comfort break in the Oxford Spanish Dictionary

Translations for comfort break in the English»Spanish Dictionary

I.comfort [Am ˈkəmfərt, Brit ˈkʌmfət] N

II.comfort [Am ˈkəmfərt, Brit ˈkʌmfət] VB trans

I.break <pt broke, pp broken> [Am breɪk, Brit breɪk] VB trans

II.break <pt broke, pp broken> [Am breɪk, Brit breɪk] VB intr

III.break [Am breɪk, Brit breɪk] N

See also word, will2, will1, spirit, law, heart, free, even2, even1

I.word [Am wərd, Brit wəːd] N

1. word C (term, expression):

vocablo m form
voz f form
mala palabra f esp LatAm
garabato m Chil
o sea

2. word C (thing said):

in word and deed liter
de palabra y obra liter
without a word of a lie Brit

3. word (assurance):

word no pl
(upon) my word! dated

4.1. word U (news, message):

se dice que

II.word [Am wərd, Brit wəːd] VB trans

I.will2 [Am wɪl, Brit wɪl] N

1.3. will U (desire, intention):

II.will2 <pt & pp willed> [Am wɪl, Brit wɪl] VB trans

will1 <pt would> [Am wɪl, Brit wɪl] VB mod 'll es la contracción de will de will not y 'll've 'll've de will have
When translating will into Spanish, the future tense is not always the first option. Ir +  a +  infinitive is common in Latin American countries. For examples, see the entry below.

1.1. will (talking about the future):

I.spirit [Am ˈspɪrɪt, Brit ˈspɪrɪt] N

II.spirit [Am ˈspɪrɪt, Brit ˈspɪrɪt] VB trans

1.2. law U (collectively):

heart [Am hɑrt, Brit hɑːt] N

1.3. heart (inmost feelings):

2.2. heart (love, affection):

2.3. heart (enthusiasm, inclination):

3. heart (courage, morale):

I.free <freer [ˈfriːər, ˈfriːə(r)], freest [ˈfriːəst, ˈfriːɪst]> [Am fri, Brit friː] ADJ

1.1. free (at liberty):

II.free [Am fri, Brit friː] ADV

I.even1 [Am ˈivən, Brit ˈiːv(ə)n] ADV

2. even in phrases:

he's only 12yes, but even so

II.even1 [Am ˈivən, Brit ˈiːv(ə)n] ADJ

2. even (equal):

estamos a mano LatAm

III.even1 [Am ˈivən, Brit ˈiːv(ə)n] VB trans

comfort break in the PONS Dictionary

Translations for comfort break in the English»Spanish Dictionary

I.comfort [ˈkʌmfət, Am -fɚt] N

II.comfort [ˈkʌmfət, Am -fɚt] VB trans

I.break [breɪk] broke, broken broke, broken N

II.break [breɪk] broke, broken broke, broken VB trans

III.break [breɪk] broke, broken broke, broken VB intr

American English

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Many of the coaches heading south will use the same services for comfort breaks.
www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk
Staff are often measured by the volume of calls they can handle, and even a five-minute comfort break can be greeted with raised eyebrows by supervisors.
thenextweb.com
As you can imagine, a sneaky couple of minutes at a friend's computer as they wander off for a comfort break and you could really have them going.
mashable.com
Petrol stations and border crossings -- as well as the occasional comfort break -- are the only planned stops.
www.telegraph.co.uk
Built into the day will be a couple of drinks and comfort breaks, there may also be short breaks to help agents re-charge after difficult calls.
www.callcentrehelper.com
You do not attack when the peloton stops for a comfort break.
www.cyclingweekly.co.uk
Pulling away from the riders, we quickly stop off at one of the mountain villages to say hello, accept a quick snack and have a comfort break.
www.cyclingweekly.co.uk
The train stopped for a comfort break on the way to the game.
www.irishexaminer.com
Then take a comfort break.
www.firstpost.com
So far, either through municipal tradition or as a misguided tactic to keep contributions short, there have been no comfort breaks.
www.ft.com

Would you like to add some words, phrases or translations?

Submit a new entry.

Look up "comfort break" in other languages


Choose your language Deutsch | Ελληνικά | English | Español | Français | Italiano | Polski | Português | Русский | Slovenščina | Srpski | 中文