Cosera in english

Cosera

pronunciation: koʊserə part of speech: none
In gestures

coser = stitch ; sew (together) ; stitch together. 

Example: At the other end of the scale, controversial pamphlets, and such things as single poems, plays, or sermons were normally sold stitched.Example: Assemble the sections in the correct order and sew them together over tapes or cords.Example: The codex book was originally a group of leaves folded and gathered into quires which were then stitched together and to other quires as necessary.

more:

» aguja para coser cuadernillosstabbing needle .

Example: Hand-operated stabbing machines, which forced three stabbing needles simultaneously through the side of a pamphlet, ready for subsequent sewing by hand, appeared early in the century.

» coser el dobladillohem .

Example: Young girls in the nineteenth century often learned to sew by hemming squares of cloth for handkerchiefs.

» coser una heridastitch (up) + a wound .

Example: Fixing a broken leg or stitching up a wound, vets can luckily work wonders for a pet in need.

» coser y cantarplain sailingwalkoverdoss .

Example: The article is entitled 'Plain sailing with Swets' = El artículo se titula "Con Swets todo es coser y cantar".

Example: The election is widely expected to be a walkover for him.

Example: Many people think maternity leave is a doss.

» máquina de cosersewing machine .

Example: In 1895 a good London bindery would have the following machines: hand-fed folding machines, sewing machines, nipping machines (for pressing the sewn books before casing-in), cutting machines, rounding machines, backing machines, straight-knife trimming machines (guillotines), rotary board-cutting machines, power blocking presses, and hydraulic standing presses.

» máquina de coser librosbook-sewing machine .

Example: Wire staplers were first introduced in about 1875 in default of satisfactory book-sewing machines (which were not fully developed until 1882).

» no ser todo coser y cantarbe not all beer and skittles .

Example: Diplomacy is not all beer and skittles but this book can give that impression.

» ser coser y cantarbe a breezebe a cinchbe a piece of cakebe a doddlebe a snapbe a picnicbe duck soupbe a walk/stroll in/through/across the park .

Example: We both woke up bright and early to forage for food nearby, which was a breeze.

Example: The article 'Singing with Children Is a Cinch!' explains how children learn to sing and discusses criteria for selecting songs suitable for young voices.

Example: That was a piece of cake compared with getting the resulting research agency off the ground.

Example: Sitting on top of a launch rocket waiting for somebody to push a button and send you hurtling off into outer space is a doddle when compared with diving.

Example: The article is entitled 'Enhancing digital images is a snap'.

Example: Drying and stewing fruit was a picnic compared to the elaborate rituals involved in the preparation and preservation of meat.

Example: Even driving the Taliban out of power from Afghanistan was duck soup compared to Iraq.

Example: The Zionists will discover that the war they had in July was a walk in the park if we compare it to what we've prepared for every new aggression.

» tan fácil como coser y cantar(as) simple as ABC(as) easy as ABC(as) easy as (apple) pie(as) easy/simple as 1,2,3 .

Example: Advocates of the dictionary catalogue claim that it is as simple as ABC and certainly there is no preliminary psychological barrier against its use.

Example: Preventing infant deaths can be as easy as ABC if parents remember three simple ways to keep their little ones safe at night.

Example: Sometimes it's incredible how we complicate things when they can be as easy as pie.

Example: Calculating the amount of lye you need for your next soap recipe is as easy as 1,2,3.
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