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1 ache
ache [eɪk]2. noundouleur f* * *[eɪk] 1.2.aches and pains — douleurs fpl
1) ( physically) [person] avoir mal; [limb, back] faire mal2) littér ( suffer emotionally)to ache with — mourir de [humiliation, despair]
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2 ache
ache [eɪk](a) (feel pain) faire mal, être douloureux;∎ I ache all over j'ai mal partout;∎ my head/tooth aches j'ai mal à la tête/aux dents;∎ figurative her heart ached to see them so unhappy elle souffrait de les voir si malheureux(b) (feel desire) avoir très envie;∎ she was aching for them to leave elle mourait d'envie de les voir partir2 noun(physical) douleur f; (emotional) peine f;∎ a dull ache une douleur sourde;∎ aches and pains douleurs fpl, maux mpl -
3 ache
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4 stomach
stomach [ˈstʌmək]1. noun[+ behaviour] supporter3. compounds* * *['stʌmək] 1.to have a pain in one's stomach — avoir mal au ventre or à l'estomac
2. 3.to have a strong stomach — lit, fig avoir l'estomac bien accroché (colloq)
transitive verb supporter [person, attitude]I can't stomach that guy! — (colloq) je ne peux pas encaisser (colloq) ce type! (colloq)
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5 feel
feel [fi:l]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. noun━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► vb: pret, ptp felt━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. nouna. ( = texture) toucher mb. ( = sensation) sensation fc. ( = impression) you have to get the feel of a new car il faut se faire à une nouvelle voiture• the palms bring a Mediterranean feel to the garden les palmiers donnent un aspect méditerranéen au jardind. ( = intuition) to have a feel for languages être doué pour les languesa. ( = touch) toucher ; ( = explore with one's fingers) palper• she felt the jacket to see if it was made of wool elle a touché la veste pour voir si c'était de la laine• he got out of bed and felt his way to the telephone il s'est levé et a avancé à tâtons jusqu'au téléphone• she's still feeling her way in her new job elle n'est pas encore complètement habituée à son nouveau travailb. ( = experience physically) [+ blow, caress, pain] sentirc. ( = be affected by) to feel the cold être sensible au froidd. ( = experience emotionally) [+ sympathy] éprouver ; [+ grief] ressentir• to feel o.s. blushing se sentir rougire. ( = believe) penser• he felt it necessary to point out... il a jugé nécessaire de faire remarquer...• I feel strongly that... je suis convaincu que...• I can't help feeling that something is wrong je ne peux m'empêcher de penser que quelque chose ne va pas• how do you feel today? comment vous sentez-vous aujourd'hui ?• to feel cold/hot/hungry/thirsty avoir froid/chaud/faim/soifb. (emotionally) I couldn't help feeling envious je ne pouvais pas m'empêcher d'éprouver de la jalousie• I feel sure that... je suis sûr que...• how do you feel about him? que pensez-vous de lui ?c. ► to feel like sth ( = want) avoir envie de qch• do you feel like a walk? ça vous dit d'aller vous promener ?d. ( = have impression) I felt as if I was going to faint j'avais l'impression que j'allais m'évanouire. ( = give impression) to feel hard/soft [object] être dur/doux au toucherf. ( = grope) she felt in her pocket for some change elle a fouillé dans sa poche pour trouver de la monnaie* * *[fiːl] 1.1) (atmosphere, impression created) atmosphère f2) ( sensation to the touch) sensation f3) (act of touching, feeling)let me have a feel — ( touch) laisse-moi toucher; (hold, weigh) laisse-moi soupeser
4) (familiarity, understanding)2.to get the feel of — se faire à [controls, system]
transitive verb (prét, pp felt)1) ( experience) éprouver [affection, desire, pride]; ressentir [hostility, obligation, effects]2) ( believe)I feel deeply ou strongly that they are wrong — j'ai la profonde conviction qu'ils ont tort
3) ( physically) sentir [blow, draught, heat]; ressentir [ache, stiffness, effects]she feels/doesn't feel the cold — elle est/n'est pas frileuse
4) ( touch deliberately) tâter [texture, washing, cloth]; palper [patient, body part, parcel]to feel one's way — lit avancer à tâtons; fig tâter le terrain
5) ( sense) avoir conscience de [presence, tension, seriousness, irony]3.intransitive verb (prét, pp felt)1) ( emotionally) se sentir [sad, happy, nervous, safe]; être [sure, surprised]; avoir l'impression d'être [trapped, betrayed]to feel afraid/ashamed — avoir peur/honte
to feel as if ou as though — avoir l'impression que
how does it feel ou what does it feel like to be a dad? — qu'est-ce que ça fait d'être papa?; feel for
2) ( physically) se sentir [ill, better, tired]to feel hot/thirsty — avoir chaud/soif
3) ( create certain sensation) être [cold, smooth]; avoir l'air [eerie]4) ( want)5) (touch, grope)to feel in — fouiller dans [bag, pocket, drawer]
4.to feel along — tâtonner le long de [edge, wall]; feel around, feel for
Phrasal Verbs:- feel for- feel out -
6 stiffen
stiffen ['stɪfən](a) (paper, fabric) raidir, renforcer(c) (make painful → arm, leg, muscle) courbaturer;∎ his joints had become stiffened by arthritis ses articulations s'étaient raidies à cause de l'arthrite(d) (strengthen → resistance, resolve) renforcer(a) (harden → paper, fabric) devenir raide ou rigide(b) (tense, stop moving) se raidir;∎ everybody in the room suddenly stiffened tout à coup, tout le monde dans la pièce retint son souffle ou s'immobilisa(d) (become hard to move → hinge, handle, door) se coincer(e) (start to ache) s'ankyloser
См. также в других словарях:
ache — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ constant, deep (figurative), dull, nagging, throbbing ▪ familiar ▪ muscular, st … Collocations dictionary
ache — ► NOUN ▪ a continuous or prolonged dull pain. ► VERB 1) suffer from an ache. 2) (ache for/to do) feel intense desire for or to do. DERIVATIVES aching adjective. ORIGIN Old English … English terms dictionary
ache for — verb To desire, or want something, or someone, very much. He ached for her as hed never ached for any woman … Wiktionary
ache — {{11}}ache (n.) early 15c., æche, from O.E. æce, from P.Gmc. *akiz, from same source as ACHE (Cf. ache) (v.). {{12}}ache (v.) O.E. acan to ache, suffer pain, from P.Gmc. *akanan, perhaps from a PIE root *ag es fault, guilt, represented also in… … Etymology dictionary
ache — [[t]e͟ɪk[/t]] aches, aching, ached 1) VERB If you ache or a part of your body aches, you feel a steady, fairly strong pain. [V adv/prep] The glands in her neck were swollen, her head was throbbing and she ached all over... My leg is giving me… … English dictionary
ache — [OE] Of the noun ache and the verb ache, the verb came first. In Old English it was acan. From it was formed the noun, æce or ece. For many centuries, the distinction between the two was preserved in their pronunciation: in the verb, the ch was… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
ache — [OE] Of the noun ache and the verb ache, the verb came first. In Old English it was acan. From it was formed the noun, æce or ece. For many centuries, the distinction between the two was preserved in their pronunciation: in the verb, the ch was… … Word origins
ache */ — I UK [eɪk] / US verb [intransitive] Word forms ache : present tense I/you/we/they ache he/she/it aches present participle aching past tense ached past participle ached 1) if part of your body aches, you feel a continuous pain there that is… … English dictionary
ache — 1 verb (I) 1 if part of your body aches, you feel a continuous, but not very sharp pain there: The noise of the traffic made my head ache. | an aching back 2 ache to do sth/for sth to want to do or have something very much: I was aching to tell… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
ache — ache1 [ eık ] noun count * 1. ) a pain that is continuous and unpleasant, but usually not very strong: a dull ache (=slight, but still unpleasant): There was a dull ache in his stomach. aches and pains (=minor pains that continue over a period of … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
ache — /eɪk / (say ayk) verb (i) (ached, aching) 1. to suffer pain; have or be in continuous pain: her whole body ached. 2. to be eager; yearn; long: to be aching for some chocolate. –noun 3. pain of some duration, as opposed to sudden twinges or… …