Stuffy in spanish
Cargado
pronunciation: kɑɹ̩gɑdoʊ part of speech: adjective
pronunciation: kɑɹ̩gɑdoʊ part of speech: adjective
In gestures
stuffy [stuffier -comp., stuffies -sup.]1 = mal ventilado, cargado, viciado. [Pincha en o en para ver otros adjetivos cuyo grados comparativos y superlativos se formas añadiendo "-er" o "-est" (o sus variantes "-r" o "-st") al final]
Example: She wrote, 'the atmosphere of a bookshop I always imagine to be stuffy and fusty'.more:
» stuffy nose = nariz congestionada.
Example: From a runny nose to being all bunged up, nasal changes affect a third of mums-to-be, but there's plenty you can do to help yourself if you have a stuffy nose in pregnancy.stuffy [stuffier -comp., stuffies -sup.]2 = estirado, acartonado, convencional. [Pincha en o en para ver otros adjetivos cuyo grados comparativos y superlativos se formas añadiendo "-er" o "-est" (o sus variantes "-r" o "-st") al final]
Example: Some children are prepared to patronize the shop, and use it in quite a different way, when they find the library (however well run) stuffy or off-putting.more:
» unstuffy [unstuffier -comp., unstuffiest -sup.] = campechano, informal.
Example: The book is often funny, occasionally heart-renderingly tragic, and written in an unstuffy modern style.