Peek-a-boo - traducción al Inglés
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Peek-a-boo - traducción al Inglés

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Peek a boo; Peek-a-Boo; Peek-A-Boo; Peek a Boo (song); Peek-a-Boo (song)

Peek-a-boo         
  • Two children playing peekaboo (1895 painting by [[Georgios Jakobides]])
(n.) =

Def: Juego infantil.
Ex: The first precursor of make-believe in a child's life may be the game of peekaboo, which babies start to play at about six months.
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* Peek-a-boo card = ficha de coincidencia óptica, ficha peek-a-boo
* peek-a-boo system = sistema de fichas peek-a-boo
peek         
PEEK
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* ficha peek-a-boo = Peek-a-boo card.
* sistema de fichas peek-a-boo = peek-a-boo system.
boo         
abucheo
abuchear

Definición

pret-a-porter
pret-a-porter (fr.; pronunc. [préta portér]) adj. y n. m. Se aplica a la ropa que se hace en serie según unas tallas fijadas de antemano.

Wikipedia

Peekaboo (disambiguation)

Peekaboo is a form of play primarily played with an infant.

Peekaboo may also refer to:

Ejemplos de uso de Peek-a-boo
1. It is also a stylish metal hat for a child, an opportunity to play peek–a–boo, and helps little boys grasp the concept of cooking so that their girlfriends don‘t have to later in life.
2. Labour‘s former deputy leader, Roy Hattersley, once a guest on the show, believed Lawley had lowered the tone, accusing her of frivolity, a peek–a–boo interviewing style and asking "chase me round the studio" questions.
3. Even the most practical skills and trades depend slavishly on certification, via tests often vapidly designed; the holders of diplomas thus develop the delusion that these bits of paper entitle them to respect and employment, even if they do not appear to have much experience or ability at all. (I first became aware of this 20 years ago, interviewing a young nanny fresh off a course: she proudly showed off a pedantically assessed workbook on the psychology of peek–a–boo and the importance of not imposing gender roles, while displaying no interest at all in the actual baby crawling at her feet.) To return to A levels, the sad fact is that nobody trusts the judgment of teachers and mentors nowadays, and hardly any universities bother to interview candidates (to be fair, not many can afford to). So the importance of exam results has become ludicrously inflated and a simplistic, grasping ethos has triumphed, in which more means better.