Lisiado in english

Crippled

pronunciation: krɪpəld part of speech: adjective
In gestures

lisiado = crippled ; cripple. 

Example: The president of the Society for Specific Learning Disabilities gave information on the library needs of crippled children.Example: The author examines how the physically disabled have been depicted over the years, from the association of disability with moral culpability to the more recent portrayal of the cripple as survivor and hero.

more:

» dejar lisiadolame .

Example: He was assaulted by a gang of white rowdies who beat him over the head with pistols bruising him severely and laming him.

» lisiado de por vidalamed for life .

Example: When sixteen he broke one ankle so badly that he was lamed for life and could no longer follow the plough.

lisiar = maim ; fudge ; cripple ; lame. 

Example: There is nothing 'fair' about the arms trade and is is an insult to the children who are killed and maimed every day by land-mines deliberately designed to look like toys and butterflies.Example: This adaptation of David Leavitt's novel wobbles between comedy and melodrama, ultimately fudging the novel's spiky empathy.Example: The objection to it seems to be that by reading rubbish children cripple their own imaginative, linguistic or moral powers.Example: He was assaulted by a gang of white rowdies who beat him over the head with pistols bruising him severely and laming him.

more:

» lisiar a Alguien de por vidalame + Nombre + for life .

Example: They pitched him unceremoniously out of the window, laming him for life, on a brick pavement below.

Lisiado synonyms

lame in spanish: cojo, pronunciation: leɪm part of speech: adjective, noun halt in spanish: detener, pronunciation: hɔlt part of speech: noun, verb unfit in spanish: impropio, pronunciation: ənfɪt part of speech: adjective halting in spanish: vacilante, pronunciation: hɔltɪŋ part of speech: adjective
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