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41 éventuellement
éventuellement [evɑ̃tyεlmɑ̃]adverb• éventuellement, nous pourrions... we could possibly...━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━+1! éventuellement ≠ eventually* * *evɑ̃tɥɛlmɑ̃1) ( peut-être) possibly2) ( si nécessaire) if necessary* * *evɑ̃tɥɛlmɑ̃ advVous croyez qu'on pourrait construire ici? - Eventuellement. — Do you think we could build here? - Possibly.
les difficultés que vous pourriez éventuellement rencontrer — the difficulties that you might come across, the difficulties that you could possibly come across
Nous pourrions éventuellement avoir besoin de vous. — We might need you.
* * *éventuellement adv possibly; il y aura Paul et éventuellement Nicole Paul will be there and possibly Nicole; cela pourrait éventuellement servir that might be useful; éventuellement nous prendrons le train we could take the train; ‘tu viendras?’-‘éventuellement’ ‘will you come?’-‘I might’; je relis et éventuellement je corrige I reread and if necessary I correct.[evɑ̃tɥɛlmɑ̃] adverbetu me le prêterais? — éventuellement would you lend it to me? — maybe ou if need beles entreprises qui pourraient éventuellement nous racheter the companies which might ou could buy us out -
42 se délier
delje1. vpr/viLes langues ont fini par se délier. — Eventually people began to talk.
Chacun est soulagé d'en avoir terminé, les langues se délient. — Everyone is relieved to be finished with it, and is speaking more freely.
2. vpr/réflse délier de qch [serment, contrainte, contrôle] — to free o.s. of sth
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43 se ranger
ʀɑ̃dʒe1. vpr/vi1) (= se disposer)Ils se sont rangés autour de son bureau. — They gathered around his desk.
Ils se sont rangés sur la ligne de départ. — They lined up at the starting line.
Ils se sont rangés derrière elle pour la photo. — They gathered behind her for the photo., fig
Ils se sont finalement rangés du côté des socialistes. — They eventually sided with the socialists.
2) (= s'écarter) [véhicule, conducteur] to pull over, [piéton] to step aside3) (= s'arrêter) to pull in4) fig (= s'assagir) to settle downse ranger à [avis] — to come round to, to fall in with
2. vpr/pass[objets, vêtements] to go -
44 paille
n. f.1. Tirer à la courte paille: To draw straws (in order to decide who will be lumbered with an unpleasant task).2. Etre sur la paille: To be 'down on one's uppers', to be penniless. Mettre quelqu'un sur la paille: To drive someone out of business.3. Feu de paille: 'Flash in the pan', promising start eventually tailing ofif into failure.4. Homme de paille: 'Puppet', front-man who is more often than not made to 'carry the can' when the undertaking he manages, runs into difficulties.5. Le chapeau de paille: Deportation to the penal colony of French Guiana. (According to Auguste le Breton it is a direct reference to the hat worn by the 'Papillon-like' convicts during their term of hard-labour.)a To get down to some hard graft, to put in some hard work.b (of musicians): To serenade diners from table to table in a restaurant.7. Allumer la paille (pol.): To 'swoop', to deploy men in force.8. Une paille (iron.): A mere trifle. Il s'est payé une tire pour vingt briques, une paille! That twenty-grand car to him is just a drop in the ocean!9. Il y en a pour une paille! We're in for quite a long wait! (This expression can also be found as Il y en a pour une paye implying that the wait can last until next payday.)10. Faire des pailles: To be unfaithful to one's spouse (also: faire des pailhns or faire des traits). -
45 tasser
I.v. intrans. Qu'est-ce que je lui ai tassé! I didn't halflet him have it! — I gave him what for! — I gave him a severe punishing! (this can be physical or verbal).II.v. trans. reflex. To 'stuff one's face', to consume vast quantities of food and drink. On s'est tassé un sacré petit gueuleton! We had ourselves a really slap-up meal!III.v. pronom. Ça va se tasser! It'll all come out in the wash! — Things will sort themselves out! T'en fais pas, tout finira par se tasser! I wouldn't bother, things will right themselves eventually! -
46 Barbie, Klaus
(1913-1991)Known during the Second World War as the "Butcher of Lyons", Klaus Barbie was a notorious SS officer. As head of the Gestapo in Lyons, he oversaw the torture, death and deportation of Jews and French Resistance fighters betwen 1942 and 1944. Most notably, he was responsible for the torture and possible murder of Resistance leader Jean Moulin, and for the deportation to Auschwitz of 44 children from an orphanage at Izieu, a small town to the east of Lyon. After the war, he fled to Latin America, eventually ending up in Bolivia. In 1983 he was finally exradited to France, where he was put on trial in Lyon for crimes against humanity. Though he pleaded innocent, Barbie was found guilty, and sentenced to life imprisonment. He died in jail in 1991.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Barbie, Klaus
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47 Contrat Première Embauche
, CPEThe CPE was introduced by the Villepin government in 2006, in an attempt to reduce France's high levels of youth unemployment. It created a new form of work contract for young people, with less guarantees of job security than normal French work contracts. Left-wing student unions, encouraged by opposition parties, protested vigorously against the new contract, calling it discriminatory against youth, and an attack on the acquired social rights of employees. It was portrayed as a contract by which employers would be free to sack young employees without reason. In scenes reminiscent of 1968 (seesoixante- huit), students closed down a number of universities and set up barricades. After initially refusing to give in, the government eventually decided to scrap the CPE which by the, according to opinion polls, had become a very unpopular plan.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Contrat Première Embauche
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48 Espace
The original European "monospace" vehicle, first produced in 1984 byRenault. The initial concept for the Espace was actually conceived in the Rootes/Chrysler design facility in Coventry, England; this facility was associated with Chrysler's French subsidiary, Matra-Simca. When Chrysler sold their UK operations to Peugeot, the latter were not interested in the monospace project, so Matra teamed up with Renault, who eventually went ahead with the project and launched what has since become one of the company's flagship models.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Espace
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49 Intermittents du Spectacle
People working intermittently in the media and culture sector, including part-time actors, stage hands and technicians. At the start of the twenty-first century, les Intermittents du Spectaclebenefited from extremely attractive conditions for obtaining unemployment benefit - far less stringent that conditions applied to other types of worker. Judging that the system was being abused and exploited both by many workers themselves and by the media and production companies employing them, the government decided in 2003 to tighten the conditions of entitlement to unemployment benefit. This led to massive strikes and protest actions by the Intermittents, and even to the cancellation of the 2003 Avignon theatre festival. The rules were eventually tightened up in 2006, though Intermittents still benefit from an easier entitlement to benefits than most other employees.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Intermittents du Spectacle
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50 Lip
Iconic French watch manufacturer, the most spectacular victim of the collapse of the French watch industry in the early 1970s. In 1973, the Lip factory in Besançon became a symbol of worker contestation; employees refused to accept the closure of the plant, and took it over in an act of defiance. Watch production continued for several weeks, until the plant was stormed by riot police. 100,000 people gathered in Besançon on 29th September, in support of the workers, but eventually the plant was closed down and sold to businessman Claude Neuschwander. Production started up again, but the company was unable to compete against cheap eastern imports, and went into liquidation in 1976. Later, the brand name was bought, and Lipwatches are again produced - but mostly in China. A few are produced in France, but not in Besançon. -
51 Madelin, Alain
Born 1946Former minister, Alain Madelin is renowned as the most strident defender of economic liberalism in France, during the early 1990s, at a time when "liberalism" was still the "L" word, even for many French conservatives. A right-wing activist during his student days, virulently anti-Socialist, Madelin later joined Giscard d'Estaing's centre-right UDF party. He held a number of ministerial portfolios, eventually being appointed Minister of Finance and the Economy by prime minister Edouard Balladur in 1995; Balladur however sacked him after three months, judging Madelin too liberal. In reality, Madelin was ahead of his times, and many of his economic ideas - aimed at freeing up the French economy - have since been put in place. In 1997, he became president of the Parti Républicain (PR), which he later renamed Démocratie Libérale(DL): in 2003 DL merged with the mainstream conservative UMP party. Madelin retired from politics in 2007.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Madelin, Alain
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52 UDF
Union pour la Démocratie Française, a centre-right political party founded in 1978 as a party of non-Gaullist conservative supporters of president Valéry Giscard d'Estaing. Built out of the previous Républicains Indépendants party, the UDF remained the second force on the right of French politics until 1995 when it foundered as members split their loyalties between two presidential hopefuls of the time, Jacques Chirac and Edouard Balladur. Since then, the party lost ground and support, before eventually being wound down by its leader François Bayrou, in order to set up a new centre party, the MoDem or Mouvement Démocratique, in 2007. SeePolitical Parties in France -
53 systčme lymphatique
лимфатическая система
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[ http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]EN
lymphatic system
A system of vessels and nodes conveying lymph in the vertebrate body, beginning with capillaries in tissue spaces and eventually forming the thoracic ducts which empty in the subclavian veins. (Source: MGH)
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Франко-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > systčme lymphatique
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54 fine poussičre
мелкая пыль
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[ http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]EN
fine dust
Air-borne solid particles, originating from human activity and natural sources, such as wind-blown soil and fires, that eventually settle through the force of gravity, and can cause injury to human and other animal respiratory systems through excessive inhalation. (Source: ALL)
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Франко-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > fine poussičre
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55 ressource non renouvelable
невозобновляемый ресурс
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[ http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]EN
non-renewable resource
A natural resource which, in terms of human time scales, is contained within the Earth in a fixed quantity and therefore can be used once only in the foreseeable future (although it may be recycled after its first use). This includes the fossil fuels and is extended to include mineral resources and sometimes ground water, although water and many minerals are renewed eventually. (Source: ALL)
[http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]Тематики
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Франко-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > ressource non renouvelable
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56 dégradation des ressources en eau douce
ухудшение качества пресных вод
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[ http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]EN
freshwater degradation
Pollution immediately or eventually involves the hydrological cycle of the earth, because even pollutants emitted into the air and those present in the soil are washed out by precipitation. Water is considered polluted when it is altered in composition or condition so that it becomes less suitable for any or all of the functions and purposes for which it would be suitable in its natural state. This definition includes changes in the physical, chemical and biological properties of water, or such discharges of liquid, gaseous or solid substances into water as will or are likely to create nuisances or render such water harmful to public health, safety or welfare, or to domestic, commercial, industrial, agricultural, fish or other aquatic life. It also includes changes in temperatures, due to the discharge of hot water. (Source: WPR)
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Франко-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > dégradation des ressources en eau douce
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57 circulation maritime
циркуляция морской воды
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[ http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]EN
sea circulation
Large-scale horizontal water motion within an ocean. The way energy from the sun, stored in the sea, is transported around the world. The currents explain, for example, why the UK has ice-free ports in winter, while St. Petersburg, at the same latitude as the Shetland Islands, needs ice breakers. Evidence is growing that the world's ocean circulation was very different during the last ice age and has changed several times in the distant past, with dramatic effects on climate. The oceans are vital as storehouses, as they absorb more than half the sun's heat reaching the earth. This heat, which is primarily absorbed near the equator is carried around the world and released elsewhere, creating currents which last up to 1.000 years. As the Earth rotates and the wind acts upon the surface, currents carry warm tropical water to the cooler parts of the world. The strength and direction of the currents are affected by landmasses, bottlenecks through narrow straits, and even the shape of the sea-bed. When the warm water reaches polar regions its heat evaporates into the atmosphere, reducing its temperature and increasing its density. When sea-water freezes it leaves salt behind in the unfrozen water and this cold water sinks into the ocean and begins to flow back to the tropics. Eventually it is heated and begins the cycle all over again. (Source: MGH / WRIGHT)
[http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]Тематики
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Франко-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > circulation maritime
См. также в других словарях:
Eventually — E*ven tu*al*ly, adv. In an eventual manner; finally; ultimately. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
eventually — index in due course Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
eventually — ultimately, 1670s, from EVENTUAL (Cf. eventual) + LY (Cf. ly) (2) … Etymology dictionary
eventually — [adv] in the course of time after all, at last, at the end of the day*, finally, hereafter, in future, in the end, in the long run*, one day, someday, sometime, sooner or later*, ultimately, when all is said and done*, yet; concepts 552,820 … New thesaurus
eventually — [ē ven′cho͞o əl ē, ē ven′sho͞oəl ē; ē ven′chə lē] adv. finally; ultimately; in the end … English World dictionary
eventually — 01. If you keep on working hard, [eventually] you will succeed. 02. The [eventual] goal of the recent talks between North and South Korea is the reunification of the country. 03. Our flight was delayed by snow, but we [eventually] got away about… … Grammatical examples in English
eventually — [[t]ɪve̱ntʃuəli[/t]] ♦♦ 1) ADV: ADV with cl, ADV before v Eventually means in the end, especially after a lot of delays, problems, or arguments. Eventually, the army caught up with him in Latvia... The flight eventually got away six hours late.… … English dictionary
Eventually — Infobox Album | Name = Eventually Type = Album Artist = Paul Westerberg Released = 1996 Recorded = Genre = Alternative rock Length = Label = Reprise Producer = Lou Giordano, Brendan O Brien Reviews = *Allmusic Guide rating|2|5… … Wikipedia
eventually — e|ven|tu|al|ly [ ı ventʃuəli ] adverb *** at the end of a process or period of time in which many things happen: Dad was eventually diagnosed as suffering from a chronic heart condition. We re hoping, eventually, to create 500 new jobs. Did they… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
eventually — adverb after a long time, especially after a long delay or a lot of problems: He worked so hard that eventually he made himself ill. | She eventually passed her driving test. | “Did you manage to contact Roger?” “Well yes, eventually.” … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
eventually */*/*/ — UK [ɪˈventʃuəlɪ] / US adverb at the end of a process or period of time in which many things happen Dad was eventually diagnosed as suffering from a chronic heart condition. We re hoping, eventually, to create 500 new jobs. Did they ever pay you?… … English dictionary