-
1 perles de verre
-
2 verroterie
verroterie [veʀɔtʀi]feminine noun* * *vɛʀɔtʀinom féminin glass jewellery GB ou jewelry US* * *veʀɔtʀi nfglass beads pl glass jewellery Grande-Bretagne glass jewelry USA* * *[vɛrɔtri] nom féminin[bibelots] glass trinkets[bijoux] glass jewels[perles] glass beads -
3 perle
perle [pεʀl]feminine nouna. ( = bijou) pearl ; ( = boule) beadc. ( = personne, chose de valeur) gemd. ( = erreur) howler* * *pɛʀl2) fig gemépouser une perle — to marry a wonderful man/woman
3) (colloq) ( erreur grossière) howler (colloq) (de in)4) ( goutte) liter•Phrasal Verbs:••il n'est pas ici pour enfiler des perles — (colloq) he's not here to amuse himself
* * *pɛʀl nf1) (en nacre) pearl2) [plastique, verre, bois] bead3) [sueur] bead4) fig (= personne, chose) gemla perle rare — that special someone, that special something
dénicher la perle rare — to find that special someone, to find that special something
5) (= erreur) howler ** * *B nf2 ( être ou chose d'exception) gem; c'est la perle des maris/cuisiniers he's a gem of a husband/cook; perle de bon sens/d'économie paragon of common sense/of thrift; épouser une perle to marry a wonderful man/woman; ma femme de ménage est une vraie perle my cleaning lady is a real treasure;3 ○( erreur grossière) howler○ (de in);4 liter ( goutte) perle de rosée dewdrop; perle de sang drop(let) of blood; perle de sueur bead of sweat.perle de culture cultured pearl; perle fine real pearl; perle naturelle = perle fine; perle rare fig real treasure; chercher/trouver la perle rare to look for/to find someone special; perles de bain Cosmét bath pearls.il n'est pas ici pour enfiler des perles he's not here to amuse himself; jeter des perles aux cochons or pourceaux to cast one's pearls before swine.[pɛrl] nom féminin1. [bijou] pearlperle fine/de culture natural/cultured pearl2. [bille] bead3. (littéraire) [goutte] drop5. (familier) [bêtise] howler————————[pɛrl] adjectif invariable -
4 perlé
perle [pεʀl]feminine nouna. ( = bijou) pearl ; ( = boule) beadc. ( = personne, chose de valeur) gemd. ( = erreur) howler* * *pɛʀl2) fig gemépouser une perle — to marry a wonderful man/woman
3) (colloq) ( erreur grossière) howler (colloq) (de in)4) ( goutte) liter•Phrasal Verbs:••il n'est pas ici pour enfiler des perles — (colloq) he's not here to amuse himself
* * *pɛʀl nf1) (en nacre) pearl2) [plastique, verre, bois] bead3) [sueur] bead4) fig (= personne, chose) gemla perle rare — that special someone, that special something
dénicher la perle rare — to find that special someone, to find that special something
5) (= erreur) howler ** * *B nf2 ( être ou chose d'exception) gem; c'est la perle des maris/cuisiniers he's a gem of a husband/cook; perle de bon sens/d'économie paragon of common sense/of thrift; épouser une perle to marry a wonderful man/woman; ma femme de ménage est une vraie perle my cleaning lady is a real treasure;3 ○( erreur grossière) howler○ (de in);4 liter ( goutte) perle de rosée dewdrop; perle de sang drop(let) of blood; perle de sueur bead of sweat.perle de culture cultured pearl; perle fine real pearl; perle naturelle = perle fine; perle rare fig real treasure; chercher/trouver la perle rare to look for/to find someone special; perles de bain Cosmét bath pearls.il n'est pas ici pour enfiler des perles he's not here to amuse himself; jeter des perles aux cochons or pourceaux to cast one's pearls before swine.2. [orné de perles] beadedcoton perlé [mercerisé] pearl ou perlé cotton3. [orge] pearl[riz] polished4. [rire, son] rippling
См. также в других словарях:
Powder glass beads — The earliest powder glass beads on record were discovered during archaeological excavations at Mapungubwe, in present day Zimbabwe, and dated to 970 1000 CE. In our time, the main area of powder glass bead manufacture is West Africa, most… … Wikipedia
Glass beadmaking — The technology for glass beadmaking is among the oldest human arts, dating back 30,000 years (Dubin, 1987). Glass beads have been dated back to at least Roman times. Perhaps the earliest glass like beads were Egyptian faience beads, a form of… … Wikipedia
glass — glassless, adj. glasslike, adj. /glas, glahs/, n. 1. a hard, brittle, noncrystalline, more or less transparent substance produced by fusion, usually consisting of mutually dissolved silica and silicates that also contain soda and lime, as in the… … Universalium
Glass — /glas, glahs/, n. 1. Carter, 1858 1946, U.S. statesman. 2. Philip, born 1937, U.S. composer. * * * I Solid material, typically a mix of inorganic compounds, usually transparent or translucent, hard, brittle, and impervious to the natural elements … Universalium
GLASS — Earliest Times The earliest manufacture of glass does not antedate the late third millennium B.C.E., when the first glass beads were made in Mesopotamia and Egypt. The invention of glass vessel making dates to the mid second millennium B.C.E.,… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
glass bead screen — F/A/V screen covered with tiny glass beads, each of which provides a spherically reflective surface … Audio and video glossary
GLASS — Glass results from the heating of a mixture of sand, lime, and sodium carbonate to a very high temperature. When different materials are added to the sand, glass can become transparent, translucent, or colored. While the origins of glass are… … Historical Dictionary of Architecture
Glass — This article is about the material. For other uses, see Glass (disambiguation). Moldavite, a natural glass formed by meteorite impact, from Besednice, Bohemia … Wikipedia
glass — noun 1 transparent substance ADJECTIVE ▪ clear, coloured/colored, opaque, plain, smoked, tinted ▪ broken ▪ flying … Collocations dictionary
Murano beads — are intricate glass beads influenced by Venetian glass artists. Since 1291, the Murano glassmakers have refined technologies such as crystalline glass, enamelled glass (smalto), glass with threads of gold (aventurine), multicoloured glass… … Wikipedia
Anglo-Saxon glass — has been found across England during archaeological excavations of both settlement and cemetery sites. Glass in the Anglo Saxon period was used in the manufacture of a range of objects including vessels, beads, windows and was even used in… … Wikipedia