get the picture significado, get the picture definición | diccionario inglés definición

Collins

picture  

  ( pictures    plural & 3rd person present)   ( picturing    present participle)   ( pictured    past tense & past participle  )
1       n-count   A picture consists of lines and shapes which are drawn, painted, or printed on a surface and show a person, thing, or scene.  
A picture of Rory O'Moore hangs in the dining room at Kildangan.     
2       n-count   A picture is a photograph.  
The tourists have nothing to do but take pictures of each other...     
3       n-count   Television pictures are the scenes which you see on a television screen.  
usu pl  
...heartrending television pictures of human suffering.     
4       verb   To be pictured somewhere, for example in a newspaper or magazine, means to appear in a photograph or picture.  
usu passive  
The golfer is pictured on many of the front pages, kissing his trophy as he holds it aloft.      be V-ed  
...a woman who claimed she had been pictured dancing with a celebrity in Stringfellows nightclub...      be V-ed -ing  
The rattan and wrought-iron chair pictured here costs £125.      V-ed  
5       n-count   You can refer to a film as a picture.  
...a director of epic action pictures.     
6       n-plural   If you go to the pictures, you go to a cinema to see a film.  
  (BRIT)   the N   (=cinema)  
We're going to the pictures tonight...     
in AM, use the movies     
7       n-count   If you have a picture of something in your mind, you have a clear idea or memory of it in your mind as if you were actually seeing it.  
oft N of n   (=image)  
We are just trying to get our picture of the whole afternoon straight...     
8       verb   If you picture something in your mind, you think of it and have such a clear memory or idea of it that you seem to be able to see it.   (=imagine)  
He pictured her with long black braided hair...      V n prep  
He pictured Claire sitting out in the car, waiting for him...      V n -ing  
I tried to picture the place, but could not.      V n  
9       n-count   A picture of something is a description of it or an indication of what it is like.  
usu sing, with supp  
I'll try and give you a better picture of what the boys do...     
10       n-sing   When you refer to the picture in a particular place, you are referring to the situation there.  
oft the N   (=situation)  
It's a similar picture across the border in Ethiopia.     
11    If you get the picture, you understand the situation, especially one which someone is describing to you.  
get the picture             phrase   V inflects   (=get the idea)  
Luke never tells you the whole story, but you always get the picture.     
12    If you say that someone is in the picture, you mean that they are involved in the situation that you are talking about. If you say that they are out of the picture, you mean that they are not involved in the situation.  
in the picture/out of the picture      phrase   v-link PHR, PHR after v  
Meyerson is back in the picture after disappearing in July...     
13    You use picture to describe what someone looks like. For example, if you say that someone is a picture of health or the picture of misery, you mean that they look extremely healthy or extremely miserable.  
a picture of sth/the picture of sth      phrase   v-link PHR  
We found her standing on a chair, the picture of terror, screaming hysterically.     
14    If you put someone in the picture, you tell them about a situation which they need to know about.  
put sb in the picture      phrase   V inflects  
Has Inspector Fayard put you in the picture?     
Traducción diccionario Collins Ingles - Cobuild  
Diccionario Colaborativo     Inglés Cobuild
adj.
faultless; absolutely perfect
adjective describing a situation/person/thing that could make the object of a perfect picture. E.g picture-perfect moment, picture-perfect family etc.
exp.
disappear ; be absent; leave (temporary or for good)
E.g. "Now, that the parents are out of the picture, we can throw a party". (meaning=Now, that the parents left, that they are no longer here) "James is out of the picture, him and Mary split up"
exp.
get drunk or take drugs; get high
exp.
from the outset, from the beginning
v.
launch the process, launch the project, make sure that progress is under way
idiom
n.
means a liquid is not clear: this tea's got bits in it, I don't like yogurt with bits in it
assez proche de l'idée de 'il y a à boire et à manger'
exp.
= get your knickers in a twist/knot
US English, colloquial
exp.
get rid of a strong feeling towards something or someone
[Informal] If you have done something wrong, tell him and get it out of your system. After the break up, it took him some while to get her out of his system.
exp.
to become very upset about something, usually something that is not important
Other expression: to get your knickers in a knot
exp.
be negatively impacted by a situation, event.
E.g.: The building is being renovated, but for the moment people living there get the short end of the stick.
q.
Either a teacher or a cob This year get govt job
n.
self-taken picture
[Slang];[Fam.]
v.
to picture in your mind a person,place, thing, or event using only your imagination.
n.
to get so focused on the details or intricacies of something that you miss the big picture or the main point
His book subject is quite good, but he tends to miss the forest for the trees. (tending to get in too much detail and miss the essence).
n.
buy one, get one free
It's a common form of sales promotion. This marketing technique is universally known in the marketing industry by the acronym BOGOF.
exp.
go crazy; get angry; lose self-control
E.g.: I will lose it if we keep listening to this song.
exp.
go crazy about something, get enthusiastic
v.
to get rid of one's frustration (for example by doing something violent or impulsive)
n.
something easy to get
exp.
metaphoric expression for getting married
n.
got a lot on his plate

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"Collins Cobuild English Dictionary for Advanced Learners 4th edition published in 2003 © HarperCollins Publishers 1987, 1995, 2001, 2003 and Collins A-Z Thesaurus 1st edition first published in 1995 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995"
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