Stricken in spanish

Afligido

pronunciation: ɑflixidoʊ part of speech: adjective
In gestures

stricken 

more:

» cancer-stricken = enfermo de cáncer, afectado por el cáncer, canceroso.

Example: Doctors have replaced the cancer-stricken windpipe of a patient with an organ made in a lab, a landmark achievement for regenerative medicine.

» conscience-stricken = atormentado, contrito, reconcomido.

Example: Preventive medicine in the community, for example, is obviously vital, but this is no reason for hospital doctors and nurses to feel conscience-stricken because they wait for patients to come to them.

» horror-stricken = horrorizado, aterrorizado, horripilado.

Example: The protagonist becomes a bewildered, horror-stricken pawn in a game of vengeance and betrayal.

» love-stricken = enfermo de amor, enamoradísimo, locamente enamorado, perdidamente enamorado, ciegamente enamorado.

Example: In all three novels, a love-stricken swain believes that he is disporting himself with the handsome object of his affections, when actually he lies abed with the grotesquely ugly maidservant of his mistress.

» panic-stricken = aterrorizado, presa del pánico.

Example: Amid all the doom and gloom in panic-stricken nation-state capitals, nowadays, something completely different may be exactly what we all need.

» poverty-stricken = empobrecido, necesitado, indigente, muerto de hambre.

Example: The British Museum Reading Room is filled with cranks, hacks, poverty-stricken scholars who cherish their hobby.

» terror-stricken = horrorizado, aterrorizado, horripilado.

Example: In each case, the immediate cause of death can readily be inferred from the terror-stricken expressions on their dead faces.

strike4 = hacer huelga, declararse en huelga. [Verbo irregular: pasado y participio struck]

Example: School teachers have decided to strike for more money.

strike5 = golpear. [Verbo irregular: pasado y participio struck]

Example: The ribbon must be disengaged so that the metal typefaces strike the wax sheet directly.

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» lightning never strikes twice = las cosas sólo pasan una vez.

Example: Tall television towers and large skyscrapers blow the 'lightning never strikes twice' myth out of the water.

» strike + a balance = conseguir un equilibrio.

Example: An attempt has been made to strike a practical balance between the advantages of synthesis and those of enumeration.

» strike + a blow = asestar un golpe, dar un tortazo, dar un revés.

Example: This ultimately resulted in a Supreme Court decision that supported the defendants, striking what the music industry claimed would be a 'mortal blow' to its livelihood.

» strike + a blow for = defender.

Example: In an effort to save US culture, strike a blow for reading, and correct well intentioned but misguided notions about the Internet making libraries obsolete, offers ten reasons why the Internet is no substitute for a library..

» strike + a deal = llegar a un acuerdo, cerrar un acuerdo, hacer un trato, cerrar un trato.

Example: The article is entitled 'The Times newspaper strikes deal with Gale to digitise back issues from 1785'.

» strike + a death blow = asestar un golpe mortal, dar el golpe de muerte, dar el puntillazo, dar la puntilla, dar el golpe de gracia.

Example: Moreover, military operations, whatever they may be, will not be able to strike a death blow to international terrorism, indicating that its high time that we probe the topic from a fresh standpoint.

» strike + a key = pulsar una tecla.

Example: Problems can arise if an inexperienced typist strikes the keys too strongly as enclosed letters such as 'o' tend to drop out.

» strike + a killer blow = asestar un golpe mortal, dar el golpe de muerte, dar el puntillazo, dar la puntilla, dar el golpe de gracia.

Example: Merick quickly sprang to his feet and rushed forward to strike a killer blow, but the troll was already dead.

» strike + an agreement = llegar a un acuerdo.

Example: Ministers have failed to strike an agreement yesterday on how to deal with the billions of plastic bags Australians throw away each year.

» strike + a (rich) vein = encontrar un filón, descubrir un filón.

Example: Milan have struck a rich vein of form of late, and will look to continue the same in this match.

» strike + bottom = tocar fondo.

Example: However this was to no avail and the ship struck bottom.

» strike + gold = hacerse rico, hacerse millonario, hacer fortuna, encontrar una mina de oro, descubrir una mina de oro, tener suerte, aparecérsele la virgen a Alguien.

Example: That was a Gold Rush term: the money a miner needed for grub until he struck gold.

» strike + home = dar en el clavo, dar en el blanco, dar en la diana, hacer diana, poner el dedo en la llaga, darse cuenta, atinar, acertar.

Example: Among many observations in this widely bruited report, one in particular struck home: fewer books had been translated into Arabic in a millennium than were translated into Spanish in a year.

» strike (it) + lucky = tener suerte, ser afortunado, aparecérsele la virgen a Alguien.

Example: It's a bit like a lottery -- sometimes you strike lucky and become rich and famous.

» strike it + rich = hacerse rico, hacerse millonario, hacer fortuna, volverse millonario.

Example: 'Stagecoach robberies', 'shoot-outs', 'striking it rich' these are all typical events associated to the Wild West when men and women from the East went to California searching for gold = "Asaltos a las diligencias", "tiroteos", "volverse millonario" son cosas típicas asociadas al Lejano Oeste cuando los hombres y las mujeres del este se dirigieron a California en busca de oro.

» strike + oil = encontrar petróleo, descubrir petróleo.

Example: Israel has struck oil again, this time off the Tel Aviv coast.

» strike + oil = encontrar una mina de oro, encontrar un filón, descubrir una mina de oro, descubrir un filón.

Example: There's no doubt socialite Melania Brown struck oil when she landed Donald Brown, one of the richest men in America.

» strike out = tachar, borrar.

Example: Dots placed under words or letters wrongly struck out by the corrector.

» strike out from = partir de, salir de.

Example: It was sung by immigrants as they struck out from distant shores and pioneers who pushed westward against an unforgiving wilderness.

» strike out on + a different path = seguir un camino diferente, actuar de un modo diferente.

Example: By comparing it with its Parisian counterpart, shows how the British Library has struck out on a different path, using different design concepts, to achieve similar ends.

» strike out on + Posesivo + own = ponerse a trabajar por cuenta propia.

Example: A great deal of interest is currently being paid to those who strike out on their own and take on the title of an 'entrepreneur'.

» strike + pay dirt = hacerse rico, hacerse millonario, hacer fortuna, encontrar una mina de oro, descubrir una mina de oro, tener suerte, aparecérsele la virgen a Alguien.

Example: She thought she'd struck pay dirt when a wealthy couple hired her to find their missing daughter, who they suspected has started using heroin -- who better to find a junkie than an ex-junkie?.

» strike + Posesivo + fancy = atraer, llamar la atención, gustar.

Example: Most books for children are selected by looking along the shelf until an attractive cover, familiar author's name or familiar title strikes the reader's fancy.

» strike + the right balance = encontrar el equilibro justo.

Example: We therefore have to strike the right balance if we are not to deprive the waste pickers of their income.

» strike + the right note = encontrar el equilibrio, encontrar el punto medio, comedirse.

Example: It is worth some time and trouble to strike the right note of pride and frugality.

» strike + the right note (with) = caer bien, aceptar favorablemente, dar una buena impresión, causar una buena impresión.

Example: Our growth doubled that of the market trend, demonstrating that our products are striking the right note with customers.

» strike up + a conversation = entablar conversación.

Example: The author explains how people strike up conversations under their new identities.

» strike up + a friendship with = entablar amistad con, trabar amistad con, hacerse amigo de.

Example: One of the immediate results was that she struck up a friendship with Jeffrey Gordon, a young consultant assigned to the R&D section.

» strike while + the iron is hot = aprovechar la oportunidad, la ocasión la pintan calva, coger la ocasión por los pelos.

Example: If you fail to strike while the iron is hot, there's a good chance you'll lose your momentum.

strike6 = atacar. 

Example: On September 5th, the security cabinet deliberated for the last time, and voted to strike.

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» strike back = contraatacar, defenderse.

Example: This paper details the attempt by Boston University to strike back at such agencies by filing a lawsuit against Internet term paper companies in the USA.

strike8 = afectar, padecer. 

Example: The collections of the National Library of the Czech Republic have suffered from the floods that recently struck a large part of the country.

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» disaster + strike = catástrofe + ocurrir, catástrofe + producirse, catástrofe + suceder.

Example: Because any library is susceptible to a variety of potentially serious disasters, it is unreasonable to wait until disaster strikes.

» terror + strike = terror + sacudir.

Example: Two weeks have passed since terror struck Mumbai.

» tragedy + strike = ocurrir una tragedia, suceder una tragedia, tragedia + tener lugar.

Example: At 4:30 in the afternoon on Reunion Island last week tragedy struck when a bodysurfer was viciously attacked by a shark 20 yards from the shoreline = A las 4:30 de la tarde de la semana pasada en la Isla de Reunión ocurrió una tragedia cuando un tiburón atacó brutalmente a un bodysurfista a 20 metros de la costa.

Stricken synonyms

sick in spanish: , pronunciation: sɪk part of speech: adjective affected in spanish: , pronunciation: əfektəd part of speech: adjective ill in spanish: , pronunciation: ɪl part of speech: adjective smitten in spanish: , pronunciation: smɪtən part of speech: adjective struck in spanish: , pronunciation: strʌk part of speech: adjective afflicted in spanish: , pronunciation: əflɪktəd part of speech: adjective laid low in spanish: , pronunciation: leɪdloʊ
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