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41 drive
drive [draɪv]1. nouna. ( = car journey) trajet m en voitureb. ( = private road) allée fd. ( = energy) énergie fe. ( = promotional campaign) campagne fa. [+ car, train] conduire ; [+ racing car] piloter• he drives a lorry/taxi il est camionneur/chauffeur de taxib. [+ people, animals] pousser (devant soi)c. [+ machine] [person] actionner ; [steam] faire fonctionner( = be the driver) conduire ; ( = go by car) aller en voiture• to drive away/back partir/revenir (en voiture)• can you drive? savez-vous conduire ?• to drive at 50km/h rouler à 50 km/h• did you come by train? -- no, we drove êtes-vous venus en train ? -- non, en voiture4. compounds• drive-in cinema ciné-parc m ► drive-through (British), drive-thru noun ( = restaurant) drive-in m inv adjective [restaurant, drugstore] drive-in[vehicle, person] rouler( = intend, mean) vouloir dire• what are you driving at? où voulez-vous en venir ?► drive away[car] démarrer ; [person] s'en aller en voiture[car] revenir ; [person] rentrer en voiturea. ( = cause to retreat) refoulerb. ( = convey back) ramener (en voiture)► drive in[car] entrer ; [person] entrer (en voiture)[+ nail] enfoncer[car] démarrer ; [person] s'en aller en voiturea. ( = repel) chasserb. ( = leave by car) to drive off a ferry débarquer d'un ferry (en voiture)[+ ferry] embarquer sur[car] sortir ; [person] sortir (en voiture)[+ person] faire sortir( = convey) conduire en voiture► drive up[car] arriver ; [person] arriver (en voiture)* * *[draɪv] 1.1) ( in car)3) ( motivation) dynamisme m4) Computing entraînement m de disques5) Automobile transmission f6) ( path) allée f7) Sport drive m2. 3.1) conduire [vehicle, passenger]; piloter [racing car]; transporter [cargo, load]; parcourir [quelque chose] (en voiture) [distance]to drive something into — rentrer quelque chose dans [garage, space]
3) ( chase or herd) conduirehe was driven from ou out of the country — il a été chassé du pays
4) (power, propel) actionner5) (force, push) lit, fig pousser [boat, person]; enfoncer [nail]; faire passer [road]4.1) Automobile conduireto drive into — entrer dans [garage, space]; rentrer dans [tree, lamppost]
5.to drive up/down a hill — monter/descendre une côte
1) Automobile conduire soi-même2)•Phrasal Verbs:- drive at- drive on -
42 crash
[kræʃ] 1. noun1) (a noise as of heavy things breaking or falling on something hard: I heard a crash, and looked round to see that he'd dropped all the plates.) fracas2) (a collision: There was a crash involving three cars.) accident3) (a failure of a business etc: the Wall Street crash.) faillite4) (a sudden failure of a computer: A computer crash is very costly.)2. verb1) (to (cause to) fall with a loud noise: The glass crashed to the floor.) (se) fracasser2) (to drive or be driven violently (against, into): He crashed (his car); His car crashed into a wall.) (faire) percuter3) ((of aircraft) to land or be landed in such a way as to be damaged or destroyed: His plane crashed in the mountains.) s'écraser4) ((of a business) to fail.) faire faillite5) (to force one's way noisily (through, into): He crashed through the undergrowth.) passer à travers qqch. avec fracas6) ((of a computer) to stop working suddenly: If the computer crashes, we may lose all our files.)3. adjective(rapid and concentrated: a crash course in computer technology.) intensif- crash-land -
43 screw
screw [skru:]1 noun∎ figurative to turn the screw or screws serrer la vis;∎ familiar to put the screws on sb faire pression sur qn;∎ the Mafia put the screws on him la Mafia lui a forcé la main;∎ familiar to have a screw loose avoir la tête fêlée, avoir une case de vide∎ give it a couple more screws donnez-lui encore un ou deux tours de vis(d) (propeller) hélice f∎ a screw of paper un cornet en papier∎ he's on a good screw il gagne plein de fric∎ to have a screw baiser, s'envoyer en l'air;∎ to be a good screw être un bon coup;∎ she's a good screw elle baise bien(i) (in snooker, pool) effet m∎ to screw sth shut fermer qch (en vissant);∎ to screw the lid on a bottle visser le bouchon d'une bouteille;∎ screw it tight vissez-le bien∎ I screwed the letter/my handkerchief into a ball j'ai fait une boule de la lettre/de mon mouchoir(c) (wrinkle → face)∎ he screwed his face into a grimace une grimace lui tordit le visage;∎ he screwed his face into a forced smile il grimaça un sourire∎ to screw a promise/an agreement out of sb arracher une promesse/un accord à qn;∎ he managed to screw the money/the answer out of her il a réussi à lui soutirer l'argent/la réponse□∎ we've been screwed! on s'est fait arnaquer ou baiser!;∎ they're out to screw you for every penny you've got ils essayent de vous extorquer tout l'argent que vous avez□∎ screw the expense! et merde, je peux bien m'offrir ça!;∎ screw you! va te faire foutre!∎ to screw the pooch (blunder) faire une gaffe ou une boulette(a) (bolt, lid) se visser(b) (in snooker, pool → ball) revenir en arrière►► screw eye vis f à œil;screw jack cric m à vis;Nautical screw propeller hélice f;screw shot = coup avec effet;screw thread pas m ou filet m de vis;screw top couvercle m qui se visse;∎ the jar has a screw top le couvercle du pot se visse∎ very familiar to screw sb around (treat badly) se foutre de la gueule de qn; (waste time of) faire perdre son temps à qn□(in snooker, pool → player) faire de l'effet rétrograde, faire un rétro; (→ ball) revenir en arrièrevisserse visserdévisserse dévisser➲ screw onvisser;∎ the cupboard was screwed on to the wall le placard était vissé au murse visser;∎ it screws on to the wall ça se visse dans le mur∎ to screw sb over arnaquer qn, refaire qnBritish visser, tourner;∎ he screwed his head round to see il a brusquement tourné la tête pour voir1(a) (tighten, fasten) visser(b) (crumple → handkerchief, paper) chiffonner, faire une boule de∎ she screwed up her eyes elle plissa les yeux;∎ he screwed up his face in concentration la concentration fit se plisser les traits de son visage;∎ to screw up one's courage prendre son courage à deux mains∎ you've screwed everything up tu as tout foutu en l'air;∎ he's screwed up any chance of promotion il a foutu en l'air toute chance de promotion∎ the divorce really screwed her up le divorce l'a complètement perturbée□ ou déboussolée(a) (lid, nut etc) se visser∎ her face screwed up in distaste or disgust elle fit une grimace de dégoût -
44 stretch
stretch [stretʃ]1 noun(a) (expanse → of land, water) étendue f;∎ this stretch of the road is particularly dangerous in the winter cette partie de la route est très dangereuse en hiver;∎ a new stretch of road/motorway un nouveau tronçon de route/d'autoroute;∎ a long straight stretch une longue route en ligne droite;∎ it's a lovely stretch of river/scenery cette partie de la rivière/du paysage est magnifique;∎ Horseracing & figurative to go into the final or finishing or home stretch entamer la dernière ligne droite(b) (period of time) période f;∎ for a long stretch of time pendant longtemps;∎ for long stretches at a time there was nothing to do il n'y avait rien à faire pendant de longues périodes;∎ to do a stretch of ten years in the army passer dix ans dans l'armée;∎ familiar he did a stretch in Dartmoor il a fait de la taule à Dartmoor;∎ familiar he was given a five-year stretch (in prison) il a écopé de cinq ans(c) (act of stretching) étirement m;∎ he stood up, yawned and had a stretch il se leva, bâilla et s'étira;∎ to give one's legs a stretch se dégourdir les jambes;∎ do a couple of stretches before breakfast faites quelques étirements avant le petit déjeuner;∎ Music stretch of the fingers (at the piano) écart m des doigts;∎ by no stretch of the imagination même en faisant un gros effort d'imagination;∎ he's the better writer by a long stretch c'est de loin le meilleur écrivain;∎ not by a long stretch! loin de là!(d) (elasticity) élasticité f;∎ there isn't much stretch in these gloves ces gants ne sont pas très souples;∎ there's a lot of stretch in these stockings ces bas sont très élastiques ou s'étirent facilement;∎ with two-way stretch (of elastic fabric) extensible dans les deux sens(a) (pull tight) tendre;∎ stretch the rope tight tendez bien la corde;∎ a cable was stretched across the ravine on avait tendu un câble à travers le ravin;∎ they stretched a net over the pit ils ont tendu un filet au-dessus de la fosse;∎ Art to stretch the canvas on the frame tendre la toile sur le châssis∎ to stretch sth out of shape déformer qch;∎ don't pull your socks like that, you'll stretch them ne tire pas sur tes chaussettes comme ça, tu vas les déformer(c) (extend, reach to full length) étendre;∎ stretch your arms upwards tendez les bras vers le haut;∎ he stretched his arm through the broken window il allongea le bras à travers le carreau cassé;∎ if I stretch up my hand I can reach the ceiling si je tends la main je peux toucher le plafond;∎ to stretch one's neck to see sth tendre le cou pour voir qch;∎ to stretch oneself s'étirer;∎ the bird stretched its wings l'oiseau déploya ses ailes;∎ figurative to stretch one's wings (become more independent) voler de ses propres ailes; (seek out new challenges) aller de l'avant(d) (force, bend → meaning) forcer; (→ rules) tourner, contourner, faire une entorse à; (→ principle) faire une entorse à; (→ imagination) faire un gros effort de;∎ you're really stretching my patience ma patience a des limites;∎ to stretch the truth exagérer;∎ they have stretched their authority a bit too far ils ont un peu abusé de leur autorité;∎ that's stretching it a bit! il ne faut pas exagérer!;∎ it would be stretching a point to call him a diplomat dire qu'il est diplomate serait exagérer ou aller un peu loin;∎ I suppose we could stretch a point and let him stay je suppose qu'on pourrait faire une entorse au règlement et lui permettre de rester(e) (budget, income, resources, supplies → get the most from) tirer le maximum de; (→ overload) surcharger, mettre à rude épreuve;∎ our resources are stretched to the limit nos ressources sont exploitées ou utilisées au maximum;∎ I can't stretch my income that far mon salaire ne me permet pas de faire de telles dépenses;∎ we should be able to stretch the food until the weekend nous devrions pouvoir faire durer les provisions jusqu'au week-end;∎ our staff are really stretched today le personnel travaille à la limite de ses possibilités aujourd'hui;∎ to be fully stretched (machine, engine) tourner à plein régime; (factory, economy) fonctionner à plein régime; (resources, services) être sollicité à fond; (person, staff) faire son maximum;∎ the job won't stretch you enough le travail ne sera pas assez stimulant pour vous;∎ she believes young people need to be stretched elle pense qu'il faut être exigeant avec les jeunes pour qu'ils donnent le meilleur d'eux-mêmes(f) (ligament, muscle) étirer∎ this fabric tends to stretch ce tissu a tendance à s'étirer;∎ the shoes will stretch with wear vos chaussures vont se faire ou s'élargir à l'usage;∎ my pullover has stretched out of shape mon pull s'est déformé(b) (person, animal → from tiredness) s'étirer; (→ on ground, bed) s'étendre, s'allonger; (→ to reach something) tendre la main;∎ she stretched lazily elle s'étira nonchalamment;∎ he had to stretch to reach it (reach out) il a dû tendre le bras pour l'atteindre; (stand on tiptoe) il a dû se mettre sur la pointe des pieds pour l'atteindre;∎ she stretched across me to get the salt elle a passé le bras devant moi pour attraper le sel;∎ can you stretch over and get me the paper? pouvez-vous tendre le bras et me passer le journal?;∎ he stretched up to touch the cupboard il s'est mis sur la pointe des pieds pour atteindre le placard(c) (spread, extend → in space, time) s'étendre;∎ the forest stretches as far as the eye can see la forêt s'étend à perte de vue;∎ the road stretches away into the distance la route s'étend au lointain;∎ the road stretched across 500 miles of desert la route parcourait 800 km de désert;∎ the rope stretched across the ravine le corde allait d'un côté à l'autre du ravin;∎ minutes stretched into hours les minutes devenaient des heures;∎ our powers don't stretch as far as you imagine nos pouvoirs ne sont pas aussi étendus que vous l'imaginez(d) (money, resources)∎ my salary won't stretch to a new car mon salaire ne me permet pas d'acheter une nouvelle voiture;∎ my resources won't stretch to that mes moyens (pécuniaires) ne vont pas jusque-là(a) (in a row) d'affilée;∎ we worked for five hours at a stretch nous avons travaillé cinq heures d'affilée(b) (with much effort) à la limite, à la rigueur;∎ we could finish by Monday at a stretch à la limite ou à la rigueur, on pourrait finir pour lundi;∎ we could fit six people in the car at a stretch à la rigueur, on pourrait tenir à six dans la voiture∎ to be at full stretch (factory, machine) fonctionner à plein régime ou à plein rendement; (person) se donner à fond, faire son maximum;∎ we were working at full stretch nous travaillions d'arrache-pied;∎ even at full stretch, we can't meet the delivery date même en tournant à plein régime, nous ne pouvons pas respecter les délais de livraison►► stretch class cours m de stretching;stretch fabric Stretch ® m;stretch limo limousine f à la carrosserie allongée(a) (pull tight) tendre;∎ the sheets had been stretched out on the line to dry on avait étendu les draps sur le fil à linge pour qu'ils sèchent;∎ the plastic sheet was stretched out on the lawn la bâche en plastique était étalée sur la pelouse∎ she stretched out her hand towards him/for the cup elle tendit la main vers lui/pour prendre la tasse;∎ she lay stretched out in front of the television elle était allongée par terre devant la télévision∎ she has to stretch her thesis out a bit for publication il faut qu'elle étoffe un peu sa thèse pour la publier(d) (make last → supplies, income) faire durer(a) (person, animal) s'étendre, s'allonger;∎ they stretched out on the lawn in the sun ils se sont allongés au soleil sur la pelouse∎ a nice long holiday stretched out before them ils avaient de longues vacances devant eux -
45 tooth
1 noun∎ permanent teeth dents fpl permanentes;∎ a set of teeth une denture, une dentition;∎ a false tooth une fausse dent;∎ a set of false teeth un dentier;∎ to have a tooth out se faire arracher une dent;∎ to have good/bad teeth avoir de bonnes/mauvaises dents;∎ also figurative to bare or to show one's teeth montrer les dents;∎ to have no teeth être édenté; figurative manquer de force;∎ the amendment will give the law some teeth l'amendement renforcera quelque peu le pouvoir de la loi(b) (of comb, file, cog, saw) dent f∎ to be fed up or sick to the back teeth (with sb/sth) en avoir plein le dos ou ras le bol (de qn/qch);∎ armed to the teeth armé jusqu'aux dents;∎ to fight tooth and nail se battre bec et ongles;∎ figurative to cut one's teeth on sth se faire les dents sur qch;∎ to get one's teeth into sth se mettre à fond à qch;∎ she needs something to get her teeth into elle a besoin de quelque chose qui la mobilise;∎ the play gives you nothing to get your teeth into la pièce manque de substance;∎ familiar it was a real kick in the teeth ça m'a fichu un sacré coup;∎ familiar it's better than a kick in the teeth c'est mieux que rien□ ;∎ figurative to set sb's teeth on edge faire grincer qn des dents;∎ she's a bit long in the tooth elle n'est plus toute jeune(cogwheels) s'engrenermalgré;∎ he acted in the teeth of fierce opposition il a agi malgré une opposition farouche►► tooth decay carie f dentaire;the tooth fairy ≃ la petite souris;tooth glass verre m à dents;tooth mug verre m à dents;tooth powder poudre f dentifrice -
46 hit
[hit] 1. present participle - hitting; verb1) (to (cause or allow to) come into hard contact with: The ball hit him on the head; He hit his head on/against a low branch; The car hit a lamp-post; He hit me on the head with a bottle; He was hit by a bullet; That boxer can certainly hit hard!) frapper2) (to make hard contact with (something), and force or cause it to move in some direction: The batsman hit the ball (over the wall).) (r)envoyer3) (to cause to suffer: The farmers were badly hit by the lack of rain; Her husband's death hit her hard.) toucher4) (to find; to succeed in reaching: His second arrow hit the bull's-eye; Take the path across the fields and you'll hit the road; She used to be a famous soprano but she cannot hit the high notes now.) atteindre2. noun1) (the act of hitting: That was a good hit.) coup2) (a point scored by hitting a target etc: He scored five hits.) coup réussi3) (something which is popular or successful: The play/record is a hit; ( also adjective) a hit song.) (à) succès•- hit-or-miss - hit back - hit below the belt - hit it off - hit on - hit out - make a hit with -
47 pull
[pul] 1. verb1) (to (try to) move something especially towards oneself usually by using force: He pulled the chair towards the fire; She pulled at the door but couldn't open it; He kept pulling the girls' hair for fun; Help me to pull my boots off; This railway engine can pull twelve carriages.) (re)tirer (sur)2) ((with at or on) in eg smoking, to suck at: He pulled at his cigarette.) tirer sur3) (to row: He pulled towards the shore.) ramer4) ((of a driver or vehicle) to steer or move in a certain direction: The car pulled in at the garage; I pulled into the side of the road; The train pulled out of the station; The motorbike pulled out to overtake; He pulled off the road.) entrer dans2. noun1) (an act of pulling: I felt a pull at my sleeve; He took a pull at his beer/pipe.) traction; gorgée; bouffée2) (a pulling or attracting force: magnetic pull; the pull (=attraction) of the sea.) attraction3) (influence: He thinks he has some pull with the headmaster.) influence•- pull down - pull a face / faces at - pull a face / faces - pull a gun on - pull off - pull on - pull oneself together - pull through - pull up - pull one's weight - pull someone's leg -
48 cajole
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49 habit
['hæbit]1) (something which a person does usually or regularly: the habit of going for a walk before bed; an irritating habit of interrupting.) habitude2) (a tendency to do the same things that one has always done: I did it out of habit.) (par) habitude3) (clothes: a monk's habit.) habit(s)•- habitual- habitually - from force of habit - get someone into - get into - out of the habit of -
50 pump
1. noun1) (a machine for making water etc rise from under the ground: Every village used to have a pump from which everyone drew their water.) pompe2) (a machine or device for forcing liquid or gas into, or out of, something: a bicycle pump (for forcing air into the tyres).) pompe2. verb1) (to raise or force with a pump: Oil is being pumped out of the ground.) pomper2) (to get information from by asking questions: He tried to pump me about the exam.) tirer les vers du nez•- pump up -
51 shame
[ʃeim] 1. noun1) ((often with at) an unpleasant feeling caused by awareness of guilt, fault, foolishness or failure: I was full of shame at my rudeness; He felt no shame at his behaviour.) honte2) (dishonour or disgrace: The news that he had accepted bribes brought shame on his whole family.) honte3) ((with a) a cause of disgrace or a matter for blame: It's a shame to treat a child so cruelly.) honte4) ((with a) a pity: What a shame that he didn't get the job!) dommage2. verb1) ((often with into) to force or persuade to do something by making ashamed: He was shamed into paying his share.) obliger (qqn à) en lui faisant honte2) (to cause to have a feeling of shame: His cowardice shamed his parents.) faire honte à•- shameful- shamefully - shamefulness - shameless - shamelessly - shamelessness - shamefaced - put to shame - to my - his shame -
52 suck
suck [sʌk](a) (with mouth) sucer; (drink, sweets) sucer, suçoter; (mother's milk) téter; (pipe) tirer sur; (not smoking) sucer;∎ to suck one's thumb sucer son pouce;∎ he sucked the end of his pencil thoughtfully il suçait pensivement le bout de son crayon;∎ she was sucking orange juice through a straw elle sirotait du jus d'orange avec une paille;∎ he was sucking a sweet il suçait un bonbon;∎ to suck poison out of a wound extraire le poison d'une blessure en la suçant;∎ suck the poison out aspirez le poison;∎ to suck sb dry prendre jusqu'à son dernier sou à qn∎ the dust is sucked into the bag la poussière est aspirée dans le sac;∎ the whirlpool sucked him to the bottom le tourbillon l'a entraîné au fond;∎ figurative we found ourselves sucked into an argument nous nous sommes trouvés entraînés dans une dispute∎ to suck face se rouler des pelles ou des patins∎ to suck at or on sth sucer ou suçoter qch;∎ the child was sucking at her breast l'enfant tétait son sein∎ this town sucks! cette ville est dégueulasse!;∎ this bar/movie sucks ce bar/film est vraiment nul;∎ this sucks, let's do something else c'est nul, si on faisait autre chose?;∎ I've got to work all weekend -- that sucks! il faut que je travaille tout le week-end -- ça craint!∎ (ya boo) sucks to you! va te faire voir!3 noun(a) (act of sucking → gen)∎ to have a suck at sth sucer ou suçoter qch;∎ he took a long suck on his cigar il tira longuement sur son cigare(b) (act of sucking → at breast) tétée f;∎ to give suck donner le sein, allaiter(of sea, quicksand, whirlpool) engloutir(with mouth) sucer; (draw in by vacuum) aspirer; (of air pump) aspirer; (in vortex) engloutir; (cheeks) creuser; (knowledge) absorber;∎ to get sucked in (to sth) (to conspiracy, plot etc) se laisser entraîner (dans qch)∎ to suck sb off sucer qn, tailler une pipe à qn➲ suck up∎ familiar to suck up to sb faire de la lèche à qn, cirer les pompes à qn -
53 possession
possession [pəˈze∫ən]b. ( = object) bien m* * *[pə'zeʃn] 1.1) ( state of having) possession f (of de)3) Law ( of property) jouissance f (of de)to take possession of — prendre possession de [premises, property]
4) Sportto be in ou have possession — contrôler le ballon
5) ( by demon) possession f (by par)6) ( colonial) possession f2.possessions plural noun ( belongings) biens mpl••possession is nine-tenths of the law — Prov possession vaut titre Prov
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54 coerce
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55 goad
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56 strike
1. past tense - struck; verb1) (to hit, knock or give a blow to: He struck me in the face with his fist; Why did you strike him?; The stone struck me a blow on the side of the head; His head struck the table as he fell; The tower of the church was struck by lightning.) frapper2) (to attack: The enemy troops struck at dawn; We must prevent the disease striking again.) attaquer3) (to produce (sparks or a flame) by rubbing: He struck a match/light; He struck sparks from the stone with his knife.) faire jaillir4) ((of workers) to stop work as a protest, or in order to force employers to give better pay: The men decided to strike for higher wages.) faire grève5) (to discover or find: After months of prospecting they finally struck gold/oil; If we walk in this direction we may strike the right path.) trouver6) (to (make something) sound: He struck a note on the piano/violin; The clock struck twelve.) sonner7) (to impress, or give a particular impression to (a person): I was struck by the resemblance between the two men; How does the plan strike you?; It / The thought struck me that she had come to borrow money.) frapper8) (to mint or manufacture (a coin, medal etc).) frapper9) (to go in a certain direction: He left the path and struck (off) across the fields.) prendre, aller10) (to lower or take down (tents, flags etc).) démonter; amener2. noun1) (an act of striking: a miners' strike.) grève2) (a discovery of oil, gold etc: He made a lucky strike.) découverte•- striker- striking - strikingly - be out on strike - be on strike - call a strike - come out on strike - come - be within striking distance of - strike at - strike an attitude/pose - strike a balance - strike a bargain/agreement - strike a blow for - strike down - strike dumb - strike fear/terror into - strike home - strike it rich - strike lucky - strike out - strike up -
57 away
away [ə'weɪ]1 adverb∎ he got into his car and drove away il est monté dans sa voiture et il est parti;∎ to go away partir, s'en aller;∎ to look away détourner son regard;∎ to run/fly away s'enfuir/s'envoler;∎ they moved away from the door ils se sont éloignés de la porte;∎ they're away! (at start of race) ils sont partis;∎ familiar a couple of drinks and he's away (talking, doing something) deux verres et il est parti;(b) (indicating distance, position)∎ the village is 10 miles away le village est à 10 miles;∎ it's less than five minutes' walk away c'est à moins de cinq minutes à pied;∎ the church was set away from the road l'église était située en retrait par rapport à la route;∎ away in the distance au loin, dans le lointain;∎ away over there beyond the mountains là-bas, bien loin au-delà des montagnes∎ the holidays are only three weeks away les vacances sont dans trois semaines seulement;∎ away back in the 20s il y a bien longtemps, dans les années 20;∎ away back in 1970 il y a longtemps déjà, en 1970∎ he feeds the cat whenever we're away il donne à manger au chat quand nous ne sommes pas là ou quand nous sommes absents;∎ the boss is away on business this week le patron est en déplacement cette semaine;∎ they're away on holiday/in Madrid ils sont (partis) en vacances/à Madrid(e) (indicating disappearance, decline)∎ the water had boiled away l'eau s'était évaporée (à force de bouillir);∎ we danced the night away nous avons passé toute la nuit à danser;∎ government support gradually fell away le soutien de l'État a disparu petit à petit∎ to work away travailler beaucoup;∎ she's working away on her novel elle travaille d'arrache-pied à son roman;∎ he was singing away to himself il fredonnait∎ the team is (playing) away this Saturday l'équipe joue à l'extérieur ou en déplacement samedi∎ away with assez de;∎ away with petty restrictions! assez de restrictions mesquines;∎ familiar away with you! (don't be silly) arrête tes bêtises!(indicating precise distance) à…de; (not at, not in) loin de;∎ two metres away from us à deux mètres de nous;∎ somewhere well away from the city quelque part très loin de la ville;∎ when we're away from home quand nous partons, quand nous ne sommes pas chez nous►► Sport away game match m à l'extérieur;away goal = but marqué lors d'un match à l'extérieur;∎ they won on away goals ils ont gagné grâce aux buts qu'ils ont marqués lors de matchs joués à l'extérieur;away match match m à l'extérieur;away strip = tenue portée par l'équipe qui joue à l'extérieur lorsque l'équipe qui joue à domicile a une tenue similaire;the away team l'équipe f qui joue à l'extérieur, les visiteurs mpl
См. также в других словарях:
Force Dynamics — is a semantic category that describes the way in which entities interact with reference to force. Force Dynamics gained a good deal of attention in cognitive linguistics due to its claims of psychological plausibility and the elegance with which… … Wikipedia
force — force1 W1S3 [fo:s US fo:rs] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(military)¦ 2¦(military action)¦ 3¦(violence)¦ 4¦(physical power)¦ 5¦(natural power)¦ 6¦(organized group)¦ 7¦(strong influence)¦ 8¦(powerful effect)¦ 9 join/combine forces (with somebody/something) … Dictionary of contemporary English
force — force1 [ fɔrs ] noun *** ▸ 1 physical strength ▸ 2 group of police, etc. ▸ 3 influence ▸ 4 scientific effect ▸ 5 military ▸ + PHRASES 1. ) uncount physical strength or violence: They accused the police of using excessive force during the arrest.… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
force */*/*/ — I UK [fɔː(r)s] / US [fɔrs] noun Word forms force : singular force plural forces 1) a) [uncountable] physical strength, or violence They accused the police of using excessive force during the arrest. by force: The army took control of the region… … English dictionary
force — 1 noun 1 MILITARY a) (C) a group of people who have been trained to fight in a war: forces loyal to President Aquino | a highly efficient fighting force b) the forces the army, navy, and air force: Both her sons are in the forces. c) (U) military … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
force — [[t]fɔ͟ː(r)s[/t]] ♦ forces, forcing, forced 1) VERB If someone forces you to do something, they make you do it even though you do not want to, for example by threatening you. [V n to inf] He was charged with abducting a taxi driver and forcing… … English dictionary
force — force1 noun 1》 physical strength or energy as an attribute of action or movement. ↘Physics an influence tending to change the motion of a body or produce motion or stress in a stationary body. 2》 coercion backed by the use or threat of… … English new terms dictionary
force — /fɔs / (say faws) noun 1. strength; impetus; intensity of effect. 2. might, as of a ruler or realm; strength for war. 3. strength or power exerted upon an object; physical coercion; violence: to use force in order to do something; to use force on …
Something Wicked This Way Comes (novel) — Something Wicked This Way Comes … Wikipedia
force — [fôrs, fōrs] n. [ME < OFr < VL * fortia, * forcia < L fortis, strong: see FORT1] 1. strength; energy; vigor; power 2. the intensity of power; impetus [the force of a blow] 3. a) physical power or strength exerted against a person or… … English World dictionary
force — 1 n 1: a cause of motion, activity, or change intervening force: a force that acts after another s negligent act or omission has occurred and that causes injury to another: intervening cause at cause irresistible force: an unforeseeable event esp … Law dictionary