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intra
a través de
I. through [ingl. am. θru, ingl. brit. θruː] PREP.
1.1. through (from one side to the other):
through
she came in through the door
look through the window
it fell through that hole
it went right through the wall
to hear/feel sth through sth
he was shot through the head
the chair flew through the air
we drove through Munich
1.2. through (past, beyond):
to be through sth
2.1. through (in time):
we worked through the night
half-way through his speech
half-way through his speech
through the centuries
2.2. through (until and including) ingl. am.:
offer good through May 31
3. through (by):
through no fault of her own
II. through [ingl. am. θru, ingl. brit. θruː] ADV.
1. through (from one side to the other):
come through, please!
he barged through
the sun came through
the red paint shows through
2. through (in time, process):
all night through
3.1. through (completely):
wet/soaked through
locuciones, giros idiomáticos:
through and through he's a soldier through and through
it's a subject which he knows through and through
III. through [ingl. am. θru, ingl. brit. θruː] ADJ.
1. through TRANSP. atrbv.:
through train/route
through traffic
no through road
2. through (finished) coloq. pred:
aren't you through yet?
as a journalist, you're through
to be through with sb/sth
haber terminado con alguien/algo
I'm through with her/him
when I'm through with you
are you through with the atlas?
to be through (with) -ing I'm through trying to be nice to you
3. through ingl. brit. TEL.:
you're through!
we're through to Madrid
I. put through V. [ingl. am. pʊt -, ingl. brit. pʊt -] (v + o + prep + o)
1. put through (make undergo):
put through
to put sb through it coloq.
2. put through (send to):
put through
II. put through V. [ingl. am. pʊt -, ingl. brit. pʊt -] (v + o + adv, v + adv + o)
1. put through (connect) TEL.:
me dio con el gerente Río Pl.
2. put through (complete, achieve):
put through reform/deal
I. pull through V. [ingl. am. pʊl -, ingl. brit. pʊl -] (v + adv, v + prep + o)
1. pull through (recover):
pull through
to pull through an illness
2. pull through (survive):
pull through
to pull through a crisis
II. pull through V. [ingl. am. pʊl -, ingl. brit. pʊl -] (v + o + adv, v + o + prep + o)
1. pull through (help recover):
pull through
2. pull through (help survive):
pull through
pull through
I. get through V. [ingl. am. ɡɛt -, ingl. brit. ɡɛt -] (v + prep + o, v + adv)
1. get through (pass through):
get through gap/hole
2. get through:
get through ordeal/difficulties
get through period
once we've got through the winter
3. get through DEP.:
get through heat/qualifying round
to get through to the finals
4. get through (pass) ingl. brit.:
get through examination/test
get through examination/test
II. get through V. [ingl. am. ɡɛt -, ingl. brit. ɡɛt -] (v + adv)
1. get through (reach destination):
get through supplies/reinforcements/messenger:
get through news/report:
2. get through (on the telephone):
get through
to get through to sb/sth
comunicarse con alguien/algo
3. get through (make understand):
to get through (to sb) am I getting through to you?
to get through (to sb) am I getting through to you?
I can't get through to him
4. get through (finish):
get through ingl. am.
get through ingl. am.
III. get through V. [ingl. am. ɡɛt -, ingl. brit. ɡɛt -] (v + prep + o)
1. get through (use up) ingl. brit.:
get through materials
get through materials
she got through £100 just on table napkins
2. get through (deal with):
IV. get through V. [ingl. am. ɡɛt -, ingl. brit. ɡɛt -] (v + o + adv, v + o + prep + o) (bring through)
get through
to get sth through customs
the teacher got them all through ingl. brit.
the teacher got them all through ingl. brit.
V. get through V. [ingl. am. ɡɛt -, ingl. brit. ɡɛt -] (v + o + adv)
1. get through (send):
get through supplies/convoy/message
2. get through (make understood):
get through
I can't get it through to him that
to get sth through one's head or skull coloq. can't you get it through your thick head or skull that … ?
¿no puedes meterte en esa cabezota que … ? coloq.
plow through V. [ingl. am. plaʊ -, ingl. brit. plaʊ -], plough through ingl. brit. V. (v + prep + o)
1. plow through mud/snow:
plow through
2. plow through wall/fence:
plow through
scrape through V. [ingl. am. skreɪp -, ingl. brit. skreɪp -] (v + adv, v + prep + o)
scrape through exam:
scrape through
scrape through
scrape through
scrape through
I. see through V. [ingl. am. si -, ingl. brit. siː -] (v + prep + o) (not be deceived by)
I saw through him from the start
II. see through V. [ingl. am. si -, ingl. brit. siː -] (v + o + adv, v + o + prep + o)
1. see through (support):
his support saw me through
2. see through (last):
$20 won't see me through the week
III. see through V. [ingl. am. si -, ingl. brit. siː -] (v + o + adv) (carry to completion)
see through
he saw the term through
see-through [ingl. am. ˈsi ˌθru, ingl. brit. ˈsiːθruː] ADJ.
see-through
I. sleep through V. [ingl. am. slip -, ingl. brit. sliːp -] (v + prep + o)
II. sleep through V. [ingl. am. slip -, ingl. brit. sliːp -] (v + adv)
sleep through
sail through V. [ingl. am. seɪl -, ingl. brit. seɪl -] (v + prep + o)
sit through V. [ingl. am. sɪt -, ingl. brit. sɪt -] (v + prep + o)
sell-through [ingl. am. ˈsɛl ˌθru, ingl. brit.] SUST. U or C
1. sell-through U (retail sales):
sell-through
2.1. sell-through U (retail sale):
sell-through
2.2. sell-through C (video for retail sale):
sell-through
strike through V. [ingl. am. straɪk -, ingl. brit. strʌɪk -] (v + adv + o)
strike through name:
strike through
I. through [θru:] PREP.
1. through (spatial):
through
through
to go right through sth
to go through the door
to walk through a room
to walk through a village
2. through (temporal):
through
all through my life
to be through sth
3. through ingl. am. (until):
through
4. through MAT.:
6 through 3 is 2
6 entre 3 da 2
5. through (by means of):
through
II. through [θru:] ADV.
1. through (of place):
through
I read the book through
to go through to sth
2. through (of time):
all day through
halfway through
3. through TEL.:
to put sb through to sb
4. through (completely):
through
to think sth through
locuciones, giros idiomáticos:
through and through
III. through [θru:] ADJ.
1. through (finished):
through
we are through
2. through (direct):
through
3. through ENS.:
to get through
sit through V. trans.
sit through
read through V. trans.
read through
go through V. trans. insep.
1. go through (pass):
go through
2. go through (experience):
go through
go through operation
3. go through:
go through (practice, perform)
go through (review, discuss)
4. go through (be approved):
go through
5. go through (use up):
go through
6. go through (look through):
go through
7. go through (wear through):
go through
put through irreg. V. trans. -tt-
1. put through (insert through):
to put sth through sth
2. put through (process with):
put through proposal
put through bill
3. put through (send):
put through
to put sb through college
4. put through TEL.:
put through
to put a call through
to put sb through (to sb)
5. put through (implement):
put through
6. put through (make endure):
to put sb through sth
to put sb through it
through flight SUST.
through flight
through traffic SUST.
through traffic
play through V. trans.
play through
run-through [ˈrʌnθru:] SUST. TEAT., MÚS.
run-through
to have a run-through of sth
Entrada de OpenDict
run through V.
to run through sth
I. through [θru] PREP.
1. through (spatial):
through
through
to go right through sth
to go through the door
to walk through a room
to walk through a village
2. through (temporal):
through
all through my life
to be through sth
3. through (until):
through
4. through (by means of):
through
II. through [θru] ADV.
1. through (of place):
through
I read the book through
to go through to sth
2. through (of time):
all day through
halfway through
3. through TEL.:
to put sb through to sb
4. through (completely):
through
to think sth through
locuciones, giros idiomáticos:
through and through
III. through [θru] ADJ.
1. through (finished):
through
we are through
2. through (direct):
through
3. through ENS.:
to get through
read through V. trans.
read through
I. push through V. intr.
push through
II. push through V. trans.
1. push through legislation, proposal:
push through
2. push through (help to succeed):
push through
rush through V. trans.
rush through
run-through [ˈrʌn·θru] SUST. TEAT., MÚS.
run-through
to have a run-through of sth
sleep through V. trans.
to sleep through noise
through traffic SUST.
through traffic
through train SUST.
through train
talk through V. trans.
1. talk through (discuss):
talk through
2. talk through (explain):
talk through
I. break through V. intr.
break through
break through sun
II. break through V. trans.
break through
to break through a crowd
Present
Iscrape through
youscrape through
he/she/itscrapes through
wescrape through
youscrape through
theyscrape through
Past
Iscraped through
youscraped through
he/she/itscraped through
wescraped through
youscraped through
theyscraped through
Present Perfect
Ihavescraped through
youhavescraped through
he/she/ithasscraped through
wehavescraped through
youhavescraped through
theyhavescraped through
Past Perfect
Ihadscraped through
youhadscraped through
he/she/ithadscraped through
wehadscraped through
youhadscraped through
theyhadscraped through
PONS OpenDict

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Ejemplos de uso en el diccionario PONS (revisados por la redacción)
Ejemplos monolingües (no verificados por la redacción de PONS)
That's why they go through great lengths to ignore the high beams glaring in their eyes.
www.cnn.com
Youths are made to go through a three-phase training plan comprising life skills and orientation course, vocational skills training, and business entrepreneurship training.
thenationonlineng.net
During their 11pm newscasts, and only after a weather update, sports anchors would go through the highlights and final scores between two teams.
en.wikipedia.org
The game is set in an open world, and the player is not forced to go through the plotline in a set sequence.
en.wikipedia.org
Most chimeras will go through life without realizing they are chimeras.
en.wikipedia.org