-
1 to suck up to somebody
hacerle la pelota a alguien -
2 suck
1. verb1) (to draw liquid etc into the mouth: As soon as they are born, young animals learn to suck (milk from their mothers); She sucked up the lemonade through a straw.) mamar, chupar, sorber2) (to hold something between the lips or inside the mouth, as though drawing liquid from it: I told him to take the sweet out of his mouth, but he just went on sucking; He sucked the end of his pencil.) chupar; sorber3) (to pull or draw in a particular direction with a sucking or similar action: The vacuum cleaner sucked up all the dirt from the carpet; A plant sucks up moisture from the soil.) aspirar4) ((American) (slang) to be awful, boring, disgusting etc: Her singing sucks; This job sucks.) ser una mierda; ser un rollazo (aburrido)
2. noun(an act of sucking: I gave him a suck of my lollipop.) chupada- sucker- suck up to
suck vb chupartr[sʌk]1 (person - liquid) sorber; (- lollipop, pencil, thumb, etc) chupar; (insect -blood, nectar) chupar, succionar3 (draw powerfully) arrastrar1 (person) chupar (at/on, -); (baby) mamar (at, -); (vacuum cleaner) aspirar (up,-); (pump) succionar, aspirar1 chupada\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be sucked into something verse arrastrado,-a a algo, verse involucrado,-a en algoto suck up to somebody hacerle la pelota a alguiensuck ['sʌk] vi1) : chupar (por la boca), aspirar (dícese de las máquinas)2) suckle: mamarsuck vt: sorber (bebidas), chupar (dulces, etc.)n.• chupada s.f.• chupadura s.f.• mamada s.f. (Pump)v.• aspirar v.v.• chupar v.• libar v.• mamar v.• sorber v.• succionar v.
I
1. sʌka) \<\<person\>\> \<\<finger/candy\>\> chupar; \<\<liquid\>\> ( through a straw) sorber; \<\<vacuum cleaner\>\> aspirar; \<\<pump\>\> succionar, aspirar; \<\<insect\>\> \<\<blood/nectar\>\> chuparto suck something up — \<\<dust\>\> aspirar algo; \<\<liquid\>\> ( through a straw) sorber algo
the roots suck (up) moisture out of o from the soil — las raíces absorben la humedad de la tierra
b) (pull, draw) (+ adv compl) arrastrarshe was sucked down o under by the current — la corriente se la tragó
2.
vi1) \<\<person\>\> chuparto suck on something — \<\<on pipe/pen\>\> chupar algo
2) ( be objectionable) (AmE sl)•Phrasal Verbs:- suck in
II
noun (no pl) chupada f[sʌk]to give suck — (arch) dar* el pecho, amamantar
1.VT [person] sorber; [machine] aspirarto suck one's thumb/fingers — chuparse el dedo/los dedos
- suck sb dry- suck it and see2. VIto suck on/at sth — chupar algo
2) (esp US)this sucks ** — es una mierda **
- suck in- suck off- suck out- suck up* * *
I
1. [sʌk]a) \<\<person\>\> \<\<finger/candy\>\> chupar; \<\<liquid\>\> ( through a straw) sorber; \<\<vacuum cleaner\>\> aspirar; \<\<pump\>\> succionar, aspirar; \<\<insect\>\> \<\<blood/nectar\>\> chuparto suck something up — \<\<dust\>\> aspirar algo; \<\<liquid\>\> ( through a straw) sorber algo
the roots suck (up) moisture out of o from the soil — las raíces absorben la humedad de la tierra
b) (pull, draw) (+ adv compl) arrastrarshe was sucked down o under by the current — la corriente se la tragó
2.
vi1) \<\<person\>\> chuparto suck on something — \<\<on pipe/pen\>\> chupar algo
2) ( be objectionable) (AmE sl)•Phrasal Verbs:- suck in
II
noun (no pl) chupada fto give suck — (arch) dar* el pecho, amamantar
-
3 suck up
v.1 succionar (líquido); aspirar (dust)2 absorber.3 pasar la brocha.vi. (familiar)to suck up to somebody hacer la pelota a o (español de España) lambisconear a o (español de México) chuparle las medias a alguien (Csur) -
4 pull
pul
1. verb1) (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.) arrastrar, tirar de2) ((with at or on) in eg smoking, to suck at: He pulled at his cigarette.) chupar3) (to row: He pulled towards the shore.) remar4) ((of a driver or vehicle) to steer or move in a certain direction: The car pulled in at the garage; I pulled into the side of the road; The train pulled out of the station; The motorbike pulled out to overtake; He pulled off the road.) tirar, ir hacia
2. noun1) (an act of pulling: I felt a pull at my sleeve; He took a pull at his beer/pipe.) tirón; calada, chupada (tabaco); sorbo (bebida)2) (a pulling or attracting force: magnetic pull; the pull (=attraction) of the sea.) atracción3) (influence: He thinks he has some pull with the headmaster.) enchufe•- pull down
- pull a face / faces at
- pull a face / faces
- pull a gun on
- pull off
- pull on
- pull oneself together
- pull through
- pull up
- pull one's weight
- pull someone's leg
pull1 n tirónpull2 vb1. tirarit's heavy, but if you pull and I push, we'll move it pesa mucho, pero si tú tiras y yo empujo lo moveremos2. tirar / dar un tirón3. arrastrartr[pʊl]1 (tug) tirón nombre masculino2 (of moon, current) fuerza4 (on bottle) sorbo; (on cigarette) calada, chupada5 (prolonged effort) paliza6 (single impression, proof) prueba2 (tug forcefully) tirar de, dar un tirón a■ don't pull my hair! ¡no me tires del pelo!■ have you pulled the chain? ¿has tirado de la cadena?3 (remove, draw out) sacar4 (damage - muscle) sufrir un tirón5 (operate - trigger) apretar1 (tug) tirar (at/on, de)2 (on pipe, cigarette) chupar, dar caladas a3 (of vehicle - veer) tirarpull ['pʊl, 'pʌl] vt1) draw, tug: tirar de, jalar2) extract: sacar, extraerto pull teeth: sacar muelasto pull a gun on: amenazar a (alguien) con pistola3) tear: desgarrarse (un músculo, etc.)4)to pull down : bajar, echar abajo, derribar (un edificio)5)to pull in attract: atraer (una muchedumbre, etc.)to pull in votes: conseguir votos6)to pull off remove: sacar, quitar7)to pull oneself together : calmarse, tranquilizarse8)to pull up raise: levantar, subirpull vi1) draw, tug: tirar, jalarthey pulled in front of us: se nos metieron delanteto pull to a stop: pararse3)to pull through recover: recobrarse, reponerse4)to pull together cooperate: trabajar juntos, cooperarpull n1) tug: tirón m, jalón mhe gave it a pull: le dio un tirón2) attraction: atracción f, fuerza fthe pull of gravity: la fuerza de la gravedad3) influence: influencia f4) handle: tirador m (de un cajón, etc.)5)bell pull : cuerda fn.• chupada s.f.• estirón s.m.• primeras pruebas s.f.pl.• tirador s.m.• tirón s.m.v.• arrastrar v.• halar v.• jalar v.• tirar v.• tirar de v.
I
1. pʊl1)b) ( in specified direction) (+ adv compl)pull your chair closer to the fire — acerca or arrima la silla al fuego
could you pull the door to/the curtains, please? — por favor, cierra la puerta/corre las cortinas
the current pulled him under — la corriente lo arrastró or se lo llevó al fondo
to pull the carpet o rug (out) from under somebody o somebody's feet — fastidiarle los planes a alguien, moverle* el tapete a alguien (Méx fam)
2)a) ( tug) tirar de, jalar (AmL exc CS)pull the other one! — (BrE colloq) me estás tomando el pelo (fam)
to pull strings o wires — ( use influence) tocar* todos los resortes or muchas teclas, mover* hilos
to pull the strings o wires — ( be in control) tener* la sartén por el mango
b) (tear, detach)he pulled the toy to bits — rompió or destrozó el juguete
c) ( snag)3)a) \<\<weeds/nail\>\> arrancar*; \<\<tooth\>\> sacar*b) ( take out) sacar*he pulled a gun on them — sacó una pistola y los amenazó; see also pull out
4) (colloq) \<\<crowd/audience\>\> atraer*; \<\<votes\>\> conseguir*5) ( perform) (colloq)don't you ever pull a stunt like that on me again — no me vuelvas a hacer una faena así or una cosa semejante
to pull a fast one on somebody — hacerle* una jugarreta a alguien (fam)
6) ( Med) \<\<muscle/tendon\>\> desgarrarse
2.
vi1)a) (drag, tug) tirar, jalar (AmL exc CS)to pull AT/ON something — tirar de or (AmL exc CS) jalar algo
b) ( suck)to pull ON o AT something — \<\<on pipe\>\> darle* una chupada or (AmL tb) una pitada or (Esp tb) una calada a algo
2)a) \<\<vehicle\>\> ( move) (+ adv compl)to pull off the road — salir* de la carretera
to pull into the station — entrar en la estación; see also pull in, pull up
b) ( row) remar•Phrasal Verbs:- pull in- pull off- pull on- pull out- pull up
II
1) c ( tug) tirón m, jalón m (AmL exc CS)2) ua) ( pulling force) fuerza fb) ( influence) influencia f4) c ( difficult journey)[pʊl]1. N2) [of moon, magnet, sea etc] (fuerza f de) atracción f; [of current] fuerza f, ímpetu m; (fig) (=attraction) atracción fthe pull of the south — la atracción del Sur, lo atractivo del Sur
3) * (=influence) enchufe * m, palanca f (LAm) *; (=advantage) ventaja fhe took a pull from the bottle — tomó un trago de la botella, dio un tiento a la botella (Sp)
5) (=journey, drive etc)it was a long pull — fue mucho camino or trecho
6) (=handle of drawer etc) tirador m; [of bell] cuerda f7) (Typ) primeras pruebas fpl8) (Brit)*to be on the pull — estar de ligue (Sp) *, estar chequeando (LAm) *
2. VT1) (=draw, drag) tirar de, jalar (LAm)punch I, 1., 2), weight 1., 1)to pull a door shut/open — cerrar/abrir una puerta de un tirón or (LAm) jalón
2) (=tug) tirar de, jalar (LAm); [+ trigger] apretar; [+ oar] tirar de; [+ boat] remar; (Naut) [+ rope] halar, jalar; [+ tooth] sacar; [+ weeds] arrancarto pull sb's hair — tirar or (LAm) jalar de los pelos a algn
- pull the other oneleg 1., 1)3) (=extract, draw out) sacar, arrancar; [+ beer] servirrank I, 1., 1)4) (=injure)5) [+ ball] (at golf etc) golpear oblicuamente (a la izquierda)6) (Typ) imprimir7) * (=cancel) [+ TV programme] suspender8) * (=carry out, do)what are you trying to pull? — ¿qué quieres conseguir?, ¿qué es lo que pretendes con esto?
to pull a fast one or a trick on sb — jugar una mala pasada a algn
9) * (=attract)he knows how to pull the birds — (Brit) sabe ligar con las chicas *
3. VI1) tirar, jalar (LAm)to pull at or on a rope — tirar de una cuerda
2)to pull at or on one's pipe — dar chupadas a la pipa
to pull at a bottle — tomar un trago or (Sp) dar un tiento a una botella
3) (=move) [vehicle] ir; [oarsmen etc] remarhe pulled sharply to one side to avoid the lorry — torció bruscamente a un lado para no chocar con el camión
4) (Brit) * ligar *, pillar (cacho) (Sp) **4.CPDpull ring, pull tab N — anilla f
- pull in- pull off- pull on- pull out- pull up* * *
I
1. [pʊl]1)b) ( in specified direction) (+ adv compl)pull your chair closer to the fire — acerca or arrima la silla al fuego
could you pull the door to/the curtains, please? — por favor, cierra la puerta/corre las cortinas
the current pulled him under — la corriente lo arrastró or se lo llevó al fondo
to pull the carpet o rug (out) from under somebody o somebody's feet — fastidiarle los planes a alguien, moverle* el tapete a alguien (Méx fam)
2)a) ( tug) tirar de, jalar (AmL exc CS)pull the other one! — (BrE colloq) me estás tomando el pelo (fam)
to pull strings o wires — ( use influence) tocar* todos los resortes or muchas teclas, mover* hilos
to pull the strings o wires — ( be in control) tener* la sartén por el mango
b) (tear, detach)he pulled the toy to bits — rompió or destrozó el juguete
c) ( snag)3)a) \<\<weeds/nail\>\> arrancar*; \<\<tooth\>\> sacar*b) ( take out) sacar*he pulled a gun on them — sacó una pistola y los amenazó; see also pull out
4) (colloq) \<\<crowd/audience\>\> atraer*; \<\<votes\>\> conseguir*5) ( perform) (colloq)don't you ever pull a stunt like that on me again — no me vuelvas a hacer una faena así or una cosa semejante
to pull a fast one on somebody — hacerle* una jugarreta a alguien (fam)
6) ( Med) \<\<muscle/tendon\>\> desgarrarse
2.
vi1)a) (drag, tug) tirar, jalar (AmL exc CS)to pull AT/ON something — tirar de or (AmL exc CS) jalar algo
b) ( suck)to pull ON o AT something — \<\<on pipe\>\> darle* una chupada or (AmL tb) una pitada or (Esp tb) una calada a algo
2)a) \<\<vehicle\>\> ( move) (+ adv compl)to pull off the road — salir* de la carretera
to pull into the station — entrar en la estación; see also pull in, pull up
b) ( row) remar•Phrasal Verbs:- pull in- pull off- pull on- pull out- pull up
II
1) c ( tug) tirón m, jalón m (AmL exc CS)2) ua) ( pulling force) fuerza fb) ( influence) influencia f4) c ( difficult journey) -
5 thumb
1. noun1) (the short thick finger of the hand, set at a different angle from the other four.) pulgar2) (the part of a glove or mitten covering this finger.) pulgar
2. verb((often with through) to turn over (the pages of a book) with the thumb or fingers: She was thumbing through the dictionary.) hojear; manosear- thumbprint
- thumbs-up
- thumbtack
- under someone's thumb
thumb n dedo pulgartr[ɵʌm]1 pulgar nombre masculino1 hacer autostop\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be all thumbs ser un manazas, ser torpeto be under somebody's thumb estar dominado,-a por alguiento get the thumbs up ser aprobado,-a, recibir la aprobaciónto get the thumbs down ser rechazado,-ato give something the thumbs up aprobar algoto give something the thumbs down rechazar algoto have somebody under one's thumb tener a alguien en el bolsilloto stick out like a sore thumb saltar a la vistato thumb a ride / thumb a lift hacer autostopthumb ['ɵʌm] vt: hojear (con el pulgar)thumb n: pulgar m, dedo m pulgarn.• pulgar (Dedo) s.m.v.• hojear v.
I θʌmnoun pulgar m, dedo m gordo (fam)to be all thumbs o (BrE also) all fingers and thumbs: I'm all thumbs today hoy estoy muy torpe con las manos; to be under somebody's thumb estar* dominado por alguien; to get the thumbs down/up from somebody ser* rechazado por alguien/recibir la aprobación de alguien; to give the thumbs up/down to something aprobar*/rechazar* algo; to stick out like a sore thumb \<\<building/person/object\>\> desentonar terriblemente, no pegar* ni con cola (fam); to twiddle one's thumbs — estar* sin hacer nada, estar* perdiendo el tiempo; green I 1)
II
a)I thumbed a lift o (AmE also) a ride home — me fui a casa a dedo (fam), me fui a casa de aventón (Col, Méx)
b) \<\<book\>\> hojearPhrasal Verbs:[θʌm]1.N pulgar mto be all thumbs —
- twiddle one's thumbs- be under sb's thumbrule 1., 2)the voters have given him the thumbs up/down — el electorado votó a favor de/en contra de él
2. VT1) [+ book] manosear2)to thumb a lift or a ride — hacer autostop, hacer dedo, pedir aventón (LAm)
3)to thumb one's nose at sth/sb — (lit) hacer burla a algo/algn (agitando la mano con el pulgar sobre la nariz) ; (fig) burlarse de algo/algn
3.VIto thumb through a book/magazine — hojear un libro/una revista
4.CPDthumb index N — índice m recortado
* * *
I [θʌm]noun pulgar m, dedo m gordo (fam)to be all thumbs o (BrE also) all fingers and thumbs: I'm all thumbs today hoy estoy muy torpe con las manos; to be under somebody's thumb estar* dominado por alguien; to get the thumbs down/up from somebody ser* rechazado por alguien/recibir la aprobación de alguien; to give the thumbs up/down to something aprobar*/rechazar* algo; to stick out like a sore thumb \<\<building/person/object\>\> desentonar terriblemente, no pegar* ni con cola (fam); to twiddle one's thumbs — estar* sin hacer nada, estar* perdiendo el tiempo; green I 1)
II
a)I thumbed a lift o (AmE also) a ride home — me fui a casa a dedo (fam), me fui a casa de aventón (Col, Méx)
b) \<\<book\>\> hojearPhrasal Verbs: -
6 teach
ti:past tense, past participle - taught; verb(to give knowledge, skill or wisdom to a person; to instruct or train (a person): She teaches English / the piano; Experience has taught him nothing.) enseñar- teacher- teaching
teach vb1. dar clases2. enseñartr[tiːʧ]■ this course will be taught by Mr Smith este curso lo impartirá el Sr. Smith1 ser profesor,-ra, dar clases\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLthat'll teach you así aprenderásto teach school SMALLAMERICAN ENGLISH/SMALL ser profesor,-rayou can't teach an old dog new tricks loro viejo no aprende a hablar: enseñar, dar clases deshe teaches math: da clases de matemáticasshe taught me everything I know: me enseñó todo lo que séteach vi: enseñar, dar clasesexpr.• alfabetizar v.• enseñar a alguien a leer expr.• enseñar a leer a al. expr.v.(§ p.,p.p.: taught) = adiestrar v.• aleccionar v.• apacentar v.• disciplinar v.• doctrinar v.• enseñar v.tiːtʃ
1.
(past & past p taught) transitive verb \<\<subject\>\> dar* clases de, enseñar; \<\<pupils/students\>\>who teaches you? — ¿quien te da clase?
the course is taught by Dr Green — el curso lo da or (frml) lo imparte el profesor Green
to teach school — (AmE) dar* clase(s) en un colegio
to teach something TO somebody — dar* clase(s) de algo a alguien, enseñar algo a alguien
he taught himself Greek — aprendió griego él solo or por su cuenta
to teach somebody to + INF — enseñarle a alguien a + inf
will you teach me how to do that trick? — ¿me enseñas (a hacer) ese truco?
that'll teach her — eso le servirá de lección or de escarmiento
2.
vi dar* clase(s)[tiːtʃ] (pt, pp taught)I'd like to teach — me gustaría ser profesor or dedicarme a la enseñanza
1. VTMiss Hardy taught us needlework — la Srta. Hardy nos daba clases de or nos enseñaba costura
he teaches primary-school children — es maestro de escuela (primaria), da clases a niños de primaria
•
to teach school — (US) (primary) dar clases en un colegio de enseñanza primaria; (secondary) dar clases en un colegio de enseñanza secundaria•
she taught English to Japanese businessmen — enseñaba inglés or daba clases de inglés a ejecutivos japoneses2) (not in class) enseñarI'll teach you to speak to me like that! — ¡ya te enseñaré yo a hablarme así!
•
you can't teach him anything about cars — no le puedes enseñar nada sobre coches•
my mother taught me how to cook — mi madre me enseñó a cocinar•
that'll teach you! — ¡eso te servirá de lección!, ¡te está bien empleado!that will teach you to mind your own business! — ¡eso te enseñará a no meterte en lo que no te importa!
- teach sb a lesson2.VI (=give classes) dar claseshis wife teaches at our school — su esposa da clases or es profesora en nuestro colegio
he has always wanted to teach — siempre ha querido ser profesor or dedicarse a la enseñanza
* * *[tiːtʃ]
1.
(past & past p taught) transitive verb \<\<subject\>\> dar* clases de, enseñar; \<\<pupils/students\>\>who teaches you? — ¿quien te da clase?
the course is taught by Dr Green — el curso lo da or (frml) lo imparte el profesor Green
to teach school — (AmE) dar* clase(s) en un colegio
to teach something TO somebody — dar* clase(s) de algo a alguien, enseñar algo a alguien
he taught himself Greek — aprendió griego él solo or por su cuenta
to teach somebody to + INF — enseñarle a alguien a + inf
will you teach me how to do that trick? — ¿me enseñas (a hacer) ese truco?
that'll teach her — eso le servirá de lección or de escarmiento
2.
vi dar* clase(s)I'd like to teach — me gustaría ser profesor or dedicarme a la enseñanza
-
7 crawl
kro:l
1. verb1) (to move slowly along the ground: The injured dog crawled away.) avanzar lentamente2) ((of people) to move on hands and knees or with the front of the body on the ground: The baby can't walk yet, but she crawls everywhere.) gatear, andar a gatas3) (to move slowly: The traffic was crawling along at ten kilometres per hour.) arrastrar(se)4) (to be covered with crawling things: His hair was crawling with lice.) estar plagado de, hervir de
2. noun1) (a very slow movement or speed: We drove along at a crawl.) paso lento2) (a style of swimming in which the arms make alternate overarm movements: She's better at the crawl than she is at the breaststroke.) crolcrawl vb1. gatear / arrastrarsethe baby can't walk yet, he just crawls el bebé no anda aún, sólo gatea2. moverse
crawl /krol/ sustantivo masculino: tb ' crawl' also found in these entries: Spanish: arrastrarse - crol - gatear - reptar - arrastrar - copeo - gata - grima English: crawl - kerb-crawl - woodwork - creep - pub - underneathtr[krɔːl]2 (car, traffic) avanzar lentamente, ir a paso de tortuga3 (be covered with, be full of) estar lleno,-a de, estar plagado,-a de4 familiar pejorative (try to gain favour) arrastrarse (to, ante), rebajarse (to, ante), humillarse (to, ante)\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto do the crawl nadar a crolto make somebody's flesh crawl ponerle los pelos de punta a alguiento move at a crawl avanzar muy lentamente, ir a paso de tortugacrawl ['krɔl] vi1) creep: arrastrarse, gatear (dícese de un bebé)2) teem: estar plagadocrawl n: paso m lenton.• arrastramiento s.m.• gateamiento s.m.• marcha lenta s.f.v.• arrastrar v.• arrastrarse v.• gatear v.
I krɔːl1)a) ( creep) arrastrarse; \<\<baby\>\> gatear, ir* a gatas; \<\<insect\>\> andar*; flesh a)b) ( go slowly) \<\<trafficain\>\> avanzar* muy lentamente2) ( teem)the beach was crawling with tourists — la playa estaba plagada de turistas, la playa hervía de turistas
3) ( demean oneself) (colloq) arrastrarse, rebajarseto crawl TO somebody — arrastrarse or rebajarse ante alguien
II
1) ( slow pace) (no pl)to go at a crawl — avanzar* muy lentamente, ir* a paso de tortuga (fam)
2) ( swimming stroke) crol m[krɔːl]1. N1) (=slow pace) [of traffic]2) (Swimming) crol m2. VI1) (=drag o.s.) arrastrarse; [child] andar a gatas, gatearto crawl in/out — meterse/salirse a gatas
2) (=move slowly) [traffic] avanzar lentamente, formar caravana; [time] alargarse interminablemente3) * (=suck up)to crawl to sb — dar coba a algn *, hacer la pelota a algn *
4)fleshto be crawling with vermin — estar plagado or cuajado de bichos
3.CPDcrawl space N — (US) (between floors) espacio entre plantas para tuberías o cables
* * *
I [krɔːl]1)a) ( creep) arrastrarse; \<\<baby\>\> gatear, ir* a gatas; \<\<insect\>\> andar*; flesh a)b) ( go slowly) \<\<traffic/train\>\> avanzar* muy lentamente2) ( teem)the beach was crawling with tourists — la playa estaba plagada de turistas, la playa hervía de turistas
3) ( demean oneself) (colloq) arrastrarse, rebajarseto crawl TO somebody — arrastrarse or rebajarse ante alguien
II
1) ( slow pace) (no pl)to go at a crawl — avanzar* muy lentamente, ir* a paso de tortuga (fam)
2) ( swimming stroke) crol m -
8 líquido
Del verbo liquidar: ( conjugate liquidar) \ \
liquido es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
liquidó es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativoMultiple Entries: liquidar líquido
liquidar ( conjugate liquidar) verbo transitivo 1 ‹ existencias› to sell off 2 ‹ negocio› to wind up; ‹ activo› to liquidate 3 ‹sueldo/pago› to pay 4 (fam) ‹ persona› ( matar) to do away with (colloq); ( destruir) (AmL) to destroy (colloq)
líquido 1
◊ -da adjetivo1 ‹ sustancia› liquid 2 ‹sueldo/renta› net
líquido 2 sustantivo masculino 1 ( sustancia) liquid; 2 ( dinero) cash
liquidar verbo transitivo
1 (una deuda) to settle (un producto) to sell off
2 fam (dilapidar) to waste away
3 familiar liquidar a alguien, (asesinar) to bump somebody off
líquido,-a
I sustantivo masculino
1 liquid
2 Fin liquid assets pl
II adjetivo
1 liquid
2 Fin net ' líquido' also found in these entries: Spanish: ahogar - ahogarse - asentarse - bocanada - bombeo - bullir - calar - chorro - chupar - circular - cocer - depurar - deshacer - deshacerse - deshecha - deshecho - desparramar - desparramarse - escaparse - escape - filtrar - filtrarse - flujo - fuga - gaseosa - gaseoso - gel - inmersa - inmerso - irse - jabón - jarra - líquida - onda - oxígeno - pulverizar - quemar - quemadura - quemarse - rebosar - remover - reposar - reposo - rociar - salirse - salpicar - soltar - sorber - tintura - trago English: absorb - bead - blob - bubble - clear - cloud - cloudy - correction fluid - dilute - discharge - do away with - drain - draught - dribble - drop - exude - flow - fluid - freeze - frozen - gulp - gurgle - gush - leak - liquid - liquid crystal display - molten - pool - pump out - runny - settle - shake up - slop - sloppy - smooth - spill - spout - sprinkle - spurt - stand - sticky - stir - stir up - stream - suck - thick - thin - upset - well - cleaning
См. также в других словарях:
suck up (to somebody) — ˌsuck ˈup (to sb) derived (informal, disapproving) to try to please sb in authority by praising them too much, helping them, etc, in order to gain some advantage for yourself Main entry: ↑suckderived … Useful english dictionary
suck somebody in — ˌsuck sb ˈin | ˌsuck sb ˈinto sth derived usually passive to involve sb in an activity or a situation, especially one they do not want to be involved in Main entry: ↑suckderived … Useful english dictionary
suck somebody into something — ˌsuck sb ˈin | ˌsuck sb ˈinto sth derived usually passive to involve sb in an activity or a situation, especially one they do not want to be involved in Main entry: ↑suckderived … Useful english dictionary
suck up — verb 1. take in, also metaphorically (Freq. 1) The sponge absorbs water well She drew strength from the minister s words • Syn: ↑absorb, ↑suck, ↑imbibe, ↑soak up, ↑sop up, ↑ … Useful english dictionary
suck in — verb 1. take up as if with a sponge (Freq. 2) • Syn: ↑take in, ↑sop up, ↑take up • Hypernyms: ↑consume, ↑ingest, ↑take in, ↑take, ↑ … Useful english dictionary
suck out — verb remove as if by suction aspirate the wound • Syn: ↑aspirate, ↑draw out • Hypernyms: ↑remove, ↑take, ↑take away, ↑withdraw … Useful english dictionary
suck somebody dry — milk/suck sb/sth ˈdry idiom to get from sb/sth all the money, help, information, etc. they have, usually giving nothing in return • By earning millions from racing and giving pennies back, the bookmakers are sucking the sport dry. Main entry:… … Useful english dictionary
suck up — verb a) To absorb fluid The dry soil sucked up water like a sponge. b) To adulate or flatter somebody excessively, generally to obtain some personal benefit or favour. Jimmy sucked up to the English teacher hoping he would get an A … Wiktionary
give suck — verb give suck to The wetnurse suckled the infant You cannot nurse your baby in public in some places • Syn: ↑breastfeed, ↑suckle, ↑suck, ↑nurse, ↑wet nurse, ↑lactate … Useful english dictionary
fair suck of the sav — interjection a) Used to inform somebody that they’re taking more than their fair share. b) An exclamation of incredulity, as in Youve got to be kidding Syn: fair go, fair shake of the sauce bottle, fair suck of the sauce bottle … Wiktionary
fair suck of the sauce bottle — interjection Used to inform somebody that they’re taking more than their share, etc. Syn: fair crack of the whip, fair go, fair shake of the sauce bottle, fair suck of the sav … Wiktionary