inglés » ruso

I . pop1 [pɒp, ingl. am. pɑ:p] SUST.

1. pop ingl. am. coloq.:

pop

2. pop (noise):

pop

II . pop1 [pɒp, ingl. am. pɑ:p] V. intr.

III . pop1 [pɒp, ingl. am. pɑ:p] V. trans.

1. pop (make a sound):

pop cork
pop balloon, corn

2. pop (put):

pop

3. pop coloq. (take):

pop drugs

IV . pop1 [pɒp, ingl. am. pɑ:p] ADV.

I . pop2 [pɒp, ingl. am. pɑ:p] ADJ.

1. pop (popular):

pop

II . pop2 [pɒp, ingl. am. pɑ:p] SUST. no pl. (pop music)

pop off V. trans.

pop art [ˈpɒpɑ:t, ingl. am. ˈpɑ:pɑ:rt] SUST. no pl.

pop concert [ˈpɒpˌkɒnsət, ingl. am. ˈpɑ:pˌkɑ:nsɚt] SUST.

pop-eyed [ˌpɒpˈaɪd, ingl. am. ˈpɑ:pˌaɪd] ADJ.

1. pop-eyed (with eyes wide open):

2. pop-eyed (with bulging eyes):

pop group [ˈpɒpgru:p, ingl. am. ˈpɑ:p-] SUST.

pop music [ˈpɒpˈmju:zik, ingl. am. ˌpɑ:pˈ-] SUST. no pl.

pop singer [ˈpɒpsɪŋəʳ, ingl. am. ˈpɑ:psɪŋɚ] SUST.

pop star SUST.

pop-up window SUST. INFORM.

Ejemplos monolingües (no verificados por la redacción de PONS)

inglés
The two longtime musical partners, who trade off instruments and lead vocals, deliver 12 scrappy, crackerjack pop songs veritably buzzing with youthful energy and bristling with hooks.
www.winnipegfreepress.com
You can pop the whole tray in a polythene bag too (except pelargoniums loathe this close environment) during this chancy phase.
www.telegraph.co.uk
Like the soundtrack, the music was comedic but also satirical of pop song conventions.
en.wikipedia.org
Self-revelation has become a stunt, a kind of theatre carefully stage-managed for the celebrity magazines, while on television politicians and pop stars choke back the tears on cue.
www.telegraph.co.uk
The party has generally backed government-sponsored legislation on economic issues, but has sought a clampdown on pop concerts, sorcery and soothsayers.
en.wikipedia.org
Coffee pods are convenient, just pop one into your machine, hit the button and boom -- instant gratification.
www.cnet.com
You then simply add the smooth cake mixture to the little cases and pop them in the oven for 12 minutes.
www.highland-news.co.uk
He said it's not uncommon for ratepayers to pop into their Commercial Court office and ask questions about their bill.
www.napaneeguide.com
If you've been keeping up with pop culture lately, you may have noticed that clean eating means different things to different stars.
www.theglobeandmail.com
In these cases, users of infected machines get deluges with dodgy pop-up ads and other crud.
www.theregister.co.uk

¿Quieres añadir alguna palabra, frase o traducción?

Proponnos una nueva entrada.

Página en Deutsch | English | Español | Français | Italiano | Polski | Русский