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1 cohabitation
cohabitation [kɔabitasjɔ̃]feminine noun━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━This describes the situation when, as a result of a presidential or general election, the French people find themselves with a president from one political party and a government from another. A recent example of cohabitation is the combination of a Socialist Prime Minister, Lionel Jospin, with a Gaullist President, Jacques Chirac.* * *A period in which the government and the Président de la République come from opposite political camps. The first instance of political cohabitation in the 5th Republic occurred in 1986 when François Mitterrand (PS) was president and Jacques Chirac (RPR) became prime minister. parti* * *kɔabitasjɔ̃ nf1) (= concubinage) living together, [amis] sharing2) POLITIQUE, DROIT cohabitation* * *cohabitation nf1 living with somebody, living under the same roof as somebody; la cohabitation avec la belle-famille living with one's in-laws;2 Pol period when the French president and the government are drawn from opposing parties.ⓘ Cohabitation A period in which the government and the Président de la République come from opposite political camps. The first instance of political cohabitation in the 5th Republic occurred in 1986 when François Mitterrand (PS) was president and Jacques Chirac (RPR) became prime minister. ⇒ parti[kɔabitasjɔ̃] nom féminin2. POLITIQUEcoexistence of an elected head of state and an opposition parliamentary majorityDescribes a situation whereby the French president represents one political party and the government another. This term was first used during the period 1986-1988, when the socialist president (François Mitterrand) had a right-wing prime minister (Jacques Chirac), following the victory of the RPR in the legislative elections. -
2 union libre
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3 concubinage
concubinage [kɔ̃kybinaʒ]masculine noun* * *kɔ̃kybinaʒnom masculin cohabitationils vivent en concubinage — they live together (as husband and wife), they cohabit Administration
* * *kɔ̃kybinaʒ nmDROIT cohabitation* * *concubinage nm cohabitation; ils vivent en concubinage they live together (as husband and wife), they cohabit Admin; les enfants issus du concubinage children born to a cohabiting couple.concubinage notoire Jur cohabitation.[kɔ̃kybinaʒ] nom masculin1. [vie de couple]vivre en concubinage to live as man and wife, to cohabit -
4 union
union [ynjɔ̃]1. feminine nounb. ( = mariage) unionc. ( = groupe) association2. compounds* * *ynjɔ̃1) ( alliance) union2) ( association) association3) ( mariage) union sout, marriage4) Mathématique union•Phrasal Verbs:••l'union fait la force — Proverbe united we stand, divided we fall
* * *ynjɔ̃ nf* * *union nf1 ( alliance) union; union du corps et de l'âme union of mind and body; l'union politique européenne European political union;2 ( association) association; union de consommateurs consumers' association; union de producteurs association of producers;3 ( mariage) union sout, marriage; de cette union allaient naître trois fils from this union ou marriage three sons would come;4 Math union; ‘A union B’ ‘A union B’.union douanière Écon, Fisc customs union; union économique et monétaire Écon, Fin economic and monetary union; union libre cohabitation; union mystique Relig mystic union; union sacrée united front; former l'union sacrée contre to present a united front against; union sportive, US sports club; Union européenne, UE European Union, EU; Union des Républiques socialistes soviétiques Hist Union of Soviet Socialist Republics; Union soviétique Hist Soviet Union.l'union fait la force Prov united we stand, divided we fall.[ynjɔ̃] nom féminina. [être solidaires] to show ou to present a united front4. [liaison entre un homme et une femme] union6. GÉOGRAPHIEl'Union soviétique ou des républiques socialistes soviétiques the Soviet Union, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics -
5 PACS
PACS [paks]masculine noun( = pacte civil de solidarité) ≈ civil partnership (Brit)* * *
I paksnom masculin (abbr = pacte civil de solidarité) contract of civil union
II
In force since November 1999, this new civil contract is designed to safeguard the common interests of partners living together either in mixed or in same-sex couples. The PACS does not apply to under 18s, to couples who are blood relatives or those already in another marriage or relationship. The PACS entails certain obligations on the part of the couple such as a commitment to mutual support and maintenance and shared responsibility for joint expenses. By the same token, couples have rights in the areas of accommodation, property, taxation, social security, employment and inheritance* * *paks abr nmPacte civil de solidarité contract of civil partnership, contact of civil union* * *PACS nm (abbr = pacte civil de solidarité) contract of civil union.ⓘ PACS In force since November 1999, this new civil contract is designed to safeguard the common interests of partners living together either in mixed or in same-sex couples. The PACS does not apply to under 18s, to couples who are blood relatives or those already in another marriage or relationship. The PACS entails certain obligations on the part of the couple such as a commitment to mutual support and maintenance and shared responsibility for joint expenses. By the same token, couples have rights in the areas of accommodation, property, taxation, social security, employment and inheritance.civil solidarity pactlegally recognized cohabitation arrangement, between same-sex or opposite-sex couples -
6 mariage
c black mariage [maʀjaʒ]1. masculine nouna. ( = cérémonie) weddingb. ( = institution, union) marriage• hors mariage [cohabitation] outside of marriage ; [naissance, né] out of wedlock ; [relations sexuelles] extramaritalc. [de couleurs, parfums, matières] blend ; [d'entreprises] mergerc black2. compounds━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━✎ Le mot anglais s'écrit avec deux r.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━Marianne, a woman wearing a red cap of liberty, is the personification of the French republic. She appears on stamps, and there are busts of her in all town halls. Her features vary - film stars have been used as models for her.* * *maʀjaʒnom masculin1) ( union) marriagefaire un mariage d'amour/d'argent — to marry for love/money
2) ( cérémonie) wedding3) fig ( association) ( de couleurs) marriage; ( d'entreprises) merger; ( de partis) alliance; ( de techniques) fusion•Phrasal Verbs:••c'est le mariage de la carpe et du lapin — (colloq) it's a mismatch
* * *maʀjaʒ nm1) (union, état) marriagedemander qn en mariage — to propose to sb, to ask sb to marry one
Il l'a demandée en mariage. — He proposed to her., He asked her to marry him.
2) (= noce) weddingmariage civil — registry office wedding Grande-Bretagne civil wedding
3) fig, [couleurs, saveurs, genres] blend, combinationmariage entre... et... — blend of... and...
mariage de deux... — blend of two..., combination of two...
* * *mariage nm1 ( union) marriage; donner sa fille en mariage to give one's daughter in marriage; un mariage heureux a happy marriage; s'opposer à un mariage to oppose a marriage; au début de leur mariage in the early days of their marriage; il ne pense qu'au mariage marriage is all he thinks about; fêter ses 50 ans de mariage to celebrate fifty years of marriage; né d'un premier mariage from a previous marriage; faire un mariage de raison or convenance to make a marriage of convenience; faire un mariage d'amour/argent to marry for love/money; faire un riche mariage to marry into money; un enfant né hors mariage a child born out of wedlock; c'est pour quand le mariage? when is the big day?;2 ( cérémonie) wedding; la cérémonie du mariage the wedding ceremony; un mariage en blanc a white wedding; le mariage a été célébré hier/à la mairie the wedding took place yesterday/at the Town Hall; leur mariage a été célébré à l'église their marriage was followed by a church service; cadeau de mariage wedding present; messe de mariage nuptial mass;3 fig ( association) (de couleurs, parfums, goûts) marriage; (d'entreprises, de réseaux) merger; ( de partis) alliance; ( de techniques) fusion;4 Jeux ( aux cartes) marriage; faire des mariages to score marriages; faire le mariage à pique to have the King and Queen of spades.mariage blanc ( contrat) marriage in name only, paper marriage; ( non consommé) unconsummated marriage; faire un mariage blanc ( contractuel) to marry in name only; ( ne pas le consommer) to have an unconsummated marriage; mariage civil register office ou civil wedding; faire un mariage civil to have a register office ou civil wedding; mariage de la main gauche† common-law marriage; c'est un mariage de la main gauche they're living together; mariage morganatique morganatic marriage; mariage putatif putative marriage; mariage religieux church wedding; faire un mariage religieux to have a church wedding.c'est le mariage de la carpe et du lapin○ it's a mismatch.[marjaʒ] nom masculin1. [union] marriagefaire un mariage d'amour to marry for love, to make a love matchfaire un mariage d'argent ou d'intérêt to marry for moneymariage de convenance ou de raison marriage of conveniencemariage blanc unconsummated marriage, marriage in name only2. [cérémonie] wedding[cortège] wedding processionmariage civil/religieux civil/church wedding[de couleurs] combination[d'associations, d'organisations] mergingIn France, a civil ceremony (which takes place at the mairie) is required of all couples wishing to marry, though some choose to have a church wedding as well. The traditional wedding involves a long and sumptuous meal at which the wedding cake, a pyramid of caramel-covered profiteroles (the pièce montée), is served. -
7 collage
n. m. Le collage: 'Life under the brush', cohabitation. Etre en collage: To 'live in sin' (also: vivre à la colle). -
8 Balladur, Edouard
(born 1929)Conservative politician, and Prime Minister of France from 1993 to 1995. Minister of the Economy in the first "Cohabitation" government of Jacques Chirac during the first Mitterrand presidency, he was appointed Prime Minister by Mitterrand at the start of his second term in office. While Chirac incarnated the traditional Gaullist wing of the conservative RPR party, Balladur was seen as more modern, more libéraland more European in his outlook - but also rather aloof and patrician. In 1995, he ran against Chirac for the presidency, and was at one time tipped as favourite, but lost out in the first round. Divisions in the RPR between the Chiraquiens and the Balladurians lasted for several years after this, notably with the sidelining by Chirac of an up-and-coming young minister, NicolasSarkozy.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Balladur, Edouard
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9 Chirac, Jacques
born 1932.(adj. Chiraquien)Former conservative (Gaullist) President of France, from 1995 to 2007. Chirac's reelection in 2002 was an unexpected twist of fortune, caused by the elimination of the front-runner, socialist Lionel Jospin, pipped into third place in the first round of the election by a surge in the vote for the far right wing leader of the French National Front, Jean Marie Le Pen.Facing Le Pen in the second round, Chirac was reelected with a massive majority in what was in essence a contest between the the extreme right and everyone else. Had the second round of the election been a classic left-right contest, Chirac's re-election would not have been guaranteed.Jacques Chirac was a highly ambitious career politician, who worked his way rapidly up the ranks of the Gaullist movement; yet his first steps in politics were actually as a militant for the Communist party, and as a student he sold the communist newspaper l'Humanité on the streets of Paris. After graduating from "Sciences Po", he changed tack, married into Parisian high society, studied at the elite ENA (Ecole Nationale d'Administration), and then began a career in politics, working for the office of the prime minister, Georges Pompidou. In 1976, he was appointed junior minister for employment in the third Pompidou government, and from then after he remained one of the most omnipresent of conservative politicians in France. From Gaullist, he became a supporter of Valéry Giscard d'Estaing during Giscard's 1974 bid for the presidency - against the Gaullist Chaban-Delmas - and was appointed Prime Minister when Giscard won. Two years later, he resigned, complaining that Giscard was cramping his style.This was the start of his rise to the top. No longer prime minister, in 1977 he set about building his own power base, or rather his own two power bases, firstly as leader of a new political party, the RPR, created out of the old Gaullist UDR, and secondly by becoming elected Mayor of Paris. In 1981, he challenged Giscard for the presidency, but came third in the first round of the election, which was won by François Mitterrand. By 1986 he was clear leader of the conservative opposition. When the conservatives won the general election of that year, he was appointed prime minister, ushering in the first period of cohabitation (see below) between a president and a government of different political persuasions.In 1988, he was again a candidate in the presidential election, and again lost; but with his power base in Paris and in the RPR, he then had seven years in which to prepare his third, and first successful, challenge for the presidency.He served two terms as president, the first of seven years, the second of five - though as already stated, his reelection in 2002 was more due to the failure of the Socialist campaign and the surprise presence of Le Pen in the second round, than in his own popularity. It is still rather early to judge the Chirac presidency in a historic perspective, but early appraisals suggest that it will not be remembered as a great period in French history. It was a time during which France dramatically failed to adapt to the changes in the modern world - the end of the Cold War and the challenge of globalisation - and failed to push through the social and economic reforms that were allowing other developed nations such as France, Germany or Spain, to find their place in the new world order.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Chirac, Jacques
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10 Mitterrand, François
(adj. Mittérandiste)(1916 - 1996)Françoisz Mitterrand was the longest serving French president under the Fifth Republic. Mitterrand, a Socialist, served two full terms in office, from 1981 to 1995. He was also the oldest president of the Fifth republic, leaving the job at the age of 78. History will judge how successful Mitterrand was; adulated by his supporters, he was much maligned by his political opponents; but for the second period of both his terms, he was obliged to appoint a Prime Minister from the conservative opposition (leading to a state of " cohabitation" (q.v.)), following mid-term rejections of his socialist administrations. He will perhaps be remembered as an indecisive president; from 1981 to 1983, he oversaw left-wing policies, including the nationalisation of some banks and other major companies; but from 1983 onwards, this policy went into reverse, and from then on state companies were progressively privatized. He did much to free France from the tight constrictions of the Gaullist state, abolishing the death penalty and removing state control of the media; but he was party to a notorious act of international piracy, the sinking of the Greenpeace ship Rainbow Warrior in the harbour at Auckland, New Zealand, in which a Greenpeace activist was killed.Reelected in 1988, he pledged to follow a policy that was neither too left, nor too right. Known as the " ni-ni" policy ("neither nor" policy), this was frequently interpreted as being tantamount to no policy at all, and led to a crushing defeat for the Socialists in the 1993 general elections, as France's economic situation declined.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Mitterrand, François
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11 Premier Ministre
The role of Prime Minister in France is not the same as that of the Prime Minister of Britain. While the British Prime Minister is politically (though not constitutionally) Britain's head of state, the French Prime Minister is only the head of the French government, and nominated as such by the President. Weekly meetings of the French cabinet (see Conseil des Ministres) are therefore presided over by the President, not by the Prime Minister. When President and Prime Minister are of the same political leaning ("left" or "right"), government policy will tend to be lead by the two; when they are from different political families (a situation known as cohabitation), the Prime Minister's role and decision-making power are considerably strengthened. The Prime Minister is responsible for forming the government, but the list of names has to be approved by the President. See Balladur, Barre, Chaban Delmas, Chirac, Jospin, Raffarin, Rocard, etc.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Premier Ministre
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12 President
The head of state, under the constitution of the French Fifth Republic (Cinquième république). The French president is elected by direct universal suffrage, for a term of five years in office. Since the 2008 constitutional reform introduced by President Sarkozy, a president may serve no more than two five-year terms in office. Election by universal suffrage was first introduced following a referendum organised by General de Gaulle in 1962. Originally the presidential term in office was seven years, with one president, F. Mitterrand, serving a full two terms. With presidential and legislative elections operating according to different calendars, swings in the popularity of parties and their leaders led in the mid eighties to situations or " Cohabitation", with presidents and parliamentary majorities from different sides of the political spectrum. In 2002, presidential and legislative elections were held within two months of each other, each leading to five year terms in office for those elected; thus president Chirac emerged for a second term in office with a solid parliamentary majority of his own supporters.The president is responsible for choosing his Prime Minister (see Premier Ministre), who proposes a team of government ministers which the president must approve. He is the chief of the executive, who oversees weekly cabinet meetings (see Conseil des ministres), and promulgates new laws. He is also the commander in chief of French forces. He has the power to dissolve theNational Assembly and call legislative elections - a power used rather disastrously in 1997 by Jacques Chirac, who dissolved the Assembly in attempt to give his "presidential majority" a rather less slender majority, only to see the Socialist opposition voted into power.In exceptional cases of national emergency, Article 16 of the Constitutiongives the president the power to rule without the consent of parliament.See also Giscard d'Estaing, PompidouDictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > President
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13 concubinage
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > concubinage
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14 union libre
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > union libre
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15 lyber
Concept inventé en mars 2000 par Michel Valensi, directeur des éditions de l’Eclat, le lyber est un terme "construit à partir du mot latin liber qui signifie à la fois: libre, livre, enfant, vin". Dans le Petit traité plié en dix sur le lyber, Michel Valensi définit le lyber comme un livre numérique disponible gratuitement sur l’internet dans son intégralité, selon le principe du shareware (partagiciel). Avec invitation d’acheter un exemplaire pour soi ou ses amis, possibilité de signaler l’adresse du libraire le plus proche où le livre imprimé est disponible, et possibilité aux lecteurs de laisser des commentaires sur le texte en ligne. "Le lyber est une tentative de cohabitation dynamique de ces supports. Le principe est simple: diffusion simultanée d’un même contenu sur les deux supports. Livre papier et document-en-ligne." Sur les 180 titres que comprend le catalogue des éditions de l’Eclat, une vingtaine est disponible sous forme de lyber. L’éditeur passe aussi un partenariat avec Google en août 2005 pour participer au programme Google Livres (Google Book Search).
См. также в других словарях:
cohabitation — I (living together) noun abiding together, act of dwelling together, alliance, living together in sexual intimacy, lodging together, lodging together as husband and wife, occupying the same domicile, residing together, rooming together associated … Law dictionary
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cohabitation — COHABITATION. s. f. Terme de Jurisprudence. État du mari et de la femme qui vivent ensemble. Les Juges ont ordonné la cohabitation … Dictionnaire de l'Académie Française 1798
Cohabitation — This article is about a living arrangement. For the situation in governmental politics, see Cohabitation (government). Relationships … Wikipedia
Cohabitation — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. Sur les autres projets Wikimedia : « Cohabitation », sur le Wiktionnaire (dictionnaire universel) La cohabitation peut désigner : la… … Wikipédia en Français
Cohabitation — JOSPIN (Lionel) Bio express : Homme politique français (1937 ) «Je pense que la cohabitation n est pas un bon système dans la durée. Le problème n est pas tant que la cohabitation fasse courir le risque de la paralysie car le… … Dictionnaire des citations politiques
COHABITATION — s. f. T. de Jurispr. Il signifie, en général, L état de deux personnes qui habitent ensemble ; mais on le dit plus particulièrement D un mari et d une femme qui vivent ensemble, en remplissant les devoirs du mariage, et quelquefois, par extension … Dictionnaire de l'Academie Francaise, 7eme edition (1835)