flee

flee
fli:
past tense, past participle - fled; verb
(to run away (from danger): He fled the danger.) huir
flee vb huir
El pasado y participio pasado de flee es fled; el gerundio se escribe fleeing
flee
tr[fliː]
transitive verb (pt & pp fled tr[fled] )
1 (run away) huir de
hundreds fled the country cientos de personas huyeron del país
intransitive verb
1 (run away, escape) huir
the people fled in fear la gente huyó espantada
she had to flee to America tuvo que huir a América
2 (vanish) desaparecer
flee ['fli:] v, fled ['flɛd] ; fleeing vi
: huir, escapar(se)
flee vt
: huir de
flee
v.
(§ p.,p.p.: fled) = afufar v.
apeldar v.
escapar v.
evadir v.
fugarse v.
huir v.
pirarse v.
rehuir v.
fliː
1.
(past & past p fled) intransitive verb huir*, escapar

to flee FROM somebody/something — huir* or escapar de alguien/algo

the little girl fled to her mother — la niña corrió hacia su madre

to flee TO something: they fled to safety/shelter — corrieron a ponerse a salvo/a refugiarse


2.
vt huir* de

to flee the country — huir* del país

[fliː] (pt, pp fled)
1.
VT huir de

to flee the country — huir del país

2.
VI huir (from de); darse a la fuga

they fled to the West/the mountains — huyeron hacia el oeste/las montañas

* * *
[fliː]
1.
(past & past p fled) intransitive verb huir*, escapar

to flee FROM somebody/something — huir* or escapar de alguien/algo

the little girl fled to her mother — la niña corrió hacia su madre

to flee TO something: they fled to safety/shelter — corrieron a ponerse a salvo/a refugiarse


2.
vt huir* de

to flee the country — huir* del país


English-spanish dictionary. 2013.

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Mira otros diccionarios:

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  • Flee — (fl[=e]), v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Fled} (fl[e^]d); p. pr. & vb. n. {Fleeing}.] [OE. fleon, fleen, AS. fle[ o]n (imperf. fle[ a]h); akin to D. vlieden, OHG. & OS. fliohan, G. fliehen, Icel. fl[=y]ja (imperf. fl[=y][eth]i), Dan. flye, Sw. fly (imperf …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • flee — I verb abandon, abscond, absent oneself, clear out, decamp, desert, disappear, effugere, escape, evacuate, evade, fly, fugam petere, hasten away, hide, make an escape, make off, play truant, remove oneself, retire, retreat, run, run away, run off …   Law dictionary

  • flee — [ fli ] (past tense and past participle fled [ fled ] ) verb intransitive or transitive ** to escape from a dangerous situation or place very quickly: Earthquake victims have been forced to flee their homes. Police caught up with one of the gang …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • flee — meaning ‘to run away, escape’ is most often used in its past tense fled. Flee has a somewhat literary or romantic flavour: • The fourteenth Dalai Lama…has lived in exile in the Indian Himalayas since 1959, when Khamba rebels persuaded him to flee …   Modern English usage

  • flee — [fli:] v past tense and past participle fled [fled] [I and T] written [: Old English; Origin: flean] to leave somewhere very quickly, in order to escape from danger ▪ His attackers turned and fled. ▪ Masaari spent six months in prison before… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • flee — (v.) O.E. fleon take flight, fly from, avoid, escape (contracted class II strong verb; past tense fleah, pp. flogen), from P.Gmc. *thleukhanan (Cf. O.H.G. fliohan, O.N. flöja, O.Fris. flia, Du. vlieden, Ger. fliehen, Goth. þliuhan to flee ), of… …   Etymology dictionary

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  • flee — /flee/, v., fled, fleeing. v.i. 1. to run away, as from danger or pursuers; take flight. 2. to move swiftly; fly; speed. v.t. 3. to run away from (a place, person, etc.). [bef. 900; ME fleen, OE fleon; c. OHG flichan (G fliehen), Goth thliuhan;… …   Universalium

  • flee — fly, Cscape, decamp, abscond Analogous words: evade, elude, avoid, Cscape …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

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