Tenso in english

Tense

pronunciation: tens part of speech: noun, adjective
In gestures

tensar = tighten ; tension ; tense up ; tense. 

Example: Self-effacing nervousness causes the epiglottis to tighten, strangling the words in the throat and stiffening the diaphragm so that it is like pulled-out elastic unable to propel anything.Example: Tension the battens until those wrinkles disappear.Example: Get comfy and totally relax your body and if you need to tense it up and then feel it let go then do so..Example: If you neck is hurting during the exercise then you are tensing it too much and that means your technique is wrong.

tenso = stressful ; fraught ; taut ; tight ; tense ; edgy ; nervy ; uptight ; stressed ; frayed ; nerve-frayed. 

Example: On the other hand, a prolonged sequence of interviews can be equally stressful, and 'free time' should be interspersed with the successive appointments.Example: The article is entitled 'Fraught years ahead? Trade unions and libraries' = The article is entitled 'Fraught years ahead? Trade unions and libraries'.Example: While the stencil is held taut, the cylinder is slowly rotated until the bottom edge of the wax sheet can be clamped in position.Example: The platen was lashed up tight to the toe of the spindle by cords which connected hooks at its four corners to another set of hooks at the four lower corners of the hose.Example: The urgency of his supplication was mirrored in the tense whiteness of his knuckles as he clasped his hands tightly in front of him.Example: His selection of films suggests a temperamental bias toward strong, violent, edgy scenes with killings, face-slappings, and confrontations.Example: The article 'Nervy Days for Office Suppliers' reviews the present state of affairs of office automation.Example: Many of the working-class mothers who take part could be described as uptight.Example: Australia is 'in a different league' to most stressed world economies because of the stability of its banks and China's hunger for its exports.Example: Her mood was frayed after that and her game lacking consistency.Example: Particularly useful for nerve-frayed residents of a country where manic partying often overlaps with political violence.

more:

» minutos tensostense minutes .

Example: A nosy octopus nearly got away with a scuba diver's camera in an underwater tussle that lasted a few tense minutes.

» ponerse tensotense upstress + Nombre + out .

Example: My problem is that sometimes I will get tensed up unwantedly for small problems.

Example: Forty percent of Americans say it stresses them out too much to think about health care and costs.

» situación tensastress situationtense situationstressful situationstressing situation .

Example: We each have a different ways of coping with stress situations and our own attitudes influence how we accept the circumstances.

Example: The police said people should not try to intervene during a tense situation such as a dog attack because you could get hurt.

Example: Stressful situations can wear us down over time.

Example: Stressing situations generate the emission of hormones which are useful for fight and flight but inhibit intellectual functions.

Tenso synonyms

strain in spanish: tensión, pronunciation: streɪn part of speech: noun tight in spanish: apretado, pronunciation: taɪt part of speech: adjective taut in spanish: tenso, pronunciation: tɔt part of speech: adjective electric in spanish: eléctrico, pronunciation: ɪlektrɪk part of speech: adjective, noun nervous in spanish: nervioso, pronunciation: nɜrvəs part of speech: adjective edgy in spanish: nervioso, pronunciation: edʒi part of speech: adjective drawn in spanish: dibujado, pronunciation: drɔn part of speech: adjective restive in spanish: intranquilo, pronunciation: restɪv part of speech: adjective wired in spanish: cableado, pronunciation: waɪɜrd part of speech: adjective jittery in spanish: nervioso, pronunciation: dʒɪtɜri part of speech: adjective strained in spanish: tenso, pronunciation: streɪnd part of speech: adjective uptight in spanish: tenso, pronunciation: əptaɪt part of speech: adjective isotonic in spanish: isotónico, pronunciation: aɪsətɑnɪk part of speech: adjective nervy in spanish: nervioso, pronunciation: nɜrvi part of speech: adjective aroused in spanish: despertado, pronunciation: ɜraʊzd part of speech: adjective jumpy in spanish: asustadizo, pronunciation: dʒʌmpi part of speech: adjective wound up in spanish: terminó, pronunciation: waʊndʌp part of speech: adjective high-strung in spanish: de cuerdas altas, pronunciation: haɪstrəŋ part of speech: adjective constricted in spanish: constreñido, pronunciation: kənstrɪktəd part of speech: adjective suspenseful in spanish: suspenso, pronunciation: səspensfəl part of speech: adjective overstrung in spanish: sobreexcitado, pronunciation: oʊvɜrstrʌŋ part of speech: adjective suspensive in spanish: suspensivo, pronunciation: səspensɪv part of speech: adjective unrelaxed in spanish: no relajado, pronunciation: ənrɪlækst part of speech: adjective tense up in spanish: tensarse, pronunciation: tensʌp part of speech: verb cliff-hanging in spanish: colgando del acantilado, pronunciation: klɪfhændʒɪŋ part of speech: adjective
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