slim in spanish


Spanish nouns have a gender, which is either feminine … to eat less in order to become thinner.

estar a régimen.

1. (volume/column) fino.

[waist, neck, hand] delgado.

(Translation of slim from the Cambridge English-Spanish Dictionary © Cambridge University Press) With no food and no water, the possibility of escaping from the island was slim.Sin comida ni agua, era pequeña la posibilidad de escapar de la isla. Sports, movies, kids and more in English and Spanish. [figure, person] (= slender) delgado ⧫ fino. A transitive verb is a verb that requires a direct … English example sentences. man, dog, house).


[slɪm ] adjective Word forms: comparative slimmer , superlative slimmest. Personalize your channel lineup & save. Translation of slim at Merriam-Webster's Spanish-English Dictionary.

delgado. He was slim to medium build, with cropped, mousy brown hair and spoke with a local accent. the industry is now considerably slimmer — la industria se ha racionalizado considerablemente. (m) means that a noun is masculine.

(thin) (person/figure) esbelto.

(waist) fino.

(= elegant) esbelto. (person/figure) delgado.

delgado adjective.

b. pequeño.
Spanish Translation.

slender, svelte, jimp. 1. The risk of medical service provision becoming the object healthcare tourism is slim.

Programming from Mexico, Sudamerica, the Caribbean and Spain.

At this time of year, women's magazines are full of articles on how to slim for the summer. expand_more El riesgo de que la prestación de servicios médicos se convierta en objeto de turismo sanitario es escaso. More Spanish words for slim.

slime (slaym) A noun is a word referring to a person, animal, place, thing, feeling or idea (e.g. to get slim … slim … esbelto adjective. A esta altura del año las revistas están llenos de artículos sobre cómo adelgazar para el verano.

thin, flimsy, spidery, slenderly built.

Spanish translation of 'slim'. Audio pronunciations, verb conjugations, quizzes and more.

Additional Translations: Inglés: Español: slim [sth] ⇒ vtr transitive verb: Verb taking a direct object--for example, "Say something."