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1 dérivé
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2 dérivatif
dérivatif [deʀivatif]masculine noun• dans son travail il cherche un dérivatif à sa douleur he throws himself into his work to try and take his mind off his grief* * *
1.
- ive deʀivatif, iv adjectif Linguistique derivative
2.
nom masculin1) gén diversion (à from)2) Médecine derivative* * *deʀivatif nm* * *A adj Ling derivative.B nm1 gén diversion (à from);2 Méd derivative.( féminin dérivative) [derivatif, iv] adjectif1. [activité, occupation] derivative————————nom masculin -
3 dériver
dériver [deʀive]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verba. [+ mot, produit] to derive3. intransitive verb[bateau, avion] to drift• la conversation a dérivé sur... the conversation drifted onto...* * *deʀive
1.
1) ( détourner) to divert [rivière]2) Mathématique to obtain the derivative of [fonction]
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dériver de verbe transitif indirect1) gén2) Linguistique
3.
verbe intransitif1) lit, fig to drift2) Mathématique to differentiate* * *deʀive1. vt1) [cours d'eau, circulation] to divert2) MATHÉMATIQUE to derive2. vi1) [bateau] to drift2) fig to drift3) (= provenir)* * *dériver verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( détourner) to divert [rivière];2 Math to obtain the derivative of [fonction].B dériver de vtr ind1 gén dériver de to stem from;2 Ling dériver de to be derived from.C vi2 Math to differentiate.[derive] verbe intransitif————————[derive] verbe transitif1. [détourner - rivière] to divert (the course of)————————dériver de verbe plus préposition1. [être issu de] to derive ou to come from3. LINGUISTIQUE to stem ou to derive from -
4 dérivé
dérive [deʀiv]feminine nouna. ( = déviation) drift• être à la dérive [personne] to be driftingc. ( = abus) excess ; ( = évolution) drift* * *deʀiv1) fig driftaller or partir à la dérive — to drift away
2) Économie slide* * *deʀiv1. nf1) [dériveur] centre-board Grande-Bretagne center-board USA2) [embarcation] drifting, driftaller à la dérive NAVIGATION — to drift, figto drift
2. dérives nfpl(= excès) excesses* * *dérive nf1 ( évolution regrettable) drift; dérive nationaliste nationalist drift;3 Écon slide; dérive budgétaire budgetary slide;4 Naut ( aileron) centreboardGB; ( déviation) deviation; navire à la or en dérive ship adrift; être à la dérive to be adrift;6 Électron drift;dérive des continents Géog continental drift.( féminin dérivée) [derive] adjectifdérivé nom masculin1. CHIMIE derivative3. [sous-produit] by-productdérivée nom féminin -
5 produit dérivé
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6 sous-produit
sous-produit [supʀɔdyi]masculine noun* * *pl sous-produits supʀɔdɥi nom masculin1) ( produit secondaire) by-product2) ( produit médiocre) second-rate product* * *supʀɔdɥi nm* * *1 ( produit secondaire) by-product;2 ( produit médiocre) second-rate product.[suprɔdɥi] nom masculin -
7 casque
I.n. m.1. Prendre son casque: To 'get a skinful', to get drunk.2. Avoir le casque: To have a hangover.II.n. f.1. La casque:a Pay-packet, wages.b (fig.): Moment of reckoning.2. Le coup de casque (joc.): Verbal appeal for funds at the end of an emotional speech or a sales-pitch. (The noun is a derivative of casquer. to 'fork out', to pay.)
См. также в других словарях:
derivative — de·riv·a·tive 1 /də ri və tiv/ n: a contract or security that derives its value from that of an underlying asset (as another security) or from the value of a rate (as of interest or currency exchange) or index of asset value (as a stock index) ◇… … Law dictionary
Derivative — De*riv a*tive, a. [L. derivativus: cf. F. d[ e]rivatif.] Obtained by derivation; derived; not radical, original, or fundamental; originating, deduced, or formed from something else; secondary; as, a derivative conveyance; a derivative word. [1913 … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Derivative — De*riv a*tive, n. 1. That which is derived; anything obtained or deduced from another. [1913 Webster] 2. (Gram.) A word formed from another word, by a prefix or suffix, an internal modification, or some other change; a word which takes its origin … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
derivative — [adj] borrowed, transmitted from source acquired, ancestral, caused, cognate, coming from, connate, copied, evolved, hereditary, imitative, inferential, inferred, not original, obtained, plagiaristic, plagiarized, procured, rehashed, secondary,… … New thesaurus
derivative — ► ADJECTIVE 1) chiefly derogatory imitative of the work of another artist, writer, etc. 2) (of a financial product) having a value deriving from an underlying variable asset. ► NOUN 1) something which is derived from another source. 2) a… … English terms dictionary
derivative — [də riv′ə tiv] adj. [ME derivatif < LL derivativus < L derivatus, pp. of derivare: see DERIVE] 1. derived 2. using or taken from other sources; not original 3. of derivation n. 1. something derived 2 … English World dictionary
derivative — early 15c. (adj.); mid 15c. (n.), from M.Fr. dérivatif (15c.), from L.L. derivativus, from pp. stem of L. derivare (see DERIVE (Cf. derive)). Mathematical sense is from 1670s … Etymology dictionary
Derivative — This article is an overview of the term as used in calculus. For a less technical overview of the subject, see Differential calculus. For other uses, see Derivative (disambiguation) … Wikipedia
derivative — Coming from another; taken from something preceding; secondary. That which has not its origin in itself, but owes its existence to something foregoing. Anything obtained or deduced from another @ derivative action A suit by a shareholder to… … Black's law dictionary
derivative — Coming from another; taken from something preceding; secondary. That which has not its origin in itself, but owes its existence to something foregoing. Anything obtained or deduced from another @ derivative action A suit by a shareholder to… … Black's law dictionary
derivative — derivatively, adv. derivativeness, n. /di riv euh tiv/, adj. 1. derived. 2. not original; secondary. n. 3. something derived. 4. Also called derived form. Gram. a form that has undergone derivation from anoth … Universalium