-
1 to have one foot in the grave
estar con un pie en la sepultura, tener un pie en la tumba————————estar con un pie en la tumba -
2 foot
futplural - feet; noun1) (the part of the leg on which a person or animal stands or walks: My feet are very sore from walking so far.) pie2) (the lower part of anything: at the foot of the hill.) pie3) ((plural often foot; often abbreviated to ft when written) a measure of length equal to twelve inches (30.48 cm): He is five feet/foot six inches tall; a four-foot wall.) pie•- footing- football
- foothill
- foothold
- footlight
- footman
- footmark
- footnote
- footpath
- footprint
- footsore
- footstep
- footwear
- follow in someone's footsteps
- foot the bill
- on foot
- put one's foot down
- put one's foot in it
foot n pietr[fʊt]1 SMALLANATOMY/SMALL pie nombre masculino■ the mountain is 1,000 feet high la montaña tiene 1.000 pies de altura■ he's six foot tall ≈ mide dos metros3 (bottom) pie nombre masculino4 (of animal) pata\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLin bare feet descalzo,-aon foot a pieto foot the bill pagar, pagar la cuenta, correr con los gastosto foot it ir a pie, ir andandoto be on one's feet estar de pieon foot a pieto be on one's feet again estar recuperado,-ato drag one's feet querer echarse atrás, hacerse el remolón,-onato fall on one's feet / land on one's feet caer de pie, tener buena suerteto find one's feet acostumbrarse, habituarseto get off on the wrong foot familiar empezar con mal pieto get to one's feet levantarse, ponerse de pie, ponerse en pieto get a foot in the door abrirse una brechato get cold feet entrarle miedo a uno, dar marcha atrásto have feet of clay tener pies de barroto have both feet on the ground ser realistato have one foot in the grave estar con un pie en la tumbato keep one's feet mantenerse en pieto put a foot wrong equivocarseto put one's feet up descansarto put one's foot in it meter la patato put one's foot down familiar imponerse, ponerse firmeto rush somebody off his feet hacer ir de culo a alguiento set foot pisarto stand on one's own two feet ser independiente, valerse por sí mismomy foot! ¡qué va!, ¡ni hablar!foot fault falta de piefoot pump bomba de piefoot soldier soldado de infanterían.(§ pl.: feet) = pata s.f.• pie s.m.v.• andar a pie v.
I fʊtto be on one's feet — estar* de pie, estar* parado (AmL)
to get back on one's feet — ( after illness) recuperarse
to get o rise to one's feet — ponerse* de pie, levantarse, pararse (AmL)
he had never set foot in a church before — nunca había pisado una iglesia or entrado en una iglesia antes
to go/come on foot — ir*/venir* a pie or caminando or andando
a foot in the door: it's a way of getting your foot in the door es una manera de introducirte or de meterte en la empresa (or la profesión etc); my foot! (colloq): delicate condition my foot! estado delicado mi or tu abuela! (fam); not to put a foot wrong no dar* un paso en falso, no cometer ni un error; the shoe's o (BrE) boot's on the other foot se ha dado vuelta la tortilla; to be able to think on one's feet ser* capaz de pensar con rapidez; to be dead o asleep on one's feet no poder* tenerse en pie; to be rushed o run off one's feet estar* agobiado de trabajo; to fall o land on one's feet: she always seems to land on her feet siempre le sale todo redondo; to find one's feet: it didn't take him long to find his feet in his new school no tardó en habituarse a la nueva escuela; to get cold feet (about something): she got cold feet le entró miedo y se echó atrás; to get off on the wrong foot empezar* con el pie izquierdo or con mal pie; to have itchy feet ser* inquieto; to have one's feet on the ground tener* los pies sobre la tierra; to put one's best foot forward ( hurry) apretar* el paso; ( do one's best) esmerarse para causar la mejor impresión; to put one's foot down ( be firm) imponerse*, no ceder; ( accelerate vehicle) (colloq) meterle (AmL fam), apretar* el acelerador; to put one's foot in it (colloq) meter la pata (fam); to stand on one's own two feet valerse* por sí (or mí etc) mismo; to sweep somebody off her/his feet: she was swept off her feet by an older man se enamoró perdidamente de un hombre mayor que ella; under somebody's feet: the cat keeps getting under my feet — el gato siempre me anda alrededor or siempre se me está atravesando; hand I 2)
2) (bottom, lower end) (no pl) pie mhe is six foot o feet tall — mide seis pies
4) u ( infantry) (esp BrE dated) (before n)foot soldier — soldado mf de infantería or de a pie
II
[fʊt]to foot the bill — pagar*
1. N(pl feet)1) (Anat) pie m ; [of animal, chair] pata f•
to get to one's feet — ponerse de pie, levantarse, pararse (LAm)•
lady, my foot! * — ¡dama, ni hablar!•
on foot — a pie, andando, caminando (LAm)to be on one's feet — estar de pie, estar parado (LAm)
he's on his feet all day long — está trajinando todo el santo día, no descansa en todo el día
he's on his feet again — ya está recuperado or repuesto
•
to rise to one's feet — ponerse de pie, levantarse, pararse (LAm)•
I've never set foot there — nunca he estado allíto set foot inside sb's door — poner los pies en la casa de algn, pasar el umbral de algn
•
it's wet under foot — el suelo está mojado•
to put one's feet up * — descansar- put one's best foot forward- get cold feet- get one's foot in the door- put one's foot down- drag one's feet- fall on one's feet- find one's feet- have one foot in the grave- have one's feet on the ground- put one's foot in it- start off on the right foot- shoot o.s. in the foot- sit at sb's feet- stand on one's own two feet- sweep a girl off her feet2) [of mountain, page, stairs, bed] pie m3) (=measure) pie mhe's six foot or feet tall — mide seis pies, mide un metro ochenta
See:see cultural note IMPERIAL SYSTEM in imperial2. VT1) (=pay)- foot the bill for sth2)• to foot it — (=walk) ir andando or (LAm) caminando; (=dance) bailar
3.CPDfoot brake N — (Aut) freno m de pie
foot fault N — (Tennis) falta f de saque
foot passenger N — pasajero(-a) m / f de a pie
foot patrol N — patrulla f a pie
foot soldier N — soldado mf de infantería
* * *
I [fʊt]to be on one's feet — estar* de pie, estar* parado (AmL)
to get back on one's feet — ( after illness) recuperarse
to get o rise to one's feet — ponerse* de pie, levantarse, pararse (AmL)
he had never set foot in a church before — nunca había pisado una iglesia or entrado en una iglesia antes
to go/come on foot — ir*/venir* a pie or caminando or andando
a foot in the door: it's a way of getting your foot in the door es una manera de introducirte or de meterte en la empresa (or la profesión etc); my foot! (colloq): delicate condition my foot! estado delicado mi or tu abuela! (fam); not to put a foot wrong no dar* un paso en falso, no cometer ni un error; the shoe's o (BrE) boot's on the other foot se ha dado vuelta la tortilla; to be able to think on one's feet ser* capaz de pensar con rapidez; to be dead o asleep on one's feet no poder* tenerse en pie; to be rushed o run off one's feet estar* agobiado de trabajo; to fall o land on one's feet: she always seems to land on her feet siempre le sale todo redondo; to find one's feet: it didn't take him long to find his feet in his new school no tardó en habituarse a la nueva escuela; to get cold feet (about something): she got cold feet le entró miedo y se echó atrás; to get off on the wrong foot empezar* con el pie izquierdo or con mal pie; to have itchy feet ser* inquieto; to have one's feet on the ground tener* los pies sobre la tierra; to put one's best foot forward ( hurry) apretar* el paso; ( do one's best) esmerarse para causar la mejor impresión; to put one's foot down ( be firm) imponerse*, no ceder; ( accelerate vehicle) (colloq) meterle (AmL fam), apretar* el acelerador; to put one's foot in it (colloq) meter la pata (fam); to stand on one's own two feet valerse* por sí (or mí etc) mismo; to sweep somebody off her/his feet: she was swept off her feet by an older man se enamoró perdidamente de un hombre mayor que ella; under somebody's feet: the cat keeps getting under my feet — el gato siempre me anda alrededor or siempre se me está atravesando; hand I 2)
2) (bottom, lower end) (no pl) pie mhe is six foot o feet tall — mide seis pies
4) u ( infantry) (esp BrE dated) (before n)foot soldier — soldado mf de infantería or de a pie
II
to foot the bill — pagar*
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3 grave
I ɡreiv noun(a plot of ground, or the hole dug in it, in which a dead person is buried: He laid flowers on the grave.) tumba- gravestone
- graveyard
II ɡreiv adjective1) (important: a grave responsibility; grave decisions.) grave, serio2) (serious, dangerous: grave news.) grave, serio3) (serious, sad: a grave expression.) grave•- gravely- gravity
grave1 adj grave / seriograve2 n tumba
Del verbo gravar: ( conjugate gravar) \ \
gravé es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) pretérito indicativo
grave es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) imperativoMultiple Entries: gravar grave
gravar ( conjugate gravar) verbo transitivo ( con impuesto) ‹ingresos/productos› to tax
grave adjetivo 1 2 ‹situación/asunto/error› serious 3 4 (Ling) ‹ acento› grave; ‹ palabra› paroxytone
gravar vtr Jur (cargar con impuestos) to tax
grave adjetivo
1 (peligroso, crítico) serious: está muy grave, he's seriously ill
2 (voz, nota, tono) low: siempre le reconocía por su voz grave, I always recognized him by his low voice ' grave' also found in these entries: Spanish: cavar - cogida - consideración - deforestación - desforestación - enfrentarse - extracorpórea - extracorpóreo - fosa - hoya - hoyo - pronóstico - renacer - revolverse - sedición - sepultura - seria - serio - tumba - ultratumba - vivir - afectado - asustar - bajo - crimen - esperar - frente - herida - profundo English: acute - Armageddon - bad - critical - dangerous - deep - deepen - deficiency - dire - felony - grave - grievous - life-threatening - low - major - mark - mass grave - nasty - serious - severe - danger - desperate - felon - less - sober - solemn - tend - violatetr[greɪv]1 (solemn - voice, look, etc) grave2 (serious - situation, consequences, error, etc) grave, serio,-a3 (tr[grɑːv]) (accent) grave————————tr[greɪv]1 (tomb) tumba, sepultura\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLas silent as the grave como una tumbafrom the cradle to the grave (durante) toda la vidato have one foot in the grave estar con un pie en la sepultura, tener un pie en la tumbato turn in one's grave revolverse en su tumbagrave robber profanador,-ra de tumbas1) important: grave, de mucha gravedad2) serious, solemn: grave, seriograve n: tumba f, sepultura fadj.• aplomado, -a adj.• formal adj.• grave adj.• mesurado, -a adj.• reposado, -a adj.• serio, -a adj.• solemne adj.• tumba adj.n.• entierro s.m.• fosa s.f.• hoya s.f.• hoyo s.m.• huesa s.f.• sepulcro s.m.• sepultura s.f.• tumba s.f.• yacija s.f.v.• grabar v.
I greɪvadjective graver, gravest1) <error/danger/voice> grave
II
noun tumba f, sepultura fas quiet o silent as the grave — como una tumba
to dig one's own grave — cavarse su (or mi etc) propia tumba
to turn in one's grave: your father must be turning in his grave — si tu padre levantara la cabeza...
I
[ɡreɪv]ADJ (compar graver) (superl gravest)1) (=serious) [danger, problem, mistake] grave; [threat, suspicion] serio2) (=solemn) [face, expression] grave, serio; [person] seriohis face was grave — su rostro era grave or serio
II
[ɡreɪv]N tumba f, sepultura f; (with monument) sepulcro m, tumba fcommon grave — fosa f común
dig 2., turn 3.from beyond the grave — (fig) desde ultratumba
III
[ɡrɑːv]ADJ (Ling)grave accent — acento m grave
* * *
I [greɪv]adjective graver, gravest1) <error/danger/voice> grave
II
noun tumba f, sepultura fas quiet o silent as the grave — como una tumba
to dig one's own grave — cavarse su (or mi etc) propia tumba
to turn in one's grave: your father must be turning in his grave — si tu padre levantara la cabeza...
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4 grave
adj.grave, serio (manner, voice, situation, mistake)s.1 tumba, sepultura.to make somebody turn in his grave hacer que alguien se revuelva en su sepulturato have one foot in the grave estar con un pie en la tumba3 cavidad, fosa.v.1 grabar, dibujar o delinear en alguna cosa dura.2 grabar, esculpir, imprimir alguna cosa.3 despalmar, limpiar la embarcación, embrearla y darle sebo. (náutica)4 calafatear, despalmar, cubrir con brea, recubrir con brea.5 burilar, esculpir. (pt graved; pp graved o graven) -
5 cabeza
cabeza sustantivo femenino 1a) (Anat) head;◊ de la cabeza a los pies from head to toe o foot;me duele la cabeza I've got a headache; marcó de cabeza he scored with a header; pararse en la or de cabeza (AmL) to do a headstand; cabeza rapada skinheadd) ( inteligencia):¡qué poca cabeza! have you/has he no sense?e) ( mente):◊ ¡que cabeza la mía! what a memory!;tú estás mal de la cabeza you're out of your mind; se me ha ido de la cabeza it's gone right out of my head; se le ha metido en la cabeza que … she's got it into her head that …; no se me pasó por la cabeza it didn't cross my mind; cabeza de chorlito sustantivo masculino y femenino (fam) scatterbrain (colloq); írsele a algn la cabeza to feel dizzy; levantar cabeza (fam) ( superar problemas) to get back on one's feet; perder la cabeza: no perdamos la cabeza let's not panic o lose our heads; perdió la cabeza por esa mujer he lost his head over that woman; quitarle a algn algo de la cabeza to get sth out of sb's head; romperse la cabeza (fam) ( preocuparse) to rack one's brains; ( lastimarse) to break one's neck (colloq); tener la cabeza llena de pájaros (fam) to have one's head in the clouds 2a) ( individuo):3 (primer lugar, delantera): a la cabeza de la manifestación at the front o head of the demonstration; el equipo va en cabeza de la clasificación the team is at the top of the division; cabeza de familia head of the family; cabeza de serie seed 4 5 (Audio, Video) head 6 ( de plátanos) hand, bunch;
cabeza sustantivo femenino
1 head: le dolía la cabeza, she had a headache
2 (sentido común) sense
3 (mente) mind, head: no se me pasó por la cabeza it didn't even occur to me
no puedo quitármelo de la cabeza, I can't get it out of my mind
me vino a la cabeza la idea, the idea sprang to my mind
4 (habilidad) no tiene cabeza para los negocios, he hasn't got a good head for business
5 (cabellera) hair: se lavó la cabeza, he washed his hair
6 (responsable, líder) es la cabeza pensante de la banda, he's the brains behind the gang
la cabeza de la Iglesia Anglicana, the head of the Anglican Church
cabeza de familia, head of the family 7 cabeza de ajo, bulb of garlic
8 familiar cabeza de chorlito, scatterbrain, featherhead
cabeza dura, stubborn o obstinate person
cabeza de turco, scapegoat
cabeza rapada, skinhead Dep cabeza de serie, heat, seed: jugará contra el cabeza de serie número 2, she's going to play against the second seed
9 cabeza de ganado, head of cattle Locuciones: a la cabeza de, at the front o top of
con la cabeza alta, with one's head held high: puedes decirlo con la cabeza bien alta, you can say it with your head held high
de cabeza, (de lleno) completely (en natación) se tiró de cabeza a la piscina, he dived headfirst into the pool Dep metió un gol de cabeza, he headed a goal
en cabeza, in the lead
estar mal/tocado de la cabeza, to be a mental case
perder la cabeza, to lose one's temper
rodar cabezas: si baja la cotización, van a rodar cabezas, if the share price goes down heads will roll
romperse la cabeza, to rack one's brains
traer a alguien de cabeza, to drive sb mad
por cabeza, per person: debemos poner cinco mil pesetas por cabeza, we should charge five thousand pesetas per head
sentar la cabeza: ya tienes edad de sentar la cabeza, it's about time you settled down ' cabeza' also found in these entries: Spanish: acéfala - acéfalo - ajo - asentir - bajar - brecha - cabecear - caber - cabezazo - cabezón - cabezona - cabezudo - calentar - calentarse - cantidad - casco - chorlito - coco - dar - descolgarse - descontar - desgraciada - desgraciado - entrar - escalabrar - escarmentar - gacha - gacho - girar - hueca - hueco - inclinar - infernal - jaqueca - ladear - matar - melón - mover - negación - pájaro - pañuelo - pie - por - quebradero - reclinar - remate - reposar - romperse - rondar - sacar English: above - ache - aching - ahead - bad - balance - bang - bare - bash - bash in - bend - bonk - bow - bump - catch up - clear - cock - crack - crush - crushing - dive - dizzy - excruciating - giddy - grave - hair - hammer - hang - head - head-first - headache - headroom - hit - hold - idea - incline - keep down - knock - lead - lift - look round - lose - mind - monstrous - nod - nut - one-track - overhead - pat - per capita
См. также в других словарях:
have one foot in the grave — (informal) To be not far from death • • • Main Entry: ↑foot * * * have one foot in the grave humorous phrase to be very old or ill and likely to die soon Thesaurus: to feel or be illsynonym … Useful english dictionary
have one foot in the grave — ► have one foot in the grave humorous be very old or ill. Main Entry: ↑foot … English terms dictionary
have one foot in the grave — tv. to be near death. (Have got can replace have.) □ I feel like I’ve got one foot in the grave. □ Uncle Ben has one foot in the grave, but he’s still cheery … Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions
have one foot in the grave — humorous to be very old and likely to die soon. He s been telling everyone he s got one foot in the grave for years now … New idioms dictionary
One Foot in the Grave — This article is about the BBC sitcom. For the 1994 album by Beck, see One Foot in the Grave (album). One Foot in the Grave Series title card (1990–2000) Format … Wikipedia
have one foot in the grave — humorous be very old or ill. → foot … English new terms dictionary
Have one foot in the grave — be near death … Dictionary of Australian slang
have one foot in the grave — Australian Slang be near death … English dialects glossary
have one foot in the grave — humorous to be very old or ill and likely to die soon … English dictionary
have one foot in the grave — idi to be so frail, sick, or old that death appears imminent … From formal English to slang
List of One Foot in the Grave episodes — This is a list of episodes of the British sitcom One Foot in the Grave, written by David Renwick. The show ran for six series of six episodes each. There were also nine specials including two shorts for Comic Relief, first screened from 4 January … Wikipedia