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1 arbitre
arbitre [aʀbitʀ]masculine nouna. (Boxing, football, rugby) referee ; (Hockey, tennis) umpire• faire l'arbitre to referee or umpireb. ( = conciliateur) arbiter* * *aʀbitʀnom masculin1) Sport (en boxe, football, rugby) referee; (en base-ball, cricket, tennis) umpire2) fig3) Droit ( de différend) arbitrator* * *aʀbitʀ nmf1) SPORT FOOTBALL referee, TENNIS, CRICKET umpire2) fig arbiter, judge3) DROIT arbitrator* * *arbitre nm2 fig ( expert) arbiter; l'arbitre suprême the Supreme Arbiter; elle est l'arbitre des élégances she's the arbiter of all things elegant; être l'arbitre d'une consultation électorale to hold the balance of power in an election;3 Jur ( de différend) arbitrator.[arbitr] nom masculinexercer un rôle d'arbitre to act as arbitrator, to arbitrate[au volley-ball, tennis, cricket] umpire3. PHILOSOPHIE -
2 arbitre
arbitre [aarbietr]〈m.〉1 scheidsman, -vrouw ⇒ arbiter♦voorbeelden:m1) arbiter, scheidsman/-vrouw -
3 arbitre des élégances
(arbitre des élégances [или du goût])законодатель мод (лат. arbiter elegantiarum - прозвище Петрония в Древнем Риме)Puis très raide, un carreau dans l'œil, parut M. Daniel Salomon, arbitre des élégances. (A. France, Le Lys rouge.) — Затем появился г-н Даниель Саломон - законодатель мод, высокомерный, с моноклем в глазу.
Dictionnaire français-russe des idiomes > arbitre des élégances
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4 tribunal
masculine noun• tribunal judiciaire/d'exception judicial/special court► tribunal correctionnel ≈ magistrates' court (dealing with criminal matters)► tribunal d'instance ≈ magistrates' court (dealing with civil matters)* * *pl - aux tʀibynal, o nom masculin1) Droit (lieu, magistrats) courtporter une affaire devant les tribunaux — to bring ou take a case to court
2) figle tribunal de l'histoire/de l'humanité — the judgment of history/of humanity
•Phrasal Verbs:* * *tʀibynal, otribunaux mpl nm1) DROIT court2) MILITAIRE tribunal* * *1 Jur (lieu, magistrats) court; aller devant les tribunaux [affaire] to be taken before the court; [personne] to go to court; porter une affaire devant les tribunaux to bring ou take a matter to court; traîner qn devant les tribunaux to take sb to court; le tribunal a décidé que the court has decided that; séance/vacation/rentrée d'un tribunal court session/vacation/reopening;2 fig tribunal de l'histoire/de l'humanité the judgment seat of history/humanity; tribunal de Dieu, tribunal suprême the judgment seat of God; le tribunal des hommes the justice of men; le tribunal de l'opinion the bar of public opinion; s'ériger en tribunal du goût/des mœurs to set oneself up as an arbiter of taste/morals.tribunal administratif ≈ administrative court; tribunal de commerce court dealing with trade disputes; tribunal correctionnel court trying criminal cases of a fairly serious nature; tribunal ecclésiastique ecclesiastical court; tribunal d'exception ≈ specialized court; tribunal de grande instance higher level court (presided over by three judges dealing with cases of a fairly serious nature); tribunal incompétent unqualified court; tribunal d'instance court of first instance (presided over by a single judge dealing with less serious cases); tribunal militaire military tribunal GB ou court US; tribunal de police police court (dealing with petty offencesGB punishable by a fine); tribunal pour enfants juvenile court; tribunal de première instance = tribunal de grande instance; tribunal révolutionnaire revolutionary tribunal.( pluriel tribunaux) [tribynal, o] nom masculinporter une affaire devant le tribunal ou les tribunaux to take a matter to court ou before the Courtsa. [litiges] commercial courtb. [liquidations] bankruptcy courttribunal de grande instance ≃ Crown Court2. MILITAIRE -
5 juge
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6 arbitre
1. arbiter2. rozjemca3. sędzia -
7 tête
n. f.1. Avoir la tête de l'emploi (iron.): To 'look the part'. Les croque-morts n'ontpas toujours la tête de l'emploi, c'est souvent des rigolos! Undertakers aren't always the mournful buggers we expect them to be!3. Faire la mauvaise tête: To be 'pig-headed', to be obstreperous and reluctant to comply.4. Avoir ses têtes: To 'have one's (little) favourites', to let oneself be ruled by likes and dislikes where relationships at work are concerned.5. Avoir une tête à coucher dehors avec un billet de logetnent: To have an 'ugly mug', to have an unattractive face (in fact, to have the kind of features that would even get you turned a way from a welfare hostel).6. Faire un prix à la tête du client: To quote a price according to the likely means of a customer. Au garage, lesprix sont un peu à la tête du client! If you drive a Rolls, they'll charge the earth for repairs!7. Tête de pipe: Portrait-photograph. J'ai vu sa tête de pipe dans le canard! I've seen his mug somewhere in a paper!10. Affaire tête de lard (pol.): Dead-end enquiry, one where witnesses and accused alike make the police's job more arduous by refusing to co-operate.11. Se payer la tête de quelqu'un: To 'take the piss out of someone', to 'take the mickey', to poke fun at someone.12. Etre tombé sur la tête: To be 'bonkers', 'potty', to be mad. T'es tombé sur la tête, quoi?! You crazy in the head?!a To 'take a header', to dive into the water.b (fig.): To 'go under', to become bankrupt.14. Petite tête! (jocular form of address): Salut, petite tête! Mornin' mate! Alors, comment ça va, petite tête?! Well, how's tricks?!15. Cause à mon cul, ma tête est malade! (sarcastic retort): 'Get knotted'—I don't want to hear what you've got to say!16. La tête et lesjambes: The combination of brains and brawn. (The expression courir avec la tête et les jambes originates from the racing cyclist's slang and refers to competitors who use critical judgement when exerting physical effort. In the 1960s, a television quiz-cum-competition with that name teamed up scholars and sportsmen to compete for prizes.)17. Tenir la tête (Gambling slang): To act as judge and arbiter at the tables. (August Le Breton in his L 'ARGOT CHEZ LES VRAIS DE VRAI explains that this 'refereeing' activity is often given to a 'cleaned-out' player by a gambling baron; the position carries a small commission on stakes.) -
8 arbitre1
m. (lat. arbiter) 1. арбитър, мирови съдия; 2. спорт. рефер, съдия; 3. посредник, помирител, арбитър; 4. който дава тон; 5. филос. libre arbitre1 свободна воля.
См. также в других словарях:
arbiter — ar·bi·ter / är bə tər/ n [Latin, onlooker, arbitrator]: arbitrator Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. arbiter … Law dictionary
Arbiter — may refer to:*Arbiter (electronics), in computing and electronics a circuitry component *Arbiter (Halo), a character in the Halo video game series *Arbitration, in law a method of dispute resolution *HMS Arbiter (D31), an escort aircraft carrier… … Wikipedia
arbiter — arbiter, arbitrator Arbiter, a more literary word (16c), is now restricted to the meaning ‘a judge or authority’ as in an arbiter of taste. For the meaning ‘a person appointed to settle a dispute’, the slightly older form arbitrator (15c) is now… … Modern English usage
arbiter — ar‧bi‧ter [ˈɑːbtə ǁ ˈɑːrbtər] noun [countable] 1. HUMAN RESOURCES a person or organization with the authority to decide how something should be done: • The Food and Drug Administration is the final arbiter of food labeling. 2. ORGANIZATIONS … Financial and business terms
Arbiter — Ar bi*ter, n. [L. arbiter; ar (for ad) + the root of betere to go; hence properly, one who comes up to look on.] 1. A person appointed, or chosen, by parties to determine a controversy between them. [1913 Webster] Note: In modern usage,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
arbiter — {{/stl 13}}{{stl 8}}rz. mos I, Mc. arbitertrze; lm M. arbitertrzy {{/stl 8}}{{stl 20}} {{/stl 20}}{{stl 12}}1. {{/stl 12}}{{stl 8}}praw. {{/stl 8}}{{stl 7}} rozjemca powołany przez sąd lub strony wiodące spór do rozstrzygnięcia tego sporu; sędzia … Langenscheidt Polski wyjaśnień
Arbiter — Ar bi*ter, v. t. To act as arbiter between. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
arbiter — (n.) late 14c., from O.Fr. arbitre or directly from L. arbiter one who goes somewhere (as witness or judge), in classical Latin used of spectators and eye witnesses, in law, he who hears and decides a case, a judge, umpire, mediator; from ad to… … Etymology dictionary
Arbĭter — (lat.), Schiedsrichter. A. datus, Richter, welchen der Prätor in Sachen bonae fidei ernannte, um nicht nach vorgeschriebenen Formeln (wie beim Judex), aber nach den Gesetzen, zu entscheiden; A. receptus, der von den Parteien durch… … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
Arbĭter — (lat.), Schiedsrichter … Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon
Arbiter — Arbiter, lat., der Schiedsrichter … Herders Conversations-Lexikon