crumple

crumple
verb
(to make or become wrinkled or creased: This material crumples easily; She crumpled up the piece of paper.) arrugar, estrujar
crumple vb arrugar
your trousers are all crumpled, iron them tu pantalón está todo arrugado, plánchalo
El gerundio de crumple se escribe crumpling
crumple
tr['krʌmpəl]
transitive verb
1 (clothes) arrugar; (paper) estrujar
he crumpled the letter up into a ball hizo una bola estrujando la carta
intransitive verb
1 (clothes, material, face) arrugarse; (car) abollarse
crumple ['krʌmpəl] v, -pled ; -pling vt
rumple: arrugar
crumple vi
1) wrinkle: arrugarse
2) collapse: desplomarse
crumple
v.
acodillar v.
apañuscar v.
aportillar v.
arrugar v.
plegar v.
'krʌmpəl
1.
transitive verb \<\<paper/clothes\>\> arrugar*; \<\<metal\>\> abollar

she crumpled the sheet of paper into a ball — hizo una bola estrujando la hoja de papel

to crumple something up — arrugar* algo


2.
vi (become creased) \<\<fabric/shirt\>\> arrugarse*
['krʌmpl]
1.
VT (also: crumple up) [+ paper] estrujar; [+ clothes] arrugar
2.
VI [material] arrugarse; [person] (=fall) desplomarse; (=lose one's nerve) desmoronarse, venirse abajo

she crumpled to the floor — se desplomó

he just crumpled and lost all his confidence — se desmoronó or se vino abajo y perdió toda la confianza

his face crumpled and he started to cry — se le descompuso el rostro y se echó a llorar

3.
CPD

crumple zone N — (Aut) zona f de deformación absorbente

* * *
['krʌmpəl]
1.
transitive verb \<\<paper/clothes\>\> arrugar*; \<\<metal\>\> abollar

she crumpled the sheet of paper into a ball — hizo una bola estrujando la hoja de papel

to crumple something up — arrugar* algo


2.
vi (become creased) \<\<fabric/shirt\>\> arrugarse*

English-spanish dictionary. 2013.

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Mira otros diccionarios:

  • Crumple — Crum ple (kr[u^]m p l), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Crumpled} ( p ld); p. pr. & vb. n. {Crumpling} ( pl[i^]ng).] [Dim. fr. crump, a.] To draw or press into wrinkles or folds; to crush together; to rumple; as, to crumple paper. [1913 Webster] They… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Crumple — Crum ple, v. i. To contract irregularly; to show wrinkles after being crushed together; as, leaves crumple. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • crumple — c.1300, crumplen, frequentative of crumpen to curl up (from O.E. crump bent, crooked ). Related: Crumpled; crumpling …   Etymology dictionary

  • crumple — [v] make or become wrinkled break down, buckle, cave in, collapse, crease, crimp, crimple, crinkle, crush, fall, fold, give way, go to pieces, pucker, rimple, ruck, rumple, screw, scrunch, shrivel, wad, wrinkle; concepts 184,208,252 Ant.… …   New thesaurus

  • crumple — ► VERB 1) crush so as to become creased and wrinkled. 2) suddenly lose force, effectiveness, or composure. ► NOUN ▪ a crushed fold, crease, or wrinkle. ORIGIN from obsolete crump «make or become curved» …   English terms dictionary

  • crumple — [krum′pəl] vt. crumpled, crumpling [ME crumplen, var. of crimplen, to wrinkle, freq. of crimpen, CRIMP1] 1. to crush together into creases or wrinkles 2. to cause to collapse vi. 1. to become crumpled 2 …   English World dictionary

  • crumple — UK [ˈkrʌmp(ə)l] / US verb Word forms crumple : present tense I/you/we/they crumple he/she/it crumples present participle crumpling past tense crumpled past participle crumpled 1) crumple or crumple up [intransitive/transitive] to crush something… …   English dictionary

  • crumple — [[t]krʌ̱mp(ə)l[/t]] crumples, crumpling, crumpled 1) V ERG If you crumple something such as paper or cloth, or if it crumples, it is squashed and becomes full of untidy creases and folds. [V n] She crumpled the paper in her hand... The front and… …   English dictionary

  • crumple — verb Crumple is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑face Crumple is used with these nouns as the object: ↑paper …   Collocations dictionary

  • crumple — crum|ple [ˈkrʌmpəl] v [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: crump to curl up (14 19 centuries), from crump, crumb bent (11 18 centuries), from Old English] 1.) [I and T] also crumple up to crush something so that it becomes smaller and bent, or to be crushed …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • crumple — crum|ple [ krʌmpl ] verb 1. ) crumple or crumple up intransitive or transitive to crush something such as paper or cloth so that it forms messy folds, or to be crushed in this way: I quickly crumpled up the letter and shoved it in my pocket. The… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

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