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1 Vichy
vichy [vi∫i]masculine nouna. ( = tissu) gingham* * *viʃinom masculin1) ( tissu) gingham2) ( eau) vichy water* * *viʃi nm1) (= toile) gingham2) (= eau) Vichy water* * *A nm1 ( tissu) gingham; une robe en vichy a gingham dress;2 ( eau) vichy water; un vichy menthe vichy water with peppermint cordial.[viʃi] nom propreSeat of the French government under Maréchal Pétain from 1940 to 1944, during the German occupation. Pétain's right-wing traditionalist and authoritarian regime extolled the virtues of a new order and a National Revolution which would bring back the values of Work, Family and Fatherland. The Vichy government collaborated with the Germans and deported French Jews after 1942. Reduced to a puppet regime after the German invasion of the free zone, the government collapsed after the Allied victory. -
2 défense
défense [defɑ̃s]feminine nounb. ( = protection) protectiond. (Law) defence (Brit), defense (US) ; ( = avocat) counsel for the defence (Brit), defense attorney (US)• qu'avez-vous à dire pour votre défense ? what have you to say in your defence?e. ( = interdiction) « défense d'entrer » "no entrance"• « danger: défense d'entrer » "danger - keep out"• « défense de fumer/stationner » "no smoking/parking"• « défense d'afficher » "stick no bills"f. [d'éléphant, sanglier] tusk* * *defɑ̃s1) ( interdiction)‘défense de pêcher/fumer’ — ‘no fishing/smoking’
‘défense d'entrer’ — ‘no entry’
‘défense de toucher’ — ‘(please) do not touch’
2) ( contre un agresseur) gén, Armée, Sport defence [BrE] ( contre against); (moyens, ouvrages)défenses — defences [BrE]
courir à la défense de quelqu'un — to leap to somebody's defence [BrE]
pour sa défense, elle a dit que... — in her defence [BrE], she said that...
le budget de la défense (nationale) — the defence [BrE] budget
sans défense — ( faible) helpless; ( sans protection) unprotected
prendre la défense de quelqu'un/quelque chose — to stand up for somebody/something
3) Médecine, Psychologie defence [BrE]les défenses de l'organisme — the body's defences [BrE]
4) Zoologie (d'éléphant, de sanglier, morse) tusk* * *defɑ̃s nf1) (pour se protéger) MILITAIRE defence Grande-Bretagne defense USAministre de la défense — Minister of Defence Grande-Bretagne Defence Secretary
2) (pour protéger) defence Grande-Bretagne defense USAprendre la défense de qn — to stand up for sb, to back sb up
3) SPORT defence Grande-Bretagne defense USA4) (interdiction) prohibition"défense de fumer " — "no smoking ", "smoking prohibited"
5) [éléphant] tusk* * *défense nf1 ( interdiction) ‘défense de pêcher/nager/fumer’ ‘no fishing/swimming/smoking’; ‘défense d'entrer’ ‘no entry’; ‘défense de toucher’ ‘(please) do not touch’; défense d'en parler devant lui don't mention it in front of him; ils sont sortis malgré la défense qui leur en avait été faite they went out although they had been forbidden to do so;2 ( contre un agresseur) gén, Mil defenceGB (contre against); (moyens, ouvrages) défenses defencesGB; courir à la défense de qn to leap to sb's defenceGB; le budget de la défense (nationale) the defenceGB budget; ligne/moyens de défense line/means of defenceGB; position/armes de défense defensive position/weapons; assurer la défense du territoire to defend the country; sans défense ( faible) defencelessGB, helpless; ( sans protection) unprotected; ⇒ légitime;3 ( protection) protection; la défense de l'environnement the protection of the environment; la défense du patrimoine/de la langue française the preservation of the national heritage/of the French language; association pour la défense des consommateurs/droits de l'homme/libertés consumer rights/human rights/civil liberties organization; faire grève pour la défense de l'emploi to strike against job cuts; prendre la défense de qn/qch to stand up for sb/sth;4 ( résistance) Sport defenceGB; opposer une défense énergique to put up a stubborn defenceGB ou resistance; jouer en défense Sport to play in defenceGB;5 Physiol, Psych defenceGB; les défenses de l'organisme the body's defencesGB; les défenses immunitaires the immune system;6 (justification, plaidoyer) gén, Jur defenceGB; pour sa défense, elle a dit que… in her defenceGB, she said that…; assurer la défense d'un accusé Jur to conduct the case for the defenceGB;7 Jur ( partie défendante) defenceGB; ( defenseur) defenceGB; l'avocat de la défense counsel for the defenceGB, defense attorney US; la parole est à la défense (the counsel for) the defenceGB may now speak;8 Zool (d'éléphant, de sanglier, morse) tusk;9 la Défense commercial and residential district in Paris.défense passive civil defenceGB.ⓘ La Défense The area immediately to the north-west of Paris, developed as a modern business and residential area from the 1960s to the 1980s. Its biggest attraction is the Grande arche de la Défense, an enormous archway erected in 1989 to mark the bicentenary of the Revolution. It is also an architectural throwback to the Arc de Triomphe which, together with the Obélisque in the Place de la Concorde, can be seen from the vantage point of the steps leading up to the Grande arche itself.[defɑ̃s] nom féminin1. [interdiction] prohibition‘défense d'entrer’ ‘no admittance ou entry’‘danger, défense d'entrer’ ‘danger, keep out’‘défense d'afficher’ ‘stick no bills’‘défense de fumer’ ‘no smoking’‘défense de déposer des ordures’ ‘no dumping’2. [protection] defencepour la défense des institutions in order to defend ou to safeguard the institutions[moyen de protection] defence3. [dans un débat] defenceprendre la défense de quelqu'un/quelque chose to stand up for ou to defend somebody/something7. SPORT————————défenses nom féminin pluriel————————de défense locution adjectivale————————pour ma défense locution adverbiale,pour sa défense etc. locution adverbialein my/his etc. defenceje dirai pour ma défense que... I will say in my (own) defence that...————————sans défense locution adjectivaleDéfense nom propre féminin -
3 palais
palais [palε]1. masculine nouna. ( = édifice) palace2. compounds* * *palɛnom masculin invariable1) Anatomie palate2) ( goût) palate3) Architecture (de souverain, particulier) palace4) Droit•Phrasal Verbs:* * *palɛ nm1) (= lieu) palace2) ANATOMIE palate* * *palais nm inv1 Anat palate; palais dur/mou/fendu hard/soft/cleft palate;2 ( goût) palate; avoir le palais fin to have a fine palate; délicat au palais delicate to the palate; vin qui flatte le palais wine that delights the palate;3 Archit (de souverain, particulier) palace; palais nationaux state-owned historic buildings in Paris; Grand Palais 19th century exhibition centre in Paris;palais Bourbon seat of the French National Assembly; palais Brongniart home of the French Stock Exchange; palais du Luxembourg seat of the French Senate; palais des sports sports centreGB.[palɛ] nom masculin1. [bâtiment] palace[monument]le Grand Palais, le Petit Palaisgalleries built for the Exposition universelle in 1900, now used for art exhibitions3. [organe du goût] palateThis historic building, dating from the 13th and 14th centuries, is the prestigious venue for the most important events of the Festival d'Avignon. -
4 cocarde
cocarde [kɔkaʀd]feminine noun━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━The cocarde was originally a red, white and blue rosette used as an emblem by revolutionaries during the French Revolution. It became a symbol of the French republic and appears on military aircraft, uniforms and official vehicles.* * *kɔkaʀdnom féminin ( sur uniforme) cockade; ( emblème national) ( sur un avion) roundel; ( sur un véhicule) official badgecocarde tricolore — Histoire revolutionary cockade; ( en tissu) rosette
* * *kɔkaʀd nf* * *cocarde nf ( sur uniforme) cockade; ( emblème national) ( sur avion) roundel; ( sur véhicule) official badge; cocarde tricolore Hist revolutionary cockade; ( en tissu) rosette.[kɔkard] nom féminin1. [en tissu] rosette2. [signe - militaire] roundel ; [ - sur une voiture officielle] official logo -
5 liberté
liberté [libεʀte]1. feminine nouna. freedom• mise en liberté [de prisonnier] release• être/remettre en liberté to be/set free• liberté, égalité, fraternité liberty, equality, fraternityb. ( = loisir) moments de liberté free momentsc. ( = absence de contrainte) liberté de langage freedom of language2. compounds* * *libɛʀte1) (condition, état) freedom [U]liberté, égalité, fraternité — Liberty, Equality, Fraternity
2) ( latitude) freedom [U]n'avoir aucune liberté de manœuvre — to have no room for manoeuvre GB ou maneuver US
3) ( hardiesse) freedom4) ( droit) freedomliberté de pensée/d'expression — freedom of thought/of expression
•Phrasal Verbs:* * *libɛʀte1. nf1) freedommettre en liberté [personne, animal] — to set free, [prisonnier] to release
Il a été mis en liberté au bout d'un an de prison. — He was released after a year in prison.
2) (= latitude) freedom2. libertés nfpl(= privautés) liberties* * *liberté nf1 (condition, état) freedom ¢; choisir la liberté to choose freedom; recouvrer la liberté to regain one's freedom; amour de la liberté love of freedom; vive la liberté! long live freedom!; lutter pour la liberté to fight for freedom; Statue de la liberté Statue of Liberty; liberté, égalité, fraternité Liberty, Equality, Fraternity; élever des animaux en liberté to raise animals in a natural habitat; espèce vivant en liberté species living wild; être en liberté to be free; l'assassin est toujours en liberté the killer is still at large;2 ( latitude) freedom ¢; peu de/trop de liberté little/too much freedom; en toute liberté with complete freedom; liberté d'action/de mouvement/de choix freedom of action/of movement/of choice; donner à qn la liberté de faire to give sb freedom to do; avoir sa liberté to be free; avoir toute liberté pour faire to be quite free to do; n'avoir aucune liberté de manœuvre to have no room for manoeuvre GB ou maneuver US; ne pas avoir une grande liberté de choix not to have much choice;3 ( hardiesse) freedom; liberté de ton outspokenness; une liberté qui frise l'impertinence outspokenness bordering on impertinence; liberté d'esprit independence of mind; s'exprimer avec une étonnante liberté to be remarkably outspoken; prendre la liberté de faire to take the liberty of doing; prendre des libertés avec qn/qch to take liberties with sb/sth;4 ( droit) freedom; liberté de pensée/d'expression/d'opinion/de parole freedom of thought/of expression/of opinion/of speech; libertés individuelles/fondamentales individual/fundamental liberties; porter atteinte aux libertés to undermine civil liberties.liberté d'association Jur, Pol freedom of association; liberté civile Jur civil liberty; liberté conditionnelle Jur parole; mettre qn en liberté conditionnelle Jur to release sb on parole; liberté de conscience Pol freedom of conscience; liberté de l'enseignement Jur freedom of choice in education; liberté d'installation Jur, UE freedom of establishment; liberté de la presse Pol freedom of the press; liberté des prix Comm, Jur free prices (pl); liberté provisoire Jur provisional release (pending trial); en liberté provisoire provisionally released; mettre en liberté provisoire to release provisionally; mise en liberté provisoire provisional release; liberté surveillée Jur probation; en liberté surveillée on probation; mise en liberté surveillée release on probation; mettre en liberté surveillée to release on probation; liberté du travail Jur freedom of contract; libertés publiques Jur, Pol civil liberties; libertés syndicales Jur, Pol trade union rights.[libɛrte] nom fémininle pays de la liberté the land of the free ou of freedomliberté conditionnelle ou sur parole (release on) paroleêtre mis en liberté provisoire to be granted bail, to be released on bailliberté d'association/du travail right of association/to workliberté du culte/d'opinion/de mouvement freedom of worship/thought/movementliberté d'entreprise free enterprise, right to set up a businessliberté de la presse/d'expression freedom of the press/of speechLiberté, Égalité, Fraternité Liberty, Equality, Fraternity (motto of the French Revolution and, today, of France)3. [indépendance] freedomliberté de jugement/de pensée freedom of judgment/thoughtavoir toute liberté pour décider to be totally free ou to have full freedom to decidereprendre sa liberté [sentimentale] to regain one's freedom4. [temps libre] free time5. [désinvolture, irrévérence]il y a une trop grande liberté dans la traduction the translation is not close enough to the original ou is too free6. ÉCONOMIEinstaurer la liberté des prix to end ou to abolish price controls————————libertés nom féminin plurielatteinte aux/défense des libertés attack on/defence of civil liberties2. [privautés]prendre ou se permettre des libertés avec quelqu'un to take liberties with somebodyj'ai pris quelques libertés avec la recette I took a few liberties with ou I didn't stick entirely to the recipe————————en liberté locution adjectivale & locution adverbialea. [personne] to be free ou at largeb. [animal] to be free ou in the wilden toute liberté locution adverbiale -
6 Bastille Day
14th July. Le quatorze Juillet The French national holiday, celebrating the fall of the Bastille during the French Revolution, on 14th July 1789. This date was not officially declared France's national day until almost a century later, in 1880. The day is traditionally celebrated by a flamboyant military parade along the Champs Elysées, in Paris, in the presence of the President of the Republic.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Bastille Day
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7 Elitism
In spite of the national commitment to the principles of Liberty, Equality and Fraternity, France remains marked by traditions of elitism that are ingrained in the very fibre of society. The French Revolution was supposed to have done away with privileges and elites, and usher in an age of greater equality; in the event, it - and subsequent upheavals - changed the nature of the elites in France, without making a great impact on the underlying system. Indeed, the notion of 'republican elites' is one that was fundamental in the shaping of post-Revolutionary France.In terms of local power, the role of local notables - important figures - remains strong. Notables frequently fulfil multiple roles in local administration and structures, sometimes combining these with elected positions on a regional or national scale, giving them and their close supporters a considerable degree of power. (See Cumul des mandats). They are frequently referred to as les elites locales. The process of devolution in France, set in motion in 1982, has had the effect of strengthening the power base of local elites.The French education system, while offering a good quality non-selective education to all children at lower levels, is increasingly elitist towards the top, particularly when it comes to preparing for higher education. Manyclasses préparatoires, particularly those preparing students for entrance to the top institutions of higher education, called Grandes Ecoles, are very selective, and the selection process - and for that matter the system itself - often disfavours students from humble or poorer backgrounds. The Grandes Ecoles themselves, tailor-made to the needs of the nation, train the future leaders and decision makers in specific fields of the public or private sector, producing very close networks of former students, that make the British concept of the "old-boy network" seem rather informal.Places in the top grandes écoles and some other institutions are highly sought after, as graduates from these schools are seen in France as a sort of caste, membership of which is highly recommended, if not essential, for anyone wanting to reach the top. The classic example of this is the ENA, Ecole Normale d'Administration, the Grande Ecole designed to train top civil servants and future political leaders. In the corridors of French power, many if not most of the top positions are occupied by Enarques, graduates of the ENA. In 1967, Jean-Pierre Chevènement - himself an Enarque, and later to be Minister of the Interior under François Mitterrand - coined the word Enarchie, to define the French system of state elites.As for business elites, a 2006 review in the Economist observed that they "often seem to owe more allegiance to the group from which they are drawn than to the international corporations they work for."Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Elitism
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8 Extremism
Compared to most of its European neighbours, France is a country with a surprising level of tolerance of extremism. For instance, in the first round of the 2002 Presidential elections, virtually a third of all votes cast went to an extremist candidate in the first round of voting, on a turnout of 71% of the electorate. Almost 20% of votes went to the extreme right-wing Front National or ex-FN candidates, and 13.81% was split among four trotskyist or communist candidates. While this can be seen in part as a form of protest vote, or lack of confidence in mainstream political parties, it also illustrates the degree to which France remains a polarised society.Extremism has long historic roots in France, going back to absolutism and the collaboration of the Vichy régime on the one hand, and the excesses of the French Revolution on the other. However its current vigour can also be attributed to the fact that mainstream political parties in modern France, on the left and on the right, have done their bit to strenghten the position of extremist parties. Conservative parties have a long history of assimilating centre-left and socialist parties with the Communists and other far-left parties, while the Socialists have persistently sought to make political capital by portraying the mainstream conservative parties as the natural bedfellows of the far right. The paradoxical result has been to give credence and respectability to extremist parties and leaders such as Jean Marie Le Pen of the National Front, or Arlette Laguiller of Lutte Ouvrière.Furthermore, in their keenness to demonstrate even-handedness, French television stations and the media have persistently given coverage to charismatic politicians of the left and the right, turning people such as Le Pen, Laguiller or more recently Olivier Besancenot, into popular chat-show guests.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Extremism
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9 août
c blackaoût° [u(t)]masculine noun━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━✎ Les noms de mois s'écrivent avec une majuscule en anglais.* * *u(t)nom masculin August* * *u(t) nmSee:* * *août ⇒ Les mois de l'année nm August.[u(t)] nom masculinla nuit du 4 août 1789the night during which feudal privileges were abolished by the 'Assemblée Constituante' (considered to be one of the starting points of the French Revolution)le 15 aoûtfeast of The Assumption, national holiday in France well-known as a time of heavy traffic congestionvoir aussi link=mars mars -
10 bleu
bleu, e [blø]1. adjectivea. [couleur] blueb. ( = meurtri) bruisedc. [steak] very rare2. masculine nouna. ( = couleur) blue• le grand bleu ( = mer) the blue depths of the seac. ( = vêtement) bleu(s) de travail overallse. ( = fromage) blue cheese3. compounds━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► When bleu is combined with another word, such as clair or ciel, to indicate a shade, there is no agreement with the noun: des yeux bleus, but des yeux bleu clair.* * *
1.
bleue blø adjectif1) ( couleur) blue2) Culinaire [entrecôte, viande] very rare
2.
nom masculin1) ( couleur) blue2) ( ecchymose) bruise3) ( vêtement)bleu (de travail) — ( combinaison) overalls (pl); ( veste et pantalon) workman's blue cotton jacket and trousers
4) ( fromage) blue cheese5) (colloq) ( nouvelle recrue) soldiers' slang rookie (colloq); ( débutant) beginner••avoir une peur bleue de quelque chose — to be scared stiff (colloq) of something
* * *blø bleu, -e1. adj1) (couleur, chose) blue3) (locution)2. nm1) (= couleur) blueLe bleu est ma couleur préférée. — Blue is my favourite colour.
2) (= contusion) bruiseIl a un bleu au front. — He's got a bruise on his forehead.
3) (= vêtement) (bleu de travail) overalls pl Grande-Bretagne coveralls pl USA4) CUISINE (= fromage) blue cheese3. nm/f(= novice) greenhorn4. nfla grande bleue (= la Méditerranée) — the Mediterranean
* * *A adj1 ⇒ Les couleurs ( couleur) blue; des yeux bleus blue eyes; bleu vert blue-green; j'ai les lèvres toutes bleues my lips are all blue; bleu de froid [personne, doigts] blue with cold; bleu de peur white with fear; ⇒ grand;2 Culin [entrecôte, viande] very rare.B nm1 ⇒ Les couleurs ( couleur) blue; le ciel était d'un bleu magnifique the sky was a magnificent blue;2 ( ecchymose) bruise; avoir un bleu sur le bras/la cuisse to have a bruise on one's arm/thigh; être couvert de bleus to be covered in bruises; se faire un bleu to bruise oneself;3 ( vêtement) bleu (de travail) ( combinaison) overalls (pl); ( veste et pantalon) workman's blue cotton jacket and trousers;4 ( fromage) blue cheese;5 ○( nouvelle recrue) soldiers' slang rookie○; ( débutant) beginner, greenhorn○; se faire avoir comme un bleu to be completely conned.bleu ardoise slate blue; bleu azur azure blue; bleu canard peacock blue; bleu ciel sky blue; bleu de cobalt cobalt blue; bleu électrique electric blue; bleu horizon sky blue; bleu lavande lavender blue; bleu marine navy blue; bleu de méthylène methylene blue; bleu noir blue-black; bleu nuit midnight blue; bleu océan ocean blue; bleu outremer ultramarine; bleu pétrole petrol-blue; bleu de Prusse Prussian blue; bleu roi royal blue; bleu saphir sapphire blue; bleu turquoise turquoise blue.avoir une peur bleue de qch to be scared stiff○ of sth; j'ai eu une peur bleue I had a bad scare.1. [coloré] blueavoir les yeux bleus to have blue eyes, to be blue-eyed3. (locution)avoir une peur bleue to have the fright of one's life, to be terrifiedavoir une peur bleue de quelque chose/quelqu'un to be terrified ou scared stiff of something/somebody————————, bleue [blø] nom masculin, nom fémininbleu nom masculin1. [couleur] blueadmirer le bleu du ciel/de la mer to admire the blueness of the sky/sea2. [ecchymose] bruiseêtre couvert de bleus to be black and blue, to be covered in bruises3. [vêtement]4. [fromage] blue cheese————————bleue nom féminin[mer]————————au bleu locution adjectivale————————les Bleus nom masculin plurielsport -
11 Bibliothèque Nationale
The French national library, known to academics as the BN, was historically sited in the First arrondissement of Paris. As a deposit library, the BN receives a copy of every book and periodical published in France. It also contains the most important French collection of manuscripts and old printed books from before the Revolution. Previously located in the Rue Richelieu, in the 1st arondissement of central Paris, the library moved in 1996 to custom-designed new buildings beside the Seine in the 13th arondissement known as the Bibliothèque François Mitterrand. The last of France's " grands projects" of the 20th century, the building attracted criticism for environmentally-poor design - in particular for the idea of storing books in eighteen-story glass-clad skyscraper buildings.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Bibliothèque Nationale
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12 July 14th
Le quatorze Juillet, Bastille Day, the French National Day, and a public holiday. This day commemorates the fall of the Bastille prison in 1789, the defining moment of the French Revolution.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > July 14th
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