-
21 dodgy
1) (difficult or risky: Catching the 5.15 train after the meeting will be rather dodgy.) délicat2) ((of a person, organization etc) not trustworthy or safe, financially or otherwise: I think the whole business sounds a bit dodgy.) malin, risqué -
22 eye
1. noun1) (the part of the body with which one sees: Open your eyes; She has blue eyes.) oeil2) (anything like or suggesting an eye, eg the hole in a needle, the loop or ring into which a hook connects etc.) trou3) (a talent for noticing and judging a particular type of thing: She has an eye for detail/colour/beauty.) (avoir l')oeil (pour)2. verb(to look at, observe: The boys were eyeing the girls at the dance; The thief eyed the policeman warily.) observer- eyeball- eyebrow - eye-catching - eyelash - eyelet - eyelid - eye-opener - eye-piece - eyeshadow - eyesight - eyesore - eye-witness - before/under one's very eyes - be up to the eyes in - close one's eyes to - in the eyes of - keep an eye on - lay/set eyes on - raise one's eyebrows - see eye to eye - with an eye to something - with one's eyes open -
23 fishing-line
noun (a fine strong thread, now usually made of nylon, used with a rod, hooks etc for catching fish.) ligne -
24 fishing-rod
noun (a long thin flexible rod used with a fishing-line and hooks etc for catching fish.) canne à pêche -
25 for fear of
(so as not to: She would not go swimming for fear of catching a cold.) de peur de -
26 hook
[huk] 1. noun1) (a small piece of metal shaped like a J fixed at the end of a fishing-line used for catching fish etc: a fish-hook.) hameçon2) (a bent piece of metal etc used for hanging coats, cups etc on, or a smaller one sewn on to a garment, for fastening it: Hang your jacket on that hook behind the door; hooks and eyes.) crochet, agrafe3) (in boxing, a kind of punch with the elbow bent: a left hook.) crochet2. verb1) (to catch (a fish etc) with a hook: He hooked a large salmon.) prendre2) (to fasten or to be fastened by a hook or hooks: He hooked the ladder on (to the branch); This bit hooks on to that bit; Could you hook my dress up down the back?) accrocher3) (in golf, to hit (the ball) far to the left of where it should be (or to the right if one is left-handed).) coup tiré•- hooked- by hook or by crook - off the hook -
27 inoculate
[i'nokjuleit](to give (a person etc) a mild form of a disease, usually by injecting germs into his body, so as to prevent him from catching a more serious form: Has he been inoculated against diphtheria?) vacciner (contre) -
28 juggle
(to keep throwing in the air and catching a number of objects (eg balls or clubs): He entertained the audience by juggling with four balls and four plates at once.) jongler (avec)- juggler -
29 lasso
[læ'su:] 1. plural - lasso(e)s; noun(a long rope with a loop which tightens when the rope is pulled, used for catching wild horses etc.) lasso2. verb(to catch with a lasso: The cowboy lassoed the horse.) prendre au lasso -
30 net
I 1. [net] noun((any of various devices for catching creatures, eg fish, or for any of a number of other purposes, consisting of) a loose open material made of knotted string, thread, wire etc: a fishing-net; a hair-net; a tennis-net; ( also adjective) a net curtain.) (de/au) filet2. verb(to catch in a net: They netted several tons of fish.) prendre au filet- netting- netball - network -
31 snappy
1) (irritable; inclined to snap: He is always rather snappy on a Monday morning.) hargneux2) (quick; prompt: You'll have to be snappy if you're catching that bus!) vif3) (smart: He's certainly a snappy dresser.) pimpant -
32 snare
-
33 trap
[træp] 1. noun1) (a device for catching animals: He set a trap to catch the bear; a mousetrap.) piège2) (a plan or trick for taking a person by surprise: She led him into a trap; He fell straight into the trap.) piège2. verb(to catch in a trap or by a trick: He lives by trapping animals and selling their fur; She trapped him into admitting that he liked her.) prendre au piège- trapper- trap-door -
34 vaccine
['væksi:n](a substance made from the germs that cause a particular disease, especially smallpox, and given to a person or animal to prevent him from catching that disease.) vaccin- vaccination -
35 catch
A n3 ( break in voice) with a catch in his voice d'une voix émue ;4 ( act of catching) prise f ; to take a catch GB, to make a catch US Sport prendre la balle ; to play catch jouer à la balle ;7 ( marriage partner) to be a good catch être un beau parti.1 ( hold and retain) [person] attraper [ball, fish, mouse] ; [container] recueillir [water, dust] ; ( by running) [person] attraper [person] ; I managed to catch her in ( at home) j'ai réussi à la trouver ;2 ( take by surprise) prendre, attraper [person, thief] ; to catch sb doing surprendre qn en train de faire ; to be ou get caught se faire prendre ; to catch sb in the act, to catch sb at it ○ prendre qn sur le fait ; you wouldn't catch me smoking/arriving late! ce n'est pas moi qui fumerais/arriverais en retard! ; you won't catch me at it again! on ne m'y reprendra plus! ; we got caught in the rain/in the storm nous avons été surpris par la pluie/par la tempête ; you've caught me at an awkward moment vous tombez mal ; ⇒ balance, foot, short, unawares ;3 ( be in time for) attraper, prendre [bus, train, plane] ; to catch the last post ou mail avoir la dernière levée ;5 ( grasp) prendre [hand, arm] ; agripper [branch, rope] ; captiver, éveiller [interest, imagination] ; to catch hold of sth attraper qch ; to catch sb's attention ou eye attirer l'attention de qn ; to catch the Speaker's eye GB Pol obtenir la parole ; to catch the chairman's eye Admin obtenir la parole ; to catch some sleep ○ dormir un peu ;6 ( hear) saisir ○, comprendre [word, name] ; do you catch my meaning? tu comprends ce que je veux dire? ;7 ( perceive) sentir [smell] ; discerner [sound] ; surprendre [look] ; to catch sight of sb/sth apercevoir qn/qch ;8 ( get stuck) to catch one's fingers/foot in se prendre les doigts/le pied dans [drawer, door] ; to catch one's shirt/sleeve on accrocher sa chemise/manche à [nail] ; to get one's head/hand caught se coincer la tête/main (in dans ; between entre) ; to get one's shirt/sweater caught accrocher sa chemise/son pull-over (on à) ; to get caught in [person] se prendre dans [net, thorns, barbed wire] ;10 ( hit) heurter [object, person] ; the ball/stone caught him on the head la balle/pierre l'a heurté à la tête ; to catch sth with heurter qch avec [elbow, broom handle] ; to catch sb (with) a blow donner un coup à qn ;11 ( have an effect on) [sun, light] faire briller [object, raindrops] ; [wind] emporter [paper, bag] ; to catch one's breath retenir son souffle ;12 ( be affected by) to catch the sun prendre le soleil ; to catch fire ou light prendre feu, s'enflammer ; to catch the light refléter la lumière ;16 ( manage to reach) ⇒ catch up.1 ( become stuck) to catch on sth [shirt, sleeve] s'accrocher à qch ; [wheel] frotter contre [frame] ;2 ( start to burn) [wood, coal, fire] prendre.you'll catch it ○ ! tu vas en prendre une ○ !■ catch on1 ( become popular) [fashion, song, TV programme, activity, idea] devenir populaire (with auprès de) ;■ catch out:▶ catch [sb] out1 ( take by surprise) prendre [qn] de court ; ( doing something wrong) prendre [qn] sur le fait ;2 ( trick) attraper, jouer un tour à ;3 (in cricket, baseball) éliminer [batsman].■ catch up:▶ catch up ( in race) regagner du terrain ; ( in work) rattraper son retard ; to catch up with rattraper [person, vehicle] ; to catch up on rattraper [work, sleep] ; se remettre au courant de [news, gossip] ;▶ catch [sb/sth] up1 ( manage to reach) rattraper ;2 ( pick up) attraper [bag, child] (in dans) ;▶ catch [sth] up in ( tangle) prendre [qch] dans [barbed wire, thorns, chain] ; to get one's feet caught up in sth se prendre les pieds dans qch ; I got my skirt caught up in the thorns j'ai pris ma jupe dans les ronces ; to get caught up in se laisser entraîner par [enthusiasm, excitement] ; se trouver pris dans [traffic] ; se trouver pris au milieu de [war, bombing] ; se trouver mêlé à [scandal, fight, argument]. -
36 chance
chance, US [transcription][tS_ns]A n1 ( opportunity) occasion f ; to have ou get the chance to do avoir l'occasion de faire ; I had the chance of a job in China on m'a offert la possibilité de travailler en Chine ; this was the chance (that) she was waiting for c'était l'occasion qu'elle attendait ; to give sb a ou the chance to do donner à qn l'occasion de faire ; the trip gave me a chance to speak Greek le voyage m'a donné l'occasion de parler grec ; give me a chance to explain laisse-moi t'expliquer ; give the tablets a chance to work laisse aux cachets le temps d'agir ; to take one's chance saisir l'occasion ; you've missed your chance tu as laissé passer l'occasion ; now's your chance! c'est l'occasion ou jamais! ; I haven't had a chance yet je n'en ai pas encore eu l'occasion ; this is your last chance c'est ta dernière chance ; this is your big chance c'est l'occasion ou jamais ; if you get a chance si tu en as la possibilité ; when you get a ou the chance, can you…? quand tu auras le temps est-ce que tu pourras…? ; ‘can you do it?’ ‘yes, given a ou the chance’ ‘est-ce que tu peux le faire?’ ‘oui, si on me laisse essayer’ ;2 ( likelihood) chance f ; there's little chance of sb doing il y a peu de chances que qn fasse ; there's little chance of winning il y a peu de chances de gagner ; the chances of catching the thief are slim il y a peu de chances qu'on attrape le voleur ; there is a chance that sb will do il y a des chances que qn fasse ; the chances are that il y a de grandes chances que (+ subj) ; the chances of sb doing are poor il y a peu de chances que qn fasse ; she has a good chance elle a de bonnes chances ; I have no chance je n'ai aucune chance ; what are his chances of recovery? a-t-il des chances de s'en tirer? ; what are my chances? quelles sont mes chances? ; any chance of a coffee ○ ? est-ce que c'est possible d'avoir un café? ;3 ( luck) hasard m ; a game of chance un jeu de hasard ; it happened by chance ça s'est produit par hasard ; by a lucky chance comme par hasard ; as chance would have it par coïncidence ;4 ( risk) risque m ; to take a chance prendre un risque ; to take a chance on doing prendre le risque de faire ; I'm taking no chances je ne prends pas de risques ; it's a chance I'm willing to take c'est un risque à prendre ;5 ( possibility) chance f ; not to stand a chance n'avoir aucune chance (of doing de faire) ; to be still in with a chance of doing avoir encore une chance de faire ; are you by any chance Juliet West? seriez-vous, par hasard, Juliet West? ; do you have his address by any chance? auriez-vous, par hasard, son adresse?B modif [encounter, occurrence] fortuit ; [discovery] accidentel/-elle ; a chance acquaintance une personne rencontrée par hasard.C vtr1 ( risk) to chance doing courir le risque de faire ; to chance one's luck ou arm tenter sa chance ; we'll just have to chance it il faudra tenter notre chance or le coup ; I shouldn't chance it if I were you à ta place je ne risquerais pas le coup ;2 sout ( happen to do) I chanced to see it je l'ai vu par hasard ; if you should chance to do si tu venais à faire.■ chance upon, chance on:▶ chance upon [sb] rencontrer [qn] par hasard ;▶ chance upon [sth] trouver [qch] par hasard. -
37 lariat
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38 creel
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39 decoy
∎ we want you to act as a decoy nous voulons que vous serviez d'appât[dɪ'kɔɪ] (bird → using live bird) attirer à l'appeau ou à la chanterelle; (→ using artificial means) attirer au leurre; (person) appâter, attirer;∎ they decoyed him into leaving his house ils l'ont appâté ou attiré hors de chez lui;∎ the phone call decoyed her away from the office le coup de téléphone était un piège pour la faire sortir du bureau -
40 direct
direct [dɪ'rekt]diriger ⇒ 1 (a), 1 (d), 1 (g), 2 (a), 2 (b) réaliser ⇒ 1 (b) adresser ⇒ 1 (c) ordonner ⇒ 1 (e) instruire ⇒ 1 (f) faire de la réalisation ⇒ 2 (c) direct ⇒ 3 (a)-(c), 3 (e) exact ⇒ 3 (d) directement ⇒ 4(a) (supervise → business) diriger, gérer, mener; (→ office, work) diriger; (→ movements) guider; (→ traffic) régler(b) Cinema, Radio & Television (film, programme) réaliser; (actors) diriger; Theatre (play) mettre en scène;∎ directed by Danny Boyle Cinema, Radio & Television réalisation Danny Boyle; Theatre mise f en scène Danny Boyle∎ please direct your remarks to the chairperson veuillez adresser vos observations au président;∎ the accusation was directed at him l'accusation le visait;∎ he directed my attention to the map il a attiré mon attention sur la carte;∎ we should direct all our efforts towards improving our education service nous devrions consacrer tous nos efforts à améliorer notre système scolaire∎ I directed my steps homewards je me suis dirigé vers la maison;∎ can you direct me to the train station? pourriez-vous m'indiquer le chemin de la gare?(e) (instruct) ordonner;∎ he directed them to leave at once il leur a donné l'ordre de partir immédiatement;∎ she directed him to take control of the project elle l'a chargé de prendre en main le projet;∎ I did as I was directed j'ai fait comme on m'avait dit ou comme on m'en avait donné l'ordre;∎ take as directed (on drugs packaging) se conformer à la prescription du médecin∎ to direct the jury instruire le jury;∎ the judge directed the jury to bring in a verdict of guilty le juge incita le jury à rendre un verdict de culpabilité;∎ American directed verdict = verdict rendu par le jury sur la recommandation du juge∎ it's her first chance to direct Cinema, Radio & Television c'est la première fois qu'elle a l'occasion de faire de la réalisation; Theatre c'est la première fois qu'elle a l'occasion de faire de la mise en scène;∎ he's never directed before il n'a jamais fait de mise en scène(a) (straight) direct;∎ direct flight/route vol m/chemin m direct;∎ direct heating/lighting chauffage m/éclairage m direct(b) (immediate → cause, effect) direct, immédiat;∎ she has direct control over the finances les questions financières relèvent directement de sa responsabilité;∎ he's a direct descendant of the King il descend du roi en ligne directe;∎ keep out of direct sunlight (on packaging) évitez l'exposition directe au soleil;∎ you're not in direct danger of catching the disease vous ne courez pas de risque immédiat d'attraper cette maladie∎ he was always very direct with us il nous a toujours parlé très franchement;∎ she asked some very direct questions elle a posé des questions parfois très directes∎ direct quotation citation f exacte;∎ it's the direct opposite of what I said c'est exactement le contraire de ce que j'ai dit4 adverb(go) directement, tout droit;∎ to travel direct from London to Edinburgh prendre un train/un vol/ etc direct de Londres à Edimbourg;∎ to dispatch goods direct to sb expédier des marchandises directement à qn;∎ the concert will be broadcast direct from Paris ce concert sera transmis en direct de Paris►► Computing direct access accès m direct;direct action action f directe;direct advertising publicité f directe;direct banking banque f à distance;Telecommunications direct broadcast satellite satellite m de télédiffusion directe;direct costs charges fpl directes, frais mpl directs;direct cost accounting (méthode f de) comptabilité f des coûts variables;direct costing méthode f des coûts variables ou proportionnels;Electricity direct current courant m continu;∎ to pay by direct debit payer par prélèvement automatique;Telecommunications direct dialling automatique m;direct fixed costs coûts mpl fixes directs ou attribuables;direct hit coup m au but;∎ to score a direct hit on sth (of bomber) toucher qch en plein dans le mille; (of bomb) tomber en plein dans qch;∎ the missile made a direct hit le missile a atteint son objectif;∎ the palace is built to withstand a direct hit le palais a été construit pour résister à une bombe lâché d'un avion ou à un missile;∎ the ship suffered two direct hits from missiles le bateau a été touché par deux missiles;direct investment investissement m direct;direct labour main-d'œuvre f directe;direct labour cost prix m de la main-d'œuvre directe;Telecommunications direct line ligne f directe;direct mail advertising publicité f directe, publicité f par publipostage;direct mail campaign campagne f de publicité directe;direct marketing marketing m direct;Computing direct memory access accès m direct à la mémoire;Grammar direct object complément m (d'objet) direct;direct purchasing achats mpl directs;Grammar direct question question f au style direct;Politics direct rule = contrôle direct du maintien de l'ordre par le gouvernement britannique en Irlande du Nord imposé en 1972;direct selling vente f directe;Finance direct tax impôt m direct;Finance direct taxation imposition f directe
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