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1 catching
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2 catching
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3 catching
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4 catching
adjective (infectious: Is chicken-pox catching?) contagieux -
5 catching up with salaries
[con.] rattrapage salarialEnglish-French dictionary of law, politics, economics & finance > catching up with salaries
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6 eye-catching
adjective (striking or noticeable, especially if attractive: an eye-catching advertisement.) tape-à-l'oeil; attrayant -
7 eye-catching
eye-catching: adj [colour, design, poster] attrayant ; [dress, hat] original ; [advertisement, headline] accrocheur/-euse. -
8 eye-catching
Un panorama unique de l'anglais et du français > eye-catching
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9 vote-catching
Un panorama unique de l'anglais et du français > vote-catching
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10 vote-catching practices
Pol. pratiques électoralistesEnglish-French dictionary of law, politics, economics & finance > vote-catching practices
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11 eye-catching
adjective [design, poster] attrayant; [advertisement, headline] accrocheur/-euse -
12 gotcha
gotcha (inf!) [ˈgɒt∫ə]( = I've got you) -
13 catch
[kæ ] 1. past tense, past participle - caught; verb1) (to stop and hold (something which is moving); to capture: He caught the cricket ball; The cat caught a mouse; Did you catch any fish?; I tried to catch his attention.) attraper2) (to be in time for, or get on (a train, bus etc): I'll have to catch the 9.45 (train) to London.) arriver à temps pour (prendre)3) (to surprise (someone) in the act of: I caught him stealing (my vegetables).) surprendre4) (to become infected with (a disease or illness): He caught flu.) attraper5) (to (cause to) become accidentally attached or held: The child caught her fingers in the car door.) (se) prendre6) (to hit: The punch caught him on the chin.) flanquer un coup7) (to manage to hear: Did you catch what she said?) comprendre8) (to start burning: I dropped a match on the pile of wood and it caught (fire) immediately.) prendre (feu)2. noun1) (an act of catching: He took a fine catch behind the wicket.) arrêt (au vol)2) (a small device for holding (a door etc) in place: The catch on my suitcase is broken.) loquet, serrure, fermoir3) (the total amount (of eg fish) caught: the largest catch of mackerel this year.) prise4) (a trick or problem: There's a catch in this question.) attrape•- catching- catchy - catch-phrase - catch-word - catch someone's eye - catch on - catch out - catch up -
14 gotcha
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15 risk
A n1 gen risque m (of de ; of doing de faire) ; there's a risk of him catching the illness ou that he'll catch the illness il risque d'attraper la maladie ; is there any risk of him catching the illness? est-ce qu'il risque d'attraper la maladie? ; there's a risk that the operation will not succeed l'opération comporte un risque d'échec ; there is no risk to consumers il n'y a aucun danger pour le consommateur ; without risks to health sans danger pour la santé ; to run the risk of being injured/ridiculed courir le risque d'être blessé/tourné en ridicule ; they run a higher risk of cancer ils courent un risque supérieur de cancer ; to take risks prendre des risques ; it's not worth the risk le risque est trop grand ; children at risk enfants menacés de violence ; their jobs are at risk leurs emplois sont menacés ; the factory is at risk of closure l'usine est menacée de fermeture ; to put one's life/health at risk mettre sa vie/santé en danger ; her health could be at risk sa santé pourrait être compromise ; at one's own risk à ses risques et périls ; he saved the child at considerable risk to himself il a sauvé l'enfant en prenant des risques considérables ; at the risk of seeming ungrateful/paradoxical au risque de paraître ingrat/de sembler paradoxal ; ‘at owner's risk’ ‘aux risques et périls du propriétaire’ ;2 Fin, Insur risque m ; to be a good/bad risk être un bon/mauvais risque ; to spread a risk diviser les risques ; an all-risks policy Insur une assurance tous risques.B vtr1 ( endanger) to risk one's life risquer sa vie ; to risk one's health compromettre sa santé ; to risk one's neck (doing) lit, fig risquer sa peau (à faire) ;2 ( venture) to risk doing courir le risque de faire ; we're prepared to risk cash nous sommes prêts à risquer de l'argent ; to risk death risquer la mort ; to risk injury risquer de se blesser ; to risk one's all risquer le tout pour le tout ; we decided to risk it nous avons décidé de prendre le risque ; let's risk it anyway c'est un risque à prendre. -
16 catch
catch [kæt∫](verb: preterite, past participle caught)1. nouna. ( = act, thing caught) prise f, capture f ; (Fishing) ( = several fish) pêche f ; ( = one fish) prise f• good catch! (Cricket) bien rattrapé !• where's the catch? où est le piège ?e. ( = ball game) jeu de ballea. attraper• I dialled her number hoping to catch her before she left je lui ai téléphoné en espérant la joindre avant son départ• can I ring you back? you've caught me at a bad time je peux vous rappeler ? je suis occupé en ce moment• to catch sb's attention or eye attirer l'attention de qnb. ( = take by surprise) surprendre• if I catch you at it again! (inf) que je t'y reprenne !• you won't catch me doing that again! (inf) on ne m'y reprendra pas !c. [+ bus, train] ( = be in time for) attraper ; ( = travel on) prendre• did you catch the news/that film last night? tu as vu les informations/le film hier soir ?d. ( = trap) the branch caught my skirte. ( = understand, hear) saisirf. [+ disease] attrapera. [fire] prendre ; [wood] prendre feub. her dress caught in the door/on a nail sa robe s'est prise dans la porte/s'est accrochée à un clou4. compounds• it's a catch 22 situation c'est une situation inextricable ► catch-all noun fourre-tout m inv (fig) adjective[regulation, clause etc] fourre-tout inva. ( = become popular) [fashion] prendreb. ( = understand) saisir( = catch napping) prendre en défaut ; ( = catch in the act) prendre sur le faita. se rattraper ; (with news, gossip) se mettre au courantb. to be or get caught up in sth (in activity, campaign) être pris par qch ; (in circumstances) être prisonnier de qch* * *[kætʃ] 1.1) ( fastening) (on purse, brooch) fermoir m, fermeture f; (on window, door) fermeture f2) ( drawback) piège m fig3) ( break in voice)4) ( act of catching) prise fto take a catch — GB
to make a catch — US Sport prendre la balle
6) ( marriage partner)2.transitive verb (prét, pp caught)1) ( hold and retain) [person] attraper [ball, fish]; [container] recueillir [water, dust]; ( by running) [person] attraper [person]I managed to catch her in — ( at home) j'ai réussi à la trouver chez elle
2) ( take by surprise) prendre, attraperto be ou get caught — se faire prendre
to catch somebody in the act —
to catch somebody at it — (colloq) prendre quelqu'un sur le fait
3) ( be in time for) prendre [bus, train, plane]; avoir [last post]4) ( manage to see) voir [programme]; aller voir [show]5) ( grasp) prendre [hand, arm]; agripper [branch, rope]; captiver, éveiller [interest, imagination]to catch somebody's attention ou eye — attirer l'attention de quelqu'un
to catch the chairman's eye — Administration obtenir la parole
6) ( hear) saisir (colloq), comprendre7) ( perceive) discerner [sound]; surprendre [look]to catch sight of somebody/something — surprendre quelqu'un/quelque chose
8) ( get stuck)to catch one's fingers in — se prendre les doigts dans [drawer, door]
to get caught in — [person] se prendre dans [net, thorns]
9) Medicine attraper [disease, virus, flu]10) (hit, knock) heurter [object, person]11) ( have an effect on) [light] faire briller [object]; [wind] emporter [paper, bag]12) ( be affected by)to catch fire ou light — prendre feu, s'enflammer
13) ( capture) rendre [atmosphere, spirit]16) ( manage to reach) catch up3.intransitive verb (prét, pp caught)1) ( become stuck)to catch on — [shirt, sleeve] s'accrocher à [nail]; [wheel] frotter contre [frame]
2) ( start to burn) [wood, fire] prendre•Phrasal Verbs:- catch on- catch up••you'll catch it! — (colloq) tu vas en prendre une! (colloq)
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17 chance
chance [t∫α:ns]1. nouna. ( = luck) hasard m• have you a pen on you by any chance? auriez-vous par hasard un stylo sur vous ?• the chances are that... il y a de grandes chances que... + subj il est très possible que... + subjc. ( = opportunity) occasion f• I had the chance to go or of going j'ai eu l'occasion d'y aller2. adjectiveb. ( = risk) [+ rejection, fine] risquer* * *[tʃɑːns], US [tʃæns] 1.1) ( opportunity) occasion fto have ou get the chance to do — avoir l'occasion de faire
when you get a ou the chance, can you...? — quand tu auras le temps est-ce que tu pourras...?
2) ( likelihood) chance fthe chances are that — il y a de grandes chances que (+ subj)
any chance of a coffee? — (colloq) est-ce que c'est possible d'avoir un café?
3) ( luck) hasard m4) ( risk) risque m5) ( possibility) chance f2. 3.do you have his address by any chance? — auriez-vous, par hasard, son adresse?
transitive verb1) ( risk)to chance one's arm —
2) ( happen to do)•Phrasal Verbs:••no chance! — (colloq) pas question! (colloq)
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18 eye
eye [aɪ]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. noun3. compounds━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. nouna. [of person, animal] œil m• a catastrophe is unfolding before our very eyes une catastrophe se déroule actuellement sous nos yeux• why don't you use your eyes? tu es aveugle ?• an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth œil pour œil, dent pour dent• will you keep an eye on the baby? vous pouvez surveiller le bébé ?• he chopped the onions under his mother's watchful eye il coupait les oignons sous l'œil attentif de sa mère• with a critical/an uneasy eye d'un œil critique/inquietd. ( = flair) customers with an eye for a bargain les clients qui savent flairer les bonnes affairese. eyes ( = attention) : he only had eyes for her il n'avait d'yeux que pour elle• "eyes only" (US) « top secret »f. eyes ( = opinion) : in the eyes of... aux yeux de...• one can't close one's eyes to the fact that... il faut bien reconnaître que...► to have one's eye on sth (inf)• to be up to one's eyes in debt être endetté jusqu'au cou► with + eyes( = look at) regarder3. compounds( = surprise) révélation f* * *[aɪ] 1.1) Anatomy œil min front of ou before your (very) eyes — sous vos yeux
to keep an eye on something/somebody — surveiller quelque chose/quelqu'un
to have one's eye on somebody/something — ( watch) surveiller quelqu'un/quelque chose; ( want) avoir envie de [house]; ( lust after) loucher (colloq) sur [person]; ( aim for) viser [job]
to keep one ou half an eye on something/somebody — garder un œil sur quelque chose/quelqu'un
to close ou shut one's eyes — fermer les yeux
to close ou shut one's eyes to something — fig se refuser à reconnaître quelque chose
to open somebody's eyes to something — fig ouvrir les yeux de quelqu'un sur quelque chose
to do something with one's eyes open — fig faire quelque chose en toute connaissance de cause
to go around with one's eyes shut — fig vivre sans rien voir
to keep an eye out ou one's eyes open for somebody/something — essayer de repérer quelqu'un/quelque chose
2) ( opinion)in his eyes... — à ses yeux...
3) ( flair)to have an eye for — avoir le sens de [detail, colour]; s'y connaître en [antiques]
4) ( hole in needle) chas m; ( to attach hook to) œillet m5) ( on potato) œil m6) ( on peacock's tail) œil m, ocelle m7) ( of storm) œil m2.the eye of the storm — fig l'œil de la tempête
noun modifier [ operation] de l'œil; [ muscle, tissue] de l'œil, oculaire; [ ointment, lotion] pour les yeux3.eye trouble — troubles mpl oculaires
- eyed combining form4.transitive verb1) ( look at) regarder [person, object]•Phrasal Verbs:- eye up••to be up to one's eyes in — être submergé de [mail, work]
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19 risk
risk [rɪsk]1. nouna. ( = possible danger) risque mb. (Insurance) risque m3. compounds* * *[rɪsk] 1.1) gen risque m‘at owner's risk’ — ‘aux risques et périls du propriétaire’
2) (in banking, insurance)2.to be a good/bad risk — être un bon/mauvais risque
transitive verb1) ( endanger)to risk one's life/neck — risquer sa vie/peau
2) ( venture) -
20 catch out
1) (to put out (a batsman) at cricket by catching the ball after it has been hit and before it touches the ground.) mettre hors jeu à balle attrapée2) (to cause (someone) to fail by means of a trick, a difficult question etc: The last question in the exam caught them all out.) prendre au dépourvu
См. также в других словарях:
Catching — Catch ing, n. The act of seizing or taking hold of. [1913 Webster] {Catching bargain} (Law), a bargain made with an heir expectant for the purchase of his expectancy at an inadequate price. Bouvier. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Catching — Catch ing a. 1. Infectious; contagious. [1913 Webster] 2. Captivating; alluring. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
catching — index attractive, contagious Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
catching — contagious, *infectious, communicable … New Dictionary of Synonyms
catching — [adj] contagious (disease) communicable, dangerous, endemic, epidemic, epizootic, infectious, infective, miasmatic, pandemic, pestiferous, pestilential, taking, transferable, transmittable; concept 314 Ant. uncontagious … New thesaurus
catching — ► ADJECTIVE informal ▪ (of a disease) infectious … English terms dictionary
catching — [kech′iŋ] adj. 1. contagious; infectious 2. attractive … English World dictionary
catching — [[t]kæ̱tʃɪŋ[/t]] 1) ADJ GRADED: v link ADJ If an illness or a disease is catching, it is easily passed on or given to someone else. [INFORMAL] There are those who think eczema is catching. Syn: infectious 2) ADJ GRADED: v link ADJ If a feeling or … English dictionary
catching — catchingly, adv. catchingness, n. /kach ing/, adj. 1. tending to be transmitted from one person to another; contagious or infectious: a disease that is catching; His enthusiasm is catching. 2. attractive; fascinating; captivating; alluring: a… … Universalium
catching — catch|ing [ˈkætʃıŋ] adj [not before noun] 1.) an illness that is catching is easily passed to other people = ↑infectious 2.) an emotion or feeling that is catching spreads quickly among people ▪ Julia s enthusiasm was catching … Dictionary of contemporary English
catching — adjective (not before noun) informal 1 a disease or illness that is catching is infectious: Well, I hope it s not catching. 2 an emotion or feeling that is catching spreads quickly among people … Longman dictionary of contemporary English