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1 concession
1 ( compromise) concession f (on sur) ; as a concession à titre de concession ; to make concessions faire des concessions (to à) ; her sole concession to fashion sa seule concession à la mode ; to make no concessions to ne pas céder aux exigeances de [tourism, comfort] ;2 ¢ ( yielding) concession f ;3 ( discount) réduction f ; ‘concessions’ ‘tarif réduit’ ; tax concession dégrèvement m ; travel concessions participation f aux frais de transport ; -
2 Navigo
Carte Navigo - The electronic smart-card system used for travel concessions on the public transport systems of the Ile de France (Paris) region. Navigo cards can be applied for free online. Alternatively, "Navigo découverte" (Navigo discovery) cards can be purchased for 5 € at metro stations and other approved points of sale. A passport-style photo is required. Anyone can apply for a card, there are no local residence requirements. The card can then be credited for weekly, monthly or annual use, providing ticketless transport on all or parts of the Ile de France public transport network (buses, metro, RER, suburban trains). In September 2009, a week's pass for travel in zones 1 and 2 cost 17.20 Euros, a month's pass covering zones 1-4 cost 91.70 €. Navigo will have fully replaced the ParisCarte Orange travel cards by 2010. The system is similar to London's Oyster card system, though cheaper.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Navigo
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3 Reisegeschwindigkeit
Reisegeschwindigkeit f GEN, LOGIS cruising speed* * *Reisegeschwindigkeit
(Flugzeug, Kraftwagen) cruising speed;
• Reisegesellschaft touring company (party), coach party, excursion, itinera[n]cy, outfit (US), (betreute) conducted tour, guided package tour (US);
• Reisegesellschaftstarif (Flugzeug) group charter rate;
• Reisegewerbe itinerant trading;
• Reisegewerbekarte hawker's licence;
• Reisegewerbetreibender itinerant dealer (trader, merchant);
• Reiseinspektor travelling (walking) inspector;
• Reisejournalist travel editor;
• Reiseklausel voyage clause;
• Reisekomfort travelling conveniences;
• Reisekonjunktur tourist boom;
• Reisekonzessionen travel concessions;
• Reisekorb hamper. -
4 Carte Orange
a card entitling residents in the greater Paris area to buy an unlimited travel pass for use on the region's public transport network. For this and other purposes, the greater Paris area is divided into six concentric zones, and cards cover one or more zones, working out from the centre to the outer zone. The system is currently being phased out, since different Paris travel concessions are being centralised within a new smart card system known as Navigo.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Carte Orange
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5 Reisekonzessionen
Reisekonzessionen
travel concessions -
6 World War II
(1939-1945)In the European phase of the war, neutral Portugal contributed more to the Allied victory than historians have acknowledged. Portugal experienced severe pressures to compromise her neutrality from both the Axis and Allied powers and, on several occasions, there were efforts to force Portugal to enter the war as a belligerent. Several factors lent Portugal importance as a neutral. This was especially the case during the period from the fall of France in June 1940 to the Allied invasion and reconquest of France from June to August 1944.In four respects, Portugal became briefly a modest strategic asset for the Allies and a war materiel supplier for both sides: the country's location in the southwesternmost corner of the largely German-occupied European continent; being a transport and communication terminus, observation post for spies, and crossroads between Europe, the Atlantic, the Americas, and Africa; Portugal's strategically located Atlantic islands, the Azores, Madeira, and Cape Verde archipelagos; and having important mines of wolfram or tungsten ore, crucial for the war industry for hardening steel.To maintain strict neutrality, the Estado Novo regime dominated by Antônio de Oliveira Salazar performed a delicate balancing act. Lisbon attempted to please and cater to the interests of both sets of belligerents, but only to the extent that the concessions granted would not threaten Portugal's security or its status as a neutral. On at least two occasions, Portugal's neutrality status was threatened. First, Germany briefly considered invading Portugal and Spain during 1940-41. A second occasion came in 1943 and 1944 as Great Britain, backed by the United States, pressured Portugal to grant war-related concessions that threatened Portugal's status of strict neutrality and would possibly bring Portugal into the war on the Allied side. Nazi Germany's plan ("Operation Felix") to invade the Iberian Peninsula from late 1940 into 1941 was never executed, but the Allies occupied and used several air and naval bases in Portugal's Azores Islands.The second major crisis for Portugal's neutrality came with increasing Allied pressures for concessions from the summer of 1943 to the summer of 1944. Led by Britain, Portugal's oldest ally, Portugal was pressured to grant access to air and naval bases in the Azores Islands. Such bases were necessary to assist the Allies in winning the Battle of the Atlantic, the naval war in which German U-boats continued to destroy Allied shipping. In October 1943, following tedious negotiations, British forces began to operate such bases and, in November 1944, American forces were allowed to enter the islands. Germany protested and made threats, but there was no German attack.Tensions rose again in the spring of 1944, when the Allies demanded that Lisbon cease exporting wolfram to Germany. Salazar grew agitated, considered resigning, and argued that Portugal had made a solemn promise to Germany that wolfram exports would be continued and that Portugal could not break its pledge. The Portuguese ambassador in London concluded that the shipping of wolfram to Germany was "the price of neutrality." Fearing that a still-dangerous Germany could still attack Portugal, Salazar ordered the banning of the mining, sale, and exports of wolfram not only to Germany but to the Allies as of 6 June 1944.Portugal did not enter the war as a belligerent, and its forces did not engage in combat, but some Portuguese experienced directly or indirectly the impact of fighting. Off Portugal or near her Atlantic islands, Portuguese naval personnel or commercial fishermen rescued at sea hundreds of victims of U-boat sinkings of Allied shipping in the Atlantic. German U-boats sank four or five Portuguese merchant vessels as well and, in 1944, a U-boat stopped, boarded, searched, and forced the evacuation of a Portuguese ocean liner, the Serpa Pinto, in mid-Atlantic. Filled with refugees, the liner was not sunk but several passengers lost their lives and the U-boat kidnapped two of the ship's passengers, Portuguese Americans of military age, and interned them in a prison camp. As for involvement in a theater of war, hundreds of inhabitants were killed and wounded in remote East Timor, a Portuguese colony near Indonesia, which was invaded, annexed, and ruled by Japanese forces between February 1942 and August 1945. In other incidents, scores of Allied military planes, out of fuel or damaged in air combat, crashed or were forced to land in neutral Portugal. Air personnel who did not survive such crashes were buried in Portuguese cemeteries or in the English Cemetery, Lisbon.Portugal's peripheral involvement in largely nonbelligerent aspects of the war accelerated social, economic, and political change in Portugal's urban society. It strengthened political opposition to the dictatorship among intellectual and working classes, and it obliged the regime to bolster political repression. The general economic and financial status of Portugal, too, underwent improvements since creditor Britain, in order to purchase wolfram, foods, and other materials needed during the war, became indebted to Portugal. When Britain repaid this debt after the war, Portugal was able to restore and expand its merchant fleet. Unlike most of Europe, ravaged by the worst war in human history, Portugal did not suffer heavy losses of human life, infrastructure, and property. Unlike even her neighbor Spain, badly shaken by its terrible Civil War (1936-39), Portugal's immediate postwar condition was more favorable, especially in urban areas, although deep-seated poverty remained.Portugal experienced other effects, especially during 1939-42, as there was an influx of about a million war refugees, an infestation of foreign spies and other secret agents from 60 secret intelligence services, and the residence of scores of international journalists who came to report the war from Lisbon. There was also the growth of war-related mining (especially wolfram and tin). Portugal's media eagerly reported the war and, by and large, despite government censorship, the Portuguese print media favored the Allied cause. Portugal's standard of living underwent some improvement, although price increases were unpopular.The silent invasion of several thousand foreign spies, in addition to the hiring of many Portuguese as informants and spies, had fascinating outcomes. "Spyland" Portugal, especially when Portugal was a key point for communicating with occupied Europe (1940-44), witnessed some unusual events, and spying for foreigners at least briefly became a national industry. Until mid-1944, when Allied forces invaded France, Portugal was the only secure entry point from across the Atlantic to Europe or to the British Isles, as well as the escape hatch for refugees, spies, defectors, and others fleeing occupied Europe or Vichy-controlled Morocco, Tunisia, and Algeria. Through Portugal by car, ship, train, or scheduled civil airliner one could travel to and from Spain or to Britain, or one could leave through Portugal, the westernmost continental country of Europe, to seek refuge across the Atlantic in the Americas.The wartime Portuguese scene was a colorful melange of illegal activities, including espionage, the black market, war propaganda, gambling, speculation, currency counterfeiting, diamond and wolfram smuggling, prostitution, and the drug and arms trade, and they were conducted by an unusual cast of characters. These included refugees, some of whom were spies, smugglers, diplomats, and business people, many from foreign countries seeking things they could find only in Portugal: information, affordable food, shelter, and security. German agents who contacted Allied sailors in the port of Lisbon sought to corrupt and neutralize these men and, if possible, recruit them as spies, and British intelligence countered this effort. Britain's MI-6 established a new kind of "safe house" to protect such Allied crews from German espionage and venereal disease infection, an approved and controlled house of prostitution in Lisbon's bairro alto district.Foreign observers and writers were impressed with the exotic, spy-ridden scene in Lisbon, as well as in Estoril on the Sun Coast (Costa do Sol), west of Lisbon harbor. What they observed appeared in noted autobiographical works and novels, some written during and some after the war. Among notable writers and journalists who visited or resided in wartime Portugal were Hungarian writer and former communist Arthur Koestler, on the run from the Nazi's Gestapo; American radio broadcaster-journalist Eric Sevareid; novelist and Hollywood script-writer Frederick Prokosch; American diplomat George Kennan; Rumanian cultural attache and later scholar of mythology Mircea Eliade; and British naval intelligence officer and novelist-to-be Ian Fleming. Other notable visiting British intelligence officers included novelist Graham Greene; secret Soviet agent in MI-6 and future defector to the Soviet Union Harold "Kim" Philby; and writer Malcolm Muggeridge. French letters were represented by French writer and airman, Antoine Saint-Exupery and French playwright, Jean Giroudoux. Finally, Aquilino Ribeiro, one of Portugal's premier contemporary novelists, wrote about wartime Portugal, including one sensational novel, Volframio, which portrayed the profound impact of the exploitation of the mineral wolfram on Portugal's poor, still backward society.In Estoril, Portugal, the idea for the world's most celebrated fictitious spy, James Bond, was probably first conceived by Ian Fleming. Fleming visited Portugal several times after 1939 on Naval Intelligence missions, and later he dreamed up the James Bond character and stories. Background for the early novels in the James Bond series was based in part on people and places Fleming observed in Portugal. A key location in Fleming's first James Bond novel, Casino Royale (1953) is the gambling Casino of Estoril. In addition, one aspect of the main plot, the notion that a spy could invent "secret" intelligence for personal profit, was observed as well by the British novelist and former MI-6 officer, while engaged in operations in wartime Portugal. Greene later used this information in his 1958 spy novel, Our Man in Havana, as he observed enemy agents who fabricated "secrets" for money.Thus, Portugal's World War II experiences introduced the country and her people to a host of new peoples, ideas, products, and influences that altered attitudes and quickened the pace of change in this quiet, largely tradition-bound, isolated country. The 1943-45 connections established during the Allied use of air and naval bases in Portugal's Azores Islands were a prelude to Portugal's postwar membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). -
7 tarif
tarif [taʀif]1. masculine nouna. ( = tableau) price list• quels sont vos tarifs ? how much do you charge?• envoyer une lettre au tarif économique ≈ to send a letter second class• deux mois de prison, c'est le tarif ! (inf) two months' prison is what you get!2. compounds• « tarifs réduits pour étudiants » "special prices for students"* * *taʀifnom masculin1) ( prix) gén rate; ( de transport) fare; ( de consultation) feepayer plein tarif — gén to pay full price; (en train, avion, bus) to pay full fare
tarif normal/économique — Postes ≈ first-class/second-class rate
tarif de nuit — Télécommunications night-time rate
tu connais le tarif (colloq), c'est deux jours de renvoi — fig you know the penalty - two days' suspension
2) ( document) price list* * *taʀif nm1)tarif réduit (billet) — concessionary, reduced-fare
un billet de train tarif réduit — a concessionary train ticket, a reduced-fare train ticket
à tarif réduit (communication, appel) — off-peak
tarif de groupe; Est-ce que vous faites un tarif de groupe? — Is there a reduction for groups?
2) (= liste) price list, tariff Grande-Bretagne3) (= barème) rate, rates pl tariff Grande-Bretagne* * *tarif nm1 ( prix) gén rate; ( de transport) fare; ( de consultation) fee; les tarifs de chemin de fer/du métro train/underground GB ou subway US fares; payer plein tarif gén to pay full price; Transp to pay full fare; tarif normal/réduit/spécial Transp normal/reduced/special fare; tarif normal/économique Postes ≈ first-class/second-class rate; tarif de nuit Télécom night-time rate, off-peak rate; le tarif en vigueur the going rate; le tarif horaire de qch the hourly rate for sth; tarif lettres/cartes postales letter/postcard rate; tu connais le tarif, c'est deux jours de renvoi fig you know the penalty-two days' suspension;2 ( document) price list, tariff GB.tarif douanier Comm customs tariff; tarif de l'impôt Fisc taxation schedule; tarif rouge Télécom peak rate; tarif syndical union rate; tarifs postaux postage rates.[tarif] nom masculin1. [liste de prix] price listtarif postal postal ou postage ratesaugmentation du tarif horaire increase in ou of the hourly rate2. [prix pratiqué]quel est votre tarif?, quels sont vos tarif s?a. [femme de ménage, baby-sitter, mécanicien, professeur particulier] how much do you charge?b. [conseiller, avocat] what fee do you charge?, what are your fees?quel est le tarif courant pour une traduction? what's the usual ou going rate for translation?tarif heures creuses/pleines [gaz, électricité] off-peak/full tariff rate‘tarif réduit pour étudiants’ ‘concessions for students’10 jours de prison, c'est le tarif 10 days in the cooler is what it's usually worth ou what you usually get -
8 réduction
réduction [ʀedyksjɔ̃]feminine noun• réduction de salaire/d'impôts wage/tax cut• réduction pour les étudiants/chômeurs concessions for students/the unemployed* * *ʀedyksjɔ̃1) ( remise) discount, reduction; ( consentie à un groupe particulier) concession ( sur on)réduction de 5% — 5% reduction
réduction étudiants — concession GB ou special price for students
2) ( action de diminuer) (de dépenses, coût, subventions, production) cutting, reducing; ( de délais) shortening, reducing; (d'armements, inégalités) reducing3) ( diminution) (de dépenses, coût, d'armements) reduction, cut (de in)4) Art ( reproduction réduite) small replica5) Chimie, Culinaire, Mathématique, Médecine reduction* * *ʀedyksjɔ̃ nf1) (= diminution) reduction2) COMMERCE discount, reduction3)* * *réduction nf1 ( remise) discount, reduction; ( consentie à un groupe particulier) concession (sur on); réduction de 5% 5% reduction; faire une réduction à qn to give sb a discount; je vous fais une réduction de 50 euros/5% I'll give you a 50-euro/5% discount; réduction de fractions au même dénominateur reduction of fractions to a common denominator; réduction étudiants/familles nombreuses concession for students/large families; avoir droit à une réduction to have a concession;2 ( action de diminuer) (de dépenses, coût, subventions, production) cutting, reducing; ( de délais) shortening, reducing; (d'armements, inégalités) reducing; réduction d'impôts cutting taxes; réduction de l'écart entre narrowing the gap between;3 ( diminution) (de dépenses, coût, d'armements) reduction, cut (de in); réduction d'impôts tax cut; réductions d'effectifs staff cuts;4 ( simplification) la réduction d'une théorie à quelques principes de base reducing a theory to a few basic principles;5 Art ( reproduction réduite) small replica;[redyksjɔ̃] nom fémininaccorder ou faire une réduction de 50 euros sur le prix total to give a 50-euro discount on the overall costils nous ont imposé une réduction des dépenses/salaires they've cut our expenditure/wagesils ont promis une réduction des impôts they promised to reduce ou to lower taxes3. [copie plus petite - d'une œuvre] (scale) model7. DROIT————————en réduction locution adjectivale
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