word of mouth in the Oxford Spanish Dictionary

Translations for word of mouth in the English»Spanish Dictionary

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

See also mince

III.mince [Am mɪns, Brit mɪns] N U Brit

I.mouth <pl mouths [maʊðz]> N [Am maʊθ, Brit maʊθ]

1.1. mouth C (of person, animal):

ser un fantasma Spain inf
ser un bocón And Mex inf
darse pisto Spain inf

II.mouth VB trans [Am maʊð, Brit maʊð]

of [Am əv, Brit ɒv, (ə)v] PREP

word of mouth in the PONS Dictionary

Translations for word of mouth in the English»Spanish Dictionary

Phrases:

of [əv, stressed: ɒv] PREP

American English

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
He said that existing laws only allowed prosecutions for preaching hate by word of mouth, but not by the written word or through placards.
en.wikipedia.org
During the project's campaign, project creators are encouraged to publicise their works through embedded videos, word of mouth, social networks and regular project updates.
en.wikipedia.org
Word of mouth and referrals from some vets have seen things tick over nicely for the business.
www.stuff.co.nz
After initial word of mouth efforts and advertising in the local paper, 24 families responded.
en.wikipedia.org
It is only passed on through the generations by word of mouth.
en.wikipedia.org
This method of marketing relied on word of mouth and emphasized sales made directly to neighbors (door-to-door) and, after 1905, sales on credit.
en.wikipedia.org
Nevertheless, it became a sleeper hit due to word of mouth.
en.wikipedia.org
She was raised in an oral literature and storytelling culture, where folklore is passed on from generation to generation, by word of mouth.
en.wikipedia.org
Children's interests in a particular toy are likely to arise from word of mouth and peer pressure.
en.wikipedia.org
Because even implausible and ineffective methods have a success rate of 50%, many continued to be recommended by word of mouth.
en.wikipedia.org

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