¿Cómo quieres hacer uso de PONS.com?

¿Ya estás suscrito a PONS Pur o a PONS Translate Pro?

PONS con publicidad

Visita PONS.com como acostumbras, con seguimiento de anuncios y publicidad

Encontrarás más detalles sobre el seguimiento en Protección de datos y en Configuración de privacidad.

PONS Pur

Sin publicidad de terceros

Sin seguimiento de anuncios

Suscríbete aquí

Si ya disfrutas de una cuenta de usuario gratuita en PONS.com, suscríbete a PONS Pur .

We process your data to deliver content or advertisements and measure the delivery of such content or advertisements to extract insights about our website. We share this information with our partners on the basis of consent and legitimate interest. You may exercise your right to consent or object to a legitimate interest, based on a specific purpose below or at a partner level in the link under each purpose. These choices will be signaled to our vendors participating in the Transparency and Consent Framework.

Cookies, device or similar online identifiers (e.g. login-based identifiers, randomly assigned identifiers, network based identifiers) together with other information (e.g. browser type and information, language, screen size, supported technologies etc.) can be stored or read on your device to recognise it each time it connects to an app or to a website, for one or several of the purposes presented here.

Advertising and content can be personalised based on your profile. Your activity on this service can be used to build or improve a profile about you for personalised advertising and content. Advertising and content performance can be measured. Reports can be generated based on your activity and those of others. Your activity on this service can help develop and improve products and services.

Prix
jour

Oxford-Hachette French Dictionary

day [ingl. brit. deɪ, ingl. am. deɪ] SUST.

1. day (24-hour period):

day
day after day , day in day out
every day
from day to day
any day now
on a day to day basis
one day , some day
one fine day fig.
it's not every day that
the day when or that
le jour
it's 15 years to the day since
to this day
all day and every day
from this day forth liter.

2. day (until evening):

day
a hard/busy day
all day
all that day
to be paid by the day
it was a hot day
have a nice day!
what a day!
what a day! atrbv. job

3. day (as opposed to night):

day
we rested by day
at close of day liter.
at close of day atrbv. nurse

4. day (specific):

day
to her dying day

5. day (as historical period):

day gén pl.
of his day
not to give sb the time of day
to call it a day
to carry or win/to lose the day
to have an off day
to have had its day
he's 50 if he's a day
il a 50 ans bien tassés! coloq.
to make a day of it
to save the day

week [ingl. brit. wiːk, ingl. am. wik] SUST.

a week today/on Monday ingl. brit., a week from today/Monday ingl. am., today/Monday week
a week yesterday ingl. brit., a week from yesterday ingl. am.
a 40-hour week
the working or work ingl. am. week

day centre ingl. brit., day center ingl. am. SUST.

day centre

day-to-day [ingl. brit. deɪtəˈdeɪ, ingl. am. ˌdeɪdəˈdeɪ] ADJ.

day-to-day
on a day-to-day basis

day labourer ingl. brit., day laborer ingl. am. SUST.

day return, day return ticket SUST. ingl. brit. FERRO.

day return

flag day SUST.

1. flag day ingl. brit.:

flag day

locuciones, giros idiomáticos:

Flag Day ingl. am.

feast day SUST. REL.

feast day

sports day SUST. ingl. brit.

sports day

budget day SUST. ingl. brit. POL.

budget day

trading day SUST. FIN.

en el diccionario PONS

day [deɪ] SUST.

1. day (24 hours):

day
day
4 times a day
every day
have a nice day!
have a nice day!
bonjour! fr. canad.

2. day (particular day):

that day
D-day
Boxing Day ingl. brit.

3. day (imprecise time):

some day
day in day out

4. day (period of time):

day

5. day (working hours):

day
8-hour day
day off

6. day (salary):

day

7. day (distance):

8. day pl. form. (life):

locuciones, giros idiomáticos:

day by day

day-to-day ADJ.

day-to-day

flag day SUST.

1. flag day ingl. brit.:

flag day

2. flag day ingl. am.:

Flag Day

day shift SUST.

1. day shift (period of time):

day shift

2. day shift (workers):

day shift

day return SUST. ingl. brit.

day return

field day SUST.

1. field day ingl. am., ingl. austr. (day outside classroom):

field day

2. field day (sporting event):

field day

3. field day coloq.:

rest-day SUST.

rest-day

present-day ADJ.

VE day [ˌvi:ˈi:deɪ] SUST.

VE day abreviatura de day of Victory in Europe

VE day
le 8 mai 1945

market day SUST.

market day
en el diccionario PONS

day [deɪ] SUST.

1. day (24 hours):

day
day
every day
have a nice day!
have a nice day!
bonjour! fr. canad.

2. day (particular day):

that day
D-Day

3. day (imprecise time):

some day
day in and day out

4. day (period of time):

day

5. day (working hours):

day
8-hour day
day off

6. day (distance):

7. day pl. form. (life):

locuciones, giros idiomáticos:

day by day

day-to-day ADJ.

day-to-day

present-day ADJ.

school day SUST.

1. school day (day):

school day

2. school day (part of day):

school day

3. school day pl. (period in life):

school day

working day SUST.

1. working day (day of work):

2. working day ADMIN.:

day nursery <-ries> SUST.

day shift SUST.

1. day shift (period of time):

day shift

2. day shift (workers):

day shift

day trip SUST.

day trip

field day SUST.

1. field day (day outside classroom):

field day

2. field day coloq.:

wedding day SUST.

Glosario OFAJ "Intégration et égalité des chances"

PONS OpenDict

¿Quieres añadir alguna palabra, frase o traducción?

Envíanos una nueva entrada para el PONS OpenDict. La redacción de PONS revisará vuestras sugerencias e incluirá los resultados en el diccionario abierto.

Agregar una entrada

Ejemplos de uso en el diccionario PONS (revisados por la redacción)

Ejemplos monolingües (no verificados por la redacción de PONS)

It also marked the first prime time running of the race.
en.wikipedia.org
He took her as his common-law wife and later trusted her with running his plantation when he was away on business.
en.wikipedia.org
Business loan offers came pouring in only after her business had been running for three years.
www.bbc.co.uk
The figure shows a screenshot of the administrative interface of the content management application in a running instance.
en.wikipedia.org
The truck driver was reportedly running the vehicle recklessly and talking over a mobile phone just before the accident.
en.wikipedia.org