Trodden in spanish

Trodden

pronunciation: tɹ̩oʊdden part of speech: adjective
In gestures

tread2 = pisar, andar. 

Example: E. M. Forster fashions a homoerotic subjectivity in his novel 'Where Angels Fear to Tread'.

more:

» dare to + tread = atreverse a tratar.

Example: This book on the Vedic religious imagination covers an area of Indian studies that few dare to tread.

» fear to + tread = no atreverse a tratar, temer tratar.

Example: The director goes where even the previous two movies feared to tread -- to an exquisitely off-beam imaginary world of arrested adolescence.

» tread across + boundaries = atravesar fronteras.

Example: In anthropology, there has been concern with mediating figures and other ritual specialists who tread across natural and cultural boundaries.

» tread + a delicate line between ... and = estar a caballo entre... y..., intentar encontrar un término medio entre... y....

Example: Juxtaposing harrowing scenes of a family in grief with high comedy, this film does not so much tread a delicate line between these two modes as career wildly between them like a drunken mourner.

» tread + a fine line between ... and = star a caballo entre... y..., intentar encontrar un término medio entre... y....

Example: These ferocious competitors tread a fine line between controlled aggression and illegality.

» tread + a middle path between ... and = estar a caballo entre... y..., intentar encontrar un término medio entre... y....

Example: This lavishly illustrated book ultimately fails in its attempt to tread a middle path between the scholarly and popular approaches to the Roman amphitheatre.

» tread + common ground = tener en común, compartir.

Example: Libraries and education tread a great deal of common ground, e.g., continuing education, staff qualities, library use education for students, and adult literacy.

» tread + familiar ground = tratar un tema conocido.

Example: The remaining two sections tread more familiar ground.

» tread + grapes = pisar uvas.

Example: The article 'Treading the grapes: The CD-ROM experience' is a report of an informal discussion of CD-ROM networking issues.

» tread into = adentrarse, penetrar.

Example: This seems to suggest that Schopenhauer may have trodden much further into the mystics' domain than he is willing to admit.

» tread + lightly = andar con cuidado.

Example: In conversing with her you hadn't got to tread lightly and warily, lest at any moment you might rupture the relationship, and tumble into eternal disgrace.

» tread on = pisar, pisotear.

Example: The article is entitled 'Tread softly for you tread on my dreams: academicising Arthur Ransome'.

» tread on + air = sentirse como flotando en las nubes, estar en la gloria, estar en el séptimo cielo.

Example: Who is this young woman who goes out stealthily like this, and meets a young man, and comes back feeling as if she had been treading on air?.

» tread on + dangerous ground = andar por terreno peligroso, andar por terreno resbaladizo.

Example: They are treading on dangerous ground if they have decided to sacrifice the principles of parliamentary government to try to enthuse their troops.

» tread on + eggshells = andarse con (mucho) cuidado, andarse con pies de plomo, ir con pies de plomo.

Example: She has learned when it is safe to be herself and when it is wiser to 'tread on eggshells'.

» tread on + Posesivo + toes = molestar, ofender.

Example: For all the indisputable good the Dalai Lama does in terms of spiritual guidance, he seems reluctant to tread on any political toes.

» tread + path = seguir un camino.

Example: Some of themes depict the diverse possibilities available to those who 'tread the path of righteousness and enter the gates of salvation'.

» tread + softly = andar con cuidado.

Example: The article is entitled 'Tread softly for you tread on my dreams: academicising Arthur Ransome'.

» tread + the line between ... and = andar a caballo entre... y....

Example: The fair is dedicated to objects that tread the line between utility and art.

» tread + the thin line between ... and = estar a caballo entre... y..., andarse con mucho cuidado.

Example: Therapists must be able to tread the thin line between too much involvement with patients and too little.

» tread + (very) carefully = andarse con (mucho) cuidado, andarse con pies de plomo, ir con pies de plomo.

Example: The article is entitled 'Treading carefully through the murky legalities of electronic reserves'.

» tread + (very) warily = andarse con (mucho) cuidado, andarse con pies de plomo, ir con pies de plomo.

Example: The director saw at once that he must tread warily.

» tread + water = ir tirando, salir adelante, no avanzar.

Example: In this type of educational system fast, learners often 'tread water,' with little incentive to work beyond minimum competency levels.

» tread + water = tratar de mantenerse a flote, mantenerse a flote.

Example: The fish pulled him overboard after being hooked and his boat drifted away, leaving him treading water for six hours in the shark-infested area.

» tread + well-worn ground = andar camino trillado.

Example: While the first three chapters tread well-worn ground, chapters four to eight cover material that is less well known.

» tread with + care = andarse con cuidado.

Example: The overall conclusion is that policy-makers need to tread with care in this area of social security law and policy.

» well-tread = trillado.

Example: All the contributions provide well-articulated, fresh insights, even on well-tread subjects.

trodden 

more:

» downtrodden = oprimido.

Example: This revolutionary syndicalist union consistently supported the most downtrodden & oppressed, & encouraged a cult of the unspoiled, heroic brawny proletarian with raw courage & 'natural' virtues.

» well trodden = bien andado, trillado.

Example: Like Theseus in the Labyrinth we need to be able to follow well trodden pathways through hypermedia materials and re-track our journey along an imaginary thread when we get lost.

Trodden synonyms

damaged in spanish: , pronunciation: dæmədʒd part of speech: adjective trampled in spanish: , pronunciation: træmpəld part of speech: adjective
Follow us