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feeds

Oxford Spanish Dictionary

spoon-feed <pret. & part. pas. spoon-fed> [ingl. am. ˈspunˌfid, ingl. brit. ˈspuːnfiːd] V. trans.

1. spoon-feed baby/invalid:

2. spoon-feed (of a teacher):

I. feed <pret. & part. pas. fed> [ingl. am. fid, ingl. brit. fiːd] V. trans.

1.1. feed (give food to):

to feed sb on sth
darle de comer algo a alguien

1.2. feed baby:

darle la mamadera a Co. Sur Perú

1.3. feed (provide food for):

1.4. feed (give as food):

2.1. feed (supply):

to feed sth to sth/sb
pasarle algo a algo/alguien
to feed sth/sb with sth it feeds the industry with raw material

2.2. feed (insert, pass):

to feed sth into sth

3. feed (sustain):

feed imagination/curiosity/rumor
feed hope/ego
feed fire

II. feed <pret. & part. pas. fed> [ingl. am. fid, ingl. brit. fiːd] V. intr.

to feed on sth
to feed on sth

III. feed [ingl. am. fid, ingl. brit. fiːd] SUST.

1.1. feed C (act of feeding):

give him three feeds a day ingl. brit.

1.2. feed U:

to be off one's feed ingl. am. argot

2. feed C (on machine):

3. feed C ingl. am.:

feed RADIO, TV

I. drip feed [ingl. am. ˈdrɪp ˌfid, ingl. brit.] SUST. ingl. brit.

gota a gota m Esp.

II. drip-feed V. trans.

drip-feed < pret. & part. pas. drip-fed>:

force-feed <pret. & part. pas. force-fed> [ingl. am. ˈfɔrsˌfid, ingl. brit. ˌfɔːsˈfiːd] V. trans.

gravity feed SUST. U or C

hand-feed <pret. & part. pas. hand-fed> [ˈhændˈfiːd] V. trans.

line feed [ingl. am. laɪn fid, ingl. brit. ˈlʌɪnfiːd] SUST. U

1. line feed (in printing):

2. line feed INFORM.:

RSS feed [ɑːrɛsˈɛs ˌfiːd] SUST.

feed pipe SUST.

feed gauge SUST.

en el diccionario PONS

I. feed [fi:d] V. trans. fed

1. feed (give food to):

feed person, animal
feed plant
feed baby

2. feed (provide food for):

feed family, country

3. feed (supply):

to feed sb a line TEAT.

II. feed [fi:d] V. intr.

feed baby

III. feed [fi:d] SUST.

1. feed sin pl. (for farm animals):

2. feed coloq. (meal):

3. feed TÉC.:

spoon-feed [ˈspu:nfi:d] V. trans.

1. spoon-feed (feed):

2. spoon-feed pey.:

feed up V. trans.

feed up person
feed up animal

feed on V. trans. insep. a. fig.

sheet feed SUST. INFORM.

feed in V. trans.

feed in information

force-feed [ˌfɔ:sˈfi:d, ingl. am. ˈfɔ:rsfi:d] V. trans.

form feed SUST. INFORM.

feed back V. trans.

Entrada de OpenDict

feed SUST.

feed (broadcast) TV, RADIO
en el diccionario PONS
inglés
inglés
español
español

I. feed <fed> [fid] V. trans.

1. feed (give food to):

feed person, animal
feed plant
feed baby

2. feed (provide food for):

feed family, country

3. feed (supply):

to feed sb a line TEAT.

II. feed <fed> [fid] V. intr.

feed baby

III. feed <fed> [fid] SUST.

1. feed (for farm animals):

2. feed coloq. (meal):

3. feed TÉC.:

spoon-feed [ˈspun·fid] V. trans.

1. spoon-feed (feed):

2. spoon-feed pey.:

feed up V. trans.

feed up person
feed up animal

feed in V. trans.

feed in information

form feed SUST. comput

chicken feed SUST.

1. chicken feed (food):

2. chicken feed (small amount of money):

force-feed [ˈfɔrs·fid] V. trans.

feed back V. trans.

feed on V. trans. insep. a. fig.

español
español
inglés
inglés
a dog bites the hand that feeds it provb.

Glosario técnico de refrigeración GEA

Present
Ispoon-feed
youspoon-feed
he/she/itspoon-feeds
wespoon-feed
youspoon-feed
theyspoon-feed
Past
Ispoon-fed
youspoon-fed
he/she/itspoon-fed
wespoon-fed
youspoon-fed
theyspoon-fed
Present Perfect
Ihavespoon-fed
youhavespoon-fed
he/she/ithasspoon-fed
wehavespoon-fed
youhavespoon-fed
theyhavespoon-fed
Past Perfect
Ihadspoon-fed
youhadspoon-fed
he/she/ithadspoon-fed
wehadspoon-fed
youhadspoon-fed
theyhadspoon-fed

PONS OpenDict

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Ejemplos monolingües (no verificados por la redacción de PONS)

This starling feeds on a variety of fruits, especially guava, and insects.
en.wikipedia.org
It usually feeds on crucifers: both cultivated brassicas and wild species such as flixweed, garlic mustard, perennial wall-rocket, wallflower and wild radish.
en.wikipedia.org
The mussel is a filter feeder that feeds on phytoplankton, zooplankton and suspended organic materials.
en.wikipedia.org
You wouldn't be able to keep biting the hand that feeds you if you lacked it, and a tame, house-trained reviewer is no good to anyone.
www.telegraph.co.uk
It feeds on the ground, and will wedge larger items in rock crevies while it hammers them open with its strong bill.
en.wikipedia.org

Consultar "feeds" en otros idiomas