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101 progress
1. noun( = advance) faire progresser4. compounds━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━✦ Lorsque progress est un nom, l'accent tombe sur la première syllabe: ˈprəʊgres, lorsque c'est un verbe, sur la seconde: prəˈgres.* * *1. ['prəʊgres], US ['prɒgres]1) ( advances) progrès mto make slow/steady progress — progresser lentement/régulièrement
2) (course, evolution) (of person, vehicle, inquiry, event) progression f; (of talks, dispute, disease, career) évolution fto make (slow/steady) progress — progresser (lentement/régulièrement)
2. [prə'gres]to be in progress — [discussions, meeting, exam, work] être en cours
1) (develop, improve) [person, work, studies] progresser2) ( follow course) [person, vehicle, discussion] progresser -
102 road
road [rəʊd]• this vehicle shouldn't be on the road on ne devrait pas laisser circuler un véhicule dans cet état• to be on the road [salesman, theatre company] être en tournée• is this the road to London? c'est (bien) la route de Londres ?• he has no road sense [driver] il conduit mal ; [pedestrian] il ne fait jamais attention à la circulation ► road show noun (TV, radio) émission f itinérante• they are road-testing the car tomorrow ils vont faire les essais sur route demain ► road traffic noun circulation f routière* * *[rəʊd] 1.1) ( between places) route facross the road — de l'autre côté de la route, en face
down the road — plus bas, plus loin
transported by road — transporté par or sur route
to take (to) the road — prendre la route, se mettre en route
to be on the road — [car] être en état de rouler; [driver] être sur la route; [band, performers] être en tournée
to be off the road — [vehicle] être hors d'usage
2) ( in built-up area) rue f2.he lives just along ou down the road — il habite un peu plus loin dans la rue
noun modifier [ condition, network, map, safety] routier/-ière; [ repair] des routes; [ accident] de la route•• -
103 safe
safe [seɪf]1. adjectivea. ( = not risky) [substance, toy] sans danger ; [nuclear reactor] sûr, sans danger ; [place, vehicle] sûr ; [ladder, structure] solide► safe to• it is safe to say that... on peut affirmer sans trop s'avancer que...• is it safe to come out? est-ce qu'on peut sortir sans danger ?• to keep a safe distance from sth se tenir à bonne distance de qch ; (while driving) maintenir la distance de sécurité par rapport à qchc. ( = problem-free) to wish sb a safe journey souhaiter bon voyage à qn• safe journey! bon voyage !• he wrote to acknowledge the safe arrival of the photographs il a écrit pour dire que les photos étaient bien arrivées• to ensure the safe return of the hostages faire en sorte que les otages soient libérés sains et saufs• a reward for the safe return of the stolen equipment une récompense à qui rapportera en bon état l'équipement voléd. ( = likely to be right) it is a safe assumption that... on peut dire sans trop s'avancer que...• a safe bet ( = wise choice) un bon choixe. ( = not in danger) [person] en sécurité ; ( = no longer in danger) hors de danger ; [object] en sécurité• I won't feel safe until he's behind bars je ne serai tranquille que quand il sera derrière les barreaux• safe in the knowledge that... avec la certitude que...• your secret is safe with me je garderai le secret (PROV) better safe than sorry on n'est jamais trop prudent2. noun(for money, valuables) coffre-fort m3. compounds• to guarantee sb safe passage to/from a country assurer la protection de qn à son entrée dans un pays/à sa sortie d'un pays ► safe seat noun siège m sûr• it was a safe Conservative seat (British) c'était un siège acquis au parti conservateur ► safe sex noun rapports mpl sexuels sans risque ; (with condom) rapports mpl sexuels protégés* * *[seɪf] 1.noun coffre-fort m2.1) (after ordeal, risk) [person] sain et sauf; [object] intact2) (free from threat, harm)to be safe — [person] être en sécurité; [document, valuables] être en lieu sûr; [company, job, reputation] ne pas être menacé
to keep somebody safe — protéger quelqu'un ( from contre, de)
to keep something safe — ( protect) mettre quelque chose à l'abri ( from de); ( store) garder quelque chose en lieu sûr
to be safe from — être à l'abri de [attack, curiosity]
3) ( risk-free) [product, toy, level, method] sans danger; [place, environment, vehicle, route] sûr; [structure, building] solide; [animal] inoffensif/-ive; [speed] raisonnablethe toy/park is not safe for children — le jouet/parc est dangereux pour les enfants
to make something safe — rendre [quelque chose] (plus) sûr [premises, beach]; rendre [quelque chose] inoffensif/-ive [bomb]
4) ( prudent) [investment] sûr; [estimate, choice] prudent; [topic] anodin5) ( reliable) [driver] prudent••as safe as houses — GB ( secure) [person] en sécurité; [place] sûr; ( risk-free) sans risque
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104 standard
standard [ˈstændəd]1. noun2. adjectiveb. [pronunciation, grammar] correctc. [text, book] de référence3. compounds* * *['stændəd] 1.1) ( level of quality) niveau mto have high/low standards — [worker] être très/peu consciencieux; [school, institution] être d'un bon/mauvais niveau
2) ( official specification) norme f ( for de)3) ( requirement) (of student, work) niveau m requis; (of hygiene, safety) critères mpl4) ( banner) étendard m5) ( song) standard m2.1) ( normal) [size, equipment, rate] standard; [procedure] habituel/-uelle; [image] traditionnel/-elle2) ( authoritative) [work] de référence3) (also standard class) GB Railways [ticket] de seconde classe -
105 stick to
stick to [something/somebody]1) ( keep to) s'en tenir à [facts, point, plan, diet]; maintenir [story, version]2) ( follow) suivre3) ( stay faithful to) rester fidèle à -
106 succeed
succeed [səkˈsi:d]a. ( = be successful) réussirb. ( = follow) succéder (to à)* * *[sək'siːd] 1.transitive verb succéder à2.1) ( achieve success) réussir2) ( accede) succéder -
107 suit
suit [su:t]1. nounb. (in court) procès ma. [arrangements, date, price, climate] convenir à• suit yourself! (inf) faites comme vous voulez !b. [garment, colour, hairstyle] aller à• will tomorrow suit? est-ce que demain vous conviendrait ?* * *[suːt, sjuːt] 1.3) ( in cards) couleur fto be somebody's strong suit — fig être le point fort de quelqu'un
2.to follow suit — fig faire de même
transitive verb1) [colour, outfit] aller àto suit somebody down to the ground — (colloq) aller à quelqu'un comme un gant
2) [date, climate, arrangement] convenir àsuits me! — (colloq) ça me va!
3) [part, job] convenir à4) ( adapt)3.intransitive verb convenir4. -
108 trace
trace [treɪs]1. nountrace f• they traced him as far as Paris but then lost him ils ont pu suivre sa trace jusqu'à Paris mais l'ont perdu par la suite3. compounds• this traces back to the loss of... ceci est imputable à la perte de...• to trace back one's ancestry to... faire remonter sa famille à...• they traced the murder weapon back to a shop in Leeds ils ont réussi à établir que l'arme du crime provenait d'un magasin de Leeds* * *[treɪs] 1.1) ( evidence) trace fwithout trace — [disappear, sink] sans laisser de traces
2) ( hint) (of irony, flavour, garlic) soupçon m; ( of accent) pointe f; (of chemical, drug) trace f3) ( of harness) trait m2.transitive verb1) ( locate) retrouver [person, weapon, car]; dépister [fault]; déterminer [cause]the call was traced to a London number — on a pu établir que le coup de téléphone venait d'un numéro à Londres
2) faire l'historique de [development, growth]; retracer [life, progress]; faire remonter [origins, ancestry]•Phrasal Verbs:•• -
109 track
track [træk]1. noun► on track• to be on the right track être sur la bonne voie► to keep track of [+ events] suivre le fil de ; [+ developments, situation] rester au courant de• keep track of the time n'oubliez pas l'heure► to lose track of [+ developments, situation] ne plus être au courant de ; [+ events] perdre le fil deb. ( = path) sentier me. ( = athletics) athlétisme mf. [of CD, computer disk] piste f ; [of long-playing record] plage f ; ( = piece of music) morceau m[+ animal, person, vehicle] suivre la trace de3. compounds[+ lost object, reference] (finir par) retrouver* * *[træk] 1.1) ( print) (of animal, person) expreintes fpl, traces fpl; ( of vehicle) traces fplto be on track — [talks, negotiations] se dérouler comme prévu
to keep track of — [person] se tenir au courant de [developments, events]; suivre le fil de [conversation]; [police] suivre les mouvements de [criminal]; [computer] tenir à jour [bank account, figures]
to lose track of — perdre de vue [friend]; perdre la trace de [document, aircraft, suspect]; perdre le fil de [conversation]
3) (path, road) sentier m, chemin m; Sport piste f(motor-)racing track — ( open-air) circuit m; ( enclosed) autodrome m
to leave the track(s) — [train] dérailler
5) (song on record, tape, CD) morceau m; ( recording channel on tape) piste f6) (of tank, tractor) chenille f7) US School ( stream) groupe m de niveau2. 3.transitive verb suivre la trace de [person, animal]; suivre la trajectoire de [rocket, plane, comet]Phrasal Verbs:•• -
110 worse
worse [wɜ:s]1. adjective• I'm bad at English, but worse at maths je suis mauvais en anglais et pire en maths• things could be worse! ça pourrait être pire !• and, what's worse,... et, qui pis est...• and, to make matters worse, he... et pour ne rien arranger, il...• to be the worse for drink ( = drunk) être ivre• you're worse than he is! tu es pire que lui !d. ( = more harmful) smoking is worse for you than cholesterol le tabac est plus mauvais pour la santé que le cholestérol2. adverba. (in quality, behaviour) [sing, play] plus mal• and, worse,... et, qui pis est,...• now I'm worse off than before maintenant, je suis moins bien loti qu'avantb. ( = more intensely) it hurts worse than ever ça fait plus mal que jamais3. nounpire m* * *[wɜːs] 1.1) (more unsatisfactory, unpleasant) pireto get worse — [pressure, noise] augmenter; [conditions, weather] empirer
‘you missed the bus’ - ‘yes worse luck!’ — ‘tu as raté le bus’ - ‘oui pas de veine (colloq)!’
2) (more serious, severe) pire ( than que)and what is worse, she doesn't care — et le pire, c'est que ça lui est égal
to get worse (and worse) — [illness, conflict] s'aggraver; [patient] aller de plus en plus mal
to be made worse — être aggravé (by par)
you'll only make things ou it worse! — tu ne feras qu'empirer les choses!
and to make matters worse, he lied — et pour ne rien arranger, il a menti
3) ( of lower standard) pire ( than que)4) (more unwell, unhappy)to feel worse — ( more ill) se sentir plus malade; ( more unhappy) aller moins bien
5) ( more inappropriate)he couldn't have chosen a worse place to meet — il n'aurait pas pu choisir un lieu de rendez-vous moins approprié
2. 3.the decision couldn't have come at a worse time — la décision n'aurait pas pu arriver à un moment plus inopportun
1) (more unsatisfactorily, incompetently) moins bien ( than que)2) (more seriously, severely) [cough, bleed, vomit] plus -
111 IFA
( abbreviation independent financial adviser) conseiller(ère) m, f financier(ère) indépendant(e)In the past, when a manager moved on, many investors would wait to see how the new one fared, while others would not even realise there had been a change. Since the start of the bear market, however, independent financial advisers ( IFAs) have encouraged investors to view 'star' managers as the only chance of making money. If they move, you should follow - treating them as guardians of your money.
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112 chart
1 noun(diagram) graphique mACCOUNTANCY chart of accounts plan m comptable général;chart analysis analyse f sur graphiques;chart analyst analyste m f sur graphiques∎ this graph charts sales over the last ten years ce graphique montre l'évolution des ventes au cours des dix dernières années(b) (follow) (progress, rise) retracer;∎ the director charted a way out of financial collapse le directeur a établi ou mis au point un plan pour éviter un effondrement financier -
113 micromanage
he's got a tendency to micromanage his company il a tendance à trop s'impliquer dans les détails de la gestion de sa sociétéBy her own admission, Shapiro was not a good administrator and manager of the staff … That she spent almost as much time out of the office than in attests to how she attempted to run Giants. Her accusation that the board has sought to micromanage Giants is inaccurate. In fact, the board only became more involved in management when Ms. Shapiro failed to do so; and in addition, she refused to follow board directions on hiring and compensation.
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114 procedure
procédure f;∎ what's the correct procedure? comment doit-on procéder?, quelle est la marche à suivre?;∎ you must follow the normal procedure vous devez suivre la procédure normaleLAW procedure by arbitration procédure f arbitrale -
115 telephone
1 nountéléphone m;∎ to be on the telephone (have a telephone) être abonné(e) au téléphone; (talking) être au téléphone;∎ to have a good telephone manner savoir bien parler au téléphone;∎ to order sth by telephone commander qch par téléphone;∎ the boss is on the telephone for you le patron te demande au téléphone;∎ you're wanted on the telephone on vous demande au téléphonetelephone banking opérations f pl bancaires par téléphone; telephone bill facture f de téléphone;telephone book annuaire m (téléphonique);telephone call appel m téléphonique, coup m de téléphone;telephone canvassing prospection f téléphonique, démarchage m à distance, télédémarchage m;telephone code area circonscription f téléphonique;telephone communications liaison f téléphonique;telephone dealing cotation f par téléphone;telephone directory annuaire (téléphonique);telephone exchange central m téléphonique;telephone follow-up relance f téléphonique;MARKETING telephone interview entretien m téléphonique, entretien par telephone;telephone line ligne f téléphonique;telephone link liaison téléphonique;telephone marketing prospection téléphonique;telephone message message m téléphonique;telephone network réseau m téléphonique;telephone number numéro m de téléphone;telephone order commande f téléphonique ou par téléphone;telephone prospecting démarchage à distance;telephone sales ventes f pl par téléphone;telephone selling vente par téléphone;telephone subscriber abonné(e) m, f du téléphone;telephone survey enquête f téléphonique, enquête par téléphone;telephone system réseau téléphoniquetéléphoner à;∎ to telephone New York appeler New Yorktéléphoner -
116 arrow
['ærəu]1) (a thin, straight stick with a point, which is fired from a bow.) flèche2) (a sign shaped like an arrow eg to show which way to go: You can't get lost - just follow the arrows.) flèche• -
117 be a law unto oneself
(to be inclined not to obey rules or follow the usual customs and conventions.) ne connaître d'autre loi que la sienne -
118 close
I 1. [kləus] adverb1) (near in time, place etc: He stood close to his mother; Follow close behind.) près (de)2) (tightly; neatly: a close-fitting dress.) étroitement2. adjective1) (near in relationship: a close friend.) intime2) (having a narrow difference between winner and loser: a close contest; The result was close.) serré3) (thorough: a close examination of the facts; Keep a close watch on him.) rigoureux4) (tight: a close fit.) ajusté5) (without fresh air: a close atmosphere; The weather was close and thundery.) étouffant6) (mean: He's very close (with his money).) regardant7) (secretive: They're keeping very close about the business.) renfermé•- closely- closeness - close call/shave - close-set - close-up - close at hand - close on - close to II 1. [kləuz] verb1) (to make or become shut, often by bringing together two parts so as to cover an opening: The baby closed his eyes; Close the door; The shops close on Sundays.) fermer2) (to finish; to come or bring to an end: The meeting closed with everyone in agreement.) finir3) (to complete or settle (a business deal).) conclure2. noun(a stop, end or finish: the close of day; towards the close of the nineteenth century.) fin- close up -
119 depart
1) (to go away: The tour departed from the station at 9 a.m.) partir2) ((with from) to cease to follow (a course of action): We departed from our original plan.) s'écarter de• -
120 dog
[doɡ] 1. noun(a domestic, meat-eating animal related to the wolf and fox.) chien2. adjective((usually of members of the dog family) male: a dog-fox.) mâle3. verb(to follow closely as a dog does: She dogged his footsteps.) talonner- dogged- doggedly - doggedness - dog-biscuit - dog collar - dog-eared - dog-tired - a dog's life - go to the dogs - in the doghouse - not a dog's chance
См. также в других словарях:
follow — [ˈfɒləʊ ǁ ˈfɑːloʊ] verb 1. [intransitive, transitive] to come or happen afterwards: • The company s decision to diversify follows a sharp decline in demand for its products. • As the recession worsened, further closures followed. 2.… … Financial and business terms
Follow-on — is a term used in the sport of cricket to describe a situation where the team that bats second is forced to take its second batting innings immediately after its first, because the team was not able to get close enough (within 200 runs) to the… … Wikipedia
Follow — Fol low, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Followed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Following}.][OE. foluwen, folwen, folgen, AS. folgian, fylgean, fylgan; akin to D. volgen, OHG. folg[=e]n, G. folgen, Icel. fylgja, Sw. f[ o]lja, Dan. f[ o]lge, and perh. to E. folk.] 1.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
follow — [fäl′ō] vt. [ME folwen < OE folgian, akin to Ger folgen & (?) Welsh olafiad, follower] 1. to come or go after 2. to go after in order to catch; chase; pursue 3. to go along [follow the right road] 4. to come or occur after in time, in a series … English World dictionary
follow — vb 1 Follow, succeed, ensue, supervene mean to come after someone or, more often, something. Although all of these verbs occur as transitives and intransitives, ensue and supervene are more commonly intransitive verbs. Follow is the general term… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
follow-up — follow up1 adj [only before noun] done in order to find out more or do more about something →↑follow up ▪ a follow up study on children and poverty follow up 2 follow up2 n 1.) [U and C] something that is done to make sure that earlier actions… … Dictionary of contemporary English
follow — ► VERB 1) move or travel behind. 2) go after (someone) so as to observe or monitor them. 3) go along (a route or path). 4) come after in time or order. 5) be a logical consequence. 6) (also follow on from) occur as a result of … English terms dictionary
follow-up — follow ,up noun 1. ) count or uncount something that is done in order to complete something: Everyone liked my proposal, but there hasn t been any follow up. The researchers conducted a follow up study two years later. a ) something that is done… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
follow-up — n. 1. a second (or subsequent) action to increase the effectiveness of an initial action. Also used attributively; as a follow up visit. Note: A follow up may be of various types. After a medical examination, a second examination (or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
follow — fol·low vt: to be in accordance with (a prior decision): accept as authoritative see also precedent compare overrule Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 … Law dictionary
follow — (v.) O.E. folgian, fylgan follow, accompany; follow after, pursue, also obey, apply oneself to a practice or calling, from W.Gmc. *fulg (Cf. O.S. folgon, O.Fris. folgia, M.Du. volghen, Du. volgen, O.H.G. folgen, Ger. folgen, O.N. fylgja to follow … Etymology dictionary