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1 tend
tend [tend]∎ to tend to avoir tendance à, tendre à;∎ he does tend to take himself seriously il a vraiment tendance à se prendre au sérieux;∎ we tend to think of man as being separate from nature nous avons tendance à considérer que l'homme ne fait pas partie de la nature;∎ some people like that kind of film, but I tend not to il y a des gens qui aiment ce genre de film, moi (je n'aime) pas trop;∎ I tend to think (that) politics is a waste of time j'ai tendance à penser que la politique est une perte de temps;∎ that does tend to be the case c'est souvent le cas∎ red tending to orange rouge tirant sur l'orange(c) (go, move) tendre;∎ his writings tend to or towards exoticism ses écrits tendent vers l'exotisme;∎ in later life, she tended more towards a Marxist view of things vers la fin de sa vie, elle inclina ou évolua vers des idées marxistes∎ she tended to his every wish elle lui a passé tous ses caprices, elle a fait ses quatre volontés;∎ to tend to one's business/one's guests s'occuper de ses affaires/ses invités;∎ to tend to sb's wounds panser ou soigner les blessures de qn(a) (take care of → sheep) garder; (→ the sick, wounded) soigner; (→ garden) entretenir, s'occuper de;∎ to tend sb's wounds panser ou soigner les blessures de qn∎ to tend the bar servir au bar -
2 tend
tend [tend]• to tend to... avoir tendance à...• I tend to think that... j'ai tendance à penser que...( = take care of) [+ invalid] soigner ; [+ garden] entretenir* * *[tend] 1.transitive verb soigner [patient]; entretenir [garden]; s'occuper de [stall, store]2.1) ( incline)2) ( look after)to tend to — soigner [patient]; s'occuper de [guests]
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3 tend
A vtr soigner [patient] ; garder [animals] ; entretenir [garden] ; surveiller [fire] ; s'occuper de [stall, store].B vi1 ( incline) to tend to do [person, event] avoir tendance à faire ; to tend upwards/downwards avoir tendance à monter/baisser ; to tendtowards sth [tastes, views] pencher vers qch ; I tend to think that j'inclinerais à penser que ; it tends to be the case c'est en général le cas ; things are tending in that direction les choses vont dans cette direction ; to tend the other way prendre le contrepied ;2 ( look after) to tend to soigner [patient] ; s'occuper de [guests] ; to tend to sb's needs veiller aux besoins de qn. -
4 tend
I [tend] verb(to take care of; to look after: A shepherd tends his sheep.) garder- tenderII [tend] verb1) (to be likely (to do something); to do (something) frequently: Plants tend to die in hot weather; He tends to get angry.) avoir tendance (à)2) (to move, lean or slope in a certain direction: This bicycle tends to(wards) the left.) pencher, tirer (vers)•- tendency -
5 tenderhearted
[ˌtendə'hɑːtɪd]adjective sensible -
6 attend
attend [əˈtend]( = be present) être présent, être là• will you attend? est-ce que vous y serez ?━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━‼|/b] [b]to attend ≠ attendre━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━( = deal with) s'occuper de• are you being attended to? (in shop) est-ce qu'on s'occupe de vous ?* * *[ə'tend] 1.transitive verb1) ( go to) assister à [ceremony, meeting, performance]; aller à [church, school]; suivre [class, course]the event was well/poorly attended — beaucoup de/peu de monde assistait à l'événement
2) ( accompany) accompagner3) ( take care of) soigner2.1) ( be present) être présent2) sout ( pay attention) être attentif/-ive (to à)•Phrasal Verbs: -
7 attendant
attendant [əˈtendənt]1. noun2. adjective( = associated) associé* * *[ə'tendənt] 1.noun (in cloakroom, museum, car park) gardien/-ienne m/f; ( in cinema) ouvreuse f; ( at petrol station) pompiste mf; ( at swimming pool) surveillant/-e m/f2.medical attendant — membre m du personnel médical
adjective sout1) ( associated) [cost, danger, issue] associé; [symptom] concomitant2) ( attending) [aide, bodyguard] attaché à sa personne -
8 contend
contend [kənˈtend]a. ( = assert) prétendre• you'll have me to contend with vous aurez affaire à moi► to contend for [+ title, medal, prize] se battre pour* * *[kən'tend] 1.transitive verb soutenir ( that que)2.1)2) ( compete) -
9 contender
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10 incline
a. ( = bend) incliner• inclined at an angle of... incliné à un angle de...• to be inclined to do sth ( = have tendency to) avoir tendance à faire qch ; ( = feel desire to) être enclin à faire qch• I'm inclined to think that... je suis enclin à penser que...a. ( = slope) s'inclinerb. ( = tend towards) his politics incline towards socialism il a des idées proches du socialisme3. nounpente f━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━✦ Lorsque incline est un verbe, l'accent tombe sur la deuxième syllabe: ɪnˈklaɪn, lorsque c'est un nom, sur la première: ˈɪnklaɪn.* * *1. ['ɪŋklaɪn] 2. [ɪn'klaɪn]transitive verb1) ( tilt) incliner2)3. [ɪn'klaɪn]to be inclined to do — ( have tendency) avoir tendance à faire; ( have desire) avoir envie de faire
1) ( tend)to incline to ou towards — [ideas, politics] tendre vers
2) ( lean) s'incliner -
11 intend
intend [ɪnˈtend]• the building was originally intended as a sports complex le bâtiment devait initialement être un complexe sportif* * *[ɪn'tend] 1.transitive verb1) ( have in mind) vouloir [outcome]to intend to do —
2) ( mean)no insult intended — ( to one person) sans vouloir t'offenser; ( to group) sans vouloir offenser personne
it was clearly intended as a reference to... — c'était manifestement une allusion à...
to be intended for — être destiné à [person]; être prévu pour [purpose]
2.the law is intended to prevent... — la loi vise à empêcher...
intending present participle adjective [applicant, traveller] éventuel/-elle -
12 intended
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13 pretend
pretend [prɪˈtend]a. ( = feign) feindreb. ( = claim) prétendrea. ( = feign) faire semblant• he's not really ill, he's just pretending il n'est pas malade, il fait semblant• I was only pretending! c'était pour rire !* * *[prɪ'tend] 1.(colloq) adjective lang enfantin [gun, car] imaginaire; [jewels] faux/fausse (before n)2.transitive verb1) ( feign) simuler2) ( claim)3.1) ( feign) faire semblant2) ( maintain deception) jouer la comédie4.pretended past participle adjective [emotion, ignorance] simulé -
14 superintend
superintend [‚su:pərɪnˈtend]superviser ; [+ exam] surveiller* * *[ˌsuːpərɪn'tend, ˌsjuː-]transitive verb surveiller [person, work]; diriger [organization, research] -
15 superintendent
superintendent [‚su:pərɪnˈtendənt]a. [of department] chef mb. [of police] ≈ commissaire m* * *[ˌsuːpərɪn'tendənt, ˌsjuː-]1) ( supervisor) responsable mf2) ( in police) cf commissaire m de police3) US ( for apartments) concierge mf4) US (also school superintendent) inspecteur/-trice m/f -
16 tendency
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17 tender
tender [ˈtendər]1. adjective• to leave sb/sth to the tender mercies of sb abandonner qn/qch aux bons soins de qnb. ( = young) at the tender age of seven à l'âge de sept ansc. ( = sore) [skin, bruise] sensible( = proffer) offrir• "please tender exact change" « prière de faire l'appoint »4. noun5. compounds* * *['tendə(r)] 1.1) ( offer) soumission2) ( currency) legal tender2.1) ( soft) [food] tendre; [bud, shoot] fragile2) ( loving) [kiss, love, smile] tendre3) ( sensitive) [bruise, skin] sensible4) ( young)3.transitive verb offrir [money]; présenter [apology, fare]; donner [resignation]4.intransitive verb soumissionner, faire une soumission -
18 tenderize
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19 tenderly
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20 tenderness
tenderness [ˈtendənɪs]b. ( = soreness) sensibilité f* * *['tendənɪs]1) ( gentleness) tendresse f2) ( soreness) sensibilité f
См. также в других словарях:
tend — tend … Dictionnaire des rimes
tend — [ tend ] verb *** 1. ) intransitive to usually do a particular thing: tend to do something: He tends to exaggerate. The gym tends to get very busy at around six o clock. We tend to take technology for granted nowadays. These arguments tend merely … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
Tend — Tend, v. i. [F. tendre, L. tendere, tensum and tentum, to stretch, extend, direct one s course, tend; akin to Gr. ? to stretch, Skr. tan. See {Thin}, and cf. {Tend} to attend, {Contend}, {Intense}, {Ostensible}, {Portent}, {Tempt}, {Tender} to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Tend — Tend, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Tended}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Tending}.] [Aphetic form of attend. See {Attend}, {Tend} to move, and cf. {Tender} one that tends or attends.] 1. To accompany as an assistant or protector; to care for the wants of; to look… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
tend — W1S1 [tend] v [Sense: 1, 3, 5; Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: tendre to stretch , from Latin tendere] [Sense: 2, 4; Date: 1100 1200; Origin: attend] 1.) tend to do sth if something tends to happen, it happens often and is likely to happen … Dictionary of contemporary English
tend — tend1 [tend] vt. [ME tenden, aphetic < attenden: see ATTEND] 1. to take care of; minister to; watch over; look after; attend to [to tend plants or animals, to tend the sick] 2. to be in charge of or at work at; manage or operate [to tend a… … English World dictionary
tend — /tend/ verb 1 tend to do sth to often do a particular thing, especially something that is bad or annoying, and to be likely to do it again: Sally tends to interfere in other people s business. | The car does tend to overheat. 2 tend towards sth… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
tend — tend, attend, mind, watch are comparable when they mean to take charge of or look after someone or something especially as a duty or in return for remuneration. Tend usually retains some notion of an earlier sense in which it means to pay… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
tend*/*/*/ — [tend] verb 1) [I] to usually do a particular thing He tends to exaggerate.[/ex] I tend not to go out so much in the winter.[/ex] 2) [I/T] to take care of someone or something Eddie kept himself busy tending the garden.[/ex] Doctors were tending… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
Tend — Tend, v. i. 1. To wait, as attendants or servants; to serve; to attend; with on or upon. [1913 Webster] Was he not companion with the riotous knights That tend upon my father? Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. [F. attendre.] To await; to expect. [Obs.]… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
tend — Ⅰ. tend [1] ► VERB 1) frequently behave in a particular way or have a certain characteristic. 2) go or move in a particular direction. ORIGIN Latin tendere stretch, tend . Ⅱ. tend [2] ► … English terms dictionary