traducción al español de "trip over"

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Ejemplos de frases que contienen "trip over" trip over

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  • to trip on/over sth

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How do you say trip over in Spanish?

trip over in Spanish it is said dar un tropezón, tropezar con .

Sentences containing trip over in Spanish

And it makes it even more laughable everytime she trips over her own foot

Other forms of sentences containing trip over where this translation can be applied

  • tripping over
  • tripped over
  • to trip over

Similar phrases to trip over in spanish

How do you say trip over + each other in spanish?

How do you say trip switch in spanish?

How do you say trip up in spanish?

English [ edit ]

Verb [ edit ].

trip over ( third-person singular simple present trip overs , present participle trip overing , simple past and past participle trip overed )

  • To trip or stumble and almost fall, as a result of bumping into someone or something with one's feet.

Translations [ edit ]

trip over in spanish

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  • English phrasal verbs with particle (over)
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Translation of trip – English–Spanish dictionary

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  • You should always check your oil , water and tyres before taking your car on a long trip.
  • How about a trip to the zoo this afternoon ?
  • She's going on a trip to New York, all expenses paid .
  • The travel company has written giving information about the trip.
  • He's always going off around the world on business trips, leaving his wife to cope with the babies by herself.

LOSE BALANCE

  • The bowler tripped as he was delivering the ball .
  • She tripped and fell over.
  • I tripped as I got off the bus .
  • She tripped over the rug .
  • I tripped on a piece of wire that someone had stretched across the path .

(Translation of trip from the Cambridge English-Spanish Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)

Translation of trip | GLOBAL English–Spanish Dictionary

(Translation of trip from the GLOBAL English-Spanish Dictionary © 2020 K Dictionaries Ltd)

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trip over in spanish

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Ireland emerges from technical recession; Ocado CEO’s £15m bonus plan approved despite revolt – as it happened

Irish GDP returned to growth at the start of the year, while 19% of Ocado shareholders oppose pay policy that could give boss Tim Steiner a £15m bonus

  • 5d ago Closing post
  • 5d ago One in five Ocado shareholders oppose boss's £14.8m package
  • 5d ago BHP and Vale propose $25bn reparations to settle Mariana disaster
  • 6d ago Tesla shares jump 12% after Musk's Beijing trip
  • 6d ago IMF's Georgieva hails falling eurozone inflation
  • 6d ago German harmonised inflation rises to 2.4%
  • 6d ago Spanish inflation rises after energy support cut
  • 6d ago Ireland's technical recession over as GDP rises in Q1 2024
  • 6d ago Eurozone economic sentiment weakens
  • 6d ago Inflation picks up in some German states
  • 6d ago FTSE 100 starts new week with another record high
  • 6d ago Prices of flats increasing more sharply than other property types, says Halifax
  • 6d ago Knight Frank: house prices are once again under downwards pressure
  • 6d ago Introduction: Mortgage repayments up 60% since 2021, reports Zoopla

The skyline of the business and financial sector of Dublin city centre.

Ireland's technical recession over as GDP rises in Q1 2024

Newsflash: Ireland has escaped a technical recession, after its economy returned to growth this year driven by its IT sector.

Ireland’s GDP is estimated to have risen by 1.1% quarter-on-quarter in January-March, new data from the Central Statistics Office shows. Growth was driven mainly by an increase in the Information & Communication sector.

That follows a 3.4% tumble in GDP in the final three months of 2023.

Enda Behan , statistician in the National Accounts Data Collection and Quality Division , said:

“In today’s release, GDP is estimated to have expanded by 1.1% in Q1 2024 in volume terms when compared with Q4 2023. This was driven by an increase in the multinational dominated sector of Information & Communication in Q1 2024. GDP is estimated to have fallen by 0.8% when compared with the same quarter of 2023.

Ireland’s GDP fell in every quarter of last year, shrinking by 3.4% in Q1, 0.1% in Q2 and 2.5% in Q3.

A chart showing Ireland’s GDP

But….GDP is not a very precise way of measuring the Irish economy, as it is dominated by multinational companies based in the Republic.

Ireland’s government favours another measures, called modified domestic demand , which excludes the large transactions of foreign corporations. Unfortunately we did not have new MDD data today.

Early estimates indicate that Gross Domestic Product (GDP) increased by 1.1% in Quarter 1 2024 https://t.co/Lp4kLgQkMY #CSOIreland #Ireland #NationalAccounts #Economy #Economics #EconomicIndicators #GovernmentFinances #EconomicActivity #Output #ValueAdded pic.twitter.com/UWxvVRT3Ry — Central Statistics Office Ireland (@CSOIreland) April 29, 2024

PS: The London stock market has ended the day at a new closing high, just.

The FTSE 100 index has closed for the night up 7 points, or 0.1%, at 8147 points. That’s its latest in a series of closing highs.

Earlier in the session it nudged a new intraday high of 8189.14 points.

Closing post

Time to wrap up… here’s today’s main stories:

One in five Ocado shareholders oppose boss's £14.8m package

Newsflash: Online grocery firm Ocado has been given a bloody nose by shareholders protest over its plan to give its CEO Tim Steiner a potential bonus of almost £15m.

But while one in five shareholders opposed the plan, it has been approved.

At today’s annual general meeting, 19.4% of shareholders opposed the approval of the Directors’ Remuneration Policy.

Another resolution, to approve the Ocado Performance Share Plan 2024, was passed with 80.62% votes in favour, and 19.38% against.

As we reported this morning, shareholder advisory group Glass Lewis had urged investors to vote against Ocado’s remuneration policy and performance share plan, citing “egregious remuneration practices”.

Campaign group ShareAction planned to ask Ocado’s board why it was comfortable proposing the multimillion-pound pay package for Steiner while “refusing to pay hundreds of its workers a real living wage of £12 an hour”.

Today, we're at @Ocado ’s AGM to ask the board of directors to pay ALL of its staff the real #LivingWage . Our campaigner Ruan is joined by AGM activist Danny. Hear what we’re asking of the company 🎬⏬ pic.twitter.com/u3tQAHJm7B — ShareAction (@ShareAction) April 29, 2024

Under Ocado’s pay plan, Steiner could receive a bonus worth up to 1,800% – or an “enhanced multiplier” – of his £824,570 base salary if its share price hits £29.69 in three years’ time and other performance targets are met.

Ocado shares hit £29 during the pandemic when online shopping surged, but have since fallen, trading at 357p today.

He would receive an award worth 600% of his base salary, or almost £5m, if targets for total shareholder returns and other performance measures are met but the share price goal is missed.

BHP and Vale propose $25bn reparations to settle Mariana disaster

In the mining sector, BHP Group and Vale are proposing a $25.7bn settlement over Brazil’s worst environmental disaster, the Mariana dam failure.

The collapse of the Fundão tailings dam in November 2015 killed 19 people, polluted a river and devastated livelihoods downstream of the Samarco Mariana Mining Complex.

The dam was co-owned by Vale and BHP , through their Brazilian joint venture Samarco ; they have been negotiating with the Brazilian State and Federal Government and other public entities.

Today, they say:

As part of the settlement negotiations, BHP Brasil, Samarco and Vale have submitted a non-binding, indicative settlement proposal which is within BHP Brasil’s provision for the Samarco dam failure. The proposal is for a total financial value of approximately R$127 billion (approximately US$25.7 billion) on a 100% basis with Samarco as the primary obligor and a 50% contribution from each of Vale and BHP Brasil as secondary obligors if Samarco cannot fund.

The new offer includes around R$37bn (US$7.7bn) already spent on remediation and compensation to date.

Tesla shares jump 12% after Musk's Beijing trip

Shares in Tesla have surged 12% at the start of trading in New York, recovering some of their recent losses.

Investors appear to be pleased with Elon Musk’s weekend work in Beijing, where he secured a deal for Tesla to use mapping data provided by web search company Baidu.

Tesla Shares Up 10.7% After Clearing Key Regulatory Hurdles for Self-Driving in China — DB News TradFi (@DBNewswire) April 29, 2024

That deal could be an important step towards Tesla introducing driver assistance technology in the world’s largest car market.

My colleague Jasper Jolly explains:

Baidu, which dominates web search in China, will provide mapping and navigation functions to help Tesla operate its driver assistance technology, which it calls “full self-driving”, or FSD , according to sources cited by Bloomberg News. Mapping services – crucial to driver assistance technologies – are strictly controlled by China’s government. Despite its name, FSD does not provide autonomous driving abilities: it requires a driver who has “hands on the wheel and is prepared to take over at any moment”. However, launching it in China could help Tesla in the fierce competition for market share in the country, and provide more income. It costs $8,000, or $99 (£80) a month, although it is not available in many countries.

As covered earlier ( 8.06am ), Musk also met with China’s premier, Li Qiang, during an unexpected trip to the Chinese capital.

Tesla’s shares are still down 25% so far this year, but have been recovering since mid-April when they sunk to around $140 each, amid concerns over slowing sales .

Kristalina Georgieva then warns that Europe is facing two problems – low growth and high debt.

She explains:

Problem one: growth . Our World Economic Outlook shows the global economy converging back to a rather weak trend rate of growth. Yes, the US economy still looks like it’s firing on all cylinders, but that is unlikely to last. In China, real-estate issues weigh on the outlook. In Europe, productivity growth lags behind, reflecting much less private investment in new technologies than in the United States. This is why we say it is vital to pursue structural reforms and scale-up innovation and investment. Europe needs faster productivity growth, and that means reforms—including transformational ones in the energy and digital arenas, and the completion of the single market.
🇪🇺🇺🇸💸⚡️- US economy does not have long to demonstrate high rates of its current activity -IMF head Kristalina Georgieva. “The US economy is still running at full capacity, but it is unlikely that this will last,” she said in her opening speech the budget conference. #EU - #USA — Millitary Nerd (@MilitaryNerdd) April 29, 2024
Problem two: debt. After two massive shocks—the pandemic and the energy-supply shock caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine—many countries are shouldering very heavy public debt burdens. This is why we say many countries must now pursue judicious, wellarticulated medium-term fiscal consolidation to rebuild buffers— appropriately tailored to country specifics, of course.

This is “not a great place” to start a big push to develop clean energy supply and fight climate change, Georgieva cautions, adding:

But let us be clear: if we do not win the fight against climate change, all of humanity together, we will all suffer.

IMF's Georgieva hails falling eurozone inflation

Over in Brussels, the head of the International Monetary Fund has welcomed signs that inflation is easing in the eurozone.

Kristalina Georgieva , IMF managing director, is addressing the Annual EU Budget Conference, and begins by hailing easing inflation.

Georgieva says:

The global environment. When we stare out at the horizon, what do we see? I see a hint of sunshine. But I also see a dull grey sky and some dark clouds. Let me start with the sunshine. After a global burst of inflation to levels many people have never seen in their lifetimes, it looks like the ECB’s tight monetary policy is doing its work. This is something I need to say carefully because it’s not over yet. But, yes, it looks promising: inflation down from its disturbingly high peaks and no deep recessions in Europe.

Georgieva then warns, though, that the forget though, that “the last mile can be the hardest” in the fight against inflation.

No longer will the major central banks be marching in lockstep, as they did during the recent ratehiking cycle. No. From now on, each currency zone will have to chart its own path. An interest rate divergence looms, and maybe some exchange rate movements too. We save the champagne for later.

Members of the Public and Commercial Services Union on the picket line at Heathrow Airport today

Over at Heathrow Airport, members of Border Force have set up a picket line as a four-day strike in a dispute over working conditions.

The Public and Commercial Services (PCS) union said more than 300 of its members will take part in the industrial action, which started at 5am today and will continue until 7am on Friday.

The union said the workers, based at Heathrow’s Terminals 2, 3, 4 and 5, are protesting at plans to introduce new rosters they claim will see around 250 of them forced out of their jobs at passport control.

PCS general secretary Fran Heathcote said:

“It’s disappointing that, despite talks last week, the Home Office is not prepared to grant any flexibility to their new roster. “None of our dedicated and highly experienced members in the Border Force want to take strike action but the way they’ve been treated by their employer leaves them with no option. “The Home Office still have time to prevent tomorrow’s strike if they agree to abandon this unworkable new system.”

German harmonised inflation rises to 2.4%

Just in: German inflation rise slightly this month.

On an EU-harmonised basis, German consumer price inflation rose to 2.4% this month, up from 2.3% in March.

On a non-harmonised basis, though, German inflation was flat at 2.2%, with services inflation slowing to 3.4% but goods inflation rising to 1.2%.

Core inflation, which strips out food and energy, eased to 3% in April from 3.3% in March.

German CPI data comes in slightly below expectations: • CPI inflation comes in at 0.5% MoM and 2.2% YoY (vs 0.6% MoM and 2.3% YoY expected) in Apr, unchanged from Mar. • Core CPI inflation eases from 3.3% YoY in Mar to 3.0% YoY in Apr. • Services inflation at 3.4% YoY (prev… pic.twitter.com/nhsL62LdU2 — MTS Insights (@MTSInsights) April 29, 2024

Spanish inflation rises after energy support cut

Inflation in Spain has risen, as Madrid’s government cut back support for energy bills.

Spanish consumer price inflation rose to 3.3% per year in April, up from 3.2% in March.

Inflation was pushed up by gas prices – which rose this month but fell in April 2023 – after Spain’s government stopped measures taken to ease rising inflation after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine two years ago.

Spanish inflation accelerates as government energy aid removed https://t.co/yGzUN2VzpN pic.twitter.com/o4NuW9GMUH — Zoe Schneeweiss (@ZSchneeweiss) April 29, 2024

Food prices also rose.

Core inflation, which strips out food and energy prices, fell to 2.9% from 3.3% in March.

This data, and Germany’s CPI report due in half an hour, will feed into the latest eurozone inflation data due at 10am tomorrow.

Ireland’s return to growth is a sign that tomorrow’s eagerly-awaited eurozone GDP report may bring good news.

Economists predict the eurozone returned to modest growth in Q1 2024, after shrinking slightly in the second half of last year ( GDP fell by 0.1% in both Q3 and Q4 2023 ).

Ireland’s 1.1% growth, and the 0.3% recorded in Belgium this morning , will help that return to growth.

Analysts at Investec said last Friday:

Recent revisions now mean that the Eurozone was in a technical recession in H2, albeit by the slimmest of margins. Given that economic data at the start of 2024 has been more positive, we expect the Eurozone exited that recession in Q1, with a 0.1% quarterly expansion in output.
Ireland’s economy partially rebounded in the first quarter, a gain that may have helped the euro zone as a whole exit a shallow recession https://t.co/PuXte7ZQaY — Bloomberg Economics (@economics) April 29, 2024

Eurozone economic sentiment weakens

Just in: economic sentiment has fallen marginally in the EU and the euro area, as Europeans fret about their employment prospects.

The Economic Sentiment Indicator declined in the EU (by 0.3 points to 96.2) in April, and by more within the eurozone (where it fell by 0.6 points to 95.6).

The employment expectations gauge fell slightly more sharply.

Confidence among industrial firms, and among services companies, both fell; consumer confidence inched up, but remained in negative territory.

Within individual countries, economic sentiment deteriorated significantly in France (-4.8 points) and more moderately in Italy (-1.3 points), while it improved markedly in Spain (+2.3), Germany (+1.5) and Poland (+1.5).

The ESI remained broadly stable in the Netherlands (rising by 0.3).

A chart showing eurozone economic sentiment

Tomorrow we learn whether the eurozone returned to growth, when GDP data for the first quarter of 2024 is released….

Belgium’s economy has continued to grow at a modest pace, new data from its central bank shows.

Belgian GDP rose by 0.3% in January-March, the fourth quarter in a row in which a 0.3% expansion was recorded.

Both industry and services grew by 0.3%, while the construction sector shrank by 0.2%.

Belgium's GDP

Sweden’s economy has shrunk for the fourth quarter in a row, leaving it in recession.

Swedish GDP shrank by 0.1% in the first quarter of 2024, Statistics Sweden reported this morning.

Mattias Kain Wyatt , economist at Statistics Sweden , says:

“Swedish economic activity continued to weaken in the first quarter of 2024 with contractions in the months of February and March. This is the fourth consecutive quarter with negative growth.”

Marc Ostwald, chief economist & global strategist at ADM Investor Service, says the data is much weaker than expected.

Sweden’s economy is in a poor run; GDP contracted by 0.8% in April-June 2023, then by 0.3% in July-September 2023, followed by a 0.1% contraction in October-December.

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COMMENTS

  1. Trip over in Spanish

    b. tropezar con. Nigel tripped over a toy in the dark and fell down the stairs.En medio de la oscuridad, Nigel tropezó con un juguete y se cayó por la escalera. 3. (to stutter over) a. atrancarse con. Susie keeps tripping over words when reading.Susie suele atrancarse con las palabras cuando lee. b. no direct translation.

  2. trip over

    Peggy tripped over in the street and broke her hip. Peggy dio un traspié en la calle y se rompió la cadera. Peggy se tropezó en la calle y se rompió la cadera. trip over [sth] vi + prep. (fall by stepping on) tropezarse con v prnl + prep. The child tripped over the toys on the floor and fell down.

  3. trip over

    Many translated example sentences containing "trip over" - Spanish-English dictionary and search engine for Spanish translations.

  4. Spanish translation of 'trip over'

    Spanish Translation of "TRIP OVER" | The official Collins English-Spanish Dictionary online. Over 100,000 Spanish translations of English words and phrases.

  5. Spanish translation of 'trip over'

    1. (= stumble) tropezar. he tripped and fell tropezó y se cayó al suelo. to trip on/over sth tropezar con algo. see also trip over. 2. (literary) (= step lightly) she tripped gracefully round the dance floor se movía con paso ligero y grácil por la pista de baile. to trip along, go tripping along ir con paso ligero.

  6. traducción al español de "trip over"

    Español Traducción de "TRIP OVER" | El Collins Diccionario inglés-español en línea oficial. Más de 100.000 traducciones español de inglés palabras y frases.

  7. trip over in Spanish

    Check 'trip over' translations into Spanish. Look through examples of trip over translation in sentences, listen to pronunciation and learn grammar.

  8. trip over

    trip over. trip over - he tripped over a toy. trip over herself. Trip over the front end of the sandal/flip flop. trip over/on something. trip up - trip over - stumble. trip up / trip over. Visit the Spanish-English Forum. Help WordReference: Ask in the forums yourself.

  9. trip over translation in Spanish

    b vi + prep. 1 (lit) tropezarse con, tropezar con. he tripped over a wire tropezó or se tropezó con un cable. she tripped over her own feet se tropezó con sus propios pies. to trip over one another to do sth (fig) darse de tortas por hacer algo *. 2 (fig)

  10. trip over

    Translation of "trip over" in Spanish. Be careful not to trip over or bump into others while playing. Ten cuidado para no tropezar o chocar con otros mientras juegas. There are at least nine things between here and the control room I can trip over. Hay al menos nueve cosas hasta la sala de control con las que puedo tropezar.

  11. Trip over

    2. (chocar con) a. tropezarse con. I tripped over a rug and fell flat on my face.Me tropecé con una alfombra y me di de bruces con el suelo. b. tropezar con. Nigel tripped over a toy in the dark and fell down the stairs.En medio de la oscuridad, Nigel tropezó con un juguete y se cayó por la escalera.

  12. To trip over something

    Translate To trip over something. See Spanish-English translations with audio pronunciations, examples, and word-by-word explanations. Learn Spanish. Translation. ... SpanishDictionary.com is the world's most popular Spanish-English dictionary, translation, and learning website. Ver en español en inglés.com.

  13. Trip over something

    Translate Trip over something. See Spanish-English translations with audio pronunciations, examples, and word-by-word explanations.

  14. trip over in spanish

    Sentences containing trip over in Spanish. And it makes it even more laughable everytime she trips over her own foot. Other forms of sentences containing trip over where this translation can be applied. tripping over; tripped over; trips over

  15. trip

    trip [sb] up vtr phrasal sep. (cause to stumble, fall) ponerle la zancadilla a loc verb + prep. hacerle la zancadilla a, hacerle zancadilla a loc verb + prep. hacer tropezar a loc verb + prep. He stuck his leg out as I walked past to trip me up. Sacó la pierna cuando iba yo pasando y me puso la zancadilla.

  16. trip over

    trip over (third-person singular simple present trip overs, present participle trip overing, simple past and past participle trip overed) ... Translations [edit] to trip or stumble and almost fall, as a result of bumping into someone or something with one's feet. Spanish: ...

  17. TRIP

    TRIP translate: viaje, excursión, salida, tropezar, viaje [masculine, singular], rarito/ta [masculine-feminine…. Learn more in the Cambridge English-Spanish ...

  18. trip over*

    trip over* - Translation to Spanish, pronunciation, and forum discussions. WordReference.com | ... trip over [sth] vi + prep (fall by stepping on) tropezarse con v prnl + prep : The child tripped over the toys on the floor and fell down. El niño se tropezó con un juguete y cayó al suelo.

  19. Ireland emerges from technical recession; Ocado CEO's £15m bonus plan

    Spanish inflation rises after energy support cut Inflation in Spain has risen, as Madrid's government cut back support for energy bills. Spanish consumer price inflation rose to 3.3% per year in ...

  20. Trip over vs. Trip up

    trip up. "Trip over" is an intransitive verb phrase which is often translated as "tropezar", and "trip up" is a transitive verb phrase which is often translated as "confundir". Learn more about the difference between "trip over" and "trip up" below. Watch you don't trip over.