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1 weary
مُنْهَك \ all in: tired out: After runing 8 miles he was all in. overcome: weakened; unable to control one’s feelings or body: She was overcome with shame at her crime. The fireman was overcome with smoke and fell down. prostrate: weak and helpless, esp. with grief. weary: very tired. -
2 протомити
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3 донимать
донять (вн.) разг.pester (d.); harass (d.); (просьбами и т. п.) weary to death (d.), weary out of all patience (d.), exasperate (d.) -
4 bıkmış
adj. tired of, fed up with, sick of, weary of, weary, out of conceit with -
5 надокучати
= надокучитиto bore, to annoy, to importune, to plague, to tease, to bother, to tire, to worry, to weary outмені це надокучило — I am bored with it (sick of it, tired of it, sick and tired of it)
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6 dē-fatīgō or dēfetīgō
dē-fatīgō or dēfetīgō āvī, ātus, āre, to weary out, tire, fatigue, exhaust: se, T.: exercitum itineribus, Cs.: opus faciam ut defatiger, T.: diuturnitate belli defatigati, Cs.: iudices: numquam defatigabor ante, quam, etc. -
7 prae-dēlassō
prae-dēlassō —, —, āre, to weary out beforehand: incursūs quae (moles) praedelassat aquarum, O. -
8 defatigo
dē-fătīgo or dē-fĕtīgo, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a., to weary out, tire a person; to fatigue; to exhaust. (For syn. cf.: fatigo, fessus, lassus, langueo, languidus, defessus. —Freq. and class.)I.Lit.(α).Act.:(β).cum crebro integri defessis succederent nostrosque assiduo labore defatigarent,
Caes. B. G. 7, 41, 2; cf.:exercitum Pompeii quotidianis itineribus,
id. B. C. 3, 85, 2; Suet. Caes. 65 et saep.:se,
Plaut. Trin. 2, 1, 2; Ter. Ad. 4, 1, 3.—Pass.:* B.opus faciam ut defatiger usque, ingratiis ut dormiam,
Ter. Eun. 2, 1, 14: defatigatus vulneribus, Cato [p. 528] ap. Gell. 3, 7, 19:defatigatus,
Caes. B. G. 1, 40, 8;and opp. integer,
id. ib. 5, 16 fin.; 7, 85, 7; id. B. C. 3, 40, 2:defatigatus est populus nimis,
Vulg. 1 Reg. 14, 31.—Transf.:II.ubertate nimia prioris aevi defatigatum et effetum solum,
exhausted, Col. 1, praef. § 1.—Trop.(α).Act.: deos suppliciis, votis, precibus, etc., Afran. ap. Non. 398, 23:(β).ne te adolescens mulier defatiget,
Ter. Ph. 5, 3, 11:censores, judices,
Cic. Leg. 3, 12 fin. —Pass.:te nec animi neque corporis laboribus defatigari,
Cic. Fam. 14, 1; id. de Or. 2, 41, 177; Plaut. Epid. 1, 2, 15:numquam conquiescam neque defatigabor ante, quam, etc.,
Cic. de Or. 3, 36, 145; cf. id. Brut. 22, 86.—Once with inf.: nec defatigabor permanere in studio libertatis, Lentulus ap. Cic. Fam. 12, 14 fin. -
9 praedelasso
prae-dēlasso, āre, v. a., to weary out or weaken beforehand:quae (moles) incursus praedelassat aquarum,
Ov. M. 11, 731. -
10 letih
-
11 утомленный
weary имя прилагательное: -
12 utslitt
weary, worn-out* * *adj. worn-out -
13 unavený
out for the count; overcome; sick; stale; tired; weary* * *tired -
14 tolg’in
weary, worn out.tolgul dial.oleander (s. sambitgul) -
15 cansado
adj.1 tired, all-in, worn-out, bleary.2 tiresome.past part.past participle of spanish verb: cansar.* * *1→ link=cansar cansar► adjetivo1 (gen) tired, weary2 (que fatiga) tiring3 (pesado) boring, tiresome4 (harto) tired (de, of), fed up (de, with)\tener la vista cansada to have eyestrain* * *(f. - cansada)adj.1) tired, weary2) tiring* * *ADJ1) (=fatigado) [persona] tired (de from)[aspecto, apariencia] weary, tired; [ojos] tired, strainedvista 1., 1)es que nació cansada — iró she was born lazy
2) (=harto)•
estar cansado de algo — to be tired of sthestoy cansado de que me hagan siempre la misma pregunta — I'm tired of always being asked the same question
¡ya estoy cansado de vuestras tonterías! — I've had enough of this nonsense of yours!
•
estar cansado de hacer algo — to be tired of doing sthsus amigos, cansados de esperarlo, se habían ido — tired of waiting, his friends had left
3) (=pesado) tiringdebe de ser cansado corregir tantos exámenes — it must be tiring marking o to mark so many exams, marking so many exams must be tiring
4)CANSADO ¿"Tired" o "tiring"? Hay que tener en cuenta la diferencia entre tired y tiring a la hora de traducir cansado. ► Lo traducimos por tired cuando queremos indicar que {estamos} o que nos sentimos cansados: Se sintió cansado y se marchó He felt tired and left Estoy cansado de trabajar I'm tired of working Estábamos cansados del viaje We were tired after the journey ► Lo traducimos por tiring cuando queremos indicar que algo {es} cansado, es decir, que nos produce cansancio: Conducir 140 kms. todos los días es muy cansado Driving 140 kms every day is very tiring Para otros usos y ejemplos ver la entrada* * *- da adjetivo1)a) [estar] ( fatigado) tiredb) [estar] (aburrido, harto)cansado de algo/+ inf — tired of something/-ing
a las cansadas — (RPl) at long last
2) [ser] <viaje/trabajo> tiring* * *= fatigued, tired, wearisome, weary [wearier -comp., weariest -sup.], wearying, wearied, washed-out.Ex. In the event of any incorrect citations, one can then return to the 'scene of the crime' and discover whether the error was in the source or in one's fatigued perception of it.Ex. In this reading mood we feel anxious, tired, lazy, worried -- whatever causes us to reject demanding and 'new' literature and forces us to take up again books that are comfortably -- and comfortingly -- known and easily enjoyed.Ex. The earliest binding machines replaced the wearisome hand-beating of the sheets in order to fold them.Ex. Humanity is returning to the downsized, reengineered, total quality management weary business world.Ex. A new wave of books dealing frankly with such concerns as sex, alcoholism and broken homes was seen as a breakthrough, but plots and styles have begun to show a wearying sameness.Ex. 'I better go in,' Leforte muttered, a wearied, disillusioned expression coming over her pallid features.Ex. He calls himself a writer but he never produces anything because he says he's always too washed-out to write.----* con cara de cansado = bleary-eyed.* de un modo cansado = wearily.* sentirse cansado = feel + tired.* tener la vista cansada = need + reading glasses.* vista cansada = presbyopia.* * *- da adjetivo1)a) [estar] ( fatigado) tiredb) [estar] (aburrido, harto)cansado de algo/+ inf — tired of something/-ing
a las cansadas — (RPl) at long last
2) [ser] <viaje/trabajo> tiring* * *= fatigued, tired, wearisome, weary [wearier -comp., weariest -sup.], wearying, wearied, washed-out.Ex: In the event of any incorrect citations, one can then return to the 'scene of the crime' and discover whether the error was in the source or in one's fatigued perception of it.
Ex: In this reading mood we feel anxious, tired, lazy, worried -- whatever causes us to reject demanding and 'new' literature and forces us to take up again books that are comfortably -- and comfortingly -- known and easily enjoyed.Ex: The earliest binding machines replaced the wearisome hand-beating of the sheets in order to fold them.Ex: Humanity is returning to the downsized, reengineered, total quality management weary business world.Ex: A new wave of books dealing frankly with such concerns as sex, alcoholism and broken homes was seen as a breakthrough, but plots and styles have begun to show a wearying sameness.Ex: 'I better go in,' Leforte muttered, a wearied, disillusioned expression coming over her pallid features.Ex: He calls himself a writer but he never produces anything because he says he's always too washed-out to write.* con cara de cansado = bleary-eyed.* de un modo cansado = wearily.* sentirse cansado = feel + tired.* tener la vista cansada = need + reading glasses.* vista cansada = presbyopia.* * *cansado -daA1 [ ESTAR] (fatigado) tiredtienes cara de cansado you look tiredcreo que nació cansado ( hum); I reckon he was born lazyen un tono cansado in a weary tone of voicetengo los pies cansados my feet are tired2 [ ESTAR] (aburrido, harto) cansado DE algo/+ INF tired OF sth/ -INGestoy cansado de decirle que me deje en paz I'm tired of telling him to leave me alonea las cansadas ( RPl); at long lastB [ SER] ‹viaje/trabajo› tiring* * *
Del verbo cansar: ( conjugate cansar)
cansado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
cansado
cansar
cansado◊ -da adjetivo
1 [estar]
tienes cara de cansado you look tired;
en un tono cansado in a weary tone of voiceb) ( aburrido) cansado de algo/hacer algo tired of sth/doing sth
2 [ser] ‹viaje/trabajo› tiring
cansar ( conjugate cansar) verbo transitivo
b) ( aburrir):◊ ¿no te cansa oír la misma música? don't you get tired of listening to the same music?
verbo intransitivo
cansarse verbo pronominal
cansadose de algo/algn to get tired of sth/sb, get bored with sth/sb, cansadose de hacer algo to get tired of doing sth
cansado,-a adjetivo
1 (fatigado) tired, weary
(harto, hastiado) estoy cansado de oírte, I'm tired of hearing you 2 ser cansado (que produce cansancio) to be tiring
(que produce aburrimiento) to be boring
cansar
I verbo transitivo
1 to tire
2 (hartar, aburrir) to get tired: tus quejas me cansan, I'm getting tired of your complaints
II verbo intransitivo
1 (agotar las fuerzas) to be tiring
2 (hartar, aburrir) to get tiresome
' cansado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
aburrida
- aburrido
- algo
- cansada
- dejar
- deshecha
- deshecho
- destrozada
- destrozado
- fatigada
- fatigado
- muerta
- muerto
- notar
- polvo
- tanta
- tanto
- trabajada
- trabajado
- veras
- cara
- fresco
- harto
- mamado
- muy
- palmado
- poder
English:
deadbeat
- done
- fatigued
- gaunt
- out
- start
- strained
- tired
- tiring
- war-weary
- weary
- zonked
- little
- run
- wearily
- wonder
* * *cansado, -a adj1. [fatigado] tired;tener cara de cansado to look tired;estar cansado de algo/de hacer algo to be tired of sth/of doing sth2. [harto] tired, sick;estoy cansado de decirte que apagues la luz al salir I'm tired o sick of telling you to turn off the light when you go out3. [pesado, cargante] tiring;es muy cansado viajar cada día en tren it's very tiring travelling on the train every day* * *adj tired;vista cansada farsightedness, Br longsightedness* * *cansado, -da adj1) : tiredestar cansado: to be tired2) : tiresome, wearyingser cansado: to be tiring* * *cansado adj1. (persona fatigado) tired2. (persona harto) tired of3. (trabajo, viaje) tiring -
16 fatigado
adj.fatigued, worn-out, exhausted, tired.past part.past participle of spanish verb: fatigar.* * *(f. - fatigada)adj.tired, weary* * *ADJ tired, weary* * *- da adjetivo tired, weary* * *= fatigued, washed-out, wearied.Ex. In the event of any incorrect citations, one can then return to the 'scene of the crime' and discover whether the error was in the source or in one's fatigued perception of it.Ex. He calls himself a writer but he never produces anything because he says he's always too washed-out to write.Ex. 'I better go in,' Leforte muttered, a wearied, disillusioned expression coming over her pallid features.* * *- da adjetivo tired, weary* * *= fatigued, washed-out, wearied.Ex: In the event of any incorrect citations, one can then return to the 'scene of the crime' and discover whether the error was in the source or in one's fatigued perception of it.
Ex: He calls himself a writer but he never produces anything because he says he's always too washed-out to write.Ex: 'I better go in,' Leforte muttered, a wearied, disillusioned expression coming over her pallid features.* * *fatigado -datired, weary* * *
Del verbo fatigar: ( conjugate fatigar)
fatigado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
fatigado
fatigar
fatigado◊ -da adjetivo
tired, weary
fatigar ( conjugate fatigar) verbo transitivo ( físicamente) to tire … out;
( mentalmente) to tire
fatigarse verbo pronominal
fatigado,-a adj (cansado) tired
fatigar verbo transitivo to tire, weary
' fatigado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
cansada
- cansado
- fatigada
English:
fatigued
* * *fatigado, -a adj* * *adj tired* * *fatigado, -da adjagotado: weary, tired -
17 stanco
(pl -chi) tiredstanco morto dead beat* * *stanco agg.1 tired (pred.), weary: stanco del mondo, tired of the world (o world-weary); stanco morto, dead tired (o tired to death o tired out); sono, mi sento stanco, I am, I feel tired; hai gli occhi stanchi, your eyes look tired; sono stanco di aspettare, I am tired of waiting; essere stanco di qlco., qlcu., to be tired of sthg., s.o. (o to be sick of sthg., s.o.)2 ( esaurito) tired, exhausted, worn-out: uno scrittore dalla vena ormai stanca, a writer who has run out of (o exhausted) his inspiration // terreno stanco, exhausted (o worn-out) soil // (econ.) il mercato è stanco, the market is slack.* * *1) (affaticato) [persona, gambe, occhi] tiredstanco morto — exhausted, dead tired colloq.
2) (che mostra a fatica) [viso, gesto, sorriso] weary; [ voce] strained, weary3) (annoiato, infastidito) tired (di of; di fare of doing)* * *stanco2 (che mostra a fatica) [viso, gesto, sorriso] weary; [ voce] strained, weary; avere l'aria -a to look weary3 (annoiato, infastidito) tired (di of; di fare of doing); stanco della vita weary of living; stanco del mondo world-weary -
18 müde
I Adj. tired; (matt) weary; (erschöpft) exhausted; (schläfrig) sleepy; müdes Lächeln fig. weary smile; keine müde Mark umg., fig. not a penny ( oder cent); einer Sache müde werden grow weary ( oder tired) of s.th.; umg. (satt haben) get fed up with s.th.; ich bin es jetzt müde I’ve had enough (of it); nicht müde werden zu (+ Inf.) never tire of (+ Ger.)II Adv. wearily, in a tired way; müde lächeln smile wearily, give a weary smile; müde abwinken give a weary gesture of refusal* * *weary; sleepy; tired* * *mü|de ['myːdə]1. adj2) (= überdrüssig) tired, wearymǘde werden — to tire or weary of sth, to grow tired or weary of sth
mǘde sein — to be tired or weary of sth
des Wartens mǘde sein — to be tired of waiting
ich bin es mǘde, das zu tun — I'm tired or weary of doing that
sie wird nicht mǘde, das zu tun — she never tires or wearies of doing that
keine mǘde Mark (inf) — not a single penny
2. adv1)(= erschöpft)
sich mǘde reden/kämpfen — to tire oneself out talking/fightingsich mǘde laufen — to tire oneself out running about
2)(= gelangweilt)
mǘde lächeln — to give a weary smilemǘde lächelnd — with a weary smile
mǘde abwinken — to make a weary gesture (with one's hand)
* * *1) (tired; with strength or patience exhausted: a weary sigh; He looks weary; I am weary of his jokes.) weary2) wearily3) (wearied; exhausted: She was too tired to continue; a tired child.) tired* * *mü·de[ˈmy:də]I. adj1. (schlafbedürftig) tiredvon zu viel Bier in der Mittagspause wird man \müde drinking too much beer during your lunch-hour makes you feel tired! [or sleepy2. (gelangweilt) weary, tiredII. adv1. (erschöpft)2. (gelangweilt) wearily, tiredly* * *1.ein müdes Lächeln — (auch fig.) a weary smile
etwas müde sein — (geh.) be tired of something
einer Sache (Gen.) müde werden — (geh.) tire or grow tired of something
2.nicht müde werden, etwas zu tun — never tire of doing something; s. auch Mark I
adverbial wearily; (schläfrig) sleepily* * *müdes Lächeln fig weary smile;ich bin es jetzt müde I’ve had enough (of it);B. adv wearily, in a tired way;müde lächeln smile wearily, give a weary smile;müde abwinken give a weary gesture of refusal…müde im adj tired of …;europamüde disillusioned with the EU;kriegsmüde war-weary;pillenmüde tired of ( stärker: fed up with) taking pills* * *1.ein müdes Lächeln — (auch fig.) a weary smile
etwas müde sein — (geh.) be tired of something
einer Sache (Gen.) müde werden — (geh.) tire or grow tired of something
2.nicht müde werden, etwas zu tun — never tire of doing something; s. auch Mark I
adverbial wearily; (schläfrig) sleepily -
19 fatigar
v.1 to tire, to weary.la televisión me fatiga mucho la vista my eyes get very tired watching television2 to fatigue, to exhaust, to tire, to overwork.Fatigamos a nuestros empleados We fatigue our employees.El sol fatiga los materiales The sun fatigues the materials.* * *1 (cansar) to wear out, tire2 (molestar) to annoy1 to tire, get tired■ se fatigó de tanto subir y bajar escaleras she got tired of going up and down the stairs all the time* * *verbto fatigue, tire* * *1. VT1) (=cansar) to tire2) (=molestar) to annoy2.See:* * *1. 2.fatigarse v prona) ( cansarse) to get tired, wear oneself out (colloq)b) ( ahogarse) to get breathless* * *= exhaust, fatigue, weary.Ex. The potential areas of application of PRECIS are far from being exhausted.Ex. Always snivelling, coughing, spitting; a stupid, tedious, ill-natured fellow, who was for ever fatiguing people.Ex. She wearies of the constant procession of visitors, and the round of invitations and commissions, which swallow up her time.* * *1. 2.fatigarse v prona) ( cansarse) to get tired, wear oneself out (colloq)b) ( ahogarse) to get breathless* * *= exhaust, fatigue, weary.Ex: The potential areas of application of PRECIS are far from being exhausted.
Ex: Always snivelling, coughing, spitting; a stupid, tedious, ill-natured fellow, who was for ever fatiguing people.Ex: She wearies of the constant procession of visitors, and the round of invitations and commissions, which swallow up her time.* * *fatigar [A3 ]vt(físicamente) to tire … out; (mentalmente) to tiretanto subir y bajar me fatiga all this going up and down stairs tires me out o ( colloq) takes it out of me1 (cansarse) to get tired, wear oneself out ( colloq)2 (ahogarse) to get breathlessse fatiga subiendo las escaleras she gets breathless o out of breath climbing stairs* * *
fatigar ( conjugate fatigar) verbo transitivo ( físicamente) to tire … out;
( mentalmente) to tire
fatigarse verbo pronominal
fatigar verbo transitivo to tire, weary
' fatigar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
cansar
* * *♦ vtto tire, to weary;el abuelo fatiga a todos con sus historias grandad tires us all with his stories;la televisión me fatiga mucho la vista my eyes get very tired watching television* * *v/t tire* * *fatigar {52} vtcansar: to fatigue, to tire* * *fatigar vb to tire out -
20 stancare
tire (out)* * *stancare v.tr.1 to tire, to fatigue, to weary: questo lavoro mi stanca, this work tires me; stancare i cavalli, to tire the horses // stancare la pazienza di qlcu., to exhaust s.o.'s patience2 ( infastidire, annoiare) to bore, to weary, to annoy; le sue continue richieste mi stancavano terribilmente, his persistent demands wore me out; un colore che a lungo andare stanca, a colour that one gets tired of eventually◘ stancarsi v.rifl. to tire, to get* tired, to grow* weary; ( annoiarsi) to get* bored: il bambino si stancò presto del suo gioco, the child soon tired of his game; mi stanco terribilmente in campagna, in the country I get bored stiff; non ci si stanca di ascoltarlo, one never tires (o grows weary) of listening to him; stancare a forza di parlare, to talk oneself hoarse; stancare a forza di correre, to run oneself off one's feet; stancare gli occhi a fare qlco., to strain one's eyes (in) doing sthg.* * *[stan'kare]1. vt2. vip (stancarsi)to get tired, tire o.s. outstancarsi (di) — (stufarsi) to grow tired (of), get fed up (with), grow weary (of)
* * *[stan'kare] 1.verbo transitivo1) (fisicamente) to make* [sb.] tired [ persona]; to strain [ occhi]2) (intellettualmente) [studio, lavoro] to tire [sb.] out [ persona]3) (annoiare) to wear* [sb.] out [ persona]2.verbo pronominale stancarsi1) (affaticarsi) [ persona] to get* tired2) (annoiarsi) to grow* tired, to get* tired (di of; di fare of doing)* * *stancare/stan'kare/ [1]2 (intellettualmente) [studio, lavoro] to tire [sb.] out [ persona]3 (annoiare) to wear* [sb.] out [ persona]II stancarsi verbo pronominale1 (affaticarsi) [ persona] to get* tired; non stancarti troppo don't wear yourself out (anche scherz.); - rsi gli occhi to strain one's eyes2 (annoiarsi) to grow* tired, to get* tired (di of; di fare of doing); non si stanca mai di ripetermi quanto guadagna he never tires of telling me how much he earns.
См. также в других словарях:
weary out — transitive verb : to pass or spend (time) in monotony, tedium, or longing wearied out the lonely days * * * weary out (old) 1. To exhaust 2. To get tediously through (a period of time) • • • Main Entry: ↑weary … Useful english dictionary
To weary out — Weary Wea ry, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Wearied}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Wearying}.] [1913 Webster] 1. To reduce or exhaust the physical strength or endurance of; to tire; to fatigue; as, to weary one s self with labor or traveling. [1913 Webster] So shall… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
weary out — Subdue by fatigue, exhaust completely … New dictionary of synonyms
Weary — Wea ry, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Wearied}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Wearying}.] [1913 Webster] 1. To reduce or exhaust the physical strength or endurance of; to tire; to fatigue; as, to weary one s self with labor or traveling. [1913 Webster] So shall he… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
weary — [adj] tired all in*, beat*, bone tired*, bored, burned out*, bushed, dead*, dead tired*, discontented, disgusted, dog tired*, done in*, drained, drooping, drowsy, enervated, exhausted, fagged, fatigued, fed up, flagging, had it*, impatient,… … New thesaurus
Weary — Wea ry, a. [Compar. {Wearier}; superl. {Weariest}.] [OE. weri, AS. w?rig; akin to OS. w?rig, OHG. wu?rag; of uncertain origin; cf. AS. w?rian to ramble.] [1913 Webster] 1. Having the strength exhausted by toil or exertion; worn out in respect to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
weary — [wir′ē] adj. wearier, weariest [ME weri < OE werig, akin to OHG wuorag, drunk < IE base * wōr , giddiness, faintness > Gr hōrakian, to be giddy] 1. tired; worn out 2. without further liking, patience, tolerance, zeal, etc.; bored: with… … English World dictionary
Out of My Intention — Theatrical poster Hangul 나도 모르게 … Wikipedia
out|wear|y — «owt WIHR ee», transitive verb, wear|ied, wear|y|ing. to weary to exhaustion; tire out … Useful english dictionary
weary — Synonyms and related words: apathetic, be infinitely repetitive, be tedious, beat, benumbed, black, blase, bleak, blow, bored, break down, burden, burn out, collapse, crack up, crush one, dark, dead, debilitate, debilitated, disgusted, dismal,… … Moby Thesaurus
weary — I (Roget s IV) modif. Syn. exhausted, fatigued, overworked; see tired . See Synonym Study at tired . v. 1. [To make weary] Syn. annoy, vex, distress, irk, tax, strain, overwork, exhaust, fatigue, tire, tucker out*, harass, bore, disgust,… … English dictionary for students