vārdnīca spāņu - angļu

español - English

estropearse angļu valodā:

1. to spoil to spoil


1. Only one thing can spoil it. / 2. He didn't want to spoil the evening.
You always have to spoil everything!

Angļu vārds "estropearse"(to spoil) notiek komplektos:

Kitchen and Cooking - Cocina y Cocción
Kitchen and cooking - Cocina

2. break down break down


I might break down and cry if you ask me about when my grandma died.
The photocopier is always breaking down. I hope he won't break down
Some teeeagers break down and try to commit suicide
break down computers
My father has been under a lot of the stress lately. I hope he won't break down.
Plastics do not break down quickly. It takes hundreds of years for a plastic bottle to decompose
I can't enter Facebook because the computer break down.
My car doesn't break down!
Something break down our connection

Angļu vārds "estropearse"(break down) notiek komplektos:

phrasal verbs

3. go off go off


When her mother would go off hunting, we would stay and film.
Careful those cannons might go off.
I have heard that three bombs go off last year.
My alarm clock went off at 5 AM. So what else can go off? In this particular sense of to go off, it’s used when something is activated, or when something explodes.
It should go off in about five minutes, but you never know with homemade explosives, so - run!
Has a bomb ever go off in the capital city of your country?
The bomb will go off in two minutes.
have to go off their house immediately.
My alarm clock didn't go off.
I was just lying in bed waiting for the alarm to go off.
I've always loved chocolate, but recently I've started to go off it. I hardly ever eat it now.
explode, make a sudden noise/The bomb could go off at any moment.
For three months, the automatic lights outside did not go off because it was that dark.
If it's fresh produce, it might go off before you get to use it all.
How soon does meat, fish or milk go offin hot weatherif it is not kept in a fridge.