Rodeo in english

Rodeo

pronunciation: roʊdioʊ part of speech: noun
In gestures

rodear = bound ; surround ; be all around us ; envelop ; shroud ; skirt ; hem + Nombre + in ; close in on ; gird ; fringe. 

Example: Word is a character string bounded by spaces or other chosen characters.Example: The city loomed far in the distance, with the darkness of nothing surrounding it like a protective cloak.Example: June Jordan offers the poet's view that poetry is all around us.Example: Her eyes swept the room and then enveloped him in an icy glare.Example: Often the needs of the disabled are shrouded by misconceptions such as that they are forced to lead a poor quality of life.Example: Bridleways that cross arable land may be legally ploughed up, but not those that skirt a field.Example: The world of work is no longer constrained by the four physical dimensions of space and time that have hemmed us in for most of recorded history.Example: As he closed in on the killer, he discovered evidence that points to the unimaginable -- a revelation that could rock the entire world.Example: The peaks and rocks of grotesque shapes are girded by clear streams and embraced by green trees and bamboo plants.Example: Most of the islands are low lying, with a soft, rolling landscape of fields and heather moorland, always fringed by the sea.

more:

» en el mundo que nos rodea(out) in the wild .

Example: The amount of information out in the wild on dieting versus training is nuts and the amount of people advising me of the percentage of 80% diet and 20% workout is even wilder.

» Nombre + que me rodeaNombre + round me .

Example: The world round me may have grown dimmer with the passing of the years, but not the world reflected in the magic mirror of literature.

» que nos rodeaambient .

Example: The author draws an analogy between the ambient consumerism of affluent societies and the consumption of information.

» que rodeasurrounding .

Example: This section, then, will review the basic problems surrounding the choice of form of headings for persons.

» rodear con un círculoencircle  ; circle .

Example: The empty space of the claimed issue is encircled.

Example: Additionally, subjects circled numbers from 1 to 5 to indicate how satisfying the relationship was.

» rodear de leyendasshroud in + myth .

Example: The early account of the spread of Islam in Bengal is shrouded in myth and mystery due to the intricate nature of its history.

» rodear de misterioshroud in + mysteryveil in + mysteryenshroud in + mystery .

Example: She is keeping New York abuzz by shrouding the launch of 'Talk,' her new magazine, in mystery.

Example: Countless people have tried to find the entrance to this fabled underground palace, but its secrets remain veiled in mystery.

Example: Enshrouded in mystery and legend, with roots older than Egypt, this secret fraternity has continued to exist down through the centuries.

» rodear en gruposwarm .

Example: Nearby workers rescued a man after he swatted one bee and was swarmed by others that stung him more than 200 times.

rodeo1 = circumlocution ; detour. 

Example: Apart from its apparent implication that mankind had previously been subjected to mass mutilation, this statement, tested against my desk dictionary, fits admirably the definitions of prolixity, verbosity, circumlocution and tautology.Example: After a detour of a couple of miles, we turned around and found the rental office and a gas station.

more:

» andarse con rodeosmince + Posesivo + wordsgo (a)round (and (a)round) in + circlesbeat about/around + the bushprevaricatego around + the housesbe cag(e)y about .

Example: Although not a polemicist, the author minces no words in condemning the brutality and stupidity of the communist leadership.

Example: This type of discussion makes the conflict endless and the argument is going round in circles because different people are trying to solve different problems.

Example: There is no excuse for beating about the bush when combating poverty and social exclusion.

Example: I think it is about time the Tory party stopped prevaricating about Europe.

Example: They had dragged her there and they weren't even giving her an explanation, just going around the houses and dodging every question she asked.

Example: The government is cagey about its plan for Britain's future relationship with the EU.

» darle demasiados rodeos amake + a meal of .

Example: A swarm of bees looks scarey, and the movies have made a meal of it, but bees are actually very passive.

» dar (muchos) rodeosgo around + the houses .

Example: I took the bus, because the route has recently changed and it now takes you right through the middle of the park, instead of going around the houses and taking much longer.

» dar rodeosmince + Posesivo + wordsgo (a)round (and (a)round) in + circlesbeat about/around + the bushprevaricatego around + the housesbe cag(e)y about .

Example: Although not a polemicist, the author minces no words in condemning the brutality and stupidity of the communist leadership.

Example: This type of discussion makes the conflict endless and the argument is going round in circles because different people are trying to solve different problems.

Example: There is no excuse for beating about the bush when combating poverty and social exclusion.

Example: I think it is about time the Tory party stopped prevaricating about Europe.

Example: They had dragged her there and they weren't even giving her an explanation, just going around the houses and dodging every question she asked.

Example: The government is cagey about its plan for Britain's future relationship with the EU.

» dar un rodeodetourtake + a detourmake + a detour .

Example: Eastbound traffic will be detoured as a result of the road works.

Example: A woman struggled to survive when she found herself at the mercy of a psychopathic killer after taking a detour into the backwoods outside New York City.

Example: He was then forced to return the aircraft to Manchester airport after making a detour over the North Sea.

» hablando sin rodeoscrudely putto put it crudelyto put it bluntly .

Example: Crudely put, a computer is a device which can store large quantities of data (numeric or textual) and can manipulate that data in many ways and with great speed and accuracy.

Example: To put it more crudely -- the Americans would run the show and the others would be the dogsbodies.

Example: To put it bluntly: money talks.

» hablar sin rodeostalk + straight .

Example: The action of talking straight requires the person to have courage, strength and the decision to first extend trust before receiving it.

» no andarse con rodeoscall + a spade a spade .

Example: It's about time that people stopped tip-toeing around issues regarding people's identity and called a spade a spade.

» que habla sin rodeosstraight-talking .

Example: Despite initially entertaining doubts about his ability to command, he proved to be a charismatic, straight-talking officer who appeared to be universally liked by his regiment.

» sin rodeoshead-onbaldlybluntlyoutspokenlyno-nonsensein plain + Lenguain plain languageto the pointstraight talk .

Example: Behaviour Management encourages leadership that is positive, helps prevent situations that are already unsatisfactory from deteriorating, and avoids head-on confrontations between people.

Example: The search may sometimes prove fruitless: this is also an 'answer', but it is rarely satisfactory to present it to the enquirer baldly as such = A veces la búsqueda puede resultar infructuosa, lo cual en sí es un tipo de "respuesta", pero no es siempre adecuado decírselo al usuario directamente como tal.

Example: In comparison with adult literature, South African children's literature presents issues more bluntly and also explores themes barely touched on in adult fiction.

Example: Episcopalians were roiled by the approval of a rector outspokenly conservative on such matters as the liturgy, the hymnal and ordination.

Example: When you daydream about conquests you'll never have, the no-nonsense guy daydreams about ladies within reach.

Example: In plain English, it means we don't have enough students and expenses must be cut.

Example: Clear writing in plain language saves time, money, and lives.

Example: I also appreciate Mark's comments as he has a way of being to the point and direct.

Example: The article 'Straight talk in the library' presents the views of 6 decision makers in the library sector of the children's book market.

» tratar Algo sin rodeosaddress + Nombre + head-onmeet + Nombre + head-ontackle + Nombre + head-onface + Nombre + head-on .

Example: The inclusion of vendors and publishers allows everyone to address sticky business relationships head-on.

Example: While we lament the changed environment in which we live, we must not permit inertia and rigidity to prohibit us from meeting head on the demands it makes on us.

Example: The author emphasizes the importance for libraries of tackling copyright issues head on.

Example: Both stress the need to face the issues head on, but prudently, by documenting the extent of the problem before meeting with the library director.

rodeo2 = rodeo. 

Example: The short stories cover such topics as horses, the seasons of spring and summer, the family, the rodeo, home, herding sheep, and weaving a rug.
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