Agobiado in english
Overwhelmed
pronunciation: oʊvɜrwelmd part of speech: adjective
pronunciation: oʊvɜrwelmd part of speech: adjective
In gestures
agobiado = oppressed ; harassed ; under the cosh ; stressed ; harried ; beleaguered ; overburdened.
Example: The architectural styles of some library buildings make the new user feel oppressed, rather than welcome and at ease.Example: This article offers 3 remedies for harassed acquisitions librarians in the areas of booksellers, money and technology.Example: Motorists are under the cosh, feel taxed to the hilt and face record prices at the pumps.Example: Australia is 'in a different league' to most stressed world economies because of the stability of its banks and China's hunger for its exports.Example: But working mothers' lives are much more harried than the average American's.Example: The prospect of cost savings for beleaguered university budgets have revitalized in resource sharing.Example: The net result is a heavily overburdened cross-reference structure.more:
» agobiado de trabajo = up to + Posesivo + eyeballs in work .
Example: Around this time of year, professors are up to their eyeballs in work and. are likely handling lots of requests for reference letters.» agobiado por las preocupaciones = careworn .
Example: Small wonder that, in the alternative universe, librarians are careworn and cataloguers neurotic.» agobiado por problemas = beset with + problems .
Example: Not unlike several other institutions of higher education today, private universities find themselves beset with an array of problems, most of which turn on two closely linked axes: student enrollment is declining and costs are rising.» estar agobiado de = be snowed under with .
Example: Thus they may have periods with nothing to do interspersed with times of being snowed under with work.» estar agobiado de trabajo = be rushed/run off + Posesivo + feet .
Example: The first day back at work after the Easter break, and Sal Kilkenny is already rushed off her feet.» estar muy agobiado = be in a fret .
Example: What do you do when a calm puppy is suddenly in a frenzy, as if he had a bee in his bonnet?.agobiar = haunt ; weigh down ; harry ; stress ; overburden ; sledge ; oppress.
Example: Some authors, of course, object to their work being subjected to compulsory dissection for exams in the traditional deadly manner and like Bernard Shaw, they swear to haunt anyone who so mistreats them (Shaw's ghost must be busy these days).Example: The passages describing the environment, though lushly written, are inclined to weigh down the narrative thrust of the novel.Example: They stayed there for the winter, and spent the succeeding three summers harrying the coasts of Ireland and Scotland, after which they returned to Norway.Example: The animals are captured for only a few minutes, to avoid stressing them too much.Example: Our prison system is greatly overburdened by non-violent drug offenders.Example: The batsman were sledged beyond words, harassed and were pressured into making mistakes.Example: Christians, Jews, and Muslims show rare case of unity by oppressing gays and lesbians.more:
» agobiarse = fret ; stew ; stress + Nombre + out ; get + stressed ; get in(to) + a fret .
Example: So stop fretting that UK unemployment is rising as the tax burden soars, consumers stop spending and North Sea oil runs dry. Example: He was unhappy about Rosecrans grabbing the limelight and just getting too big for his breeches and decided to let him stew a little bit. Example: Forty percent of Americans say it stresses them out too much to think about health care and costs. Example: When she got stressed we would back off until she showed interest again a few weeks later. Example: It seems he never gets into a fret, always stays in full control.» agobiarse de calor = swelter .
Example: Europe is sweltering in the heat of one of the hottest summers in recent history.» agobiarse por = fret about .
Example: I would have included library schools in this list except for the fact that they fret endlessly about the pros and cons of being called a library school.» no agobiarse = take + Posesivo + time .
Example: Printers have always liked working on special jobs, putting their best into them and taking their time.