-
1 insufficiently
insufficiently [‚ɪnsəˈfɪ∫əntlɪ]* * *[ˌɪnsə'fɪʃntlɪ] -
2 insufficiently
-
3 insufficiently
Un panorama unique de l'anglais et du français > insufficiently
-
4 insufficiently
adverb insuffisamment -
5 under
under [ˈʌndər]1. prepositiona. ( = beneath) sous• under the table/umbrella sous la table/le parapluie• under the command of... sous les ordres de...b. ( = less than) moins de ; (in rank, scale) au-dessous de• it sells at under £10 cela se vend à moins de 10 livresc. (with names) sousd. ( = according to) selon2. adverba. ( = beneath) en dessousb. ( = less) moins3. prefix( = insufficiently) sous-* * *Note: When under is used as a straightforward preposition in English it can almost always be translated by sous in French: under the table = sous la table; under a sheet = sous un drap; under a heading = sous un titreunder is often used before a noun in English to mean subject to or affected by ( under control, under fire, under oath, under review etc). For translations, consult the appropriate noun entry (control, fire, oath, review etc)under is also often used as a prefix in combinations such as undercook, underfunded, underprivileged and undergrowth, underpass. These combinations are treated as headwords in the dictionaryFor particular usages, see the entry below['ʌndə(r)] 1.1) ( physically beneath or below) sous2) ( less than)under £10 — moins de 10 livres sterling
children under five — les enfants de moins de cinq ans or en dessous de cinq ans
temperatures under 10°C — des températures inférieures à 10°C
3) ( according to)4) ( subordinate to) sous5) ( in classification) sous2.do I look for Le Corbusier under ‘le’ or ‘Corbusier’? — est-ce que je dois chercher Le Corbusier sous ‘le’ ou ‘Corbusier’?
1) ( physically beneath or below something) [crawl, sit, hide] en dessousto go under — [diver, swimmer] disparaître sous l'eau
2) ( less) moins£10 and under — 10 livres sterling et moins
to run five minutes under — [event, programme] durer cinq minutes de moins que prévu
3) ( anaesthetized)4) ( subjugated)5) (below, later in text) -
6 insufficient
[insə'fiʃənt](not enough: The prisoner was released because the police had insufficient proof of his guilt.) insuffisant- insufficiency
См. также в других словарях:
Insufficiently — In suf*fi cient*ly, adv. In an insufficient manner or degree; unadequately. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
insufficiently — insufficient UK US /ˌɪnsəˈfɪʃənt/ adjective ► not enough, or not big or important enough for a particularpurpose: »Their plan may mature with insufficient funds to pay off their mortgages. »This would leave insufficient time to release any new… … Financial and business terms
insufficiently — adv. Insufficiently is used with these adjectives: ↑precise, ↑radical … Collocations dictionary
insufficiently — insufficient ► ADJECTIVE ▪ not enough. DERIVATIVES insufficiency noun insufficiently adverb … English terms dictionary
insufficiently — adverb to an insufficient degree (Freq. 1) he was insufficiently prepared • Ant: ↑sufficiently • Derived from adjective: ↑insufficient … Useful english dictionary
insufficiently considered — index injudicious Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
insufficiently — adverb see insufficient … New Collegiate Dictionary
insufficiently — See insufficient. * * * … Universalium
insufficiently — adverb not sufficiently … Wiktionary
insufficiently — (Roget s IV) modif. Syn. barely, incompletely, partly; see inadequately … English dictionary for students
insufficiently — adv. in an insufficient manner, inadequately, deficiently … English contemporary dictionary