-
1 pound
pound [paʊnd]livre ⇒ 1 (a), 1 (b) fourrière ⇒ 1 (c) broyer ⇒ 2 (a) cogner (sur) ⇒ 2 (b), 3 (a) taper ⇒ 3 (a) battre ⇒ 3 (b)1 noun(a) (unit of weight) = 453,6 grammes, livre f;∎ to sell goods by the pound vendre des marchandises à la livre;∎ three pound or pounds of apples trois livres fpl de pommes;∎ two dollars a pound deux dollars la livre;∎ figurative to get one's pound of flesh obtenir ce que l'on exigeait;∎ he wants his pound of flesh il veut son dû à n'importe quel prix∎ have you got change for a pound? avez-vous la monnaie d'une livre?;∎ two for a pound deux pour une livre;∎ the pound fell yesterday against the Deutschmark la livre est tombée hier face au Deutsche Mark;∎ pound coin pièce f d'une livre;∎ the Lebanese/Maltese pound la livre libanaise/maltaise;∎ the pound sterling la livre sterling(c) (for dogs, cars) fourrière f(a) (crush, pulverize → grain) broyer, concasser; (→ spices, drugs etc) piler, broyer; (→ rocks) concasser, broyer, piler;∎ to pound sth to a powder/a paste réduire qch en poudre/en bouillie∎ she pounded the table with her fist elle martelait la table du poing;∎ the soldiers' heavy boots pounded the earth les soldats martelaient le sol de leurs lourdes bottes;∎ the waves pounded the rocks/boat les vagues battaient les rochers/venaient s'écraser violemment contre le bateau;∎ he began pounding the typewriter keys il commença à taper sur ou à marteler le clavier de la machine à écrire(c) (bombard, shell) bombarder, pilonner;∎ they pounded the enemy positions with mortar fire ils ont bombardé les positions ennemies au mortier(d) (walk → corridor) faire les cent pas dans, aller et venir dans;∎ to pound the streets battre le pavé;∎ to pound the beat (policeman) faire sa ronde∎ the neighbours started pounding on the ceiling les voisins ont commencé à cogner au plafond;∎ we had to pound on the door before anyone answered il a fallu frapper à la porte à coups redoublés avant d'obtenir une réponse;∎ the waves pounded against the rocks les vagues battaient les rochers;∎ the rain was pounding on the roof la pluie tambourinait sur le toit(b) (rhythmically → drums) battre; (→ heart) battre fort; (→ with fear, excitement) battre la chamade;∎ my head was pounding from the noise le bruit me martelait la tête∎ he pounded up/down the stairs il monta/descendit l'escalier bruyamment;∎ the horses came pounding along the track les chevaux arrivaient au grand galop dans un bruit de tonnerre►► Cookery pound cake ≃ quatre-quarts m inv;(a) (on typewriter, piano, drums)∎ he was pounding away at the piano il martelait les touches du piano;∎ she's been pounding away at her typewriter since eight o'clock elle s'acharne sur sa machine à écrire depuis huit heures;∎ every weekend, he pounds away on his drums il passe ses week-ends à taper sur sa batterie;∎ he spent the holidays pounding away at his thesis il a passé les vacances à travailler dur à sa thèse∎ to pound away at the enemy lines pilonner sans arrêt les lignes ennemies;∎ we heard the guns pounding away nous entendions le bruit incessant des canons∎ pound the millet down to a fine powder réduisez le millet en une poudre fine;∎ pound the mixture down to a pulp réduisez le mélange en bouillie(b) (flatten → earth) pilonner, tasser∎ the pianist was pounding out a tune le pianiste martelait un air(b) (letter, document) taper (avec fougue);∎ she pounds out a book a month elle sort ou écrit un livre par moispiler, concasserⓘ Pound of flesh Cette formule ("une livre de chair") vient du Marchand de Venise, de Shakespeare, pièce dans laquelle Shylock vient réclamer son dû à Antonio (une livre de la chair de ce dernier) comme dédommagement pour n'avoir pas tenu ses engagements. Aujourd'hui on utilise cette expression pour parler des conditions exactes d'un contrat ou d'une façon plus générale en référence à une somme d'argent qu'un débiteur est dans l'incapacité de payer. On pourra dire par exemple We're barely able to make ends meet as it is, the last thing we need is the taxman asking for his pound of flesh ("on a déjà du mal à joindre les deux bouts, on n'a vraiment pas besoin que le percepteur vienne nous réclamer de l'argent"). -
2 pound
A n1 Meas ⇒ Weight measurement livre f (de 453,6 g) ; two pounds of apples ≈ un kilo de pommes ; pears are 80 pence a ou per pound ≈ les poires sont à 80 pence la livre ; pound for pound chicken is better value than pork tout comparé le poulet revient moins cher que le porc ; to lose ten pounds in weight ≈ perdre quatre kilos et demi ;2 ( unit of currency) ⇒ Currencies and money livre f ; the British/Irish/Maltese pound la livre sterling/irlandaise/maltaise ; £500 worth of traveller's cheques, spoken) five hundred pounds' worth of traveller's cheques 500 livres sterling en chèques de voyage ; I'll match your donation pound for pound je donnerai exactement la même somme que toi ;B modif [weight] d'une livre, de 453,6 grammes ; [coin, note] d'une livre ; a £200,000 house, spoken) a two hundred thousand pound house une maison de 200 000 livres sterling ; a two million pound fraud/robbery une escroquerie/un hold up de deux millions de livres ; a five/ten pound note un billet de cinq/dix livres.C vtr1 Culin ( crush) piler [spices, grain, salt] ; aplatir [meat] ; to pound sth to réduire qch en [powder, paste, pieces] ;2 ( beat) [waves] battre [shore] ; to pound one's chest se frapper la poitrine ; to pound sth with one's fists frapper sur qch avec ses poings [door, table] ; to pound a stake into the ground enfoncer un pieu dans la terre ;4 ( tread heavily) to pound the streets battre le pavé ; to pound the beat [policeman] faire sa ronde.D vi3 ( run noisily) to pound up/down the stairs monter/descendre l'escalier d'un pas lourd ; to come pounding down ou along the street descendre la rue d'un pas lourd ;■ pound away:▶ pound away at [sth]1 ( strike hard) taper à tour de bras sur [piano, typewriter] ;2 ( work doggedly) travailler d'arrache-pied sur [novel, report].■ pound out:▶ pound out [music] retentir ;▶ pound [sth] out, pound out [sth]1 ( play) faire ressortir [rhythm, tune] ;2 ○ ( produce) pondre ○ [qch] sur une machine à écrire [script] ;■ pound up:▶ pound [sth] up, pound up [sth] concasser [rocks, pepper]. -
3 pound
pound [paʊnd]1. nouna. ( = weight) livre f ( = 453,6 grammes)• $3 a pound 3 dollars la livre → IMPERIAL SYSTEMb. ( = money) livre fc. (for dogs, cars) fourrière f* * *[paʊnd] 1.1) ( weight measurement) livre f (de 453,6g)two pounds of apples — ≈ un kilo de pommes
pears are 80 pence a ou per pound — ≈ les poires sont à 80 pence la livre
pound for pound chicken is better value than pork — tout comparé le poulet revient moins cher que le porc
2) ( unit of currency) livre f3) ( compound) (for dogs, cars) fourrière f2.transitive verbto pound something to — réduire quelque chose en [powder, paste, pieces]
2) ( beat) [waves] battre [shore]3) ( bombard) [artillery] pilonner [city]4) ( tread heavily)3.1) ( knock loudly)to pound on — marteler [door, wall]
2) ( beat) [heart] battreto pound on — [waves] battre contre [beach, rocks]
3) ( run noisily)to pound up/down the stairs — monter/descendre l'escalier d'un pas lourd
4) ( throb)•Phrasal Verbs:
См. также в других словарях:
pounding — noun 1. repeated heavy blows (Freq. 1) • Syn: ↑buffeting • Hypernyms: ↑blow, ↑bump 2. an instance of rapid strong pulsation (of the heart) (Freq. 1) he felt a throbbing in his head … Useful english dictionary
Stamp head — Stamp Stamp, n. 1. The act of stamping, as with the foot. [1913 Webster] 2. The which stamps; any instrument for making impressions on other bodies, as a die. [1913 Webster] T is gold so pure It can not bear the stamp without alloy. Dryden. [1913 … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
pound — pound1 W2S1 [paund] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(weight)¦ 2¦(money)¦ 3¦(for dogs and cats)¦ 4¦(for cars)¦ 5 get/take/demand etc your pound of flesh 6¦(telephone)¦ ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Sense: 1 2, 5 6; Origin: Old English pund, from Latin pondo] [ … Dictionary of contemporary English
Natural Born Killers — Not to be confused with Natural Born Killaz. Natural Born Killers Theatrical release poster Directed by Oliver Stone … Wikipedia
Gay Liberation — is the name used to describe the radical lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender movement of the late 1960s and early to mid 1970s in North America, Western Europe, and Australia and New Zealand. The phrase is somewhat synonymous with the… … Wikipedia
headache — head|ache [ˈhedeık] n 1.) a pain in your head ▪ I had a really bad headache , and couldn t go to work. a splitting/pounding headache (=a very bad headache) 2.) informal a problem that is annoying or difficult to deal with >headachy adj ▪ a… … Dictionary of contemporary English
List of Chinese inventions — A bronze Chinese crossbow mechanism with a buttplate (the wooden components have … Wikipedia
Trip hammer — A trip hammer (alt. helve hammer) is a massive powered hammer, usually raised by a cam and then released to fall under the force of gravity. Historically, trip hammers were often powered by a water wheel, known to be used in China as long ago as… … Wikipedia
Disasters — ▪ 2009 Introduction Aviation January 23, Poland. A Spanish built CASA transport plane carrying members of the Polish air force home from a conference on flight safety in Warsaw crashes near the town of Miroslawiec; all 20 aboard are killed … Universalium
Megas (character) — Megas is the main giant robot in the Cartoon Network animated television series Megas XLR . The name Megas stands for Mechanized Earth Guard Attack System.OriginIn the future, a war is taking place between humans and an alien race called the… … Wikipedia
Water wheel — This article is about the machine for converting energy of flowing or falling water. For paddle wheels used to propel watercraft, see paddle wheel ship. For wheels used solely to lift water, see Noria. For factories or industries driven by water… … Wikipedia