Blanca Estela Murillo Aguilera and Sonia Maritza Márquez Espinoza: BridalParty

 

Words you find from the book BridalParty


POTENTIALITIES = POTECIABILIDADES

Potentialities (ponteciability) It is a noun that is conjugated with the personal pronouns he, she, he. is used in the present simple

Word find in chapter III.

 “The people who had come in were rich and at home in their richness with one another-a dark, lovely girl with a hysterical little laugh whom be had met before; two confident men whose jokes referred invariably o last night's scandal and tonight's potentialities, as if they had important rôles in a play that extended indefinitely into the past and the future.”

Means in Spanish

Means in English

Pronunciation

Quality of potential or Thing that has the possibility of being or existing in the future.

Synonym: ability, possibility, aptitude, probable.

Latent qualities or abilities that may be developed and lead to future success or usefulness.

Synonym: possibility, capacity, energy.

Pow·ten·shee·a·luh·teez

 






DEVOTIONS

1.        Your friend has a lot of talent and potentialities, it would be a shame if she didn't play.

2.      There were many potentialities for hurricanes to be dangerous and destructive.

3.       Her potentialities make me love her very much.

4.      He studies in the best university in the country, he had good qualifications, many recognizing in addition to great attitudes, its potentialities make it the best option for the job.


ETHEREAL=ETÉREO


It's an adjective.

Word find in chapter II.

“She was lovely in a dress of thin ethereal blue, and the proximity of her crackly yellow hair, of her cool and tender gray eyes, turned his body clumsy and rigid; he stumbled with their first step on the floor.”

Means in Spanish

Means in English

Pronunciation

That is subtle, vague, imprecise, sublime lives oblivious to reality, in a world full of ethereal dreams.

Synonym: impalpable,

Subtle, faint, pure.

Extremely delicate and light in a way that seems not to be of this world.

Synonym:

 Airy, celestial, exquisite.

Ghostly, intangible.

sublime.

Uh·thee·ree·uhl

  



DEVOTIONS

1.        The love I feel for you is inexplicable and ethereal, I only know that I love you.

2.      Yesterday I went with my friend to a Japanese neighborhood, we tried a very exquisite soup, each spoonful in my mouth was a ticket to heaven, it was a very ethereal feeling.

3.       God is his ethereal being, only with faith can you find him.

4.      She is so deep, she is not afraid to speak her mind, very sincere, intelligent, and beautiful, so ethereal, anyone would like to be with her even if only for a few seconds.

 

ASTONISH= PASMAR


It's a verb. 

Word find in chapter I.

“ Tiglione, proprietors and patrons were on the sidewalk gazing upward, for the Graf Zeppelin, shining and glorious, symbol of escape and destruction-of escape, if necessary, through destruction-glided in the Paris sky, He heard a woman say in French that it would not her astonish if that commenced to let fall the bombs.”

Means in Spanish

Means in English

Pronunciation

Surprising or surprising someone to the point of leaving them unable to speak or react.

Synonym:

Admire, wonder, stun, astonish, frighten.

To strike with sudden and usually great wonder or surprise.

Synonym:

Amaze, astound stagger

Surprise, startle.

Uh·staa·nuhsh

 








DEVOTIONS

1.        I was so astonished to have been accepted to the university, I was out of breath and wanted to cry.

2.      Everyone was astonished with what happened at the concert.

3.       The waiter looked at a rat in the kitchen, his astonish frightening the cooks.

4.      Astonish is part of a person's emotion when they are happy, sad, or angry.

 


WOUNDEDNESS = HERIDA   

 


Wounded is an adjective that uses the suffix - ness, to transform it into a noun, which indicates "the state of the adjective or the condition of"

 

Word find in chapter I.

She saw through to his profound woundedness, and something quivered inside her, died out along the curve of her mouth and in her eyes.

Means in Spanish

Means in English

Pronunciation

Has one or more wounds.

Synonym:

Injury, cripple, sore, Chafing, court.

The quality or state of being wounded.

Synonym:

Injure, hurt, damage, harm, maim.

Woon·duhd·ness

 








DEVOTIONS

1.        the nurse told me that my woundedness will have to be treated for surgery.

2.      The character in the story ended up with his girlfriend, although he loved her, he had to leave her because she reminded him of his father's death, that woundedness could not heal if he continued to be close to her.

3.       his woundedness in the soul was more important than those of his body.

4.      I had a woundedness on my hand, but eventually he healed and left.

 

 

INSTINCTS = INSTINTOS



It's a noun.

word find in chapter II.

‘They were to meet in the bar of the Hotel Jena. Michael knew what he would say: "See here, Rutherford, do you realize the responsibility you're taking in going through with this marriage? Do you realize the harvest of trouble and regret you're sowing in persuading a girl into something contrary to the instincts of her heart?"

Means in Spanish

Means in English

Pronunciation

Innate and unconscious wave that is transmitted genetically between living beings of the same species and that makes them respond in the same way to certain stimuli.

Synonym:

Hunch, smell.

an inborn impulse or motivation to action typically performed in response to specific external stimuli.

Synonym:

intuition, knack, talent, hunch, sentiment, aptitude, impulse

in·stingkts

 










DEVOTIONS

1.        My instinct tells me that she is cheating on me with her friend.

2.      The sky was cloudy all morning my instinct told me that at any moment it would rain, so i decided to leave the house with an umbrella.

3.       I am a person who always listens to his instinct.

4.      She had an instinct that her friend needed help.


FAITHFUL = FIEL


It's an adjective

 Word finds in chapter I.

He carried them around with him in the form of photographs and packets of correspondence and a liking for a maudlin popular song called "Among My Souvenirs." He kept clear of other girls, as if Caroline would somehow know it and reciprocate with a faithful heart.

 

Means in Spanish

Means in English

Pronunciation

That he is firm and constant in his affections, ideas and obligations and fulfills his commitments to someone or something.

Synonym:

loyal, firm.

faithful is used of someone who has a firm and constant devotion to something to which he or she is united by or as if by a promise or pledge. Always be faithful to your duty.

Synonym:

True, devoted, exact

feiful

 

 








DEVOTIONS

1.         Early and late the faithful black hands were toiling for the children of the man whom he had so devotedly loved.

2.       She believed that to any man who would provide these few essentials she could be a faithful and a loyal wife.

3.       A dog is a faithful companion.

4.      He has been a very faithful friend to me.


 

IMPULSES = IMPULSOS

It's a noun 

Word finds in chapter I.

All the unforgettable impulses of first love had surged up once more; their hearts had in some way touched across two feet of Paris sunlight. 

Means in Spanish

Means in English

Pronunciation

Is the tendency that most human beings experience even once in a lifetime and that involves acting moved by some emotion without prior deliberation of reason.

Synonym:

stimulus, thrust.

something that causes something to happen or happen more quickly; an impetus.

Synonym:

Urge, instinct, drive, compulsion, need

 

Impulsis.

 

 







DEVOTIONS

1. I resisted the impulse to laugh.

2. He felt an irresistible impulse to jump.

3. He tends to act on impulse.

4. My first impulse was to run away.

 

 

INTOLERABLE=INTOLERABLE

It's an adjective

 

Word finds in chapter I.

The two vivid years of his love for Caroline moved back around him like years in Einstein's physics. Intolerable memories arose, of rides in the Long Island moonlight; of a happy time at Lake Placid with her cheeks so cold there, but warm just underneath the surface; of a despairing afternoon in a little café on Forty-eighth Street in the last sad months when their marriage had come to seem impossible.

Means in Spanish

Means in English

Pronunciation

Intolerance is a person’s ability or ability not to tolerate opinions other than his own.

Synonym:

unacceptable, irresistible.

 

The ultimate issue becomes whether life-extending intervention on behalf of a permanently unconscious being is intrinsically degrading and therefore intolerable.

Synonym :

Unbearable, insufferable

Unsupportable.

 

 

untorolobol

 












DEVOTIONS

1.         The image of his unhappiness was intolerable.

2.       Become intolerable the permanence in it.

3.       The pain was intense, precise, intolerable.

4.      The tension was becoming intolerable.

 

 

STRONGER=MAS FUERTE


It's an adjective

 Word finds in chapter I.

"Oh, why couldn't you have done something about it? Why couldn't you have been stronger, made me marry you? Don't you see how sad I am?"

Means in Spanish

Means in English

Pronunciation

It resists continuous use, friction or it is firmly attached and is difficult to start, remove or break.

Synonym:

hard, solid, sturdy.

 

It is understood by strong the person or any living being that has greater endurance or resistance.

             Synonym :

Powerful, burly.

 

Stronguer.

 









DEVOTIONS

1.         He was stronger than he had.

2.       There is no stronger way in.

3.       I am stronger than the glass.

4.      Libido is stronger than usual.

  

CROWD=MULTITUD


It's a noun

 Word finds in chapter II.

But Hamilton drinks too much and all this crowd of young people drink too much. ¿Do you live in Paris?"

 

Means in Spanish

Means in English

Pronunciation

La palabra multitud la usamos habitualmente cuando en un determinado contexto, evento o acontecimiento, se encuentran presentes un número importante y cuantioso de individuos o de cosas.

Synonym:

crowd, abundance.

 large number of people gathered together in a disorganized or unruly way.

             Synonym :

Multitude

Host

 

Crawd.

 










DEVOTIONS

1.         the soccer game attracted a large crowd.

2.        A crowd of people gathered in the street.

3.        At that time, the train was very crowded.

4.        He lost sight of his friend in the crowd.


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