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1 through
through [θru:]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► When through is an element in a phrasal verb, eg break through, fall through, sleep through, look up the verb.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. adverb2. prepositiona. à traversb. ( = throughout) pendantd. ( = by means of) par3. adjective[carriage, train, ticket] direct• "through traffic" ≈ « toutes directions »4. compounds* * *[θruː] 1.1) ( from one side to the other) à travers2) (via, by way of)to look through — regarder avec [binoculars, telescope]; regarder par [hole, window]
3) ( past)to go through — brûler [red light]
to get ou go through — passer à travers [barricade]; passer [customs]
4) ( among)6) ( because of)7) ( until the end of)all ou right through the day — toute la journée
8) ( up to and including) jusqu'à2.open April through September — US ouvert d'avril à fin septembre
1) (colloq) ( finished) finiwe're through — ( of a couple) c'est fini entre nous
2) ( direct) [train, ticket, route] direct; [freight] à forfait‘no through road’ — ‘voie sans issue’
‘through traffic’ — ( on roadsign) ‘autres directions’
3) ( successful)4) GB3.2) ( from beginning to end)4.to read/play something right through — lire/jouer quelque chose jusqu'au bout
through and through adverbial phrase•• -
2 run through
run through [something]1) ( be present in) se retrouver dans [work]2) ( look through) parcourir [list, article]; ( discuss) passer [quelque chose] en revuerun through [something], run [something] through répéter [scene, speech] -
3 rush through
rush through [something] expédier [task]; parcourir [quelque chose] en vitesse [book]; rush [something] through, rush through [something] adopter en vitesse [legislation]; traiter en priorité [order, application]; rush [something] through to envoyer [quelque chose] d'urgence à -
4 get through
1) ( squeeze through) passer2) ( on phone)3) ( communicate with)to get through to — communiquer avec [person]
4) [news, supplies] arriver5) [examinee] réussirget through [something]6) traverser [checkpoint, mud]; terminer [book, revision]; finir [meal, task]; réussir à [exam, qualifying round]7) ( use) manger [food]; boire [drink]; dépenser [money]get [somebody/something] through8) lit faire passer; fig ( help to endure) aider quelqu'un à tenir le coup (colloq)9) School, University ( help to pass) permettre à [quelqu'un] de réussir10) Politics faire passer [bill] -
5 see through
see through [something] déceler [deception, lie]see through [somebody] percer [quelqu'un] à jour; see [something] through mener [quelque chose] à bonne fin; see [somebody] through -
6 let through
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7 carry through
carry through [something], carry [something] through mener [quelque chose] à bien [reform, policy, task]; carry [somebody] through [humour] soutenir [person] -
8 follow through
follow through Sport faire un swing complet; follow through [something], follow [something] through mener [quelque chose] à terme [project]; mettre [quelque chose] à exécution [threat]; aller jusqu'au bout de [idea, theory] -
9 push through
push [something] through, push through [something] faire voter [bill, legislation]; faire passer [deal] -
10 force through
force [something] through, force through [something] faire adopter [legislation, measures] -
11 go through
1) ( come in) entrer2) ( be approved) [law, agreement] passer; [divorce] être prononcé; [business deal] être conclugo through [something]3) endurer, subir [experience, ordeal]; passer par [stage, phase]4) (check, inspect) examiner; ( rapidly) parcourir [documents, files, list]5) ( search) fouiller6) (perform, rehearse) répéter [scene]; expliquer [procedure]; remplir [formalities]7) (consume, use up) dépenser [money] -
12 put through
put [something/somebody] through, put through [something/somebody]1) ( implement) faire passer2) Telecommunications passer -
13 think through
think through [something], think [something] through bien réfléchir à [proposal, action]; faire le tour de [problem, question] -
14 vote through
vote [something] through, vote through [something] faire adopter -
15 comb through
comb through [something] passer [quelque chose] au peigne fin ( for something à la recherche de quelque chose) -
16 come through
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17 break through
break through [army] faire une percée; break through [something] percer [defences, reserve]; franchir [barrier]; traverser [mur]; [sun] percer [clouds] -
18 burst through
burst through [something] rompre [barricade]to burst through the door — entrer violemment or brusquement
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19 flick through
flick through [something] feuilleter [book, report]to flick through the channels — Television zapper
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20 look through
См. также в других словарях:
carry through something — carry through (something) to complete something successfully. We ll need a qualified and experienced planner to carry through the study. Usage notes: often used in the form carry through with something or carry through on something: I think they… … New idioms dictionary
run through (something) — 1. to practice something. We ran through our lines once, then started filming. 2. to use all of something quickly. I still don t see how you could run through $5000 in a week. Alex ran through a large inheritance … New idioms dictionary
sail through (something) — 1. to go quickly and smoothly through something. In the early evening light, we watched bats sail through the air, scooping up insects. 2. to easily succeed in something. The new voting machines sailed through their first election day test last… … New idioms dictionary
talk through something — talk through (something) to explain or consider something in detail, esp. a problem. He had tried to get her to talk through her fears so she would see that they weren t so serious. I think you will have to talk it through with Sandy to see if… … New idioms dictionary
pull through (something) — pull (someone/something) through (something) to help someone or something through a difficult experience. She said her religious faith pulled her through this illness … New idioms dictionary
sit through something — sit through (something) to stay until the end of something. It s hard for little kids to sit through a whole baseball game. Usage notes: often said about something you do not enjoy: We had to sit through another boring lecture … New idioms dictionary
page through something — ˌpage ˈthrough sth derived (NAmE) to quickly turn the pages of a book, magazine, etc. and look at them without reading them carefully or in detail Syn: ↑flick through something, Syn: ↑leaf through something … Useful english dictionary
wade through (something) — 1. to read detailed or complicated information. We don t have enough staff to wade through the data. If you can wade through the ads, there s useful information here about the history of the Internet. 2. to move through a large group. We waded… … New idioms dictionary
breeze through something — breeze through (something) to do something easily or quickly. Lisa breezed through her homework, then started practicing for the play … New idioms dictionary
cut through something — cut through (something) to make clear something that has been made difficult to understand. She cut through all the political talk and outlined what was wrong and what could be done to fix it … New idioms dictionary
pull through something — pull through (something) to experience difficulties and continue to live or succeed. I didn t think he d survive, but he somehow pulled through. Those flowers can pull through a mild winter. We hope our experience will encourage them to pull… … New idioms dictionary