English » Portuguese

wound1 [waʊnd] VB intr, trans

wound pt, pp of:

See also wind , wind

I . wind2 <wound, wound> [waɪnd] VB trans

2. wind (turn):

3. wind film:

II . wind2 <wound, wound> [waɪnd] VB intr

I . wind1 [wɪnd] N

2. wind no pl (breath):

3. wind no pl MED:

gases m pl

II . wind1 [wɪnd] VB trans

I . wound2 [wuːnd] N

wound
ferida f

II . wound2 [wuːnd] VB trans

wound

flesh wound N

I . wind1 [wɪnd] N

2. wind no pl (breath):

3. wind no pl MED:

gases m pl

II . wind1 [wɪnd] VB trans

I . wind2 <wound, wound> [waɪnd] VB trans

2. wind (turn):

3. wind film:

II . wind2 <wound, wound> [waɪnd] VB intr

I . wind down VB trans

1. wind down (lower):

2. wind down (gradually reduce):

II . wind down VB intr (relax)

I . wind up VB trans

1. wind up (bring to an end):

2. wind up Brit, Aus COMM:

3. wind up (watch):

to wind sb up Brit fig

Phrases:

to be/get all wound up (be/get excited)

II . wind up VB intr (come to an end)

wind energy N no pl

wind instrument N

wind power N no pl

Usage examples with wound

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
He sustained a small flesh wound on his right arm and was admitted into a hospital overnight for observation.
en.wikipedia.org
She can heal almost any lethal wound, but her life is shortened every time she does so.
en.wikipedia.org
It is a wound and needs to be dealt with gingerly.
www.thefrisky.com
The wound turned gangrenous and an operation failed to save his life.
en.wikipedia.org
They have got egg on their face and there is no point rubbing salt into the wound.
www.odt.co.nz
Once it was bitten into, the prosthetic exploded and resembled a severe flesh wound.
en.wikipedia.org
Otherwise, the source tape could be wound up again, and loaded back into the tape reader for a second pass.
en.wikipedia.org
These provide a volatile solvent for the diterpene resins so that successive evaporation leaves a barrier that seals the wound site.
en.wikipedia.org
Amputations had to be made at the point where the wound occurred, often leaving men with stub limbs.
en.wikipedia.org
His speedy act of contrition also represents an attempt to cauterise the wound to avoid the political equivalent of gangrene.
www.brisbanetimes.com.au

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