Suplicar in english
Supplicate
pronunciation: sʌpləkeɪt part of speech: verb
pronunciation: sʌpləkeɪt part of speech: verb
In gestures
suplicar = implore ; appeal for ; plead ; entreat ; beseech ; beg ; pray ; make + an emotional appeal.
Example: Several members of the group raised polite brows and implored him to go on.Example: She stopped and looked hard into his eyes, as it were, appealing for approval.Example: 'Jeanne, will you not do anything about this, please?' he pleaded.Example: Bajalovic entreated her to go on.Example: In this play Isabella, the heroine, refuses Angelo's dishonorable proposal to her though it would save Claudio her brother's life if she yielded; and she does this in spite of the fact that Claudio beseeches her to yield = In this play Isabella, the heroine, refuses Angelo's dishonorable proposal to her though it would save Claudio her brother's life if she yielded; and she does this in spite of the fact that Claudio beseeches her to yield.Example: A sociologist at Yale begs libraries to keep information from him - he says that information seeks him everywhere in this world of email, fax and telephone.Example: While technology has advanced the art of record keeping, the underlying purposes have remained essentially the same -- to commemorate, communicate, pray, calculate, measure, and preserve.Example: The mother of a missing 15-year-old girl has made an emotional appeal for information about the whereabouts of her daughter.more:
» suplicar perdón = beg for + forgiveness .
Example: I didn't give her a song and dance or get on my hands and knees begging for forgivenes.