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1 steeply
steeply [ˈsti:plɪ]a. ( = precipitously) [rise, climb, fall, drop] en pente raideb. ( = greatly) to rise/fall steeply [prices, costs, profits] monter en flèche/baisser fortement* * *['stiːplɪ]1) [rise, drop] à pic2) Finance [rise] en flèche -
2 steeply
1 [rise, climb, descend] à pic, abruptement ; [drop, slope] abruptement ; -
3 zoom
zoom [zu:m]∎ the car zoomed up/down the hill la voiture a monté/descendu la côte à toute allure ou en trombe;∎ the rocket zoomed up into the clouds la fusée est montée en chandelle dans les nuages;∎ I'm just going to zoom into town to get some food je vais faire un saut en ville pour acheter de quoi manger(b) (prices, costs, sales) monter en flèche;∎ inflation zoomed up or upwards l'inflation est montée en flèche(a) (fool, deceive) se foutre de(b) (flirt with) faire du rentre-dedans à3 noun(a) (of engine) vrombissement mvroum!►► Computing zoom box case f zoom;zoom lens zoom mPhotography faire un zoom;∎ the camera zoomed in on the laughing children la caméra a fait un zoom sur les enfants en train de rirefiler;∎ they're zooming off on holiday tomorrow ils filent en vacances demainPhotography faire un zoom arrière -
4 fall
fall [fɔ:l]1. noun2. plural noun• the ground fell steeply to the valley floor le terrain descendait en pente raide vers le fond de la valléeb. ► to fall + adjective4. compounds( = retreat) reculer• some money to fall back on un peu d'argent en réserve► fall behind intransitive verb rester en arrière ; [runner] se laisser distancera. tomberb. ( = fail) [person] échouera. she leaned over the pool and fell in elle s'est penchée au-dessus de la piscine et elle est tombée dedansb. [troops] former les rangs[+ trap] tomber dans ; [+ disfavour, disuse] tomber en• the city fell into decline at the end of the 16th century le déclin de la ville remonte à la fin du 16e siècle• the students fall into three categories les étudiants se divisent en trois catégories► fall in with inseparable transitive verb• he fell in with a bad crowd il s'est mis à avoir de mauvaises fréquentations► fall off intransitive verba. tomberb. [sales, numbers, attendances] décliner( = quarrel) se brouiller* * *[fɔːl] 1.1) lit gen chute f ( from de); (of snow, hail) chutes fpl; (of earth, soot) éboulement m; (of axe, hammer, dice) coup mto have a fall — faire une chute, tomber
2) (in temperature, shares, production, demand, quality, popularity) baisse f (in de); ( more drastic) chute f (in de)3) (of leader, regime, town) chute f; ( of monarchy) renversement m; ( of seat) perte f4)fall from grace ou favour — disgrâce f
5) US ( autumn) automne m6) (in pitch, intonation) descente f7) ( in wrestling) tombé m; ( in judo) chute f2.falls plural noun chutes fpl3.1) ( come down) tomberto fall from ou out of — tomber de [boat, nest, bag, hands]
to fall off ou from — tomber de [chair, table, roof, bike, wall]
to fall on — tomber sur [person, town]
to fall in ou into — tomber dans [bath, river]
to fall down — tomber dans [hole, stairs]
to fall under — tomber sous [table]; passer sous [bus, train]
to fall through — passer à travers [ceiling, hole]
to fall to the floor ou to the ground — tomber par terre
2) ( drop) [quality, standard, level] diminuer; [temperature, price, production, number, attendance, morale] baisserto fall below zero/5% — descendre au-dessous de zéro/5%
3) ( yield position) tomberto fall to — tomber aux mains de [enemy, allies]
5) fig ( descend) [night, silence, gaze] tomber (on sur); [blame] retomber (on sur); [shadow] se projeter ( over sur)6) ( occur) [stress] tomber (on sur)to fall into/outside a category — rentrer/ne pas rentrer dans une catégorie
7) ( be incumbent on)8) ( throw oneself)to fall to ou on one's knees — tomber à genoux
to fall at somebody's feet/on somebody's neck — se jeter aux pieds/au cou de quelqu'un
•Phrasal Verbs:- fall for- fall in- fall off- fall on- fall out- fall to••did he fall or was he pushed? — hum est-ce qu'il est parti de lui-même ou est-ce qu'on l'a forcé?
the bigger you are ou the higher you climb, the harder you fall — plus dure sera la chute
to stand or fall on something — reposer sur quelque chose, dépendre de quelque chose
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5 mount
1. verb1) (to get or climb up (on or on to): He mounted the platform; She mounted (the horse) and rode off.) monter2) (to rise in level: Prices are mounting steeply.) monter3) (to put (a picture etc) into a frame, or stick it on to card etc.) monter, coller sur carton4) (to hang or put up on a stand, support etc: He mounted the tiger's head on the wall.) fixer (sur un support)5) (to organize: The army mounted an attack; to mount an exhibition.) monter2. noun1) (a thing or animal that one rides, especially a horse.) monture2) (a support or backing on which anything is placed for display: Would this picture look better on a red mount or a black one?) support•- mounted- Mountie -
6 steep
I [sti:p] adjective1) ((of eg a hill, stairs etc) rising with a sudden rather than a gradual slope: The hill was too steep for me to cycle up; a steep path; a steep climb.) escarpé2) ((of a price asked or demand made) unreasonable or too great: He wants rather a steep price for his house, doesn't he?; That's a bit steep!) excessif•- steeply II [sti:p](to soak thoroughly.) tremper (dans)
См. также в других словарях:
climb — Ⅰ. climb UK US /klaɪm/ verb ► [I] if a price, number, or amount climbs, it increases: costs/prices/rates climb »Our costs have climbed rapidly in the last few years. »climb steadily/steeply/slowly ► [I or T] to improve your position at work or in … Financial and business terms
climb — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 act of climbing ADJECTIVE ▪ long, slow ▪ short ▪ arduous, difficult, hard, steep, tough … Collocations dictionary
steeply — steep steep [stiːp] adjective 1. steep prices, charges etc are unusually expensive: • Consumers are paying relatively steep prices for dairy products. • Anyone caught fiddling their expenses will face steep fines. 2. a steep increase or rise in… … Financial and business terms
climb — I UK [klaɪm] / US verb Word forms climb : present tense I/you/we/they climb he/she/it climbs present participle climbing past tense climbed past participle climbed *** 1) a) [intransitive/transitive] to use your hands and feet to move up, over,… … English dictionary
climb — climbable, adj. /kluym/, v.i. 1. to go up or ascend, esp. by using the hands and feet or feet only: to climb up a ladder. 2. to rise slowly by or as if by continued effort: The car laboriously climbed to the top of the mountain. 3. to ascend or… … Universalium
climb — [[t]klaɪm[/t]] v. i. 1) to go up or ascend; move upward or toward the top of something: The sun climbed over the hill[/ex] 2) to slope upward: The road climbs steeply[/ex] 3) to ascend by twining or by means of tendrils, adhesive tissues, etc.,… … From formal English to slang
climb — 1. verb /klaɪm/ a) To ascend; rise; to go up. Prices climbed steeply. b) To mount; to move upwards on … Wiktionary
climb — 1. verb 1) we climbed the hill Syn: ascend, mount, scale, scramble up, clamber up, shinny up; go up, walk up; conquer, gain Ant: descend 2) the plane climbed … Thesaurus of popular words
steeply — adv. Steeply is used with these verbs: ↑ascend, ↑climb, ↑decline, ↑descend, ↑dip, ↑drop, ↑fall, ↑incline, ↑increase, ↑rise, ↑slope … Collocations dictionary
climb — verb 1) we climbed the hill Syn: ascend, mount, scale, scramble up, clamber up, shin up, conquer 2) the plane climbed Syn: rise, ascend, go up, gain height … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary
zoom ceiling — The maximum altitude achieved by a high performance aircraft after a zoom maneuver at high altitude. The aircraft accelerates to its near maximum Mach number at an intermediate altitude and then pulls up the nose to climb steeply at an optimized… … Aviation dictionary