La palabra inglés para grande es
big
Definición inglesa
grande | |
1. adj. (after the noun or predicatively) big, large | |
2. adj. (before a plural noun) great | |
3. adj. (about human age) aged, old | |
Mi papá ya es muy grande para hacer eso. - My dad is now a bit old to do that. | |
4. s. grandee |
Traducciones de grande y sus definiciones
big | ||
1. adj. Grande. | ||
2. adj. Popular. |
big | ||
1. adj. Of great size, large. | ||
Elephants are big animals, and they eat a lot. | ||
2. adj. (of an industry or other field) Thought to have undue influence. | ||
There were concerns about the ethics of big pharma. | ||
3. adj. Popular. | ||
That style is very big right now in Europe, especially among teenagers. | ||
4. adj. (informal) Adult. | ||
Kids should get help from big people if they want to use the kitchen. | ||
5. adj. (informal) Fat. | ||
Gosh, she is big! | ||
6. adj. (informal) Important or significant. | ||
What's so big about that? I do it all the time. | ||
7. adj. (informal, with on) Enthusiastic (about). | ||
I'm not big on the idea, but if you want to go ahead with it, I won't stop you. | ||
8. adj. (indtr, en, of) (informal) Mature, conscientious, principled; generous. | ||
That's very big of you, thank you! | ||
I tried to be the bigger person and just let it go, but I couldn't help myself. | ||
9. adj. (informal) Well-endowed, possessing large breasts in the case of a woman or a large penis in the case of a man. | ||
Whoa, Nadia has gotten pretty big since she hit puberty. | ||
10. adj. (sometimes figurative) Large with young; pregnant; swelling; ready to give birth or produce. | ||
She was big with child. | ||
11. adj. (informal) Used as an intensifier, especially of negative-valence nouns | ||
You are a big liar. Why are you in such a big hurry? | ||
12. adj. (of a city) populous | ||
13. adj. (informal, slang) old, mature. Used to imply that somebody is too old for something, or acting immaturely. | ||
Imagine still watching Pokemon at your big age. | ||
14. adj. topics, en, Size | ||
15. adv. In a loud manner. | ||
16. adv. In a boasting manner. | ||
He's always talking big, but he never delivers. | ||
17. adv. In a large amount or to a large extent. | ||
He won big betting on the croquet championship. | ||
18. adv. On a large scale, expansively. | ||
You've got to think big to succeed at Amalgamated Plumbing. | ||
19. adv. Hard. | ||
He hit him big and the guy just crumpled. | ||
20. s. Someone or something that is large in stature | ||
21. s. An important or powerful person; a celebrity; a big name. | ||
22. s. (as plural) The big leagues, big time. | ||
23. s. (BDSM, slang) The participant in ageplay who acts out the older role. | ||
24. v. To praise, recommend, or promote. | ||
25. v. (transitive, archaic, or UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) to inhabit; occupy | ||
26. v. (reflexive, archaic, or UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) to locate oneself | ||
27. v. (transitive, archaic, or UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) to build; erect; fashion | ||
28. v. (intransitive, archaic, or UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) to dwell; have a dwelling | ||
29. s. One or more kinds of barley, especially six-rowed barley. |
large | ||
1. adj. Grande, gran. |
large | ||
1. adj. Of considerable or relatively great size or extent. | ||
Russia is a large country. The fruit-fly has large eyes for its body size. He has a large collection of stamps. | ||
2. adj. (obsolete) Abundant; ample. | ||
3. adj. (archaic) Full in statement; diffuse; profuse. | ||
4. adj. (obsolete) Free; unencumbered. | ||
5. adj. (obsolete) Unrestrained by decorum; said of language. | ||
6. adj. (nautical) Crossing the line of a ship's course in a favorable direction; said of the wind when it is abeam, or between the beam and the quarter. | ||
7. adj. topics, en, Size | ||
8. s. (music, obsolete) An old musical note, equal to two longas, four breves, or eight semibreves. | ||
9. s. (obsolete) Liberality, generosity. | ||
10. s. (slang) A thousand dollars/pounds. | ||
Getting a car tricked out like that will cost you 50 large. | ||
11. s. A large serving of something. | ||
One small coffee and two larges, please. | ||
12. adv. (nautical) Before the wind. |
grandee | |
grandee | ||
1. s. A high-ranking nobleman in Spain or Portugal. | ||
2. s. (by extension) A person of high rank. | ||
3. s. The title for a high ranking nobleman in Spain or Portugal. |
grand | ||
1. adj. Grande. | ||
2. s. Mil dólares. | ||
3. s. Mil libras. |
grand | ||
1. adj. Of a large size or extent; great. | ||
a grand mountain | ||
a grand army | ||
a grand mistake | ||
2. adj. Great in size, and fine or imposing in appearance or impression; illustrious, dignified, magnificent. | ||
a grand monarch | ||
a grand view | ||
His simple vision has transformed into something far more grand. | ||
3. adj. Having higher rank or more dignity, size, or importance than other persons or things of the same name. | ||
a grand lodge | ||
a grand vizier | ||
a grand piano | ||
The Grand Viziers of the Ottoman Empire. | ||
4. adj. (i, usually in compound forms) Standing in the second or some more remote degree of parentage or descent. | ||
grandfather, grandson, grand-child | ||
5. adj. (Ireland, Northern England, colloquial, otherwise dated) Fine; lovely. | ||
A cup of tea? That'd be grand. | ||
6. adj. (music) Containing all the parts proper to a given form of composition. | ||
7. s. A thousand of some unit of currency, such as dollars or pounds. (Compare G.) | ||
(SeeCites) | ||
8. s. (musical instruments) A grand piano | ||
9. s. A grandparent or grandchild. |
great | ||
1. adj. Grande | ||
2. adj. Grandioso, extraordinario |
great | ||
1. adj. Relatively large in scale, size, extent, number (i. e. having many parts or members) or duration (i. e. relatively long); very big. | ||
A great storm is approaching our shores. | ||
a great assembly | ||
a great wait | ||
2. adj. Of larger size or more importance than others of its kind. | ||
the great auk | ||
3. adj. (qualifying nouns of family relationship) Involving more generations than the word qualified implies (from 1510s). see Derived terms | ||
great-grandfather | ||
4. adj. (obsolete, postpositive, followed by 'with') Pregnant; large with young; full of. | ||
great with child | ||
great with hope | ||
5. adj. (obsolete, except with 'friend' and similar words such as 'mate','buddy') Intimate; familiar. | ||
6. adj. Extreme or more than usual. | ||
great worry | ||
7. adj. Of significant importance or consequence; important. | ||
a great decision | ||
8. adj. (applied to actions, thoughts and feelings) Arising from or possessing idealism; admirable; superior; commanding; heroic; illustrious; eminent. | ||
a great deed | ||
a great nature | ||
a great history | ||
9. adj. Impressive or striking. | ||
a great show of wealth | ||
10. adj. Much in use; favoured. | ||
Poetry was a great convention of the Romantic era. | ||
11. adj. (applied to persons) Endowed with extraordinary powers; of exceptional talents or achievements; uncommonly gifted; able to accomplish vast results; remarkable; strong; powerful; mighty; noble. | ||
a great hero, scholar, genius, philosopher, writer etc. | ||
12. adj. Title referring to an important leader. | ||
Alexander the Great | ||
13. adj. Doing or exemplifying (a characteristic or pursuit) on a large scale; active or enthusiastic. | ||
What a great buffoon! | ||
He's not a great one for reading. | ||
a great walker | ||
14. adj. (often followed by 'at') Skilful or adroit. | ||
a great carpenter | ||
You are great at singing. | ||
15. adj. (informal) Very good; excellent; wonderful; fantastic (from 1848). | ||
Dinner was great. | ||
16. adj. (informal, British) Intensifying a word or expression, used in mild oaths. | ||
a dirty great smack in the face | ||
Great Scott! | ||
17. interj. Expression of gladness and content about something. | ||
Great! Thanks for the wonderful work. | ||
18. interj. sarcastic inversion thereof. | ||
Oh, great! I just dumped all 500 sheets of the manuscript all over and now I have to put them back in order. | ||
19. s. A person of major significance, accomplishment or acclaim. | ||
Newton and Einstein are two of the greats of the history of science. | ||
20. s. (music) The main division in a pipe organ, usually the loudest division. | ||
21. adv. very well (in a very satisfactory manner) | ||
Those mechanical colored pencils work great because they don't have to be sharpened. |
Entradas en el diccionario Wikcionario
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