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1 vagabundieren
v/i lead the life of a vagabond, drift from place to place* * *va|ga|bun|die|ren [vagabʊn'diːrən] ptp vagabundiertvi1) (= als Landstreicher leben) to live as a vagabond/as vagabonds2) aux sein (= umherziehen) to rove around, to lead a vagabond life* * *va·ga·bun·die·ren *[vagabʊnˈdi:rən]vi1. (als Landstreicher leben) to live as a vagabond/as vagabonds2. Hilfsverb: sein (umherziehen) to roam [or wander]durch die halbe Welt/viele Länder \vagabundieren to roam over half the world/through many countries3. FIN\vagabundierende Gelder flight [or hot] money\vagabundierendes Kapital FIN hot money, footloose funds* * *intransitives Verb1) live as a vagabond/as vagabonds2) mit sein (umherziehen) wander or travel around* * *vagabundieren v/i lead the life of a vagabond, drift from place to place* * *intransitives Verb1) live as a vagabond/as vagabonds2) mit sein (umherziehen) wander or travel around* * *v.to stray v. -
2 vagar
v.to wander about, to stroll, to wander, to gad.* * *————————1 (estar ocioso) to idle about, loaf around* * *verb* * *1. VI1) (=errar) to wander (about), roam; (=rondar) to prowl about; (=pasear) to saunter up and down, wander about the streets; (=entretenerse) to loiter; (=gandulear) to idle, loaf2) (Mec) to be loose, move about2.SM (=tiempo libre) leisure, free time; (=pereza) idleness; (=calma) lack of anxiety, freedom from worry* * *verbo intransitivo to wander, roam* * *= bob about, meander, roam (about/around), range, wander, drift off, rove.Ex. 'Out of the secretarial world it comes, the prime example of the untethered query, bobbing uselessly about till one can tell what caused it to be launched'.Ex. They are mixed up as the talk meanders about, apparently without conscious pattern.Ex. Unless children are given time to roam about unhindered among books of many kinds, left alone to choose for themselves, and to do what any avid adult reader does, then maybe we labor in vain.Ex. We will be bringing scholars from all over the world both to range widely in our multiform collections and put things together rather than just take them apart.Ex. The article is entitled ' Wandering the Web: further developments on the global information bazaar'.Ex. The study loses track of its argument at times and drifts off into analyses of the peacemaking process that are not relevant.Ex. The production is extremely lively: Wandering musicians rove the tiny stage and aisles, competing with birdsong and baroque concertos over the tannoy.----* vagar libremente = roam + free.* * *verbo intransitivo to wander, roam* * *= bob about, meander, roam (about/around), range, wander, drift off, rove.Ex: 'Out of the secretarial world it comes, the prime example of the untethered query, bobbing uselessly about till one can tell what caused it to be launched'.
Ex: They are mixed up as the talk meanders about, apparently without conscious pattern.Ex: Unless children are given time to roam about unhindered among books of many kinds, left alone to choose for themselves, and to do what any avid adult reader does, then maybe we labor in vain.Ex: We will be bringing scholars from all over the world both to range widely in our multiform collections and put things together rather than just take them apart.Ex: The article is entitled ' Wandering the Web: further developments on the global information bazaar'.Ex: The study loses track of its argument at times and drifts off into analyses of the peacemaking process that are not relevant.Ex: The production is extremely lively: Wandering musicians rove the tiny stage and aisles, competing with birdsong and baroque concertos over the tannoy.* vagar libremente = roam + free.* * *vagar [A3 ]vito wander, roam, drift* * *
vagar ( conjugate vagar) verbo intransitivo
to wander, roam
vagar vi (ir sin rumbo fijo) to wander, roam: vagamos por la ciudad toda la noche, we wandered around the town all night long
vagaba por el desierto, he was wandering about in the desert
' vagar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
errar
- rondar
English:
drift
- mooch
- roam
- rove
- wander
- meander
* * *vagar vivagar (por) to wander (around), to roam;vagando por las calles de la ciudad wandering around o roaming the streets of the city* * *v/i wander* * *vagar {52} vierrar: to roam, to wander* * *vagar vb to wander -
3 errar
v.1 to choose wrongly.2 to wander.3 to make a mistake.María erró en sus cálculos Mary made a mistake in her calculations.4 to miss.5 to mistake, to miss, to fail, to miscalculate.María erró sus cálculos Mary mistook her calculations.6 to go astray, to err from the path of righteousness.El huérfano erró The orphan went astray.7 to roam around, to ramble, to roam about.* * *(e changes to ye in stressed syllables)Present IndicativePresent SubjunctiveImperative* * *verb1) to miss2) wander3) be mistaken* * *1. VT1) (=equivocar) [+ tiro] to miss with, aim badly; [+ blanco] to miss; [+ vocación] to miss, mistake2) [en obligación] to fail ( in one's duty to)2. VI1) (=vagar) to wander, rove2) (=equivocarse) to be mistakenerrar es cosa humana, de los hombres es errar — to err is human
3.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo <tiro/golpe> to miss2.erró su vocación — she chose the wrong vocation/career
errar vi1) ( fallar)(le) erré otra vez — missed again! (colloq), I've missed again
le erraste feo — (RPl fam) you were way out o off the mark (colloq)
* * *= miss + the mark, ramble, err, roam (about/around), mistake, range, rove, miss + the point.Ex. Such considerations suggest that exhortations directed at SLIS to transform their curricula in unspecified radical fashion miss the mark.Ex. Because by now comparative librarianship has a well-developed methodology, he does not have to waste his effort by rambling.Ex. Wherein had she erred? Try as she might she could think of nothing.Ex. Unless children are given time to roam about unhindered among books of many kinds, left alone to choose for themselves, and to do what any avid adult reader does, then maybe we labor in vain.Ex. A flat 'no' to a question such as 'Is this book recommended for Professor Shaw's course?' leaves uncertainty as to whether one was mistaken in the professor or in the suggestion that it was for a course.Ex. We will be bringing scholars from all over the world both to range widely in our multiform collections and put things together rather than just take them apart.Ex. The production is extremely lively: Wandering musicians rove the tiny stage and aisles, competing with birdsong and baroque concertos over the tannoy.Ex. Even those states who are pushing for legalized sports betting are missing the point when it comes to making a profit through sports betting.* * *1.verbo transitivo <tiro/golpe> to miss2.erró su vocación — she chose the wrong vocation/career
errar vi1) ( fallar)(le) erré otra vez — missed again! (colloq), I've missed again
le erraste feo — (RPl fam) you were way out o off the mark (colloq)
* * *= miss + the mark, ramble, err, roam (about/around), mistake, range, rove, miss + the point.Ex: Such considerations suggest that exhortations directed at SLIS to transform their curricula in unspecified radical fashion miss the mark.
Ex: Because by now comparative librarianship has a well-developed methodology, he does not have to waste his effort by rambling.Ex: Wherein had she erred? Try as she might she could think of nothing.Ex: Unless children are given time to roam about unhindered among books of many kinds, left alone to choose for themselves, and to do what any avid adult reader does, then maybe we labor in vain.Ex: A flat 'no' to a question such as 'Is this book recommended for Professor Shaw's course?' leaves uncertainty as to whether one was mistaken in the professor or in the suggestion that it was for a course.Ex: We will be bringing scholars from all over the world both to range widely in our multiform collections and put things together rather than just take them apart.Ex: The production is extremely lively: Wandering musicians rove the tiny stage and aisles, competing with birdsong and baroque concertos over the tannoy.Ex: Even those states who are pushing for legalized sports betting are missing the point when it comes to making a profit through sports betting.* * *vt‹tiro/golpe› to misserró el remate he missed the shot, he shot wide/higherró su vocación she chose the wrong vocation/career■ errarviAerró en su decisión he was mistaken in his decision, he made the wrong decisionle erraste feo ( RPl fam); you were way out o way off the mark ( colloq), you were miles out ( colloq)errar es humano to err is humansu imaginación erraba por lugares lejanos his thoughts wandered o drifted o strayed to far-off places* * *
errar ( conjugate errar) verbo transitivo ‹tiro/golpe› to miss;◊ erró su vocación she chose the wrong vocation/career
verbo intransitivo [ tirador] to miss;
erró en su decisión he made the wrong decision
errar
I verbo transitivo
1 (un tiro, golpe) to miss
2 (una elección) to get wrong
II verbo intransitivo
1 (vagar) to wander
2 (cometer fallos) to make a mistake
' errar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
equivocarse
- engañar
- fallar
- tiro
- yerra
English:
aimlessly
- err
- miss
- muff
- roam
* * *♦ vt1. [tiro, golpe] to miss2. [no acertar en]errar el cálculo/la respuesta to get the figures/answer wrong;errar el rumbo to choose the wrong course;errar la vocación to mistake one's vocation;RPle erraron con el diagnóstico he was misdiagnosed;RP Famerrar el biscochazo to be wide of the mark♦ vi1. [vagar] [persona, imaginación, mirada] to wander;erró de pueblo en pueblo she wandered from town to town2. [equivocarse] to make a mistake;erró en la elección de carrera he chose the wrong course;RPerrarle to make a mistake;le erré en las cuentas I made a mistake in the accounts;le erró, no le tendría que haber dicho nada he made a mistake, he shouldn't have told him anything3. [al tirar] to miss* * *I v/t miss;errar el tiro/golpe miss;errar el cálculo miscalculate, make a mistake in one’s figuresII v/i miss;errar es humano to err is human* * *errar {32} vtfallar: to misserrar vi1) desacertar: to be wrong, to be mistaken2) vagar: to wander* * *errar vb1. (fallar) to miss2. (equivocarse) to be wrong3. (vagar) to wander -
4 deambular
v.1 to wander (about).2 to wander around, to gad, to wander, to idle around.* * *1 to saunter, stroll* * *verb* * ** * *verbo intransitivo to wander around o about* * *= walk (a)round, wander about, meander, roam (about/around), wander around, range, wander, rove.Ex. He got up, and, putting hands in the pockets of his trousers, began to walk around the room.Ex. He was a loner himself, a small-town country boy who spent most of his time wandering about the hills and fields near his home.Ex. They are mixed up as the talk meanders about, apparently without conscious pattern.Ex. Unless children are given time to roam about unhindered among books of many kinds, left alone to choose for themselves, and to do what any avid adult reader does, then maybe we labor in vain.Ex. The audience can wander around at will and discuss with contributors and each other.Ex. We will be bringing scholars from all over the world both to range widely in our multiform collections and put things together rather than just take them apart.Ex. The article is entitled ' Wandering the Web: further developments on the global information bazaar'.Ex. The production is extremely lively: Wandering musicians rove the tiny stage and aisles, competing with birdsong and baroque concertos over the tannoy.----* deambular libremente = wander + at large, roam + free.* deambular por = perambulate about.* * *verbo intransitivo to wander around o about* * *= walk (a)round, wander about, meander, roam (about/around), wander around, range, wander, rove.Ex: He got up, and, putting hands in the pockets of his trousers, began to walk around the room.
Ex: He was a loner himself, a small-town country boy who spent most of his time wandering about the hills and fields near his home.Ex: They are mixed up as the talk meanders about, apparently without conscious pattern.Ex: Unless children are given time to roam about unhindered among books of many kinds, left alone to choose for themselves, and to do what any avid adult reader does, then maybe we labor in vain.Ex: The audience can wander around at will and discuss with contributors and each other.Ex: We will be bringing scholars from all over the world both to range widely in our multiform collections and put things together rather than just take them apart.Ex: The article is entitled ' Wandering the Web: further developments on the global information bazaar'.Ex: The production is extremely lively: Wandering musicians rove the tiny stage and aisles, competing with birdsong and baroque concertos over the tannoy.* deambular libremente = wander + at large, roam + free.* deambular por = perambulate about.* * *deambular [A1 ]vito roam, wander around o about* * *
deambular ( conjugate deambular) verbo intransitivo
to wander around o about
deambular verbo intransitivo to saunter, stroll
' deambular' also found in these entries:
English:
amble
- wander
- meander
- roam
* * *deambular vito wander (about o around);deambulaba por la casa sin saber qué hacer he wandered around the house without knowing what to do* * *v/i wander around* * *deambular vi: to wander, to roam* * *deambular vb to wander -
5 errare
wander, roam( sbagliare) be mistaken* * *errare v. intr.1 ( vagare) to wander (about, around), to roam (about, around, through), to ramble, to rove, to stroll (about): errava in un bosco, he was wandering through a wood; errare per i boschi, to roam through the woods; errava tutto solo per le strade, he wandered the streets all alone; errare con lo sguardo, con la fantasia, to let one's gaze, one's imagination wander; errare per il mondo, to wander over the world (o to wander the world); errare per terra e per mare, to rove over land and sea2 ( sbagliare) to make* mistakes, to be mistaken; to be wrong; (form.) to err: se affermi ciò, erri, if you say that, you are mistaken; errare è umano, to err is human; se non vado errando, io e te ci siamo già visti, if I'm not mistaken, we've already met; per favore, se erro correggetemi, please correct me if I'm wrong (o if I make a mistake please tell me); il suo numero di telefono è cambiato, se non erro, if I'm not mistaken, his telephone number has changed* * *[er'rare]1) (vagare) [persona, animale] to wander, to roam; [mente, pensiero, sguardo] to wander (su over)errare con la fantasia — to let one's imagination wander o run free
2) (sbagliare) to err, to be* mistaken3) (peccare) to err••* * *errare/er'rare/ [1](aus. avere)1 (vagare) [persona, animale] to wander, to roam; [mente, pensiero, sguardo] to wander (su over); errare con la fantasia to let one's imagination wander o run free2 (sbagliare) to err, to be* mistaken; se non erro if I am not mistaken3 (peccare) to errerrare è umano to err is human. -
6 recorrer
v.1 to travel through or across, to cross (atravesar) (lugar, país).recorrieron la sabana en un camión they drove round the savannah in a truckrecorrió la región a pie he walked round the regionRecorrimos dos kilómetros We traveled two kilometers.Ellos recorren la ciudad They tour the city.2 to cover (distancia).3 to look over.lo recorrió de arriba a abajo con la mirada she looked him up and down4 to go over, to run by, to course, to go through.Ellos recorren el camino They go over the road.* * *1 (distancia) to cover, travel2 (país) to tour, travel over, travel round3 (ciudad) to visit, walk round4 (registrar) to check, go through, examine■ recorrimos toda la biblioteca y no encontramos el libro we checked the whole library and couldn't find the book5 (un escrito) to look over, go over, look through6 (reparar) to mend, repair* * *verb2) cover* * *VT1) [+ ciudad, país] to travel aroundrecorrer una ciudad a pie — to walk round a city, do a city on foot
2) [+ trayecto] to cover, doese día recorrimos 100 kilómetros — we covered o did 100 kilometres that day
3) (=inspeccionar) to go roundhe recorrido todas las librerías buscando esa novela — I've been round all the bookshops looking for that novel
4) (Tip) [+ letras] to take over5) † (=leer por encima)recorrer un escrito — to run one's eye over o look through a document
6) † (=reparar) to repair, mend* * *1.verbo transitivoa) <país/ciudad>recorrí toda España — I traveled o went all over Spain
recorrimos toda la costa — we went o traveled the whole length of the coast
recorrerla — (Chi fam) to live it up (colloq)
b) <distancia/trayecto> to cover, doc) ( con la mirada)2.recorrerse v pron (enf)a) <ciudad/país>se recorrió toda Europa — she went all over o around Europe
b) <distancia/trayecto> to cover, do* * *= move through, step through, traverse, trek, tour, make + the rounds, rove, travel around, parade.Ex. Use PgDn (Page Down) to move through INDEX screens.Ex. If he deflects the lever further to the right, he steps through the book 10 pages at a time.Ex. As he traversed the length of the corridor to the media center, Anthony Datto reflected on the events that had brought him to this unhappy pass.Ex. It makes sound sense to house all materials on the same subject together so that the information seeker needs to go to one place only rather than trek to half a dozen different areas to discover the books, pamphlets, periodicals, portfolios, cassettes and slides on his chosen subject.Ex. A 5-day symposium was held at Champagne Public Library and an exhibition toured the public libraries of the state.Ex. You may have seen the lines making the rounds of library e-mail: 'A Zen librarian searched for 'nothing' on the Internet and received 28 million hits'.Ex. The production is extremely lively: Wandering musicians rove the tiny stage and aisles, competing with birdsong and baroque concertos over the tannoy.Ex. If you plan to travel around Britain, a combination of trains and rental cars is usually the best way to do this.Ex. A boy was paraded naked with "I am thief" written on his stomach and back for allegedly stealing a dress from a boutique where he worked.----* camino por recorrer, el = road ahead, the.* el camino por recorrer = the way ahead.* haber recorrido mucho mundo = be well-travelled.* recorrer cielo y tierra = travel + far and wide.* recorrer el mundo = travel around + the world, span + the globe.* recorrer grandes distancias = travel + long distances.* recorrer las calles = pound + the streets.* recorrer olgadamente = wander about, wander around.* tener mucha distancia que recorrer = have + a long way to go.* tener mucho camino que recorrer = have + a long way to go.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) <país/ciudad>recorrí toda España — I traveled o went all over Spain
recorrimos toda la costa — we went o traveled the whole length of the coast
recorrerla — (Chi fam) to live it up (colloq)
b) <distancia/trayecto> to cover, doc) ( con la mirada)2.recorrerse v pron (enf)a) <ciudad/país>se recorrió toda Europa — she went all over o around Europe
b) <distancia/trayecto> to cover, do* * *= move through, step through, traverse, trek, tour, make + the rounds, rove, travel around, parade.Ex: Use PgDn (Page Down) to move through INDEX screens.
Ex: If he deflects the lever further to the right, he steps through the book 10 pages at a time.Ex: As he traversed the length of the corridor to the media center, Anthony Datto reflected on the events that had brought him to this unhappy pass.Ex: It makes sound sense to house all materials on the same subject together so that the information seeker needs to go to one place only rather than trek to half a dozen different areas to discover the books, pamphlets, periodicals, portfolios, cassettes and slides on his chosen subject.Ex: A 5-day symposium was held at Champagne Public Library and an exhibition toured the public libraries of the state.Ex: You may have seen the lines making the rounds of library e-mail: 'A Zen librarian searched for 'nothing' on the Internet and received 28 million hits'.Ex: The production is extremely lively: Wandering musicians rove the tiny stage and aisles, competing with birdsong and baroque concertos over the tannoy.Ex: If you plan to travel around Britain, a combination of trains and rental cars is usually the best way to do this.Ex: A boy was paraded naked with "I am thief" written on his stomach and back for allegedly stealing a dress from a boutique where he worked.* camino por recorrer, el = road ahead, the.* el camino por recorrer = the way ahead.* haber recorrido mucho mundo = be well-travelled.* recorrer cielo y tierra = travel + far and wide.* recorrer el mundo = travel around + the world, span + the globe.* recorrer grandes distancias = travel + long distances.* recorrer las calles = pound + the streets.* recorrer olgadamente = wander about, wander around.* tener mucha distancia que recorrer = have + a long way to go.* tener mucho camino que recorrer = have + a long way to go.* * *recorrer [E1 ]vt1 ‹país/ciudad›recorrieron toda España en tren they traveled o went all over Spain by trainha recorrido mucho mundo he has been all over the place o the worldrecorrimos toda la costa del sur we went o traveled the whole length of the south coastrecorrimos toda la ciudad en busca de otro igual we scoured the whole city looking for another one like it, we searched the whole city for another one like it2 ‹distancia/trayecto› to cover, doya hemos recorrido más de la mitad del trayecto we have already covered o done more than half the distance3(con la mirada): recorrió la habitación con la mirada he looked around the roommientras recorría la carta con la vista while I looked through o ran my eyes over the letter( enf)1 ‹ciudad/país›se recorrió Europa en dos semanas she went all over o around Europe in two weeks, she did Europe in two weeks ( colloq)2 ‹distancia/trayecto› to cover, donos recorrimos los 300 kilómetros en tres horas we covered o did the 300 kilometers in three hours* * *
recorrer ( conjugate recorrer) verbo transitivoa) ( viajar por):◊ recorrí toda España I traveled o went all over Spain;
( como turista) I toured all over Spain;
recorrimos toda la costa we traveled the whole length of the coast
c) ( con la mirada):
recorrer verbo transitivo
1 (una distancia) to cover, travel
2 (un territorio) to travel across
recorrer el mundo, to travel around the world
3 (un museo, etc) to visit, go round
4 (con la vista) (una sala, etc) to look around
(un escrito) to run one's eyes over, to scan
' recorrer' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
andar
- batir
- caminar
- patear
- patearse
- salvar
- hacer
- pasar
English:
cover
- do
- fly
- go
- ply
- roam
- sweep
- tour
- travel
- trudge
- walk
- scan
* * *♦ vt1. [atravesar] [lugar, país] to travel through o across, to cross;[ciudad] to go round;recorrieron la sabana en un camión they drove round the savannah in a truck;recorrió la región a pie he walked round the region;recorrieron el perímetro de la isla they went round the island2. [distancia] to cover;recorrió los 42 km en tres horas he covered o did the 42 km in three hours3. [con la mirada] to look over;lo recorrió de arriba a abajo con la mirada she looked him up and down♦ See also the pronominal verb recorrerse* * *v/t1 distancia cover, do; a pie walk; territorio, país go around, travel around; camino go along, travel along2:recorrer algo con la vista look sth over, run one’s eyes over sth* * *recorrer vt1) : to travel through, to tour2) : to cover (a distance)3) : to go over, to look over* * *recorrer vb1. (atravesar) to go round / to travel round2. (hacer un trayecto) to travel / to do -
7 ziehen
das Ziehenhaul; traction; drawing; pull* * *Zie|hennt -s, no pl(= Schmerz) ache; (im Unterleib) abdominal pain* * *1) (to pull along, out or towards oneself: She drew the child towards her; He drew a gun suddenly and fired; All water had to be drawn from a well; The cart was drawn by a pony.) draw2) extract3) ((an) act of extracting eg a tooth.) extraction4) (to pull with great effort or difficulty: Horses are used to haul barges along canals.) haul5) (to draw (a straight line): He ruled a line across the page.) rule6) (to (try to) move something especially towards oneself usually by using force: He pulled the chair towards the fire; She pulled at the door but couldn't open it; He kept pulling the girls' hair for fun; Help me to pull my boots off; This railway engine can pull twelve carriages.) pull7) ((with at or on) in eg smoking, to suck at: He pulled at his cigarette.) pull8) (to move to a new house etc: He has removed to London.) remove9) (to make (a tree, plant etc) grow in a particular direction.) train10) (to go, move, walk etc (about, in or on) from place to place with no definite destination in mind: I'd like to spend a holiday wandering through France; The mother wandered the streets looking for her child.) wander* * *Zie·hen<-s>[ˈtsi:ən]nt kein pl ache* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) pull; (sanfter) draw; (zerren) tug; (schleppen) dragPerlen auf eine Schnur ziehen — thread pearls/beads on to a string
ziehen und ablegen — (DV) drag and drop
2) (fig.)es zog ihn zu ihr/zu dem Ort — he felt drawn to her/to the place
alle Blicke auf sich ziehen — attract or capture all the attention
jemandes Zorn/Unwillen usw. auf sich ziehen — incur somebody's anger/displeasure etc.
etwas nach sich ziehen — result in something; entail something
3) (herausziehen) pull out <nail, cork, organ-stop, etc.>; extract < tooth>; take out, remove <stitches, splinter>; draw <cord, sword, pistol>den Hut ziehen — raise or doff one's hat
Zigaretten/Süßigkeiten usw. ziehen — (ugs.): (aus Automaten) get cigarettes/sweets etc. from a slot machine
die [Quadrat]wurzel ziehen — (Math.) extract the square root
5) (Gesichtspartien bewegen) make <face, grimace>die Stirn in Falten ziehen — wrinkle or knit one's brow; (missmutig) frown
6) (bei Brettspielen) move <chessman etc.>7)er zog den Rauch in die Lungen — he inhaled the smoke [into his lungs]
8) (zeichnen) draw <line, circle, arc, etc.>9) (anlegen) dig < trench>; build < wall>; erect < fence>; put up < washing-line>; run, lay <cable, wires>; draw < frontier>; trace < loop>; follow < course>sich (Dat.) einen Scheitel ziehen — make a parting [in one's hair]
11) (verblasst; auch als Funktionsverb) draw <lesson, conclusion, comparison>; s. auch Konsequenz 1); Rechenschaft; Verantwortung 1)2.unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb1) (reißen) pullan etwas (Dat.) ziehen — pull on something
an einem od. am selben Strang ziehen — (fig.) be pulling in the same direction
3) mit sein (umziehen) move (nach, in + Akk. to)4) mit sein (gehen) go; (marschieren) march; (umherstreifen) roam; rove; (fortgehen) go away; leave; <fog, clouds> driftin den Krieg ziehen — go or march off to war
5) (saugen) drawan einer Zigarette/Pfeife ziehen — draw on a cigarette/pipe
6) <tea, coffee> draw7) (Kochk.) simmer8) unperses zieht [vom Fenster her] — there's a draught [from the window]
das zieht bei mir nicht — that won't wash or won't cut any ice with me (fig. coll.)
10) (schmerzen)es zieht [mir] im Rücken — I've got backache
3.ein leichtes/starkes Ziehen im Bauch — a slight/intense stomach ache
2)der Weg o. ä. zieht sich — (ugs.) the journey etc. goes on and on
* * *ziehen; zieht, zog, gezogenA. v/t (hat)1. (Pflug, Wagen etc) draw, pull; (Spülung) pull; (Handbremse) put on, pull up; (schleppen) drag; (schwere Lasten) haul; (zerren) tug;lass dich nicht so ziehen zu Kind: stop pulling (and keep up)!;ein Boot ans Ufer ziehen pull a boat ashore;jemanden am Ärmel ziehen tug at sb’s sleeve;jemanden an den Haaren/Ohren ziehen pull sb’s hair/ears;jemanden an sich (akk)ziehen draw sb to one;aus dem Wasser ziehen (Boot) pull ( oder haul) out of the water; (Ertrinkenden) auch pull from the water;kurz durchs Wasser ziehen give sth a quick rinse;jemanden mit sich ziehen pull sb along (with one);einen Ring vom Finger ziehen take a ring off, slip a ring from one’s finger;einen Pullover über die Bluse ziehen put a jumper (US sweater) on over the blouse;jemandem ein Brett über den Kopf ziehen (damit schlagen) hit sb on the head with a board;die Gardinen vors Fenster ziehen draw the curtains (across the window);jemanden zur Seite ziehen take sb aside2. (Zahn) pull out, extract; (Korken, Messer, Revolver etc) draw, pull out; (Möhren) pull up; (den Hut) take off; (Los, Gewinn) draw; (Karte) take; (auswählen) pick;die Fäden ziehen MED take out the stitches;Zigaretten (aus dem Automaten) ziehen get some cigarettes out of the machine3. (Linie) draw; (Kreis) auch describe; (Mauer) build, erect; (Graben) dig; (Wäscheleine) put up; (Leitungen) put sth in;einen Scheitel ziehen make a parting (US part);4. (dehnen) stretch;etwas lässt sich ziehen sth stretches, sth gives;die Suppe zieht Fäden the soup’s gone stringyeine Niete ziehen draw a blank7. (Kerzen) draw;Perlen auf eine Schnur ziehen thread beads;ziehen string a violin etc;Wein auf Flaschen ziehen bottle wine;ein Bild auf Karton ziehen print a picture on a card8. fig:auf sich (akk)jemanden auf seine Seite ziehen win sb over to one’s side;jemanden ins Gespräch/Vertrauen ziehen draw sb into ( oder include sb in) the conversation/take sb into one’s confidence;etwas ins Lächerliche ziehen ridicule sth, hold sth up to ridicule;nach sich ziehen zur Folge haben: have as a consequence, result in; notwendigerweise: entail, involve; verursachen: bring about, cause; als Nebeneffekt: bring with it ( oder in its wake);es zieht mich dorthin/zu ihr I feel drawn there/to her;es zieht mich nichts in diese Gesellschaft I don’t feel drawn to these people in any way; → Bilanz 2, Ferne 1, Länge 1, Schluss 5, zurate etcdie Kinder sind gut gezogen (erzogen) the children are well brought up;den werd ich mir schon noch ziehen I’ll teach him some mannersB. v/i1. (hat) pull (der Wagen zieht schlecht the car’s not pulling properly;er zieht schnell Cowboy etc: he’s quick on the draw;zieh! in Western: draw!;an der Glocke ziehen pull ( oder ring) the bell;2. (ist) (wandern, reisen) wander, rove; Tiere, Vögel: migrate; Vögel: auch fly; (weggehen) go (away), leave;ziehen nach/in (+akk) (umziehen) move to/into;aufs Land ziehen move to the country;zu jemandem ziehen go to live with sb, move in with sb;durch die Welt ziehen see (liter roam) the world;in den Krieg ziehen go to war;jemanden ziehen lassen let sb go;jemanden ungern ziehen lassen be sorry to see sb go3. (ist) Rauch, Wolken etc: drift;die Wolken ziehen the clouds drift ( schnell: scud) across the sky;das Gewitter ist nach Westen gezogen the storm has moved (away) westward4. (hat) Schach etc: (make a) move;mit dem König ziehen move the ( oder one’s) king;wer zieht? whose move is it?5. (hat) Ofen, Pfeife etc: draw;der Ofen zieht nicht the stove isn’t drawing;6. (hat) unpers:hier zieht’s there’s a draught (US draft);mir zieht’s am Rücken I can feel a draught (US draft) on my backden Tee etcziehen lassen let the tea etc stand8. umg:einen ziehen lassen let (one) off9. (hat) (schmerzen) twinge, ache;ziehender Schmerz twinge, ache; unpers:es zieht mir im Rücken I can feel a twinge in my back;ein leichtes Ziehen im Rücken haben have a slight pain ( oder ache) in one’s back, have a touch of (US a slight) backachedieses Stück zieht nicht the play isn’t getting very good houses ( oder audiences), the play isn’t pulling in the crowds ( oder isn’t exactly pulling them in umg);diese Ausrede zieht bei mir nicht that excuse won’t wash with me, try another one;Schmeichelei/das zieht bei mir nicht flattery/that will get you nowhere, flattery/that doesn’t work with meC. v/r (hat)1.sich an einem Seil in die Höhe ziehen pull o.s. up on a rope2. (sich dehnen) stretch, give; Käse: go stringy, form strings; Klebstoff: get tacky; umg, fig, Verhandlungen etc: drag on; Weg: go on and on;das zieht sich umg (dauert lange) it’s going on a bit4.sich ziehen über (+akk) Narbe: go right across;sich ziehen um Mauer, Wall: go right (a-)round, enclose;* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) pull; (sanfter) draw; (zerren) tug; (schleppen) dragPerlen auf eine Schnur ziehen — thread pearls/beads on to a string
ziehen und ablegen — (DV) drag and drop
2) (fig.)es zog ihn zu ihr/zu dem Ort — he felt drawn to her/to the place
alle Blicke auf sich ziehen — attract or capture all the attention
jemandes Zorn/Unwillen usw. auf sich ziehen — incur somebody's anger/displeasure etc.
etwas nach sich ziehen — result in something; entail something
3) (herausziehen) pull out <nail, cork, organ-stop, etc.>; extract < tooth>; take out, remove <stitches, splinter>; draw <cord, sword, pistol>den Hut ziehen — raise or doff one's hat
Zigaretten/Süßigkeiten usw. ziehen — (ugs.): (aus Automaten) get cigarettes/sweets etc. from a slot machine
die [Quadrat]wurzel ziehen — (Math.) extract the square root
5) (Gesichtspartien bewegen) make <face, grimace>die Stirn in Falten ziehen — wrinkle or knit one's brow; (missmutig) frown
6) (bei Brettspielen) move <chessman etc.>7)er zog den Rauch in die Lungen — he inhaled the smoke [into his lungs]
8) (zeichnen) draw <line, circle, arc, etc.>9) (anlegen) dig < trench>; build < wall>; erect < fence>; put up < washing-line>; run, lay <cable, wires>; draw < frontier>; trace < loop>; follow < course>sich (Dat.) einen Scheitel ziehen — make a parting [in one's hair]
11) (verblasst; auch als Funktionsverb) draw <lesson, conclusion, comparison>; s. auch Konsequenz 1); Rechenschaft; Verantwortung 1)2.unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb1) (reißen) pullan etwas (Dat.) ziehen — pull on something
an einem od. am selben Strang ziehen — (fig.) be pulling in the same direction
3) mit sein (umziehen) move (nach, in + Akk. to)4) mit sein (gehen) go; (marschieren) march; (umherstreifen) roam; rove; (fortgehen) go away; leave; <fog, clouds> driftin den Krieg ziehen — go or march off to war
5) (saugen) drawan einer Zigarette/Pfeife ziehen — draw on a cigarette/pipe
6) <tea, coffee> draw7) (Kochk.) simmer8) unperses zieht [vom Fenster her] — there's a draught [from the window]
das zieht bei mir nicht — that won't wash or won't cut any ice with me (fig. coll.)
10) (schmerzen)es zieht [mir] im Rücken — I've got backache
3.ein leichtes/starkes Ziehen im Bauch — a slight/intense stomach ache
2)der Weg o. ä. zieht sich — (ugs.) the journey etc. goes on and on
* * *n.traction n. -
8 ziehen
zie·hen1. zie·hen <zog, gezogen> [ʼtsi:ən]vt haben1) ( hinter sich her schleppen) to pull;die Kutsche wurde von vier Pferden gezogen the coach was drawn by four horses2) ( bewegen)den Hut \ziehen to raise [or to take off] one's hat;den Choke/Starter \ziehen to pull out the choke/starter;die Handbremse \ziehen to put on the handbrake;jdn/etw irgendwohin \ziehen to pull sb/sth somewhere;sie zog das Kind an sich she pulled the child to[wards] her;die Knie in die Höhe \ziehen to raise one's knees;die Stirn kraus/ in Falten ziehen to knit one's brow3) ( Richtung ändern)er zog das Auto in letzter Minute nach rechts at the last moment he pulled the car to the right;der Pilot zog das Flugzeug nach oben the pilot put the plane into a climb;etw ins Komische \ziehen to ridicule sth4) ( zerren)jdn an etw \ziehen dat to drag sb to sth;das Kind zog mich an der Hand zum Karussell the child dragged me by the hand to the carousel;warum ziehst du mich denn am Ärmel? why are you tugging at my sleeve?;der Felix hat mich an den Haaren gezogen Felix pulled my hair5) (ab\ziehen)etw von etw \ziehen to pull sth [off sth];den Ring vom Finger \ziehen to pull one's ring off [one's finger]6) ( hervorholen)etw [aus etw] \ziehen to pull sth [out of sth];sie zog ein Feuerzeug aus der Tasche she took a lighter out of her pocket/bag7) (heraus\ziehen)jdn/etw \ziehen [aus] to pull sb/sth [out];wer hat den Ertrinkenden aus dem Wasser gezogen? who pulled [or dragged] the drowning man out of the water?;muss ich dich aus dem Bett \ziehen? do I have to drag you out of bed?;die Fäden \ziehen to take out [or remove] the stitches;den Revolver/das Schwert \ziehen to draw the revolver/sword;einen Zahn \ziehen to take out [or extract] a tooth;ein Los/eine Spielkarte \ziehen to draw a lottery ticket/a card;einen Vergleich \ziehen to draw [or make] a comparison;eine Wasserprobe \ziehen to take a sample of water;die Wahrsagerin forderte mich auf, irgendeine Karte zu \ziehen the fortune teller told me to pick a card;Zigaretten aus dem Automaten \ziehen to get [or buy] cigarettes from a machine;hast du eine Straßenbahnkarte gezogen? have you bought a tram ticket?8) ( betätigen)etw \ziehen to pull sth;er zog die Handbremse he put the handbrake on;kannst du nicht die Wasserspülung \ziehen? can't you flush the toilet?9) (verlegen, anlegen)ein Kabel/eine Leitung \ziehen to lay a cable/wire;einen Bewässerungskanal/einen Graben \ziehen to dig an irrigation canal/a ditch;10) (durch\ziehen)durch etw \ziehen to pull sth through sth;ich kann den Faden nie durchs Öhr \ziehen I can never thread a needleneue Saiten auf die Gitarre \ziehen to restring a guitar;Perlen auf eine Schnur \ziehen to thread pearls;ein Bild auf Karton \ziehen to mount a picture onto cardboardetw irgendwohin \ziehen to pull sth somewhere;er zog sich den Hut tief ins Gesicht he pulled his hat down over his eyes;den Mantel fest um sich \ziehen to pull one's coat tight around oneself;zieh bitte die Vorhänge vor die Fenster please draw the curtains;die Rollläden nach oben \ziehen to pull up the blinds;zieh doch eine Bluse unter den Pulli put on a blouse underneath the jumper;er zog sich die Schutzbrille über die Augen he put on protective glassesTiere \ziehen to breed animalssie haben die Kinder gut gezogen they have brought the children up welleinen Kreis/eine Linie \ziehen to draw a circle/lineComputerprogramme schwarz \ziehen to pirate computer programszieh doch die Worte nicht so stop drawling18) (an\ziehen)etw auf sich \ziehen akk to attract sth;sie zog die Aufmerksamkeit/ Blicke auf sich she attracted attention;jds Hass auf sich \ziehen to incur sb's hatred;jdn ins Gespräch \ziehen to draw sb into the conversationetw nach sich \ziehen to have consequencesviich kann es nicht leiden, wenn der Hund so zieht I hate it when the dog pulls [on the lead] like that;ein \ziehender Schmerz an aching painirgendwohin/zu jdm \ziehen to move somewhere/in with sb;nach München \ziehen to move to Munich;sie zog zu ihrem Freund she moved in with her boyfriendirgendwohin \ziehen to move [or go] somewhere; Armee, Truppen, Volksmasse to march; Schafe, Wanderer to wander [or roam], to rove; Rauch, Wolke to drift; Gewitter to move; Vogel to fly;durch die Stadt \ziehen to wander through the town/city;in den Krieg/die Schlacht \ziehen to go to war/into battle;Zigeuner \ziehen kreuz und quer durch Europa gypsies wander [or roam] all over Europe;die Schwalben zogen nach Süden the swallows migrated south [or flew south for the winter];Tausende von Schafen zogen über die Straße thousands of sheep roamed onto the road;Aale und Lachse \ziehen zum Laichen flussaufwärts eels and salmon swim upstream to breeddas Feuer zieht gut/ schlecht the fire is drawing well/poorlyan etw \ziehen dat;mach die Tür zu, sonst zieht der Fischgeruch durchs ganze Haus! close the door, otherwise we will be able to smell the fish throughout the house;Giftgas kann durch die kleinste Ritze \ziehen poisonous gas can penetrate [or ( fam) get through] the smallest crack;die Imprägnierung muss richtig ins Holz \ziehen this waterproofing solution has to really sink into the wood[bei jdm] \ziehen to go down well [with sb];hör auf, das zieht bei mir nicht! stop it, I don't like that sort of thing!;die Ausrede zieht bei mir nicht that excuse won't work with memit dem Bauer \ziehen to move the pawn;wer hat die letzte Karte gezogen? who drew the last card?die Pistole \ziehen to draw a gunWein auf Flaschen ziehen to bottle wineWENDUNGEN:vi impers habenwenn es dir zieht, kannst du ja das Fenster schließen if you are in a draught [or if you find it draughty], go ahead and close the window;es zieht hier an die Beine I can feel [or there is] a draught round my legs2) ( Schmerz empfinden)mir zieht es manchmal so im Knie sometimes my knee really hurts [or is really painful];ich habe so einen \ziehenden Schmerz im ganzen Körper I ache [or my body aches] all overes zog ihn in die weite Welt the big wide world lured him away;was zieht dich hierhin/nach Hause? what brings you here/home?;mich zieht es stark zu ihm I feel very attracted to him;am Sonntag zog es mich ins Grüne on Sunday I couldn't resist going to the country;heute zieht mich aber auch gar nichts nach draußen wild horses wouldn't get me [or couldn't drag me] outside today ( fam)vr haben1) ( sich hinziehen)sich \ziehen Gespräch, Verhandlungen to drag on;dieses Thema zieht sich durch das ganze Buch this theme runs through the entire book2) ( sich erstrecken)beiderseits der Autobahn zieht sich eine Standspur entlang there is a hard shoulder along both sides of the motorway;der Sandstrand zog sich kilometerweit am Meer entlang the sandy beach stretched for miles along the shore;sich in Schlingen durch etw \ziehen to wind [or twist] its way through sth3) (sich hoch\ziehen)sich aus etw \ziehen to pull oneself out of sth; s. a. Affäre, Patsche2. Zie·hen <-s> [ʼtsi:ən] ntkein pl ache
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