run off en el Oxford Spanish Dictionary

Traducciones de run off en el diccionario inglés»español

I.run off V. [ingl. am. rən -, ingl. brit. rʌn -] (v + o + adv, v + adv + o)

II.run off V. [ingl. am. rən -, ingl. brit. rʌn -] (v + adv)

run off with V. [ingl. am. rən -, ingl. brit. rʌn -] (v + adv + prep + o)

run off with → run away with

Véase también: run away with

run away with V. [ingl. am. rən -, ingl. brit. rʌn -] (v + adv + prep + o)

Traducciones de run off en el diccionario inglés»español

I.run <part. pres. running, pret. ran, part. pas. run> [ingl. am. rən, ingl. brit. rʌn] V. intr.

8.1. run water/oil:

10.2. run (to become + adj) → dry, → low , → short

II.run <part. pres. running, pret. ran, part. pas. run> [ingl. am. rən, ingl. brit. rʌn] V. trans.

5. run (to manage):

III.run [ingl. am. rən, ingl. brit. rʌn] SUST.

1. run (on foot):

Véase también: water, short, seed, low2, low1, fat, dry up, dry

I.water [ingl. am. ˈwɔdər, ˈwɑdər, ingl. brit. ˈwɔːtə] SUST. U

1. water:

abre la canilla Río Pl.
abre el caño Perú

II.water [ingl. am. ˈwɔdər, ˈwɑdər, ingl. brit. ˈwɔːtə] V. intr.

III.water [ingl. am. ˈwɔdər, ˈwɑdər, ingl. brit. ˈwɔːtə] V. trans.

I.short <shorter shortest> [ingl. am. ʃɔrt, ingl. brit. ʃɔːt] ADJ.

1. short (of length, height, distance):

to get sb by the short hairs or ingl. brit. also by the short and curlies coloq.
to have sb by the short hairs or ingl. brit. also by the short and curlies coloq.

2.1. short (brief):

hace un ratito coloq.

4. short (inadequate, deficient):

II.short [ingl. am. ʃɔrt, ingl. brit. ʃɔːt] ADV.

1. short (suddenly, abruptly):

2. short (below target, requirement):

III.short [ingl. am. ʃɔrt, ingl. brit. ʃɔːt] SUST.

IV.short [ingl. am. ʃɔrt, ingl. brit. ʃɔːt] V. intr. ELECTR.

V.short [ingl. am. ʃɔrt, ingl. brit. ʃɔːt] V. trans.

I.seed [ingl. am. sid, ingl. brit. siːd] SUST.

I.low1 <lower lowest> [ingl. am. loʊ, ingl. brit. ləʊ] ADJ.

3. low (in intensity, amount, quality):

II.low1 <lower lowest> [ingl. am. loʊ, ingl. brit. ləʊ] ADV.

1. low:

III.low1 [ingl. am. loʊ, ingl. brit. ləʊ] SUST.

I.fat <comp fatter, superl fattest> [ingl. am. fæt, ingl. brit. fat] ADJ.

II.fat [ingl. am. fæt, ingl. brit. fat] SUST.

I.dry up V. [ingl. am. draɪ -, ingl. brit. drʌɪ -] (v + adv)

II.dry up V. [ingl. am. draɪ -, ingl. brit. drʌɪ -] (v + o + adv, v + adv + o)

I.dry <drier, driest> [ingl. am. draɪ, ingl. brit. drʌɪ] ADJ.

II.dry <dries, drying, dried> [ingl. am. draɪ, ingl. brit. drʌɪ] V. trans.

III.dry <dries, drying, dried> [ingl. am. draɪ, ingl. brit. drʌɪ] V. intr.

2. dry → dry up

IV.dry [ingl. am. draɪ, ingl. brit. drʌɪ] SUST.

I.off [ingl. am. ɔf, ɑf, ingl. brit. ɒf] PREP.

II.off [ingl. am. ɔf, ɑf, ingl. brit. ɒf] ADV. off often appears as the second element of certain verb structures in English (break off, pay off, take off, etc). For translations, see the relevant verb entry (break, pay, take, etc).

III.off [ingl. am. ɔf, ɑf, ingl. brit. ɒf] ADJ.

6. off → offside

Véase también: well-off, on, offside, go off, bring on, better-off, badly off

well-off <pred well off> [wɛl ɔf, wɛlˈɒf] 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.

I.offside [ingl. am. ˌɔfˈsaɪd, ingl. brit. ɒfˈsʌɪd] SUST.

II.offside [ingl. am. ˌɔfˈsaɪd, ingl. brit. ɒfˈsʌɪd] ADJ.

III.offside [ingl. am. ˌɔfˈsaɪd, ingl. brit. ɒfˈsʌɪd] ADV. DEP.

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

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

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)

better-off <pred better off> [ingl. am. ˌbɛdərˈɔf, ˌbɛdərˈɑf, ingl. brit. ˌbɛtərˈɒf] ADJ.

badly off <comp worse off, superl worst off, pred> ADJ.

run off en el diccionario PONS

Traducciones de run off en el diccionario inglés»español

Traducciones de run off en el diccionario inglés»español

IV.off [ɒf, ingl. am. ɑ:f] SUST. sin pl. ingl. brit.

I.run [rʌn] ran, run ran, run SUST.

inglés americano

Ejemplos monolingües (no verificados por la redacción de PONS)

inglés
The lyrics describe a couple in love lamenting about being too young to run off to get married, fantasizing about how nice it would be if they were adults.
en.wikipedia.org
They run off with it to leave the poor drone at his wit's end.
en.wikipedia.org
Gradually, events started to include a number of special stages which were often run off-road.
en.wikipedia.org
Belle's car is run off the road and the evidence that the toxic waste site causes cancer is stolen.
en.wikipedia.org
They run off together and spend the night in the car.
en.wikipedia.org
The hoodlums run off as the police sirens are heard in the distance.
en.wikipedia.org
When enemies are hit, they turn into animals and run off the screen.
en.wikipedia.org
He may even run off with a shiny keepsake or two.
en.wikipedia.org
Each has a young wife and the two men are afraid that their wives will run off with other men.
en.wikipedia.org
The carousel run off was paved, as well as turn 1 (the 90) and the esses were paved in the winter of 06-07.
en.wikipedia.org

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