Dorado in english

Golden

pronunciation: goʊldən part of speech: adjective
In gestures

dorado = gold ; gilt ; gilding ; golden-brown ; browning ; golden. 

Example: It was a grand day, one of those dazzling spectacular blue and gold days of early fall.Example: Various skins were used for leather bindings -- calf, goat, and sheep were the commonest -- and the surface was often decorated with heated brass tools, either using gold leaf (gilt) or plain (blind).Example: Clobbering is a form of decoration where the original designs or patterns have been disregarded or deliberately altered or disguised by overpainting with enamels and/or gilding.Example: Bake for 25-30 minutes, or until golden-brown -- if the profiteroles are too pale they will become soggy when cool.Example: Check in occasionally and make sure the liquid hasn't completely boiled off and nothing is burning (though a bit of browning is desirable).Example: Bake the pudding for 30-35 minutes until golden on the surface and bubbling around the edges.

more:

» bronceado doradogolden-tan .

Example: She was everything but ugly -- she had long red hair with the brightest emerald eyes you ever saw with golden-tan skin.

» cabello(s) dorado(s)golden hair .

Example: 'Goldilocks and the Three Bears' is a fairytale about a curious girl with golden hair.

» chorlito doradogolden plover .

Example: Golden plovers travel in large flocks and follow snipes on their northern flight.

» con abundantes doradosheavily gilt .

Example: A good many heavily gilt retailers' bindings (such as the small English devotional books that were sold in large numbers from the 1560s until the later seventeenth century) were indeed intended to look expensive while really being cheaply executed.

» edad doradagolden agegolden years [Usado generalmente para referirse a la jubilación] .

Example: It is unlikely that the 1970s will be dubbed a golden age of libraries.

Example: A long-lost engagement ring still divides childhood sweethearts who are now in their golden years.

» el silencio es doradosilence is golden .

Example: They say silence is golden but some people really just don't get it and they go on and on and on!.

» época doradaglory days .

Example: The author of 'Glory days or the lure of scientific misconduct' looks at fabrication, falsification and plagiarism in scientific research.

» pasa doradasultana .

Example: Could you please tell me how to stop sultanas from sinking to the bottom of a cake?.

» pelo doradogolden hair .

Example: 'Goldilocks and the Three Bears' is a fairytale about a curious girl with golden hair.

dorar = gild ; sear ; brown. 

Example: The cut edges of the book might then be sprinkled or brushed with colour or (less commonly) marbled or gilded.Example: Searing meat is the process for caramelising the sugars present in meat and forming an aesthetic crust around its surface.Example: The sausages were browned on the hob before being transferred to a casserole dish.

more:

» dorar la píldorasweeten + the pillspin-doctortake + the bite out ofsugar + the pillsugar-coat + the pillsugar-coattake + the teeth out of .

Example: They also differ in their views of what can be done to 'sweeten the pill,' whether death ought to be viewed as a barrier to self-fulfillment or a means of self-transcendence.

Example: The field is clouded by manufacturers hyping their own products and industry factions spin-doctoring new technologies.

Example: The aim of this paper is to chart a different course of interpretation through Husserl's earliest work; a course which doesn't take all of the bite out of Heidegger's critique of technology.

Example: Liberal economists like to sugar the pill by talking about constructing a social safety net.

Example: The government has attempted to sugar-coat the pill by making various promises about maintenance of employment and working conditions.

Example: Some Muslims try to sugar-coat the ugly truths about the way their religion is practised.

Example: Sometimes making fun of something terrible helps to take the teeth out of it.

» hierro para dorarhot tool [En encuadernación, pequeñas herramientas manuales usadas para estampar letras o decoraciones sobre la cubiertas o lomo de los libros] .

Example: Finally gold leaf was laid in place over the blind impressions, and fixed into them with further impressions of the hot tools, surplus gold being rubbed off.

» prensa para dorararming press [En encuadernación, máquina para decorar la encuadernación con figuras en oro u otro metal que consta de un mecanismo para calentar los hierros y los tipos] .

Example: In 1843 the great London bindery of Westley and Clark had a rolling press, two cloth-embossing machines, and three arming presses.

Dorado synonyms

happy in spanish: feliz, pronunciation: hæpi part of speech: adjective gold in spanish: oro, pronunciation: goʊld part of speech: noun auspicious in spanish: propicio, pronunciation: ɑspɪʃəs part of speech: adjective halcyon in spanish: martín pescador, pronunciation: hælsiən part of speech: adjective, noun blessed in spanish: bendito, pronunciation: blest part of speech: adjective prosperous in spanish: próspero, pronunciation: prɑspɜrəs part of speech: adjective gilt in spanish: dorado, pronunciation: gɪlt part of speech: adjective, noun fortunate in spanish: afortunado, pronunciation: fɔrtʃənət part of speech: adjective gilded in spanish: dorado, pronunciation: gɪldɪd part of speech: adjective favorable in spanish: favorable, pronunciation: feɪvɜrəbəl part of speech: adjective advantageous in spanish: ventajoso, pronunciation: ædvənteɪdʒəs part of speech: adjective blest in spanish: bendito, pronunciation: blest part of speech: adjective colored in spanish: de colores, pronunciation: kʌlɜrd part of speech: adjective metallic in spanish: metálico, pronunciation: mətælɪk part of speech: adjective chromatic in spanish: cromático, pronunciation: kroʊmætɪk part of speech: adjective aureate in spanish: dorado, pronunciation: ɔrieɪt part of speech: adjective favored in spanish: favorecido, pronunciation: feɪvɜrd part of speech: adjective euphonious in spanish: eufónico, pronunciation: jufoʊniəs part of speech: adjective euphonous in spanish: eufórico, pronunciation: jufənəs part of speech: adjective
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