's throat — A person who has a frog in their throat has difficulty in speaking clearly because they have a cough or a sore throat. Teaching was difficult today. I had a frog in my throat all morning … English Idioms & idiomatic expressions
frog — Ⅰ. frog [1] ► NOUN 1) a tailless amphibian with a short squat body and very long hind legs for leaping. 2) (Frog) informal, derogatory a French person. ● have a frog in one s throat Cf. ↑have a frog in one s throat … English terms dictionary
frog — [frôg, fräg] n. [ME frogge < OE frogga, akin to Ger frosch, ON froskr < IE base * preu , to jump > Sans právatē, (he) hops] 1. a) any of various families of tailless, leaping anuran amphibians with long, powerful hind legs, short… … English World dictionary
frog — n. 1) a grass; green; wood frog 2) frogs croak; jump 3) (misc.) to have a frog in one s throat ( to be hoarse ) * * * [frɒg] green jump wood frog a grass frogs croak (misc.) to have a frog in one s throat ( to be hoa … Combinatory dictionary
frog — frog1 noun 1》 a tailless amphibian with a short squat body, moist smooth skin, and very long hind legs for leaping. [Many species, chiefly in family Ranidae.] 2》 (Frog) informal, derogatory a French person. Phrases have a frog in one s throat… … English new terms dictionary
Frog — For other uses, see Frog (disambiguation). Frogs Temporal range: Triassic–present … Wikipedia
Frog zoology — Introduction to phylumAround 400 million years ago, some members of the sarcopterygian group of fish moved onto land. These became the first amphibians. Today, these animals still spend part of their lives in water and return to water for… … Wikipedia