English | Portuguese |
---|---|
cram (information hastily memorized; as, a cram from an examination) noun [UK: kræm] [US: ˈkræm] | decorebanoun |
cram (the act of cramming) noun [UK: kræm] [US: ˈkræm] | entupimentonoun |
cram [crammed, cramming, crams] (to eat greedily, and to satiety; to stuff) verb [UK: kræm] [US: ˈkræm] | entupir-severb |
cram [crammed, cramming, crams] (to fill with food to satiety; to stuff) verb [UK: kræm] [US: ˈkræm] | empanturrarverb |
cram [crammed, cramming, crams] (to press, force, or drive, particularly in filling, or in thrusting one thing into another) verb [UK: kræm] [US: ˈkræm] | entupirverb |
cram school (specialised school) noun | cursinhonoun |
Cramer's rule (the explicit formula) noun | regra de Cramernoun |
cramp [cramps] (painful contraction of a muscle) noun [UK: kræmp] [US: ˈkræmp] | cãibranoun |
cramped (overcrowded or congested) adjective [UK: kræmpt] [US: ˈkræmpt] | abarrotadoadjective |
cramped (uncomfortably restricted in size) adjective [UK: kræmpt] [US: ˈkræmpt] | apertadoadjective |
macramé (textile) noun | macraménoun |
sacrament [sacraments] (sacred act or ceremony) noun [UK: ˈsæ.krə.mənt] [US: ˈsæ.krə.mənt] | sacramentonoun |
sacramentary (ancient book containing the rites for Mass, the sacraments, etc.) noun [UK: sˌakrəmˈentəri] [US: sˌækrəmˈentɚri] | sacramentárionoun |
Sacramento (Sacramento, the capital city of California) proper noun [UK: ˌsæ.krə.ˈmen.təʊ] [US: ˌsæ.krə.ˈmento.ʊ] | Sacramentoproper noun |
scram [scrammed, scramming, scrams] (to leave in a hurry) verb [UK: skræm] [US: skræm] | sumirverb vazarverb |
scrambled egg (dish) noun | ovos mexidosnoun |