Hincha in english

Fan

pronunciation: fæn part of speech: noun
In gestures

hincha = fan. 

Example: The article 'Why girls flock to Sweet Valley High' investigates the appeal to girls of adolescent romances and what, if anything, could be done to broaden the reading habits of such fans of formula fiction.

more:

» hincha de fútbolfootball supporterfootball fan .

Example: Football violence in the 90s decreased and the credit has been given to the increased use of ecstasy by football supporters .

Example: A football fan has paid the ultimate tribute to his favourite club by naming his daughter after it.

» hincha incondicionalloyal fan .

Example: Hundreds of usually loyal fans booed and jeered as the tortured singer delivered a shambolic and apparently drunken performance.

» hincha radical del fútbolfootball hooligan .

Example: The violence wasn't caused by war vets but by football hooligans.

» radicalismo de los hichas del fútbolfootball hooliganism .

Example: The thing with football hooliganism is that, especially in countries like ours, it is a bigger issue than bad manners.

» ser hincha deroot forbe a (big) fan ofpull for .

Example: I didn't know her from Adam but started rooting for her from day 1 of the competition.

Example: I've always been a fan of putting jam on my grilled cheese on toast (I think it's best with a chunky homemade apricot or blackberry jam).

Example: As we relive the story, we pull for him, and against Judas who betrays him, Peter who denies him, Herod who mocks him, Pilate who washes his hands and condemns him, and Barabbas who is guilty but gets to go free.

hinchar = bulk ; swell ; bloat ; inflate ; blow up. 

Example: Such entries bulk the catalogue, making its weeding increasingly difficult and time-consuming.Example: Reference work has been ill-served in the past by its expositors and theoreticians: its extensive literature of several hundred papers and books is swollen by a mass of the transient and the trivial.Example: During feeding the ciliate bloats in a few minutes to 10 to 20 times its original volume.Example: It can take as little as one minute to inflate or deflate some air mattresses.Example: We had to blow 50 balloons up for the party = We had to blow 50 balloons up for the party.

more:

» hinchar las pelotaspiss + Nombre + off .

Example: And he isn't one to squander an opportunity to take credit for an operation that will piss off Washington.

» hinchar los cojonespiss + Nombre + offcheese + Nombre + off .

Example: And he isn't one to squander an opportunity to take credit for an operation that will piss off Washington.

Example: Again, she too could be just as corrupt as the others, but I have a sneaky feeling that she cheesed someone off, and they decided to put a spoke in her wheel.

» hinchar los huevospiss + Nombre + offcheese + Nombre + off .

Example: And he isn't one to squander an opportunity to take credit for an operation that will piss off Washington.

Example: Again, she too could be just as corrupt as the others, but I have a sneaky feeling that she cheesed someone off, and they decided to put a spoke in her wheel.

» hincharsebloatswell uppouchballoon .

Example: During feeding the ciliate bloats in a few minutes to 10 to 20 times its original volume.

Example: Outside the walls of the room, outside the walls of his skull, outside the impalpable energy walls of his mind, he felt those forces gathering, swelling up.

Example: Also, a few months after the fracture, my stomach began to pouch outward, and a lot of times I feel bloated.

Example: She ballooned to nearly 17 stone and struggled with small tasks such as tying her shoelaces, as the bulk of her large belly would prevent her from bending over.

» hincharse con el vientobillow .

Example: He was puzzled by the annoying tendency of shower curtains to billow in during a shower and stick to the leg or arm of the person attempting to bathe.

Hincha synonyms

buff in spanish: pulir, pronunciation: bʌf part of speech: noun, adjective winnow in spanish: aventar, pronunciation: wɪnoʊ part of speech: verb, noun lover in spanish: amante, pronunciation: lʌvɜr part of speech: noun afficionado in spanish: aficionado, pronunciation: æfitʃoʊnɑdoʊ part of speech: noun devotee in spanish: devoto, pronunciation: devəti part of speech: noun strike out in spanish: tachar, pronunciation: straɪkaʊt part of speech: verb sports fan in spanish: fan de los deportes, pronunciation: spɔrtsfæn part of speech: noun
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