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1 criant
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > criant
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2 éhonté
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > éhonté
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3 flagrant
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > flagrant
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4 manifeste
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > manifeste
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5 patent
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > patent
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6 flagrant
blatant, flagrant, glaring -
7 criant
criant, e [kʀijɑ̃, ɑ̃t]adjective* * *criante kʀijɑ̃, ɑ̃t adjectif1) ( manifeste) strikingcriant de vérité — [description, peinture] true to life (jamais épith)
2) ( scandaleux) [inégalité, malhonnêteté] blatant; [injustice] glaring; [abus] flagrant* * *kʀijɑ̃, ɑ̃t adj criant, -e(injustice) glaring* * *1 ( manifeste) [besoin, évidence, preuve] clear, striking; [contraste, manque] striking; criant de vérité [description, peinture, témoignage] true to life ( jamais épith); il est criant de vérité dans le rôle he's extremely convincing in the role;2 ( scandaleux) [inégalité, malhonnêteté, mauvaise foi] blatant; [injustice] glaring; [abus] flagrant.[erreur] glaring[parti pris] blatant -
8 flagrant
flagrant, e [flagʀɑ̃, ɑ̃t]adjective[mensonge] blatant ; [erreur, injustice] glaring* * *flagrante flagʀɑ̃, ɑ̃t adjectif [preuve] obvious; [injustice] flagrant; [mensonge] blatant; [erreur, exemple] glaringPhrasal Verbs:* * *flaɡʀɑ̃, ɑ̃t adj flagrant, -eflagrant, blatanten flagrant délit — in the act, in flagrante delicto
* * *flagrant, flagrante adj [échec, déséquilibre, différence, preuve] obvious; [injustice, malhonnêteté, violation] flagrant; [mensonge, contradiction, discrimination] blatant; [erreur, exemple] glaring; il ment, c'est flagrant it's blatantly obvious that he's lying.flagrant délit Jur case requiring no further collection of evidence; en flagrant délit in flagrante delicto; prendre qn en flagrant délit to catch sb red-handed; en flagrant délit de vol in the act of stealing; en flagrant délit de meurtre/d'adultère in the act of committing murder/adultery; prendre qn en flagrant délit de mensonge to catch sb out in a lie.il apparaît de façon flagrante que... it is blatantly obvious that...2. DROITb. (figuré) in the act, red-handed -
9 caractérisé
caractérisé, e [kaʀakteʀize][erreur] glaring* * *kaʀakteʀize adj caractérisé, -e1) (manquement, injustice) blatant2)* * *caractérisé, caractérisée adj c'est du vol caractérisé it's a blatant act of theft; c'est une colite caractérisée it's a clear case of colitis.( féminin caractérisée) [karakterize] adjectif[méchanceté] blatant[indifférence] pointed -
10 provocant
provocant, e [pʀɔvɔkɑ̃, ɑ̃t]adjective* * *provocante pʀɔvɔkɑ̃, ɑ̃t adjectif provocative* * *pʀɔvɔkɑ̃, ɑ̃t adj provocant, -e* * *provocant, provocante adj provocative.( féminin provocante) [prɔvɔkɑ̃, ɑ̃t] adjectif2. [osé] blatant -
11 carrément
carrément [kaʀemɑ̃]adverb* * *kaʀemɑ̃* * *kaʀemɑ̃ adv1) (= franchement, sans détours) straight out, bluntlyDis-lui carrément ce que tu penses. — Tell him straight out what you think.
Il l'a carrément mis à la porte. — He just sacked him.
c'est carrément...; C'est carrément impossible. — It's completely impossible., It's just about impossible
À ce prix, c'est carrément du vol. — At that price, it's daylight robbery.
* * *carrément adv1 ( purement et simplement) [malhonnête, stupide, désastreux, exotique] downright; la situation devient carrément inquiétante the situation is becoming downright worrying; ce n'est plus de la prudence, c'est carrément de la lâcheté it's no longer a question of being cautious, it's downright cowardice; il vaut carrément mieux les jeter/changer le moteur it would be better just to throw them out/to change the engine;2 ( complètement) completely; changer carrément de nom to change name completely; on est carrément dans le brouillard we're completely in the dark; c'est carrément un désastre/le cauchemar it's a complete disaster/nightmare; certaines entreprises ont carrément été exonérées some companies have been totally exempted; ils ont carrément engagé des tueurs they have even hired assassins; il faudrait carrément louer une camionnette we should really hire a van; reprenons carrément depuis le début let's start again right from the beginning; les réformes ne suffiront pas, il faut carrément changer le système the reforms will not be enough, it's the system that needs changing;3 ( sans ambages) [demander, dire] straight out; [exprimer] clearly, in no uncertain terms; elle m'a carrément accusé de mentir she accused me straight out of lying;4 ( sans hésiter) allez-y carrément! go straight ahead!, go for it○!; il a carrément démissionné he went straight ahead and resigned; faute de pouvoir payer son loyer, il a carrément installé un lit de camp dans son bureau since he was unable to pay the rent, he went and set up a camp bed in his office; dans un cas pareil, appelle carrément la police in such a case, don't hesitate to call the police; le pétrolier a carrément vidé ses cuves dans le port the tanker emptied its tanks right in the harbourGB.[karemɑ̃] adverbe[agir] straightje vais le quitter! — ah, carrément? I'm going to leave him! — it's as serious as that, is it?c'est carrément du vol/de la corruption it's daylight robbery/blatant corruption -
12 éclater
éclater [eklate]➭ TABLE 11. intransitive verba. ( = exploser) [pneu] to burst ; [verre] to shatter ; [parti, ville, services, structures familiales] to break upb. ( = commencer) [incendie, épidémie, guerre] to break out ; [orage, scandale, nouvelle] to breakc. ( = retentir) un coup de fusil a éclaté there was the crack of a rifled. ( = se manifester) [vérité] to shine out ; [mauvaise foi] to be blatant• il a éclaté ( = s'est mis en colère) he exploded with rage2. reflexive verb* * *eklateverbe intransitif1) ( exploser) [pneu, bulle, chaudière] to burst; [obus, pétard] to explode; [bouteille] to shatterfaire éclater — [personne] to burst [bulle, ballon]; to detonate [bombe, grenade]; to let off [pétard]
2) ( se rompre) [canalisation, abcès] to burst; [organe] to rupture3) ( retentir) [applaudissements, rire, fusillade] to break out; [coup de feu] to ring out4) ( être révélé) [scandale, nouvelle] to break; [vérité] to come out5) ( survenir) [guerre, grève, polémique] to break out; [orage] to break; [crise] to erupt6) ( être exprimé) [colère] to erupt7) ( se fragmenter) [coalition, royaume] to break up (en into); [parti] to split (en into)8) ( se mettre en colère) [personne] to lose one's temper* * *eklate vi1) [pneu] to burst, [bombe] to explode2) [guerre, épidémie] to break outLa Seconde Guerre mondiale a éclaté en 1939. — The Second World War broke out in 1939.
3) [groupe, parti] to break up4)* * *éclater verb table: aimerA vi1 ( exploser) [pneu, bulle, chaudière] to burst; [obus, pétard] to explode; [tuyau] to burst; [bouteille] to shatter; éclater en mille morceaux [bouteille, verre] to shatter into a thousand pieces; faire éclater [personne] to burst [bulle, ballon]; to detonate [bombe, grenade]; to let off [pétard];2 ( se rompre) [canalisation, veine, abcès] to burst; [organe] to rupture; faire éclater [gel] to burst [tuyau];3 ( retentir) [applaudissements, rire, fusillade] to break out; [coup de feu] to ring out; un coup de tonnerre a éclaté there was a sudden clap of thunder;4 ( être révélé) [scandale, affaire, nouvelle] to break; [vérité] to come out; [polémique] to break out; faire éclater qch au grand jour to bring sth to light; ce groupe a éclaté sur la scène internationale en 1974 the group burst onto the international scene in 1974;5 ( survenir) [guerre, dispute, grève, épidémie] to break out; [orage] to break; [crise] to erupt;6 ( être exprimé) [joie, bonheur] to manifest itself; [colère] to erupt; laisser éclater sa joie/son bonheur to give free rein to one's joy/one's happiness; laisser éclater sa colère/son ressentiment to give vent to one's anger/one's resentment;7 ( se fragmenter) [coalition, royaume] to break up; éclater en to break up into [provinces]; to split into [tendances]; faire éclater un parti to split a party;8 ( se mettre en colère) [personne] to lose one's temper, to blow up○; éclater en reproches contre qn to heap reproaches on sb; éclater de rire to burst out laughing; éclater en sanglots to burst into tears.[eklate] verbe intransitifj'ai l'impression que ma tête/mon cœur/ma poitrine va éclater I feel as if my head/heart/chest is going to burst3. [retentir]4. [se déclencher - guerre, scandale] to break out5. [apparaître] to stand out6. [de colère] to explode7. [être célèbre] to be an instant success————————s'éclater verbe pronominal intransitif(familier) to have a whale of a time ou a ball -
13 douzaine
n. f. On en trouve à la douzaine: They are a pretty common sight. (The irony of the expression is more blatant in the negative. On n'en trouve pas à la douzaine! They don't grow on trees you know!) -
14 mollets
n. m. pl.1. Avoir des moltets de coq: To have 'spindleshanks', to have legs like matchsticks.2. Se masser les mollets (fig.): To display self-deprecating yet blatant immodesty.
См. также в других словарях:
Blatant — Bla tant, a. [Cf. {Bleat}.] Bellowing, as a calf; bawling; brawling; clamoring; disagreeably clamorous; sounding loudly and harshly. Harsh and blatant tone. R. H. Dana. [1913 Webster] A monster, which the blatant beast men call. Spenser. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
blatant — blatant, flagrant 1. Blatant was, invented late in the 16c by the poet Spenser as an epithet of a thousand tongued monster in The Faerie Queene. It now means ‘glaringly conspicuous’, and overlaps in meaning with flagrant but has rather less of… … Modern English usage
blatant — (adj.) 1596, in blatant beast, coined by Edmund Spenser in The Faerie Queen to describe a thousand tongued monster representing slander; probably suggested by L. blatire to babble. It entered general use 1650s, as noisy in an offensive and vulgar … Etymology dictionary
blatant — [adj1] obvious; brazen arrant, bald, barefaced, brassy, clear, conspicuous, crying, flagrant, flashy, flaunting, garish, gaudy, glaring, glitzy, impudent, loud, meretricious, naked, obtrusive, ostentatious, outright, overbold, overt, plain,… … New thesaurus
blatant — ► ADJECTIVE ▪ open and unashamed; flagrant. DERIVATIVES blatancy noun blatantly adverb. ORIGIN first used by the poet Edmund Spenser in blatant beast to describe a thousand tongued monster, then in the sense «clamorous»: perhaps from Scots… … English terms dictionary
blatant — [blāt′ nt] adj. [coined by SPENSER2 Edmund, prob. < L blaterare, to babble, or E dial. blate, to bellow] 1. disagreeably loud or boisterous; clamorous 2. glaringly conspicuous or obtrusive [blatant ignorance] SYN. VOCIFEROUS blatantly adv … English World dictionary
blatant — I (conspicuous) adjective apparent, celebrated, clear, discernible, exposed, famous, manifest, noticeable, notorious, observable, obvious, outstanding, overt, patent, perceivable, plain, prominent, public, sensational, well known II (obtrusive)… … Law dictionary
blatant — clamorous, *vociferous, strident, boisterous, obstreperous Analogous words: assertive, self assertive, pushing, *aggressive, militant: *vocal, articulate, voluble, glib: vulgar, *coarse, gross Antonyms: decorous: reserved Contrasted words: * … New Dictionary of Synonyms
blatant — [16] Blatant appears to have been coined, or at least introduced, by the poet Edmund Spenser. In the Faerie Queene 1596 he describes how ‘unto themselves they [Envy and Detraction] gotten had a monster which the blatant beast men call, a dreadful … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
blatant — , flagrant The words are not quite synonymous. Something that is blatant is glaringly obvious and contrived ( a blatant lie ) or willfully obnoxious ( blatant commercialization ) or both. Something that is flagrant is shocking and reprehensible ( … Bryson’s dictionary for writers and editors
blatant — blatancy, n. blatantly, adv. /blayt nt/, adj. 1. brazenly obvious; flagrant: a blatant error in simple addition; a blatant lie. 2. offensively noisy or loud; clamorous: blatant radios. 3. tastelessly conspicuous: the blatant colors of the dress.… … Universalium