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to+be+thirsty

  • 81 sed

    • avidness
    • craving
    • desire
    • thirdly
    • thirst for
    • thirst for living
    • thirsty

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > sed

  • 82 sediento

    • athirst
    • thirstily
    • thirsty for blood

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > sediento

  • 83 tener mucha sed

    • be very thirsty

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > tener mucha sed

  • 84 tener sed de

    • be thirsty for
    • have a thin time
    • have a thorn in one's flesh
    • raven for
    • thirds
    • thirst for knowledge

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > tener sed de

  • 85 estar con

    v.
    1 to be with.
    Ellos están con los demócratas They are with the Democrats.
    Yo estoy con Ricardo I am with Richard.
    2 to be with, to agree with, to hold with.
    Ellos están con los demócratas They are with the Democrats.
    3 to have, to be with.
    Estoy con mucha sed I have a lot of thirst (I am very thirsty).
    4 to be staying with, to abide with.

    Spanish-English dictionary > estar con

  • 86 alberca

    (Sp. model spelled same [alpérka] < Arabic al-birka 'the pool or pond')
       West Texas: 1892. According to Clark, "a water hole or watering place." The DRAE indicates that this term can refer to small accumulations of water, such as a pond or a pool, or a larger source, such as a dam or reservoir. In dry, dusty west Texas (as well as in other desert regions), an alberca was a welcome sight to thirsty cowmen and cattle.

    Vocabulario Vaquero > alberca

  • 87 bebedero

    (Sp. model spelled same [bepeðéro] < beber < Latin bibere 'to drink' plus Spanish derivational suffix - dero; drinking place)
       Hoy gives a general and a specific meaning for this term. Broadly, it refers to an artificial receptacle for watering animals. On the Sonoran Desert, it refers to "a concrete water trough, generally connected to a corral and windmill." The DRAE defines this term as a drinking place for birds. Santamaría indicates that in Mexico the term refers to a watering hole for all kinds of animals. The southwestern or borderlands cowhand was pleased to find a bebedero, whether manmade or natural, for his thirsty dogies.

    Vocabulario Vaquero > bebedero

  • 88 buffalo

    ( búfalo (búfalo] < Late Latin bufalus < Latin bübulus 'cattle; beef')
       West: 1848. The North American bison ( Bison americanus). According to Watts, Nuñez Cabeza de Vaca was the first to apply erroneously the Spanish term búfalo to the American bison because it was similar in appearance to the Indian or African wild ox or buffalo. The buffalo played an important role in the exploration and settlement of the Old West. According to Josiah Gregg ( Commerce of the Prairies), it was a primary source of meat for early expeditions. It was also widely hunted by Indians for its meat and hide. As a result of the animal's importance in the Southwest, the term, originally applied by the Spaniards, became highly integrated into English. This is evidenced by its use as a verb (first referenced in English in central Texas in 1896), meaning to frighten or confuse (or, by extension, to strike on the head with the barrel of a gun), as well as by its use in more than thirty compounds that refer to Southwestern plant life (buffalo berry, buffalo clover, buffalo pea) and animal life (buffalo fish, buffalo wolf). Some compounds containing buffalo also pertain to the history of the Southwest: "buffalo cider" or "buffalo gall" was a liquid found in the buffalo's stomach that could save a thirsty explorer, "buffalo fever" was the excitement felt at the onset of a "buffalo hunt," and "buffalo wood," "buffalo fuel" or "buffalo chips" referred to dried buffalo manure, used to start fires. Santamaría and the DRAE both point out the erroneous use of búfalo in North America to refer to the American bison.
        Alternate forms: buff, buffler, bufler.

    Vocabulario Vaquero > buffalo

  • 89 rodeo cool

       Beer that is not cold, but considered cool enough to drink when one is especially thirsty, such as at a rodeo.

    Vocabulario Vaquero > rodeo cool

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