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1 expletive
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2 expletive
B adj explétif/-ive. -
3 expletive
expletive [ɪk'spli:tɪv]1 noun(a) (swearword) juron m;∎ a string of expletives un chapelet de juronsGrammar explétif -
4 Lord
lord [lɔ:d]1. nouna. seigneur mb. ( = God) the Lord le Seigneur• oh Lord! (inf) Seigneur !• Lord knows (what/who) (inf) Dieu sait (quoi/qui)2. compounds* * *[lɔːd]1) Religion Seigneur m2) (colloq) ( in exclamations)Lord knows where/why — Dieu sait où/pourquoi
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5 lord
lord [lɔ:d]1. nouna. seigneur mb. ( = God) the Lord le Seigneur• oh Lord! (inf) Seigneur !• Lord knows (what/who) (inf) Dieu sait (quoi/qui)2. compounds* * *[lɔːd]1) ( ruler) seigneur m (of de)2) ( peer) lord m••to lord it over somebody — (colloq) regarder quelqu'un de haut
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6 Anglo-Saxon
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7 deuce
deuce [dju:s](a) (on card, dice) deux m∎ where the deuce is it? où diable peut-il bien être?;∎ what the deuce! bon sang!;∎ how the deuce should I know? comment voulez-vous que je sache?□ ;∎ we're in a deuce of a mess nous sommes dans un sacré ou satané pétrin -
8 jiggered
jiggered ['dʒɪgəd]∎ well, I'll be jiggered! mince alors!;∎ I'm jiggered if I'll do it! pas question que je le fasse!∎ my ankle/back is jiggered je me suis niqué la cheville/le dos -
9 wretched
wretched ['retʃɪd](a) (poor → dwelling, clothes) misérable;∎ she had a wretched existence elle a eu une existence misérable;∎ their living conditions are wretched leurs conditions de vie sont misérables ou sont épouvantables;∎ she receives a wretched wage elle touche un salaire de misère∎ he was or felt wretched about what he had said il se sentait coupable à cause de ce qu'il avait dit;∎ I felt cold and wretched j'avais froid et je me sentais malheureux∎ the flu made me feel really wretched je me sentais vraiment très mal avec cette grippe∎ keep your wretched money! garde-le, ton fichu argent!(e) (abominable → behaviour, performance, weather) lamentable;∎ what wretched luck! quelle déveine!;∎ I'm a wretched singer/writer je suis un piètre chanteur/écrivain;∎ it's a wretched business c'est une affaire ou une histoire lamentable∎ the wretched les déshérités mplⓘ Wretched refuse Ces mots (que l'on pourrait traduire par "le rebut") sont extraits du poème New Colossus (1883) de la poétesse américaine Emma Lazarus. Ce poème est inscrit sur le piédestal de la Statue de la Liberté, à l'entrée du port de New York. Y figurent également les vers Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free ("donne-moi tes exténués, tes pauvres, qui en rangs pressés aspirent à vivre libres"). On emploie cette formule en anglais américain à propos des immigrants des siècles passés mais également à propos de ceux d'aujourd'hui.
См. также в других словарях:
Expletive — Ex ple*tive, a. [L. expletivus, from expletus, p. p. of explere to fill up; ex out+plere to fill, akin to plenus full: cf. F. expl[ e]tif. See {Full}.] Filling up; hence, added merely for the purpose of filling up; superfluous. Expletive imagery … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
expletive — is an adjective and a noun: both are pronounced ik splee tiv, with the stress on the second syllable. The primary meaning is ‘filling out a sentence, line of verse, etc.’, and the noun denotes a word that does this, typically in verse, without… … Modern English usage
expletive — [eks′plətôr΄ēeks′plə tiv] n. [LL expletivus, serving to fill < L expletus, pp. of explere, to fill < ex , out, up + plere, to fill: see FULL1] 1. an oath or exclamation, esp. an obscenity 2. a word, phrase, etc. not needed for the sense but … English World dictionary
Expletive — Ex ple*tive, n. A word, letter, or syllable not necessary to the sense, but inserted to fill a vacancy; an oath. [1913 Webster] While explectives their feeble aid to join, And ten low words oft creep in one dull line. Pope. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
expletive — I noun addition, anathema, bad language, blaspheming, curse, denunciation, ecphonesis, embellishment, execration, foul invective, foul language, imprecation, injection, insertion, interjection, interpolation, irreverence, malediction, outcry,… … Law dictionary
expletive — [n] swear word; exclamation curse, cuss, cuss word, interjection, oath; concept 275 … New thesaurus
expletive — ► NOUN ▪ an oath or swear word. ORIGIN originally denoting a word used to fill out a sentence: from Latin expletivus, from explere fill out … English terms dictionary
Expletive — The word expletive is currently used in three senses: syntactic expletives, expletive attributives, and bad language .The word expletive comes from the Latin verb explere , meaning to fill , via expletivus , filling out . It was introduced into… … Wikipedia
expletive — {{11}}expletive (adj.) mid 15c., from L. expletivus (see EXPLETIVE (Cf. expletive) (n.)). {{12}}expletive (n.) 1610s, originally a word or phrase serving to fill out a sentence or metrical line, from M.Fr. explétif (15c.) and directly from L.L.… … Etymology dictionary
expletive — [17] Originally, an expletive word was simply one used to ‘fill up’ a line of verse, to complete its metrical pattern (expletive comes from Latin explētus, the past participle of explēre ‘fill out’, a compound formed from the prefix ex ‘out’ and… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
expletive — [17] Originally, an expletive word was simply one used to ‘fill up’ a line of verse, to complete its metrical pattern (expletive comes from Latin explētus, the past participle of explēre ‘fill out’, a compound formed from the prefix ex ‘out’ and… … Word origins