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1 jumped-up
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2 jumped-up
jumped-up [dʒʌmpt-]∎ she's just a jumped-up shop assistant ce n'est qu'une petite vendeuse qui se donne de grands airs ou qui se prend au sérieux -
3 jumped-up
['dʒʌmptʌp]adjective péj [clerk, waiter] prétentieux/-ieuse -
4 jumped
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5 jump
jump [dʒʌmp]saut ⇒ 1 (a), 1 (d) bond ⇒ 1 (a), 1 (b) hausse ⇒ 1 (b) obstacle ⇒ 1 (c) prise ⇒ 1 (e) sauter ⇒ 2 (a), 2 (c), 3 (a), 3 (d) faire sauter ⇒ 2 (b) bondir ⇒ 3 (a) sursauter ⇒ 3 (b) monter en flèche ⇒ 3 (c)1 noun(a) (leap, bound) saut m, bond m;∎ she got up with a jump elle se leva d'un bond;∎ figurative we need to keep one jump ahead of the competition nous devons garder une longueur d'avance sur nos concurrents;∎ familiar to have the jump on sb avoir pris une longueur d'avance sur qn dès le départ;∎ familiar to get the jump on sb devancer qn□ ;∎ familiar go take a jump! va te faire voir (ailleurs)!, va te faire cuire un œuf!(b) (sharp rise) bond m, hausse f;∎ there has been a sudden jump in house prices il y a eu une flambée des prix de l'immobilier;∎ inflation took a sudden jump last month l'inflation a subitement augmenté le mois dernier(e) (in board games) prise f (de pion)(a) (leap over) sauter;∎ to jump a fence sauter ou franchir un obstacle;∎ American to jump rope sauter à la corde;∎ to jump a piece (in draughts) prendre un pion;∎ figurative he jumped all the others in his field il a dépassé tout le monde dans sa spécialité∎ she jumped her horse over the stream elle a fait sauter ou franchir le ruisseau à son cheval(c) (omit, skip) sauter;∎ to jump a line sauter une ligne∎ two men jumped him in the park deux hommes lui ont sauté dessus dans le parc∎ to jump bail ne pas comparaître au tribunal□ (après avoir été libéré sous caution);∎ also figurative to jump ship quitter le navire□ ;∎ American the fugitive jumped town le fugitif a réussi à quitter la ville□∎ to jump the queue ne pas attendre son tour, resquiller;∎ she jumped the lights elle a grillé ou brûlé le feu (rouge)∎ he jumped a (mining) claim (took illegally) il s'est approprié une concession (minière)□∎ they jumped across the crevasse ils ont traversé la crevasse d'un bond;∎ to jump back faire un bond en arrière;∎ can you jump over the hedge? peux-tu sauter par-dessus la haie?;∎ he jumped up, he jumped to his feet il se leva d'un bond;∎ to jump to the ground sauter à terre;∎ the frog jumped from stone to stone la grenouille bondissait de pierre en pierre;∎ to jump for joy sauter de joie;∎ she was jumping up and down with rage elle trépignait de rage;∎ familiar jump to it! grouille!;∎ familiar to jump down sb's throat (reply sharply to) rabrouer qn, rembarrer qn; (criticize) engueuler qn;∎ let's wait and see which way she jumps attendons de voir sa réaction, attendons de voir comment elle va réagir(b) (make a sudden movement → person) sursauter, tressauter; (→ record player needle, chisel, drill) sauter;∎ the noise made her jump le bruit l'a fait sursauter;∎ when the phone rang his heart jumped il tressaillit en entendant la sonnerie du téléphone;∎ this record jumps ce disque saute;∎ we nearly jumped out of our skins (from surprise) nous avons failli sauter au plafond; (from fear, shock) ça nous a fait un de ces coups(c) (rise sharply) monter ou grimper en flèche;∎ prices jumped dramatically in 1974 les prix ont grimpé de façon spectaculaire en 1974(d) (go directly) sauter;∎ he jumped from one topic to another il passait rapidement d'un sujet à un autre;∎ to jump to conclusions tirer des conclusions hâtives;∎ she immediately jumped to the conclusion that he was being unfaithful elle en a immédiatement conclu qu'il la trompait;∎ I jumped to the third chapter je suis passé directement au troisième chapitre;∎ the film then jumps to the present puis le film fait un saut jusqu'au présent;∎ Computing to jump from one Web page to another passer d'une page Web à une autre∎ by nightfall the joint was jumping à la tombée de la nuit, ça chauffait dans la boîte►► Sport jump ball (in basketball) entre-deux m inv;Cinema jump cut faux m raccord, saut m de montage;British jump leads câbles mpl de démarrage;American jump rope corde f à sauter;British jump seat strapontin m;jump shot (in basketball) tir m en suspension(b) (campaign, bandwagon) se joindre à(a) (get on boat) embarquer(b) (join campaign, bandwagon)∎ they've been campaigning for years but few people have jumped aboard ça fait des années qu'ils font campagne, mais ils ont fait peu d'adeptes;∎ the anti-gun lobby received a boost when the State Governor jumped aboard le lobby qui fait campagne contre les armes à feu a été très aidé par l'adhésion du gouverneursautiller; figurative (story, film) partir dans toutes les directions(offer, chance, suggestion) sauter sur, saisir;∎ he jumped at the chance to go abroad il sauta sur l'occasion de partir à l'étranger∎ go on, jump in! vas-y, monte!;∎ if you want a lift, jump in! si tu veux que je te dépose, monte!;∎ figurative to jump in at the deep end se jeter tête baissée dans les problèmes∎ he jumped in to defend her il est intervenu pour la défendre, il est venu à sa rescousse□sauter dans;∎ she jumped into her car elle a sauté dans sa voiture;∎ to jump into bed with sb coucher avec qn tout de suite➲ jump off(b) Horseriding faire un barrage(leap from → wall) sauter de; (get off from → bicycle, bus, train, horse) descendre de;∎ he jumped off the train (leapt from) il a sauté du train; (got off from) il est descendu du train;∎ he jumped off the bridge il s'est jeté du haut du pont➲ jump on∎ the boss jumps on every little mistake aucune faute n'échappe au patron;∎ familiar to jump on sb (reprimand) passer un savon à qn(on to bicycle, horse) sauter dessus; (on to bus, train) monter(from hiding place) sortir d'un bond ( from de); (from high place) sauter; (from vehicle) descendre (of or from de);∎ I'll jump out at the traffic lights je vais descendre au feu rouge;∎ to jump out of bed sauter (à bas) du lit;∎ to jump out of the window sauter par la fenêtre;∎ to jump out of the bushes/one's hiding place bondir d'entre les buissons/de sa cachette;∎ why did he jump out of the window? pourquoi a-t-il sauté par la fenêtre?;∎ figurative the answer suddenly jumped out at me la réponse m'a subitement sauté aux yeux -
6 jump
jump [dʒʌmp]1. nounb. ( = leap) bond m• it's a big jump from medical student to doctor il y a une grande différence entre être étudiant en médecine et devenir médecinc. (Horse riding) obstacle ma. ( = leap) sauter• he managed to jump clear as the car went over the cliff il a réussi à sauter hors de la voiture au moment où celle-ci passait par-dessus la falaise• to make sb jump [loud noise] faire sursauter qnc. (figurative) [person] sauter• she jumped from seventh place to second elle est passée directement de la septième à la seconde place• he jumped to the conclusion that... il en a conclu hâtivement que...d. [prices, shares, profits, costs] faire un bond• her salary jumped from $15,000 to $22,000 son salaire est passé brusquement de 15 000 à 22 000 dollarsa. sauter• the company's shares jumped 3% les actions de la société ont fait un bond de 3 %• to jump the rails [train] déraillerb. [rider] [+ horse] faire sauter4. compounds► jump about, jump around intransitive verb(onto truck, bus) jump on! montez !* * *[dʒʌmp] 1.1) ( leap) saut m, bond mto be one jump ahead — fig avoir une longueur d'avance ( of somebody sur quelqu'un)
2) ( for horse) obstacle m3) ( sudden increase) (in price, wages etc) bond m (in dans)2.she's made the jump from deputy to director — elle est passée d'un bond du poste d'adjointe à celle de directrice
transitive verb1) ( leap over) sauter [obstacle, ditch]2) ( anticipate)to jump the lights — [motorist] passer au feu rouge
3) ( escape)to jump ship — [crewman] ne pas rejoindre son bâtiment
4) ( miss) [stylus] sauter [groove]; [disease] sauter [generation]5) (colloq) ( attack) sauter sur [person]3.1) ( leap) sauterto jump across ou over something — franchir quelque chose d'un bond
to jump up and down — [gymnast] sautiller; [child] sauter en l'air; fig ( in anger) trépigner de colère
2) ( start in surprise) [person] sursauter3) ( rise) [prices, rate] monter en flèche4) ( move)5) ( welcome)to jump at — sauter sur [opportunity]; accepter [quelque chose] avec enthousiasme [offer]
•Phrasal Verbs:- jump on- jump out- jump up••jump to it! — et que ça saute! (colloq)
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7 jump
1. verb1) (to (cause to) go quickly off the ground with a springing movement: He jumped off the wall / across the puddle / over the fallen tree / into the swimming-pool; Don't jump the horse over that fence!) (faire) sauter2) (to rise; to move quickly (upwards): She jumped to her feet; He jumped into the car.) sauter3) (to make a startled movement: The noise made me jump.) sursauter4) (to pass over (a gap etc) by bounding: He jumped the stream easily.) franchir (d'un bond)2. noun1) (an act of jumping: She crossed the stream in one jump.) bond2) (an obstacle to be jumped over: Her horse fell at the third jump.) saut3) (a jumping competition: the high jump.) saut4) (a startled movement: She gave a jump when the door suddenly banged shut.) sursaut5) (a sudden rise, eg in prices: There has been a jump in the price of potatoes.) montée en flèche•- jumpy- jump at - jump for joy - jump on - jump the gun - jump the queue - jump to conclusions / jump to the conclusion that - jump to it -
8 jump
A n4 ( sudden increase) bond m (in dans) ; prices start at £50 then there's a big jump to £200 les prix commencent à 50 livres et ensuite ils passent d'un bond à 200 livres ; she's made the jump from deputy to director elle est passée d'un bond du poste d'adjointe à celle de directrice ; it's a big jump from school to university il y a un grand décalage entre l'école et l'université ;5 Comput instruction f de saut.B vtr1 ( leap over) sauter [obstacle, ditch] ; he jumped three metres il a sauté trois mètres ; she can jump the horse over the fence elle peut faire sauter la barrière à son cheval ;2 ( anticipate) to jump the gun lit [athlete] partir avant le signal ; fig anticiper ; to jump the lights [motorist] passer au feu rouge ; to jump the queue passer devant tout le monde ;3 ( escape) to jump ship [crewman] ne pas rejoindre son bâtiment ; to jump bail ne pas comparaître au tribunal ;4 ( miss) [stylus] sauter [groove] ; [disease] sauter [generation] ; to jump the rails [train] dérailler ; to jump a stage ( in argument) omettre un point ; (in promotion, hierarchy) brûler une étape ;6 ○ ( board) to jump a train sauter dans un train en marche.C vi1 ( leap) sauter ; to jump for joy sauter de joie ; to jump across ou over franchir [qch] d'un bond [ditch, hole] ; to jump clear of sth faire un bond pour éviter qch ; to jump to one's feet se lever d'un bond ; to jump to sb's defence se précipiter pour défendre qn ; to jump to conclusions tirer des conclusions hâtives ; to jump up and down [gymnast] sautiller ; [child] sauter en l'air ; fig ( in anger) pousser des hurlements ;2 ( start) [person] sursauter ; you made me jump tu m'as fait sursauter ; he jumped out of his skin ○ il a sauté au plafond ○ ;3 ( rise) [prices, profits, birthrate] monter en flèche ;4 ( move) I jumped to the last page je suis passé directement à la dernière page ; the film jumps from 1800 to 1920 le film passe d'un seul coup de 1800 à 1920 ;5 ( welcome) to jump at saisir, sauter sur [opportunity] ; accepter [qch] avec enthousiasme [offer, suggestion] ;jump to it! et que ça saute ○ ! ; go and jump in the lake ○ ! va te faire voir ○ !■ jump about, jump around sauter.■ jump down [person] sauter (from de).■ jump in [person] monter.■ jump on:■ jump out [person] sauter ; to jump out of sauter par [window] ; sauter de [bed, chair, train] ; to jump out in front of sb surgir devant qn. -
9 clean
clean [kli:n]1. adjectivea. propre• as clean as a new pin or as a whistle propre comme un sou neufb. [joke, story, film] non vulgaired. [sheet of paper] viergee. [image, reputation] sans tachef. [smell, taste] pur ; [sound, edge, stroke, shape] netg. [operation, job] sans bavuresh. to be clean (inf) ( = innocent of wrongdoing) n'avoir rien à se reprocher ; ( = not in possession of drugs, weapon, stolen property) n'avoir rien sur soi ; ( = off drugs) être clean (inf)i. ( = total) to make a clean break tourner la page• to make a clean sweep of all the trophies/awards remporter tous les trophées/prix2. adverb3. noun( = do housework) faire le ménage6. compounds[+ drawer, box, cupboard, room] nettoyer à fond• she had to clean up after the children's visit elle a dû tout remettre en ordre après la visite des enfants[+ room, mess, person, the environment] nettoyer• to clean o.s. up se laver* * *[kliːn] 1. 2.1) ( not dirty) [clothes, dishes, floor] propre; [air, water] pur; [syringe] désinfectémy hands are clean — lit, fig j'ai les mains propres
2) ( with no pollution) [fuel] propre3) ( not obscene) [joke] anodin4) ( unsullied) [reputation] sans tache; [record, licence] vierge5) ( no longer addicted) désintoxiqué6) (colloq) ( without illicit property)7) Sport [tackle] sans faute; [hit] préciskeep it clean — ( in match) pas de bavures
8) ( neat) [lines, profile] pur; [edge] net/netteclean break — Medicine fracture f simple
3. 4.to make a clean break with the past — fig rompre définitivement avec le passé
transitive verb1) nettoyer [room, shoes, gun]; effacer [blackboard]to clean something from ou off — enlever quelque chose de [hands, car]
2) Culinary vider [fish]5.intransitive verb ( do housework) faire le ménage6.to clean itself — [animal] faire sa toilette
Phrasal Verbs:- clean up••to clean up one's act — [person] devenir plus sérieux
I'll have to come clean — (colloq) il va falloir que je dise la vérité
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10 conclusion
conclusion [kənˈklu:ʒən]• to come to the conclusion that... conclure que...* * *[kən'kluːʒn]1) ( end) fin fin conclusion — en conclusion, pour terminer
2) (opinion, resolution) conclusion fto come to ou to reach a conclusion — arriver à une conclusion
he jumped ou leapt to the conclusion that she was dead — il en a conclu un peu trop hâtivement qu'elle était morte
don't jump ou leap to conclusions! — ne tire pas de conclusions hâtives!
3) ( outcome) conclusion ftaken to its logical conclusion, this would mean that — si on va jusqu'au bout, ceci signifierait que
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11 off
off [ɒf]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. preposition2. adverb3. adjective4. noun5. compounds━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► When off is an element in a phrasal verb, eg keep off, take off, look up the verb. When it is part of a set combination, eg off duty, far off, look up the other word.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. prepositiona. ( = from) de━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► Note the French prepositions used in the following:━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━b. ( = missing from) there are two buttons off my coat il manque deux boutons à mon manteauc. ( = away from) de• the helicopter was just a few metres off the ground l'hélicoptère n'était qu'à quelques mètres du sold. ( = not taking, avoiding) (inf) I'm off coffee/cheese at the moment je ne bois pas de café/ne mange pas de fromage en ce moment2. adverba. ( = away) the house is 5km off la maison est à 5 km• they're off! (in race) les voilà partis !• where are you off to? où allez-vous ?c. ( = removed) he had his coat off il avait enlevé son manteaud. (as reduction) 10% off 10 % de remise or de rabais• I'll give you 10% off je vais vous faire une remise or un rabais de 10 %• they lived together off and on for six years ils ont vécu ensemble six ans, par intermittence3. adjectivea. ( = absent from work) he's been off for three weeks cela fait trois semaines qu'il est absentb. ( = off duty) she's off at 4 o'clock today elle termine à 4 heures aujourd'huic. ( = not functioning, disconnected) [machine, TV, light] éteint ; [engine, gas at main, electricity, water] coupé ; [tap] fermé ; [brake] desserréd. ( = cancelled) [meeting, trip, match] annuléf. (indicating wealth, possession) they are comfortably off ils sont aisés• how are you off for bread? qu'est-ce que vous avez comme pain ?g. ( = not right inf) it was a bit off, him leaving like that ce n'était pas très bien de sa part de partir comme ça• that's a bit off! ce n'est pas très sympa ! (inf)4. noun5. compounds• I came on the off chance of seeing her je suis venu à tout hasard, en pensant que je la verrais peut-être ► off-colour adjective (British)a. ( = bad day)• to sing off-key chanter faux ► off-licence noun (British) ( = shop) magasin m de vins et spiritueux• to go off-line [computer] se mettre en mode autonome• to put the printer off-line mettre l'imprimante en mode manuel ► off-load transitive verb [+ goods] décharger ; [+ task, responsibilities] se décharger de► off-peak (British) adjective [period, time, hour] creux ; [train, electricity] en période creuse ; [telephone call] à tarif réduit (aux heures creuses)• off-peak ticket billet m au tarif réduit heures creuses adverb (outside rush hour) en dehors des heures de pointe ; (outside holiday season) en période creuse ► off-piste adjective adverb━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━Dans le monde du théâtre new-yorkais, on qualifie de off-Broadway les pièces qui ne sont pas montées dans les grandes salles de Broadway. Les salles off-Broadway, généralement assez petites, proposent des billets à des prix raisonnables. Aujourd'hui, les théâtres les plus à l'avant-garde sont appelés off-off-Broadway.* * *Note: off is often found as the second element in verb combinations ( fall off, run off etc) and in offensive interjections ( clear off etc). For translations consult the appropriate verb entry (fall, run, clear etc)off is used in certain expressions such as off limits, off colour etc and translations for these will be found under the noun entry (limit, colour etc)For other uses of off see the entry below[ɒf], US [ɔːf] 1.(colloq) noun2.just before the off — ( of race) juste avant le départ
1) ( leaving)to be off — partir, s'en aller
I'm off — gen je m'en vais; ( to avoid somebody) je ne suis pas là
he's off again talking about his exploits! — fig et voilà c'est reparti, il raconte encore ses exploits!
2) ( at a distance)3) ( ahead in time)4) Theatre3.1) ( free)2) ( turned off)3) ( cancelled)to be off — [match, party] être annulé
the ‘coq au vin’ is off — ( from menu) il n'y a plus de ‘coq au vin’
4) ( removed)to have one's leg off — (colloq) se faire couper la jambe
25% off — Commerce 25% de remise
5) (colloq) ( bad)4.to be off — [food] être avarié; [milk] avoir tourné
off and on adverbial phrase par périodes5.1) ( away from in distance)2) ( away from in time)3) (also just off) juste à côté de [kitchen etc]4) ( astray from)5) ( detached from)there's a button off — [cuff etc] il manque un bouton à
6) (colloq) ( no longer interested in)7) (colloq) (also off of)••how are we off (colloq) for...? — qu'est-ce qu'il nous reste comme...? [flour etc]
that's a bit off — (colloq) GB ça c'est un peu fort (colloq)
to feel a bit off(-colour) (colloq) — GB ne pas être dans son assiette (colloq)
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12 over
over [ˈəʊvər]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. adverb2. adjective3. preposition4. noun5. modifier━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. adverb► to have sb over ( = invite) inviter qn chez soib. ( = there) làc. ( = above) dessusd. (with adverb/preposition)━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► When followed by an adverb or a preposition, over is not usually translated.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━e. ( = more) plusf. ( = in succession) he did it five times over il l'a fait cinq fois de suite• William played the same tune over and over again William a joué le même air je ne sais combien de fois• I got bored doing the same thing over and over again je m'ennuyais à refaire toujours la même choseg. ( = remaining) there are three over il en reste troish. (on two-way radio) over! à vous !• over and out! terminé !2. adjective( = finished) after the war was over après la guerre3. preposition━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► When over occurs in a set combination, eg over the moon, an advantage over, look up the noun. When over is used with a verb such as jump, trip, step, look up the verb.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━a. ( = on top of) surb. ( = above) au-dessus dec. ( = across) de l'autre côté ded. ( = during) over the summer pendant l'étéf. ( = more than) plus de• spending has gone up by 7% over and above inflation les dépenses ont augmenté de 7 %, hors inflation• over and above the fact that... sans compter que...h. ( = while having) they chatted over a cup of coffee ils ont bavardé autour d'une tasse de caféi. ( = recovered from)► to be over sth [+ illness, bad experience] s'être remis de qch4. noun5. modifier* * *Note: over is used after many verbs in English ( change over, fall over, lean over etc). For translations, consult the appropriate verb entry (change, fall, lean etc)over is often used with another preposition in English (to, in, on) without altering the meaning. In this case over is usually not translated in French: to be over in France = être en France; to swim over to somebody = nager vers quelqu'unover is often used with nouns in English when talking about superiority ( control over etc) or when giving the cause of something ( concern over, worries over etc). For translations, consult the appropriate noun entry (control, concern, worry etc)over is often used as a prefix in verb combinations ( overeat), adjective combinations ( overconfident) and noun combinations ( overcoat). These combinations are treated as headwords in the dictionary['əʊvə(r)] 1.1) ( across the top of) par-dessusover here/there — par ici/là
3) ( above) au-dessus de4) (covering, surrounding) gen sur5) ( physically higher than)6) ( more than) plus detemperatures over 40° — des températures supérieures à 40°
7) ( in the course of)8) ( recovered from)to be over — s'être remis de [illness, operation]
9) ( by means of)10) ( everywhere)2.over and above prepositional phrase3.adjective, adverb2) ( finished)to be over — [term, meeting] être terminé; [war] être fini
3) ( more)4) ( remaining)5) (to one's house, country)to invite ou ask somebody over — inviter quelqu'un
6) Radio, Television7) ( showing repetition)I had to do it over — US j'ai dû recommencer
I've told you over and over (again)... — je t'ai dit je ne sais combien de fois...
8) GB ( excessively) -
13 interim
intérimaireinterim accounts comptes m pl semestriels;interim budget budget m intérimaire;FINANCE interim dividend dividende m intérimaire;interim payment paiement m provisoire;interim report rapport m intérimaire;ACCOUNTANCY interim statement bilan m intérimaireShares in Dixons, the UK retailer, jumped 2.88 per cent to £12.50 after the company declared a special interim dividend of 7.5p per ordinary share to be paid on December 13. Sir Stanley Kalms, Dixons' chairman, said total retail sales for the 18 weeks to September 4 were up 20 per cent over the same period last year and 9 per cent higher on a like-for-like basis.
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14 manipulate
to manipulate the accounts trafiquer les comptes;They said there had been speculation that someone may be manipulating the market, noting that three-month prices had climbed to $6,200 per tonne last week while tin trading volatility jumped to as high as 25 percent.
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15 hurdle
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16 joy
[‹oi]1) (great happiness: The children jumped for joy when they saw the new toys.) joie2) (a cause of great happiness: Our son is a great joy to us.) joie•- joyful- joyfully - joyfulness - joyous - joyously -
17 jump at
(to take or accept eagerly: He jumped at the chance to go to Germany for a fortnight.) sauter (sur) -
18 jump on
(to make a sudden attack on: He was waiting round the corner and jumped on me in the dark.) sauter (sur) -
19 jump the gun
(to start before the proper time: We shouldn't be going on holiday till tomorrow, but we jumped the gun and caught today's last flight.) prendre les devants -
20 jump to conclusions / jump to the conclusion that
(to form an idea without making sure of the facts: He saw my case in the hall and jumped to the conclusion that I was leaving.) conclure tout de suite queEnglish-French dictionary > jump to conclusions / jump to the conclusion that
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См. также в других словарях:
jumped-up — adj [only before noun] BrE informal a jumped up person thinks they are more important than they really are, because they have improved their social position ▪ a jumped up little bureaucrat … Dictionary of contemporary English
jumped-up — adj. Upstart. [British informal] [WordNet 1.5] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
jumped-up — jumped′ up′ adj. Slang. brit. upstart; parvenu • Etymology: 1825–35 … From formal English to slang
jumped-up — ► ADJECTIVE informal ▪ considering oneself to be more important than one really is … English terms dictionary
jumped-up — [jumpt′up′] adj. [Brit. Informal] having recently gained wealth, power, success, etc. and regarded as behaving presumptuously, aggressively, etc … English World dictionary
jumped-up — adjective (British informal) upstart • Similar to: ↑pretentious • Usage Domain: ↑colloquialism • Regions: ↑United Kingdom, ↑UK, ↑U.K., ↑Britain, ↑ … Useful english dictionary
jumped-up — ADJ: usu ADJ n (disapproval) If you describe someone as jumped up, you disapprove of them because they consider themselves to be more important than they really are. [BRIT, INFORMAL] He s nothing better than a jumped up bank clerk! … English dictionary
jumped — jump jump, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {jumped} (j[u^]mt; 215); p. pr. & vb. n. {jumping}.] [Akin to OD. gumpen, dial. G. gumpen, jumpen.] [1913 Webster] 1. To spring free from the ground by the muscular action of the feet and legs; to project one s self … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
jumped-up — adjective (only before noun) BrE believing that you are more important than you really are, because you have improved your social position: some jumped up little bureaucrat … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
jumped-up — /ˈdʒʌmpt ʌp/ (say jumpt up) adjective Colloquial upstart; parvenu; conceited: *He had a poor view of anyone in authority; officers, bosses, little jumped up clerks behind a desk who hum and ha and make you feel like shit before they ll stamp… …
jumped-up — /jumpt up /, adj. Chiefly Brit. having recently gained prominence or fame and appearing arrogant. [1825 35] * * * … Universalium