4. n-m. boiler suit, coveralls, overall, onesie (a one-piece suit combining trousers and jacket, worn for heavy or hot manual labour)
5. n-m. jumpsuit, overalls (a one-piece item of clothing originally by parachutists)
6. n-m. jumpsuit (a female one-piece item of clothing)
7. n-m. (Chile, Peru) tracksuit, joggers (garment consisting of a top and trousers for sports and casual wear)
8. n-m. (Costa Rica, slang) the vulva or vagina
9. n-m. (Mexico, Chile) doll, puppet
10. n-m. (colloquial) withdrawal symptom
estar con el mono - to have withdrawal symptoms
Traducciones de mono y sus definiciones
monkey
1. s. Mono.
monkey
1. s. Any member of the clade Simiiformes not also of the clade Hominoidea containing humans and apes, from which they are usually, but not universally, distinguished by smaller size, a tail, and cheek pouc
He had been visiting an area zoo when a monkey swung from its tree perch, swiped his glasses and hurled them into a hippo hole.
2. s. (informal) Any nonhuman primate, including apes.
Chimpanzees are known to form bands to hunt and kill other monkeys.
3. s. (informal) A mischievous child.
Stop misbehaving, you little monkey!
She's a cheeky monkey.
4. s. A dance move popular in the 1960s.
5. s. (UK, slang) Five hundred pounds sterling.
6. s. (slang) A person or the role of the person on the sidecar platform of a motorcycle involved in sidecar racing.
7. s. (slang) A person with minimal intelligence and/or an unattractive appearance
8. s. (blackjack) A face card.
9. s. (slang) A menial employee who does a repetitive job, as in code monkey, grease monkey, phone monkey, powder monkey.
10. s. The weight or hammer of a pile driver; a heavy mass of iron, which, being raised high, falls on the head of the pile, and drives it into the earth; the falling weight of a drop hammer used in forging.
11. s. A small trading vessel of the sixteenth century.
12. s. (slang) A drug habit; an addiction; a compulsion.
13. v. (informal) To meddle; to mess with
Please don't monkey with the controls if you don't know what you're doing.
2. s. (not US or Canada) Loose fitting garment worn over regular clothes to protect them.
3. s. (US, Canada) Loose fitting pair of pants with supporting cross-straps and a panel of material in the chest (called a bib), often associated with farm work.
jumpsuit
jumpsuit
1. s. a one-piece item of clothing originally used by parachutists
2. s. a similar item of clothing used for outdoor sports such as skiing
onesie
onesie
1. s. (US) A one-piece garment for an infant or small child, generally worn over a diaper.
2. s. One-piece adult loungewear jumpsuit.
3. s. One-piece fashionable streetwear worn mostly by teenagers.
overall
overall
1. adj. All-encompassing, all around.
2. adv. Generally; with everything considered.
Overall, there is not enough evidence to form a clear conclusion.
3. s. (British) A garment worn over other clothing to protect it; a coverall or boiler suit. A garment, for manual labor or for casual wear, often made of a single piece of fabric, with long legs and a bib
4. s. (in the US) A garment, worn for manual labor, with an integral covering extending to the chest, supported by straps.
withdrawal symptom
withdrawal symptom
1. s. (medicine, especially in plural) Any of a wide range of symptoms associated with the discontinuance of a drug by a person who has become addicted to it.
dungarees
dungarees
1. s. Heavy denim pants or overalls, worn especially as work clothing.
Helen donned a pair of faded dungarees and grabbed her knapsack before rushing off to school.