soothe

soothe
su:ð
verb
1) (to calm, comfort or quieten (a person, his feelings etc): She was so upset that it took half an hour to soothe her.) calmar, tranquilizar
2) (to ease (pain etc): The medicine soothed the child's toothache.) aliviar, calmar
- soothingly
soothe vb aliviar / calmar
this medicine will soothe the pain esta medicina aliviará el dolor
El gerundio de soothe se escribe soothing
soothe
tr[sʊːð]
transitive verb
1 (calm) calmar, tranquilizar, aplacar; (quieten) acallar
2 (ease pain) aliviar, calmar
soothe ['su:ð] vt, soothed ; soothing
1) calm: calmar, tranquilizar
2) relieve: aliviar
soothe
v.
ablandar v.
aliviar v.
calmar v.
desenojar v.
endulzar v.
suːð
transitive verb
a) (calm) \<\<person\>\> calmar, tranquilizar*; \<\<nerves\>\> calmar
b) (relieve) \<\<pain/cough\>\> aliviar, calmar
[suːð]
1.
VT [+ person, baby] calmar, tranquilizar; [+ nerves] calmar; [+ mind] relajar; [+ anger] aplacar; [+ doubts] acallar; [+ pain, cough] aliviar

to soothe sb's fears — disipar los temores de algn, tranquilizar a algn

to soothe sb's vanity — halagar la vanidad a algn

2.
VI aliviar
* * *
[suːð]
transitive verb
a) (calm) \<\<person\>\> calmar, tranquilizar*; \<\<nerves\>\> calmar
b) (relieve) \<\<pain/cough\>\> aliviar, calmar

English-spanish dictionary. 2013.

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Mira otros diccionarios:

  • Soothe — (s[=oo][th]), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Soothed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Soothing}.] [Originally, to assent to as true; OE. so[eth]ien to verify, AS. ges[=o][eth]ian to prove the truth of, to bear witness. See {Sooth}, a.] 1. To assent to as true. [Obs.]… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • soothe — [su:ð] v [T] [: Old English; Origin: sothian to prove the truth , from soth true ] 1.) to make someone feel calmer and less anxious, upset, or angry ▪ Lucy soothed the baby by rocking it in her arms. ▪ She made a cup of tea to soothe her nerves.… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • soothe — [ suð ] verb transitive 1. ) to make someone more calm and more relaxed when they are feeling nervous, worried, or upset: She was doing her best to soothe the crying baby. The news wasn t enough to soothe nerves on Wall Street. 2. ) to make… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • soothe — I verb allay, alleviate, ameliorate, appease, assuage, attemper, balm, becalm, blunt, calm, comfort, compose, deaden, dulcify, dull, ease, free from anxiety, free from pain, give relief, humor, hush, lenify, lenire, lessen, lull, mitigate,… …   Law dictionary

  • soothe — O.E. soðian show to be true, from soð true (see SOOTH (Cf. sooth)). Sense of quiet, comfort, mollify is first recorded 1690s, on notion of to assuage one by asserting that what he says is true (i.e. to be a yes man), a sense attested from 1560s …   Etymology dictionary

  • soothe — *calm, compose, quiet, quieten, still, lull, settle, tranquilize Analogous words: mollify, appease, placate, *pacify, propitiate, conciliate: allay, alleviate, assuage, mitigate, *relieve Antonyms: annoy: excite …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • soothe — [v] calm, ease allay, alleviate, appease, assuage, balm, becalm, butter up*, calm down, cheer, compose, console, cool, cool off*, dulcify, help, hush, lighten, lull, make nice*, make up, mitigate, mollify, pacify, patch things up*, play up to*,… …   New thesaurus

  • soothe — ► VERB 1) gently calm. 2) relieve (pain or discomfort). DERIVATIVES soother noun soothing adjective. ORIGIN Old English, «verify, show to be true», from SOOTH(Cf. ↑sooth) …   English terms dictionary

  • soothe — [so͞oth] vt. soothed, soothing [ME sothen < OE sothian, to bear witness to, prove true < soth: see SOOTH] 1. to make calm or composed, as by gentle treatment, flattery, etc.; appease; mollify 2. to allay or relieve (pain, an ache, etc.);… …   English World dictionary

  • soothe — 01. A good hot bath will help to [soothe] those sore muscles. 02. The smell of her perfume [soothed] and relaxed him, and he soon fell asleep. 03. The mother stroked her baby s back to [soothe] him, and put him to sleep. 04. The father held his… …   Grammatical examples in English

  • soothe — UK [suːð] / US [suð] verb [transitive] Word forms soothe : present tense I/you/we/they soothe he/she/it soothes present participle soothing past tense soothed past participle soothed 1) to make someone more calm and more relaxed when they are… …   English dictionary

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