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1 tend
tend [tend]∎ to tend to avoir tendance à, tendre à;∎ he does tend to take himself seriously il a vraiment tendance à se prendre au sérieux;∎ we tend to think of man as being separate from nature nous avons tendance à considérer que l'homme ne fait pas partie de la nature;∎ some people like that kind of film, but I tend not to il y a des gens qui aiment ce genre de film, moi (je n'aime) pas trop;∎ I tend to think (that) politics is a waste of time j'ai tendance à penser que la politique est une perte de temps;∎ that does tend to be the case c'est souvent le cas∎ red tending to orange rouge tirant sur l'orange(c) (go, move) tendre;∎ his writings tend to or towards exoticism ses écrits tendent vers l'exotisme;∎ in later life, she tended more towards a Marxist view of things vers la fin de sa vie, elle inclina ou évolua vers des idées marxistes∎ she tended to his every wish elle lui a passé tous ses caprices, elle a fait ses quatre volontés;∎ to tend to one's business/one's guests s'occuper de ses affaires/ses invités;∎ to tend to sb's wounds panser ou soigner les blessures de qn(a) (take care of → sheep) garder; (→ the sick, wounded) soigner; (→ garden) entretenir, s'occuper de;∎ to tend sb's wounds panser ou soigner les blessures de qn∎ to tend the bar servir au bar -
2 tend
tend [tend]• to tend to... avoir tendance à...• I tend to think that... j'ai tendance à penser que...( = take care of) [+ invalid] soigner ; [+ garden] entretenir* * *[tend] 1.transitive verb soigner [patient]; entretenir [garden]; s'occuper de [stall, store]2.1) ( incline)2) ( look after)to tend to — soigner [patient]; s'occuper de [guests]
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3 tend
A vtr soigner [patient] ; garder [animals] ; entretenir [garden] ; surveiller [fire] ; s'occuper de [stall, store].B vi1 ( incline) to tend to do [person, event] avoir tendance à faire ; to tend upwards/downwards avoir tendance à monter/baisser ; to tendtowards sth [tastes, views] pencher vers qch ; I tend to think that j'inclinerais à penser que ; it tends to be the case c'est en général le cas ; things are tending in that direction les choses vont dans cette direction ; to tend the other way prendre le contrepied ;2 ( look after) to tend to soigner [patient] ; s'occuper de [guests] ; to tend to sb's needs veiller aux besoins de qn. -
4 tend
I [tend] verb(to take care of; to look after: A shepherd tends his sheep.) garder- tenderII [tend] verb1) (to be likely (to do something); to do (something) frequently: Plants tend to die in hot weather; He tends to get angry.) avoir tendance (à)2) (to move, lean or slope in a certain direction: This bicycle tends to(wards) the left.) pencher, tirer (vers)•- tendency -
5 tenderhearted
[ˌtendə'hɑːtɪd]adjective sensible -
6 attend
attend [əˈtend]( = be present) être présent, être là• will you attend? est-ce que vous y serez ?━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━‼|/b] [b]to attend ≠ attendre━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━( = deal with) s'occuper de• are you being attended to? (in shop) est-ce qu'on s'occupe de vous ?* * *[ə'tend] 1.transitive verb1) ( go to) assister à [ceremony, meeting, performance]; aller à [church, school]; suivre [class, course]the event was well/poorly attended — beaucoup de/peu de monde assistait à l'événement
2) ( accompany) accompagner3) ( take care of) soigner2.1) ( be present) être présent2) sout ( pay attention) être attentif/-ive (to à)•Phrasal Verbs: -
7 attendant
attendant [əˈtendənt]1. noun2. adjective( = associated) associé* * *[ə'tendənt] 1.noun (in cloakroom, museum, car park) gardien/-ienne m/f; ( in cinema) ouvreuse f; ( at petrol station) pompiste mf; ( at swimming pool) surveillant/-e m/f2.medical attendant — membre m du personnel médical
adjective sout1) ( associated) [cost, danger, issue] associé; [symptom] concomitant2) ( attending) [aide, bodyguard] attaché à sa personne -
8 contend
contend [kənˈtend]a. ( = assert) prétendre• you'll have me to contend with vous aurez affaire à moi► to contend for [+ title, medal, prize] se battre pour* * *[kən'tend] 1.transitive verb soutenir ( that que)2.1)2) ( compete) -
9 contender
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10 incline
a. ( = bend) incliner• inclined at an angle of... incliné à un angle de...• to be inclined to do sth ( = have tendency to) avoir tendance à faire qch ; ( = feel desire to) être enclin à faire qch• I'm inclined to think that... je suis enclin à penser que...a. ( = slope) s'inclinerb. ( = tend towards) his politics incline towards socialism il a des idées proches du socialisme3. nounpente f━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━✦ Lorsque incline est un verbe, l'accent tombe sur la deuxième syllabe: ɪnˈklaɪn, lorsque c'est un nom, sur la première: ˈɪnklaɪn.* * *1. ['ɪŋklaɪn] 2. [ɪn'klaɪn]transitive verb1) ( tilt) incliner2)3. [ɪn'klaɪn]to be inclined to do — ( have tendency) avoir tendance à faire; ( have desire) avoir envie de faire
1) ( tend)to incline to ou towards — [ideas, politics] tendre vers
2) ( lean) s'incliner -
11 intend
intend [ɪnˈtend]• the building was originally intended as a sports complex le bâtiment devait initialement être un complexe sportif* * *[ɪn'tend] 1.transitive verb1) ( have in mind) vouloir [outcome]to intend to do —
2) ( mean)no insult intended — ( to one person) sans vouloir t'offenser; ( to group) sans vouloir offenser personne
it was clearly intended as a reference to... — c'était manifestement une allusion à...
to be intended for — être destiné à [person]; être prévu pour [purpose]
2.the law is intended to prevent... — la loi vise à empêcher...
intending present participle adjective [applicant, traveller] éventuel/-elle -
12 intended
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13 pretend
pretend [prɪˈtend]a. ( = feign) feindreb. ( = claim) prétendrea. ( = feign) faire semblant• he's not really ill, he's just pretending il n'est pas malade, il fait semblant• I was only pretending! c'était pour rire !* * *[prɪ'tend] 1.(colloq) adjective lang enfantin [gun, car] imaginaire; [jewels] faux/fausse (before n)2.transitive verb1) ( feign) simuler2) ( claim)3.1) ( feign) faire semblant2) ( maintain deception) jouer la comédie4.pretended past participle adjective [emotion, ignorance] simulé -
14 superintend
superintend [‚su:pərɪnˈtend]superviser ; [+ exam] surveiller* * *[ˌsuːpərɪn'tend, ˌsjuː-]transitive verb surveiller [person, work]; diriger [organization, research] -
15 superintendent
superintendent [‚su:pərɪnˈtendənt]a. [of department] chef mb. [of police] ≈ commissaire m* * *[ˌsuːpərɪn'tendənt, ˌsjuː-]1) ( supervisor) responsable mf2) ( in police) cf commissaire m de police3) US ( for apartments) concierge mf4) US (also school superintendent) inspecteur/-trice m/f -
16 tendency
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17 tender
tender [ˈtendər]1. adjective• to leave sb/sth to the tender mercies of sb abandonner qn/qch aux bons soins de qnb. ( = young) at the tender age of seven à l'âge de sept ansc. ( = sore) [skin, bruise] sensible( = proffer) offrir• "please tender exact change" « prière de faire l'appoint »4. noun5. compounds* * *['tendə(r)] 1.1) ( offer) soumission2) ( currency) legal tender2.1) ( soft) [food] tendre; [bud, shoot] fragile2) ( loving) [kiss, love, smile] tendre3) ( sensitive) [bruise, skin] sensible4) ( young)3.transitive verb offrir [money]; présenter [apology, fare]; donner [resignation]4.intransitive verb soumissionner, faire une soumission -
18 tenderize
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19 tenderly
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20 tenderness
tenderness [ˈtendənɪs]b. ( = soreness) sensibilité f* * *['tendənɪs]1) ( gentleness) tendresse f2) ( soreness) sensibilité f
См. также в других словарях:
tend — [ tend ] verb *** 1. ) intransitive to usually do a particular thing: tend to do something: He tends to exaggerate. The gym tends to get very busy at around six o clock. We tend to take technology for granted nowadays. These arguments tend merely … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
Tend and befriend — is a behavioural pattern exhibited by human beings and some animal species when under threat. It refers to protection of offspring (tending) and seeking out of the social group for joint protection (befriending). Fight or flight versus tend and… … Wikipedia
Tend — Tend, v. i. [F. tendre, L. tendere, tensum and tentum, to stretch, extend, direct one s course, tend; akin to Gr. ? to stretch, Skr. tan. See {Thin}, and cf. {Tend} to attend, {Contend}, {Intense}, {Ostensible}, {Portent}, {Tempt}, {Tender} to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Tend — Tend, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Tended}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Tending}.] [Aphetic form of attend. See {Attend}, {Tend} to move, and cf. {Tender} one that tends or attends.] 1. To accompany as an assistant or protector; to care for the wants of; to look… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
tend — W1S1 [tend] v [Sense: 1, 3, 5; Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: tendre to stretch , from Latin tendere] [Sense: 2, 4; Date: 1100 1200; Origin: attend] 1.) tend to do sth if something tends to happen, it happens often and is likely to happen … Dictionary of contemporary English
tend — tend1 [tend] vt. [ME tenden, aphetic < attenden: see ATTEND] 1. to take care of; minister to; watch over; look after; attend to [to tend plants or animals, to tend the sick] 2. to be in charge of or at work at; manage or operate [to tend a… … English World dictionary
tend — /tend/ verb 1 tend to do sth to often do a particular thing, especially something that is bad or annoying, and to be likely to do it again: Sally tends to interfere in other people s business. | The car does tend to overheat. 2 tend towards sth… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
tend — tend, attend, mind, watch are comparable when they mean to take charge of or look after someone or something especially as a duty or in return for remuneration. Tend usually retains some notion of an earlier sense in which it means to pay… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
tend bar — american phrase to work behind a bar serving drinks Thesaurus: in bars, pubs and clubshyponym Main entry: tend * * * tend bar US : to work as a bartender : to prepare and serve drinks at a bar He tends bar at the restaurant … Useful english dictionary
tend*/*/*/ — [tend] verb 1) [I] to usually do a particular thing He tends to exaggerate.[/ex] I tend not to go out so much in the winter.[/ex] 2) [I/T] to take care of someone or something Eddie kept himself busy tending the garden.[/ex] Doctors were tending… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
Tend — Tend, v. i. 1. To wait, as attendants or servants; to serve; to attend; with on or upon. [1913 Webster] Was he not companion with the riotous knights That tend upon my father? Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. [F. attendre.] To await; to expect. [Obs.]… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English