-
1 recover
1) (to become well again; to return to good health etc: He is recovering from a serious illness; The country is recovering from an economic crisis.) recuperarse2) (to get back: The police have recovered the stolen jewels; He will recover the cost of the repairs through the insurance.) recuperar3) (to get control of (one's actions, emotions etc) again: The actor almost fell over but quickly recovered (his balance).) recuperar(se)•- recoveryrecover vb recuperarse / reponersetr[rɪ'kʌvəSMALLr/SMALL]1 (gen) recuperar; (dead body) rescatar1 recuperarse, reponerse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto recover consciousness recobrar el conocimientorecover [ri'kʌvər] vtregain: recobrarrecover virecuperate: recuperarsev.• curarse v.v.• alentar v.• cobrar v.• ganar un pleito v.• mejorarse v.• recaudar v.• recobrar v.• recuperar v.• reintegrar v.• reponer v.(§pres: -pongo, -pones...) pret: -pus-pp: -puestofut/c: -pondr-•)• reponerse v.• rescatar v.• restablecer v.• retradeshacer v.(§pres: -hago, -haces...) pret: -hic-pp: -hechofut/c: -har-•)• sanar v.rɪ'kʌvər, rɪ'kʌvə(r)
1.
a) ( regain) \<\<consciousness/strength\>\> recuperar, recobrar; \<\<investment/position/lead\>\> recuperarhe was on the point of losing his temper, but recovered himself — estuvo a punto de perder los estribos, pero se contuvo
b) ( retrieve) rescatarc) ( reclaim) \<\<metal/glass/paper\>\> recuperard) ( Law)to recover damages — obtener* indemnización por daños y perjuicios
2.
via) \<\<person\>\>to recover (FROM something) — reponerse* or restablecerse* or recuperarse (de algo)
b) \<\<economy/industry\>\> recuperarse, repuntar, reactivarse[rɪ'kʌvǝ(r)]1. VT1) (=regain) [+ faculty] recuperar, recobrar frmhe fought to recover his balance — luchó por recuperar or frm recobrar el equilibrio
composurerecovering himself with a masterly effort he resumed his narrative — reponiéndose or sobreponiéndose con un esfuerzo sobrehumano, terminó su narración
2) (=retrieve) [+ bodies, wreck] rescatar; [+ debt] cobrar; [+ stolen property, costs, losses, investment] recuperar; (Jur) [+ money] recuperar; [+ property] reivindicar, recuperar; (Comput) [+ data] recobrar, recuperar3) (=reclaim) [+ materials] recuperar2. VI1) (after accident, illness) reponerse, recuperarse, restablecerse ( from de); (after shock, blow) sobreponerse, reponerse ( from de)he recovered from being 4-2 down to reach the semi-finals — se recuperó tras ir perdiendo 4-2 y llegó a las semifinales
2) (Econ) [currency] recuperarse, restablecerse; [shares, stock market] volver a subir; [economy] reactivarse* * *[rɪ'kʌvər, rɪ'kʌvə(r)]
1.
a) ( regain) \<\<consciousness/strength\>\> recuperar, recobrar; \<\<investment/position/lead\>\> recuperarhe was on the point of losing his temper, but recovered himself — estuvo a punto de perder los estribos, pero se contuvo
b) ( retrieve) rescatarc) ( reclaim) \<\<metal/glass/paper\>\> recuperard) ( Law)to recover damages — obtener* indemnización por daños y perjuicios
2.
via) \<\<person\>\>to recover (FROM something) — reponerse* or restablecerse* or recuperarse (de algo)
b) \<\<economy/industry\>\> recuperarse, repuntar, reactivarse -
2 deuda
deuda sustantivo femeninoa) (Com, Fin) debt;contraer una deuda to run up o (frml) contract a debt; deuda pública public debt (AmE), national debt (BrE)b) ( compromiso moral):
deudo,-a m frml relative: se convocó a los deudos para la lectura del testamento, the relatives were called to hear the reading of the will
deuda sustantivo femenino debt: tiene conmigo una deuda de dos mil pesetas, she owes me two thousand pesetas (moral) estamos en deuda con ellos, we are indebted to them
deuda pública, public debt ' deuda' also found in these entries: Spanish: amortizar - amortización - cancelar - cobrar - cobro - condonar - deber - débito - liquidar - liquidación - perdonar - prometida - prometido - recargar - reembolsar - saldar - saldo - satisfacción - satisfacer - solventar - trampa - vencida - vencido - abultado - consolidar - impago - nacional - pagar - zanjar English: amortize - bad debt - chip away - clear - contract - debt - discharge - due - indebted - lien - oblige - outstanding - overdue - owing - paid - pay - pay off - recover - redeem - repay - reschedule - restructure - satisfy - settle - settlement - unpaid - unsettled - write off - foreign -
3 cobro
Del verbo cobrar: ( conjugate cobrar) \ \
cobro es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
cobró es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativoMultiple Entries: cobrar cobro
cobrar ( conjugate cobrar) verbo transitivo 1◊ nos cobran 30.000 pesos de alquiler they charge us 30,000 pesos in rent;cobro algo por algo/hacer algo to charge sth for sth/doing sth; vino a cobro el alquiler she came for the rent o to collect the rent; ¿me cobra estas cervezas? can I pay for these beers, please?; me cobró el vino dos veces he charged me twice for the wine ‹ pensión› to draw;◊ cobra 2.000 euros al mes he earns/draws 2,000 euros a month;todavía no hemos cobrado junio we still haven't been paid for June 2a) (Chi) ( pedir):3 ( adquirir) ‹ fuerzas› to gather;◊ cobro fama/importancia become famous/important4 (period) ‹vidas/víctimas› to claim verbo intransitivoa) cobro por algo/hacer algo to charge for sth/doing sth;◊ ¿me cobra, por favor? can you take for this, please?, can I pay, please?;llámame por cobro (Chi, Méx) call collect (AmE), reverse the charges (BrE) cobrarse verbo pronominala) ( recibir dinero):◊ tenga, cóbrese here you are;cóbrese las cervezas can you take for the beers, please?
cobro sustantivo masculino (de sueldo, pensión):b) (Telec):
cobrar
I verbo transitivo
1 (pedir un precio) to charge (exigir el pago) to collect (recibir el pago de una deuda) to recover
2 (un cheque, un billete de lotería) to cash (recibir el salario) to earn: aún no han cobrado el sueldo, they still haven't been paid their salary
cobra un buen sueldo, he earns a good salary
3 figurado (alcanzar, lograr) to gain, get: su proyecto cobra hoy importancia, today his project is becoming important
cobrar ánimos, to take heart
4 (empezar a sentir) cobrar afecto a alguien/algo, to become very fond of sb/sthg
II verbo intransitivo
1 (exigir un pago) ¿me cobra, por favor? I'd like to pay now, please
nunca me cobra, he never charges me
2 (recibir el salario) to be paid
3 fam (recibir una zurra) to catch it, get it
cobro sustantivo masculino (de un pago, deuda) collection (de un cheque) cashing Locuciones: Tel llamar a cobro revertido, to reverse the charges, US to call collect ' cobro' also found in these entries: Spanish: llamada - cobrar - conferencia - llamar - menos English: bad debt - cash in - claim - collect - collection - extra - payment - reverse - transfer - call - debit - levy
См. также в других словарях:
Recover — Re*cov er (r?*k?v ?r), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Recovered} ( ?rd); p. pr. & vb. n. {Recovering}. ] [OE. recoveren, OF. recovrer, F. recouvrer, from L. recuperare; pref. re re + a word of unknown origin. Cf.{Recuperate}.] [1913 Webster] 1. To get or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Recover arms — Recover Re*cov er (r?*k?v ?r), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Recovered} ( ?rd); p. pr. & vb. n. {Recovering}. ] [OE. recoveren, OF. recovrer, F. recouvrer, from L. recuperare; pref. re re + a word of unknown origin. Cf.{Recuperate}.] [1913 Webster] 1. To… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Debt settlement — Debt settlement, also known as debt arbitration, debt negotiation or credit settlement, is an approach to debt reduction in which the debtor and creditor agree on a reduced balance that will be regarded as payment in full.[1] Debt settlement is… … Wikipedia
debt — n [Old French dette, ultimately from Latin debita, plural of debitum debt, from neuter of debitus, past participle of debere to owe] 1: something owed: as a: a specific sum of money or a performance due another esp. by agreement (as a loan… … Law dictionary
recover — re·cov·er /ri kə vər/ vt 1: to get back or get back an equivalent for recover costs through higher prices 2 a: to obtain or get back (as damages, satisfaction for a debt, or property) through a judgment or decree recover damages in a tort action… … Law dictionary
Debt — • That which is owed or due to another; in general, anything which one person is under an obligation to pay or render to another Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Debt Debt … Catholic encyclopedia
Debt — Debt, n. [OE. dette, F. dette, LL. debita, fr. L. debitus owed, p. p. of debere to owe, prop., to have on loan; de + habere to have. See {Habit}, and cf. {Debit}, {Due}.] 1. That which is due from one person to another, whether money, goods, or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Debt of nature — Debt Debt, n. [OE. dette, F. dette, LL. debita, fr. L. debitus owed, p. p. of debere to owe, prop., to have on loan; de + habere to have. See {Habit}, and cf. {Debit}, {Due}.] 1. That which is due from one person to another, whether money, goods … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
debt collector — UK US noun [C] ► COMMERCE a person or company that collects payments from people who have failed to pay the money they owe: »After she became overdrawn, the bank closed her account and threatened her with debt collectors, credit reference… … Financial and business terms
debt — n. 1) to contract, incur, run up a debt; to get into, go into debt 2) to collect, recover a debt 3) to discharge, pay (off), settle; wipe out; write off a debt 4) to cancel; repudiate a debt 5) a bad; outstanding, unsettled debt 6) a business;… … Combinatory dictionary
debt — A sum of money due by certain and express agreement. A specified sum of money owing to one person from another, including not only obligation of debtor to pay but right of creditor to receive and enforce payment. State v. Ducey, 25 Ohio App.2d 50 … Black's law dictionary