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1 acquit oneself
v.comportarse bien. -
2 to acquit oneself well
quedar en bien lugar, quedar bien, salir airoso,-a -
3 acquit
ə'kwitpast tense, past participle - acquitted; verb(to declare (an accused person) to be innocent: The judge acquitted her of murder.) absolveracquit vb absolvertr[ə'kwɪt]1 absolver, declarar inocente\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto acquit oneself well quedar en bien lugar, quedar bien, salir airoso,-a1) : absolver, exculpar2)to acquit oneself : comportarse, defendersev.• absolver (Jurisprudencia) (•Acusación•) v.• exculpar v.• exonerar (Obligación) v.ə'kwɪt
1.
- tt- transitive verbto acquit somebody (of something) — absolver* a alguien (de algo)
2.
v reflto acquit oneself — desenvolverse*, desempeñarse (AmL)
[ǝ'kwɪt]VT1) (Jur)to acquit sb (of) — absolver or exculpar a algn (de)
2)to acquit o.s.: how did he acquit himself? — ¿cómo se desenvolvió?
to acquit o.s. well — defenderse bien
to acquit o.s. of — [+ duty] desempeñar
* * *[ə'kwɪt]
1.
- tt- transitive verbto acquit somebody (of something) — absolver* a alguien (de algo)
2.
v reflto acquit oneself — desenvolverse*, desempeñarse (AmL)
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4 come out
1) (to become known: The truth finally came out.) revelarse, salir a la luz2) (to be published: This newspaper comes out once a week.) salir3) (to strike: The men have come out (on strike).) declararse en huelga4) ((of a photograph) to be developed: This photograph has come out very well.) resultar, salir5) (to be removed: This dirty mark won't come out.) salir, quitarsecome out vb salirare you coming out to play? ¿sales a jugar?1) v + adv (+ prep + o)a) (from inside, indoors) salir*to come out of something — salir* de algo
if you take this route, you come out at Park Lane — por este camino se sale a Park Lane
b) (from prison, hospital) salir*2) \<\<tooth/hair\>\> caerse*; \<\<stain\>\> salir*3) v + adv( appear) \<\<sun/stars\>\> salir*; \<\<flowers\>\> florecer*, salir*4)a) (be said, spoken) salir*I didn't mean to say it, it just came out — no lo dije a propósito, se me escapó
b) (be revealed, emphasized) \<\<secretuth\>\> revelarse, salir* a la luz5)a) ( declare oneself) declararseto come out (on strike) — declararse en huelga, ir* a la huelga
b) ( as being gay) destaparse (fam), declararse abiertamente homosexual6) (be published, become available) \<\<newspaper/record/product\>\> salir*7)a) (have as outcome, total) salir*b) (fare, acquit oneself)to come out well/badly — salir* bien/mal parado
8) ( Phot) salir*VI + ADV1) (=emerge) [person, object, sun, magazine] salir (of de); [qualities] mostrarse; [news] divulgarse, difundirse; [scandal] descubrirse, salir a la luz; [film] estrenarsecloset2) (=open) [flower] abrirse, florecer3) (into the open) [debutante] ser presentada en sociedad, ponerse de largo; [homosexual] declararse(fig)to come out for/against sth — declararse en pro/en contra de algo
4) [stain] (=be removed) quitarse; [dye] (=run) desteñirse5) (=become covered with)I came out in a sweat — empecé a sudar, me cubrí de sudor
you never know what he's going to come out with next! * — ¡nunca se sabe por dónde va a salir!
7) (=turn out) salirit comes out at £5 a head — sale a 5 libras por cabeza
* * *1) v + adv (+ prep + o)a) (from inside, indoors) salir*to come out of something — salir* de algo
if you take this route, you come out at Park Lane — por este camino se sale a Park Lane
b) (from prison, hospital) salir*2) \<\<tooth/hair\>\> caerse*; \<\<stain\>\> salir*3) v + adv( appear) \<\<sun/stars\>\> salir*; \<\<flowers\>\> florecer*, salir*4)a) (be said, spoken) salir*I didn't mean to say it, it just came out — no lo dije a propósito, se me escapó
b) (be revealed, emphasized) \<\<secret/truth\>\> revelarse, salir* a la luz5)a) ( declare oneself) declararseto come out (on strike) — declararse en huelga, ir* a la huelga
b) ( as being gay) destaparse (fam), declararse abiertamente homosexual6) (be published, become available) \<\<newspaper/record/product\>\> salir*7)a) (have as outcome, total) salir*b) (fare, acquit oneself)to come out well/badly — salir* bien/mal parado
8) ( Phot) salir* -
5 come off
1) (to fall off: Her shoe came off.) caerse, soltarse2) (to turn out (well); to succeed: The gamble didn't come off.) tener lugar, sucedercome off vb caerse / quitarse / desprendersev.• despegar v.come off*expr.• realizarse v.1)a) v + adv ( detach itself) \<\<handle\>\> soltarse*; \<\<button\>\> desprenderse, caerse*; \<\<wallpaper\>\> despegarse*; \<\<dirt/grease\>\> quitarse, salir*b) v + prep + o ( fall off) \<\<horse/motorcycle\>\> caerse* de2) v + adva) ( take place) sucederb) ( succeed) tener* éxitoc) (fare, acquit oneself)to come off badly — salir* mal parado
d) (appear, seem) (AmE colloq)to come off as something: she doesn't come off as very bright — no da la impresión de ser muy inteligente
3) v + prep + oa) ( stop taking) \<\<drug\>\> dejar de tomarb) ( be serious)come off it! — (colloq) anda! no digas tonterías! (fam)
1. VI + ADV1) [button] caerse; [stain] quitarsedoes this lid come off? — ¿se puede quitar esta tapa?
2) (=take place, come to pass) tener lugar, realizarse3) (=succeed) tener éxito, dar resultadosto come off well/badly — (=turn out) salir bien/mal
4) (=acquit o.s.) portarseto come off best — salir mejor parado, salir ganando
5) (Theat)2. VI + PREP1) (=separate from)come off it! * — ¡vamos, anda!, ¡venga ya!
2) (=give up) dejar* * *1)a) v + adv ( detach itself) \<\<handle\>\> soltarse*; \<\<button\>\> desprenderse, caerse*; \<\<wallpaper\>\> despegarse*; \<\<dirt/grease\>\> quitarse, salir*b) v + prep + o ( fall off) \<\<horse/motorcycle\>\> caerse* de2) v + adva) ( take place) sucederb) ( succeed) tener* éxitoc) (fare, acquit oneself)to come off badly — salir* mal parado
d) (appear, seem) (AmE colloq)to come off as something: she doesn't come off as very bright — no da la impresión de ser muy inteligente
3) v + prep + oa) ( stop taking) \<\<drug\>\> dejar de tomarb) ( be serious)come off it! — (colloq) anda! no digas tonterías! (fam)
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6 defenderse
■defenderse verbo reflexivo
1 to defend oneself
2 (resguardarse) to shelter [de, from]
3 fam (tener cierta habilidad) to get by: se defiende bien en inglés, he can get by in English ' defenderse' also found in these entries: Spanish: defender English: acquit - hit back - hold - fight
См. также в других словарях:
acquit oneself — conduct oneself or perform in a specified way: → acquit … English new terms dictionary
acquit oneself of — archaic discharge (a duty or responsibility). → acquit … English new terms dictionary
acquit oneself — (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. behave; conduct, comport, or bear oneself; pay off, settle, square. See conduct, payment … English dictionary for students
acquit — ► VERB (acquitted, acquitting) 1) formally declare that (someone) is not guilty of a criminal charge. 2) (acquit oneself) behave or perform in a specified way. DERIVATIVES acquittal noun. ORIGIN Latin acquitare pay a debt … English terms dictionary
acquit — /əˈkwɪt / (say uh kwit) verb (t) (acquitted, acquitting) 1. (sometimes followed by of) to relieve from a charge of fault or crime; pronounce not guilty. 2. to release or discharge (a person) from an obligation. 3. to settle (a debt, obligation,… …
acquit — verb (acquits, acquitting, acquitted) 1》 formally declare (someone) not guilty of a criminal charge. 2》 (acquit oneself) conduct oneself or perform in a specified way: the goalkeeper acquitted himself well. ↘(acquit oneself of) archaic… … English new terms dictionary
acquit — ac·quit /ə kwit/ vb ac·quit·ted, ac·quit·ting [Old French acquiter to pay off, absolve, acquit, from a , prefix marking causation + quite free (of an obligation)] vt: to discharge completely: as a: to release from liability for a debt or other… … Law dictionary
acquit — (v.) early 13c., to satisfy a debt (either for oneself or on behalf of another), from O.Fr. aquiter pay, pay up, settle a claim (12c.), from à to (see AD (Cf. ad )) + quite free, clear (see QUIT (Cf. quit) (adj.)). Meanings set free from charges… … Etymology dictionary
acquit — [ə kwit′] vt. acquitted, acquitting [ME aquiten < OFr aquiter, to free < ML acquitare, to settle a claim < L ad , to + quietare: see QUIET] 1. to release from a duty, obligation, etc. 2. to clear (a person) of a charge, as by declaring… … English World dictionary
acquit — verb 1) the jury acquitted her Syn: clear, exonerate, find innocent, absolve; discharge, release, free, set free; informal let off (the hook); formal exculpate See note at absolve Ant: convict … Thesaurus of popular words
acquit — [13] Acquit is ultimately related to quiet. The Latin noun quies, from which we get quiet, was the basis of a probable verb *quietare, later *quitare, whose original meaning, ‘put to rest’, developed to ‘settle’, as in ‘settle a debt’. With the… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins