Baldado in english

Cripple

pronunciation: krɪpəl part of speech: noun, verb
In gestures

baldado = dog-tired ; cream crackered ; knackered ; bone-tired ; exhausted ; washed-out ; worn out ; pooped. 

Example: After all, who has not felt dog-tired and drained, sometimes for long stretches, at one time or another?.Example: I am relieved that the week-end is approaching because I am beginning to feel quite cream crackered, and so are you, by the sound of it.Example: I did the Plymouth half marathon too, which was two weeks later, I was absolutely knackered after that, but had a great time doing both.Example: This is a very comfortable way to end the day after a walkabout, when you are bone-tired.Example: No matter how much effort you put into getting enough sleep every night, there are going to be days when you wake up exhausted.Example: He calls himself a writer but he never produces anything because he says he's always too washed-out to write.Example: If you're usually worn out after a workout, there's a chance you're focusing too much on quantity instead of quality.Example: At the end of a workshop, I'm often pooped and the very best thing to do, after a nice cuppa tea, is to go out into the fresh air.

baldar = cripple. 

Example: The objection to it seems to be that by reading rubbish children cripple their own imaginative, linguistic or moral powers.

Baldado synonyms

lame in spanish: cojo, pronunciation: leɪm part of speech: adjective, noun
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