Swelling in spanish
Hinchazón
pronunciation: intʃɑθoʊn part of speech: noun, adjective
pronunciation: intʃɑθoʊn part of speech: noun, adjective
In gestures
swell3 = aumentar, hinchar, engrosar. [Verbo irregular: pasado swelled, participio swollen]
Example: Reference work has been ill-served in the past by its expositors and theoreticians: its extensive literature of several hundred papers and books is swollen by a mass of the transient and the trivial.more:
» river + swell = río + crecer.
Example: The runoff from Sunday's heavy rain has caused many rivers and streams in the area to swell, causing some flooding.» stream + swell = arroyo + crecer, riachuelo + crecer.
Example: The runoff from Sunday's heavy rain has caused many rivers and streams in the area to swell, causing some flooding.» swell up = hincharse, inflarse.
Example: Outside the walls of the room, outside the walls of his skull, outside the impalpable energy walls of his mind, he felt those forces gathering, swelling up.» swell with + pride = sentirse orgulloso.
Example: Upon hearing the favourable appraisal the committee was giving of her, the young appointee swelled with pride.swelling1 = hinchazón, chichón, inflamación.
Example: The gush of water could serve many purposes and was prescribed to soothe, to refrigerate, to stop a swelling, to widen pores, to shock the patient.swelling2 = cada vez mayor, cada vez más abultado.
Example: By far the most difficult new challenge looming for librarianship will be preserving and providing access to 'born-digital' materials, that swelling mass of material that appears only in electronic form.