day en el Oxford Spanish Dictionary

Traducciones de day en el diccionario inglés»español

day [ingl. am. deɪ, ingl. brit. deɪ] SUST.

3.1. day (point in time):

day
what day is (it) today?
every day
día por medio Co. Sur Perú
(on) the day they left
the other day
day after day
day by day
day by day
day in, day out
from day to day
from day to day
from that day forth arc. or liter.
it's not my/his day
ha sido un día de aquí te espero Esp. coloq.
that'll be the day coloq., irón.
have a good or nice day! esp ingl. am.
what a day!
at the end of the day
at the end of the day
to make a day of it (spend whole day)
to make sb's day coloq.
to save for a rainy day
another day, another dollar provb. ingl. am.

5.1. day (period of time):

day
in days gone by liter.
antaño liter.
in days to come liter.
in days to come liter.
antaño liter.
it's early days yet ingl. brit.

Véase también: light3, light2, light1, happy

I.light2 <lighter lightest> [ingl. am. laɪt, ingl. brit. lʌɪt] ADJ.

II.light2 [ingl. am. laɪt, ingl. brit. lʌɪt] ADV.

I.light1 [ingl. am. laɪt, ingl. brit. lʌɪt] SUST.

1. light U (illumination):

luz f
let there be light BÍBL.
to see the light (of day)
atrbv. light waves

2.1. light C:

luz f
prender la luz amer.
dar la luz Esp.
lights! CINE, TEAT.
caer como piedra amer. coloq.

II.light1 <pret. & part. pas. lighted or lit> [ingl. am. laɪt, ingl. brit. lʌɪt] V. trans.

III.light1 <pret. & part. pas. lighted or lit> [ingl. am. laɪt, ingl. brit. lʌɪt] V. intr.

IV.light1 <lighter lightest> [ingl. am. laɪt, ingl. brit. lʌɪt] ADJ.

happy <happier happiest> [ingl. am. ˈhæpi, ingl. brit. ˈhapi] ADJ.

1.1. happy (of people) (joyful, content):

as happy as a sandboy/as a lark/as the day (is long)/as Larry esp ingl. brit.
as happy as a sandboy/as a lark/as the day (is long)/as Larry esp ingl. brit.

day-to-day [ingl. am. ˌdeɪdəˈdeɪ, ingl. brit. deɪtəˈdeɪ] ADJ. atrbv.

day laborer, day labourer ingl. brit. SUST.

day return, day return ticket SUST. ingl. brit.

day en el diccionario PONS

Traducciones de day en el diccionario inglés»español

1. day:

day
day after day
day by day
all day (long)
any day now
by day
by the day
one day

day-to-day [ˌdeɪtəˈdeɪ, ingl. am. -t̬ə-] ADJ.

day Ejemplos de uso en el diccionario PONS (revisados por la redacción)

day after day
day by day
day in day out
from day to day
Rome was not built in a day provb.
to live from day to day
to live from day to day
inglés americano

Ejemplos monolingües (no verificados por la redacción de PONS)

inglés
He would work outdoors all day and study at night, reading late into the evenings by the light of the fireplace.
en.wikipedia.org
Match day atmosphere was special, bathed in late winter sunshine (shirt sleeve weather).
www.bbc.co.uk
They had a bivouac and resumed the climb at 3.35 a.m. on the next day.
en.wikipedia.org
His was a dangerous occupation: the relay of postal runners worked throughout the day and night, vulnerable to attacks by bandits and wild animals.
en.wikipedia.org
It's a demanding, all-day trek that requires good hiking shoes, plenty of bottled drinks and warm clothes at the peak.
www.theglobeandmail.com
The coffee beans, still coated with mucilage, are then stored for up to a day.
en.wikipedia.org
To this day these communal garden squares continue to provide the area with much of its attraction for the wealthiest householders.
en.wikipedia.org
V-J Day is instead celebrated on September 2, the date of the formal signing of the surrender.
en.wikipedia.org
We would have returned that day to the scent of home-baked bread and rolls.
www.ganderbeacon.ca
The child is officially adopted on the day of the notarization, after which the adopters are fully and legally responsible for the child.
en.wikipedia.org

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