earful

earful
earful
tr['ɪəfʊl]
\
SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALL
to give somebody an earful familiar (bore) pegarle un rollo a alguien 2 (tell off) cantarle las cuarenta a alguien, decirle a alguien cuatro verdades
'ɪrfʊl, 'ɪəfʊl
noun (colloq)

my mother gave me an earful — mi madre me echó un rapapolvo or (RPl) me cafeteó (fam)

['ɪǝfʊl]
N
1)

I got an earful of Wagner — me llenaron los oídos de Wagner

she gave me an earful of her complaints — me soltó el rollo de sus quejas *

get an earful of this — (Brit) escucha esto

2) (=telling-off)

to give sb an earful — echar la or una bronca a algn *, regañar a algn

* * *
['ɪrfʊl, 'ɪəfʊl]
noun (colloq)

my mother gave me an earful — mi madre me echó un rapapolvo or (RPl) me cafeteó (fam)


English-spanish dictionary. 2013.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Mira otros diccionarios:

  • earful — (n.) a piece of one s mind, 1917, from EAR (Cf. ear) (1) + FUL (Cf. ful) …   Etymology dictionary

  • earful — ☆ earful [ir′fool΄ ] n. Informal 1. enough or too much of what is heard 2. important or startling news or gossip 3. a scolding …   English World dictionary

  • earful — [“irful] 1. n. a tremendous amount of gossip. □ I got a big earful about Sally. □ can give you an earful about the mayor. 2. n. a scolding. □ Her mother gave her an earful when she finally got home. □ …   Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions

  • earful — ear|ful [ˈıəful US ˈır ] n give sb an earful informal to tell someone how angry you are about something they have done ▪ He gave me a real earful about being late so often …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • earful — I n A lot of gossip. My grandmother gave me an earful about the neighborhood. 1910s II n A significant statement. When Russell came home plastered, his wife gave him an earful that he will never forget. 1920s …   Historical dictionary of American slang

  • earful — [[t]ɪ͟ə(r)fʊl[/t]] N SING: a N If you say that you got an earful, you mean that someone spoke angrily to you for quite an long time. [INFORMAL] I bet Sue gave you an earful when you got home …   English dictionary

  • earful — noun give sb an earful informal to tell someone how angry you are about something they have done: He gave me a real earful about being late so often …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • earful — See an earful …   English idioms

  • earful — scolding, a lot of information (often critical) He really gave his daughter an earful when she came home late …   Idioms and examples

  • earful — Noun. Enough of hearing something or someone. E.g. I ve had an earful of you, moaning on about how poor you are when I know you ve got money saved in the bank …   English slang and colloquialisms

  • earful — UK [ˈɪə(r)fʊl] / US [ˈɪrˌfʊl] noun [singular] informal if someone gives you an earful, they speak to you angrily for a long time …   English dictionary

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