something en el Oxford Spanish Dictionary

Traducciones de something en el diccionario inglés»español (Ir a español»inglés)

I.something [ingl. am. ˈsəmˌθɪŋ, ingl. brit. ˈsʌmθɪŋ] PRON.

1. something:

something
something has happened to her
something must be broken
have something to eat/drink
give him something to eat/drink
may I ask you something?
do you know something? I think we're lost
he caught sight of something white
it sounded like something out of a novel
or something of the kind
there may be something in what she says
it's not something to be proud of
that was something I hadn't expected
is it something I said?
it must be something you ate
it's not much, but it's something

2.1. something (in vague statements or approximations):

in eighteen hundred and something
she's 30 something, I reckon
she's 30 something, I reckon
have you gone mad or something?
have you gone mad or something?
something in the region of $50, 000
it was something over 12m long

3. something (sth special):

that party was something else! coloq.
she's quite something, isn't she? (in looks)
she's quite something, isn't she? (in general)
there's something about him
there's something about him
to have (got) something (be talented)

II.something [ingl. am. ˈsəmˌθɪŋ, ingl. brit. ˈsʌmθɪŋ] SUST. sin pl.

III.something [ingl. am. ˈsəmˌθɪŋ, ingl. brit. ˈsʌmθɪŋ] ADV. coloq.

La palabra que consultaste como aparece en otras partes del diccionario
she had something of the schoolmarm about her pey.

Traducciones de something en el diccionario español»inglés (Ir a inglés»español)

something en el diccionario PONS

Traducciones de something en el diccionario inglés»español (Ir a español»inglés)

I.something [ˈsʌmθɪŋ] PRON. indet., sing.

La palabra que consultaste como aparece en otras partes del diccionario
to knock together something to eat
to do something until you drop [o till you drop]
to buy something on hire purchase

Traducciones de something en el diccionario español»inglés (Ir a inglés»español)

something Ejemplos de uso en el diccionario PONS (revisados por la redacción)

to buy something on the cheap coloq.
to get something out of one's system coloq.
to knock together something to eat
to take the chill off of something
to put a stop to something
not to be sure of something
inglés americano

Ejemplos monolingües (no verificados por la redacción de PONS)

inglés
It is a large bird that is literally ablaze with fire, resembling something related to a phoenix.
en.wikipedia.org
So, even when they're both making exactly the same tone, there's still something completely different going on under the hood.
en.wikipedia.org
If you have something that you don't want anyone to know, maybe you shouldn't be doing it in the first place.
en.wikipedia.org
Castor said she had cut herself off while saying antifreeze because she had intended to say something else.
en.wikipedia.org
Around 1600 a number of experimenters used steam to power small fountains working something on the principle of a coffee percolator.
en.wikipedia.org
Music is the one thing in show-business with which you can't fool somebody into buying something.
entertainment.ie
He is depicted as being happy, but there is a glint of something more in his eyes.
en.wikipedia.org
This is something that should be done in the way that it was, subversively, not overtly.
religion.blogs.cnn.com
Tonight, something terrifying is about to be born.
en.wikipedia.org
All because this vicious, careerist, small-minded martinet felt like getting something off his preening chest.
www.dailymail.co.uk

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