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1 trot
A n1 ( of horse) trot m ; at a ou the trot au trot ; to break into a trot [animal] se mettre au trot, prendre le trot ; [person] se mettre à trotter or à trottiner ; her children followed at a trot ses enfants trottinaient derrière elle ; to have a trot round the shops ○ courir les magasins ○ ;2 ○ ( run of luck) to have ou be on a good/bad trot être dans une bonne/mauvaise période ;1 [horse, animal, rider] trotter ; to trot away/past partir/passer au trot ;2 [person] (run, move briskly) courir, trotter ○ ; [child, woman in heels] trottiner ; to trot down the road/along/away descendre la rue/passer/partir en trottinant ; trot next door and borrow some tea! ○ cours vite emprunter du thé chez la voisine!to be on the trot ○ être toujours en train de courir ; to keep sb on the trot ○ ne pas laisser de répit à qn ; on the trot ○ ( one after the other) coup sur coup ; ( continuously) d'affilée.■ trot out ○:▶ trot out [sth] débiter [excuse, explanation, argument]. -
2 trot
trot [trɒt]1. noun( = pace) trot m► trot away, trot off intransitive verb[+ excuses, reasons] débiter* * *[trɒt] 1.noun trot m2.to break into a trot — [animal] se mettre au trot; [person] se mettre à trotter
intransitive verb (p prés etc - tt-) [animal, rider] trotter; [person] courir, trotter (colloq); [child] trottinerPhrasal Verbs:- trot out••on the trot — (colloq) ( one after the other) coup sur coup; ( continuously) d'affilée
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3 jog
1 noun∎ at a jog (trot) au petit trot;∎ to break into a jog (person, horse) se mettre à trotter;∎ to go for a jog aller faire un jogging∎ she jogs to work every morning tous les matins, elle va travailler en joggant∎ his rifle jogged against his back son fusil se balançait dans son dos(nudge) donner un léger coup à;∎ she jogged my elbow elle m'a poussé le coude;∎ figurative to jog sb's memory rafraîchir la mémoire de ou à qn;∎ figurative to jog sb into action inciter qn à l'action;∎ to jog sb out of it secouer qn;∎ to jog sb out of their complacency tirer qn de sa complaisance►► jog pants pantalon m de jogging;jog top (sweatshirt) sweat m;jog trot petit trot m(a) Horseriding trottiner, aller au petit trot∎ figurative I'm jogging along quite happily je vais mon petit bonhomme de chemin;∎ my work is jogging along pretty steadily mon travail avance assez bien
См. также в других словарях:
break into — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms break into : present tense I/you/we/they break into he/she/it breaks into present participle breaking into past tense broke into past participle broken into 1) break into something to enter a building by force … English dictionary
break into sth phrasal — verb (T) 1 STEAL to enter a building by using force, in order to steal something: Thieves broke into the bank vault by digging a tunnel. 2 break into a run/gallop/trot etc to suddenly start running etc: Suzie heard footsteps behind her and broke… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
break into — phr verb Break into is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑face, ↑intruder, ↑thief, ↑vandal Break into is used with these nouns as the object: ↑applause, ↑car, ↑conversation, ↑flat, ↑gallop, ↑grin, ↑ … Collocations dictionary
trot — I UK [trɒt] / US [trɑt] verb Word forms trot : present tense I/you/we/they trot he/she/it trots present participle trotting past tense trotted past participle trotted * 1) a) [intransitive] if a horse or other animal trots, it moves more quickly… … English dictionary
trot — trot1 [ trat ] verb * 1. ) intransitive if a horse or other animal trots, it moves more quickly than when walking but does not run: The gray horse came trotting gracefully across the field. a ) intransitive or transitive to ride on a horse that… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
trot — 1 verb trotted, trotting 1 (I) if a horse trots, it moves fairly quickly with each front leg moving at the same time as the opposite back leg 2 (intransitive always + adv/prep) 3 a) to run fairly slowly, taking short steps: William trotted along… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
break — [brāk] vt. broke, broken, breaking [ME breken < OE brecan < IE base * bhreg > BREACH, BREECH, Ger brechen, L frangere] 1. to cause to come apart by force; split or crack sharply into pieces; smash; burst 2. a) … English World dictionary
break — breakable, adj. breakableness, n. breakably, adv. breakless, adj. /brayk/, v., broke or (Archaic) brake; broken or (Archaic) broke; breaking; n. v.t … Universalium
break — break1 W1S1 [breık] v past tense broke [brəuk US brouk] past participle broken [ˈbrəukən US ˈbrou ] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(separate into pieces)¦ 2¦(bones)¦ 3¦(machines)¦ 4¦(rules/laws)¦ 5¦(promise/agreement)¦ 6¦(stop/rest)¦ 7¦(end something)¦ … Dictionary of contemporary English
break — break1 [ breık ] (past tense broke [ brouk ] ; past participle broken [ broukən ] ) verb *** ▸ 1 separate into pieces ▸ 2 fail to obey rules ▸ 3 make a hole/cut ▸ 4 destroy someone s confidence ▸ 5 when people learn news ▸ 6 stop for a short time … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
trot — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun a trot ADJECTIVE ▪ brisk, fast ▪ gentle, slow VERB + A TROT ▪ break into ▪ … Collocations dictionary