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"Drunk" is a form of "drunk", an adjective which is often translated as "borracho". "Get scared" is an intransitive verb phrase which is often translated as "asustarse". Learn more about the difference between "get scared" and "drunk" below.
get scared(
geht
skehrd
)An intransitive verb phrase is a phrase that combines a verb with a preposition or other particle and does not require a direct object (e.g., Everybody please stand up.).
drunk(
druhngk
)An adjective is a word that describes a noun (e.g., the big dog).
a. borracho
After drinking four glasses of tequila, she was quite drunk.Después de tomar cuatro vasos de tequila, ella estaba bastante borracha.
c. tomado (Latin America)
Regionalism used in Latin America: all the countries in South America, Central America, and the Caribbean. Does not include Spain.
Don't talk to him right now; he's drunk.No le hables en este momento; está tomado.
A noun is a word referring to a person, animal, place, thing, feeling, or idea (e.g., man, dog, house).
a. el borracho (M), la borracha (F)
(m) means that a noun is masculine. Spanish nouns have a gender, which is either feminine (like la mujer or la luna) or masculine (like el hombre or el sol).
(f) means that a noun is feminine. Spanish nouns have a gender, which is either feminine (like la mujer or la luna) or masculine (like el hombre or el sol).
Don't listen to him. That drunk doesn't know what he's saying.No le hagas caso. Ese borracho no sabe lo que dice.