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101 decepcionarse
(v.) = be disappointed, become + disillusionedEx. 'I'd be disappointed to learn that my boss or subordinates -- or peers for that matter -- told tales out of school about me to others'.Ex. Some librarians become disillusioned and acquire negative attitudes toward the profession.* * *(v.) = be disappointed, become + disillusionedEx: 'I'd be disappointed to learn that my boss or subordinates -- or peers for that matter -- told tales out of school about me to others'.
Ex: Some librarians become disillusioned and acquire negative attitudes toward the profession.* * *vr -
102 poner los pelos de punta
to make one's hair stand on end* * *(v.) = bristle, scare + the living daylights out of, frighten + Nombre + to death, make + Posesivo + hair stand on end, scare + the hell out ofEx. In the course of reading this article, you may spot a factual error which makes you bristle, or you may think the writing is biased, but by now the ink has dried; all you can do is send a letter of complaint.Ex. Alfred Hitchcock dedicated himself to scaring the living daylights out of people with an oeuvre of taut, well-crafted mystery-thrillers.Ex. He didn't kill them, but frightened them to death and made them run away.Ex. He was most definitely not their kind of Republican - a moderate, a maverick; outspokenly full of opinions that made their hair stand on end.Ex. Moreover, if you happen to be suffering from dental phobia, where the idea of visiting a dentist's surgery scares the hell out of you, you will be glad to learn that 'do it yourself' dental veneer kits exist.* * *(v.) = bristle, scare + the living daylights out of, frighten + Nombre + to death, make + Posesivo + hair stand on end, scare + the hell out ofEx: In the course of reading this article, you may spot a factual error which makes you bristle, or you may think the writing is biased, but by now the ink has dried; all you can do is send a letter of complaint.
Ex: Alfred Hitchcock dedicated himself to scaring the living daylights out of people with an oeuvre of taut, well-crafted mystery-thrillers.Ex: He didn't kill them, but frightened them to death and made them run away.Ex: He was most definitely not their kind of Republican - a moderate, a maverick; outspokenly full of opinions that made their hair stand on end.Ex: Moreover, if you happen to be suffering from dental phobia, where the idea of visiting a dentist's surgery scares the hell out of you, you will be glad to learn that 'do it yourself' dental veneer kits exist. -
103 subordinado
adj.1 subordinate, noncommissioned, subaltern, subservient.2 subordinated, yielding, submissive.f. & m.underling, subordinate, servient.past part.past participle of spanish verb: subordinar.* * *1→ link=subordinar subordinar► adjetivo1 subordinate► nombre masculino,nombre femenino1 subordinate* * *(f. - subordinada)noun adj.* * *subordinado, -a1.ADJ subordinate2.SM / F subordinate* * *- da adjetivo/masculino y femenino subordinate* * *= secondary, subordinate, subordinate, underling, minion, member of the staff.Ex. In general title entries are regarded as secondary to author entries.Ex. Returning to government agencies, some agencies are treated as subordinate to a government, whilst others are entered independently.Ex. 'I'd be disappointed to learn that my boss or subordinates -- or peers for that matter -- told tales out of school about me to others'.Ex. The impassive Diane is portrayed early on as the office dragon lady, bossing about her underling.Ex. In general, a deity only accepts minions who have accomplished some great deed in service to the deity.Ex. There were at the time about 90 patients and 80 members of the staff with their families in the building.----* entidad subordinada = subordinate body.* ser subordinado = be dependent.* subordinado a = secondary to.* subordinado al tiempo = time-dependent.* * *- da adjetivo/masculino y femenino subordinate* * *= secondary, subordinate, subordinate, underling, minion, member of the staff.Ex: In general title entries are regarded as secondary to author entries.
Ex: Returning to government agencies, some agencies are treated as subordinate to a government, whilst others are entered independently.Ex: 'I'd be disappointed to learn that my boss or subordinates -- or peers for that matter -- told tales out of school about me to others'.Ex: The impassive Diane is portrayed early on as the office dragon lady, bossing about her underling.Ex: In general, a deity only accepts minions who have accomplished some great deed in service to the deity.Ex: There were at the time about 90 patients and 80 members of the staff with their families in the building.* entidad subordinada = subordinate body.* ser subordinado = be dependent.* subordinado a = secondary to.* subordinado al tiempo = time-dependent.* * *1 ‹personal› subordinate2 ‹oración› subordinatemasculine, femininesubordinate* * *
Del verbo subordinar: ( conjugate subordinar)
subordinado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
subordinado
subordinar
subordinado◊ -da adjetivo, masculino y femenino
subordinate
subordinar ( conjugate subordinar) verbo transitivo
to subordinate;
subordinado algo A algo to subordinate sth to sth
subordinado,-a adjetivo & sustantivo masculino y femenino subordinate
subordinar verbo transitivo to subordinate
' subordinado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
depender
- subordinada
- mandado
English:
averse
- delay
- depend
- enjoy
- imagine
- mention
- mind
- opposed
- stand
- subordinate
* * *subordinado, -a♦ adj2. Gram subordinate♦ nm,fsubordinate* * *I adj subordinateII m, subordinada f subordinate* * *subordinado, -da adj & n: subordinate -
104 כאן
כַּאַן(v. כָּא) here; now. Y.Ber.IV, 7c bot., a. e. כ׳ נתפללוכ׳ here (in this inn) did my father say the prayer of Bets.IV, 7 מִכַּ׳ ועד כ׳ from here to there (will I use). Ber.I, 2, a. fr. מכ׳ ואילך, v. אֵילֵךְ. Snh.IX, 1 ולאחר מכ׳ and subsequently; a. fr.מכ׳ אמרו (חכמים) from this originates what the scholars said. Ab. I, 5; a. fr.מִכַּ׳ ל־, מִכַּ׳ ש־ from this is derived, do we learn. Ber.64a מכ׳ לבעלוכ׳ from this (that Jacob is mentioned and not his ancestors) we learn that the owner of the beam must carry the heaviest side of it. B. Mets.87a מכ׳ שצדיקים אומריםוכ׳ from this we see that the righteous promise little ; a. fr.כ׳ … כ׳ here (in this case) …, there (in another place, in that case). Succ.44b; a. v. fr.Contr. כַּן, with pref. מ, מִיכַּן. Y.Ber.IV, 7c top (read:) כן ליִחיד כן לציבור in this case (when Levi disfavored many prayers), it is meant for individuals, in the other case, it is meant for congregations.Y. Erub.VII, 24b bot. מ׳ ומ׳ on both sides; a. fr. -
105 כַּאַן
כַּאַן(v. כָּא) here; now. Y.Ber.IV, 7c bot., a. e. כ׳ נתפללוכ׳ here (in this inn) did my father say the prayer of Bets.IV, 7 מִכַּ׳ ועד כ׳ from here to there (will I use). Ber.I, 2, a. fr. מכ׳ ואילך, v. אֵילֵךְ. Snh.IX, 1 ולאחר מכ׳ and subsequently; a. fr.מכ׳ אמרו (חכמים) from this originates what the scholars said. Ab. I, 5; a. fr.מִכַּ׳ ל־, מִכַּ׳ ש־ from this is derived, do we learn. Ber.64a מכ׳ לבעלוכ׳ from this (that Jacob is mentioned and not his ancestors) we learn that the owner of the beam must carry the heaviest side of it. B. Mets.87a מכ׳ שצדיקים אומריםוכ׳ from this we see that the righteous promise little ; a. fr.כ׳ … כ׳ here (in this case) …, there (in another place, in that case). Succ.44b; a. v. fr.Contr. כַּן, with pref. מ, מִיכַּן. Y.Ber.IV, 7c top (read:) כן ליִחיד כן לציבור in this case (when Levi disfavored many prayers), it is meant for individuals, in the other case, it is meant for congregations.Y. Erub.VII, 24b bot. מ׳ ומ׳ on both sides; a. fr. -
106 alive
1) (living and not dead: Queen Victoria was still alive in 1900.) vivo2) (full of activity: The town was alive with policemen on the day of the march.) animado, activo•- alive toalive adj vivotr[ə'laɪv]1 (not dead) vivo,-a2 (lively) vivo,-a, vivaz\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLalive and kicking vivo,-a y coleandoalive to something consciente de algoalive with lleno,-a de, infestado,-a delook alive! ¡espabílate!, ¡despabílate!alive [ə'laɪv] adj1) living: vivo, viviente2) lively: animado, activo3) active: vigente, en uso4) aware: conscientealive to the danger: consciente del peligroadj.• activo, -a adj.• animado, -a adj.• viviente adj.• vivo, -a adj.ə'laɪvadjective (pred)a) ( living) vivois he still alive? — ¿todavía vive or está vivo?
to bury somebody alive — enterrar* vivo a alguien
alive and kicking — (colloq) vivito y coleando (fam)
they were relieved to learn that she was alive and well — se enteraron con alivio de que estaba sana y salva
b) ( animated)c) (active, in existence)to keep something alive — \<\<tradition/memory\>\> mantener* vivo algo
d) ( aware)to be alive to something — \<\<to problem/possibility\>\> ser* sensible a algo, ser* or (Chi, Méx) estar* consciente de algo
[ǝ'laɪv]ADJ1) vivoto be alive — estar vivo, vivir
it's good to be alive! — ¡qué bueno es vivir!
to be still alive — vivir todavía; [dying person] estar todavía con vida
•
she plays as well as any pianist alive — toca tan bien como cualquier pianista del mundo•
he's the best footballer alive — es el mejor futbolista del mundo•
to bring a story alive — dar vida a una historia, animar una historia•
to be buried alive — ser enterrado vivo•
to burn sb alive — quemar a algn vivo•
the scene came alive as she described it — la escena se animaba or vivificaba al describirla ella•
we were being eaten alive by mosquitoes — los mosquitos nos comían vivos•
to keep sb alive — conservar a algn con vidato keep a memory alive — guardar vivo or fresco un recuerdo, hacer perdurar una memoria
•
man alive! — † ¡hombre!•
no man alive could do better — no lo podría hacer mejor nadie•
he managed to stay alive on fruit — logró sobrevivir comiendo frutasdead 1., 1)•
the prisoner must be taken alive — hay que capturar vivo or con vida al prisionero2) (fig) (=lively) activo, enérgicolook alive! — † * (=hurry) ¡date prisa!, ¡apúrate! (LAm)
3)• alive with — [+ insects] lleno de, hormigueante en
4) frmalive to — (=aware of) consciente de
•
I am alive to the danger — estoy consciente del peligro, me doy cuenta del peligro•
I am fully alive to the fact that... — soy consciente de que..., no ignoro que...•
I am fully alive to the honour you do me — soy plenamente consciente del honor que se me hace* * *[ə'laɪv]adjective (pred)a) ( living) vivois he still alive? — ¿todavía vive or está vivo?
to bury somebody alive — enterrar* vivo a alguien
alive and kicking — (colloq) vivito y coleando (fam)
they were relieved to learn that she was alive and well — se enteraron con alivio de que estaba sana y salva
b) ( animated)c) (active, in existence)to keep something alive — \<\<tradition/memory\>\> mantener* vivo algo
d) ( aware)to be alive to something — \<\<to problem/possibility\>\> ser* sensible a algo, ser* or (Chi, Méx) estar* consciente de algo
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107 angry
ˈæŋɡrɪ прил.
1) рассерженный, сердитый, недовольный, раздраженный;
разгневанный to become/get angry ≈ сердиться He was angry at/with his neighbor about the noisy party. ≈ Он ругал соседа за то, что тот устроил шумную вечеринку. We were angry at being disturbed. ≈ Мы рассердились, что нас потревожили. She was angry at/with me for being late. ≈ Он рассердился, что я опоздал. I was angry to learn of his refusal to help. ≈ Я рассердился на него за то, что он отказался помочь. We were angry that our request had been rejected. ≈ Мы разозлились на то, что нашу просьбу отклонили. be angry with smb. get angry at smth. make smb. angry Syn: irritated, exasperated
2) воспаленный, покрасневший, болезненный( о ране, язве и т. п.)
3) грозовой, штормовой( о погоде, небе и т.п.)сердитый, гневный;
яростный;
раздраженный - * voices сердитые голоса;
- * with smb. сердитый на кого-л.;
- to be * сердиться;
- to get * рассердиться;
- to make smb. * рассердить кого-л.;
- he was * at being kept waiting он был возмущен, что его заставили ждать;
- he was * with himself for having lost the set он проиграл сет и был недоволен собой;
- he will be * to learn that... он выйдет из себя, когда узнает, что... воспаленный, покрасневший, красный штормовой, бушующий, бурный, грозовойangry воспаленный, болезненный (о ране, язве и т. п.) ~ сердитый, раздраженный;
разгневанный;
to be angry (with smb.) сердиться (на кого-л.) ;
to get angry (at smth.) рассердиться (из-за чего-л.) ;
to make (smb.) angry рассердить (кого-л.)~ сердитый, раздраженный;
разгневанный;
to be angry (with smb.) сердиться (на кого-л.) ;
to get angry (at smth.) рассердиться (из-за чего-л.) ;
to make (smb.) angry рассердить (кого-л.)~ сердитый, раздраженный;
разгневанный;
to be angry (with smb.) сердиться (на кого-л.) ;
to get angry (at smth.) рассердиться (из-за чего-л.) ;
to make (smb.) angry рассердить (кого-л.) get: ~ становиться, делаться;
to get old стареть;
to get angry сердиться, рассердиться~ сердитый, раздраженный;
разгневанный;
to be angry (with smb.) сердиться (на кого-л.) ;
to get angry (at smth.) рассердиться (из-за чего-л.) ;
to make (smb.) angry рассердить (кого-л.) -
108 aterrorizar
v.1 to terrify.me aterrorizan las arañas I'm terrified of spidersel atracador aterrorizaba a sus víctimas the robber terrorized his victimsEl ruido asustó al caballo The noise frightened=startled the horse.2 to terrorize.* * *1 (gen) to terrify2 (terrorista) to terrorize1 to be terrified* * *verb1) to terrify2) terrorize* * *VT (=aterrar) to terrify; (Mil, Pol) to terrorize* * *verbo transitivo to terrorize* * *= terrorise [terrorize, -USA], horrify, terrify, scare + the living daylights out of, frighten + the living daylights out of, scare + the hell out of.Ex. Only majorities have the power to terrorize and subjugate minority groups.Ex. In the early nineteenth century the various education societies were horrified by what they found the people reading.Ex. The purpose of terrorism is to terrify.Ex. Alfred Hitchcock dedicated himself to scaring the living daylights out of people with an oeuvre of taut, well-crafted mystery-thrillers.Ex. Presumably they got their name from their habit of frightening the living daylights out of unsuspecting passers-by.Ex. Moreover, if you happen to be suffering from dental phobia, where the idea of visiting a dentist's surgery scares the hell out of you, you will be glad to learn that 'do it yourself' dental veneer kits exist.----* aterrorizar a Alguien = give + Nombre + the screaming abdabs, frighten + Nombre + to death.* aterrorizarse = panic.* * *verbo transitivo to terrorize* * *= terrorise [terrorize, -USA], horrify, terrify, scare + the living daylights out of, frighten + the living daylights out of, scare + the hell out of.Ex: Only majorities have the power to terrorize and subjugate minority groups.
Ex: In the early nineteenth century the various education societies were horrified by what they found the people reading.Ex: The purpose of terrorism is to terrify.Ex: Alfred Hitchcock dedicated himself to scaring the living daylights out of people with an oeuvre of taut, well-crafted mystery-thrillers.Ex: Presumably they got their name from their habit of frightening the living daylights out of unsuspecting passers-by.Ex: Moreover, if you happen to be suffering from dental phobia, where the idea of visiting a dentist's surgery scares the hell out of you, you will be glad to learn that 'do it yourself' dental veneer kits exist.* aterrorizar a Alguien = give + Nombre + the screaming abdabs, frighten + Nombre + to death.* aterrorizarse = panic.* * *aterrorizar [A4 ]vtto terrorize* * *
aterrorizar ( conjugate aterrorizar) verbo transitivo
to terrorize
aterrorizar verbo transitivo to terrify
Mil Pol to terrorize
' aterrorizar' also found in these entries:
English:
terrify
- terrorize
* * *♦ vtto terrify;me aterrorizan las arañas I'm terrified of spiders;el atracador aterrorizaba a sus víctimas the robber terrorized his victims* * *v/t1 terrify, petrify2 ( amenazar) terrorize* * *aterrorizar {21} vt1) : to terrify2) : to terrorize* * *aterrorizar vb2. (intimidar) to terrorize -
109 carilla dental
(n.) = dental veneerEx. Moreover, if you happen to be suffering from dental phobia, where the idea of visiting a dentist's surgery scares the hell out of you, you will be glad to learn that 'do it yourself' dental veneer kits exist.* * *(n.) = dental veneerEx: Moreover, if you happen to be suffering from dental phobia, where the idea of visiting a dentist's surgery scares the hell out of you, you will be glad to learn that 'do it yourself' dental veneer kits exist.
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110 cruce en barco
(n.) = boat rideEx. We learn that the island, 'a three-hour boat ride from Naples,' served as as a shelter for Italian Jews during the Second World War.* * *(n.) = boat rideEx: We learn that the island, 'a three-hour boat ride from Naples,' served as as a shelter for Italian Jews during the Second World War.
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111 dar pánico
v.1 to get panicked, to panic.Nos dio pánico We got panicked.2 to feel panic about.Nos dio pánico el accidente We felt panic about the accident.* * *(v.) = scare + the living daylights out of, frighten + the living daylights out of, dread, scare + the hell out ofEx. Alfred Hitchcock dedicated himself to scaring the living daylights out of people with an oeuvre of taut, well-crafted mystery-thrillers.Ex. Presumably they got their name from their habit of frightening the living daylights out of unsuspecting passers-by.Ex. At least it is the part most dreaded by employees and supervisors.Ex. Moreover, if you happen to be suffering from dental phobia, where the idea of visiting a dentist's surgery scares the hell out of you, you will be glad to learn that 'do it yourself' dental veneer kits exist.* * *(v.) = scare + the living daylights out of, frighten + the living daylights out of, dread, scare + the hell out ofEx: Alfred Hitchcock dedicated himself to scaring the living daylights out of people with an oeuvre of taut, well-crafted mystery-thrillers.
Ex: Presumably they got their name from their habit of frightening the living daylights out of unsuspecting passers-by.Ex: At least it is the part most dreaded by employees and supervisors.Ex: Moreover, if you happen to be suffering from dental phobia, where the idea of visiting a dentist's surgery scares the hell out of you, you will be glad to learn that 'do it yourself' dental veneer kits exist. -
112 dar un susto de muerte
(v.) = scare + the living daylights out of, frighten + the living daylights out of, frighten + Nombre + to death, scare + the hell out ofEx. Alfred Hitchcock dedicated himself to scaring the living daylights out of people with an oeuvre of taut, well-crafted mystery-thrillers.Ex. Presumably they got their name from their habit of frightening the living daylights out of unsuspecting passers-by.Ex. He didn't kill them, but frightened them to death and made them run away.Ex. Moreover, if you happen to be suffering from dental phobia, where the idea of visiting a dentist's surgery scares the hell out of you, you will be glad to learn that 'do it yourself' dental veneer kits exist.* * *(v.) = scare + the living daylights out of, frighten + the living daylights out of, frighten + Nombre + to death, scare + the hell out ofEx: Alfred Hitchcock dedicated himself to scaring the living daylights out of people with an oeuvre of taut, well-crafted mystery-thrillers.
Ex: Presumably they got their name from their habit of frightening the living daylights out of unsuspecting passers-by.Ex: He didn't kill them, but frightened them to death and made them run away.Ex: Moreover, if you happen to be suffering from dental phobia, where the idea of visiting a dentist's surgery scares the hell out of you, you will be glad to learn that 'do it yourself' dental veneer kits exist. -
113 dar un susto morrocotudo
(v.) = scare + the living daylights out of, frighten + the living daylights out of, frighten + Nombre + to death, scare + the hell out ofEx. Alfred Hitchcock dedicated himself to scaring the living daylights out of people with an oeuvre of taut, well-crafted mystery-thrillers.Ex. Presumably they got their name from their habit of frightening the living daylights out of unsuspecting passers-by.Ex. He didn't kill them, but frightened them to death and made them run away.Ex. Moreover, if you happen to be suffering from dental phobia, where the idea of visiting a dentist's surgery scares the hell out of you, you will be glad to learn that 'do it yourself' dental veneer kits exist.* * *(v.) = scare + the living daylights out of, frighten + the living daylights out of, frighten + Nombre + to death, scare + the hell out ofEx: Alfred Hitchcock dedicated himself to scaring the living daylights out of people with an oeuvre of taut, well-crafted mystery-thrillers.
Ex: Presumably they got their name from their habit of frightening the living daylights out of unsuspecting passers-by.Ex: He didn't kill them, but frightened them to death and made them run away.Ex: Moreover, if you happen to be suffering from dental phobia, where the idea of visiting a dentist's surgery scares the hell out of you, you will be glad to learn that 'do it yourself' dental veneer kits exist. -
114 fobia dental
(n.) = dental phobiaEx. Moreover, if you happen to be suffering from dental phobia, where the idea of visiting a dentist's surgery scares the hell out of you, you will be glad to learn that 'do it yourself' dental veneer kits exist.* * *(n.) = dental phobiaEx: Moreover, if you happen to be suffering from dental phobia, where the idea of visiting a dentist's surgery scares the hell out of you, you will be glad to learn that 'do it yourself' dental veneer kits exist.
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115 paseo en barco
(n.) = boat tour, boating, boat ride, boat cruiseEx. The visit includs a boat tour on the Muritzsee and a box lunch (with one soft drink).Ex. Regattas & boating in general have become a ritual statement of collective identity defined as a relation between people & territory.Ex. We learn that the island, 'a three-hour boat ride from Naples,' served as as a shelter for Italian Jews during the Second World War.Ex. A matchmaking boat cruise open only to male millionaires and 'good-looking and desirable' women is slated to set sail later this month.* * *(n.) = boat tour, boating, boat ride, boat cruiseEx: The visit includs a boat tour on the Muritzsee and a box lunch (with one soft drink).
Ex: Regattas & boating in general have become a ritual statement of collective identity defined as a relation between people & territory.Ex: We learn that the island, 'a three-hour boat ride from Naples,' served as as a shelter for Italian Jews during the Second World War.Ex: A matchmaking boat cruise open only to male millionaires and 'good-looking and desirable' women is slated to set sail later this month. -
116 persona muy trabajadora
(n.) = hard-working personEx. From the story, you can learn that a hard-working person can earn a lot of money.* * *(n.) = hard-working personEx: From the story, you can learn that a hard-working person can earn a lot of money.
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117 trayecto en barco
(n.) = boat rideEx. We learn that the island, 'a three-hour boat ride from Naples,' served as as a shelter for Italian Jews during the Second World War.* * *(n.) = boat rideEx: We learn that the island, 'a three-hour boat ride from Naples,' served as as a shelter for Italian Jews during the Second World War.
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118 с удивлением узнать(, что)
to be puzzled to learn (that …)We are puzzled to learn that you suggest making payments of the credit part of the contract price in accordance with a schedule of payments.
Дополнительный универсальный русско-английский словарь > с удивлением узнать(, что)
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119 с удивлением узнать(, что)
to be puzzled to learn (that …)We are puzzled to learn that you suggest making payments of the credit part of the contract price in accordance with a schedule of payments.
Дополнительный универсальный русско-английский словарь > с удивлением узнать(, что)
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120 узнать с удивлением(, что)
to be puzzled to learn (that …)We are puzzled to learn that you suggest making payments of the credit part of the contract price in accordance with a schedule of payments.
Дополнительный универсальный русско-английский словарь > узнать с удивлением(, что)
См. также в других словарях:
learn — W1S1 [lə:n US lə:rn] v past tense and past participle learned or learnt [lə:nt US lə:rnt] especially BrE ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(subject/skill)¦ 2¦(find out)¦ 3¦(remember)¦ 4¦(change your behaviour)¦ 5 somebody has learned their lesson 6 learn (something) the … Dictionary of contemporary English
learn — [ lɜrn ] (past tense and past participle learned [ lɜrnt ] ) verb *** 1. ) intransitive or transitive to gain knowledge or experience of something, for example by being taught: a bright girl who is already learning the alphabet research into how… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
That's So Raven — Format Family Teen sitcom Fantasy Created by Michael Poryes Susan Sherman … Wikipedia
learn */*/*/ — UK [lɜː(r)n] / US [lɜrn] verb Word forms learn : present tense I/you/we/they learn he/she/it learns present participle learning past tense learnt UK [lɜː(r)nt] / US [lɜrnt] or learned past participle learnt or learned Get it right: learn: Use… … English dictionary
learn — verb past tense and past participle learned or learnt especially BrE 1 SUBJECT/SKILL (I, T) to gain knowledge of a subject, or skill in an activity, by experience, by studying it, or by being taught: What s the best way to learn a language? |… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
learn — [[t]lɜ͟ː(r)n[/t]] ♦ learns, learning, learned, learnt (American English uses the form learned as the past tense and past participle. British English uses either learned or learnt.) 1) VERB If you learn something, you obtain knowledge or a skill… … English dictionary
learn — verb (learned; learning) Etymology: Middle English lernen, from Old English leornian; akin to Old High German lernēn to learn, Old English last footprint, Latin lira furrow, track Date: before 12th century transitive verb 1. a. (1) to gain… … New Collegiate Dictionary
learn — verb 1 gain knowledge/skill ADVERB ▪ a lot ▪ I learned a lot from my father. ▪ quickly, soon ▪ Children learn very quickly. ▪ … Collocations dictionary
learn*/*/*/ — [lɜːn] (past tense and past participle learnt [lɜːnt] learned; [lɜːnd] ) verb 1) [I/T] to gain knowledge or experience of something, for example by being taught What did you learn at school today?[/ex] The children are learning to swim this… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
That's Got His Own — Infobox The Wire episode caption = episode name = That s Got His Own episode no = 49 epigraph = That all there is to it? Bubbles teleplay = George Pelecanos story = Ed Burns and George Pelecanos writer = director = Joe Chappelle guest star = see… … Wikipedia
That's How Murder Snowballs — Infobox Television episode Title = Never Trust a Ghost Series = Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased) Caption = Season = 1 Episode = 5 Airdate = 19 October 1969 Production = 05 Writer = Ray Austin Director = Paul Dickson Guests = Michael Griffiths… … Wikipedia