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1 burst
past tense, past participle; see burstburst vb reventar / rompersetr[bɜːst]2 (explosion) estallido, explosión nombre femenino3 (of activity, anger) arranque nombre masculino4 (of speed) arrancada5 (of applause) salva6 (of gunfire) ráfaga1 (balloon, pipe) reventar; (tyre) pinchar, reventar1 (balloon, pipe) reventarse; (tyre) pincharse, reventarse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto burst forth (water) brotar, salir a chorroto burst into flames estallar en llamasto burst into song empezar a cantarto burst into tears echarse a llorarto burst out crying/laughing echarse a llorar/reírto burst its banks (river) salirse de madre1) : reventarse (dícese de una llanta o un globo), estallar (dícese de obuses o fuegos artificiales), romperse (dícese de un dique)2)to burst in : irrumpir en3)to burst into : empezar a, echar ato burst into tears: echarse a llorarburst vt: reventarburst n1) explosion: estallido m, explosión f, reventón m (de una llanta)2) outburst: arranque m (de actividad, de velocidad), arrebato m (de ira), salva f (de aplausos)n.• arranque s.m.• estallido s.m.• explosión s.f.• reventón s.m.• ráfaga (TEL, ELN) s.f.• salva s.f.pret., p.p.(Preterito definido y participio pasivo de "to burst")v.(§ p.,p.p.: burst) = estallar v.• reventar v.
I
1. bɜːrst, bɜːst(past & past p burst) intransitive verb1) \<\<balloon/tire\>\> reventarse*; \<\<pipe\>\> reventar*, romperse*; \<\<dam\>\> romperse*to burst open — abrirse* de golpe
2) ( move suddenly) (+ adv compl)
2.
vt \<\<balloon/bubble\>\> reventar*the river burst its banks — el río se desbordó or se salió de madre
Phrasal Verbs:- burst in
II
1)a) ( short surge) ( of applause) salva f; ( of activity) arrebato m, arranque mthere was a burst of laughter from the table in the corner — se oyeron carcajadas en la mesa del rincón
b) ( of gunfire) ráfaga f2) ( of pipe) rotura f[bɜːst] (vb: pt, pp burst)1. N1) (in pipe) reventón m2) [of shell etc] estallido m, explosión f ; [of shots] ráfaga f2.ADJa burst tyre — un neumático reventado, una llanta pinchada (LAm)
3.VT [+ pipe, balloon, bag, tyre, bubble] reventar; [+ banks, dam] romper•
to burst open a door — abrir una puerta de golpe4.VI [balloon, tyre, boil, boiler, bubble, pipe] reventar(se); [dam] romperse; [shell, firework] explotar, estallar; [storm] desatarse, desencadenarse; (fig) [heart] partirse•
bursting at the seams — lleno a reventar•
I was bursting to tell you * — reventaba de ganas de decírtelo•
to be bursting with pride — no caber dentro de sí de orgullo- burst in* * *
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1. [bɜːrst, bɜːst](past & past p burst) intransitive verb1) \<\<balloon/tire\>\> reventarse*; \<\<pipe\>\> reventar*, romperse*; \<\<dam\>\> romperse*to burst open — abrirse* de golpe
2) ( move suddenly) (+ adv compl)
2.
vt \<\<balloon/bubble\>\> reventar*the river burst its banks — el río se desbordó or se salió de madre
Phrasal Verbs:- burst in
II
1)a) ( short surge) ( of applause) salva f; ( of activity) arrebato m, arranque mthere was a burst of laughter from the table in the corner — se oyeron carcajadas en la mesa del rincón
b) ( of gunfire) ráfaga f2) ( of pipe) rotura f -
2 blow
I bləu noun1) (a stroke or knock: a blow on the head.) golpe2) (a sudden misfortune: Her husband's death was a real blow.) golpe (duro)
II bləu past tense - blew; verb1) ((of a current of air) to be moving: The wind blew more strongly.) soplar2) ((of eg wind) to cause (something) to move in a given way: The explosion blew off the lid.) llevarse3) (to be moved by the wind etc: The door must have blown shut.) salir volando/despedido, moverse con el aire, viento, i2etc/i2.4) (to drive air (upon or into): Please blow into this tube!) soplar5) (to make a sound by means of (a musical instrument etc): He blew the horn loudly.) tocar, hacer sonar•- blowhole- blow-lamp
- blow-torch
- blowout
- blowpipe
- blow one's top
- blow out
- blow over
- blow up
blow1 n golpeblow2 vb1. soplar2. volar / llevar3. tocar / sonar / pitartr[bləʊ]1 (wind) soplar3 (fuse) fundirse4 (tyre) reventarse5 (puff, pant) jadear\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLblow you! familiar ¡vete a hacer puñetas!I'll be blowed! architecture ¡válgame Dios!to blow one's nose sonarse las naricesto blow one's top perder los estribosto blow the lid off something desvelar algoto blow hot and cold vacilar, no saber qué hacerto blow somebody's mind familiar flipar a alguiento blow it familiar pifiarla, cagarla■ now you've blown it! ¡ahora la has cagado!to be blown up with pride ser un,-a engreído,-a, estar henchido,-a de orgullo————————tr[bləʊ]1 golpe nombre masculino\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto strike somebody a blow asestar un golpe a alguiento come to blows llegar a las manos1) : soplar, volarthe wind is blowing hard: el viento está soplando con fuerzait blew out the door: voló por la puertathe window blew shut: se cerró la ventana2) sound: sonarthe whistle blew: sonó el silbato3)to blow out : fundirse (dícese de un fusible eléctrico), reventarse (dícese de una llanta)blow vt1) : soplar, echarto blow smoke: echar humo2) sound: tocar, sonar3) shape: soplar, dar forma ato blow glass: soplar vidrio4) bungle: echar a perderblow n1) puff: soplo m, soplido m2) gale: vendaval f3) hit, stroke: golpe m4) calamity: golpe m, desastre m5)to come to blows : llegar a las manosn.• revés (Suerte) s.m.n.• bofetada s.f.• choque s.m.• estocada s.f.• golpazo s.m.• golpe s.m.• golpecito s.m.• mandoble s.m.• porrada s.f.• porrazo s.m.• ramalazo s.m.• sopapo s.m.• sopetón s.m.• soplo s.m.• tarja s.f.• trancazo s.m.• trastazo s.m.• trompada s.f.v.(§ p.,p.p.: blew, blown) = aventar v.• sonar v.• soplar v.• ventear v.bləʊ
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1)a) ( stroke) golpe mto come to blows — llegar* a las manos
at a (single) blow — de un golpe, a la vez
b) (shock, setback) golpe m2) ( action) soplo m, soplido mto give one's nose a blow — sonarse* la nariz
II
1.
1) ( propel) soplarthe plane was blown off course — el viento sacó el avión de su curso; wind I 1)
2)a) ( make by blowing)to blow bubbles — hacer* pompas de jabón
b) ( clear)to blow one's nose — sonarse* la nariz
c) ( play) \<\<note\>\> tocar*; \<\<signal\>\> dar*the referee blew the whistle — el árbitro tocó or hizo sonar el silbato or pito
to blow one's own trumpet o (AmE) horn — darse* bombo, tirarse flores
3)a) ( smash) \<\<bridge/safe\>\> volar*, hacer* saltarto blow somebody's head off — volarle* la tapa de los sesos a algn
to blow something sky high: this blows his theory sky high esto echa por tierra su teoría; if this goes off, we'll be blown sky high — como explote, saltamos por los aires
b) ( burn out) \<\<fuse\>\> fundir, hacer* saltar, quemarc) ( burst) \<\<gasket\>\> reventar*to blow one's top o lid — (colloq) explotar, ponerse* hecho una furia
4) (colloq)a) ( squander) \<\<money\>\> despilfarrar, tirarb) ( spoil)they were getting on well, but he blew it by starting to... — se estaban llevando bien, pero él lo echó todo a perder cuando empezó a...
I blew the oral test — la pifié en el oral (fam), la regué en el oral (Méx fam)
5) (past p blowed) (BrE colloq)blow me if she didn't make the same mistake! — ¿y no va y se equivoca otra vez?
2.
blow vi1)a) \<\<wind\>\> soplarto blow hot and cold — dar* una de cal y otra de arena
b) \<\<person\>\> soplarshe came up the stairs, puffing and blowing — subió las escaleras bufando y resoplando
2) ( be driven by wind)3) ( produce sound) \<\<whistle\>\> sonar*4) ( burn out) \<\<fuse\>\> fundirse, saltar, quemarse•Phrasal Verbs:- blow in- blow out- blow up
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[blǝʊ]N1) (=hit) golpe m ; (=slap) bofetada fa blow with a hammer/fist/elbow — un martillazo/un puñetazo/un codazo
to cushion or soften the blow — (lit) amortiguar el golpe; (fig) disminuir los efectos (de un desastre etc)
to deal or strike sb a blow — dar or asestar un golpe a algn
to strike a blow for freedom — (fig) dar un paso más hacia la libertad
to come to blows — (lit, fig) llegar a las manos
2) (fig) (=setback) golpe mthat's a blow! — ¡qué lástima!
II [blǝʊ] (pt blew) (pp blown)1. VT1) (=move by blowing) [wind etc] [+ leaves papers] hacer volarthe wind blew the ship towards the coast — el viento llevó or empujó el barco hacia la costa
2) [+ trumpet, whistle] tocar, sonar; [+ glass] soplar; [+ egg] vaciar (soplando)•
to blow smoke in sb's face or eyes — (lit) echar el humo en la cara or los ojos a algn; (US) (fig) engañar a algn- blow smoke up sb's ass- blow one's own trumpet- blow the whistle on sth/sb3) (=burn out, explode) [+ fuse] fundir, quemar; [+ tyre] reventar; [+ safe etc] volar•
to blow a matter wide open — destapar un asunto- blow the lid off sth- blow sb's mind- blow one's top- blow sth out of the water4) (=spoil, ruin)•
to blow it * — pifiarla *gaff IIInow you've blown it! * — ¡ahora sí que la has pifiado! *
5)• to blow money on sth * — malgastar dinero en algo
6) (esp US) *** (=fellate) mamársela a ***, hacer una mamada a ***7) (Drugs)8) * (in exclamations)blow me!, blow it!, well I'm blowed! — ¡caramba!
blow this rain! — ¡dichosa lluvia! *
I'll be blowed if... — que me cuelguen si... *
blow the expense! — ¡al cuerno el gasto! *
2. VIhot 2., wind I, 1., 1)2) [leaves etc] (with wind) volarthe door blew open/shut — se abrió/cerró la puerta con el viento
3) (=make sound) [trumpet, siren] sonar4) [fuse etc] fundirse, quemarse; [tyre] reventar5) ** (=leave) largarse *, pirarla (Sp) *3. N1) [of breath] soplo m2) (Brit) ** (=marijuana) maría ** f ; (US) (=cocaine) coca ** f, perico ** m4.CPDblow drier, blow dryer N — secador m de pelo
to give sb a blow job — mamársela or chupársela a algn ***
- blow in- blow off- blow out- blow up* * *[bləʊ]
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1)a) ( stroke) golpe mto come to blows — llegar* a las manos
at a (single) blow — de un golpe, a la vez
b) (shock, setback) golpe m2) ( action) soplo m, soplido mto give one's nose a blow — sonarse* la nariz
II
1.
1) ( propel) soplarthe plane was blown off course — el viento sacó el avión de su curso; wind I 1)
2)a) ( make by blowing)to blow bubbles — hacer* pompas de jabón
b) ( clear)to blow one's nose — sonarse* la nariz
c) ( play) \<\<note\>\> tocar*; \<\<signal\>\> dar*the referee blew the whistle — el árbitro tocó or hizo sonar el silbato or pito
to blow one's own trumpet o (AmE) horn — darse* bombo, tirarse flores
3)a) ( smash) \<\<bridge/safe\>\> volar*, hacer* saltarto blow somebody's head off — volarle* la tapa de los sesos a algn
to blow something sky high: this blows his theory sky high esto echa por tierra su teoría; if this goes off, we'll be blown sky high — como explote, saltamos por los aires
b) ( burn out) \<\<fuse\>\> fundir, hacer* saltar, quemarc) ( burst) \<\<gasket\>\> reventar*to blow one's top o lid — (colloq) explotar, ponerse* hecho una furia
4) (colloq)a) ( squander) \<\<money\>\> despilfarrar, tirarb) ( spoil)they were getting on well, but he blew it by starting to... — se estaban llevando bien, pero él lo echó todo a perder cuando empezó a...
I blew the oral test — la pifié en el oral (fam), la regué en el oral (Méx fam)
5) (past p blowed) (BrE colloq)blow me if she didn't make the same mistake! — ¿y no va y se equivoca otra vez?
2.
blow vi1)a) \<\<wind\>\> soplarto blow hot and cold — dar* una de cal y otra de arena
b) \<\<person\>\> soplarshe came up the stairs, puffing and blowing — subió las escaleras bufando y resoplando
2) ( be driven by wind)3) ( produce sound) \<\<whistle\>\> sonar*4) ( burn out) \<\<fuse\>\> fundirse, saltar, quemarse•Phrasal Verbs:- blow in- blow out- blow up -
3 reventar
reventar ( conjugate reventar) verbo intransitivo 1 [ globo] to burst, pop; [ neumático] to blow out, burst; [ampolla/tubería] to burst; [ ola] to break 2◊ si sigue comiendo así, va a reventar if he carries on eating like that, he'll burst!verbo transitivo ‹globo/neumático› to burst reventarse verbo pronominal ‹ ampolla› to burst
reventar
I verbo intransitivo
1 (un globo, una rueda) to burst
2 (un caballo) to die of exhaustion
3 (una situación) to blow up, (una persona) to explode: está que revienta, he is fuming
reventábamos de orgullo, we were bursting with pride
4 fam (de deseos, ganas) to be dying: revienta de ganas de preguntarnos, he is dying to ask us
II verbo transitivo
1 (a un caballo) to ride to death
2 (una propuesta, huelga) to break
3 (molestar mucho, enfadar) to annoy, bother: le revienta que le lleven la contraria, he hates it when people cross him
4 (un globo, las costuras) to burst
5 (una puerta, cerradura, ventana, caja fuerte: con explosivos) to blow open (: con palanca) to lever open ' reventar' also found in these entries: Spanish: estallar - revienta English: blow - burst - pop - rupture - seam - split - pound -
4 revienta
Del verbo reventar: ( conjugate reventar) \ \
revienta es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativoMultiple Entries: reventar revienta
reventar ( conjugate reventar) verbo intransitivo 1 [ globo] to burst, pop; [ neumático] to blow out, burst; [ampolla/tubería] to burst; [ ola] to break 2◊ si sigue comiendo así, va a revienta if he carries on eating like that, he'll burst!verbo transitivo ‹globo/neumático› to burst reventarse verbo pronominal ‹ ampolla› to burst
revienta,◊ revientas, etc see reventar
reventar
I verbo intransitivo
1 (un globo, una rueda) to burst
2 (un caballo) to die of exhaustion
3 (una situación) to blow up, (una persona) to explode: está que revienta, he is fuming
reventábamos de orgullo, we were bursting with pride
4 fam (de deseos, ganas) to be dying: revienta de ganas de preguntarnos, he is dying to ask us
II verbo transitivo
1 (a un caballo) to ride to death
2 (una propuesta, huelga) to break
3 (molestar mucho, enfadar) to annoy, bother: le revienta que le lleven la contraria, he hates it when people cross him
4 (un globo, las costuras) to burst
5 (una puerta, cerradura, ventana, caja fuerte: con explosivos) to blow open (: con palanca) to lever open ' revienta' also found in these entries: Spanish: reventar English: piss
См. также в других словарях:
burst\ with\ pride — • burst with joy • burst with pride v. phr. To be so full of the feeling of joy or pride that one cannot refrain from showing one s exuberant feelings. Armstrong and Aldrin burst with pride when they stepped out on the moon in July, 1969 … Словарь американских идиом
burst with joy — or[pride] {v. phr.} To be so full of the feeling of joy or pride that one cannot refrain from showing one s exuberant feelings. * /Armstrong and Aldrin burst with pride when they stepped out on the moon in July, 1969./ … Dictionary of American idioms
burst with joy — or[pride] {v. phr.} To be so full of the feeling of joy or pride that one cannot refrain from showing one s exuberant feelings. * /Armstrong and Aldrin burst with pride when they stepped out on the moon in July, 1969./ … Dictionary of American idioms
burst\ with\ joy — • burst with joy • burst with pride v. phr. To be so full of the feeling of joy or pride that one cannot refrain from showing one s exuberant feelings. Armstrong and Aldrin burst with pride when they stepped out on the moon in July, 1969 … Словарь американских идиом
burst — I n. series of shots 1) to fire a burst at outbreak 2) a sudden burst 3) in bursts misc. 4) she finally finished the job in/with a sudden burst of energy II v. 1) (d; intr.) to burst into (the mob burst into the room; to burst into flames; to… … Combinatory dictionary
burst — [[t]bɜ͟ː(r)st[/t]] ♦♦♦ bursts, bursting (The form burst is used in the present tense and is the past tense and past participle.) 1) V ERG If something bursts or if you burst it, it suddenly breaks open or splits open and the air or other… … English dictionary
pride — I n. 1) to take pride in 2) to hurt smb. s pride 3) civic; fierce, great, strong; injured, wounded pride (to take great pride in one s children) 4) the pride to + inf. (do they have enough pride to defend their principles?) 5) (misc.) to appeal… … Combinatory dictionary
burst at the seams — {v. phr.}, {informal} To be too full or too crowded. * /John ate so much he was bursting at the seams./ * /Mary s album was so full of pictures it was bursting at the seams./ … Dictionary of American idioms
burst at the seams — {v. phr.}, {informal} To be too full or too crowded. * /John ate so much he was bursting at the seams./ * /Mary s album was so full of pictures it was bursting at the seams./ … Dictionary of American idioms
burst — burst1 [bə:st US bə:rst] v past tense and past participle burst ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(break open)¦ 2 be bursting with something 3¦(move suddenly)¦ 4 burst open 5 be bursting to do something 6 be bursting 7 burst somebody s bubble 8 burst its banks Phrasal… … Dictionary of contemporary English
burst — 01. The Asian economic bubble apparently [burst] in the mid 1990s. 02. She had a blister on her heel that [burst] when she put on her new shoes. 03. The children [burst] out laughing when a dog ran into their classroom. 04. Our basement got… … Grammatical examples in English