Escapo in english

Escapo

pronunciation: eskɑpoʊ part of speech: verb
In gestures

escapar = escape ; bail out ; abscond ; lam (it). 

Example: Other words may be included in a stop-wordlist for some applications, but escape inclusion in other circumstances.Example: In the article 'Bailing out' 9 of the 10 librarians interviewed admitted that they were trying to get out of librarianship partly due to unrealistic expectations learned in library school.Example: Hundreds of prisoners, including murderers, rapists and robbers, have absconded from open prisons since 1999.Example: Though there were reports Bertollini was lamming it in Ireland, he told Michaud on Friday he never left the country.

more:

» conseguir escaparmake it out (of) .

Example: A man believes it's a miracle that he survived after making it out of a crushed car on Saturday.

» conseguir escaparse con labia y zalameríasfast-talk + Posesivo + way out ofsmooth-talk + Posesivo + way out ofsweet-talk + Posesivo + way out of .

Example: I'm frankly surprised she has only been stopped by the police once -- I was with her and she fast-talked her way out of a ticket.

Example: He told me she got in trouble a lot, but she smooth-talked her way out of everything.

Example: Her dad was mainly focused on her sister, who had broken curfew the night before and sweet-talked her way out of it.

» convencer con labia y zalamerías para escaparse desmooth-talk + Posesivo + way out ofsweet-talk + Posesivo + way out of .

Example: He told me she got in trouble a lot, but she smooth-talked her way out of everything.

Example: Her dad was mainly focused on her sister, who had broken curfew the night before and sweet-talked her way out of it.

» dejar escapar a Alguienlet + Nombre + escape .

Example: There is nothing wrong with killing enemy soldiers that are attacking you and it would seem foolhardy just to let them escape.

» embaucar y escaparse defast-talk + Posesivo + way out ofsmooth-talk + Posesivo + way out ofsweet-talk + Posesivo + way out of .

Example: I'm frankly surprised she has only been stopped by the police once -- I was with her and she fast-talked her way out of a ticket.

Example: He told me she got in trouble a lot, but she smooth-talked her way out of everything.

Example: Her dad was mainly focused on her sister, who had broken curfew the night before and sweet-talked her way out of it.

» engatusar y escaparse defast-talk + Posesivo + way out ofsmooth-talk + Posesivo + way out ofsweet-talk + Posesivo + way out of .

Example: I'm frankly surprised she has only been stopped by the police once -- I was with her and she fast-talked her way out of a ticket.

Example: He told me she got in trouble a lot, but she smooth-talked her way out of everything.

Example: Her dad was mainly focused on her sister, who had broken curfew the night before and sweet-talked her way out of it.

» escapar (de)get away (from) .

Example: Guards in the lead car of the convoy threw their doors open and ran for cover, screaming, 'Get away, get away'.

» escapar de la justiciaescape + justice .

Example: More than 250000 fugitives have managed to escape justice in New York and are still on the lam.

» escapar de la menteslip out of + Posesivo + mind .

Example: Most people's to-do lists are, almost by definition, pretty dull, filled with those quotidian little tasks that tend to slip out of our minds.

» escapar de la realidadescape + reality .

Example: Adolescents should be allowed such pleasant means of escaping reality and there's no reason why libraries can't accommodate a little schlock.

» escapar de nocheshoot + the moon .

Example: Realizing that the proprietor was angry enough to report them to the police, they decided to 'shoot the moon' leaving behind all their possessions.

» salir ilesocome out + unscathedescape + unscathedescape without + a scratch .

Example: The owner of the tool shed was inside when the storm hit -- he hid in his tractor cab and came out unscathed.

Example: It seems a bit unfair, though, for Clausen to take all of the heat while her underlings escape unscathed.

Example: Luckily, he escaped without a scratch and now has a great story to tell his buddies.

» escapar impuneescape + scot-freeget away + scot-freeget off + scot-freebeat + the rap .

Example: Needless to say that his plans go awry, as his first chosen victim dies of natural causes while his second escapes scot-free.

Example: As a result, the perpetrators are getting away scot-free.

Example: There was a chance we might get caught but we always got off scot-free.

Example: The nephew of a lawmaker and two of his relatives beat the rap Friday in a bloody bar brawl that injured two cops and a firefighter.

» escapar saltando en paracaídasbale out [Escrito bail out en inglés británico] .

Example: Robert baled out of his aircraft over enemy territory on 27th of April 1944.

» escaparseslip awayduck awayrun awayfall through + the netbreak outslip out (of)make offdo + a bunkflee awayflee [Verbo irregular: pasado y participio fled]weasel (on/out of)duck outgive + Nombre + the slipget offfly + the coopleak out .

Example: He gradually let his original aims slip away until he was attempting the impossible -- a universal bibliography -- albeit highly selectively.

Example: The difficulty for teachers is that they cannot just duck away when children, individually or corporately, are set against what is being asked of them.

Example: Street boys like Slake, a dodger used to running away, do not, even when they are myopic and dreamers, allow themselves to bump into lampposts.

Example: For several years the library has had a successful arrangement with a local bookstore to supply it with unusual and important local material that would otherwise fall through the net of its collection development effort = Desde hace varios años, la biblioteca mantiene un acuerdo satisfactorio con una librería local para que le suministre fondo local importante y poco común que, de otro modo, se le escaparía en el desarrollo de la colección.

Example: The article 'Breaking out with books' describes a pilot project involving the offering of library courses to inmate library assistants and prison librarians.

Example: The two deflated employees exchanged looks and slipped quietly out of the room.

Example: To pull off the heist, the thief stole a swipe card for the complex before using the wheelchair to make off.

Example: As soon as the advance was paid however the manager did a bunk with the money, around £100000, and was never seen nor heard of again.

Example: For this is the way with these common people; they will work up an enthusiasm one minute, and an hour later it will have fled away and left them cold and empty.

Example: The Ndzevane Refugee Settlement in south eastern Swaziland provides a home to Swazis displaced from South Africa and those fleeing the RENAMO terrorists in Mozambique.

Example: Christians have of course been weaseling on this issue since Jesus himself evasively weaseled on it.

Example: Everyone and their mother (literally) will be ducking out from work early today to be with their nearest and dearest for the long weekend.

Example: Thankfully her ploy worked and she was able to give them the slip -- the problem was that she was in a foreign country she had never been to.

Example: She managed to get off with just a year's probation but her hectic life will not be put on hold.

Example: By January 2010 I had flown the coop and escaped the clutches of winter.

Example: When the temperature is low the energy of the particles will be small and so it will not cause much of the dye to leak out.

» escaparse arun off to .

Example: This is the legislative equivalent of running off to Canada to avoid the draft and is considered dereliction of duty.

» escaparse a toda velocidadspeed away from .

Example: A 15-year-old girl was mowed down on her way home from school by a driver speeding away from police in a stolen car.

» escaparse conrun off with .

Example: You know, the way she behaves towards me, you'd never believe she ran off with my husband.

» escaparse dewriggle outbreak out ofbreak + free from/oftalk + Reflexivo + out oftalk + Posesivo + way out ofbreak away fromget + free from .

Example: She was determined that she would do her best to wriggle out from under the dunce cap he was trying to place on her.

Example: Librarians must make an effort to break out of their insularity by imbibing foreign experience.

Example: The institutional 'traditional student' discourse in the USA is one of fraternity parties and breaking free of parental control.

Example: He's talked himself out of it by saying he had to work on Monday.

Example: Ken talked his way out of it by revealing he was in fact also a double agent.

Example: He urged the young artists of England to break away from conventionality and the baleful influence of Renaissance art.

Example: He couldn't get free from the strait waistcoat that kept him restrained.

» escaparse de/el fin de semanaget away for + the weekend .

Example: Getting away for the weekend can help you reconnect with yourself, loved ones, and nature.

» escaparse de la bocaslip out of + Posesivo + mouth .

Example: The second those words slipped out of her mouth I knew in my gut that she was right.

» escaparse de la cárcelbreak out of + prisonjailbreak [gaolbreak, -USA] .

Example: Librarians must break out of the prison they have erected for themselves that dictates their solutions must be professionally perfect; 'good enough' is often the right solution.

Example: During the late 1960s, an escape artist jailbroke by using a lock pick, made out of a wire.

» escaparse de la prisiónbreak out of + prisonjailbreak [gaolbreak, -USA] .

Example: Librarians must break out of the prison they have erected for themselves that dictates their solutions must be professionally perfect; 'good enough' is often the right solution.

Example: During the late 1960s, an escape artist jailbroke by using a lock pick, made out of a wire.

» escaparse de la redfall through + the net .

Example: For several years the library has had a successful arrangement with a local bookstore to supply it with unusual and important local material that would otherwise fall through the net of its collection development effort = Desde hace varios años, la biblioteca mantiene un acuerdo satisfactorio con una librería local para que le suministre fondo local importante y poco común que, de otro modo, se le escaparía en el desarrollo de la colección.

» escaparse de las garras deescape + the clutches of .

Example: By January 2010 I had flown the coop and escaped the clutches of winter.

» escaparse de las manoslose + Posesivo + grip on .

Example: She dismissed the acussation that he was out of form towards the end of the season, a period where he eventually lost the grip on the world championship.

» escaparse de las manos deslip beyond + the grasp of .

Example: A hundred years later, the ancillary skill of knowing where to find information had in its turn begun to slip beyond the grasp of those who needed it for their study and research.

» escaparse de los beneficios de Internetfall through + the net [Expresión con la que se describe a aquellas personas que generalmente por su situación geográfica o económica no tienen acceso a Internet y que, por ello, pierden ciertos beneficios] .

Example: In the US, in spite of efforts to extend Internet access to a broad population, some segments of the population are 'falling through the net,' to their economic peril = En los Estados Unidos, a pesar de los esfuerzos por extender el acceso a Internet a la población en general, algunos sectores "se escapan de los beneficios de Internet", con el riesgo económico que esto implica.

» escaparse del yugo deescape + the grip of .

Example: It is therefore often hard to escape the grip of the official phraseology for fear that, in doing so, the meaning of the material will be altered or lost.

» escaparse de todoget away from + everything .

Example: I go for a drive when I'm really pissed to get away from everything.

» escaparse de un problemaescape + a problem .

Example: But even keeping a step ahead of data decay and software obsolescence is no guarantee of escaping the problem.

» escaparse en avión ajet off to .

Example: With Greece in a financial meltdown, and the summer holidays just around the corner, many travelers will be jetting off to Greece this summer.

» escapársele la lenguaspill + the beansshoot + Posesivo + face off [Usado también con el orden shoot off + Posesivo + face]shoot + Posesivo + mouth off [Usado también con el orden shoot off + Posesivo + mouth]let + the cat out of the bagblow + the gaffblab .

Example: Native speakers of English use idioms such as 'put your foot down' and 'spill the beans' to label events that are not described literally by the words that make up the idioms.

Example: Boy, how they shot their face off about how they were going to beat us!.

Example: She's just always shooting her mouth off and sticking her foot in it.

Example: Manic-depressives who are aware of their mental illness usually take great pains not to let the cat out of the bag, fearing it will damage their career and poison relationships.

Example: It was not idealism but plain fear, plus a peasant's nose for security, which led to Vladimir's decision to blow the gaff.

Example: Wark demonstrated that being the first to blab pays off when it's time for sentencing.

» escaparse por los peloshave + a close callhave + a narrow escapehave + a lucky escapehave + a close shaveescape by + the skin of + Posesivo + teethhave + a narrow shave .

Example: Most people have had a close call with another car, a person walking, or an object while driving.

Example: I and all friends, thankfully, are safe -- although one or two had narrow escapes.

Example: A US woman had a lucky escape when a burglar's bullet bounced off the metal underwire in her bra.

Example: A woman on board a roller-coaster ride had a close shave yesterday when the wooden train derailed as it reached the platform.

Example: Zelda has since had numerous adventures, escaping by the skin of her teeth at times.

Example: Vincent, another of the sailors, also had a narrow shave, he did not fall in but his bag did.

» escapar sin un arañazoescape without + a scratch .

Example: Luckily, he escaped without a scratch and now has a great story to tell his buddies.

» escapar sin un rasguñoescape without + a scratch .

Example: Luckily, he escaped without a scratch and now has a great story to tell his buddies.

» evitar que + escaparkeep + Nombre + in .

Example: Many farmers and ranchers construct barbed-wire fences on their property to keep livestock in and unwelcome guests out.

» ingeniárselas para escaparcontrive + an escape .

Example: As he recovers, he overhears a well-intentioned social worker murmuring soothingly about a juvenile facility, and contrives an escape.

» lograr escaparmake it out (of) .

Example: A man believes it's a miracle that he survived after making it out of a crushed car on Saturday.

» persuadir con labia y zalamerías para escaparse desweet-talk + Posesivo + way out ofsmooth-talk + Posesivo + way out offast-talk + Posesivo + way out of .

Example: Her dad was mainly focused on her sister, who had broken curfew the night before and sweet-talked her way out of it.

Example: He told me she got in trouble a lot, but she smooth-talked her way out of everything.

Example: I'm frankly surprised she has only been stopped by the police once -- I was with her and she fast-talked her way out of a ticket.

» que escapan a + Posesivo + controlbeyond + Posesivo + control .

Example: The book trade can do nothing about this as the exchange rate is beyond their control.
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