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141 course
A n1 ( progression) (of time, event, history, nature) cours m (of de) ; in the course of au cours de ; in the course of time avec le temps ; in the normal ou ordinary course of things ou events normalement ; in the course of doing en faisant ; in the course of construction/development en cours de construction/développement ; to take its course se mettre en train ; to run ou follow its course suivre son cours ; in due course en temps utile ; to change the course of sth changer le cours de qch ;2 ( route) (of river, road, planet, star) cours m ; (of boat, plane) cap m ; to be on ou hold ou steer a course Aviat, Naut tenir un cap ; to be on course for lit être en route pour ; fig aller vers ; the economy is back on course l'économie s'est restabilisée ; to be ou go off course faire fausse route ; to change course gen, lit changer de direction ; Aviat, Naut changer de cap ; fig changer d'avis ; to set (a) course for Aviat, Naut mettre le cap sur ; course of action moyen m d'action, parti m ; to take a course of action prendre un parti ; this is the only course open to us c'est le seul parti qui s'offre à nous ;3 Sch, Univ cours m (in en ; of de) ; art/French course cours m d'art/de français ; beginners' course cours m pour débutants ; introductory/advanced course cours m inaugural/avancé ; a course of study Sch programme m scolaire ; Univ cursus m universitaire ; to go on a course (aller) suivre un cours ; to be on a course suivre un cours ;4 Med, Vet ( of drug) traitement m ; ( of injections) série f ; a course of treatment un traitement ;5 Sport (in golf, athletics) parcours m ; Turf cours m ; to stay the course lit finir la course ; fig tenir bon ;6 ( part of meal) plat m ; second/third course deuxième/troisième plat m ; the fish course le plat de poisson ; the cheese course le plateau de fromages ;7 Constr assise f.C vi1 ( rush) couler ; the tears coursed down her cheeks les larmes coulaient sur ses joues ; the blood was coursing through ou in her veins le sang coulait dans ses veines ; ideas were coursing through his mind les idées se bousculaient dans son esprit ;E of course adv phr bien sûr, évidemment ; of course I do! bien sûr que oui! ; of course he doesn't! bien sûr que non! ; ‘did you lock the door?’-‘of course I did!’ ‘tu as fermé la porte à clé?’-‘mais oui, enfin!’ ; ‘you didn't believe him?’-‘of course not!’ ‘tu ne l'as pas cru?’-‘mais non, voyons!’ ; it might rain/it's too expensive, of course évidemment il pourrait pleuvoir/c'est trop cher ; you'll stay for dinner, of course? vous allez bien rester dîner?
См. также в других словарях:
take time off — verb take time off from work; stop working temporarily (Freq. 1) • Syn: ↑take off • Hypernyms: ↑interrupt, ↑disrupt, ↑break up, ↑cut off • Verb Frames … Useful english dictionary
take time off — See: TIME OFF; Compare: DAY OFF … Dictionary of American idioms
take time off — See: TIME OFF; Compare: DAY OFF … Dictionary of American idioms
take\ time\ off — See: time off; Compare: day off … Словарь американских идиом
take time off — take a break … English contemporary dictionary
take time off — Temporarily cease working … A concise dictionary of English slang
time off in lieu — UK US noun [U] UK (US compensatory time) HR ► time that an employee who has worked extra hours may take off from work: »Our workers take time off in lieu rather than accumulate high earnings on overtime … Financial and business terms
time off — n [U] time when you are officially allowed not to be at work or studying take/have/get etc time off ▪ Have you ever had to take time off for health reasons? … Dictionary of contemporary English
take something off — take (something) off to not work at your job for a period of time. I ve decided to take next semester off and travel and write. Jim needs to take off for a little while … New idioms dictionary
time off — noun a time period when you are not required to work (Freq. 4) he requested time off to attend his grandmother s funeral • Ant: ↑work time • Hypernyms: ↑time period, ↑period of time, ↑period … Useful english dictionary
take sth off — UK US take sth off Phrasal Verb with take({{}}/teɪk/ verb [T] (took, taken) ► WORKPLACE to have a period of time away from work: »After the business trip she took a few days off. »I am definitely looking forward to taking some time off. ► FINANCE … Financial and business terms