-
1 vacances parlementaires
-
2 vacance
vakɑ̃s
1.
nom féminin (de charge, poste) vacancy
2.
vacances nom féminin pluriel holiday GB, vacation USbonnes vacances! — have a good holiday GB ou vacation US!
grandes vacances — École summer holidays GB, summer ou long vacation US
* * *vakɑ̃s1. nfADMINISTRATION vacancy2. vacances nfplholidays pl Grande-Bretagne holiday Grande-Bretagne vacation USAles grandes vacances — the summer holidays Grande-Bretagne the summer vacation USA
prendre des vacances — to take a holiday Grande-Bretagne to take a vacation USA
prendre ses vacances — to take one's holidays Grande-Bretagne to take one's vacation USA
aller en vacances — to go on holiday Grande-Bretagne to go on vacation USA
* * *B vacances nfpl holiday GB, vacation US; être en vacances to be on holiday GB ou vacation US; partir ou aller en vacances to go (away) on holiday GB ou vacation US; prendre des vacances to go on holiday GB, to take a vacation US; ils ont pris trois semaines de vacances they took a three-week holiday GB ou vacation US; passer de bonnes vacances to have a good holiday GB ou vacation US; bonnes vacances! have a good holiday GB ou vacation US!; avoir besoin de vacances to need a holiday GB ou vacation US; avoir droit à cinq semaines de vacances to be entitled to five weeks' holiday GB ou vacation US; pendant les vacances during the holidays GB ou vacation US; ils vont toujours en vacances en Bretagne they always go on holiday to Brittany GB, they always take their vacation in Brittany US; vacances d'été/de Noël summer/Christmas holidays GB ou vacation US; vacances d'été, grandes vacances Scol summer holidays GB, summer vacation US; photos de vacances holiday snaps GB, vacation snaps US.vacances judiciaires Jur vacation (sg); vacances parlementaires Pol parliamentary recess; vacance du pouvoir Admin, Pol power vacuum; vacances scolaires Scol school holiday GB ou vacation US; vacance de succession Jur abeyance of succession; vacances universitaires Univ university vacation.[vakɑ̃s] nom féminin1. [d'un emploi] vacancy2. [d'une fonction politique]3. DROIT————————vacances nom féminin plurielprendre des vacances to take a holiday, to go on holidayprendre deux mois de vacances to take two months off, to have a two-month holidayrentrer de vacances to come back from one's holiday ou vacationvacances de neige skiing holidays ou vacation2. [période du calendrier]b. [pour les salariés] the Christmas break————————en vacances locution adverbiale -
3 rentrée
rentrée [ʀɑ̃tʀe]feminine nouna. rentrée (scolaire or des classes) start of the new school year• cette langue sera enseignée à partir de la rentrée 2004 this language will be part of the syllabus as from autumn 2004• les députés font leur rentrée aujourd'hui the deputies are returning today for the start of the new session• on craint une rentrée sociale agitée it is feared that there will be some social unrest this autumnc. [d'acteur, sportif] comebackd. ( = retour) return━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━La rentrée in September each year is not only the time when French children and teachers go back to school; it is also the time when political and social life begins again after the long summer break. The expression la rentrée is thus not restricted to an educational context, but can refer in general to the renewed activity that takes place throughout the country in the autumn.* * *The week at the beginning of September when the new school year starts and around which much of French administrative life revolves. The preceding weeks see intensive advertising of associated merchandise, from books and stationery to clothes and sports equipment. Many stores and supermarkets have a range of special purchases at bargain prices. The concept of the rentrée also extends to literary, political and other activities which are resumed after the period of the grandes vacances in July and August when businesses can close for up to a month. La rentrée littéraire marks the start of the literary year and la rentrée parlementaire signals the reassembly of Parliament after the recess* * *ʀɑ̃tʀe nf1) (rentrée d'argent) cash no pl coming in2) ÉDUCATIONla rentrée; la rentrée des classes — the start of the new school year
3) POLITIQUE4) [artiste, acteur]* * *ⓘ Rentrée The week at the beginning of September when the new school year starts and around which much of French administrative life revolves. The preceding weeks see intensive advertising of associated merchandise, from books and stationery to clothes and sports equipment. Many stores and supermarkets have a range of special purchases at bargain prices. The concept of the rentrée also extends to literary, political and other activities which are resumed after the period of the grandes vacances in July and August when businesses can close for up to a month. La rentrée littéraire marks the start of the literary year and la rentrée parlementaire signals the reassembly of Parliament after the recess.[rɑ̃tre] nom féminin1. ÉDUCATIONrentrée (scolaire ou des classes) start of the (new) academic yeardepuis la rentrée de Noël/Pâques since the spring/summer term began, since the Christmas/Easter breakla rentrée est fixée au 6 septembre school starts again ou schools reopen on September 6tha. [après les vacances] to start the new political season (after the summer)b. [après une absence] to make one's (political) comeback3. [saison artistique]b. [après une absence] for your Paris comeback4. [retour - des vacances d'été] (beginning of the) autumn (UK) ou fall (US) ; [ - de congé ou de week-end] return to workla rentrée a été dure it was hard to get back to work after the summer holidays (UK) ou vacation (US)6. [des foins] bringing ou taking in————————rentrées nom féminin plurielavoir des rentrées (d'argent) régulières to have a regular income ou money coming in regularlyrentrées fiscales tax receipts ou revenueThe time of the year when children go back to school has considerable cultural significance in France; coming after the long summer break or grandes vacances, it is the time when academic, political, social and commercial activity begins again in earnest.
См. также в других словарях:
Recess (break) — Recess is a general term for a period of time in which a group of people is temporarily dismissed from its duties. In parliamentary procedure, a recess is initiated by a motion to recess.It was invented by Bronson Alcott who wanted his students… … Wikipedia
Recess — may refer to: Recess (break), a break period Recess (motion), in parliamentary procedure Recess (Holy Roman Empire), the official record of decisions of an Imperial Diet Recess (TV series), an animated series by Disney GWU Recess, a student… … Wikipedia
Recess (motion) — In parliamentary procedure, recess refers to legislative bodies such as parliaments, assemblies, juries that are released to reassemble at a later time. The members may leave the meeting room, but are expected to remain nearby. A recess may be… … Wikipedia
recess — noun 1 period when a parliament, etc. does not meet ADJECTIVE ▪ August (AmE), Christmas (esp. BrE), Easter (esp. AmE), holiday (AmE), summer, Whitsun (BrE), winter (AmE) … Collocations dictionary
Parliamentary session — A parliamentary session is a period of time where the legislature in a parliamentary government is sitting.In Commonwealth Realms, each session begins with a speech from the throne and a pro forma bill to allow the Parliament to deviate from that … Wikipedia
parliamentary procedure — or rules of order Generally accepted rules, precedents, and practices used in the governance of deliberative assemblies. They are intended to maintain decorum, ascertain the will of the majority, preserve the rights of the minority, and… … Universalium
recess — {{11}}recess (n.) 1530s, act of receding, from L. recessus a going back, retreat, from recessum, pp. of recedere to recede (see RECEDE (Cf. recede)). Meaning hidden or remote part first recorded 1610s; that of period of stopping from usual work… … Etymology dictionary
parliamentary — adj. Parliamentary is used with these nouns: ↑accountability, ↑agent, ↑amendment, ↑approval, ↑candidate, ↑chamber, ↑colleague, ↑commission, ↑constituency, ↑correspondent, ↑debate, ↑ … Collocations dictionary
United Kingdom parliamentary expenses scandal — See also: Salaries of Members of the United Kingdom Parliament and List of expenses claims in the United Kingdom parliamentary expenses scandal The Palace of Westminster The United Kingdom parliamentary expenses scandal was a major political … Wikipedia
Second (parliamentary procedure) — Seconded redirects here. For temporary personnel transfer, see secondment. In deliberative bodies a second to a proposed motion is an indication that there is at least one person besides the mover that is interested in seeing the motion come… … Wikipedia
Table (parliamentary procedure) — In parliamentary procedure, a motion to table has two different and contradictory meanings: In the United States, table usually means the motion to lay on the table or motion to postpone consideration; a proposal to suspend consideration of a… … Wikipedia