blown en el Oxford Spanish Dictionary

Traducciones de blown en el diccionario inglés»español

blown [ingl. am. bloʊn, ingl. brit. bləʊn] pret. part blow

full-blown [ingl. am. ˈfʊl ˈˌbloʊn, ingl. brit. ˌfʊlˈbləʊn] ADJ. atrbv.

I.blow1 <pret. blew, part. pas. blown> [ingl. am. bloʊ, ingl. brit. bləʊ] V. trans.

1. blow (propel):

her hat was blown off

II.blow1 <pret. blew, part. pas. blown> [ingl. am. bloʊ, ingl. brit. bləʊ] V. intr.

III.blow1 [ingl. am. bloʊ, ingl. brit. bləʊ] SUST.

Véase también: wind2, wind1

I.wind2 <pret. & part. pas. wound [waʊnd]> [ingl. am. waɪnd, ingl. brit. wʌɪnd] V. trans.

1.1. wind (coil):

to wind sth around or esp ingl. brit. round sth

II.wind2 <pret. & part. pas. wound [waʊnd]> [ingl. am. waɪnd, ingl. brit. wʌɪnd] V. intr.

III.wind2 <pret. & part. pas. wound [waʊnd]> [ingl. am. waɪnd, ingl. brit. wʌɪnd] SUST.

I.wind1 [ingl. am. wɪnd, ingl. brit. wɪnd] SUST.

1. wind C or U METEO.:

como un bólido coloq.
to get the wind up ingl. brit. coloq.
to get the wind up ingl. brit. coloq.
olerse algo coloq.
to put the wind up sb ingl. brit. coloq.
to put the wind up sb ingl. brit. coloq.
to raise the wind ingl. brit. arcznte.

blow2 [ingl. am. bloʊ, ingl. brit. bləʊ] SUST.

I.blow up V. [ingl. am. bloʊ -, ingl. brit. bləʊ -] (v + adv)

II.blow up V. [ingl. am. bloʊ -, ingl. brit. bləʊ -] (v + o + adv, v + adv + o)

blow-by-blow [ingl. am. ˌbloʊˌbaɪˈbloʊ, ingl. brit. bləʊbʌɪˈbləʊ] ADJ. atrbv.

I.blow-dry <blow-dries, blow-drying, blow-dries> [ingl. am. ˈbloʊdraɪ, ingl. brit. ˈbləʊdrʌɪ] V. trans.

II.blow-dry <pl blow-dries> [ingl. am. ˈbloʊdraɪ, ingl. brit. ˈbləʊdrʌɪ] SUST.

blow over V. [ingl. am. bloʊ -, ingl. brit. bləʊ -] (v + adv)

blown en el diccionario PONS

Traducciones de blown en el diccionario inglés»español

blown [bləʊn, ingl. am. ˈbloʊn] V. trans., intr.

blown part. pas. of blow

Véase también: blow2, blow1

blow1 [bləʊ, ingl. am. bloʊ] SUST.

full-blown [ˌfʊlˈbləʊn, ingl. am. -ˈbloʊn] ADJ.

blow1 [bləʊ, ingl. am. bloʊ] SUST.

blow-by-blow [ˌbləʊbaɪˈbləʊ, ingl. am. ˌbloʊbaɪˈbloʊ] ADJ.

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

inglés americano

Ejemplos monolingües (no verificados por la redacción de PONS)

inglés
The pencil skirt is warmer due to the reduced ventilation, and is less likely to be blown up by gusts of wind.
en.wikipedia.org
An elderly man stood at the back of the arena swigging from a hip flask as he tried to stay warm while umbrellas around him were being blown inside-out.
www.independent.ie
The person attempting to obtain the access must find a new access site proximal to the blown area to prevent extravasation of medications through the damaged vein.
en.wikipedia.org
Each neon tube is individually blown and shaped, then filled with rarefied neon gas that is zapped with up to 15,000 volts of electricity to create that distinctive glow.
www.cnet.com
And if you happen to have pulled a pedant for punctuation -- well, you've really blown it.
www.telegraph.co.uk
Jugs will also produce sound at their main resonance frequency when air is blown across the top opening.
en.wikipedia.org
The fuses are blown or opened using high voltage and read using low voltage.
en.wikipedia.org
Companies are juggling planning around blown-out deadlines and there were reports of some small companies having to down tools and take leave to cope.
www.odt.co.nz
There was a record company guy in the studio the other day, and he was absolutely blown away by the ultra-heavy stuff.
en.wikipedia.org
Buoyancy is augmented underway by a fan-blown skirted compartment between the two rigid catamaran-type hulls.
en.wikipedia.org

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