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1 ridicule
'ridikju:lverb (to laugh at; to mock: They ridiculed him because he was wearing one brown shoe and one black shoe.) ridiculizar, poner en ridículotr['rɪdɪkjʊːl]1 ridículo1 ridiculizar, poner en ridículoridicule n: burlas fpln.• burla s.f.• irrisión s.f.• rechifla s.f.• ridículo s.m.v.• befar v.• burlar v.• escarnecer v.• ridiculizar v.
I 'rɪdəkjuːl, 'rɪdɪkjuːlmass noun burlas fplhe's laying himself open to ridicule — se está exponiendo a hacer el ridículo or a que se burlen de él
she became an object of ridicule — se convirtió en el hazmerreír de todos or en el centro de todas las burlas
to hold something/somebody up to ridicule — ridiculizar* algo/a alguien
II
transitive verb ridiculizar*, burlarse or reírse* de['rɪdɪkjuːl]1.N irrisión f, burla fto hold sth/sb up to ridicule — poner algo/a algn en ridículo
to lay o.s. open to ridicule — exponerse al ridículo
2.VT dejar or poner en ridículo, ridiculizar* * *
I ['rɪdəkjuːl, 'rɪdɪkjuːl]mass noun burlas fplhe's laying himself open to ridicule — se está exponiendo a hacer el ridículo or a que se burlen de él
she became an object of ridicule — se convirtió en el hazmerreír de todos or en el centro de todas las burlas
to hold something/somebody up to ridicule — ridiculizar* algo/a alguien
II
transitive verb ridiculizar*, burlarse or reírse* de -
2 object
I 'ob‹ikt noun1) (a thing that can be seen or felt: There were various objects on the table.) objeto, cosa2) (an aim or intention: His main object in life was to become rich.) objetivo, objeto, fin, propósito3) (the word or words in a sentence or phrase which represent(s) the person or thing affected by the action of the verb: He hit me; You can eat what you like.) complemento
II əb'‹ekt verb(often with to) to feel or express dislike or disapproval: He wanted us to travel on foot but I objected (to that). objetar- objectionable
- objectionably
object1 n1. objeto2. objetivo / propósito3. complementoobject2 vb oponerse / no estar de acuerdo1 (thing) objeto, cosa2 (aim, purpose) objetivo, objeto, fin nombre masculino, propósito3 (focus of feelings) objeto4 (obstacle) inconveniente nombre masculino5 SMALLLINGUISTICS/SMALL complemento■ direct/indirect object complemento directo/indirecto1 objetar■ she objected that... objetó que...1 (oppose) oponerse (to, a), poner reparos (to, a)■ I object to the use of the term "chairman' me opongo al uso del término "presidente"2 (disapprove, mind) molestar■ do you object to my smoking? ¿le molesta que fume?3 SMALLLAW/SMALL protestar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLobject glass / object lens objetivoobject lesson ejemplo práctico, perfecta demostración nombre femeninoobject [əb'ʤɛkt] vt: objetarobject vi: oponerse, poner reparos, hacer objecionesobject ['ɑbʤɪkt] n1) : objeto m2) objective, purpose: objetivo m, propósito m3) : complemento m (en gramática)n.• artículo s.m.• cosa s.f.• fin s.m.• materia s.f.• objeto s.m.• propósito s.m.v.• objetar v.• oponerse v.
I 'ɑːbdʒɪkt, 'ɒbdʒɪkt1)a) ( thing) objeto mb)no object: distance is no object la distancia no importa or no es inconveniente; money's no object for them — el dinero no les preocupa
c) (of actions, feelings) objeto m2) (aim, purpose) objetivo m, propósito m, fin mwith this object in mind — teniendo en mente este objetivo or propósito
3) ( Ling) complemento mdirect/indirect object — complemento (de objeto) directo/indirecto
II
1. əb'dʒekta) (express objection, oppose)to object (TO something) — oponerse* or poner* objeciones (a algo)
to object to a question — ( Law) oponerse* a or objetar una pregunta
b) (disapprove, mind)if you don't object — si no le molesta or (frml) importuna
to object TO -ING: do you object to my smoking? ¿le molesta que fume?; I object to your using this house as a hotel — no estoy dispuesta a aceptar que uses esta casa como un hotel
2.
vt objetar
I ['ɒbdʒɪkt]1. N1) (=item) objeto msex 3.2) (=focus) objeto mthe economy was the object of heated discussion — la economía fue el objeto de una acalorada discusión
the object of her hatred/love — el objeto de su odio/su amor
3) (=aim) objetivo mwhat's the object of doing that?, what object is there in doing that? — ¿de qué sirve hacer eso?
•
the object of the exercise is to raise money for charity — lo que se persigue con esto es recaudar dinero con fines benéficos4) (=obstacle)•
I want the best, money is no object — quiero lo mejor, no importa cuánto cuesteI want to have a great holiday, money is no object — quiero tirarme unas vacaciones estupendas, el dinero no es problema
money is no object to him — el dinero no es problema or obstáculo para él
5) (Gram) complemento m2.CPDobject clause N — (Gram) proposición f en función de complemento
object language N — (Comput) lengua f objeto
object lesson N (fig) —
it was an object lesson in how not to drive a car — fue un perfecto ejemplo de cómo no conducir un coche
object pronoun N — (Gram) pronombre m que funciona como objeto
direct/indirect object pronoun — pronombre m que funciona como objeto directo/indirecto
II [ǝb'dʒekt]1.VT objetar"you can't do that," he objected — -no puedes hacer eso -objetó
he objected that there wasn't enough time — puso la objección de que or objetó que no tenían suficiente tiempo
2. VI1) (=disapprove) oponerseto object to sth: a lot of people will object to the book — mucha gente se opondrá al libro
to object to sb: she objects to my friends — no le gustan mis amigos
I would object to Paul but not to Robert as chairman — me opondría a que Paul fuera presidente, pero no a que lo fuera Robert
to object to sb doing sth: he objects to her drinking — no le gusta que beba
do you object to my smoking? — ¿le molesta que fume?
do you object to my going? — ¿te importa que vaya?
2) (=protest) oponerse, poner objecioneshe didn't object when... — no su opuso or no puso objeciones cuando...
I object! — frm ¡protesto!
I object to that remark! — ¡ese comentario no lo tolero!
3) (Jur)* * *
I ['ɑːbdʒɪkt, 'ɒbdʒɪkt]1)a) ( thing) objeto mb)no object: distance is no object la distancia no importa or no es inconveniente; money's no object for them — el dinero no les preocupa
c) (of actions, feelings) objeto m2) (aim, purpose) objetivo m, propósito m, fin mwith this object in mind — teniendo en mente este objetivo or propósito
3) ( Ling) complemento mdirect/indirect object — complemento (de objeto) directo/indirecto
II
1. [əb'dʒekt]a) (express objection, oppose)to object (TO something) — oponerse* or poner* objeciones (a algo)
to object to a question — ( Law) oponerse* a or objetar una pregunta
b) (disapprove, mind)if you don't object — si no le molesta or (frml) importuna
to object TO -ING: do you object to my smoking? ¿le molesta que fume?; I object to your using this house as a hotel — no estoy dispuesta a aceptar que uses esta casa como un hotel
2.
vt objetar -
3 mock
mok
1. verb(to laugh at or cause to seem ridiculous: They mocked her efforts at cooking.) burlarse
2. adjective(pretended or not real: a mock battle; He looked at me in mock horror.) ficticio, falso- mockery- mocking
- mockingly
mock1 adj simuladomock2 vb burlarse / mofarsetr[mɒk]1 (object) de imitación2 (event) de prueba1 (exam) examen nombre masculino de prueba1 (laugh at, make fun of) burlarse de, mofarse de2 (imitate) imitar, remedar1 burlarse (at, de)\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto make a mock of somebody/something poner a alguien/algo en ridículomock ['mɑk, 'mɔk] vt1) ridicule: burlarse de, mofarse de2) mimic: imitar, remedar (de manera burlona)mock adj1) simulated: simulado2) phony: falsoadj.• burlesco, -a adj.• fingido, -a adj.• simulado, -a adj.n.• burla s.f.• mofa s.f.v.• befar v.• burlar v.• burlarse v.• burlarse de v.• decepcionar v.• fisgar v.• mofar v.• remedar v.
I mɑːk, mɒktransitive verb burlarse or mofarse dehe mocked her accent — imitó or remedó su acento burlonamente
II
adjective (before n) <examination/interview> de práctica, de prueba; <anger/outrage> fingido, simulado[mɒk]1.VT (=ridicule) mofarse de, burlarse de; (=mimic) imitar, remedaryou shouldn't mock other people's beliefs — no hay que mofarse or burlarse de las creencias de la gente
2.VI mofarse, burlarseto mock at sth/sb — mofarse de algo/algn, burlarse de algo/algn
3.ADJ (=feigned) [solemnity, terror] fingido, simulado; (=imitation) [leather, fur] de imitación4. N1)2) mocks (Brit) (Scol) * exámenes mpl de prueba5.CPDmock battle N — simulacro m (de batalla)
mock orange N — (Bot) jeringuilla f, celinda f
mock trial N — juicio m de prueba
* * *
I [mɑːk, mɒk]transitive verb burlarse or mofarse dehe mocked her accent — imitó or remedó su acento burlonamente
II
adjective (before n) <examination/interview> de práctica, de prueba; <anger/outrage> fingido, simulado
См. также в других словарях:
object — ob|ject1 W2S3 [ˈɔbdʒıkt US ˈa:b ] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(thing)¦ 2¦(aim)¦ 3 an object of pity/desire/ridicule etc 4 money/expense is no object 5 object lesson 6¦(grammar)¦ 7¦(computer)¦ ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Date: 1300 1400; : Medieval Latin; Origin: objectum, from … Dictionary of contemporary English
ridicule — [[t]rɪ̱dɪkjuːl[/t]] ridicules, ridiculing, ridiculed 1) VERB If you ridicule someone or ridicule their ideas or beliefs, you make fun of them in an unkind way. [V n] I admired her all the more for allowing them to ridicule her and never striking… … English dictionary
ridicule — I UK [ˈrɪdɪˌkjuːl] / US [ˈrɪdɪˌkjul] verb [transitive] Word forms ridicule : present tense I/you/we/they ridicule he/she/it ridicules present participle ridiculing past tense ridiculed past participle ridiculed to try to make someone or something … English dictionary
ridicule — rid|i|cule1 [ rıdı,kjul ] noun uncount remarks or behavior intended to make someone or something seem silly by making fun of them in an unkind way: The idea met with such ridicule that it was dropped. object of ridicule (=someone or something… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
ridicule — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ public VERB + RIDICULE ▪ attract (esp. BrE), receive ▪ expose sb/sth to, hold sb/sth up to, treat sb/sth with … Collocations dictionary
ridicule — 1 noun (U) unkind laughter or remarks intended to make someone or something seem stupid: He used his acute brain and mischievous wit to ridicule Tory MPs. | be held up to ridicule (=be publicly made to look stupid): In The Lord of the Flies ,… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
ridicule — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Derision Nouns 1. ridicule, derision, scoffing, mockery, quiz, banter, irony, persiflage, raillery, chaff, badinage. See contempt. 2. parody, burlesque, travesty, farce, caricature, camp; buffoonery,… … English dictionary for students
ridicule — rid|i|cule1 [ˈrıdıkju:l] n [U] [Date: 1600 1700; : French; Origin: Latin ridiculum something funny , from ridere to laugh ] unkind laughter or remarks that are intended to make someone or something seem stupid ▪ the ridicule of his peers ▪ The… … Dictionary of contemporary English
object — ob|ject1 [ abdʒəkt ] noun count *** 1. ) a thing that you can see and touch that is not alive and is usually solid: The boat was bumping against some solid object underwater. candles, vases, and other household objects There are thousands of… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
object — I UK [ˈɒbdʒekt] / US [ˈɑbdʒəkt] noun [countable] Word forms object : singular object plural objects *** 1) a thing that you can see and touch that is not alive and is usually solid The boat seemed to bump against some solid object. candles, vases … English dictionary
ridicule — /ˈrɪdəkjul / (say riduhkyoohl) noun 1. words or actions intended to excite contemptuous laughter at a person or thing; derision. –verb (t) (ridiculed, ridiculing) 2. to deride; make fun of. –phrase 3. object of ridicule, a person treated with… …