Complicar in english

Complicate

pronunciation: kɑmpləkeɪt part of speech: verb
In gestures

complicarse = thicken. 

Example: Though the novel begins like a house ablaze, it later thickens slightly into an acceptable if uninspiring finale.

complicar = compound ; tangle ; complicate. 

Example: This heterogeneity of object, function, and relation is compounded by imprecision due to indirectness of access and to indefiniteness of need.Example: The more unsuccessful she was the more bitter she became, and the more tangled in the web drawn about her by her husband and children.Example: Russia is complicating the Syrian conflict with its intervention there.

more:

» complicar el asuntocomplicate + the issue .

Example: The federal government has complicated the issue more than anyone.

» complicar el temacomplicate + the issue .

Example: The federal government has complicated the issue more than anyone.

» complicar la cuestióncomplicate + the issue .

Example: The federal government has complicated the issue more than anyone.

» complicar las cosasmake + things complexadd + salt to the woundadd + salt to injuryadd + insult to injuryrub + salt in the woundcomplicate + matterscomplicate + thingscomplicate + the issuecomplicate + the situation .

Example: If a sort facility is required, for instance, it will make things complex if authors are entered as: JOHN HUNT ERIC SMITH etc. = Si, por ejemplo, se necesita una herramienta para la ordenación, las cosas se complicarán si los autores se introduce del siguiente modo: JOHN HUNT ERIC SMITH etc.

Example: To add salt to the wound, weaknesses and vulnerabilities in computers have grown over 4 times in the past two years.

Example: Retailers are just adding salt to injury by rack up the price even more.

Example: It seems McDonalds are seeking to add insult to injury by negotiating directly with non-union staff.

Example: He even rubbed salt in the wound when he indicated that Obama could turn on that 'Negro dialect' whenever it suited his demagogic purposes.

Example: Looking disheveled and unkempt, he only complicated matters by wearing a black suit with a red shirt and no tie.

Example: I think we like to complicate things when it is really quite simple; find what makes you happy and who it is that makes you happy and you're set.

Example: The federal government has complicated the issue more than anyone.

Example: The rapid rise of China as a regional economic and military power has complicated the situation dramatically.

» complicar las cosas innecesariamentemake + heavy weather of .

Example: It seems to me that you're making heavy weather of something that could be so simple if you left me in charge of the situation.

» complicar las cosas más de la cuentamake + heavy weather of .

Example: It seems to me that you're making heavy weather of something that could be so simple if you left me in charge of the situation.

» complicar las cosas más de lo debidomake + heavy weather of .

Example: It seems to me that you're making heavy weather of something that could be so simple if you left me in charge of the situation.

» complicar la situacióncloud + the issueconfuse + the issuecomplicate + the issuecomplicate + matterscomplicate + thingscomplicate + the situation .

Example: Against a background of the southern caste system and negative attitudes to Black education, disagreements among Black leaders tended to cloud the issues.

Example: In the instance quoted Dr Cole begins well as shown above but later in his discussion confuses the issue so much that one is left with the feeling that it is hardly an important topic to discuss.

Example: The federal government has complicated the issue more than anyone.

Example: Looking disheveled and unkempt, he only complicated matters by wearing a black suit with a red shirt and no tie.

Example: I think we like to complicate things when it is really quite simple; find what makes you happy and who it is that makes you happy and you're set.

Example: The rapid rise of China as a regional economic and military power has complicated the situation dramatically.

» complicar la vidacomplicate + Posesivo + life .

Example: The last thing she needed was him complicating her life even further.

» complicarsethicken  .

Example: Though the novel begins like a house ablaze, it later thickens slightly into an acceptable if uninspiring finale.

» complicarse las cosasbe hung up on .

Example: As for the question of main entry, I think we're hung up on the terminology.

» complicarse la vidaask for + trouble .

Example: Systematically throwing in other resources that don't behave like documents and are not used as such is asking for trouble.

» complicarse la vida innecesariamentemake + heavy weather of .

Example: It seems to me that you're making heavy weather of something that could be so simple if you left me in charge of the situation.

» complicarse la vida más de la cuentamake + heavy weather of .

Example: It seems to me that you're making heavy weather of something that could be so simple if you left me in charge of the situation.

» complicarse la vida más de lo debidomake + heavy weather of .

Example: It seems to me that you're making heavy weather of something that could be so simple if you left me in charge of the situation.

» complicar un problemacompound + a problem .

Example: Such solutions after repeated application cause the catalog to become a clumsy, inefficient tool, and serve only to compound future problems.

» para complicar aun más las cosasto add to the confusion .

Example: To add to the confusion, other researchers have detected pleasure-sensing regions in a completely different part of the brain and that dopamine is not responsible for the pleasure response.

Complicar synonyms

elaborate in spanish: elaborar, pronunciation: ɪlæbrət part of speech: adjective, verb refine in spanish: refinar, pronunciation: rəfaɪn part of speech: verb perplex in spanish: dejar perplejo, pronunciation: pɜrpleks part of speech: verb rarify in spanish: enrarecer, pronunciation: rerəfaɪ part of speech: verb
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