dictionnaire Espagnol - Anglais

español - English

dicho Anglais:

1. said


Trust me, he said.
It is said that global warming is directly related to carbon dioxide emissions.
The clerk said, "What can I do for you, sir?"
Perseverance, it is often said, is the key to success.
Some wise man has said life consists of one disappointment after another.
When the bus swerved to miss a cat, the driver said, "That was close."
Has anybody ever said you wear too much makeup?
The boy I saw searching through the garbage can said that he had not eaten anything for four days.
The notice in the park said, "Keep off the grass."
What that fortuneteller said yesterday is nothing to be concerned about.
After a short visit, he suddenly stood up and said he was leaving.
Someone told me that Albert Einstein said, "Common sense is the collection of prejudices acquired by age eighteen."
Tom couldn't find Mary even though he said he looked just about everywhere.
67% of those who never smoked said they worried about the health effects of passive smoking.
She asked him to help her father clean the garage, but he said that he was too busy to help.

Anglais mot "dicho"(said) se produit dans des ensembles:

ColdPlay The scientist (Letra traducida)
Fichas del libro - "Mother Stories" (Maud Lindsay)
Fichas del libro - "The Path to Rome" (Hilaire Bel...
Fichas del libro - "Jimmy, Lucy, and All" (Sophie ...
Fichas del libro - "By Right of Sword" (Arthur W. ...

2. told


He told deliberate lies.
After she filled out the application, the records clerk told her that the fee was eight dollars.
He didn't tell a lie. As a matter of fact, he told the whole truth.
When both girls told John they had feelings for him, he was in a quandary as to which girl he should be with.
The doctor told you to stay in bed until your fever goes down, didn't he?
Babies can become dehydrated from a high fever, so I was told that it would be better to send him to the hospital.
He hadn't been in the office five minutes before he told us what to do.
What they said to you is exactly the opposite of what they told me yesterday.
He told me his address, but unfortunately I had no paper to write it down on.
At the age of six he had learned to use the typewriter and told the teacher that he did not need to learn to write by hand.
You'd be amazed how many times I've told Tom not to do that.
Tom was afraid of getting in trouble if he told Mary where he had really been.
I'm told "idiot" is a bad word, but where I grew up it doesn't really feel that bad.
What he told us the other day simply doesn't make sense, does it?
Tom seemed genuinely surprised when I told him that Mary had left town.