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1 département
département [depaʀtəmɑ̃]masculine noundepartment ; ( = division du territoire) département━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━France is divided into 95 metropolitan départements and four overseas départements. Each is run by its own local council, the « conseil général ». Every département has a code number which appears as the first two figures of postcodes and the last two figures on vehicle registration plates. → ARRONDISSEMENT CANTON COMMUNE RÉGION DOM-TOM* * *An administrative unit (of which there are 96 in Metropolitan France) based on a division dating from the Revolutionary period. Most are named after rivers or mountains within their border. The main town is the seat of the préfet, and is often called the préfecture. Each département has a number and this appears as the first two digits in postcodes for addresses within the département and as the two-digit number at the end of registration numbers on motor vehicles* * *depaʀtəmɑ̃ nm1) (dans une entreprise, une université) department2) ADMINISTRATION département* * *département nm1 Admin (administrative) department;2 (d'organisme, d'université, d'administration) department; ce n'est pas mon département lit fig that's not my department;3 ( ministère) department.ⓘ Département An administrative unit (of which there are 96 in Metropolitan France) based on a division dating from the Revolutionary period. Most are named after rivers or mountains within their border. The main town is the seat of the préfet, and is often called the préfecture. Each département has a number and this appears as the first two digits in postcodes for addresses within the département and as the two-digit number at the end of registration numbers on motor vehicles.[departəmɑ̃] nom masculinle Département d'État the State Department, the Department of StateOne of the three main administrative divisions in France. There are a hundred in all, four of which are overseas. Each is run by a conseil général, which has its headquarters in the principal town of the département.Départements are numbered in alphabetical order (with a few exceptions in Île de France). The number is often used to refer to the department, particularly for the Paris area, and it is not uncommon to hear people say j'habite dans le 91 meaning j'habite dans l'Essonne. -
2 Département
County. Metropolitan France is divided administratively into 96 Departments. The concept of the Department, as a territorial subdivision, has existed since the seventeenth century. The original list of 89 departments, numbered alphanumericially from A to Z, was fixed in 1860. Since then, seven new departments have been added. Department 90, the Territoire de Belfort, was made from the French-speaking part of southern Alsace in 1871, and Departments 91 to 95, the departments of the Greater Paris area, added in 1964. Department 20, Corsica, was divided into two in 1976. There are also four overseas departments, known as DOM( Départements d'Outre-Mer). The capital town of a department is known as thePréfecture, and a Department is administered by an elected Conseil Général. Departments are grouped together to form larger units, known as régions.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Département
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3 DOM
DOM [dɔm]masculine noun( = département d'outre-mer)* * *dɔmnom masculin invariable (abbr = département d'outre-mer) French overseas (administrative) department* * *dɔm abr nm nmplDépartement(s) d'outre-mer* * *DOM nm inv (abbr = département d'outre-mer) French overseas (administrative) department. -
4 DOM-TOM
DOM-TOM [dɔmtɔm]plural masculine noun( = départements et territoires d'outre-mer) French overseas departments and territories━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━DOM-TOM, ROM and COMThere are four « Départements d'outre-mer »: Guadeloupe, Martinique, La Réunion and French Guyana (Guyane). They are run in the same way as metropolitan « départements » and their inhabitants are French citizens. In administrative terms they are also « Régions », and in this regard are also referred to as « ROM » (Régions d'outre-mer). The term « Dom-Tom » is still commonly used, but the term « Territoire d'outre-mer » has been superseded by that of « Collectivité d'outre-mer » (COM). The COM include Corsica, Mayotte, Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon, Saint-Barthélemy and Saint-Martin; French Polynesia and New Caledonia were given the status of « Pays d'outre-mer » (POM) in 2009. They are independent, but each is supervised by a representative of the French government.* * *dɔmtɔmnom masculin pluriel (abbr = départements et territoires d'outre-mer) French overseas administrative departments and territories* * *dɔmtɔm abr nm nmplDépartement(s) d'outre-mer/Territoire(s) d'outre-mer* * *DOM-TOM nmpl (abbr = départements et territoires d'outre-mer) French overseas administrative departments and territories.Of the French possessions off the continent, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Guyane and La Réunion have département status, and their inhabitants are French citizens. The territoires include Wallis and Futuna, French Polynesia, New Caledonia and French territories at the Poles. The territories are independent, though supervised by a French government representative. -
5 territoire
territoire [teʀitwaʀ]masculine nounterritory ; [de département, commune] area* * *tɛʀitwaʀnom masculin1) ( d'un pays) territory2) ( chez les animaux) territory•Phrasal Verbs:* * *teʀitwaʀ nm* * *territoire nm1 ( d'un pays) territory; le territoire national/allemand national/German territory; être en territoire ennemi lit, fig to be on enemy territory; sur l'ensemble du territoire throughout the country;2 ( chez les animaux) territory; délimiter son territoire lit, fig to mark out one's territory; défendre son territoire lit, fig to defend one's territory; empiéter sur le territoire de qn fig to encroach on sb's territory.territoire de chasse area reserved for hunting, hunting ground littér; territoire d'outre-mer, TOM French overseas (administrative) territory; les territoires (arabes) occupés Pol, Géog the Occupied Territories.[tɛritwar] nom masculina. [animal] to mark its territory5. [secteur, fief] territorysa chambre, c'est son territoire his room is his kingdom -
6 arrondissement
arrondissement [aʀɔ̃dismɑ̃]masculine noun━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━Marseilles, Lyon and Paris are divided into city districts known as arrondissements, each with its own local council (the « conseil d'arrondissement ») and mayor. The number of the arrondissement appears in addresses at the end of the post code.The French metropolitan and overseas « départements » are divided into over 300 smaller administrative areas. These are also known as arrondissements.* * *A subdivision of a département. Each arrondissement has a sous-préfet representing the state administration at local level. In Paris, Lyons and Marseilles, an arrondissement is a sub-division of the commune, and has its own maire and local council* * *aʀɔ̃dismɑ̃ nmADMINISTRATION district* * *1 ( de ville) arrondissement;2 ( petite région) administrative division.ⓘ Arrondissement A subdivision of a département. Each arrondissement has a sous-préfet representing the state administration at local level. In Paris, Lyons and Marseilles, an arrondissement is a sub-division of the commune, and has its own maire and local council.[arɔ̃dismɑ̃] nom masculin1. [dans une ville]administrative subdivision of major French cities such as Paris, Lyons or Marseilles2. [au niveau départemental]administrative subdivision of a departement, governed by a 'sous-préfet' -
7 région
région [ʀeʒjɔ̃]feminine noun• la région parisienne/londonienne the Paris/London region• si vous passez dans la région, allez les voir if you are in the area, go and see them━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━The 22 régions are the largest administrative divisions in France, each being made up of several « départements ». Each région is administered by a « conseil régional », whose members « les conseillers régionaux » are elected for a six-year term in the « élections régionales ». The expression la région is also used by extension to refer to the regional council itself. → DÉPARTEMENT ÉLECTIONS* * *The largest administrative unit in France, consisting of a number of départements. Each has its own Conseil régional (regional council) which has responsibilities in education and economic planning* * *ʀeʒjɔ̃ nf* * *région ⇒ Les régions nf1 Admin region; la région parisienne the Paris region;2 Géog ( territoire) region; ( autour d'un lieu) area; les régions tropicales/froides tropical/cold regions; le Vésuve et sa région Vesuvius and the surrounding area; le vin de la région the local wine; en région journ in the regions;3 Anat region; la région lombaire the lumbar region;5 fig region; les régions supérieures du savoir the loftier realms of knowledge.ⓘ Région The largest administrative unit in France, consisting of a number of départements. Each has its own Conseil régional (regional council) which has responsibilities in education and economic planning.[reʒjɔ̃] nom féminin1. GÉOGRAPHIE regionrégion industrielle/agricole industrial/agricultural regionles régions tempérées/polaires the temperate/polar regionsle nouveau médecin n'est pas de la région the new doctor isn't from the area ou from around herela région parisienne the Paris area, the area around Paris2. ANATOMIErégion cervicale/lombaire cervical/lumbar regionRégion nom fémininOne of the three main administrative divisions in France, the région was created in 1982. There are twenty-six in all, four of which are overseas. Each région groups together several départements and is administered by a conseil régional, headed by the président du conseil régional.
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