OXFORD 9000
📚 noun • entry_id 5849

punch

/pʌnt͡ʃ/
Meanings (ES + gloss)
piñazo • puñada • puñetazo • puñete • zocotroco
A hit or strike with one's fist.
Another Karadeniz cross led to Cudicini's first save of the night, with the Spurs keeper making up for a weak punch by brilliantly pushing away Christian Noboa's snap-shot.
Word forms
📚 noun • entry_id 5851

punch

/pʌnt͡ʃ/
Meanings (ES + gloss)
perforadora • sacabocado
A device, generally slender and round, used for creating holes in thin material, for driving an object through a hole in a containing object, or to stamp or emboss a mark or design on a surface.
Word forms
📚 noun • entry_id 5853

punch

/pʌnt͡ʃ/
Meanings (ES + gloss)
ponche
A beverage, generally containing a mixture of fruit juice and some other beverage, often alcoholic.
Word forms
📚 verb • entry_id 5850

punch

/pʌnt͡ʃ/
Meanings (ES + gloss)
apuñear • apuñetear • asestar una puñada • atizar una puñeteada • chuñear • dar un puñetazo • pegar un puñete • puñetear • quiñar
To strike with one's fist.
If she punches me, I'm gonna break her nose.
agujerear • horacar • horadar • perforar • punchar • puncionar • punzonar
To make holes in something (rail ticket, leather belt, etc) (see also the verb under Etymology 2).
So I punched a hole in the roof, ah-ah, ah-ah Let the flood carry away all my pictures of you
📚 verb • entry_id 5852

punch

/pʌnt͡ʃ/
Meanings (ES + gloss)
perforar
To employ a punch to create a hole in or stamp or emboss a mark on something.
picar • taladrar
To mark a ticket.
The guard performs athletic feats in jumping from coach to coach while the train is in motion, taking orders for tickets, punching them on a bell punch in his van, and then returni…