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61 deshabituarse
1 to get out of the habit (a, of), give up (a, -)* * *VPR1) [de costumbre] to lose the habit2)deshabituarse de la droga — to kick one's drug habit, conquer one's drug addiction
* * *verbo pronominal to get out of the habitdeshabituarse a + inf — to get out of the habit of -ing
* * *verbo pronominal to get out of the habitdeshabituarse a + inf — to get out of the habit of -ing
* * *deshabituarse [ A18 ]to get out of the habitestoy deshabituada a este horario I'm not used to this schedule any moredeshabituarse A + INF to get out of the habit OF -INGme deshabitúo muy rápido a levantarme temprano I soon get out of the habit of getting up early* * *vprto break the habit, to get out of the habit (de of);le costaba deshabituarse del café she found it hard to do without her coffee* * *v/r break the habit;deshabituarse de fumar break the smoking habit
См. также в других словарях:
give up — {v.} 1a. To stop trying to keep; surrender; yield. * /The dog had the ball in his mouth and wouldn t give it up./ * /Jimmy is giving up his job as a newsboy when he goes back to school./ Compare: GIVE ONESELF UP, HAND OVER, LET GO(1a). Contrast:… … Dictionary of American idioms
give up — {v.} 1a. To stop trying to keep; surrender; yield. * /The dog had the ball in his mouth and wouldn t give it up./ * /Jimmy is giving up his job as a newsboy when he goes back to school./ Compare: GIVE ONESELF UP, HAND OVER, LET GO(1a). Contrast:… … Dictionary of American idioms
give — 1 verb past tense gavepast participle given PROVIDE/SUPPLY 1 (T) to provide or supply someone with something: give sb sth: Researchers were given a 10,000 grant to continue their work. | Can you give me a ride to the office on Tuesday? | He went… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
smoking — smok|ing S2 [ˈsməukıŋ US ˈsmouk ] n [U] the activity of breathing in tobacco smoke from a cigarette, pipe etc stop/quit/give up smoking ▪ I gave up smoking nearly ten years ago. ▪ The sign says No Smoking . ▪ a no smoking area ▪ the risks of… … Dictionary of contemporary English
give — givable, giveable, adj., n. givee, n. giver, n. /giv/, v., gave, given, giving, n. v.t. 1. to present voluntarily and without expecting compensation; bestow: to give a birthday present to someone. 2. to hand to someone: Give me that plate, please … Universalium
give — give1 W1S1 [gıv] v past tense gave [geıv] past participle given [ˈgıvən] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(present or money)¦ 2¦(put something in somebody s hand)¦ 3¦(let somebody do something)¦ 4¦(tell somebody something)¦ 5¦(make a movement/do an action)¦… … Dictionary of contemporary English
give — give1 [ gıv ] (past tense gave [ geıv ] ; past participle giv|en [ gıvn ] ) verb *** ▸ 1 provide someone with something ▸ 2 make someone owner of something ▸ 3 put medicine in someone ▸ 4 cause effect/experience ▸ 5 communicate ▸ 6 perform action … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
give — [[t]gɪv[/t]] v. gave, giv•en, giv•ing, n. 1) to present voluntarily and without expecting compensation: to give a birthday present to someone[/ex] 2) to hand to someone: Give me that plate, please[/ex] 3) to place in someone s care: I gave the… … From formal English to slang
smoking — noun (U) the habit or activity of breathing in tobacco smoke from a cigarette, pipe etc: The sign says No Smoking . | give up smoking (=stop): I gave up smoking nearly ten years ago. see also passive smoking … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
give up — verb 1. lose (s.th.) or lose the right to (s.th.) by some error, offense, or crime (Freq. 9) you ve forfeited your right to name your successor forfeited property • Syn: ↑forfeit, ↑throw overboard, ↑waiv … Useful english dictionary
give up — phrasal verb Word forms give up : present tense I/you/we/they give up he/she/it gives up present participle giving up past tense gave up past participle given up 1) [transitive] to stop doing something that you do regularly His wife finally… … English dictionary