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1 tirer de
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2 écho
écho [eko]masculine nouna. [de son] echo• avez-vous eu des échos de la réunion ? did you get any inkling of what went on at the meeting?• échos ( = rubrique) gossip column* * *ekonom masculin1) ( de son) echofaire écho à quelque chose, se faire l'écho de quelque chose — to echo something
2) ( réaction) response (à to)3) ( information)4) ( anecdote) piece of gossip* * *eko1. nmse faire l'écho de — to repeat, to spread about
rester sans écho [suggestion] — to come to nothing
2. échos nmpl1) (= potins) gossip sg rumours Grande-Bretagne rumors USA2) (= ouï-dire)3) PRESSE (= rubrique) "news in brief"* * *écho nm1 ( de son) aussi Ordinat, Tech, TV echo; écho simple/multiple/radar single/multiple/radar echo; effet d'écho echo effect; il y a de l'écho there is an echo; divulguer/répéter qch à tous les échos to divulge/repeat sth to all and sundry; faire écho à qch to echo sth; se faire l'écho de qch to echo sth;2 ( réaction) response; en écho in response (à to); avoir/recevoir un écho to get/receive a response (de from); trouver un écho or des échos to meet with a response (à qch to sth; auprès de qn, chez qn from sb; dans in); trouver un large/faible écho to meet with a great/faint response; ne trouver aucun écho to fail to elicit any response;3 ( information) nous n'avons eu aucun écho des pourparlers we have heard nothing about the talks;écho flottant echo flutter.[eko] nom masculin1. ACOUSTIQUE echo2. (figuré)4. [rubrique de journal] gossip column————————à tous les échos locution adverbiale -
3 provoquer
provoquer [pʀɔvɔke]➭ TABLE 1 transitive verba. ( = défier) to provokeb. ( = causer) to cause ; [+ réaction, changement d'attitude] to bring about ; [+ colère, curiosité] to arouse ; [+ accouchement] to induce* * *pʀɔvɔke1) ( causer) to cause [accident, mort]; to arouse [curiosité]; to provoke [réaction, gaieté, colère]; to trigger off [discussion]; to prompt [explications]2) ( défier) to provoke3) ( exciter sexuellement) to arouse* * *pʀɔvɔke vt1) [personne] to provokeIl l'a provoquée en la traitant d'imbécile. — He provoked her by calling her stupid.
2) [accident, mort] to cause, to bring aboutCet accident a provoqué la mort de quarante personnes. — The accident caused the death of 40 people.
3)4) [aveux] to prompt, to elicit5) (= inciter)* * *provoquer verb table: aimer vtr1 ( causer) to cause [accident, explosion, dégâts, mort]; to arouse [intérêt, curiosité]; to provoke [réaction, gaieté, colère]; to trigger off [discussion]; to prompt [explications, aveux]; provoquer une rencontre entre to set up a meeting between;2 ( défier) to provoke; provoquer qn en duel to challenge sb to a duel;3 ( déclencher) provoquer l'accouchement to induce labour;4 ( exciter sexuellement) to arouse.[prɔvɔke] verbe transitif2. [sexuellement] to teaseil ne se doutait pas qu'il allait provoquer sa jalousie he didn't realize that he would make her jealousses dénégations ne provoquèrent aucune réaction chez le juge his denials brought no reaction from the judgeelle fit cette déclaration pour provoquer une nouvelle enquête she made that statement so that there would be a new enquiry4. MÉDECINE
См. также в других словарях:
Elicit — E*lic it, a. [L. elictus, p. p. of elicere to elicit; e + lacere to entice. Cf. {Delight}, {Lace}.] Elicited; drawn out; made real; open; evident. [Obs.] An elicit act of equity. Jer. Taylor. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
elicit — [ē lis′it, ilis′it] vt. [< L elicitus, pp. of elicere, to draw out < e , out + lacere, to entice, akin to laqueus: see LACE] 1. to draw forth; evoke [to elicit an angry reply] 2. to cause to be revealed [to elicit facts] SYN. EXTRACT… … English World dictionary
Elicit — E*lic it, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Elicited}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Eliciting}.] To draw out or entice forth; to bring to light; to bring out against the will; to deduce by reason or argument; as, to elicit truth by discussion. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
elicit — elicit, illicit Confusion arises occasionally because both words are pronounced the same way (i lis it). Elicit is a verb meaning ‘to draw out or evoke (an answer, admission, etc.)’ whereas illicit is an adjective meaning ‘unlawful, forbidden’ … Modern English usage
elicit — I verb arouse, author, awaken, beget, bring about, bring forth, bring forward, bring out, call forth, cause, draw forth, draw out, eblandiri, educe, effect, effectuate, elicere, evocare, evoke, extract, generate, initiate, make manifest,… … Law dictionary
elicit — (v.) 1640s, from L. elicitus, pp. of elicere draw forth, from ex out (see EX (Cf. ex )) + licere, comb. form of lacere to entice, lure, deceive (related to laqueus noose, snare; see LACE (Cf. lace)). Related … Etymology dictionary
elicit — vb evoke, *educe, extract, extort Analogous words: draw, drag, *pull: *bring, fetch … New Dictionary of Synonyms
elicit — [v] draw out arm twist*, badger, bite*, bring, bring forth, bring out, bring to light*, call forth, cause, derive, educe, evince, evoke, evolve, exact, extort, extract, fetch, give rise to, milk*, obtain, put muscle on*, put the arm on*, rattle,… … New thesaurus
elicit — ► VERB (elicited, eliciting) ▪ evoke or draw out (a response or reaction). DERIVATIVES elicitation noun elicitor noun. ORIGIN Latin elicere draw out by trickery … English terms dictionary
elicit — [[t]ɪlɪ̱sɪt[/t]] elicits, eliciting, elicited 1) VERB If you elicit a response or a reaction, you do or say something which makes other people respond or react. [V n] Mr Norris said he was hopeful that his request would elicit a positive response … English dictionary
elicit — verb (T) to succeed in getting information or a reaction from someone, especially when this is difficult: My attempts at conversation didn t elicit much response. | elicit sth from sb: By patient questioning we managed to elicit enough… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English