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noun (a set of shelves for books.) bibliothèque -
5 glass
glass [glɑ:s]1 noun(a) (substance) verre m;∎ made of glass en verre;∎ a pane of glass un carreau, une vitre;∎ these plants are grown under glass ces plantes sont cultivées en serre;(b) (single piece → of window) vitre f, carreau m; (→ of car) glace f, vitre f; (→ of watch, lamp) verre m(c) (vessel, contents) verre m;∎ a glass of water/beer un verre d'eau/de bière;∎ a glass of champagne une coupe de champagne;∎ to sell wine by the glass vendre le vin au verre;∎ to raise one's glass to sb (in toast) lever son verre à qn(d) (in shop, museum) vitrine f;∎ displayed under glass exposé en vitrine(e) (glassware) verrerie f(f) (telescope) longue-vue f∎ (looking) glass glace f, miroir m(i) (barometer) baromètre m;∎ the glass is falling le baromètre baisse(bookcase, porch) vitrer; (photograph) mettre sous verre(a) (spectacles) lunettes fpl;∎ to wear glasses porter des lunettes(b) (binoculars) jumelles fpl►► glass case (for display) vitrine f;glasses case (for spectacles) étui m à lunettes;glass ceiling = plafond de verre qui désigne métaphoriquement l'ensemble des facteurs qui empêchent les femmes de parvenir aux postes les plus élevés dans le monde professionnel;glass cloth essuie-verres m inv;glass cutting taille f du verre;glass eye œil m de verre;glass factory verrerie f (usine);1 nounfibre f de verreen fibre de verre;glass manufacturer verrier m;glass roof (of station) verrière f;glass slipper pantoufle f de verre;Zoology glass snake serpent m de verre;glass wool laine f de verre(bookcase, porch) vitrer; (photograph) mettre sous verre -
6 bookshelf
bookshelf [ˈbʊk∫elf]* * * -
7 pull
pull [pʊl]1. nounb. ( = swig) gorgée fa. tirer• to pull sb clear of [+ wreckage, rubble] dégager qn deb. [+ trigger] presser• to pull to bits démolir ; [+ argument, scheme, play, film] (inf) démolir ; [+ person] (inf) éreinter• pull the other one! (inf!) à d'autres !d. [+ muscle, tendon, ligament] se déchirerb. ( = move) the train pulled into/out of the station le train est entré en gare/est sorti de la gare• to pull sharply to the left [car, driver] virer brusquement à gauchec. ( = swig) he pulled at his beer il a bu une gorgée de bière4. compounds► pull-out noun (in magazine) supplément m détachable ; [of troops] retrait m adjective [magazine section] détachablea. ( = pull to pieces) démonter ; ( = break) mettre en pièces• the police pulled the house apart looking for drugs (inf) la police a mis la maison sens dessus dessous pour trouver de la drogue• nationalism was threatening to pull the country apart le nationalisme menaçait de déchirer le paysb. ( = separate) séparerc. ( = criticize) éreinter ; [+ argument, suggestion] démolir[vehicle, train] démarrer( = withdraw) retirer brusquement ( from sb à qn ) ; ( = snatch) arracher ( from sb à qn, des mains de qn)a. [+ blind] baisserb. ( = demolish) démolirc. ( = weaken) affaiblir► pull ina. [+ rope] ramener• to pull sb in (into room, car) faire entrer qn ; (into pool) faire piquer une tête dans l'eau à qn• pull your stomach in! rentre le ventre !b. ( = pick up) (inf) the police pulled him in for questioning la police l'a appréhendé pour l'interroger► pull offa. ( = remove) [+ gloves, shoes, coat, hat] ôter• to pull off the road [vehicle, driver] quitter la route► pull on[+ gloves, coat, cover] enfiler ; [+ shoes, hat] mettre► pull outa. ( = leave) [train, bus] démarrerb. ( = withdraw) se retirerc. ( = change lane) déboîterb. ( = withdraw) [+ troops] retirer[driver] he pulled over to let the ambulance past il s'est garé sur le côté pour laisser passer l'ambulanceb. ( = stop) [+ motorist, car] (inf) forcer à s'arrêterc. ( = topple) he pulled the bookcase over on top of himself il a entraîné la bibliothèque dans sa chute[sick person] s'en sortir[+ rope] faire passer[+ illness] réchapper à ; [+ difficulties, crisis] se sortir de( = cooperate) se serrer les coudesa. ( = join) data exists but it needs pulling together les données existent mais il faut les rassemblerb. to pull o.s. together se ressaisir► pull upa. ( = stop) [vehicle] s'arrêterb. ( = draw level with) he pulled up with the leaders il a rattrapé les premiers• he leaned down from the wall and pulled the child up il s'est penché du haut du mur et a hissé l'enfant jusqu'à luib. [+ weed] arracherc. ( = halt) arrêter* * *[pʊl] 1.1) ( tug) coup m2) ( attraction) lit force f; fig attrait m (of de)3) (colloq) ( influence) influence f (over, with sur)4) (colloq) ( swig) lampée (colloq) f5) (colloq) ( on cigarette etc) bouffée f7) ( snag) ( in sweater) maille f tirée2.transitive verb1) ( tug) tirer [chain, curtain, hair, tail]; tirer sur [cord, rope]to pull a sweater over one's head — ( put on) enfiler un pull-over; ( take off) retirer un pull-over
2) (tug, move) ( towards oneself) tirer ( towards vers); ( by dragging) traîner ( along le long de); ( to show something) entraîner [quelqu'un] par le bras [person]to pull somebody/something through — faire passer quelqu'un/quelque chose par [hole, window]
3) ( draw) gen tirer; [vehicle] tracter4) ( remove)to pull something off — [child, cat] faire tomber quelque chose de
to pull something out of — tirer quelque chose de [pocket, drawer]
to pull somebody out of — retirer quelqu'un de [wreckage]; sortir quelqu'un de [river]
5) (colloq) sortir [gun, knife]6) ( operate) appuyer sur [trigger]; tirer [lever]7) Medicine se faire une élongation à [muscle]8) (steer, guide)9) Sport [golfer, batsman] hookerto pull one's punches — lit retenir ses coups; fig
10) (colloq) GB tirer [pint of beer]11) (colloq) ( attract) attirer12) ( make)3.1) ( tug) tirer (at, on sur)2) (move, resist restraint) tirer (at, on sur)to pull ahead of somebody — [athlete, rally driver] prendre de l'avance sur quelqu'un; [company] avoir de l'avance sur
•Phrasal Verbs:- pull in- pull off- pull out- pull up••pull the other one, (it's got bells on)! — (colloq) à d'autres (mais pas à moi)! (colloq)
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8 revolving
revolving [rɪˈvɒlvɪŋ][chair, bookcase, stand] pivotant* * *[rɪ'vɒlvɪŋ]adjective [chair] pivotant; [stage] tournantrevolving door — porte f à tambour
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9 section
section [ˈsek∫ən]1. nounb. [of report, article] passage mc. ( = cut) coupe fa. ( = divide) diviser ; ( = cut) couperb. [+ mentally ill person] interner* * *['sekʃn] 1.1) ( part) (of train, aircraft, town, forest, area) partie f; (of pipe, tunnel, road, river) tronçon m; (of object, kit) élément m; ( of fruit) quartier m; (of population, group) tranche f2) ( department) gen service m; (of library, shop) rayon m3) (of act, bill, report) article m; ( of newspaper) rubrique f5) Military groupe m6) Biology lamelle f7) Mathematics section f8) US ( sleeping car) compartiment-couchettes m2.transitive verb sectionner [document, text]; segmenter [computer screen]Phrasal Verbs: -
10 sectional
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11 book
[buk] 1. noun1) (a number of sheets of paper (especially printed) bound together: an exercise book.) cahier2) (a piece of writing, bound and covered: I've written a book on Shakespeare.) livre3) (a record of bets.) livre de paris2. verb1) (to buy or reserve (a ticket, seat etc) for a play etc: I've booked four seats for Friday's concert.) réserver2) (to hire in advance: We've booked the hall for Saturday.) retenir•- bookable- booking - booklet - bookbinding - bookbinder - bookcase - booking-office - bookmaker - bookmark - bookseller - bookshelf - bookshop - bookworm - booked up - book in - by the book -
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13 case
I [keis] noun1) (an instance or example: another case of child-beating; a bad case of measles.) cas2) (a particular situation: It's different in my case.) cas3) (a legal trial: The judge in this case is very fair.) affaire4) (an argument or reason: There's a good case for thinking he's wrong.) raison(s)5) ((usually with the) a fact: I don't think that's really the case.) cas6) (a form of a pronoun (eg he or him), noun or adjective showing its relation to other words in the sentence.) cas•- in case- in case of - in that case II [keis] noun1) (a container or outer covering: a case of medical instruments; a suitcase.) boîte, étui, trousse, valise2) (a crate or box: six cases of whisky.) caisse3) (a piece of furniture for displaying or containing things: a glass case full of china; a bookcase.) vitrine, bibliothèque -
14 room
[ru:m ]( in compounds rum, ( American[) ru:m)]1) (one part of a house or building, usually used for a particular purpose: This house has six rooms; a bedroom; a dining-room.) pièce; chambre; salle (à manger)2) (the space or area in which a person, thing etc is or could be put etc: The bed takes up a lot of room; There's no room for you in our car; We'll move the bookcase to make room for the television.) place3) (a need or possibility (for something): There is room for improvement in his work.) place•- - roomed- roomful - rooms - roomy - room-mate -
15 upright
1. adjective1) (( also adverb) standing straight up; erect or vertical: He placed the books upright in the bookcase; She stood upright; a row of upright posts.) droit; vertical2) ((of a person) just and honest: an upright, honourable man.) honnête2. noun(an upright post etc supporting a construction: When building the fence, place the uprights two metres apart.) montant -
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17 build
A n carrure f ; a man of stocky/average build un homme carré/de carrure moyenne ; he has the build of an athlete il a la carrure d'un athlète ; she is slender in build elle est mince.1 ( construct) construire [factory, city, railway] ; édifier [church, monument] ; construire [nest] ; to build sb a house, to build a house for sb construire une maison pour qn ; to build a wall from ou out of bricks construire un mur en briques ; to build a nest out of twigs construire un nid avec des brindilles ; to build an extension onto a house agrandir une maison ;2 ( assemble) construire [car, engine, ship] ;4 ( establish) bâtir [career, future] ; établir [relations, relationship] ; fonder [empire] ; créer [prosperity] ; former [team] ; to build a new China bâtir une Chine nouvelle ; to build a future for our country/our children bâtir un avenir pour notre pays/nos enfants ; to build one's hopes on sth fonder ses espoirs sur qch ; to build a presence in the European market faire sentir sa présence sur le marché européen ;5 Games former [sequence, set, word].1 ( construct) construire ;2 fig ( use as a foundation) to build on tirer parti de [popularity, success] ; to build on the excitement generated by the first film tirer parti de l'enthousiasme suscité par le premier film ; the scheme would build on the existing system le projet se fonderait sur le système existant ; the company wishes to build on its Asian base la société souhaite se développer à partir de sa base en Asie.■ build in:▶ build [sth] in, build in [sth]1 ( construct) encastrer [mirror, bookcase] ; to build a wardrobe into a wall encastrer une penderie dans un mur ;2 ( incorporate) introduire [clause, provision, guarantee] ; to build a safeguard into a contract introduire une garantie dans un contrat.■ build up:▶ build up [gas, silt, deposits] s'accumuler ; [traffic] s'intensifier ; [business, trade] se développer ; [tension, pressure, excitement] monter ;▶ build up [sth], build [sth] up1 ( accumulate) accumuler [weapons, wealth] ;2 ( boost) établir [self-confidence, trust] ; gonfler [morale] ; don't build your hopes up too high ne te fais pas d'illusions ;3 ( establish) constituer [collection] ; créer [business, organization] ; constituer [army] ; établir [picture, profile] ; créer [database] ; se faire [reputation] ; the college built up a large library le collège s'est constitué une importante bibliothèque ;▶ build [sth/sb] up, build up [sth/sb]1 (through eating, exercise) affermir [muscles] ; to build up one's forearms se muscler les avant-bras ; to build oneself up, to build up one's strength prendre des forces ;2 ( promote) they built him up to be a star ils l'ont lancé pour en faire une star. -
18 sectional
2 ( in section) [drawing, view] en coupe ;3 US [bookcase, sofa] à éléments. -
19 crash
crash [kræʃ]accident ⇒ 1 (a) fracas ⇒ 1 (b) krach ⇒ 1 (c) panne ⇒ 1 (d) patatras ⇒ 4 avoir un accident ⇒ 5 (a) s'écraser ⇒ 5 (a), 5 (b) retentir ⇒ 5 (b) s'effondrer ⇒ 5 (d) tomber en panne ⇒ 5 (e)1 noun(a) (collision) accident m;∎ car/plane/train crash accident m de voiture/d'avion/ferroviaire;∎ we were in a crash (car accident) nous avons eu un accident de voiture;∎ the car looks as though it has been in a crash la voiture semble avoir été accidentée;∎ the force of the crash la force de l'impact;∎ Rugby to do a crash tackle plaquer violemment(b) (loud noise) fracas m;∎ a crash of thunder un coup de tonnerre;∎ there was a loud crash as the plate hit the ground cela a fait un bruit fracassant quand l'assiette est tombée par terre;∎ there was a loud crash from the kitchen un grand fracas a retenti dans la cuisine;∎ he closed the lid with a crash il a fermé le couvercle avec fracas;∎ he fell to the floor with a crash il est tombé par terre dans un grand fracas(diet, programme) intensif, de choc3 adverb∎ he ran crash into a wall il est rentré en plein dans le mur;∎ it went crash ça a fait boum;∎ something went crash in the attic quelque chose est tombé dans le grenierpatatras!∎ we're going to crash (plane) on va s'écraser; (car) on va lui rentrer dedans/rentrer dans le mur/ etc; (train) on va avoir un accident;∎ the car hit a patch of ice and crashed la voiture a eu un accident après avoir glissé sur une plaque de verglas;∎ a detailed study of what actually happens when a car crashes une étude détaillée de ce qui se passe vraiment lors des accidents de voiture;∎ the French car crashed at the first bend la voiture française a eu un accident dans le premier virage;∎ the cars crashed (head on) les voitures se sont percutées (de plein fouet);∎ to crash into sth percuter qch, rentrer dans qch;∎ the car crashed through the fence la voiture est passée à travers la clôture;∎ to crash into sb (person) rentrer dans qn;∎ I crashed into him je lui suis rentré dedans∎ the thunder crashed (once) il y eut un violent coup de tonnerre; (repeatedly) le tonnerre retentit;∎ what are you crashing about at this hour for? pourquoi fais-tu autant de vacarme ou boucan à cette heure?;∎ the elephants crashed through the undergrowth les éléphants ont traversé le sous-bois dans un vacarme terrible(c) (fall, hit with loud noise or violently)∎ the tree came crashing down l'arbre s'est abattu avec fracas;∎ the bookcase came crashing down la bibliothèque s'est écroulée avec fracas;∎ her world came crashing down (about) her or her ears tout son monde s'est écroulé;∎ the vase crashed to the ground le vase s'est fracassé au sol;∎ his fist crashed into the other man's face son poing a percuté avec force ou violence le visage de l'autre(d) Stock Exchange s'effondrer;∎ shares crashed from 750p to 110p le cours des actions s'est effondré: de 750 pence il est passé à 110 pence∎ can I crash at your place? je peux pieuter chez toi?;∎ I need somewhere to crash for the next week j'ai besoin d'un endroit où crécher la semaine prochaine∎ to crash a car avoir un accident avec une voiture; (on purpose) démolir une voiture;∎ to crash a plane s'écraser en avion;∎ he crashed the car through the fence/shop-window il a traversé la clôture/la vitrine avec la voiture;∎ she crashed the car into a wall elle est rentrée dans ou a percuté un mur (avec la voiture)►► crash barrier glissière f de sécurité;crash course cours m intensif;∎ a crash course in French un cours intensif de français;crash helmet casque m (de protection);crash landing atterrissage m forcé ou en catastrophe;familiar crash pad piaule f de dépannage;∎ he let me use his place as a crash pad il m'a laissé crécher chez lui pour me dépanner;crash test dummy mannequin-test m;crash victim victime f d'un accident∎ I found him crashed out in the corner je l'ai trouvé endormi□ ou qui roupillait dans le coin;∎ she's absolutely crashed out elle dort comme une souche□, elle en écrase -
20 once-over
∎ I gave the morning paper the once-over j'ai jeté un coup d'œil sur le journal du matin;∎ I could see her giving me the once-over je la voyais qui me regardait des pieds à la tête∎ give the stairs/the bookcase a quick once-over passe un coup dans l'escalier/sur la bibliothèque∎ to give sb the or a once-over donner une bonne raclée à qn
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См. также в других словарях:
Bookcase — Book case , n. A case with shelves for holding books, esp. one with glazed doors. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
bookcase — (n.) 1726, from BOOK (Cf. book) + CASE (Cf. case) (n.2). An Old English word for this was bocfodder … Etymology dictionary
bookcase — ► NOUN ▪ an open cabinet containing shelves on which to keep books … English terms dictionary
bookcase — [book′kās΄] n. a set of shelves or a cabinet for holding books … English World dictionary
Bookcase — A bookcase, or bookshelf, is a piece of furniture, almost always with horizontal shelves, used to store books.History of the bookcaseWhen books were written by hand and were not produced in great quantities, they were kept in small containers… … Wikipedia
bookcase — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ glass fronted, wooden ▪ built in PREPOSITION ▪ from a/the bookcase ▪ I chose a book from the bookcase … Collocations dictionary
bookcase */ — UK [ˈbʊkˌkeɪs] / US noun [countable] Word forms bookcase : singular bookcase plural bookcases a piece of furniture with shelves in it for putting books on … English dictionary
bookcase — /book kays /, n. a set of shelves for books. [1720 30; BOOK + CASE2] * * * Piece of furniture fitted with shelves, formerly often enclosed by doors. In early times the ambry, or wall cupboard, was used to hold books. Bookcases were included in… … Universalium
bookcase — Synonyms and related words: Smyth sewing, archives, armory, arsenal, attic, backing, bank, basement, bay, bibliopegy, bin, binder board, binding, bonded warehouse, book cloth, book cover, book end, book jacket, book support, book table, book tray … Moby Thesaurus
bookcase — (Roget s IV) n. Syn. bookshelf, cabinet, sectional bookcase, secretary, bookrack; see also furniture … English dictionary for students
bookcase — [[t]b ʊkkeɪs[/t]] bookcases N COUNT A bookcase is a piece of furniture with shelves that you keep books on … English dictionary