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61 crevard
n. m.1. 'Goner', near-moribund person. Avoir une gueule de crevard: To look like death warmed up.2. Starveling, emaciated person.3. Glutton, gluttonous character. Au restau, quel crevard! It costs a packet taking him out for a meal!4. 'Squanderer', spendthrift character. -
62 fesse
n. f.1. Poser ses fesses: To sit down. Pose tes fesses! Take a pew!2. Serrer lesfesses: To be 'in a blue funk', to be frightened.3. Coller aux fesses de quelqu'un: To 'stay hot on someone's trail', to follow someone like a leech. Les avoir aux fesses: To have the fuzz on one's tail.4. N'y aller que d'une fesse: To do something half-heartedly.5. Occupe-toi de tes fesses! Mind your own bloody business!6. Ça coûte la peau des fesses: It costs a bomb—It's very expensive.7. Histoires de fesses: 'Country matters', sexual goings-on.8. Journal de fesses: 'Girlie mag', soft-porn magazine. (The umbrella term for such publications is lapresse du cul.)9. Le pain de fesses: Prostitution.10. Mes fesses! My arse! — Not bloody likely! -
63 Côtisations sociales
social security and health insurance contributions, paid in France by both employers and employees. The levels are high, and add over 50% to basic wage costs in France; but they are still insufficient to pay for the cost of running France's very full social and health services.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Côtisations sociales
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64 coûts de formation
Coûts calculés en multipliant la somme des investissements financiers consentis pour la formation d'un joueur pendant une année par le facteur joueur moyen.Investment required to train one player for one year multiplied by an average player factor.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais (UEFA Football) > coûts de formation
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65 tableau des joueurs
Liste de tous les joueurs dont l'inscription est détenue par le candidat à la licence à un moment quelconque au cours de la période et pour lesquels des frais d'acquisition directs, quels qu'ils soient, ont été encourus à un moment quelconque, au cours de la période ou au cours de périodes précédentes.Index providing specific information on all the players whose registration was held by the licence applicant at any time during the period to be covered and for whom registration costs arose or were brought forward.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais (UEFA Football) > tableau des joueurs
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66 provision ad litem
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > provision ad litem
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67 usine de déssalement
опреснительная установка
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[ http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]EN
desalination plant
1) Plants for the extraction of fresh water from saltwater by the removal of salts, usually by distilling.
2) Parts of the world with severe water shortages are looking to desalination plants to solve their problems. Desalination of water is still nearly four times more expensive than obtaining water from conventional sources. However technology is improving and costs are likely to decrease slightly in the future. There is now more interest in building distillation plants beside electric installations so that the waste heat from power generation can be used to drive the desalination process.
(Source: ALL / WRIGHT)
[http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]Тематики
EN
DE
FR
Франко-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > usine de déssalement
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68 marché monétaire
рынок краткосрочных финансовых обязательств
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[ http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]EN
money market
A financial market that trades Treasury bills, commercial paper and other short-term financial instruments. This market is often used by businesses when they need short-term funds to bridge the gap between paying operating costs and collecting revenue from product sales. As such, the term "money" in money market indicates that businesses are using highly liquid instruments to raise the money need for operating expenses. (Source: AMOS2)
[http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]Тематики
EN
DE
FR
Франко-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > marché monétaire
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69 économie de l'environnement
экономика окружающей среды
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[ http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]EN
environmental economics
A recognized field of specialization in the discipline of Economics that embraces the issues of pollution control and environment protection, in which costs and benefits are difficult or impossible to estimate, much of the subject matter falling outside the competitive market system. Yet, it is an area in which immense common property resources need to be allocated sensibly to the overall public good. The subject is also very much concerned with ways and means to achieve this sensible allocation such as emission and effluent charges, user charges for the treatment or disposal of waste, environmental taxes, product charges, deposit refunds, tradeable pollution rights, performance bonds, natural resource accounting, and the economic implications of sustainable development. (Source: GILP96)
[http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]Тематики
EN
DE
FR
Франко-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > économie de l'environnement
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