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21 level
level ['levəl]niveau ⇒ 1 (a)-(d), 1 (f) hauteur ⇒ 1 (a) taux ⇒ 1 (b) échelon ⇒ 1 (c) étage ⇒ 1 (f) plat ⇒ 1 (g), 2 (a) au même niveau ⇒ 2 (b) à la même hauteur ⇒ 2 (b) horizontal ⇒ 2 (c) de/à niveau ⇒ 2 (c) à égalité ⇒ 2 (d) calme ⇒ 2 (e) à l'horizontale ⇒ 3 aplanir ⇒ 4 (a) niveler ⇒ 4 (a)1 noun∎ at ground level au niveau du sol;∎ water seeks its own level c'est le principe des vases communicants; figurative on se heurte toujours à ses propres limites;∎ the level of the river has risen overnight le niveau de la rivière a monté pendant la nuit;∎ the flood waters have reached the level of the bridge la crue a atteint le niveau du pont;∎ the sink is on a level with the work surface l'évier est au niveau du ou de niveau avec le plan de travail;∎ on the same level au même niveau∎ noise levels are far too high le niveau sonore est bien trop élevé;∎ a low level of sugar in the bloodstream un faible taux de sucre dans le sang;∎ inflation has reached new levels l'inflation a atteint de nouveaux sommets;∎ check the oil level (in car) vérifiez le niveau d'huile;∎ her ambition is on a level with mine son ambition est du même ordre que la mienne;∎ Computing levels of grey échelle f des gris∎ at cabinet/national level à l'échelon ministériel/national;∎ at a regional level au niveau régional;∎ talks are being held at the highest level on négocie au plus haut niveau(d) (standard) niveau m;∎ her level of English is poor elle n'a pas un très bon niveau en anglais;∎ students at beginners' level étudiants mpl au niveau débutant;∎ a high level of competence/intelligence un haut niveau de compétence/d'intelligence;∎ they're not on the same level at all ils ne sont pas du tout du même niveau, ils n'ont absolument pas le même niveau;∎ she's on a different level from the others elle n'est pas au même niveau que les autres;∎ to come down to sb's level se mettre au niveau de qn;∎ don't descend or sink to their level ne t'abaisse pas à leur niveau∎ on a personal level, I really like him sur le plan personnel, je l'aime beaucoup;∎ on a practical level du point de vue pratique∎ the library is on level three la bibliothèque est au niveau trois ou au troisième étage(g) (flat land) plat m;∎ 100 km/h on the level 100 km/h sur le plat(h) (for woodwork, building etc)∎ (spirit) level niveau m (à bulle)∎ on the level (honest) honnête□, réglo;∎ do you think he's on the level? tu crois qu'il est réglo ou que c'est un type réglo?;∎ I'm giving it to you on the level je te dis ça franchement ou sans détour;∎ this deal is definitely on the level cette affaire est tout ce qu'il y a de plus réglo∎ a level spoonful une cuillerée rase;∎ to make sth level aplanir qch∎ the terrace is level with the pool la terrasse est au même niveau que ou de plain-pied avec la piscine;∎ his head is just level with my shoulder sa tête m'arrive exactement à l'épaule∎ the leading cars are almost level les voitures de tête sont presque à la même hauteur;∎ to draw level se trouver à égalité;∎ the other runners drew level with me les autres coureurs m'ont rattrapé(e) (calm, steady) calme, mesuré;∎ to speak in a level voice parler d'une voix calme ou posée;∎ she gave me a level look elle me regarda posément;∎ to keep a level head garder la tête froide∎ you're not being level with me tu ne joues pas franc jeu avec moi∎ to do one's level best faire de son mieux;∎ she did her level best to irritate me elle a tout fait pour me mettre en colère;∎ they're level pegging ils sont à égalité3 adverbà l'horizontale;∎ hold the tray level tenez le plateau à l'horizontale ou bien à plat;∎ Aviation to fly level voler en palier∎ to level a town (to the ground) raser une ville∎ to level a gun at sb braquer une arme sur qn;∎ to level accusations at sb lancer des accusations contre qn;∎ a lot of criticism has been levelled at me on m'a beaucoup critiqué(c) (in surveying) effectuer des opérations de nivellement dans, niveler∎ familiar to level with sb être franc avec qn□, jouer franc jeu avec qn□►► British & French Canadian level crossing passage m à niveau;Aviation level flight vol m horizontal(surface) aplanir, niveler; (standard) niveler par le bas(a) (production, rise, development) s'équilibrer, se stabiliser;∎ the curve on the graph levels off at this point la courbe du graphique se stabilise à partir d'ici;∎ the team's performance has levelled off this season les résultats de l'équipe se sont stabilisés cette saison(flatten) aplatir, niveler(a) (road, surface) s'aplanir(b) (stabilize) se stabilisernivelerniveler (par le haut) -
22 order
order [ˈɔ:dər]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. noun4. compounds━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. nouna. ( = sequence) ordre mb. ( = proper state)• to put one's affairs in order mettre de l'ordre dans ses affaires► to be in order ( = proper) [action, request] être dans les règles• would it be in order for me to speak to her? pourrais-je lui parler ?• it seems a celebration is in order! il va falloir fêter ça !► out of order [machine] en panne ; [remark] (inf) déplacé• "out of order" « hors service »• in good order ( = in good condition) en bon état• I did it in order to clarify matters je l'ai fait pour clarifier la situation► in order that afin que + subjd. ( = proper behaviour) ordre m• order, order! silence !• something in the order of €3,000 de l'ordre de 3 000 €f. ( = the way things are) ordre mg. ( = command) ordre m• that's an order! c'est un ordre !• by order of sb/sth par ordre de qn/qch• I don't take orders from you! je n'ai pas d'ordres à recevoir de vous !h. (from customer) commande fi. ( = portion of food) portion fk. (religious) ordre ml. ( = account) pay to the order of sb payer à l'ordre de qna. ( = command) to order sb to do sth ordonner à qn de faire qchb. ( = ask for) [+ goods, meal, taxi] commanderc. ( = put in sequence) classerd. [+ one's affairs] régler• are you ready to order? vous avez choisi ?4. compounds► order about, order around separable transitive verb* * *['ɔːdə(r)] 1.1) ( logical arrangement) ordre mto set ou put one's life in order — remettre de l'ordre dans sa vie
2) ( sequence) ordre min the right/wrong order — dans le bon/mauvais ordre
to be out of order — [files, records] être déclassé
3) (discipline, control) ordre mto keep order — [teacher] maintenir la discipline
4) ( established state) ordre mto have ou to be under orders to do — avoir (l')ordre de faire
6) (in shop, restaurant) commande fa rush/repeat order — une commande urgente/renouvelée
7) ( operational state)to be out of order — [phone line] être en dérangement; [lift, machine] être en panne
8) ( in public debate)order! order! — un peu de silence, s'il vous plaît!
9) ( all right)in order — [documents] en règle
10) Religion ordre m11) (rank, scale)of the order of 15% — GB
in the order of 15% — US de l'ordre de 15%
12) Financepay to the order of — (on cheque, draft) payer à l'ordre de
13) GB (honorary association, title) ordre m2.orders plural noun Religion ordres mpl3.in order that conjunctional phrase ( with the same subject) afin de (+ infinitive), pour (+ infinitive); ( with different subjects) afin que (+ subj), pour que (+ subj)4.he brought the proofs in order that I might check them — il a apporté les épreuves pour que je puisse les vérifier
in order to prepositional phrase pour (+ infinitive), afin de (+ infinitive)5.transitive verb1) ( command) ordonner [inquiry, retrial]3) ( put in order) classer [files, cards]; mettre [quelque chose] dans l'ordre [names, dates]6.intransitive verb [diner, customer] commander7.ordered past participle adjective [series] ordonnéPhrasal Verbs: -
23 rate
rate [reɪt]1. noun• birth/death rate taux m de natalité/mortalité• the failure/success rate for this exam is high il y a un pourcentage élevé d'échecs/de réussites à cet examen• to pay sb at the rate of £10 per hour payer qn à raison de 10 livres de l'heure• at a rate of... ( = speed) à une vitesse de...• at the rate you're going, you'll be dead before long à ce rythme-là vous ne ferez pas de vieux os• at this rate, I'll never find a job si ça continue comme ça, je ne trouverai jamais de travail• rate of interest/pay/taxation taux m d'intérêt/de rémunération/d'imposition2. plural noun• to rate sb/sth highly faire grand cas de qn/qch• how would you rate your chances of getting a job? quelles sont vos chances de trouver un emploi, à votre avis ?• reading does not rate highly among children as a hobby la lecture n'est pas un passe-temps très prisé des enfants5. compounds* * *[reɪt] 1.1) ( speed) rythme mat this rate ou at the rate we're going we'll never be able to afford a car — fig à ce train-là nous n'aurons jamais les moyens d'acheter une voiture
2) ( level) taux m3) ( charge) tarif mhourly rate — salaire m horaire
4) ( in foreign exchange) cours m2.3.business rates — ≈ taxe f professionnelle
transitive verb1) ( classify)2) ( deserve) mériter [medal, round of applause]3) ( value) estimer [honesty, friendship, person]4. 5.•• -
24 senior
senior [ˈsi:nɪər]1. adjective2. noun3. compounds► senior school noun ( = oldest classes) grandes classes fpl ; ( = secondary school) collège m d'enseignement secondaire* * *['siːnɪə(r)] 1.1) ( older person) aîné/-e m/f2) ( superior) supérieur/-e m/f3) GB School élève mf dans les grandes classes4) US School élève mf de terminale5) US University étudiant/-e m/f de licence6) Sport senior m2.noun modifier3.1) ( older) [person] plus âgéMr Becket senior — M. Becket père
2) ( superior) [person] plus haut placé; [civil servant, diplomat] haut (before n); [aide, employee, minister] haut placé; [colleague] plus ancien/-ienne; [figure] prédominant; [job, post] supérieur -
25 rebranding
MARKETING (of product) changement m de marqueWe may well see more consolidation in the sector, but a merger between any of the high street banks is a rank outsider. Everyone will be watching closely the rebranding of Midland to HSBC.
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26 class
1. plural - classes; noun1) (a group of people or things that are alike in some way: The dog won first prize in its class in the dog show.) classe2) ((the system according to which people belong to) one of a number of economic/social groups: the upper class; the middle class; the working class; ( also adjective) the class system.) classe3) (a grade or rank (of merit): musicians of a high class.) classe4) (a number of students or scholars taught together: John and I are in the same class.) classe5) (a school lesson or college lecture etc: a French class.) cours6) ((American) a course or series of lectures, often leading to an examination.)2. verb(to regard as being of a certain type: He classes all women as stupid.) classer- class-room -
27 common
['komən] 1. adjective1) (seen or happening often; quite normal or usual: a common occurrence; These birds are not so common nowadays.) courant, banal2) (belonging equally to, or shared by, more than one: This knowledge is common to all of us; We share a common language.) commun3) (publicly owned: common property.) public4) (coarse or impolite: She uses some very common expressions.) vulgaire5) (of ordinary, not high, social rank: the common people.) du commun6) (of a noun, not beginning with a capital letter (except at the beginning of a sentence): The house is empty.) commun2. noun((a piece of) public land for everyone to use, with few or no buildings: the village common.) terrain communal- commoner- common knowledge - common law - common-law - commonplace - common-room - common sense - the Common Market - the House of Commons - the Commons - in common -
28 commoner
noun (a person who is not of high rank: The royal princess married a commoner.) roturier/-ière -
29 constable
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30 dignitary
['diɡnitəri]plural - dignitaries; noun(a person who has a high rank or office.) dignitaire -
31 dignity
['diɡnəti]1) (stateliness or seriousness of manner: Holding her head high, she retreated with dignity.) dignité2) (importance or seriousness: the dignity of the occasion.) dignité3) (a privilege etc indicating rank: He had risen to the dignity of an office of his own.) dignité4) (one's personal pride: He had wounded her dignity.) dignité -
32 entourage
(a group of followers, especially of a person of high rank.) entourage -
33 exalted
[iɡ'zo:ltid](high in rank, position etc; noble; important.) haut placé -
34 investiture
[-ti ə]noun ((a ceremony of) giving (the robes etc of) high rank or office to someone.) investiture -
35 level
['levl] 1. noun1) (height, position, strength, rank etc: The level of the river rose; a high level of intelligence.) niveau2) (a horizontal division or floor: the third level of the multi-storey car park.) niveau3) (a kind of instrument for showing whether a surface is level: a spirit level.) niveau4) (a flat, smooth surface or piece of land: It was difficult running uphill but he could run fast on the level.) plat2. adjective1) (flat, even, smooth or horizontal: a level surface; a level spoonful (= an amount which just fills the spoon to the top of the sides).) plat, ras2) (of the same height, standard etc: The top of the kitchen sink is level with the window-sill; The scores of the two teams are level.) au niveau de, à égalité (avec)3) (steady, even and not rising or falling much: a calm, level voice.) assuré3. verb1) (to make flat, smooth or horizontal: He levelled the soil.) aplanir2) (to make equal: His goal levelled the scores of the two teams.) égaliser3) ((usually with at) to aim (a gun etc): He levelled his pistol at the target.) braquer (sur)4) (to pull down: The bulldozer levelled the block of flats.) raser•- level crossing - level-headed - do one's level best - level off - level out - on a level with - on the level -
36 mandarin
['mændərin]1) ((also mandarin orange) a type of small orange.) mandarine2) (an official of high rank in the Chinese Empire.) mandarin -
37 senior
['si:njə] 1. noun1) (( also adjective) (a person who is) older in years or higher in rank or authority: John is senior to me by two years; He is two years my senior; senior army officers.) aîné; supérieur2) ((American) a student in his/her last year in college or high school.)2. adjective((often abbreviated to Snr, Sr or Sen. when written) used to indicate the father of a person who is alive and who has the same name: John Jones Senior.) père- senior citizen -
38 snob
[snob](a person who admires people of high rank or social class, and despises those in a lower class etc than himself: Being a snob, he was always trying to get to know members of the royal family.) snob- snobbery- snobbish - snobbishly - snobbishness -
39 stand
[stænd] 1. past tense, past participle - stood; verb1) (to be in an upright position, not sitting or lying: His leg was so painful that he could hardly stand; After the storm, few trees were left standing.) être debout2) ((often with up) to rise to the feet: He pushed back his chair and stood up; Some people like to stand (up) when the National Anthem is played.) se mettre debout3) (to remain motionless: The train stood for an hour outside Newcastle.) rester4) (to remain unchanged: This law still stands.) maintenir5) (to be in or have a particular place: There is now a factory where our house once stood.) s'élever6) (to be in a particular state, condition or situation: As matters stand, we can do nothing to help; How do you stand financially?) dans l'état oû, dans ces conditions7) (to accept or offer oneself for a particular position etc: He is standing as Parliamentary candidate for our district.) être candidat (à)8) (to put in a particular position, especially upright: He picked up the fallen chair and stood it beside the table.) poser (droit/debout)9) (to undergo or endure: He will stand (his) trial for murder; I can't stand her rudeness any longer.) supporter10) (to pay for (a meal etc) for (a person): Let me stand you a drink!) offrir2. noun1) (a position or place in which to stand ready to fight etc, or an act of fighting etc: The guard took up his stand at the gate; I shall make a stand for what I believe is right.) poste2) (an object, especially a piece of furniture, for holding or supporting something: a coat-stand; The sculpture had been removed from its stand for cleaning.) support3) (a stall where goods are displayed for sale or advertisement.) étalage4) (a large structure beside a football pitch, race course etc with rows of seats for spectators: The stand was crowded.) tribune5) ((American) a witness box in a law court.) barre•- standing 3. noun1) (time of lasting: an agreement of long standing.) durée2) (rank or reputation: a diplomat of high standing.) importance•- stand-by4. adjective((of an airline passenger or ticket) costing or paying less than the usual fare, as the passenger does not book a seat for a particular flight, but waits for the first available seat.) sans garantie5. adverb(travelling in this way: It costs a lot less to travel stand-by.) sans garantie- stand-in- standing-room - make someone's hair stand on end - stand aside - stand back - stand by - stand down - stand fast/firm - stand for - stand in - stand on one's own two feet - stand on one's own feet - stand out - stand over - stand up for - stand up to -
40 level
A n3 Sch, Univ niveau m ; an intermediate level textbook un manuel pour le niveau intermédiaire ; that course is above/below your level ce cours est trop difficile/facile pour toi ;4 fig ( of understanding) niveau m ; to be on the same level as sb être du même niveau que qn ; to get down/to come down to sb's level se mettre/s'abaisser au niveau de qn ; to talk to sb on their level parler à qn d'égal à égal ;5 ( equal plane) to be on a level with lit [building, window] être à la hauteur de or au même niveau que [building, window] ; fig [action] équivaloir à [action] ; on a level with the first floor à la hauteur du premier étage ; two windows both on the same level deux fenêtres à la même hauteur ; at waist-/knee-level à la hauteur de la taille/des genoux ; at street level au niveau de la rue ; that is on a level with arson fig ça équivaut à l'incendie criminel ;6 ( degree) (of pollution, noise, competence) niveau m ; (of substance, unemployment, illiteracy) taux m ; ( of spending) montant m ; (of satisfaction, anxiety) degré m ; glucose/cholesterol levels taux de glucose/cholestérol ;7 ( position in hierarchy) échelon m ; at local/national/board level à l'échelon local/national/du conseil d'administration ; at all levels à tous les échelons ; at a higher/lower level à un échelon supérieur /inférieur ;8 fig ( plane) plan m ; on a purely practical level sur un plan strictement pratique ; to be reduced to the same level as être mis sur le même plan que ; on a literary/musical level d'un point de vue littéraire/musical ;9 fig ( standard) qualité f ; the level of training/of service la qualité de la formation/du service ;C adj1 ( not at an angle) [shelf, rail, floor] droit ; [surface] plan ; [worktop, table] horizontal ; to hold a compass level tenir une boussole horizontale ; I don't think this bed is level je trouve que ce lit penche ;2 ( not bumpy) [ground, surface, plain, land] plat ; [field, garden] nivelé ; ( naturally) sans dénivellation ;4 ( equally high) to be level [shoulders, windows, etc] être à la même hauteur ; [floor, ceiling, building] être au même niveau ; is the hem level? est-ce que l'ourlet est droit? ; trim the shoots so they are level with the ground taillez les rejets au ras du sol ;5 fig (equal in achievement, rank) to be level [competitors] être à égalité ; to be level in popularity atteindre la même cote de popularité ; on the same level ( of colleagues) au même échelon ;D adv ( abreast) to draw level [competitors, cars] arriver à la même hauteur (with que) ; the pound is keeping level with the deutschmark la livre se maintient par rapport au deutschmark.1 ( raze to ground) raser [village, area] ;2 ( aim) braquer [gun, weapon] (at sur) ; lancer [accusation] (at contre) ; adresser [criticism] (at à) ; the criticism was levelled mainly at the board of directors les critiques visaient essentiellement le conseil d'administration ;3 ○ ( knock down) mettre à terre [opponent].to be level-pegging être à égalité ; to be on the level ( on level ground) être sur terrain plat ; ( trustworthy) être réglo ○ ; to level with sb être honnête avec qn ; to keep a level head garder son sang-froid ; to try one's level best to do sth faire tout son possible pour faire qch.■ level off:1 [prices, rate of growth, curve] se stabiliser ;2 [plane, pilot] amorcer le vol en palier ;3 [path] continuer sur terrain plat ;▶ level [sth] off, level off [sth] égaliser [ground, floor, mortar] ; aplanir [wooden surface].■ level out:1 [land, terrain] s'aplanir ;2 [prices, rate of growth, curve] se stabiliser ;▶ level [sth] out, level out [sth] niveler [ground, floor].
См. также в других словарях:
high echelon — high rank, high level … English contemporary dictionary
rank — I n. row (esp. mil.) 1) to form a rank 2) to break ranks (also fig.) 3) (misc.) to come up, rise from the ranks position, grade 4) to hold a rank (to hold the rank of captain) 5) to pull (colloq.), use one s rank 6) high; junior; low; senior rank … Combinatory dictionary
rank — rank1 W3 [ræŋk] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(position in army/organization)¦ 2 the ranks 3 break ranks 4¦(line)¦ 5 pull rank (on somebody) 6¦(quality)¦ 7¦(social class)¦ 8¦(taxi)¦ ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; … Dictionary of contemporary English
rank — [[t]ræ̱ŋk[/t]] ♦♦♦ ranks, ranking, ranked 1) N VAR: with supp Someone s rank is the position or grade that they have in an organization. He eventually rose to the rank of captain... The former head of counter intelligence had been stripped of his … English dictionary
high — adj., n., & adv. adj. 1 a of great vertical extent (a high building). b (predic.; often in comb.) of a specified height (one inch high; water was waist high). 2 a far above ground or sea level etc. (a high altitude). b inland, esp. when raised… … Useful english dictionary
rank — ▪ I. rank rank 1 [ræŋk] noun [countable] 1. a particular level of job in an organization, especially a government organization or the army: • His father retired with the rank of major. • Knight Ridder named Maxwell King, 46, to succeed Mr.… … Financial and business terms
rank — I UK [ræŋk] / US noun Word forms rank : singular rank plural ranks ** 1) [countable/uncountable] someone s official position in the armed forces, police, fire service etc Her rank when she retired was captain. rank of: He joined in 1998, and… … English dictionary
rank — rank1 [ ræŋk ] noun ** 1. ) count or uncount someone s official position in the military, police force, fire department, etc.: Her rank when she retired was captain. rank of: He joined in 1998, and quickly rose to the rank of detective.… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
high-level — adjective Date: 1811 1. occurring, done, or placed at a high level 2. being of high importance or rank < high level diplomats > 3. of, relating to, or being a computer programming language (as BASIC or Pascal) which is similar to a natural… … New Collegiate Dictionary
high-ranking official — office bearer or functionary of a high rank, high level official … English contemporary dictionary
rank — rank1 [raŋk] n. [MFr renc < OFr ranc, renc: see RANGE] 1. a row, line, or series 2. an orderly arrangement 3. a social division or class; stratum of society [people from all ranks of life] 4. a high position in society; high degree; eminence … English World dictionary