Crío in english

Child

pronunciation: tʃaɪld part of speech: noun
In gestures

criar = breed ; rear ; raise ; fledge ; nurse ; raise + Animales ; hatch ; nurture. 

Example: The dependence on bosses for recognition, rewards, and advancement breeds an artificiality of relationship, a need to be polite and agreeable.Example: One of the main characteristics of written language, especially for people reared in oral cultural milieus, is the inability of the learner to rely on what has always been available: the non-verbal element of communication.Example: The current generation of young adults were raised on television, video games, music videos, and other highly visual media = The current generation of young adults were raised on television, video games, music videos, and other highly visual media.Example: Birds in territories with more foliage cover were more likely to fledge young.Example: The author also evokes the story of the wolf who nursed Romulus and Remus in order to suggest the barbarity of Renaissance Rome.Example: New animal husbandry systems should be developed that provide opportunities for livestock animals to be raised in environments where they are permitted to engage in 'natural behaviour'.Example: The eggs a chicken lays without the help of a cockerel are not fertilised and will therefore never hatch.Example: Studying the leisure reading preferences of teens can help library media specialists develop collections and programs that nurture a lifelong love of reading.

more:

» cría cuervos y te sacarán los ojosyou've made your bed, now you must lie in it!what goes around comes aroundthe chickens come home to roost [Derivado de la expresión original "Curses, like chickens, come home to roost"]you (shall) reap what you sowif you dance, you must pay the piperas you sow, so shall you reap .

Example: After all, "you've made your bed, now you must lie in it," so there's no sense complaining.

Example: If there's one place where what goes around comes around, it's the United States Senate.

Example: These particular chickens do come home to roost = Derivado de la expresión original "Curses, like chickens, come home to roost".

Example: A popular teaching of the New Testament is the principle that 'you reap what you sow'.

Example: And as the old saying goes: 'If you dance, you must pay the piper' .

Example: The article 'as you sow, so shall you reap: understanding the value of information' addresses the common problem of how to establish the value of the library and the information it provides in the eyes of the parent organisation.

» criando malvassix feet under .

Example: You may hear once in a while where someone had a close encounter with death, but they never made it six feet under -- death is something we can escape easily.

» criar caballosrear + horses .

Example: This property has the potential for the astute investor to subdivide it into 1 hectare lots or simply use it to rear horses or grow fresh produce.

» criar cerdosraise + pigs .

Example: For pork that tastes better than plastic-wrapped meat and costs only pennies per pound, consider raising pigs of your own.

» criar costrascab (over) .

Example: I have chicken pox, the rash started last thursday week and although the majority of spots have scabbed over, I'm still seeing a few new ones.

» criar entre algodoneswrap + Nombre + (up) in cotton wool .

Example: Fragile Sheridan Smith needs the support of her adoring fans, not to be wrapped up in cotton wool.

» criar ganadoraise + livestock .

Example: Every year millions of acres of tropical forest are burned, primarily to raise livestock, releasing millions of tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

» criar malvaspush up + (the) daisies .

Example: Anyway, some day in the not too distant future the old windbag will be pushing up the daisies.

» criar niñosrear + childrenraise + childrenchild rearing .

Example: The housewife cleaning her house, shopping, cooking meals, rearing her children and washing and ironing is undoubtedly working just as much as is her husband on the car assembly line or in the insurance office.

Example: In a promotional brochure Junctionville is vaunted as 'an attractive city to live in and a nice place to raise children'.

Example: Those women who have chosen to take a career break for child rearing may need access to top-up training on returning to the profession.

» criar pecesfarm + fish .

Example: Farming fish and rice together achieves the same rice yield as growing rice alone, but uses 68% less pesticide and 24% less chemical fertilizer.

» criar pollosraise + chickens .

Example: Sure, fresh eggs are a great reason to raise chickens, but it doesn't end there.

» criarsegrow up .

Example: Some unfortunate children grow up as readers of James Bond, of dashing thrillers and the blood-and-guts of crude war stories.

» criarse salvajegrow + wild .

Example: Bignonias are found in warm climates and grow wild in the Eastern and Southern United States.

» criarse silvestregrow + wild .

Example: Bignonias are found in warm climates and grow wild in the Eastern and Southern United States.

» cuando las ranas críen peloswhen hell freezes overwhen pigs flynever in a month of Sundays .

Example: After claiming they'd get back together 'when hell freezes over,' The Eagles did exactly that and this excellent album is the result.

Example: Somebody once told me that Arabs and Jews will come together when pigs fly.

Example: The two stepsisters also wondered who the newcomer was, for never in a month of Sundays, would they ever have guessed that the beautiful girl was really poor Cinderella who talked to the cat!.

» Dios los cría y ellos se juntanbirds of a feather flock together .

Example: I have always believed that, as the old sayings go, 'You are known by the company you keep', 'Birds of a feather flock together', 'Lie down with dogs and you get fleas', etc, etc.

» hasta que las ranas críen pelosuntil/till the cows come homeuntil/till hell freezes overuntil/till kingdom come .

Example: I put you on notice that you may argue till the cows come home about Jabari having blood on his hands, but the plain truth in this case is that Jabari and Hamas were honoring the ceasefire.

Example: But while he detested abolitionism, he passionately loved the Union and felt even greater hatred toward secessionists, vowing to 'fight them till hell freezes over'.

Example: It's a battle that's going to rage on till kingdom come.

» uando las ranas críen pelosnever in a million years .

Example: How could she tell him she would never in a million years work for him, not for all the money in the world.

crío = kiddy [kiddie] ; sprog ; tot ; little one. 

Example: If they can do it for the kiddies, perhaps they can do it for the adults too.Example: Well, she's gone and done it again -- she's up the spout and with another sprog on the way.Example: He was just a tot when his father was jailed for life for murdering his wife.Example: Preventing infant deaths can be as easy as ABC if parents remember three simple ways to keep their little ones safe at night.

Crío synonyms

boy in spanish: niño, pronunciation: bɔɪ part of speech: noun girl in spanish: niña, pronunciation: gɜrl part of speech: noun baby in spanish: bebé, pronunciation: beɪbi part of speech: noun minor in spanish: menor, pronunciation: maɪnɜr part of speech: adjective, noun kid in spanish: niño, pronunciation: kɪd part of speech: noun fry in spanish: freír, pronunciation: fraɪ part of speech: noun youngster in spanish: joven, pronunciation: jʌŋstɜr part of speech: noun tyke in spanish: perro de calle, pronunciation: taɪk part of speech: noun shaver in spanish: maquinilla de afeitar, pronunciation: ʃeɪvɜr part of speech: noun nipper in spanish: chiquillo, pronunciation: nɪpɜr part of speech: noun tike in spanish: Tike, pronunciation: taɪk part of speech: noun nestling in spanish: pajarito en el nido, pronunciation: nestlɪŋ part of speech: noun tiddler in spanish: pececillo, pronunciation: tɪdlɜr part of speech: noun small fry in spanish: frito pequeño, pronunciation: smɔlfraɪ part of speech: noun little girl in spanish: niñita, pronunciation: lɪtəlgɜrl part of speech: noun male child in spanish: niño, pronunciation: meɪltʃaɪld part of speech: noun female child in spanish: Niña, pronunciation: fimeɪltʃaɪld part of speech: noun
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