-
61 putting
present participle; see put -
62 ridding
present participle; see rid -
63 shedding
present participle; see shed II -
64 shutting
present participle; see shut -
65 singeing
present participle; see singe -
66 slitting
present participle; see slit -
67 spinning
present participle; = spin -
68 tying
present participle; see tie -
69 vie
present participle - vying; verb(to compete with: The two parents vied with each other in their attempts to gain the children's love.) rivaliser -
70 vying
present participle; see vie -
71 Usage note : for
for my sister= pour ma sœurfor the garden= pour le jardinfor me= pour moiFor particular usages see the entry for.When for is used as a preposition indicating purpose followed by a verb it is translated by pour + infinitive:for cleaning windows= pour nettoyer les vitresWhen for is used in the construction to be + adjective + for + pronoun + infinitive the translation in French is être + indirect pronoun + adjective + de + infinitive:it’s impossible for me to stay= il m’est impossible de resterit was hard for him to understand that…= il lui était difficile de comprendre que…it will be difficult for her to accept the changes= il lui sera difficile d’accepter les changementsFor the construction to be waiting for sb to do see the entry wait.For particular usages see the entry for.In time expressionsfor is used in English after a verb in the progressive present perfect tense to express the time period of something that started in the past and is still going on. To express this French uses a verb in the present tense + depuis:I have been waiting for three hours (and I am still waiting)= j’attends depuis trois heureswe’ve been together for two years (and we’re still together)= nous sommes ensemble depuis deux ansWhen for is used in English after a verb in the past perfect tense, French uses the imperfect + depuis:I had been waiting for two hours (and was still waiting)= j’attendais depuis deux heuresfor is used in English negative sentences with the present perfect tense to express the time that has elapsed since something has happened. To express this, French uses the same tense as English (the perfect) + depuis:I haven’t seen him for ten years (and I still haven’t seen him)= je ne l’ai pas vu depuis dix ansIn spoken French, there is another way of expressing this: ça fait or il y a dix ans que je ne l’ai pas vu.When for is used in English in negative sentences after a verb in the past perfect tense, French uses the past perfect + depuis:I hadn’t seen him for ten years= je ne l’avais pas vu depuis dix ans, or (in spoken French) ça faisait or il y avait dix ans que je ne l’avais pas vufor is used in English after the preterite to express the time period of something that happened in the past and is no longer going on. Here French uses the present perfect + pendant:last Sunday I gardened for two hours= dimanche dernier, j’ai jardiné pendant deux heuresfor is used in English after the present progressive tense or the future tense to express an anticipated time period in the future. Here French uses the present or the future tense + pour:I’m going to Rome for six weeks= je vais à Rome pour six semainesI will go to Rome for six weeks= j’irai à Rome pour six semainesNote, however, that when the verb to be is used in the future with for to emphasize the period of time, French uses the future + pendant:I will be in Rome for six weeks= je serai à Rome pendant six semaineshe will be away for three days= il sera absent pendant trois joursFor particular usages see A13, 14, 15 and 16 in the entry for.for is often used in English to form a structure with nouns, adjectives and verbs (weakness for, eager for, apply for, fend for etc.). For translations, consult the appropriate noun, adjective or verb entry (weakness, eager, apply, fend etc.). -
72 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: -
73 ever
ever [ˈevər]a. ( = at any time) jamais• have you ever seen her? l'avez-vous déjà vue ?• do you ever see her? est-ce qu'il vous arrive de la voir ?• faster/more beautiful than ever plus vite/plus beau que jamaisb. ( = at all times) they lived happily ever after ils vécurent heureux• as if I ever would! moi, faire ça !• why ever not? mais enfin, pourquoi pas ?• ever since then they have been very careful depuis ils sont très prudents► ever so (inf) (British)• if ever you meet him... si jamais tu le rencontres...* * *['evə(r)] 1.1) ( at any time)rarely, if ever — rarement sinon jamais
hardly ever — rarement, presque jamais
she's a liar if ever I saw one ou if ever there was one! — c'est une menteuse ou je ne m'y connais pas!
2) ( when making comparisons)more beautiful than ever — plus beau/belle que jamais
there are more working women than ever before — les femmes n'ont jamais été aussi nombreuses à travailler
3) (at all times, always) toujoursyours ever — ( in letter) bien à toi or à vous
4) (expressing anger, irritation)have you ever heard/seen anything like it? — as-tu jamais entendu/vu rien de pareil?
5) ( expressing surprise)why ever not? — GB pourquoi pas?
6) GB ( very)ever so — si
ever so glad — si heureux/-euse
7) (colloq) ( in exclamations)2.do I ever! — ( emphatic yes) et comment!
ever- combining form3.ever-growing ou -increasing — toujours croissant
as ever adverbial phrase comme toujours4.ever more adverbial phrase de plus en plus5.ever since adverbial phrase, conjunctional phrase depuis -
74 now
now [naʊ]1. adverba. ( = at this time) maintenant ; ( = these days, at the moment) actuellement ; ( = at that time) alors• the couple, who now have three children... ce couple, qui a maintenant trois enfants...• what are you doing now? qu'est-ce que tu fais en ce moment ?• it's now or never! c'est le moment ou jamais !• before now people thought that... auparavant on pensait que...• long before now it was realized that... il y a longtemps déjà, on comprenait que...► by now• by now it was clear that... dès lors, il était évident que...► even now• people do that even now les gens font ça encore aujourd'hui► (every) now and again, (every) now and then de temps en temps► for now• from now until then d'ici là► from now on (with present and future tense) à partir de maintenant ; (with past tense) dès lors► till or until or up to now ( = till this moment) jusqu'à présent ; ( = till that moment) jusque-làb. (without reference to time) now! bon !• now, now! allons, allons !• now, Simon! (warning) allons, Simon !• come now! allons !• well, now! eh bien !• now then, let's start! bon, commençons !• now then, what's all this? alors, qu'est-ce que c'est que ça ?• now, they had been looking for him all morning or ils avaient passé toute la matinée à sa recherche• now do be quiet for a minute bon, ça suffit !2. conjunction* * *[naʊ] 1. 2.1) ( at the present moment) maintenantany time ou moment now — d'un moment à l'autre
now fast, now slowly — tantôt vite, tantôt lentement
(every) now and then ou again — de temps en temps
2) ( with preposition)before ou until now — jusqu'à présent
3) ( in the past)by now it was too late — à ce moment-là, il était trop tard
4) ( without temporal force)now Paul would never do a thing like that — Paul, lui, ne ferait jamais une chose pareille
now! now! —
there now, what did I tell you? — eh bien, qu'est-ce que je t'avais dit?
now then, let's get down to work — bon, reprenons le travail
-
75 tense
tense [tens]1. nountemps m2. adjectivetendu ; [time, period] de tension• to become tense [person] se crisper• they were tense with anticipation ils attendaient, crispés[+ muscles] contracter[muscles, person, animal] se contracter* * *[tens] 1.noun Linguistics temps m2. 3.the present tense — le présent (of de)
transitive verb tendre [muscle]; raidir [body]Phrasal Verbs:- tense up -
76 will
will [wɪl]1. modal verba. (future)━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► In the following examples the main verb is future, the other is present: in French both verbs must be in the future tense.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• what will he do when he finds out? qu'est-ce qu'il fera lorsqu'il s'en apercevra ?━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• will he come too? -- yes he will est-ce qu'il viendra aussi ? -- oui• I'll go with you -- oh no you won't! je vais vous accompagner -- non, certainement pas !━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► When won't is used in question tags, eg won't it, won't you the translation is often n'est-ce pas.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• you will come to see us, won't you? vous viendrez nous voir, n'est-ce pas ?• that'll be okay, won't it? ça ira, n'est-ce pas ?━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► When future meaning is made clear by words like tomorrow, or next week, the present tense can also be used in French.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• he'll be here tomorrow il arrive or il arrivera demain• I'll phone you tonight je t'appelle or je t'appellerai ce soir► will have + past participle━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► When will indicates that something commonly happens, the present is used in French.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• the car will do 150km/h cette voiture fait du 150 km/h• thieves will often keep a stolen picture for years les voleurs gardent souvent un tableau volé pendant des annéesd. (requests, orders)━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► The present tense of vouloir is often used.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• will you be quiet! veux-tu (bien) te taire !• will you please sit down! voulez-vous vous asseoir, s'il vous plaît !• will you help me? -- yes I will tu veux m'aider ? -- oui, je veux bien• will you promise to be careful? tu me promets de faire attention ?► won't ( = refuse(s) to)• will you promise? -- no I won't tu me le promets ? -- none. (invitations, offers) will you have a cup of coffee? voulez-vous prendre un café ?• will you join us for a drink? voulez-vous prendre un verre avec nous ?• won't you come with us? vous ne voulez pas venir (avec nous) ?f. ( = must) that will be the taxi ça doit être le taxipreterite, past participlea. ( = urge by willpower) he was willing her to look at him il l'adjurait intérieurement de le regarderb. ( = bequeath) to will sth to sb léguer qch à qn3. nouna. ( = determination) volonté f• to do sth against sb's will faire qch contre la volonté de qn (PROV) where there's a will there's a way(PROV) vouloir c'est pouvoir► at willb. ( = document) testament m• the last will and testament of... les dernières volontés de...* * *I 1. [wɪl, əl]modal auxiliary1) ( to express the future)she'll help you — elle t'aidera; ( in the near future) elle va t'aider
2) (expressing consent, willingness)‘will you help me?’ - ‘yes, I will’ — ‘est-ce que tu m'aideras?’ - ‘oui, bien sûr’
‘have a chocolate’ - ‘thank you, I will’ — ‘prends un chocolat’ - ‘volontiers, merci’
do what ou as you will — fais ce que tu veux
will do! — (colloq) d'accord!
3) (in commands, requests)will you pass the salt, please? — est-ce que tu peux me passer le sel, s'il te plaît?
‘I can give the speech’ - ‘you will not!’ — ‘je peux faire le discours’ - ‘pas question!’
‘I'll do it’ - ‘no you won't’ — ‘je vais le faire’ - ‘il n'en est pas question’
4) (in offers, invitations)you'll have another cake, won't you? — vous prendrez bien un autre gâteau?
any teacher will tell you that... — n'importe quel professeur te dira que...
2.these things will happen — ce sont des choses qui arrivent; ( in exasperation)
transitive verb1) ( urge)2) (wish, desire) vouloir3) Law léguer3. II 1. [wɪl]to have a strong/weak will — avoir beaucoup/peu de volonté
2) Law testament m2.at will adverbial phrase [select, take] à volonté••where there's a will there's a way — Prov quand on veut on peut Prov
-
77 be
present tense am [ʌm], are [a:], is [ɪz]; past tense was [woz], were [w†:]; present participle 'being; past participle been [bi:n, (·meriцan) bɪn]; subjunctive were [w†:]; short forms I'm [aim] (I am), you're [ju†] (you are), he's [hi:z] (he is), she's [ʃi:z] (she is), it's [ɪ ] (it is), we're [wi†] (we are), they're [Ɵe†] (they are); negative short forms isn't (is not), aren't [a:nt] (are not), wasn't (was not), weren't [w†:nt] (were not)1) (used with a present participle to form the progressive or continuous tenses: I'm reading; I am being followed; What were you saying?.) être2) (used with a present participle to form a type of future tense: I'm going to London.)3) (used with a past participle to form the passive voice: He was shot.) être4) (used with an infinitive to express several ideas, eg necessity (When am I to leave?), purpose (The letter is to tell us he's coming), a possible future happening (If he were to lose, I'd win) etc.) devoir; aller5) (used in giving or asking for information about something or someone: I am Mr Smith; Is he alive?; She wants to be an actress; The money will be ours; They are being silly.) être•- being- the be-all and end-all -
78 historic
1 gen [event, site, moment] historique ; of historic importance d'une grande importance historique ; on this historic occasion en ce moment historique ;2 Ling past historic passé simple ; historic present présent de narration ; in the historic present au présent de narration. -
79 now
A conj now (that) I know her maintenant que je la connais ; now (that) you've recovered maintenant que tu es guéri.C adv1 ( at the present moment) she's now 17 elle a 17 ans à présent ; I'm doing it now je suis en train de le faire ; the now familiar routine la routine maintenant habituelle ; the now famous court case l'affaire maintenant célèbre ;2 ( these days) maintenant ; they now have 5 children ils ont 5 enfants maintenant ; she's working in Japan now elle travaille au Japon maintenant ; business is better now les affaires marchent mieux maintenant ;3 ( at once) maintenant ; right now tout de suite ; do it now fais-le maintenant ; I must go now il faut que je parte maintenant ;4 ( the present time) you should have phoned him before now tu aurais dû lui téléphoner avant ; before ou until now jusqu'à présent ; he should be finished by now il devrait avoir fini maintenant ; between now and next Friday d'ici vendredi prochain ; between now and then entre-temps ; 10 days from now d'ici 10 jours ; from now on(wards) à partir de maintenant, dorénavant ; that's enough for now ça suffit pour le moment ; good-bye for now à bientôt ; now is as good a time as any le moment n'est pas plus mal choisi qu'un autre ; now is the best time to do c'est le meilleur moment pour faire ;5 ( in time expressions) it's a week now since she left cela fait une semaine maintenant qu'elle est partie ; it has been six months now cela fait six mois ; some years ago now il y a de cela quelques années maintenant ; he won't be long now il ne devrait pas tarder maintenant ; he could arrive any time ou moment now il peut arriver d'un moment à l'autre ; the results will be announced any day now les résultats peuvent être annoncés d'un jour à l'autre ;6 ( in view of events) maintenant ; I'll never get a job now je ne retrouverai plus jamais de travail maintenant ; now I understand why maintenant je comprends pourquoi ; how can you trust them now? comment peux-tu leur faire confiance maintenant? ; he now admits to being wrong il reconnaît maintenant qu'il a eu tort ; I'll be more careful now je serai plus prudent dorénavant ;7 (at that moment, then) it was now 4 pm il était alors 16 heures ; now the troops attacked à ce moment-là, les troupes ont attaqué ; by now it was too late à ce moment-là, il était trop tard ;8 ( sometimes) now fast, now slowly tantôt vite, tantôt lentement ; now and then, now and again de temps en temps, de temps à autre ; every now and then de temps en temps ;9 ( introducing a change) now for the next question passons à la question suivante ; now for a drink si on prenait un verre ; if we can now compare… si nous comparons maintenant… ; now then, where was I? bon, où en étais-je? ;10 (introducing information, opinion) now, this is important because c'est important parce que ; now there's a man I can trust! ah! voilà un homme en qui on peut avoir confiance! ; now Paul would never do a thing like that Paul, lui, ne ferait jamais une chose pareille ; now that would never have happened 10 years ago ça ne se serait jamais produit il y a dix ans ;11 (in requests, warnings, reprimands) careful now! attention! ; now let's see voyons donc ; now! now! voyons! ; come now! voyons! ; there now, what did I tell you? eh bien, qu'est-ce que je t'avais dit? ; now then, let's get down to work bon, reprenons le travail maintenant ; now then! what's all this noise? bon sang! qu'est-ce que c'est que tout ce bruit? -
80 Usage note : be
I am tired= je suis fatiguéCaroline is French= Caroline est françaisethe children are in the garden= les enfants sont dans le jardinIt functions in very much the same way as to be does in English and it is safe to assume it will work as a translation in the great majority of cases.Note, however, that when you are specifying a person’s profession or trade, a/an is not translated:she’s a doctor= elle est médecinClaudie is still a student= Claudie est toujours étudianteThis is true of any noun used in apposition when the subject is a person:he’s a widower= il est veufButLyons is a beautiful city= Lyon est une belle villeFor more information or expressions involving professions and trades consult the usage note Shops, Trades and Professions.For the conjugation of the verb être see the French verb tables.Grammatical functionsThe passiveêtre is used to form the passive in French just as to be is used in English. Note, however, that the past participle agrees in gender and number with the subject:the rabbit was killed by a fox= le lapin a été tué par un renardthe window had been broken= la fenêtre avait été casséetheir books will be sold= leurs livres seront vendusour doors have been repainted red= nos portes ont été repeintes en rougeIn spoken language, French native speakers find the passive cumbersome and will avoid it where possible by using the impersonal on where a person or people are clearly involved : on a repeint nos portes en rouge.Progressive tensesIn French the idea of something happening over a period of time cannot be expressed using the verb être in the way that to be is used as an auxiliary verb in English.The presentFrench uses simply the present tense where English uses the progressive form with to be:I am working= je travailleBen is reading a book= Ben lit un livreIn order to accentuate duration être en train de is used: je suis en train de travailler ; Ben est en train de lire un livre.The futureFrench also uses the present tense where English uses the progressive form with to be:we are going to London tomorrow= nous allons à Londres demainI’m (just) coming!= j’arrive!I’m (just) going!= j’y vais!The pastTo express the distinction between she read a newspaper and she was reading a newspaper French uses the perfect and the imperfect tenses: elle a lu un journal/elle lisait un journal:he wrote to his mother= il a écrit à sa mèrehe was writing to his mother= il écrivait à sa mèreHowever, in order to accentuate the notion of describing an activity which went on over a period of time, the phrase être en train de (= to be in the process of) is often used:‘what was he doing when you arrived?’‘he was cooking the dinner’= ‘qu’est-ce qu’il faisait quand tu es arrivé?’ ‘il était en train de préparer le dîner’she was just finishing her essay when …= elle était juste en train de finir sa dissertation quand …The compound pastCompound past tenses in the progressive form in English are generally translated by the imperfect in French:I’ve been looking for you= je te cherchaisFor progressive forms + for and since (I’ve been waiting for an hour, I had been waiting for an hour, I’ve been waiting since Monday etc.) see the entries for and since.ObligationWhen to be is used as an auxiliary verb with another verb in the infinitive ( to be to do) expressing obligation, a fixed arrangement or destiny, devoir is used:she’s to do it at once= elle doit le faire tout de suitewhat am I to do?= qu’est-ce que je dois faire?he was to arrive last Monday= il devait arriver lundi derniershe was never to see him again= elle ne devait plus le revoir.In tag questionsFrench has no direct equivalent of tag questions like isn’t he? or wasn’t it? There is a general tag question n’est-ce pas? (literally isn’t it so?) which will work in many cases:their house is lovely, isn’t it?= leur maison est très belle, n’est-ce pas?he’s a doctor, isn’t he?= il est médecin, n’est-ce pas?it was a very good meal, wasn’t it?= c’était un très bon repas, n’est-ce pas?However, n’est-ce pas can very rarely be used for positive tag questions and some other way will be found to express the extra meaning contained in the tag: par hasard ( by any chance) can be very useful as a translation:‘I can’t find my glasses’ ‘they’re not in the kitchen, are they?’= ‘je ne trouve pas mes lunettes’ ‘elles ne sont pas dans la cuisine, par hasard?’you haven’t seen Gaby, have you?= tu n’as pas vu Gaby, par hasard?In cases where an opinion is being sought, si? meaning more or less or is it? or was it? etc. can be useful:it’s not broken, is it?= ce n’est pas cassé, si?he wasn’t serious, was he?= il n’était pas sérieux, si?In many other cases the tag question is simply not translated at all and the speaker’s intonation will convey the implied question.In short answersAgain, there is no direct equivalent for short answers like yes I am, no he’s not etc. Where the answer yes is given to contradict a negative question or statement, the most useful translation is si:‘you’re not going out tonight’ ‘yes I am’= ‘tu ne sors pas ce soir’ ‘si’In reply to a standard enquiry the tag will not be translated:‘are you a doctor?’ ‘yes I am’= ‘êtes-vous médecin?’ ‘oui’‘was it raining?’ ‘yes it was’= ‘est-ce qu’il pleuvait?’ ‘oui’ProbabilityFor expressions of probability and supposition ( if I were you etc.) see the entry be.Other functionsExpressing sensations and feelingsIn expressing physical and mental sensations, the verb used in French is avoir:to be cold= avoir froidto be hot= avoir chaudI’m cold= j’ai froidto be thirsty= avoir soifto be hungry= avoir faimto be ashamed= avoir hontemy hands are cold= j’ai froid aux mainsIf, however, you are in doubt as to which verb to use in such expressions, you should consult the entry for the appropriate adjective.Discussing health and how people areIn expressions of health and polite enquiries about how people are, aller is used:how are you?= comment allez-vous?( more informally) comment vas-tu?( very informally as a greeting) ça va?are you well?= vous allez bien?how is your daughter?= comment va votre fille?my father is better today= mon père va mieux aujourd’huiDiscussing weather and temperatureIn expressions of weather and temperature faire is generally used:it’s cold= il fait froidit’s windy= il fait du ventIf in doubt, consult the appropriate adjective entry.Visiting somewhereWhen to be is used in the present perfect tense to mean go, visit etc., French will generally use the verbs venir, aller etc. rather than être:I’ve never been to Sweden= je ne suis jamais allé en Suèdehave you been to the Louvre?= est-ce que tu es déjà allé au Louvre?or est-ce que tu as déjà visité le Louvre?Paul has been to see us three times= Paul est venu nous voir trois foisNote too:has the postman been?= est-ce que le facteur est passé?The translation for an expression or idiom containing the verb to be will be found in the dictionary at the entry for another word in the expression: for to be in danger see danger, for it would be best to … see best etc.This dictionary contains usage notes on topics such as the clock, time units, age, weight measurement, days of the week, and shops, trades and professions, many of which include translations of particular uses of to be.
См. также в других словарях:
présent — présent, ente 1. (pré zan, zan t ) adj. 1° Qui est dans le lieu où l on est ou dont on parle. • Il [le roi] parla encore une autre fois fort bien de M. Colbert sur cette matière des finances, M. Seignelay présent, PELLISSON Lett. hist. t. I,… … Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré
Present (quotidien) — Présent (quotidien) Pour les articles homonymes, voir Présent. Présent {{{nomorigine}}} … Wikipédia en Français
Présent (journal) — Présent (quotidien) Pour les articles homonymes, voir Présent. Présent {{{nomorigine}}} … Wikipédia en Français
Present (linguistique) — Présent (linguistique) Pour les articles homonymes, voir Présent. Catégories verbales … Wikipédia en Français
Présent (grammaire) — Présent (linguistique) Pour les articles homonymes, voir Présent. Catégories verbales … Wikipédia en Français
present — pre·sent 1 /pri zent/ vt 1: to lay before a court as an object of consideration present a complaint present ed a defense of insanity 2: to make a presentment of (an instrument) pre·sen·ta·tion /ˌprē ˌzen tā shən, ˌpre , zən / … Law dictionary
present — [prez′ənt; ] for v. [ prē zent′, prizent′] adj. [OFr < L praesens, prp. of praeesse, to be present < prae , before (see PRE ) + esse, to be (see ESSENCE)] 1. a) being at the specified or understood place; at hand; in attendance b) existing… … English World dictionary
Present — ist eine belgische Avantgarde Rock Gruppe, die von Roger Trigaux (Gitarre, Keyboards, Vocals) 1979 gegründet wurde.[1] Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Geschichte 2 Mitglieder (Stand 2011) 3 Ehemalige Mitglieder u … Deutsch Wikipedia
Present value — is the value on a given date of a future payment or series of future payments, discounted to reflect the time value of money and other factors such as investment risk. Present value calculations are widely used in business and economics to… … Wikipedia
Present — Pres ent, a. [F. pr[ e]sent, L. praesens, entis, that is before one, in sight or at hand, p. p. of praeesse to be before; prae before + esse to be. See {Essence}.] [1913 Webster] 1. Being at hand, within reach or call, within certain contemplated … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Present — Pres ent, n. [Cf. F. pr[ e]sent. See {Present}, a.] 1. Present time; the time being; time in progress now, or at the moment contemplated; as, at this present. [1913 Webster] Past and present, wound in one. Tennyson. [1913 Webster] 2. pl. (Law)… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English