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1 overwhelm
əuvə'welm(to defeat or overcome: He was overwhelmed with work/grief.) vencer, aplastar; agobiar, abrumartr[əʊvə'welm]1 (physically - defeat) arrollar, aplastar2 figurative use (emotionally) abrumaroverwhelm [.o:vər'hwɛlm] vt1) crush, defeat: aplastar, arrollar2) submerge: inundar, sumergir3) overpower: abrumar, agobiaroverwhelmed by remorse: abrumado de remordimientov.• abrumar v.• agobiar v.• anonadar v.• apesgar v.• hundir v.• inundar v.• sepultar v.• sumergir v.• sumir v.'əʊvər'hwelm, ˌəʊvə'welma) ( emotionally) abrumarb) ( defeat) \<\<army/post\>\> aplastar, arrollarc) ( swamp) inundar, anegar*to be overwhelmed WITH something: they've been overwhelmed with applications/complaints — han recibido infinidad de solicitudes/quejas
[ˌǝʊvǝ'welm]VT1) (=defeat) [+ opponent, team] arrollar, aplastar2) (=overcome) [difficulties, fear, loneliness] abrumarI felt overwhelmed by events/her — me sentía abrumado por los acontecimientos/por ella
he was overwhelmed by their kindness — su amabilidad le dejó abrumado or le conmovió profundamente
3) (=inundate, overload) (with work) abrumar, agobiar; (with questions, requests, information) atosigaryou shouldn't overwhelm the customer with too much information — no deberías atosigar al cliente con demasiada información
* * *['əʊvər'hwelm, ˌəʊvə'welm]a) ( emotionally) abrumarb) ( defeat) \<\<army/post\>\> aplastar, arrollarc) ( swamp) inundar, anegar*to be overwhelmed WITH something: they've been overwhelmed with applications/complaints — han recibido infinidad de solicitudes/quejas
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2 overwhelm
vt.1 arrollar (enemy, opponent)2 abrumar, agobiar, anonadar, aplastar. (pt & pp overwhelmed) -
3 overwhelm with
v.1 suplir abundantemente de, dotar en abundancia de.2 inundar de. -
4 overcome
1.
adjective(helpless; defeated by emotion etc: overcome with grief; I felt quite overcome.) afectado (por), dominado (por)
2. -'keim verb(to defeat or conquer: She finally overcame her fear of the dark.) superar, vencerovercome vb superarEl pasado de overcome es overcame y el participio pasado es overcome; el gerundio se escribe overcomingtr[əʊvə'kʌm]1 (defeat) vencer2 (overwhelm) agobiar, abrumar, invadir, apoderarse de, vencer3 (surmount) superar, dominar, vencer1 (triumph) vencer1) conquer: vencer, derrotar, superar2) overwhelm: abrumar, agobiarovercome vi: venceradj.• rendido, -a adj.• transido, -a adj.p.p.(Participio pasivo de "to overcome")v.(§ p.,p.p.: overcame, overcome) = abatanar v.• allanar v.• prevenir v.(§pres: -vengo, -vienes...-venimos) pret: -vin-fut: -vendr-•)• superar v.• vencer v.v.• llevarse por delante v.'əʊvər'kʌm, ˌəʊvə'kʌm
1.
a) \<\<opponent\>\> reducir*, vencer*b) ( overwhelm) invadir, apoderarse deto be overcome BY something: he was overcome by sleep/fatigue lo venció el sueño/la fatiga; they were overcome by emotion los embargó la emoción; to be overcome WITH something — \<\<with guilt/remorse\>\> sentirse* abrumado por algo
c) ( prevail over) \<\<fear\>\> superar, dominar, vencer*; \<\<inhibitions\>\> vencer*
2.
vi[ˌǝʊvǝ'kʌm] (pt overcame) (pp overcome)1. VT1) (=conquer) [+ enemy, opposition] vencer; [+ problem, temptation, inhibitions] superar, vencer; [+ rage, fear, disgust] superar, dominarthe book is an account of how she overcame cancer — el libro describe cómo superó or venció el cáncer
her curiosity finally overcame her shyness — finalmente, su curiosidad superó or venció su timidez
2) (=overwhelm) [feeling] adueñarse de; [sleep, fatigue] vencer•
to be overcome by sth, I was overcome by the heat — el calor me agobió, me sentí agobiado por el calorovercome by curiosity, he reached out to touch it — vencido or dominado por la curiosidad, extendió la mano para tocarlo
•
to be overcome with sth, she was overcome with remorse — le abrumaba el remordimientohe was overcome with grief — estaba abrumado or postrado de dolor
2.VI vencer, triunfarWE SHALL OVERCOMEwe shall overcome! — ¡venceremos!
We Shall Overcome (Venceremos) es el título de una canción cantada por los miembros del llamado US Civil Rights Movement (movimiento por los derechos civiles en Estados Unidos). Se cantaba sobre todo en los años 50 y 60 durante las protestas contra la discriminación racial y aún hoy la usan quienes protestan en contra de la injusticia.* * *['əʊvər'kʌm, ˌəʊvə'kʌm]
1.
a) \<\<opponent\>\> reducir*, vencer*b) ( overwhelm) invadir, apoderarse deto be overcome BY something: he was overcome by sleep/fatigue lo venció el sueño/la fatiga; they were overcome by emotion los embargó la emoción; to be overcome WITH something — \<\<with guilt/remorse\>\> sentirse* abrumado por algo
c) ( prevail over) \<\<fear\>\> superar, dominar, vencer*; \<\<inhibitions\>\> vencer*
2.
vi -
5 deluge
'delju:‹
1. noun(a great quantity of water: Few people survived the deluge.) diluvio, inundación
2. verb(to fill or overwhelm with a great quantity: We've been deluged with orders for our new book.) inundar, abrumartr['deljʊːʤ]1) flood: inundar2) overwhelm: abrumardeluged with requests: abrumado de pedidosdeluge n1) flood: inundación f2) downpour: aguacero m3) barrage: aluvión mn.• diluvio s.m.v.• inundar v.
I 'deljuːdʒ1)a) ( flood) inundación fb) ( downpour) diluvio m2) (of protests, questions, letters) aluvión m, avalancha f
II
1) ( overwhelm)they were deluged with protests/letters — recibieron un aluvión de protestas/cartas
2) ( flood) inundar['deljuːdʒ]1.N [of rain] diluvio m ; [of floodwater] inundación fthe Deluge — (Rel) el Diluvio
2.VT (fig) inundar ( with de)he was deluged with gifts — se vio inundado de regalos, le llovieron los regalos
he was deluged with questions — lo acribillaron a preguntas, le llovieron las preguntas
we are deluged with work — tenemos trabajo hasta encima de las cabezas, estamos hasta las cejas de trabajo
* * *
I ['deljuːdʒ]1)a) ( flood) inundación fb) ( downpour) diluvio m2) (of protests, questions, letters) aluvión m, avalancha f
II
1) ( overwhelm)they were deluged with protests/letters — recibieron un aluvión de protestas/cartas
2) ( flood) inundar -
6 devastate
'devəsteit1) (to leave in ruins: The fire devastated the countryside.) devastar2) (to overwhelm (a person) with grief: She was devastated by the terrible news.) dejar desolado•tr['devəsteɪt]1 (city, area, country) devastarv.• asolar v.• devastar v.'devəsteɪta) ( lay waste) devastar, asolarb) ( overwhelm) \<\<opposition/argument\>\> aplastar, demoler*I was devastated when I heard — quedé deshecho or anonadado cuando me enteré
['devǝsteɪt]VT (=destroy) [+ place] devastar, asolar; (fig) [+ opponent, opposition] aplastar, arrollar; (=overwhelm) [+ person] dejar desolado, dejar destrozadowe were simply devastated — estábamos verdaderamente desolados or destrozados
* * *['devəsteɪt]a) ( lay waste) devastar, asolarb) ( overwhelm) \<\<opposition/argument\>\> aplastar, demoler*I was devastated when I heard — quedé deshecho or anonadado cuando me enteré
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7 swamp
swomp
1. noun(an area of) wet, marshy ground: These trees grow best in swamp(s). pantano, ciénaga
2. verb(to cover or fill with water: A great wave swamped the deck.) empantanar, inundar, anegar- swampy- swampiness
swamp n pantanotr[swɒmp]1 pantano, ciénagaswamp ['swɑmp] vt: inundarswamp n: pantano m, ciénaga fn.• ciénaga s.f.• embalsadero s.m.• fangal s.m.• guadal s.m.• marisma s.f.• pantano s.m.v.• empantanar v.• inundar v.• sumergir v.
I swɑːmp, swɒmpnoun pantano m, ciénaga f; ( of sea water) marisma f, ciénaga f
II
a) ( with water) \<\<land\>\> anegar*, inundarb) ( overwhelm) (often pass)they were swamped by offers of help — los abrumaron con ofertas de ayuda, recibieron una avalancha de ofertas de ayuda
[swɒmp]I'm absolutely swamped with work — estoy inundada or (fam) agobiada de trabajo
1.N pantano m, ciénaga f, marisma f2. VT1) [+ land] inundar; [+ boat] hundirthey have been swamped with applications — se han visto abrumados or desbordados por las solicitudes
3.CPDswamp fever N — paludismo m
* * *
I [swɑːmp, swɒmp]noun pantano m, ciénaga f; ( of sea water) marisma f, ciénaga f
II
a) ( with water) \<\<land\>\> anegar*, inundarb) ( overwhelm) (often pass)they were swamped by offers of help — los abrumaron con ofertas de ayuda, recibieron una avalancha de ofertas de ayuda
I'm absolutely swamped with work — estoy inundada or (fam) agobiada de trabajo
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8 abrumar
abrumar ( conjugate abrumar) verbo transitivo to overwhelm; abrumar a algn con algo ‹con problemas/quejas› to wear sb out with sth;
abrumar verbo transitivo to overwhelm, crush: me abrumas con tantas atenciones, I'm overwhelmed by your kindness ' abrumar' also found in these entries: English: overcome - overpower - overwhelm - over - weigh -
9 bewilder
bi'wildə(to amaze or puzzle: She was bewildered when her husband suddenly left her; bewildered by the instructions.) desconcertar, aturdirtr[bɪ'wɪldəSMALLr/SMALL]1 desconcertar, dejar perplejo,-abewilder [bɪ'wɪldər] vt: desconcertar, dejar perplejov.• atolondrar v.• atontar v.• aturdir v.• aturrullar v.• desatinar v.• desconcertar v.• deslumbrar v.• encandilar v.bɪ'wɪldər, bɪ'wɪldə(r)[bɪ'wɪldǝ(r)]VT desconcertar, dejar perplejo* * *[bɪ'wɪldər, bɪ'wɪldə(r)] -
10 choke
əuk
1. verb1) (to (cause to) stop, or partly stop, breathing: The gas choked him; He choked to death.) ahogar, asfixiar2) (to block: This pipe was choked with dirt.) obstruir
2. noun(an apparatus in a car engine etc to prevent the passage of too much air when starting the engine.) estranguladorchoke vb atragantarsetr[ʧəʊk]1 (person) ahogar, asfixiar, estrangular2 (block - pipe, drain, etc) atascar, obstruir1 ahogarse, asfixiarse1 SMALLAUTOMOBILES/SMALL stárter nombre masculino\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto choke on something atragantarse con algoto choke to death morir asfixiado,-a1) asphyxiate, strangle: sofocar, asfixiar, ahogar, estrangular2) block: tapar, obstruirchoke vi1) suffocate: asfixiarse, sofocarse, ahogarse, atragantarse (con comida)2) clog: taparse, obstruirsechoke n1) choking: estrangulación f2) : choke m (de un motor)n.• estrangulación s.f.• estrangulador s.m.• obturador s.m.v.• ahogar v.• atarugarse v.• atorar v.• atragantar v.• añusgar v.• estrangular v.• sofocar v.• tapar v.
I
1. tʃəʊk1) ( stifle) estrangular, ahogar*, asfixiar2) ( overwhelm)
2.
vi ahogarse*, asfixiarseto choke ON something — atragantarse or (AmL tb) atorarse con algo
Phrasal Verbs:- choke up
II
[tʃǝʊk]1.N (Aut) (e)stárter m, chok(e) m (LAm); (Mech) obturador m, cierre m2. VT1) [+ person] ahogar, asfixiar; (with hands) estrangularin a voice choked with emotion — con una voz ahogada or sofocada por la emoción
2) [+ pipe etc] atascar, obstruir3.VI [person] ahogarse, asfixiarse- choke up* * *
I
1. [tʃəʊk]1) ( stifle) estrangular, ahogar*, asfixiar2) ( overwhelm)
2.
vi ahogarse*, asfixiarseto choke ON something — atragantarse or (AmL tb) atorarse con algo
Phrasal Verbs:- choke up
II
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11 flood
1.
noun1) (a great overflow of water: If it continues to rain like this, we shall have floods.) inundación2) (any great quantity: a flood of fan mail.) torrente, avalancha
2. verb(to (cause something to) overflow with water: She left the water running and flooded the kitchen.) inundar
3. -lit verb(to light with floodlights.) iluminar- floodlit
- flood-tide
flood1 n inundaciónflood2 vb inundar / inundarsetr[flʌd]1 (overflow of water) inundación nombre femenino2 (of river) riada1 (river) desbordarse2 figurative use (cover, fill) invadir, inundar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto flood the market inundar el mercado, saturar el mercadoto be in floods of tears llorar a maresflood ['flʌd] vt: inundar, anegarflood n1) inundation: inundación f2) torrent: avalancha f, diluvio m, torrente ma flood of tears: un mar de lágrimasn.• arriada s.f.• arroyada s.f.• diluvio s.m.• inundación s.f.• llena s.f.• riada s.f.• riolada s.f.v.• anegar v.• aplayarse v.• desbordar v.• enaguazar v.• inundar v.flʌd
I
a) ( of water) (often pl) inundación f; ( caused by river) inundación f, riada fto be in full flood — \<\<river\>\> estar* desbordado; \<\<speaker\>\> estar* en pleno discurso or (pey) en plena perorata; (before n)
b) (of complaints, calls, letters) avalancha f, diluvio m; ( of people) avalancha f, riada f
II
1.
a) \<\<field/town\>\> inundar, anegar*b) ( Auto) \<\<engine\>\> ahogar*c) ( overwhelm) inundarwe've been flooded with applications — nos han inundado de solicitudes, nos han llovido las solicitudes
to flood the market with imports — ( Busn) inundar el mercado de productos importados
2.
via) \<\<river/sewers\>\> desbordarse; \<\<mine/basement\>\> inundarseb) ( Auto) ahogarse*c) (+ adv compl) \<\<people/crowd\>\>to flood in — \<\<sunshine/light\>\> entrar a raudales
d) \<\<emotion\>\>memories came flooding back — los recuerdos se agolparon en su (or mi etc) memoria
Phrasal Verbs:[flʌd]1.N [of water] inundación f ; (in river) avenida f ; [of words, tears] torrente m ; (=flood tide) pleamar fthe Flood — (Rel) el Diluvio
2.VT (Aut) (gen) inundarto flood the market with sth — inundar or saturar el mercado de algo
we have been flooded with applications — nos han llovido las solicitudes, nos han inundado de solicitudes
3.VI [river] desbordarse4.CPDflood control N — medidas fpl para controlar las inundaciones
flood damage N — daños mpl causados por las inundaciones
flood defences (Brit) N — protecciones fpl contra las inundaciones
flood tide N — pleamar f, marea f creciente
- flood in* * *[flʌd]
I
a) ( of water) (often pl) inundación f; ( caused by river) inundación f, riada fto be in full flood — \<\<river\>\> estar* desbordado; \<\<speaker\>\> estar* en pleno discurso or (pey) en plena perorata; (before n)
b) (of complaints, calls, letters) avalancha f, diluvio m; ( of people) avalancha f, riada f
II
1.
a) \<\<field/town\>\> inundar, anegar*b) ( Auto) \<\<engine\>\> ahogar*c) ( overwhelm) inundarwe've been flooded with applications — nos han inundado de solicitudes, nos han llovido las solicitudes
to flood the market with imports — ( Busn) inundar el mercado de productos importados
2.
via) \<\<river/sewers\>\> desbordarse; \<\<mine/basement\>\> inundarseb) ( Auto) ahogarse*c) (+ adv compl) \<\<people/crowd\>\>to flood in — \<\<sunshine/light\>\> entrar a raudales
d) \<\<emotion\>\>memories came flooding back — los recuerdos se agolparon en su (or mi etc) memoria
Phrasal Verbs: -
12 snow
snəu
1. noun(frozen water vapour that falls to the ground in soft white flakes: We woke up to find snow on the ground; We were caught in a heavy snow-shower; About 15 centimetres of snow had fallen overnight.) nieve
2. verb(to shower down in, or like, flakes of snow: It's snowing heavily.) nevar- snowy- snowball
- snowboard
- snow-capped
- snowdrift
- snowfall
- snowflake
- snowstorm
- snow-white
- snowed under
snow1 n nievesnow2 vb nevartr[snəʊ]2 SMALLTELEVISION/SMALL nieve nombre femenino1 nevar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be snowed in/up estar aislado,-a por la nieve, quedar aislado,-a por la nieveto be snowed under with something (work) estar agobiado,-a por algo, estar desbordado,-a por algo 2 (applications) haber recibido una lluvia de solicitudessnow blindness ceguera de la nievesnow leopard onzasnow line límite nombre masculino de las nieves perpetuassnow report informe nombre masculino sobre el estado de la nievesnow shower nevadaSnow White Blancanieves nombre femeninosnow ['sno:] vi1) : nevarI'm snowed in: estoy aislado por la nieve2)to be snowed under : estar inundadosnow n: nieve fn.• nevasca s.f.• nieve s.m.v.• nevar v.snow*n.• cocaína s.f.• heroína s.f.snəʊ
I
1)a) u nieve fas pure as the driven snow — puro y virginal
as white as snow — blanco como la nieve, níveo (liter); (before n)
snow shower — nevada f, precipitación f de nieve (period)
b) c ( snowfall) nevada f2) u ( cocaine) (sl) nieve f (arg)
II
1.
impersonal verb nevar*
2.
Phrasal Verbs:- snow in[snǝʊ]1. N1) (Met) nieve f3) ** (=cocaine) nieve ** f, cocaína f2. VT1) (Met)to be snowed in or up — quedar aislado por la nieve
2) (fig)3) (US)* (=charm glibly)3.VI nevar4.CPDsnow blindness N — (Med) ceguera f de nieve
snow goose N — ánsar m nival
snow leopard N — onza f
snow machine N — cañón m de nieve artificial
snow pea N — (US, Australia) tirabeque m, arveja f china
Snow Queen N — Reina f de las nieves
snow report N — (Met) informe m sobre el estado de la nieve
snow tyre, snow tire (US) N — neumático m antideslizante
Snow White N — Blancanieves f
snow-white"Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" — "Blancanieves y los siete enanitos"
* * *[snəʊ]
I
1)a) u nieve fas pure as the driven snow — puro y virginal
as white as snow — blanco como la nieve, níveo (liter); (before n)
snow shower — nevada f, precipitación f de nieve (period)
b) c ( snowfall) nevada f2) u ( cocaine) (sl) nieve f (arg)
II
1.
impersonal verb nevar*
2.
Phrasal Verbs:- snow in -
13 abrumado
Del verbo abrumar: ( conjugate abrumar) \ \
abrumado es: \ \el participioMultiple Entries: abrumado abrumar
abrumar ( conjugate abrumar) verbo transitivo to overwhelm; abrumado a algn con algo ‹con problemas/quejas› to wear sb out with sth;
abrumado,-a adjetivo overwhelmed
abrumar verbo transitivo to overwhelm, crush: me abrumas con tantas atenciones, I'm overwhelmed by your kindness ' abrumado' also found in these entries: Spanish: abrumada English: over -
14 apabullar
apabullar ( conjugate apabullar) verbo transitivo ( vencer) to overwhelm, crush; ( dejar confuso) to overwhelm
apabullar verbo transitivo to bewilder ' apabullar' also found in these entries: Spanish: avasallar English: squash -
15 aplastar
aplastar ( conjugate aplastar) verbo transitivo 1 ( algo duro) to crush 2 ( moralmente) to devastate
aplastar verbo transitivo
1 to flatten, squash
2 fig (vencer) to crush ' aplastar' also found in these entries: Spanish: achuchar - pasapurés English: crush - flatten - mash - overwhelm - quash - squash - stifle - suppress - swat - beat - crunch - devastate - smash - stamp -
16 overwhelmed
adj.abrumado, agobiado, consternado, pasmado, sobrecogido, enmudecido.pp.participio pasado del verbo OVERWHELM.pt.pretérito del verbo OVERWHELM. -
17 besiege
bi'si:‹1) (to surround (eg a town) with an army.) sitiar, asediar2) ((with with) to overwhelm with: The reporters besieged me with questions about the plane crash.) asediartr[bɪ'siːʤ]1 SMALLMILITARY/SMALL sitiar2 figurative use asediar, inundarv.• asediar v.• sitiar v.bɪ'siːdʒtransitive verb sitiar, asediar, cercar*an angry crowd besieged the embassy — una muchedumbre enfurecida rodeó or cercó la embajada
[bɪ'siːdʒ]VT (Mil) (also fig) asediar* * *[bɪ'siːdʒ]transitive verb sitiar, asediar, cercar*an angry crowd besieged the embassy — una muchedumbre enfurecida rodeó or cercó la embajada
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18 overpower
(to defeat or make helpless or captive by a greater strength: The police overpowered the thieves.) reducirtr[əʊvə'paʊəSMALLr/SMALL]1 (defeat) vencer, reducir, dominaroverpower [.o:vər'paʊər] vt1) conquer, subdue: vencer, superar2) overwhelm: abrumar, agobiaroverpowered by the heat: sofocado por el calorv.• dominar v.• predominar v.• subyugar v.• tumbar v.• vencer v.'əʊvər'paʊər, ˌəʊvə'paʊə(r)a) ( render helpless) dominarb) ( affect greatly) \<\<smell\>\> marear; \<\<heat\>\> sofocar*, agobiar; \<\<emotion\>\> abrumar[ˌǝʊvǝ'paʊǝ(r)]VT1) (=subdue physically) dominar; (=defeat) [+ enemy, opponent] derrotar, vencerit took ten guards to overpower him — se necesitaron diez guardas para dominarlo or para poder con él
2) (fig) [heat] agobiar, sofocar; [sound] aturdir; [emotion] embargar; [guilt, shame] abrumar; [sleep, tiredness] vencer; [flavour] dominar* * *['əʊvər'paʊər, ˌəʊvə'paʊə(r)]a) ( render helpless) dominarb) ( affect greatly) \<\<smell\>\> marear; \<\<heat\>\> sofocar*, agobiar; \<\<emotion\>\> abrumar -
19 prostrate
1. 'prostreit adjective1) (lying flat, especially face downwards.) postrado2) (completely exhausted or overwhelmed: prostrate with grief.) postrado, abatido
2. prə'streit verb1) (to throw (oneself) flat on the floor, especially in respect or reverence: They prostrated themselves before the emperor.) postrarse2) (to exhaust or overwhelm: prostrated by the long journey.) postrado•1 postrado,-a1 postrar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto prostrate oneself postrarse1) : postrar2)to prostrate oneself : postrarseprostrate adj: postradoadj.• postrado, -a adj.v.• abatir v.• postrar v.
I 'prɑːstreɪt, 'prɒstreɪtadjective postrado
II
1. 'prɑːstreɪt, prɒ'streɪttransitive verb \<\<illness\>\> postrar
2.
v refl1. ['prɒstreɪt]ADJ1) (lit) boca abajo, postrado; (Bot) procumbente2) (fig) [nation, country etc] abatido; (=exhausted) postrado, abatido ( with por)2.[prɒs'treɪt]VT (lit) postrar; (fig) postrar, abatirto prostrate o.s. — (lit, fig) postrarse
* * *
I ['prɑːstreɪt, 'prɒstreɪt]adjective postrado
II
1. ['prɑːstreɪt, prɒ'streɪt]transitive verb \<\<illness\>\> postrar
2.
v refl -
20 smother
1) (to kill or die from lack of air, caused especially by a thick covering over the mouth and nose; to suffocate: He smothered his victim by holding a pillow over her face.) asfixiar, ahogar2) (to prevent (a fire) from burning by covering it thickly: He threw sand on the fire to smother it.) sofocar, extinguir, apagar3) (to cover (too) thickly; to overwhelm: When he got home his children smothered him with kisses.) cubrirsmother vb1. sofocar / ahogar2. cubrirtr['smʌðəSMALLr/SMALL]1 (asphyxiate) asfixiar, ahogar2 (put out - fire) sofocar, extinguir, apagar3 (stifle - yawn, cough, laughter) contener, reprimir; (suppress - opposition) acallar■ the terrorist attack has smothered all hopes for peace el atentado terrorista ha echado por tierra todas las esperanzas de paz1 (asphyxiate) asfixiarse, ahogarsesmother ['smʌðər] vt1) suffocate: ahogar, sofocar2) cover: cubrir3) suppress: contenersmother vi: asfixiarsen.• humareda s.f.v.• ahogar v.• sofocar v.• suprimir v.'smʌðər, 'smʌðə(r)a) ( stifle) \<\<person\>\> asfixiar, ahogar*; \<\<flames\>\> sofocar*, extinguir*, apagar*b) ( suppress) \<\<report\>\> silenciar, echar tierra sobre; \<\<yawn/giggle\>\> reprimir, contener*c) ( cover profusely)['smʌðǝ(r)]to smothersomebody/something WITH/IN something: she smothered him with kisses lo cubrió de besos; he smothers everything in tomato sauce — todo lo come bañado en salsa de tomate
1. VT1) (=stifle) [+ person] ahogar, asfixiar; [+ fire] apagar; [+ yawn, sob, laughter] contener2) (=cover) cubrirfruit smothered in cream — fruta f cubierta de crema
they smothered him with kisses — le colmaron or abrumaron de besos
2.VI (=asphyxiate) asfixiarse, ahogarse* * *['smʌðər, 'smʌðə(r)]a) ( stifle) \<\<person\>\> asfixiar, ahogar*; \<\<flames\>\> sofocar*, extinguir*, apagar*b) ( suppress) \<\<report\>\> silenciar, echar tierra sobre; \<\<yawn/giggle\>\> reprimir, contener*c) ( cover profusely)to smothersomebody/something WITH/IN something: she smothered him with kisses lo cubrió de besos; he smothers everything in tomato sauce — todo lo come bañado en salsa de tomate
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См. также в других словарях:
overwhelm — [v1] flood, beat physically bury, conquer, crush, defeat, deluge, destroy, drown, drub*, engulf, inundate, massacre, overcome, overflow, overpower, overrun, overthrow, rout, smother, submerge, swamp, thrash, total*, whip*, win*; concepts 86,95… … New thesaurus
Overwhelm — O ver*whelm , n. The act of overwhelming. [R.] [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Overwhelm — O ver*whelm , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Overwhelmed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Overwhelming}.] [1913 Webster] 1. To cover over completely, as by a great wave; to overflow and bury beneath; to ingulf; hence, figuratively, to immerse and bear down; to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
overwhelm — I verb astonish, beat, besiege, bewilder, bury, confound, confuse, conquer, daze, defeat, deluge, demergere, destroy, discomfit, immerse, impress, inundate, master, obruere, opprimere, overcome, overpower, overrun, overthrow, quash, quell, shock … Law dictionary
overwhelm — (v.) early 14c., to turn upside down, to overthrow, from OVER (Cf. over) + M.E. whelmen to turn upside down (see WHELM (Cf. whelm)). Meaning to submerge completely is mid 15c. Perhaps the connecting notion is a boat, etc., washed over, and… … Etymology dictionary
overwhelm — ► VERB 1) submerge beneath a huge mass. 2) defeat completely; overpower. 3) have a strong emotional effect on. DERIVATIVES overwhelming adjective. ORIGIN from archaic whelm engulf or submerge , from Old English … English terms dictionary
overwhelm — [ō΄vər hwelm′, ō΄vərwelm′] vt. [ME oferwhelmen: see OVER & WHELM] 1. to pour down upon and cover over or bury beneath 2. to make helpless, as with greater force or deep emotion; overcome; crush; overpower 3. Obs. to overthrow or overturn… … English World dictionary
overwhelm — verb ADVERB ▪ absolutely, completely, totally ▪ quite, rather ▪ almost, nearly ▪ suddenly … Collocations dictionary
overwhelm — [[t]o͟ʊvə(r)(h)we̱lm[/t]] overwhelms, overwhelming, overwhelmed 1) VERB If you are overwhelmed by a feeling or event, it affects you very strongly, and you do not know how to deal with it. [be V ed] He was overwhelmed by a longing for times past … English dictionary
overwhelm */ — UK [ˌəʊvə(r)ˈwelm] / US [ˌoʊvərˈwelm] / US [ˌoʊvərˈhwelm] verb [transitive] Word forms overwhelm : present tense I/you/we/they overwhelm he/she/it overwhelms present participle overwhelming past tense overwhelmed past participle overwhelmed 1) a) … English dictionary
overwhelm — /oh veuhr hwelm , welm /, v.t. 1. to overcome completely in mind or feeling: overwhelmed by remorse. 2. to overpower or overcome, esp. with superior forces; destroy; crush: Roman troops were overwhelmed by barbarians. 3. to cover or bury beneath… … Universalium