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1 severely
severely [sɪ'vɪəlɪ]∎ don't judge them too severely ne les jugez pas trop sévèrement ou avec trop de sévérité;∎ he spoke severely to them il leur parla d'un ton sec(b) (seriously → ill, injured, disabled) gravement, sérieusement;∎ to be severely handicapped être gravement handicapé;∎ her patience was severely tried by his behaviour sa patience a été durement éprouvée par son comportement(c) (austerely) d'une manière austère, sévèrement;∎ she dresses very severely elle s'habille de manière très austère∎ we were severely drunk last night on était sérieusement déchirés hier soir;∎ you are severely annoying me! tu me cours sérieusement sur le haricot! -
2 severely
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3 severely
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4 severely
adverb sévèrement -
5 severely
gravement Adverb -
6 severely affected
gravement touché/frappéEnglish-French dictionary of law, politics, economics & finance > severely affected
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7 severely beaten
Crim. roué de coupsEnglish-French dictionary of law, politics, economics & finance > severely beaten
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8 severely restricted
English-French dictionary of law, politics, economics & finance > severely restricted
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9 severely wounded
Mil., Crim. grièvement blesséEnglish-French dictionary of law, politics, economics & finance > severely wounded
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10 severely, impaired
gravement déficient -
11 disabled
disabled [dɪsˈeɪbld]1. adjective2. plural noun* * *[dɪs'eɪbld] 1.2.the disabled — les handicapés mpl
adjective handicapé -
12 hammer
hammer [ˈhæmər]1. nounmarteau m• they were going at it hammer and tongs ( = working) ils y mettaient tout leur cœur ; ( = arguing) ils discutaient âprementa. [+ metal] marteler• I'd had it hammered into me that... on m'avait enfoncé dans la tête que...b. (British) (inf) ( = defeat) battre à plates coutures ; ( = criticize severely) descendre en flammes ; ( = damage severely) frapper de plein fouet[+ plan, agreement] élaborer (avec difficulté)* * *['hæmə(r)] 1.1) gen, Music marteau mto come ou go under the hammer — être vendu aux enchères
2) Sport ( discipline) lancer m de marteau2.transitive verbto hammer something into — enfoncer quelque chose dans [wall, fence]
2) fig ( insist forcefully)3) ( attack) critiquer4) (colloq) Sport ( defeat) battre [quelqu'un] à plates coutures3.1) ( use hammer) frapper à coups de marteau2) ( pound) tambouriner (on, at contre)•Phrasal Verbs: -
13 reprimand
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14 TLACAHUALTIA
tlacâhualtia > tlacâhualtih.*\TLACAHUALTIA v.réfl., s'abstenir.Esp., abstenerse de algo e irse a la mano (M).Angl., to abstain, to restain oneself (K)." yehhuâtl in, ahmo motlacâhualtia cihuâtzintli ", cette jeune femme qui ne s'abstient pas - ésta, la mujercita que no se abstuvo (oportunamente de los actos sexuales). Cod Flor XI 171r = ECN9,196 = Sah11,180."ahhuel motlacâhualtia", il ne peut pas s'abstenir - es ist ihm unmöglich, enthaltsam zu sein.Sah 1950,112:18.*\TLACAHUALTIA v.t. tê-., recommander à quelqu'un."ic cencah quintlâcahualtiah in têpilhuân inic ahmo onchichazqueh", c'est pourquoi ils recommandent sévèrement à leurs enfant de ne pas cracher - hence they severely warned the children not to spit. Sah5,171. -
15 incapacitate
incapacitate [‚ɪnkəˈpæsɪteɪt]* * *[ˌɪnkə'pæsɪteɪt]transitive verb [accident, illness] immobiliserseverely incapacitated — infirme, invalide
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16 sharply
sharply [ˈ∫α:plɪ]a. ( = abruptly) [drop, increase] brusquement ; [reduce] nettementb. ( = clearly) nettement• what he said brought the issue sharply into focus ce qu'il a dit a fait ressortir nettement le problèmec. ( = severely) [criticize] vivement ; [say, ask, reply] avec brusqueried. sharply pointed [leaves, shoes] pointue. ( = quickly) rapidement* * *['ʃɑːplɪ]1) ( abruptly) [turn, change, rise, fall] brusquement, brutalement; [stop] net2) ( harshly) [speak] d'un ton brusque; [criticize] vivement, sévèrement; [look] durement3) ( distinctly) [differ, define] nettementto bring something sharply into focus — lit cadrer quelque chose avec netteté; fig faire passer quelque chose au premier plan
4) ( perceptively) [drawn] avec acuité; [aware] vivement -
17 sprain
sprain [spreɪn]1. noun[+ muscle] fouler ; [+ ligament] étirer* * *[spreɪn] 1.noun entorse f; ( less severe) foulure f2.transitive verbto sprain one's ankle/wrist — se faire une entorse à la cheville/au poignet; ( less severely) se fouler la cheville/le poignet
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18 worse
worse [wɜ:s]1. adjective• I'm bad at English, but worse at maths je suis mauvais en anglais et pire en maths• things could be worse! ça pourrait être pire !• and, what's worse,... et, qui pis est...• and, to make matters worse, he... et pour ne rien arranger, il...• to be the worse for drink ( = drunk) être ivre• you're worse than he is! tu es pire que lui !d. ( = more harmful) smoking is worse for you than cholesterol le tabac est plus mauvais pour la santé que le cholestérol2. adverba. (in quality, behaviour) [sing, play] plus mal• and, worse,... et, qui pis est,...• now I'm worse off than before maintenant, je suis moins bien loti qu'avantb. ( = more intensely) it hurts worse than ever ça fait plus mal que jamais3. nounpire m* * *[wɜːs] 1.1) (more unsatisfactory, unpleasant) pireto get worse — [pressure, noise] augmenter; [conditions, weather] empirer
‘you missed the bus’ - ‘yes worse luck!’ — ‘tu as raté le bus’ - ‘oui pas de veine (colloq)!’
2) (more serious, severe) pire ( than que)and what is worse, she doesn't care — et le pire, c'est que ça lui est égal
to get worse (and worse) — [illness, conflict] s'aggraver; [patient] aller de plus en plus mal
to be made worse — être aggravé (by par)
you'll only make things ou it worse! — tu ne feras qu'empirer les choses!
and to make matters worse, he lied — et pour ne rien arranger, il a menti
3) ( of lower standard) pire ( than que)4) (more unwell, unhappy)to feel worse — ( more ill) se sentir plus malade; ( more unhappy) aller moins bien
5) ( more inappropriate)he couldn't have chosen a worse place to meet — il n'aurait pas pu choisir un lieu de rendez-vous moins approprié
2. 3.the decision couldn't have come at a worse time — la décision n'aurait pas pu arriver à un moment plus inopportun
1) (more unsatisfactorily, incompetently) moins bien ( than que)2) (more seriously, severely) [cough, bleed, vomit] plus -
19 austere
[o:'stiə](severely simple and plain; without luxuries or unnecessary expenditure: an austere way of life.) austère -
20 be hard on
1) (to punish or criticize severely: Don't be too hard on the boy - he's too young to know that he was doing wrong.) être dur avec2) (to be unfair to: If you punish all the children for the broken window it's a bit hard on those who had nothing to do with it.) injuste envers
См. также в других словарях:
severely — 1540s, from SEVERE (Cf. severe) + LY (Cf. ly) (2) … Etymology dictionary
severely — [adv] harshly acutely, badly, critically, dangerously, extremely, firmly, gravely, hard, hardly, intensely, markedly, painfully, rigorously, roughly, seriously, sharply, sorely, sternly, strictly, with an iron hand; concept 569 Ant.… … New thesaurus
severely — se|vere|ly [ sı vırli ] adverb ** 1. ) very seriously: The decision would severely damage the economy of Colombia. Several of the passengers were severely injured in the accident. severely limited/restricted/reduced: The original scope of the… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
severely */*/ — UK [sɪˈvɪə(r)lɪ] / US [sɪˈvɪrlɪ] adverb 1) very seriously Several of the passengers were severely injured in the accident. The decision would severely damage the economy of Scotland. severely limited/restricted/reduced: The original scope of the… … English dictionary
severely — adverb 1 very badly or to a great degree: a severely damaged building | severely disabled | His movements are severely restricted. 2 in a strict way: Parents don t punish their children so severely these days. 3 in a way that shows you disapprove … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
severely — se|vere|ly [sıˈvıəli US ˈvır ] adv 1.) very badly or to a great degree ▪ The town was severely damaged in the war. ▪ She s now severely disabled. 2.) in a strict way ▪ Parents don t punish their children so severely these days. 3.) in a very… … Dictionary of contemporary English
severely — adjective 1) he was severely injured Syn: badly, seriously, critically; fatally; formal grievously 2) she was severely criticized Syn: sharply, roundly, soundly, fiercely, savagely 3) … Thesaurus of popular words
severely — adverb 1) he was severely injured Syn: badly, seriously, critically 2) murderers should be treated more severely Syn: harshly, strictly, sternly, rigorously 3) she looked severely at Harriet … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary
severely — adverb 1. to a severe or serious degree (Freq. 8) fingers so badly frozen they had to be amputated badly injured a severely impaired heart is gravely ill was seriously ill • Syn: ↑badly, ↑ … Useful english dictionary
severely — adv. Severely is used with these adjectives: ↑autistic, ↑congested, ↑constrained, ↑cracked, ↑critical, ↑damaging, ↑defective, ↑deficient, ↑deformed, ↑depressed, ↑deprived, ↑ … Collocations dictionary
severely — severe ► ADJECTIVE 1) (of something bad, undesirable, or difficult) very great; intense. 2) strict or harsh. 3) very plain in style or appearance. DERIVATIVES severely adverb severity noun. ORIGIN Latin severus … English terms dictionary