Bache in english
Bump
pronunciation: bʌmp part of speech: noun, verb
pronunciation: bʌmp part of speech: noun, verb
In gestures
bache = pothole ; chuckhole ; divot [divet] ; dry spell ; bump.
Example: The article is entitled 'Potholes in the road to professionalism in medical informatics'.Example: Left unattended, cracks in asphalt will eventually turn into chuckholes.Example: The only problem with divots is when you walk along the golf course and see them strewn about like so much 'Fairway Roadkill'.Example: After ten years of glut in the economy, a dry spell is due, and it will last for more than a year or two.Example: The shouts and the fires grew dimmer behind them as they streaked down the valley at a suicidal pace, rattling and crashing over the bumps.more:
» ayudar a salir del bache = pull + Nombre + through .
Example: Deen told her Florida audience on Sunday that the support of her fans helped pull her through the rough times.» bache económico = economic doldrums .
Example: People on both sides noted sardonically that economic doldrums were forcing Croats to turn to Serbs to help save them.» camino lleno de baches = bumpy road ; bumpy ride .
Example: The article is entitled 'European approaches to the information society: a gold rush over bumpy roads?'. Example: She hadn't actually tossed her cookies, but the dust of the road and the smell of the exhaust combined with the bumpy ride had nauseated her.» lleno de baches = bumpy .
Example: The article is entitled 'The big bumpy shift: digital music via the Internet'.