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61 pogne
n. f.1. 'Mitt', 'paw', hand. (Expressions such as avoir à sa pogne, passer la pogne and others not lexicalized under this heading, can be found under main.)2. Prendre la pogne: To take the initiative. Il a bien fallu que je prenne la pogne, on peut pas compter sur des lavettes comme vous! I just had to make a move, seeing you're all such ditherers!3. Homme à pogne:a Muscular figure, strong male.b Masterful and strong-willed man.a To 'wank', to masturbate.b To crow over someone's downfall. -
62 romaine
n. f. Etre bon comme la romaine:a To be 'as good as gold', to be kindness personified.b (iron.): To be the likely mug for an unpleasant task.c (iron.): To be 'for the chop', to be 'for the high jump', to be heading for punishment. -
63 serrer
I.v. trans. Expressions such as serrer la cuillère, lesfesses, la pince, la vis, etc. will be found under the heading of the direct object.1. To strangle, to throttle. Il y est allé du cigare pour avoir serré sa belle-doche: He got guillotined for doing his mother-in-law in.2. To 'pitch it strong', to 'lay it on thick', to exaggerate. Il nous a drôlement serré ses vertus! If you go by what he said, he's a clone of Superman and Albert Einstein!II.v. trans.reflex. Se la serrer:a To shake hands (also: se serrer la pince).b To go hungry, to go without food (also: se serrer la ceinture). -
64 y
I.adv.1. Y aller de ¼: To do something. (Colloquial expressions using this spoken format can usually be found under the heading of their complement, e.g. Y aller de cinq: To shake hands. Y aller de sa goualante:a To sing a song.b To voice a complaint. Y aller de la sienne: To tell a funny joke, etc.)2. Y passer (of sexual partner): To succumb to advances.3. Y tâter: To be quite good at something, to be more than proficient. Le golf, il y tâte depuis longtemps: He's no mcan golfer these days.II.pers. pron. (corr. il) Y faut pas faire ça! You mustn't do that! Y m'a bien dit que t'étais un salaud! He sure as hell told me you were a swine! (Only lax pronunciation can explain this surprising deviation from the norm which is sadly filtering into the written language.)
См. также в других словарях:
Heading — Head ing, n. 1. The act or state of one who, or that which, heads; formation of a head. [1913 Webster] 2. That which stands at the head; title; as, the heading of a paper. [1913 Webster] 3. Material for the heads of casks, barrels, etc. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
heading — UK US /ˈhedɪŋ/ noun [C] ► a title printed at the top of a page or section of a document: »Every day the Daily Telegraph lists eligible unit trusts under the heading Authorised unit trust prices . ► the subject of something being discussed,… … Financial and business terms
heading — s.n. (Sport) Lovitură dată cu capul la fotbal; joc efectuat cu capul la fotbal. [pron. hí din. / < engl. heading]. Trimis de LauraGellner, 20.04.2005. Sursa: DN HEADING HÍ DING/ s. n. lovitură cu capul (la fotbal). (< engl. heading)… … Dicționar Român
heading — heading, headed In BrE the expression meaning ‘to be going in a particular direction’ is to be heading for (in physical and figurative contexts, e.g. heading for trouble). In AmE to be headed for is also common and this form is beginning to… … Modern English usage
heading — I noun banner, caption, head, headline, label, proper title, section, superscription, title, topic II index caption, chapter (division), denomination, direction ( … Law dictionary
heading — [n1] title caption, description, descriptor, headline, label, legend, lemma, rubric; concept 283 heading [n2] course aim, angle, bearing, compass reading, direction, line, point, point of compass, route, track, trajectory, way; concepts 501,514 … New thesaurus
Heading — Heading. См. Высадка. (Источник: «Металлы и сплавы. Справочник.» Под редакцией Ю.П. Солнцева; НПО Профессионал , НПО Мир и семья ; Санкт Петербург, 2003 г.) … Словарь металлургических терминов
Heading — [engl.], Kopfzeile … Universal-Lexikon
heading — (n.) c.1300, a beheading, from prp. of HEAD (Cf. head) (v.). Meaning advancing in a certain direction is from c.1600. Meaning title at the head of a portion of text is from 1849 … Etymology dictionary
heading — ► NOUN 1) a title at the head of a page or section of a book. 2) a direction or bearing. 3) the top of a curtain extending above the hooks or wire by which it is suspended. 4) a horizontal passage made in preparation for building a tunnel … English terms dictionary
heading — [hed′iŋ] n. 1. something forming or used to form the head, top, edge, or front; specif., an inscription at the top of a paragraph, chapter, page, section, etc., giving the title or topic 2. a division of a subject; topic or category 3. the… … English World dictionary