Glossary entry

English term or phrase:

Committed to do/doing something

Spanish translation:

comprometido(a) a hacer algo

Added to glossary by Rosa Maria Duenas Rios (X)
May 9, 2006 20:42
18 yrs ago
19 viewers *
English term

Committed to do/doing something

English to Spanish Other Linguistics Verb + gerund
I would like to find out whether the verb COMMIT takes an infinitive or a gerund as an object. "I am committed to work or working with you", "The company commits itself to respect/respecting the regulations"
Proposed translations (Spanish)
4 +3 See explanation
5 +2 committed to doing

Proposed translations

+3
15 mins
Selected

See explanation

In the examples you give, it takes neither gerund (comprometiendo), nor infinitive (comprometer):

"I am committed to work or working with you":
Estoy comprometido a trabajar contigo (participio presente)


"The company commits itself to respect/respecting the regulations":
La compañía se compromete a respetar los reglamentos
(present tense)


Peer comment(s):

agree yolanda Speece : You got it!
1 min
Thanks Yolanda
agree Nahuel Hospital
35 mins
Gracias Nahuel
agree moken : :O) Saludos y sonrisas para tí Rosi. Cierto, me he pasado una buena de desintoxicación...sobredosis Proz, ya sabes!! :O) :O)
15 hrs
Muchas gracias y saludos, Álvaro. Hace mucho que no te veía por aquí.
Something went wrong...
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "Selected automatically based on peer agreement."
+2
12 mins

committed to doing

commit somebody to doing something. from Longman's Dictionary of ENglish language and Culture

commit yourself to doing something. (Longman's)
Peer comment(s):

agree Magdalena Reyes
0 min
neutral Rosa Maria Duenas Rios (X) : I am afraid the asker needs the use in Spanish.
4 mins
agree Aoife Kennedy
9 hrs
Something went wrong...
Term search
  • All of ProZ.com
  • Term search
  • Jobs
  • Forums
  • Multiple search