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1 cooperative
cooperative [kəʊˈɒpərətɪv]1. adjective[person, firm, attitude] coopératif2. noun* * *[kəʊ'ɒpərətɪv] 1.1) ( organisation) coopérative f2) US ( apartment house) immeuble m en copropriété2.1) ( joint) conjoint2) ( helpful) coopératif/-ive3) Commerce, Politics [movement, society] coopératif/-ive4) US [apartment, building] en copropriété -
2 quarter
['kwo:tə] 1. noun1) (one of four equal parts of something which together form the whole (amount) of the thing: There are four of us, so we'll cut the cake into quarters; It's (a) quarter past / (American) after four; In the first quarter of the year his firm made a profit; The shop is about a quarter of a mile away; an hour and a quarter; two and a quarter hours.) quart2) (in the United States and Canada, (a coin worth) twenty-five cents, the fourth part of a dollar.) vingt-cinq cents3) (a district or part of a town especially where a particular group of people live: He lives in the Polish quarter of the town.) quartier4) (a direction: People were coming at me from all quarters.) de toutes parts5) (mercy shown to an enemy.) grâce6) (the leg of a usually large animal, or a joint of meat which includes a leg: a quarter of beef; a bull's hindquarters.) quartier7) (the shape of the moon at the end of the first and third weeks of its cycle; the first or fourth week of the cycle itself.) quartier8) (one of four equal periods of play in some games.) quart9) (a period of study at a college etc usually 10 to 12 weeks in length.) trimestre2. verb1) (to cut into four equal parts: We'll quarter the cake and then we'll all have an equal share.) couper en quatre2) (to divide by four: If we each do the work at the same time, we could quarter the time it would take to finish the job.) diviser en quatre3) (to give (especially a soldier) somewhere to stay: The soldiers were quartered all over the town.) cantonner•3. adverb(once every three months: We pay our electricity bill quarterly.) trimestriellement4. noun(a magazine etc which is published once every three months.) publication trimestrielle- quarters- quarter-deck - quarter-final - quarter-finalist - quartermaster - at close quarters -
3 join
A n raccord m.B vtr1 ( meet up with) rejoindre [colleague, family] ; I'll join you in Paris je te rejoindrai à Paris ; come and join us for dinner/drinks venez dîner/prendre un verre avec nous ; may I join you? ( sit down) puis-je me joindre à vous? ; we're going to the opera, would you like to join us? nous allons à l'opéra, voulez-vous venir avec nous? ;2 ( go to the end of) se mettre dans [line, queue] ; se mettre au bout de [row] ; ajouter son nom à [list] ;3 ( become a member of) devenir membre de [EC, organization, team] ; adhérer à [club, party] ; s'inscrire à [class, library] ; s'engager dans [army] ; devenir membre de [church] ; to join a union se syndiquer ; join the club! tu n'es pas le seul/la seule! ;4 ( become part of) se joindre à [crowd, exodus, rush] ; to join battle entrer dans la bataille ; the province voted to join the federation la province a voté l'union avec la fédération ;6 ( participate in) ⇒ join in ;7 ( associate with) gen se joindre à [person] (to do, in doing pour faire) ; ( professionally) [actor, businesswoman] s'associer à [colleague, partner] (to do, in doing pour faire) ; to join forces s'unir, s'allier ; to join forces with sb/sth ( merge) s'allier à qn/qch ; ( co-operate) collaborer avec qn/qch ; to join sb in the struggle se joindre à qn dans la lutte ; Martin joins me in sending his congratulations Martin se joint à moi pour vous féliciter ;9 ( attach) réunir, joindre [ends, halves, pieces] ; assembler [parts] ; to join one end to another ou the other joindre un bout à l'autre ; to join two pieces together joindre deux morceaux ;10 ( link) relier [points, towns, dots] (to à) ; to join hands lit se prendre par la main ; fig collaborer ;12 Relig [priest] unir [bride and groom] ; to join two people in marriage unir deux personnes par le mariage.C vi2 (connect, meet) [edges, pieces] se joindre ; [pipes, wires] se raccorder ; [rivers, roads] se rejoindre.■ join in:▶ join in participer ;▶ join in [sth] participer à [talks, discussion, campaign, game, activity] ; prendre part à [strike, demonstration] ; to join in the bidding prendre part aux enchères ; to join in the fun se joindre à la fête ; to join in the dancing/singing se mettre à danser/chanter avec les autres.■ join on:▶ join on se fixer ;■ join up:▶ join up2 ( meet up) [people] se retrouver ;3 ( merge) [roads, tracks] se rejoindre ;▶ join up [sth], join [sth] up relier [characters, dots] ; assembler [pieces] ; joined-up writing écriture f liée. -
4 loose
A n1 on the loose [prisoner, criminal, animal] qui s'est échappé ; [troublemakers] déchaîné ; there's a killer/lion on the loose il y a un tueur/lion qui s'est échappé ; there is a gang of hooligans on the loose in the town il y a une bande de voyous qui rôdent dans les rues de la ville ; he is still on the loose il est toujours en liberté or en cavale ○ ;B adj1 lit ( not firm or tight) [knot, lace, screw] desserré ; [nail, handle] branlant ; [joint] lâche ; [component, section] mal fixé ; [button] qui se découd ; [thread] décousu ; [tooth] qui se déchausse ; to come ou work loose [knot, screw] se desserrer ; [brick, handle] être branlant ; [nail] lâcher ; [tooth] se déchausser ; to work [sth] loose desserrer [rope, knot, screw, fixture] ; dégager [nail, post] ; desceller [brick, bar] ; to hang loose [hair] être dénoué ; [rope, reins, thread] pendre ; hang loose ○ ! US détends-toi! ; loose connection Elec faux contact ;2 ( free) [animal] échappé ; the bull's loose le taureau s'est échappé ; to break loose [animal] s'échapper (from de) ; fig rompre (from avec) ; to cut sb loose détacher qn ; to roam ou run loose courir en liberté ; to let ou set ou turn loose libérer [animal, prisoner] ; he let the dogs loose on me il a lâché les chiens sur moi ; I wouldn't let her loose on a classroom je ne la laisserais pas seule face à une classe ; I wouldn't let first year students loose on Joyce! je ne ferais pas lire Joyce aux étudiants de première année! ; to let loose with criticism/insults critiquer/insulter sans retenue ;3 Comm ( not packed) [tea, tobacco, sweets, vegetables] en vrac ; we sell envelopes loose nous vendons les enveloppes au détail ; just put the apples in the bag loose mettez donc les pommes à même le sac or directement dans le sac ; loose change petite monnaie ;4 ( that has come apart) [card, page] volant ; [stone, fragment] détaché ; a loose sheet of paper une feuille volante ; these pages have come loose ces pages se sont détachées ; loose rust/paint rouille/peinture friable ; ‘loose chippings’ GB, ‘loose gravel’ US ( roadsign) ‘attention gravillons’ ;5 ( not close-fitting) [dress, jacket, trousers] ample ; [fold, waistband] large ; [collar] lâche ; ( flaccid) [skin] flasque ; [muscle] détendu ;6 ( not compacted) [soil] meuble ; [link, weave] lâche ; [structure] lâche ; [association, alliance] vague ; to have loose bowels avoir la diarrhée ; loose maul ( in rugby) mêlée ouverte ;7 ( not strict or exact) [translation, version] assez libre, approximatif/-ive ; [wording] imprécis ; [interpretation] assez libre, large ; [guideline] vague ; [discipline, style] relâché ; loose talk propos mpl inconsidérés ;9 ( spare) [cash, funds] disponible.1 ( release) libérer ;2 ( shoot) tirer [arrow].to be at a loose end GB, to be at loose ends US être désœuvré, ne pas trop savoir quoi faire ; to tie up the loose ends régler les derniers détails ; to have a loose tongue ne pas savoir tenir sa langue.▶ loose off [sth], loose [sth] off décharger [gun] ; tirer [arrow, shot] ; décocher [abuse, insults].
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