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101 mort
I.n. m. Faire le mort: To 'lie low' in order to avoid reprisals. (In the game of bridge, the expression means 'to play dummy'.)II.adj.1. C'est mort! (of project, undertaking): It's had it! — It's all over! (The expression c'est mon et enterré: It's dead and buried, implies more the 'long past, long forgotten' nature of the event.)2. Encore une de morte! (Boozers' slang): Another dead man! — Another empty bottle!III.A mort (adv. exp.): Extremely, to the extreme. Elle m'en veut a mort! She hates my bloody guts! -
102 oreiller
n. m.1. Consulter son oreiller: To 'sleep on something', to avoid making a hasty decision.2. Se raccommoder sur l'oreiller (of strifing couple): To make it up in bed. -
103 oubli
n. m. Marcher à l'oubli: To walk aloof, oblivious of other people (in many cases, in order to avoid embarrassing questions). Depuis que je lui ai prêté du fric, il marche à l'oubli et j'en suis pour mes frais: I'll never get that sub back off him, he just floats by whenever we meet, it's a lost cause! -
104 planche
n. f.2. (sch.): Mock exam (originally an oral test, because one had to go up to the blackboard).3. (pl.): 'The boards', the stage. Monter sur les planches: To take up a career in acting. Brûler les planches: To enjoy a tremendous success on the stage.4. Faire la planche:a To 'lie low', to try and remain undetected.b (fig.): To 'keep a low profile', to avoid getting involved in anything.5. Avoir du pain sur la planche: To have a lot of work on one's plate.6. S'habiller de quatre planches: To 'get a wooden overcoat', to 'snuff it', to die. -
105 planquer
I.v. trans. To hide, to secrete someone or something away.II.v. trans. reflex.1. To hide, to find a hiding-place.2. (fig.): To 'lie low', to 'keep a low profile', to avoid being buttonholed for an unpleasant task.3. To 'shoehorn' oneself into a cushy job. -
106 pot
n. m.1. 'Arse', 'bum', behind. (Few expressions containing the word pot have literal meanings. Most, like se manier le pot: to 'put one's skates on', to hurry up and en avoir plein le pot: to be fed-up, are figurative derivations.)2. Luck, good fortune. Avoir un sacré pot: To have the luck of the devil. Un coup de pot: A lucky break. Manque de pot! Hard cheese! — Hard luck! (There is a strange correlation between sodomy as in se faire casser le pot and good fortune, which would suggest as with cocu (see that word) that sexual favours and good luck are closely intertwined.)3. Drink, alcoholic beverage. (Although some lexicographers describe the drink as being a 'short', the very nature of the straight meaning of the word suggests it is a long drink, i.e. wine or beer. Prendre un pot avec quelqu'un: To have a jar with someone.)4. (Gambling slang): 'Pot', kitty, pool of money staked at cards, etc.5. Faire son pot: To 'make one's pile', to amass a tidy sum of money.6. Payer les pots cassés: To 'carry the can', to pay the consequences (often literally, on the financial plane).8. Pot de yaourt (joc.): Bubble- car. (In the 50s, the most popular bubble-car in France was manufactured by Isetta. These vehicles with their large glass area and striking white colour quickly earned this nickname.)9. Etre sourd comme un pot: To be as deaf as a post.10. Tourner autour du pot: To 'beat about the bush', to tackle a problem or a situation in a dilly-dally manner.11. Etre bête comme un pot: To be 'as thick as two short planks', to be as dumb as they come.12. Ne pas bousculer le pot de fleurs: To 'keep things on an even keel', to 'avoid upsetting the apple-cart', to refrain from causing trouble.13. Ne t'occupe pas du pot! Leave it to me! — Let me worry about it!14. Pot aux roses: Sensitive secret. Découvrir le pot aux roses: To stumble on a bit of scandal. (Because of a possible hiatus, the 't' in pot is pronounced as a liaison in colloquial contexts.) -
107 rabattre
I.v. trans. Rabattre les oreilles à quelqu'un: To 'witter on' about something to someone, to harp on ad nauseam. (This is a corruption of the accepted expression rebattre les oreilles à quelqu'un which is losing ground to the colloquial one.)II.v. intrans. To come back, to return (often with unfriendly intentions).III.v. pronom.1. (of motorist, etc.): To swerve back onto the correct side of the road to avoid oncoming traffic.2. To return to an old haunt, to come back to familiar surroundings. -
108 rare
I.adj. Se faire rare: To 'keep a low profile', to steer clear of certain places in order to avoid meeting someone. Tu te fais rare ces jours-ci! We don't seem to see much of you these days!II.adv. Not often, seldom. C'est rare s'il revient si tôt! He doesn't often come back that early! -
109 salade
n. f.1. 'Mix-up', confusion. Quelle salade! It's a proper shambles! (also: salade russe).2. En salade: In a 'higgledy-piggledy' way, in a disorderly manner. Il nous a présenté ses arguments en salade: The case he put to us was a jumble of facts and angles.3. (also pl.): 'Bullshit', 'baloney', nonsense. J'en ai marre de toute cette salade! I'm sick to the back teeth of all this tommyrot! Je ne crois pas à toutes ses salades! I don't believe all the bilge he's spouting!4. (pl.): 'Nasty tittle-tattle', evil gossip (the inference being that it is 'a pack of lies'). Il est toujours à balancer des salades sur ses meilleurs 'copains': He's always doing the dirty on his so-called pals.a To 'stir it', to create trouble (usually by passing on malicious gossip).b To put up a barrage of excuses (in order to avoid chores, etc.).6. Passer une salade à quelqu'un: To give someone 'a real wigging', a good telling-off.7. Bonnir sa salade à quelqu'un: To 'give someone the full spiel', to spin someone a right old yarn. (The assumption is that the recipient falls for it hook, line and sinker.)8. Vendre sa salade: To 'know one's onions', to know one's trade or business inside-out.9. Savoir vendre sa salade: To have the gift of the gab (literally to be able to sell sand to the Arabs).10. Avoir une salade au cul: To have something unpleasant lurking m one's past. (This is not so much a case of skeletons in the cupboard as the Damoclean consequences to recent misdemeanours.) -
110 snober
v. trans.1. To 'lord it' over someone, to act the high-and-mighty.2. To 'give someone the cold shoulder', to avoid talking to someone (through a feeling of superiority). -
111 suisse
n. m. Faire suisse (also: boire en suisse): To find a quiet place to have a drink on one's own (in order to avoid having to stand a round of drinks). -
112 terrain
n. m.1. Déblayer le terrain: To 'make tracks', to 'clear off', to leave in haste.2. Tâter le terrain: To sound things out discreetly (to make sensible enquiries to avoid putting a foot wrong). -
113 Bové, José
French MEP, elected to the European parliament on the list of the French greens in June 2009. Highly mediatized and self-styled leader of theConfédération Paysanne, an initially unofficial protest grouping of small farmers established as a backlash against the accelerating fall in the number and economic viability of France's small farms. Bové himself is a producer of Roquefort cheese, living on the barren Causses in southern central France. However his campaign in defence of the French small farmer developed into a more general anti-capitalist and anti-globalisation movement, with Bové being arrested twice and sentenced to prison firstly for leading a group of protestors in demolishing a partly built McDonald's restaurant in the town of Millau, and later for breaking into an agricultural research facility and uprooting thousands of genetically modified plants. When first sent to prison, Bové capitalised on the event by driving himself to the jail at the head of a procession of tractors, which received massive media coverage. To avoid a repeat of this, police arrested him a second time in 2003 with a spectacular dawn raid on his farmhouse, carrying Bové off to jail in a helicopter. While avoiding a second Bové media circus, the means employed in this arrest were seriously criticised throughout the media. Since the mid 1990's, Bové has also been present at most major international economic and social forums - including Puerto Alegre and Seattle - leading to accusations that he is not really the typical small farmer he claims to be.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Bové, José
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114 Gaspi, le
Cartoon figure that became well known in the nineteen seventies. The Gaspi, from the French verb gaspiller, to waste, was a sort or gremlin whose main joy in life was to waste energy, particularly petrol or other forms of fuel. Government campaigns encouraged citizens to ' Chasser le gaspi', i.e. to avoid wastage.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Gaspi, le
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115 TGV
High speed train. France has Europe's oldest and most extensive network of dedicated high-speed railway lines. The TGV entered service in 1981, and the Paris-Lyon dedicated line was largely completed in 1983, bringing journey times betwen the two cities down to just 2 hours. At present, the network consists of some 1700 km (over 1000 miles) of dedicated high-speed track, comprising four routes radiating out from Paris. An "interconnection" route round the south and west of Paris allows high-speed connections between the routes, notably allowing north-south TGVs to avoid the centre of Paris. Depending on the stock and the route, TGVs travel at speeds up to 270 km/hr or 320 km/hr. The TGV holds the current officially recorded world rail speed record, of 574.8 km/hr (357.2 m.p.h.). -
116 candidat à la descente
Syn. relégable m, candidat à la descente mDictionnaire Français-Anglais (UEFA Football) > candidat à la descente
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117 candidat à la relégation
Syn. relégable m, candidat à la descente mDictionnaire Français-Anglais (UEFA Football) > candidat à la relégation
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118 dribbler
Pousser devant soi le ballon, à petits coups de pied répétés, sans en perdre le contrôle.► Dans ce sens le verbe "dribbler" est intransitif. Employé transitivement (dribbler un adversaire), ce verbe signifie: "passer un adversaire en dribblant".
To move forward, often at speed, and avoid the challenges of opposing players by means of keeping the ball under skilful control close to the feet. -
119 maintien
Maintien d'une équipe dans la division dans laquelle elle se trouve.Syn. maintien mTo avoid being demoted to a lower playing division.Syn. avoiding relegation -
120 non-relégation
Maintien d'une équipe dans la division dans laquelle elle se trouve.Syn. maintien mTo avoid being demoted to a lower playing division.Syn. avoiding relegationDictionnaire Français-Anglais (UEFA Football) > non-relégation
См. также в других словарях:
avoid — vt [modification of Old French esvuider to destroy, literally, to empty, from es out + vuider to empty] 1: to make void or undo: annul the trustee may avoid any transfer of interest of the debtor in property U.S. Code 2: to respond to (an… … Law dictionary
Avoid — A*void , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Avoided}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Avoiding}.] [OF. esvuidier, es (L. ex) + vuidier, voidier, to empty. See {Void}, a.] 1. To empty. [Obs.] Wyclif. [1913 Webster] 2. To emit or throw out; to void; as, to avoid excretions.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
avoid — a‧void [əˈvɔɪd] verb [transitive] TAX LAW if you avoid tax, you manage to not pay it legally, for example by the way that you enter profits or losses into your accounts: • Investing in this way allows savers to avoid tax upon withdrawal. compare… … Financial and business terms
avoid — avoid; avoid·a·ble; un·avoid·abil·i·ty; avoid·ant; avoid·ance; avoid·a·bly; un·avoid·able·ness; … English syllables
avoid — [ə void′] vt. [ME avoiden < Anglo Fr avoider < OFr esvuidier, to empty < es (< L ex ), out + vuidier: see VOID] 1. to make void; annul, invalidate, or quash (a plea, etc. in law) 2. to keep away from; evade; shun [to avoid crowds] 3.… … English World dictionary
avoid — avoid, avert, evade Avoid and evade overlap in meaning, but evade has a stronger sense of guile or trickery in escaping from an obligation (such as paying income tax). Avert means ‘to turn aside’ (which is its literal meaning in averting one s… … Modern English usage
Avoid — A*void , v. i. 1. To retire; to withdraw. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] David avoided out of his presence. 1 Sam. xviii. 11. [1913 Webster] 2. (Law) To become void or vacant. [Obs.] Ayliffe. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
avoid — (v.) c.1300, from Anglo Fr. avoider to clear out, withdraw (oneself), partially anglicized from O.Fr. esvuidier to empty out, from es out (see EX (Cf. ex )) + vuidier to be empty, from voide empty, vast, wide, hollow, waste (see VOID (Cf … Etymology dictionary
avoid — *escape, shun, eschew, evade, elude Analogous words: avert, ward, *prevent, obviate: forestall, anticipate (see PREVENT): flee, fly (see ESCAPE) Antonyms: face: meet Contrasted words: *incur, contract, catch: court, solicit, * … New Dictionary of Synonyms
avoid — [v] refrain or stay away from; prevent abstain, avert, bypass, circumlocute, circumvent, deflect, desist, ditch, divert, dodge, duck, elude, escape, eschew, evade, fake out*, fend off, flee, give the slip*, hide, hold off, jump, keep clear, lay… … New thesaurus
avoid — ► VERB 1) keep away or refrain from. 2) prevent from doing or happening. DERIVATIVES avoidable adjective avoidably adverb avoidance noun. ORIGIN Old French evuider clear out, get rid of … English terms dictionary