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1 sock
sock [sɒk]1 noun∎ familiar it'll knock your socks off! tu vas tomber à la renverse!;∎ familiar to pull one's socks up se secouer (les puces);(c) (of horse) paturon m∎ (wind) sock manche f à air∎ she gave him a sock in the face elle lui a filé une beigne;∎ I got a sock on the jaw j'ai pris une beigne∎ the sock and buskin le socque et la cothurne;∎ literary to put on the sock chausser le brodequin, jouer la comédie2 adverb∎ familiar the blow caught him sock in the face il a pris le coup en pleine poire∎ she socked him in the face elle lui a filé une beigne dans la tronche;∎ they socked me over the head with a cosh ils m'ont flanqué un coup de matraque sur la tête;∎ sock it to him!, sock him one! fous-lui une beigne!, cogne-le!;∎ figurative to sock it to sb montrer à qn ce que l'on sait faire;∎ sock it to them! vas-y, montre-leur ce que tu sais faire!, vas-y, donne le maximum!;∎ sock it to me then! allez, accouche!∎ to sock it away remplir son bas de laine -
2 sock
sock [sɒk]1. noun• put a sock in it! (inf!) la ferme ! (inf !)• this will knock your socks off! (inf) ça va t'épater !• sock it to me! vas-y envoie ! (inf)• sock it to them! montre-leur un peu !* * *[sɒk] 1.1) ( footwear) chaussette f3) (colloq) ( punch) beigne (colloq) f2.(colloq) transitive verb flanquer une beigne (colloq) à••to put a sock in it — (colloq) la boucler (colloq)
to sock it to them — (colloq) donner le maximum
to pull one's socks up — (colloq) se remuer
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3 sock
1 ( footwear) chaussette f ;3 ○ ( punch) beigne ○ f.to put a sock in it ○ la boucler ○ ; I wish he'd put a sock in it ○ si seulement il la bouclait ○ ; to sock it to them ○ donner le maximum ; to pull one's socks up ○ se remuer. -
4 sock
[sok] I noun(a (usually wool, cotton or nylon) covering for the foot and ankle, sometimes reaching to the knee, worn inside a shoe, boot etc: I need a new pair of socks.)II 1. verb(slang) to strike someone hard with the fist: He socked the burglar (on the jaw).2. noun((slang) a strong blow with the fist: He gave me a sock on the jaw.) -
5 air sock
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6 ankle sock
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7 pop sock
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8 air sock
noun manche f à air -
9 ankle sock
noun socquette f -
10 pop sock
noun mi-bas m -
11 sole
sole [səʊl]1. nouna. ( = fish) sole f3. adjectivea. ( = single) seul• for the sole purpose of... dans le seul but de...b. ( = exclusive) [right, possession, supplier] exclusif ; [responsibility] entier ; [heir] universel ; [owner] unique• for the sole use of... à l'usage exclusif de...* * *[səʊl] 1.1) ( fish) sole f2) (of shoe, sock, iron) semelle f; ( of foot) plante f2.1) ( single) seul, unique2) ( exclusive) gen exclusif/-ive; [trader] indépendant3.transitive verb ressemeler [shoe]4.- soled combining formrubber/leather-soled shoes — chaussures à semelle de caoutchouc/cuir
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12 toe
toe [təʊ]1. noun• big/little toe gros/petit orteil m• that will keep you on your toes! ça t'empêchera de t'endormir !* * *[təʊ]1) Anatomy orteil mbig/little toe — gros/petit orteil
to tread ou step on somebody's toes — lit, fig marcher sur les pieds de quelqu'un
2) (of sock, shoe) bout m•• -
13 heel
[hi:l] 1. noun1) (the back part of the foot: I have a blister on my heel.) talon2) (the part of a sock etc that covers this part of the foot: I have a hole in the heel of my sock.) talon3) (the part of a shoe, boot etc under or round the heel of the foot: The heel has come off this shoe.) talon2. verb1) (to put a heel on (a shoe etc).) remettre un talon (à)2) ((usually with over) (of ships) to lean to one side: The boat heeled over in the strong wind.) gîter•- - heeled- at/on one's heels - kick one's heels - take to one's heels - to heel - turn on one's heel -
14 toe
[təu]1) (one of the five finger-like end parts of the foot: These tight shoes hurt my toes.) orteil2) (the front part of a shoe, sock etc: There's a hole in the toe of my sock.) bout•- toenail- toe the line -
15 hole
hole [həʊl]1 noun∎ to dig a hole creuser un trou;∎ his socks were full of or in holes ses chaussettes étaient pleines de trous;∎ his sock's got a hole in it il a un trou à sa chaussette;∎ to wear a hole in sth faire un trou à qch;∎ figurative to make a hole in one's savings/a bottle of whisky bien entamer ses économies/une bouteille de whisky;∎ figurative money burns a hole in my pocket l'argent me file entre les doigts;∎ to pick holes in an argument trouver des failles à une argumentation;∎ to try to pick holes in an argument chercher des failles à une argumentation;∎ his argument's full of holes son argumentation est pleine de défauts ou failles;∎ familiar a hole in the wall (restaurant) un restaurant minuscule□ ; (cash dispenser) un distributeur (de billets)□ ;∎ familiar I need that like a hole in the head c'est vraiment la dernière chose dont j'aie besoin□ ;∎ familiar you're talking through a hole in your head tu racontes n'importe quoi□ ;∎ familiar that's filled a hole! ça m'a bien calé!;∎ Medicine hole in the heart malformation f du cœur;∎ to have a hole in the heart avoir une malformation du cœur, avoir la maladie bleue;∎ a baby born with a hole in the heart un enfant bleu∎ what a hole! (town) quel trou!;∎ this is an awful hole! (house, pub, disco) c'est mortel ici!∎ to be in a hole être dans le pétrin;∎ to get sb out of a hole sortir qn du pétrin∎ to get a hole in one faire un trou en un;∎ an eighteen-hole (golf) course un parcours de dix-huit trous;∎ we played a few holes of golf together nous avons fait quelques trous ensemble au golf∎ British to get one's hole baiser(a) (make hole in) trouer∎ to hole a putt faire le trou(a) (sock, stocking) se trouer∎ to hole in four faire le trou en quatre (coups)►► hole punch perforatrice fGolf finir le trou➲ hole up(usu passive) they're holed up in a hotel ils se planquent ou ils sont planqués dans un hôtel -
16 ankle
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17 foot
foot [fʊt]1. noun(plural feet)• the children have been under my feet the whole day les enfants ont été dans mes jambes toute la journée• you've got to put your foot down ( = be firm) il faut réagir• to get off on the right/wrong foot [people, relationship] être bien/mal parti3. compounds* * *[fʊt] 1.1) gen, Anatomy (of person, horse) pied m; (of rabbit, cat, dog, cow) patte f; (of sock, chair) pied msoft under foot — doux/douce sous le pied
her speech brought the audience to its feet — toute l'audience s'est levée pour applaudir son discours
to get somebody/something back on their/its feet — ( after setback) remettre quelqu'un/quelque chose sur pied
to put one's foot down — ( accelerate) appuyer sur l'accélérateur; ( act firmly) mettre le holà
2) ( measurement) pied m (anglais) (= 0,3048 m)3) ( bottom) ( of mountain) pied m (of de)at the foot of — au pied de [bed]; à la fin de [list, letter]; en bas de [page, stairs]; en bout de [table]
4) ( in sewing) pied m2.transitive verbto foot the bill — payer la facture ( for pour)
••under somebody's feet — fig dans les jambes de quelqu'un
to fall on one's feet — fig retomber sur ses pieds
to put one's best foot forward — ( do one's best) faire de son mieux; ( hurry) se dépêcher
to put one's foot in it — (colloq) faire une gaffe
to put one's feet up — se reposer, décompresser (colloq)
to get off on the wrong/right foot — mal/bien commencer
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18 garter
garter [ˈgα:tər]* * *['gɑːtə(r)]1) ( for stocking) jarretière f; ( for sock) fixe-chaussette m2) US ( suspender) jarretelle f••I'll have your guts for garters! — (colloq) j'aurai ta peau! (colloq)
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19 heel
heel [hi:l]1. nountalon m• this meeting follows hot on the heels of last month's talks cette réunion arrive juste après les négociations du mois dernier[+ shoes] refaire un talon à3. compounds* * *[hiːl] 1.noun (of foot, shoe, sock) talon mto bring [somebody] to heel — fig mettre [quelqu'un] au pas
2.to come to heel — [dog] venir au pied; [person] fig se soumettre
heels plural noun (also high heels) chaussures fpl à (hauts) talons••to cool ou kick one's heels — attendre, faire le pied de grue (colloq)
to dig one's heel in — se braquer (colloq)
to fall/be head over heels in love with somebody — tomber/être éperdument amoureux/-euse de quelqu'un
hard ou close on somebody's heels — sur les talons de quelqu'un
to take to one's heels — hum prendre ses jambes à son cou, s'enfuir
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20 odd
odd [ɒd]1. adjectivea. ( = strange) bizarre• the odd thing about it is... ce qui est bizarre c'est...b. [number] impairc. [shoe, sock] dépareillé• £5 and some odd pennies 5 livres et quelques penniese. ( = occasional) he has written the odd article il a écrit un ou deux articles• in odd moments he... à ses moments perdus, il...• to do odd jobs about the house ( = housework) faire un peu de ménage ; ( = do-it-yourself) bricoler dans la maison2. compounds* * *[ɒd] 1.1) (strange, unusual) [person, object, occurrence] bizarrethere is something odd about — il y a quelque chose de bizarre dans [appearance, statement]
it is odd how... — c'est bizarre de voir comme...
he's a bit odd — il est un peu loufoque (colloq)
2) ( occasional)3) [socks, gloves] dépareillés4) ( miscellaneous)5) Mathematics [number] impair6) ( different)2.spot the odd man ou one out — trouvez l'intrus
- odd combining form ( approximately)
См. также в других словарях:
sock — ► NOUN 1) a knitted garment for the foot and lower part of the leg. 2) an insole. 3) informal a hard blow. ► VERB informal ▪ hit forcefully. ● knock (or blow) someone s socks off Cf. ↑knock … English terms dictionary
Sock — es una expresión que, literalmente, significa acción rápida o violenta, y que se aplicó, especialmente en la época del jazz tradicional y el Swing a una determinada forma de ejecutar los temas, potente y arrolladora (Sock Style). En este mismo… … Wikipedia Español
sock — sock1 [säk] n. [ME socke < OE socc < L soccus, type of light, low heeled shoe < Gr sukchis, prob. of Phrygian orig.; akin to Avestan haxa , sole of the foot] 1. a light shoe worn by comic characters in ancient Greek and Roman drama 2.… … English World dictionary
Sock — Sock, n. [OE. sock, AS. socc, fr. L. soccus a kind of low heeled, light shoe. Cf. {Sucket}.] 1. The shoe worn by actors of comedy in ancient Greece and Rome, used as a symbol of comedy, or of the comic drama, as distinguished from tragedy, which… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Sock — (s[o^]k), v. t. [Perh. shortened fr. sockdolager.] To hurl, drive, or strike violently; often with it as an object. [Prov. or Vulgar] Kipling. [Webster 1913 Suppl.] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Sock — Sock, n. [F. soc, LL. soccus, perhaps of Celtic origin.] A plowshare. Edin. Encyc. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Sock in — Sock in, v. t. to cause (an airport) to cease functioning, by severe weather conditions, such as fog or a snowstorm. Used often in the passive; the airport was socked in for two days by a blizzard. [PJC] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
sock it to — ► sock it to informal make a forceful impression on. Main Entry: ↑sock … English terms dictionary
sock — [n/v] hit hard beat, belt, bop, buffet, chop, clout, cuff, ding, nail, paste, punch, slap, smack, smash, soak, whack; concept 189 Ant. tap … New thesaurus
sock|er|oo — «SOK uh ROO», noun. U.S. Slang. a smash hit; smasheroo; socko … Useful english dictionary
sock|et — «SOK iht», noun, verb. –n. 1. a hollow part or piece for receiving and holding something. A candlestick has a socket in which to set a candle. A light bulb is screwed into a socket. 2. a connecting place for electric wires and plugs: »Please plug … Useful english dictionary