Spanish language learning forums

Spanish language learning forums (https://forums.tomisimo.org/index.php)
-   Vocabulary (https://forums.tomisimo.org/forumdisplay.php?f=18)
-   -   Cebarse con los profesores (https://forums.tomisimo.org/showthread.php?t=12702)

Cebarse con los profesores


ROBINDESBOIS March 01, 2012 11:10 AM

Cebarse con los profesores
 
Meterse con los profesores .
English?

micho March 01, 2012 11:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ROBINDESBOIS (Post 122655)
Meterse con los profesores .
English?

To mess with the teachers?

poli March 01, 2012 11:42 AM

I'm not familiar with the verb cebarse. To barley:thinking:.

If cebarse means befriend for the purpose of getting a grade, then this is one way of saying it to get in good with, or to chum up to.

ROBINDESBOIS March 01, 2012 11:45 AM

Cebarse means to criticiZe them, to say bad things about them

poli March 01, 2012 12:14 PM

Then what you can say is to trash.

micho March 01, 2012 02:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ROBINDESBOIS (Post 122658)
Cebarse means to criticiZe them, to say bad things about them

Cebarse with somebody is very negative and may mean criticize and more: to hurt by insulting, punishing, beating, dicussing, arguing. It could be also "destroy somebodys feelings, ideas, life... making much more hurt than needed".

AngelicaDeAlquezar March 01, 2012 03:15 PM

I think Poli's suggestion is fine...

How about to bash them?

poli March 01, 2012 03:32 PM

Bash is good. So is dis (an newer term popular in the United stated meaning to disrespect someone verbally)

micho March 01, 2012 05:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ROBINDESBOIS (Post 122655)
Meterse con los profesores .
English?

I found this:
Diccionario Espasa concise inglés-español © 2000 Espasa Calpe:
■cebarse verbo reflexivo (ensañarse) to delight in tormenting [con, -], to be cruel [con, to]

Glen March 01, 2012 06:38 PM

Maybe to badmouth the teachers?

poli March 01, 2012 08:59 PM

talk smack (VERY COLLOQUIAL)

marmoset March 01, 2012 10:24 PM

The good 'ol F word works too.

F*** with the teachers.

aleCcowaN March 02, 2012 01:50 AM

"Cebarse" in this sense has no English translation. It implies to take a liking to (about everything you proposed implying more than annoyed teachers). There's some iterative quality in that verb "cebar", that may include crescendos, as we say "cebar mate", that is, getting more pretty good mate infusions from "leaves" that are decaying.

poli March 02, 2012 07:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aleCcowaN (Post 122700)
"Cebarse" in this sense has no English translation. It implies to take a liking to (about everything you proposed implying more than annoyed teachers). There's some iterative quality in that verb "cebar", that may include crescendos, as we say "cebar mate", that is, getting more pretty good mate infusions from "leaves" that are decaying.

That is what I originally thought it meant, but other native Spanish speakers have another opinion. :thinking:

Perikles March 02, 2012 09:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by poli (Post 122705)
That is what I originally thought it meant, but other native Spanish speakers have another opinion. :thinking:

Just to confuse the issue, this is from the GDO:
cebarsev pron
1 (
ensañarse) to vent one's anger; se cebó en or con su víctima he took his anger out o vented his anger on his victim
2 (
alimentarse): el miedo se ceba en la ignorancia fear feeds on ignorance

poli March 02, 2012 09:19 AM

This is a word I will avoid.

I spoke with someone from Cuba who told me se cebarse significa hablar
mucho de alguen. Puede ser malo o pueder ser bueno.

The plot se ceba.

aleCcowaN March 02, 2012 02:53 PM

I don't think you should avoid this word. People tend to mix it up with ensañarse and encarnizarse. Cebarse is when animals start devouring either a prey or candies and they become excited, then eating with an increasingly noisy delight. All figurative senses come from that.

Anyway, almost all uses of cebar and cebarse are mostly collocations:

cebarse en su víctima
cebar mate
cebar un pavo para día de gracias
cebar la mecha de la lámpara
cebar el fuego
cebar la trampa
cebar el imán
cebar su odio
cebar la rosca

micho March 03, 2012 02:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aleCcowaN (Post 122734)
I don't think you should avoid this word. People tend to mix it up with ensañarse and encarnizarse. Cebarse is when animals start devouring either a prey or candies and they become excited, then eating with an increasingly noisy delight. All figurative senses come from that.

Anyway, almost all uses of cebar and cebarse are mostly collocations:

cebarse en su víctima
cebar mate
cebar un pavo para día de gracias
cebar la mecha de la lámpara
cebar el fuego
cebar la trampa
cebar el imán
cebar su odio
cebar la rosca

Hay que distinguir entre Cebar verbo transitivo y Cebarse reflexivo.
Cebar es una palabra de uso común y habitual. Cebar es alimentar manualmente, a la fuerza, a un animal para que engorde o que mejore su salud. Se puede cebar también un motor de gasolina para que arranque (forzar la entrada de gasolina en el motor para que arranque), se ceba una bomba de agua para que funcione, se ceban (con sangre compatible) las bombas de los riñones artificiales. Se ceban los cerdos, los pollos, los pavos e incluso en alguna región de España lo he oido refiriéndose a dar de comer a los niños pequeños cuando son malos comedores.
"Cebarse en" o "cebarse con" en reflexivo, refiriéndose a una persona, tiene una connotación de daño excesivo, injustificado, ocasionado a alguien. En algunas ocasiones, sin embargo, podría decirse "Fulano se está cebando con pan", refiriéndose a que una persona come pan en exceso. La connotación negativa podría deberse a la expresión "Cebar su odio con alguien" (alimentar y saciar su odio, haciendo daño a alguien), y de ahí puede salir la expresión "cebarse en/con alguien".

ROBINDESBOIS March 03, 2012 07:57 AM

Its kind of take it out on

chileno March 03, 2012 08:15 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ROBINDESBOIS (Post 122751)
Its kind of take it out on


That's it!

To show no mercy and relish on it.


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 01:18 PM.

Powered by vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.