fall back on en el Oxford Spanish Dictionary

Traducciones de fall back on en el diccionario inglés»español

I.fall [ingl. am. fɔl, ingl. brit. fɔːl] SUST.

II.fall <pret. fell, part. pas. fallen> [ingl. am. fɔl, ingl. brit. fɔːl] V. intr.

1.1. fall (tumble):

4.1. fall (pass into specified state):

to fall ill or esp ingl. am. sick
to fall ill or esp ingl. am. sick
to fall ill or esp ingl. am. sick

Véase también: victim, prey

victim [ingl. am. ˈvɪktəm, ingl. brit. ˈvɪktɪm] SUST.

prey [ingl. am. preɪ, ingl. brit. preɪ] SUST. U

I.back [ingl. am. bæk, ingl. brit. bak] SUST.

1. back C ANAT.:

to be on sb's back coloq.
déjame en paz coloq.

3. back C or U (rear part):

(in) back of the sofa ingl. am.
he's out back in the yard ingl. am.

II.back [ingl. am. bæk, ingl. brit. bak] ADJ. atrbv., no compar.

III.back [ingl. am. bæk, ingl. brit. bak] ADV.

1. back (indicating return, repetition):

5. back → backward

Véase también: take back, scratch, keep back, hold back, hand, go back, backward

I.take back V. [ingl. am. teɪk -, ingl. brit. teɪk -] (v + o + adv, v + adv + o)

II.take back V. [ingl. am. teɪk -, ingl. brit. teɪk -] (v + o + adv) (in time)

I.scratch [ingl. am. skrætʃ, ingl. brit. skratʃ] SUST.

II.scratch [ingl. am. skrætʃ, ingl. brit. skratʃ] V. trans.

III.scratch [ingl. am. skrætʃ, ingl. brit. skratʃ] V. intr.

IV.scratch [ingl. am. skrætʃ, ingl. brit. skratʃ] ADJ. atrbv.

I.keep back V. [ingl. am. kip -, ingl. brit. kiːp -] (v + adv)

II.keep back V. [ingl. am. kip -, ingl. brit. kiːp -] (v + o + adv, v + adv + o)

III.keep back V. [ingl. am. kip -, ingl. brit. kiːp -] (v + o + adv)

I.hold back V. [ingl. am. hoʊld -, ingl. brit. həʊld -] (v + o + adv, v + adv + o)

II.hold back V. [ingl. am. hoʊld -, ingl. brit. həʊld -] (v + adv)

I.hand [ingl. am. hænd, ingl. brit. hand] SUST.

1. hand ANAT.:

darse la(s) mano(s)
hand-sewn or -stitched

2. hand (in phrases):

en mano Esp.
presente Co. Sur
to hand ingl. brit. (within reach)
to hand ingl. brit. (within reach)
a (la) mano
a espuertas esp Esp.
not to do a hand's turn coloq.
no mover un dedo coloq.
not to do a hand's turn coloq.
no dar golpe Esp. Méx. coloq.
amarrar a alguien de pies y manos amer. excl Río Pl.
to give sb the glad hand ingl. am.
tener las manos amarradas amer. excl Río Pl.
tengo/tiene las manos amarradas amer. excl Río Pl.

3.3. hand <hands, pl > (possession, control, care):

5.1. hand JUEGOS (set of cards):

cartas fpl
irse al plato Chile
to tip one's hand ingl. am. coloq.

go back V. [ingl. am. ɡoʊ -, ingl. brit. ɡəʊ -] (v + adv)

I.backward [ingl. am. ˈbækwərd, ingl. brit. ˈbakwəd] ADJ.

I.on [ingl. am. ɑn, ɔn, ingl. brit. ɒn] PREP. on often appears as the second element of certain verb structures in English (count on, lay on, sign on, etc). For translations, see the relevant verb entry (count, lay, sign, etc).

II.on [ingl. am. ɑn, ɔn, ingl. brit. ɒn] ADV.

III.on [ingl. am. ɑn, ɔn, ingl. brit. ɒn] ADJ.

Véase también: put on, have on, go on, come on, bring on

I.put on V. [ingl. am. pʊt -, ingl. brit. pʊt -] (v + o + adv, v + adv + o)

II.put on V. [ingl. am. pʊt -, ingl. brit. pʊt -] (v + o + adv)

I.have on V. [ingl. am. hæv, həv, (ə)v -, ingl. brit. hav -] (v + o + adv, v + o + prep + o) (put on)

II.have on V. [ingl. am. hæv, həv, (ə)v -, ingl. brit. hav -] (v + o + adv, v + adv + o) (be wearing)

III.have on V. [ingl. am. hæv, həv, (ə)v -, ingl. brit. hav -] (v + o + adv) ingl. brit.

IV.have on V. [ingl. am. hæv, həv, (ə)v -, ingl. brit. hav -] (v + o + adv)

I.go on V. [ingl. am. ɡoʊ -, ingl. brit. ɡəʊ -] (v + adv)

3. go on (last, continue):

to go on -ing
that's enough to be going on with ingl. brit.
¡venga! Esp.
¡venga ya! Esp.

II.go on V. [ingl. am. ɡoʊ -, ingl. brit. ɡəʊ -] (v + prep + o)

come on V. [ingl. am. kəm -, ingl. brit. kʌm -] (v + adv)

I.bring on V. [ingl. am. brɪŋ -, ingl. brit. brɪŋ -] (v + o + adv, v + adv + o)

II.bring on V. [ingl. am. brɪŋ -, ingl. brit. brɪŋ -] (v + o + prep + o) (cause to befall)

fall back on en el diccionario PONS

Traducciones de fall back on en el diccionario inglés»español

I.fall <fell, fallen> [fɔl] V. intr.

inglés británico

Ejemplos monolingües (no verificados por la redacción de PONS)

inglés
Something to fall back on if you break a hip, or have a seizure or something.
en.wikipedia.org
At the last chance workout, the trainers stress the fact that everyone is weighing in individually, and there is no one left to fall back on if they struggle.
en.wikipedia.org
In that case the appraiser has to fall back on a combination of nationwide yield data, market research and experience.
en.wikipedia.org
Sand always said that her education was the most important thing to her, stating if her music career was to fail, she would have her education to fall back on.
en.wikipedia.org
They had no coal stoves to fall back on so residents soon requested the construction of gas lines as an alternative.
en.wikipedia.org
Social workers have commented that black people facing difficulties are usually able to fall back on support from extended families.
en.wikipedia.org
Hipper, in, followed closely behind, and ordered the light cruisers to fall back on his ships.
en.wikipedia.org
And thus the reproaches made against him fall back on their authors.
en.wikipedia.org
And there is, of course, always the original to fall back on.
en.wikipedia.org
Software consumers, having little else to fall back on, have simply accepted the lesser standards as normal.
en.wikipedia.org

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Consultar "fall back on" en otros idiomas


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