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1 flinch
flin(to make a sudden movement back or away in fear, pain etc: He flinched away from the sudden heat.) encogerse, estremecersetr[flɪnʧ]1 (wince) estremecerseflinch ['flɪnʧ] vi1) wince: estremecerse2) recoil: recular, retrocederv.• retroceder v.flɪntʃintransitive verb ( wince) estremecerse*[flɪntʃ]VI1) (=shrink back) estremecerseI flinched when he touched me — cuando me tocó, me estremecí
he struck her hard but she did not flinch — la golpeó con fuerza, pero ni se inmutó
2) (=shirk)* * *[flɪntʃ]intransitive verb ( wince) estremecerse* -
2 noticia
noticia sustantivo femenino 1 ( información):◊ una noticia a piece o an item of news;buenas/malas noticias good/bad news; la última noticia del programa the final item on the news; una noticia de última hora a late o last-minute news item 2◊ noticias sustantivo femenino plural( provenientes de otra persona) we haven't had (any) news of himb) (Rad, TV) news
noticia sustantivo femenino
1 news sing: es una buena/mala noticia, it's good/bad news
mañana le daré la noticia, tomorrow I'll break the news to him
2 voy a ver las noticias, I'm going to watch the news ' noticia' also found in these entries: Spanish: abultar - alcance - aliento - anuncio - callar - cobertura - conmocionar - dar - desplomarse - divulgarse - ensombrecerse - escopetazo - evidenciar - excesivamente - expandirse - filtrar - filtración - filtrarse - halagüeña - halagüeño - helada - helado - improviso - inflar - pregonar - producir - propagar - recibir - resonancia - respiración - resumir - ruidosa - ruidoso - rumor - sensación - sentar - silenciar - sumir - transmitir - última - último - voz - a - acoger - acogida - actualidad - afectar - aguardar - anunciar - aturdimiento English: announcement - bedlam - bit - blue - bombshell - brief - buckle - deny - development - earthshattering - encouraging - flash - flinch - front-page - get - get about - get out - headline - hit - impact - item - juicy - lead story - let out - me - news - newsflash - out - outrage - overjoyed - piece - public - red-hot - release - report - rock - sensational - shatter - shock - shocking - sink in - slant - spread - spring - story - stunning - suppress - thunderbolt - unreliable - unwelcome
См. также в других словарях:
flinch from (doing) something — usually in negatives phrase to avoid dealing with a difficult responsibility or decision We won’t flinch from making tough decisions. Thesaurus: to avoid doing something, or to avoid somethingsynonym Main entry: flinch … Useful english dictionary
flinch from something — ˈflinch from sth | ˈflinch from doing sth derived (often used in negative sentences) to avoid thinking about or doing sth unpleasant • He never flinched from facing up to trouble. Main entry: ↑flinchderived … Useful english dictionary
flinch from doing something — ˈflinch from sth | ˈflinch from doing sth derived (often used in negative sentences) to avoid thinking about or doing sth unpleasant • He never flinched from facing up to trouble. Main entry: ↑flinchderived … Useful english dictionary
flinch from — avoid through fear or anxiety. → flinch … English new terms dictionary
flinch — [flıntʃ] v also flinch away [Date: 1500 1600; : Old French; Origin: flenchir [i] to turn aside ] 1.) to move your face or body away from someone or something because you are in pain, frightened, or upset flinch at ▪ She flinched at the touch of… … Dictionary of contemporary English
flinch´ing|ly — flinch «flihnch», verb, noun. –v.i. 1. to draw back (from a difficulty, danger, or duty): »to flinch from the responsibilities of life. SYNONYM(S): quail. See syn. under shrink. (Cf. ↑shrink) 2. to shrink under physical pain; … Useful english dictionary
flinch´er — flinch «flihnch», verb, noun. –v.i. 1. to draw back (from a difficulty, danger, or duty): »to flinch from the responsibilities of life. SYNONYM(S): quail. See syn. under shrink. (Cf. ↑shrink) 2. to shrink under physical pain; … Useful english dictionary
flinch — [ flıntʃ ] verb intransitive to make a sudden small movement because you are afraid, surprised, or in pain: Pamela flinched each time he yelled at her. flinch from (doing) something usually in negatives to avoid dealing with a difficult… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
flinch — ► VERB 1) make a quick, nervous movement as an instinctive reaction to fear or pain. 2) (flinch from) avoid through fear or anxiety. ► NOUN ▪ an act of flinching. ORIGIN originally in the sense «slink or sneak off»: from Old French flenchir turn… … English terms dictionary
flinch — [[t]flɪ̱ntʃ[/t]] flinches, flinching, flinched 1) VERB: usu neg If you flinch, you make a small sudden movement, especially when something surprises you or hurts you. Murat had looked into the eyes of the firing squad without flinching... The… … English dictionary
flinch — UK [flɪntʃ] / US verb [intransitive] Word forms flinch : present tense I/you/we/they flinch he/she/it flinches present participle flinching past tense flinched past participle flinched to make a sudden small movement because you are afraid,… … English dictionary