Mimado in english
Spoiled
pronunciation: spɔɪld part of speech: adjective
pronunciation: spɔɪld part of speech: adjective
In gestures
mimado = spoilt [spoiled, -USA] ; pampered.
Example: Children who were in some way different were excused from family responsibilities in childhood because they were, for example, 'spoiled,' a 'problem child,' or 'flaky'.Example: Throughout their short but pampered lives, we treat our cupcakes with the utmost respect.more:
» niño mimado = spoilt brat ; darling ; spoilt child .
Example: Fact is, we are the largest group of ungrateful, spoiled brats the world has ever seen. Example: There is the work of the very competent and literate novelist who is not avant-garde or the current darling of the critics, but is certainly regarded as a professional and imaginative writer. Example: They are acting like two spoilt children in a family letting them do what they want to do.mimar = cherish ; feather-bed ; smother + Nombre + with kindness ; kill + Nombre + with kindness ; mollycoddle ; pamper ; coddle ; baby ; dote on ; humour [humor, -USA].
Example: The British Museum Reading Room is filled with cranks, hacks, poverty-stricken scholars who cherish their hobby.Example: Consequently, it came as no surprise when the new Conservative Government was elected in 1979 on a ticket to cut public expenditure and stop feather-bedding consumers.Example: Her father is no ogre, but since her mother and sister's died her father has basically smothered her with kindness, not allowing her any freedom.Example: But somewhere between killing them with kindness and berating them at boot camps, there must be another way.Example: Now it is the turn of Libya to throw hints that it too needs to be mollycoddled.Example: Though pampering may ease our bodies and minds, sometimes it can break the bank.Example: My generation was surely more coddled than my parents' generation, and the same is true, on average, of my friends coddling their young children.Example: My finace is a wallflower and I don't want to have to baby her for the rest of our lives.Example: It wasn't easy for me to accept the actual fact that my favorite uncle who dotes on me the most on my mum side had liver cancer.Example: With your recipes I will be able to bake things that I will be able to share with my friends without them having to humor me and say it tastes good when it really tastes like cardboard.more:
» mimar a + Posesivo + nieto = spoil + Posesivo + grandchild .
Example: It is often said that one of the best perks of being a grandparent is having the opportunity to spoil your grandchild.» mimar demasiado = spoil + Nombre + rotten ; overindulge .
Example: She was having a whale of a time, spoilt rotten by her friends, and so enamoured of the beach that she wanted to stay there for ever. Example: The answer has eluded the best-intentioned parents who overprotect, overindulge, and overschedule their children's lives.