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browse [braʊz]∎ she browsed through the book elle a feuilleté le livre;2 noun∎ I popped into the shop to have a browse around je suis passé au magasin pour jeter un coup d'œil ou regarder∎ Computing to browse the Net/Web naviguer sur l'Internet/le Web►► Computing browse mode mode m survol∎ to browse through a book/magazine feuilleter un livre/un magazine;∎ to browse through sb's books/records jeter un coup d'œil aux livres/disques de qn -
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browse [braʊz]• I'm just browsing, thanks je regarde seulement, merci2. noun• to have a browse ( = to browse)* * *[braʊz] 1. 2.transitive verb Computing naviguer sur, consulter [Web]3.1) (potter, stroll around) flâner; ( look at objects in shop) regarder2) ( graze) brouter -
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A n to have a browse in a bookshop flâner dans une librairie ; to have a browse through a book feuilleter un livre.C vi1 (potter, stroll around) flâner ; ( look at objects in shop) regarder ;2 ( graze) brouter.▶ browse through [sth] feuilleter [book] ; faire [market stall, shop]. -
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1 nounbrowse mode mode m survolto browse the Web naviguer sur le Webse promenerCOMPUTING se promener dans, survoler -
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1. verb1) ((of animals) to feed (on shoots or leaves of plants).) feuilleter2) ((of people) to glance through a book etc casually: I don't want to buy a book - I'm just browsing.) brouter3) (to search computer material, especially on a worldwide network.) explorer2. noun1) (shoots, twigs or leaves as food for cattle.) broutement; flânerie2) (an act of browsing.) -
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naviguer internetGlossaire des termes pour l'organisation d'événements > browse ltol
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Inf. naviguer ou surfer sur la toile/sur l'InternetEnglish-French dictionary of law, politics, economics & finance > to browse the Internet
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Inf. en mode defilementEnglish-French dictionary of law, politics, economics & finance > in browse mode
См. также в других словарях:
browse — [ brauz ] verb * 1. ) intransitive or transitive COMPUTING to look for information on a computer, especially on the Internet: cell phones that can browse the Web a ) to look at a Web site on the Internet: an excellent graphical interface for… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
browse — [brauz] v [Date: 1500 1600; Origin: Probably from early French brouster, from broust bud, shoot ] 1.) to look through the pages of a book, magazine etc without a particular purpose, just looking at the most interesting parts browse through ▪ Jon… … Dictionary of contemporary English
Browse — (brouz), n. [OF. brost, broust, sprout, shoot, F. brout browse, browsewood, prob. fr. OHG. burst, G. borste, bristle; cf. also Armor. brousta to browse. See {Bristle}, n., {Brush}, n.] The tender branches or twigs of trees and shrubs, fit for the … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Browse — Browse, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Browsed} (brouzd); p. pr. & vb. n. {Browsing}.] [For broust, OF. brouster, bruster, F. brouter. See {Browse}, n., and cf. {Brut}.] 1. To eat or nibble off, as the tender branches of trees, shrubs, etc.; said of cattle … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
browse — UK US /braʊz/ verb [I or T] ► to look through a book or magazine without reading everything, or to walk around a store looking at things without intending to buy anything, or without knowing exactly what you want to buy: browse through sth »I was … Financial and business terms
browse — Grazing animals, rather than people browsing in books, provide the grammatical analogy for the new meaning in computing, ‘to read or survey data files’, which can be transitive or intransitive: (transitive) • Internet cafés aren t just places to… … Modern English usage
Browse — (brouz), v. i. 1. To feed on the tender branches or shoots of shrubs or trees, as do cattle, sheep, and deer. [1913 Webster] 2. To pasture; to feed; to nibble; to graze. Shak. [1913 Webster] 3. To look casually through a book, books, or a set of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
browse — index peruse Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 browse v. To move from website to websit … Law dictionary
Browse — [dt. blättern, überfliegen, durchblättern], das Blättern in den am Bildschirm angezeigten Daten, meistens in Zusammenhang mit einer Datenbank (Browse Modus) … Universal-Lexikon
browse — 1520s, feed on buds, from M.Fr. brouster, from O.Fr. broster to sprout, bud, from brost young shoot, twig, probably from P.Gmc. *brustjan to bud. Lost its final t in English on the mistaken notion that it was a pp. inflection. Figurative… … Etymology dictionary
browse — [v] look around; look through check over, dip into*, examine cursorily, feed, flip through, get the cream*, give the once over*, glance at, graze, hit the high spots*, inspect loosely, leaf through, nibble*, once over lightly*, pass an eye over* … New thesaurus