Descosido in english

Disjointed

pronunciation: dɪsdʒɔɪntɪd part of speech: adjective
In gestures

descoser = unpick ; unstitch. 

Example: If you are doing clothing alterations, then you will be unpicking seams all the time.Example: You really need to unstitch the lining and have a tailor look inside the coat before you know if your suit can suffer alterations.

more:

» descosersecome + unstitched .

Example: Harley is a large, raw-boned, plain person with a ragged haircut and a white t-shirt coming unstitched along the shoulder.

descosido 

more:

» comer como un descosidoeat like + a horseeat like + an elephanteat like + a refugee .

Example: She can eat like a horse and never put on weight.

Example: We all have that one friend, that is stick thin but eats like an elephant  .

Example: A big man is always accused of gluttony, whereas a wizened or osseous man can eat like a refugee at every meal, and no one ever notices his greed = Al hombre grande siempre se le acusa de gula mientras que un hombre enjuto o huesudo puede comer como un descosido en cada comida y nadie le tilda de glotonería.

» como una descosidalike a madwoman .

Example: Oh, summer of 2005, windows down, driving as fast as I can whilst beating on the steering wheel like a madwoman.

» como un descosidolike a lunaticlike a madmanas one possessed .

Example: It's time to start leading by example and not going around like a lunatic all the time, loosing my cool, raving, saying things in the heat of the moment I don't mean.

Example: He was 'driving like a madman' moments before he was involved in a car crash with a lorry, according to an eyewitness.

Example: It was then that Steven himself began behaving like a wild beast, as one possessed, having gone totally berserk.

» correr como un descosidorun for + Posesivo + liferun like + hellrun like + the devilrun like + the clappers .

Example: We stood in our driveway looking daggers at each other -- the tension was like the air before lightning, even the cat ran for her life.

Example: He set explosives around where he thought the entrance to the cave would be, lit the match, and then ran like hell!.

Example: We took some photos (from a considerable distance) and then ran like the devil before the fire started to grow and block the road.

Example: They can run like the clappers, to boot, and have very few predators.

» trabajar como un descosidowork like + the devilwork off + Posesivo + shoeswork like + a horsework like + a mule .

Example: This is possible because we work like the devil to generate sponsorships.

Example: Teacher herself is worked off her shoes coping with appeals for help with grammar, style, spelling, and, most of all, providing infusions of energy when authorial spirits run low.

Example: The only time some people work like a horse is when the boss rides them.

Example: Terrified she'd be fired, she worked like a mule and earned brilliant performance ratings.

Descosido synonyms

confused in spanish: confuso, pronunciation: kənfjuzd part of speech: adjective incoherent in spanish: incoherente, pronunciation: ɪnkoʊhɪrənt part of speech: adjective scattered in spanish: dispersado, pronunciation: skætɜrd part of speech: adjective garbled in spanish: confuso, pronunciation: gɑrbəld part of speech: adjective illogical in spanish: ilógico, pronunciation: ɪlɑdʒɪkəl part of speech: adjective divided in spanish: dividido, pronunciation: dɪvaɪdəd part of speech: adjective separated in spanish: apartado, pronunciation: sepɜreɪtəd part of speech: adjective injured in spanish: lesionado, pronunciation: ɪndʒɜrd part of speech: adjective disconnected in spanish: desconectado, pronunciation: dɪskənektɪd part of speech: adjective disordered in spanish: desordenado, pronunciation: dɪsɔrdɜrd part of speech: adjective unconnected in spanish: desconectado, pronunciation: ənkənektɪd part of speech: adjective dislocated in spanish: dislocado, pronunciation: dɪsloʊkeɪtɪd part of speech: adjective
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