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1 peu disposé à
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2 rebelle
rebelle [ʀəbεl]1. adjectivea. [troupes, soldat] rebel ; [enfant, esprit] rebellious ; [fièvre, maladie] stubborn ; [mèche, cheveux] unrulyb. rebelle à [+ discipline] unamenable to• il est rebelle à la géographie ( = il n'y comprend rien) geography is a closed book to him ; ( = il ne veut pas apprendre) he doesn't want to know about geography2. masculine noun, feminine noun* * *ʀəbɛl
1.
1) Armée, Politique rebel (épith)2) ( refusant l'autorité) rebelliousêtre rebelle à — to be resistant to [compromis]
3) [mèche] stray; [tache] stubborn4) Médecine resistant
2.
nom masculin et féminin rebel* * *ʀəbɛl1. nmf2. adj1) (troupes) rebel2) (enfant) rebellious3) (mèche) unruly4)* * *A adj2 ( refusant l'autorité) [fils, artiste] rebellious; être rebelle à to be resistant to [compromis]; to have a mental block about [musique, langues étrangères]; être rebelle à la discipline to be intractable;3 [mèche] unruly; [tache] stubborn;4 Méd resistant.B nmf rebel.[rəbɛl] adjectif2. [indomptable - cheval] rebellious ; [ - cœur, esprit] rebellious, intractable ; [ - enfant] rebellious, wilful ; [ - mèche] unruly, wild3. [réfractaire à]rebelle à tout conseil unwilling to heed advice, impervious to advice4. [acné, fièvre] stubborn, refractory (terme spécialisé)————————[rəbɛl] nom masculin et féminin -
3 disposé
disposé, e [dispoze]a. ( = prêt) être disposé/peu disposé à faire qch to be willing/unwilling to do sthb. bien/mal disposé in a good/bad mood• bien disposé à l'égard de or envers qn well-disposed towards sb• mal disposé à l'égard de or envers qn ill-disposed towards sb* * *
1.
2.
1) ( agencé) [meubles, fleurs] arranged; [appartement, pièce, jardin] laid out2) ( prêt)3) ( favorable)être bien/mal disposé — to be in a good/bad mood
être bien/mal disposé l'égard de or envers quelqu'un — to be well-/ill-disposed toward(s) somebody
* * *dispoze adj disposé, -e1) (d'une certaine manière) laid-outbien disposé pour qn; bien disposé envers qn — well disposed towards sb
3) (= prêt)disposé à faire — willing to do, prepared to do
Il était disposé à m'aider. — He was willing to help me.
Ils n'étaient pas disposés à la conciliation. — They weren't open to conciliation.
* * *A pp ⇒ disposer.B pp adj1 ( agencé) [meubles, fleurs] arranged; [appartement, pièce, jardin] laid out; chaises disposées en cercle autour de qch chairs arranged in a circle around sth;2 ( prêt) disposé à aider/investir willing to help/invest;3 ( favorable) être bien/mal disposé to be in a good/bad mood; être bien/mal disposé l'égard de or envers qn to be well-/ill-disposed toward(s) sb.1. [arrangé]bien/mal disposé well-/poorly-laid out2. [personne]bien/mal disposé in a good/bad moodêtre bien/mal disposé à l'égard de quelqu'un to be well-disposed/ill-disposed towards somebody -
4 involontaire
involontaire [ɛ̃vɔlɔ̃tεʀ]adjective* * *ɛ̃vɔlɔ̃tɛʀadjectif ( incontrôlé) [réaction, cri, geste] involuntary; [mensonge, faute] unintentional; ( fortuit) [intermédiaire, héros, témoin] unwitting* * *ɛ̃vɔlɔ̃tɛʀ adj1) (mouvement) involuntary2) (insulte) unintentionalC'était tout à fait involontaire. — It was quite unintentional.
3) (complice) unwitting* * *involontaire adj2 ( par hasard) [intermédiaire, héros, témoin] unwitting.[ɛ̃vɔlɔ̃tɛr] adjectif1. [machinal] involuntaryj'eus un mouvement de recul involontaire I recoiled involuntarily ou instinctively2. [non délibéré] unintentionalc'était involontaire it was unintentional, I didn't do it on purpose4. DROIT involuntary -
5 dentelle
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6 savoir
v. trans. & intrans.1. Savoir! (abbr. c'est à savoir!): That remains to be seen! (The northern English 'appen! is the nearest elliptical equivalent to this usage of savoir.)2. Ne vouloir rien savoir: To 'dig one's heels in', to be obstreperously unwilling to conform.3. Elle pleurait tout ce qu 'elle savait: She was crying her eyes out.
См. также в других словарях:
Unwilling — Un*will ing, a. Not willing; loath; disinclined; reluctant; as, an unwilling servant. [1913 Webster] And drop at last, but in unwilling ears, This saving counsel, Keep your piece nine years. Pope. [1913 Webster] {Un*will ing*ly}, adv. {Un*will… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
unwilling — index adverse (hostile), averse, disinclined, disobedient, dissident, evasive, intractable, involuntary … Law dictionary
unwilling — O.E. unwillende, from UN (Cf. un ) (1) not + WILLING (Cf. willing). Re formed 16c … Etymology dictionary
unwilling — [adj] not in the mood afraid, against, against the grain*, averse, backward, begrudging, compelled, contrary, demurring, disinclined, disobliging, evasive, forced, grudging, hesitating, indisposed, indocile, involuntary, laggard, loath,… … New thesaurus
unwilling — ► ADJECTIVE ▪ not willing. DERIVATIVES unwillingly adverb unwillingness noun … English terms dictionary
unwilling — [unwil′iŋ] adj. [altered (in 16th c.) < ME unwilland < OE unwillende < un , not + prp. of willan: see WILL2] 1. not willing or inclined; reluctant; loath; averse 2. done, said, given, etc. reluctantly unwillingly adv. unwillingness n … English World dictionary
unwilling — [[t]ʌ̱nwɪ̱lɪŋ[/t]] 1) ADJ GRADED: usu v link, usu ADJ to inf If you are unwilling to do something, you do not want to do it and will not agree to do it. Initially the government was unwilling to accept the defeat... For months I had been either… … English dictionary
unwilling */ — UK [ʌnˈwɪlɪŋ] / US adjective 1) if you are unwilling to do something, you do not want to do it or you refuse to do it unwilling to do something: Jane was unwilling to admit she was wrong. The government seems unable or unwilling to make further… … English dictionary
unwilling — adj. unwilling to + inf. (she is unwilling to participate) * * * [ʌn wɪlɪŋ] unwilling to + inf. (she is unwilling to participate) … Combinatory dictionary
unwilling — un|will|ing [ ʌn wılıŋ ] adjective * 1. ) if you are unwilling to do something, you do not want to do it or you refuse to do it: unwilling to do something: Jane was unwilling to admit she was wrong. 2. ) only before noun involved in doing… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
unwilling — adjective Date: before 12th century not willing: a. loath, reluctant < was unwilling to learn > b. done or given reluctantly < unwilling approval > c. offering opposition ; obstinate < an unwilling student > • unwillingly … New Collegiate Dictionary