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fantastic

  • 61 ver

    n. m.
    1. Nu comme un ver: 'Starkers', 'in one's birthday suit', stark naked.
    2. Tuer le ver: To take a 'rouser', to take an early-morning drink for the purpose of killing a hang-over. (Popular myth has it that alcohol consumed on an empty stomach first thing in the morning will destroy any worms in the intestines.)
    3. Avoir le ver solitaire: To be a 'guzzler', to be forever 'stuffing one's face', to have an immoderate appetite for food. (The tapeworm is a bogey parasite to French hypochondriacs.)
    4. Ça n'est pas piqué des vers! It's smashing! — It's fantastic! (The parasite in question here is the woodworm, and anything free of that pest is therefore in prime condition.)
    5. Tirer les vers du nez à quelqu'un: To 'pump' someone for info (litcrally to 'worm' information out of someone).

    Dictionary of Modern Colloquial French > ver

  • 62 Avoriaz, Festival de film

       d' Annual cinema festival, focusing on the Fantastic, which took place at Avoriaz, in the French Alps, from 1973 to 1993.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Avoriaz, Festival de film

  • 63 Concorde

       Franco-British supersonic aircraft, in service from 1976 to 2003: the world's only supersonic commercial airliner. Concorde had a distinguished career, until this was brought to a stop following a fatal accident in the year 2000, at Gonesse, near Paris. All Concordes were withdrawn from service (by BA and Air France) following this disaster, and though the plane later took to the air again, commercial operations were stopped in 2003, following further fears about the plane's safety. Concorde was a magnificent product of the brave new world of 1960's optimism, designed at a time when environmental considerations and fuel economy were just not issues. Its extravagent operating costs meant that it was never really profitable except on the London-New York route, and was never bought by any airlines other than the British and French national flag carriers. It was nonetheless a magnificent symbol of prestige, used by Presidents and other VIPs, as well as a fantastic technological achievement. This technological prowess seems even more significant, when one remembers that Concorde was designed and built at a time when computer operated systems were in their infancy.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Concorde

  • 64 extraordinaire

    extraordinary, fantastic

    Mini Dictionnaire français-anglais > extraordinaire

См. также в других словарях:

  • Fantastic — is a literary term that describes a quality of other literary genres, and in some cases is used as a genre in and of itself, although in this case it is often conflated with the Supernatural. The term was originated in the structuralist theory of …   Wikipedia

  • fantastic — FANTÁSTIC, Ă, fantastici, ce, adj. 1. Care nu există în realitate; creat, plăsmuit de imaginaţie; ireal, fantasmagoric, fabulos. ♦ Literatură fantastică = gen de literatură în care elementul preponderent îl constituie imaginaţia, irealul. 2. Care …   Dicționar Român

  • Fantastic — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda «Fantastic» Sencillo de Ami Suzuki Publicación 8 de febrero de 2006 Formato CD Grabado …   Wikipedia Español

  • Fantastic — Single par Ami Suzuki extrait de l’album Connetta Face A Fantastic Face B Slow Motion Sortie 8 février 2006 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • fantastic — [fan tas′tik] adj. [ME fantastik < OFr fantastique < ML fantasticus < LL phantasticus < Gr phantastikos, able to present or represent to the mind < phantazein, to make visible < phainein, to show: see FANTASY] 1. existing in the …   English World dictionary

  • fantastic — 1 chimerical, visionary, fanciful, imaginary, quixotic Analogous words: extravagant, extreme (see EXCESSIVE): incredible, unbelievable, implausible (see affirmative adjectives at PLAUSIBLE): preposterous, absurd (see FOOLISH): irrational,… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • fantastic — 1. Fantastic is one of the most popular colloquial terms for ‘excellent, very enjoyable’. It is first recorded with this meaning in the 1930s and is now used in all sorts of contexts: • Oh, Val, isn t it fantastic?… It s amazing, isn t it?… …   Modern English usage

  • Fantastic — Fan*tas tic, a. [F. fantastique, fr. Gr. ??????????? able to represent, fr. ????????? to make visible. See {Fancy}.] 1. Existing only in imagination; fanciful; imaginary; not real; chimerical. [1913 Webster] 2. Having the nature of a phantom;… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • fantastic — [adj1] strange, different; imaginary absurd, artificial, capricious, chimerical, comical, crazy, eccentric, erratic, exotic, extravagant, extreme, fanciful, far fetched, fictional, foolish, foreign, freakish, grotesque, hallucinatory, illusive,… …   New thesaurus

  • Fantastic — Fan*tas tic, n. A person given to fantastic dress, manners, etc.; an eccentric person; a fop. Milton. [1913 Webster] Our fantastics, who, having a fine watch, take all ocasions to draw it out to be seen. Fuller. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • fantastic — index delusive, ludicrous, nonexistent, noteworthy, prodigious (amazing), special, unusual Burton …   Law dictionary

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