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121 brick
brick [brɪk]1. nouna. brique f2. compounds[house] en brique(s)* * *[brɪk] 1.1) Construction brique f2) GB ( child's toy) cube m2.Phrasal Verbs:- brick up••it's like banging one's head against ou talking to a brick wall — autant parler à un mur
to run up against ou run into a brick wall — se heurter à un mur
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122 tegenaan
♦voorbeelden:〈 figuurlijk〉 ergens (veel) geld tegenaan gooien • spend a lot of money on something, put a lot of money into something〈 figuurlijk〉 ergens tegenaan hikken • shrink from something, not look forward to somethingergens (toevallig) tegenaan lopen • 〈 figuurlijk〉 hit/chance upon something, run into somethinghet andere huis staat er vlak tegenaan • the other house is right (up) against it -
123 brick
A nit's like banging one's head against ou talking to a brick wall autant parler à un mur ; to brick it ◑, to shit bricks ◑ avoir les jetons ◑ ; to put one's money into bricks and mortar investir dans la pierre ; to run up against ou run into a brick wall se heurter à un mur ; to be thick as a brick ○ être bête comme ses pieds.■ brick up:▶ brick [sth] up, brick up [sth] murer [fireplace, window] ; boucher [hole]. -
124 trouble
A n1 ¢ ( problems) ( gen) problèmes mpl ; ( specific) problème m ; ( personal) ennuis mpl ; that's the trouble là est le problème ; engine trouble problèmes mécaniques ; to cause ou give sb trouble [exam question] poser des problèmes à qn ; [person] créer des ennuis à qn ; his leg/car is giving him trouble il a des problèmes avec sa jambe/sa voiture ; this car has been nothing but trouble cette voiture ne m'a apporté que des ennuis ; to get sb into trouble créer des ennuis à qn ; to get ou run into all sorts of trouble [person, business] connaître ennui sur ennui ; to make trouble for oneself s'attirer des ennuis ; to be asking for trouble chercher des ennuis ; the/my etc trouble is that… le/mon etc problème c'est que… ; the trouble with you/them etc is that… l'ennui avec toi/eux etc c'est que… ; heart/kidney trouble ennuis mpl cardiaques/rénaux ; back trouble mal m de dos ; what's the trouble? qu'est-ce qui ne va pas? ; to have man ou woman trouble ○ avoir des problèmes de cœur ;2 ( difficulties) ( specific) difficulté f ; gen difficultés fpl ; without too much trouble sans trop de difficultés ; to be in ou get into trouble gen [person] avoir des ennuis ; [company, business] avoir des difficultés ; [climber, competitor] se trouver en difficulté ; to have trouble doing avoir du mal à faire ; you'll have no trouble finding a job tu n'auras aucun mal à trouver un emploi ; to get out of trouble se tirer d'affaire ; to get sb out of trouble tirer qn d'affaire ; to stay out of trouble éviter des ennuis ; in times of trouble dans les moments difficiles ;3 (effort, inconvenience) peine f ; it's not worth the trouble cela n'en vaut pas la peine ; to take the trouble to do se donner la peine de faire ; to go to the trouble of doing se donner le mal de faire ; to save sb/oneself the trouble of doing épargner à qn/s'épargner la peine de faire ; he put me to the trouble of doing à cause de lui j'ai été obligé de faire ; to go to a lot of trouble se donner beaucoup de mal ; I don't want to put you to any trouble je ne veux pas te déranger ; it's no trouble cela ne me dérange pas ; to be more trouble than it's worth donner plus de mal qu'il n'en vaut la peine ; not to be any trouble [child, animal] être sage ; [task] ne poser aucun problème ; all that trouble for nothing tout ce mal pour rien ; it was a lot of trouble cela n'a pas été facile ; it's less/more trouble to do it this way c'est moins/plus compliqué de faire ça comme ça ; nothing is too much trouble for him il est très serviable ; leave it, it's too much trouble laisse, c'est trop pénible ; if it's too much trouble, say so si c'est trop ennuyeux, dis-le-moi ; all the trouble and expense tous les dérangements et toutes les dépenses ;4 ( discord) ( gen) problèmes mpl, histoires ○ fpl ; ( with personal involvement) ennuis mpl ; ( between groups) conflits mpl ; ( disturbance) incidents mpl ; ( reaction of displeasure) remous m ; to cause trouble between the two factions créer des conflits entre les deux factions ; I don't want any trouble je ne veux pas d'ennuis ; there'll be trouble il y aura du remous ; to expect trouble [police, pub landlord] s'attendre à des incidents ; to be looking for trouble [agitator, thug] chercher les ennuis ; to get into trouble [schoolchild, employee] s'attirer des ennuis ; to make trouble faire des histoires ; it will lead to trouble ça va mal finir ; here comes trouble! hum voilà les ennuis qui arrivent! ; he looks like trouble ○ il a une sale gueule ◑ ; to get into trouble with avoir des démêlés avec [police] ; avoir des ennuis avec [authorities, taxman] ; at the first sign of trouble au moindre signe d'agitation ; there's trouble brewing il y a de l'orage dans l'air fig.1 ( worries) soucis mpl ; to tell sb one's troubles faire part à qn de ses soucis ; tell me your troubles dis-moi ce qui ne va pas ; your troubles are over c'est la fin de tes soucis ; it's the least of my troubles c'est le cadet de mes soucis ; money troubles problèmes mpl d'argent ;C vtr1 ( bother) [person] déranger [person] ; sorry to trouble you désolé de vous déranger ; to trouble sb for sth déranger qn pour lui demander qch ; may I trouble you for the butter? puis-je vous demander le beurre? ; may ou could I trouble you to do? puis-je vous demander de faire? ; to trouble sb with ennuyer qn avec [problem, question] ; I won't trouble you with the details je te fais grâce des détails ; to trouble to do se donner la peine de faire ; don't trouble to knock will you? iron ne te donne surtout pas la peine de frapper! ;2 ( worry) tracasser [person] ; tourmenter [mind] ; don't let that trouble you ne te tracasse pas pour cela ;4 ( cause discomfort) [tooth, cough, leg] faire mal à [person] ; to be troubled by être incommodé par [cough, pain] ;D v refl to trouble oneself to do se donner la peine de faire ; don't trouble yourself! iron ne vous dérangez surtout pas!to get a girl into trouble euph mettre une fille enceinte.ⓘ The Troubles Euphémisme utilisé par les médias britanniques pour parler des périodes de troubles particulièrement graves (soulèvements, attentats, etc.) en Irlande du Nord au cours du XXe siècle. -
125 difficulty
plural - difficulties; noun1) (the state or quality of being hard (to do) or not easy: I have difficulty in understanding him.) dificultad2) (an obstacle or objection: He has a habit of foreseeing difficulties.) dificultad, obstáculo3) ((especially in plural) trouble, especially money trouble: The firm was in difficulties.) dificultad, dificultades, problemasdifficulty n dificultad / problematr['dɪfɪkəltɪ]noun (pl difficulties)1 (trouble) dificultad nombre femenino■ I had great difficulty (in) getting hold of him tuve dificultad para localizarlo, me costó mucho localizarlo■ she did it, but with some difficulty consiguió hacerlo, pero con dificultad\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be in difficulties tener problemas, estar en un apuro, pasar dificultadesto get into difficulties meterse en dificultadesto make difficulties crear problemas, poner pegas1) : dificultad f2) problem: problema f, dificultad fn.• aprieto s.m.• apuro s.m.• conflicto s.m.• dificultad s.m.• inconveniente s.m.• nudo s.m.• tropiezo s.m.'dɪfɪkəltia) u (of situation, task) dificultad fb) c ( problem) dificultad f, problema mto be in difficulties — estar* en apuros
['dɪfɪkǝltɪ]N1) (=hardness) dificultad f•
to have difficulty (in) doing sth — tener dificultades para hacer algo, resultarle difícil a algn hacer algohe has difficulty (in) walking — tiene dificultades para andar, le resulta difícil andar
•
I had no difficulty finding the house — no tuve problemas para encontrar la casa, no me resultó difícil encontrar la casa•
with difficulty — con dificultad2) (=problem) problema m, dificultad f•
to get into difficulty or difficulties — [person] (gen) meterse en problemas or apuros; (while swimming) empezar a tener problemas; [ship] empezar a peligrar•
to have difficulties with sth — tener problemas con algo•
to be in difficulties or difficulty — estar teniendo problemasthey are in financial difficulties — tienen problemas económicos, están pasando dificultades económicas
learning, run into•
to make difficulties for sb — crear problemas a algn* * *['dɪfɪkəlti]a) u (of situation, task) dificultad fb) c ( problem) dificultad f, problema mto be in difficulties — estar* en apuros
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126 addosso
[ad'dɔsso]1. avvfarsela addosso — to wet o.s.
2.addosso a prep — (sopra) on, (molto vicino) right next to
gli ombrelloni sono praticamente uno addosso all'altro — the beach umbrellas are practically on top of each other
mettere gli occhi addosso a qn/qc — to take quite a fancy to sb/sth
mettere le mani addosso a qn — (picchiare) to hit sb, lay hands on sb, (catturare) to seize sb, (molestare) to touch sb up
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127 armarse
1 (proveerse) to provide oneself (de, with), arm oneself (de, with)■ se armó de pintura y pincel y se puso a pintar he provided himself with paint and paintbrush and began to paint2 (producirse) to be, break out* * *VPR1) [soldado, atracador] to arm o.s. (con, de with)2) (=proveerse)armarse de algo — to arm o.s. with sth
los periodistas, armados de prismáticos y teleobjetivos — the journalists, armed with binoculars and telephoto lenses
3) * (=organizarse)¡que follón se armó! — there was a big fuss
Dios 3)¡menudo escándalo se armó con lo de esa boda! — what a commotion there was with that wedding! *
4)armarse un lío >: me armé un lío tremendo con todas las direcciones que me diste — * I got into a real muddle * o mess with all the addresses you gave me
5) CAm to balk, shy6) CAm, Caribe (=obstinarse) to become obstinate; (=negarse) to refuse point blank; Ven [caballo] to come to a halt7) Méx * (=enriquecerse) to make a packet *8)armarse con algo — Ven to run off with sth
* * *
■armarse verbo reflexivo to arm oneself
figurado se armó de paciencia, he summoned up his patience
figurado se armó de valor, he plucked up courage
familiar se armó la gorda o la de Dios es Cristo, all hell broke loose
' armarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
montarse
- taco
- valor
- armar
- lío
English:
pluck up
- steel
- summon up
- tangle
- pluck
* * *vpr1. [con armas] to arm oneself;Figarmarse hasta los dientes to arm oneself to the teeth;Figarmarse de [valor, paciencia] to summon up;se armó de valor y le contó la verdad he plucked up his courage and told her the truthcon tantas instrucciones, me armé un lío tremendo with all those instructions I got into a terrible muddle;la que se va a armarse cuando se entere tu padre all hell's going to break loose when your father finds out;si no paras de una vez se va a armarse una buena if you don't stop that at once, there'll be trouble;se armó la gorda o [m5] la de San Quintín o [m5] la de Dios es Cristo o [m5] la de Troya all hell broke loose4. RP [consolidarse] to do well for oneself* * *v/r1 arm o.s.2:armarse de valor pluck up courage;armarse de paciencia be patient3:la que se va a armar fam all hell will break loose fam, the shit will really hit the fan pop* * *vrarmarse de valor : to steel oneself* * *armarse vb (producirse) to be -
128 وقع
وَقَعَ \ drop: to fall: An apple dropped from the tree. fall (p.t.. [b]fell p.p.. fallen)[/b]: to go down by mistake; drop: I slipped and fell (or fell down or fell over). happen: to take place: The accident happened at exactly 4 o’clock. land: (not of an aircraft) to fall to the ground: He fell out of the tree and landed on his head. occur: to happen: Where did the accident occur?. \ وَقَعَ تحت دَيْن \ run into debt: to begin to owe money. \ وَقَعَ على \ come across: to find or meet by chance: I came across this old book in the market. \ وَقَعَ في \ fall: (with an adj. or phrase) to become: He fell ill. She fell asleep. They fell in love. get into: to come into a certain bad condition (debt, trouble, a temper, etc.). \ See Also أصبح (أَصْبَح) \ وَقَعَت عينه على \ set eyes on: (usu. with not or never) to see: I’ve never set eyes on her before today.
См. также в других словарях:
run into money — To amount to a considerable amount of money. A phrase used to describe the condition of a note after it had matured where the note was by its terms made payable in money or in specific property, at the option of the maker. Perry v Smith, 22 Vt… … Ballentine's law dictionary
run into (something) — 1. to experience something unexpectedly, esp. something unpleasant. The center ran into some financial trouble and had to borrow money. 2. to cost or reach a certain amount. Their salaries run into thousands per week. Costs on the project ran to… … New idioms dictionary
run into — {v.} 1. To mix with; join with. * /If the paint brush is too wet, the red paint will run into the white on the house./ * /This small brook runs into a big river in the valley below./ 2. To add up to; reach; total. * /Car repairs can run into a… … Dictionary of American idioms
run into — {v.} 1. To mix with; join with. * /If the paint brush is too wet, the red paint will run into the white on the house./ * /This small brook runs into a big river in the valley below./ 2. To add up to; reach; total. * /Car repairs can run into a… … Dictionary of American idioms
run\ into — v 1. To mix with; join with. If the paint brush is too wet, the red paint will run into the white on the house. This small brook runs into a big river in the valley below. 2. To add up to; reach; total. Car repairs can run into a lot of money.… … Словарь американских идиом
run into — 1) add up to, total If you decide to stay in nice hotels during your holiday it will run into a lot of money. 2) mix with, join with During the hot weather the red paint on the roof ran into the white paint. 3) be affected by, get into He ran… … Idioms and examples
run into debt — be in debt, owe money … English contemporary dictionary
run — [run] vi. ran or Dial. run, run, running [altered (with vowel prob. infl. by pp.) < ME rinnen, rennen < ON & OE: ON rinna, to flow, run, renna, to cause to run (< Gmc * rannjan); OE rinnan, iornan: both < Gmc * renwo < IE base * er … English World dictionary
run — ► VERB (running; past ran; past part. run) 1) move at a speed faster than a walk, never having both or all feet on the ground at the same time. 2) move about in a hurried and hectic way. 3) pass or cause to pass: Helen ran her fingers through her … English terms dictionary
run down — {v.} (stress on down ) 1. To crash against and knock down or sink. * /Jack rode his bicycle too fast and almost ran down his little brother./ * /It was so foggy that the steamship almost ran down a small boat leaving port./ Compare: RUN INTO(3a) … Dictionary of American idioms
run down — {v.} (stress on down ) 1. To crash against and knock down or sink. * /Jack rode his bicycle too fast and almost ran down his little brother./ * /It was so foggy that the steamship almost ran down a small boat leaving port./ Compare: RUN INTO(3a) … Dictionary of American idioms