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1 here and there
(in, or to, various places: Books were scattered here and there.) çà et là, par-ci par-là -
2 here
here [hɪər]1. adverba. ici━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► French speakers very often use là instead of the more correct ici.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• Mr Moore is not here just now M. Moore n'est pas là en ce moment• are you there? -- yes I'm here vous êtes là ? -- oui je suis là• I'm here to help! à votre service !b.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► When here is used to make an announcement or an introduction, it is usually translated voilà; voici is slightly more formal.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• here we are at last! nous voilà enfin arrivés !• here you are! (giving sth) voilà !• here goes! (inf) allons-y !• here we go again! c'est reparti ! (inf)► preposition + here• in here please par ici, s'il vous plaît• here, there and everywhere un peu partout► neither here nor there• I must warn you here and now that... il faut que je vous prévienne tout de suite que...► here's to...• here's to you! à la tienne ! à la vôtre !• here's to your success! à votre succès !2. exclamation• here, I didn't promise that at all! dites donc, je n'ai jamais promis cela !• here, you try to open it! (inf) tiens, essaie de l'ouvrir !* * *Note: When here is used to indicate the location of an object/point etc close to the speaker, it is generally translated by ici: come and sit here = viens t'asseoir iciWhen the location is not so clearly defined, là is the usual translation: he's not here at the moment = il n'est pas là pour l'instantRemember that voici is used to translate here is and here are when the speaker is drawing attention to an object/a place/a person etc physically close to him or herFor examples and particular usages, see entry below[hɪə(r)] 1.1) icifar from/near here — loin/près d'ici
up to here —
here lies — ( on tombstone) ci-gît
here they are/she comes! — les/la voici!
here is my key/are my keys — voici ma clé/mes clés
here you are — ( offering something) tiens, tenez
my colleague here — mon/ma collègue
2) (indicating presence, arrival)‘John?’ - ‘here sir’ — ( telling whereabouts) ‘John?’ - ‘ici Monsieur’; ( during roll call) ‘John?’ - ‘présent Monsieur’
3) (colloq) ( emphatic)this here contraption — ce truc (colloq)
2.look ou see here, you! — écoute-moi bien toi!
(colloq) exclamation hé!••here's to our success/to you! — à notre succès/la tienne!
here there and everywhere — partout, par-ci par-là
it's neither here nor there — ( unimportant) c'est sans importance; ( irrelevant) ça n'a aucun rapport
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3 here
❢ When here is used to indicate the location of an object/point etc close to the speaker, it is generally translated by ici: come and sit here = viens t'asseoir ici.When the location is not so clearly defined, là is the usual translation: he's not here at the moment = il n'est pas là pour l'instant. Remember that voici is used to translate here is when the speaker is drawing attention to an object/a place/a person etc physically close to him or her. For examples and particular usages, see entry below.A adv1 ( indicating place) ici ; let's stop here arrêtons-nous ici ; sign here please veuillez signer ici s'il vous plaît ; stand here mettez-vous ici ; far from/near here loin/près d'ici ; two kilometres from here à deux kilomètres d'ici ; come over here venez par ici ; up to here, down to here jusqu'ici ; put it in here mettez-le ici ; I'm up here je suis là-haut ; here below ( in text) ci-dessous ; those persons here present Jur les personnes ici présentes ; here lies ( on tombstone) ci-gît ; since you were last here depuis ta dernière visite ici ; following a visit here by members suite à la venue des membres ; here and there ( in places) par endroits ;2 ( to draw attention) I have here… j'ai ici… ; here they are/she comes! les/la voici! ; here comes the bus voilà le bus ; here you are ( offering sth) tiens, tenez ; here's a screwdriver tiens voilà un tournevis ; this thing here is ceci est ; this paragraph/sales assistant here ce paragraphe/vendeur ; my colleague here will show you mon collègue va vous montrer ; which one? this one here or that one? lequel? celui-ci ou celui-là? ; it says here that c'est marqué ici que ; here's what you do voilà ce qu'il faut faire ; here's why je vais vous expliquer pourquoi ;3 (indicating presence, arrival) she's not here right now elle n'est pas là pour le moment ; ‘Matthew?’-‘here sir’ ( revealing whereabouts) ‘Matthew?’-‘ici Monsieur’ ; ( during roll call) ‘Matthew?’-‘présent Monsieur’ ; here we are at last nous voilà enfin, nous voici arrivés ; when will he be getting here? quand est-ce qu'il arrivera? ; the train will be here any minute le train va arriver d'un moment à l'autre ; we get off here c'est là qu'on descend ;4 ( indicating juncture) now that summer's here maintenant que c'est l'été ; here' s our chance voilà notre chance ; I may be wrong here je me trompe peut-être ; so here you are, a bachelor of 25 te voilà donc, célibataire à vingt-cinq ans ; ⇒ here and now ;here goes! c'est parti! ; here's hoping j'espère ; here's to our success/to you! à notre succès/la tienne! ; here there and everywhere partout, par-ci par-là ; to be here there and everywhere fig [person] être au four et au moulin ; it's neither here nor there ce n'est pas le problème ; here we go ○ ! ( sneeringly) c'est parti!, nous y voilà! -
4 here
here [hɪə(r)]1 adverb(a) (at, in this place)∎ come here! (venez) ici!;∎ she left here yesterday elle est partie d'ici hier;∎ I've lived here for two years ça fait deux ans que j'habite ici, j'habite ici depuis deux ans;∎ is Susan here? est-ce que Susan est là?;∎ he won't be here next week il ne sera pas là la semaine prochaine;∎ winter is here c'est l'hiver, l'hiver est arrivé;∎ the miniskirt is here to stay la minijupe n'est pas près de disparaître;∎ where do I switch on the light? - here où est l'interrupteur? - ici;∎ sign here signez ici;∎ it is a question here of finances il s'agit ici d'argent∎ around here par ici;∎ it's 2 km from here c'est à 2 km d'ici;∎ from here to here d'ici jusqu'ici;∎ bring them in here apportez-les (par) ici;∎ I'm in here je suis là ou ici;∎ they're over here ils sont ici;∎ where are you? - over here! où êtes-vous? - (par) ici!;∎ the water came up to here l'eau est montée jusqu'ici;∎ familiar I've had it up to here j'en ai jusque là;∎ here today, gone tomorrow tout passe;∎ any money he gets is here today and gone tomorrow tout l'argent qu'il gagne lui file entre les doigts(c) (drawing attention to something) voici, voilà;∎ here's the key! voilà ou voici la clef!;∎ here they come! les voilà! ou voici!;∎ here's a man who knows what he wants voilà un homme qui sait ce qu'il veut;∎ here I am! me voici!, me voilà!;∎ here we are! (I've found it) voilà! j'ai trouvé!; (we've arrived) nous y sommes!, nous voilà arrivés! ou rendus!;∎ here we are in San Francisco nous voici à San Francisco;∎ have you got the paper? - here you are vous avez le journal? - le voilà ou voici;∎ here we go again! ça y est, c'est reparti pour un tour!(d) (emphasizing specified object, person)∎ ask the lady here demandez à cette dame ici;∎ it's this one here that I want c'est celui-ci que je veux;∎ my friend here saw it mon ami (que voici) l'a vu;∎ familiar this here book (that I am pointing to) ce livre-ci□ ;∎ familiar this here book you've all been talking about ce bouquin dont vous n'arrêtez pas de parler tous∎ here I should like to remind you... maintenant je voudrais vous rappeler...;∎ here I am referring to taxation c'est aux impôts que je fais allusion;∎ here she paused à ce moment-là, elle s'est arrêtée∎ here's to (in toasts) à;∎ here's to the newly-weds! aux nouveaux mariés!;∎ here's to your exams! à tes examens!;∎ here's to us! à nous!, à nos amours!∎ Alex Pilard? - here! Alex Pilard? - présent!;∎ Emma Lindsay? - here! Emma Lindsay? - présente!(b) (giving, taking)∎ here! tiens!, tenez!;∎ here, give me that! tiens, donne-moi ça!∎ here! what do you think you're doing? hé! qu'est-ce que tu fais?;∎ here, I never said that! mais dis donc, je n'ai jamais dit ça!;∎ here, stop that! écoute, tu arrêtes un peu!1 adverbsur-le-champ2 noun∎ the here and now le présentça et là;∎ the paintwork needs retouching here and there la peinture a besoin d'être refaite par endroitsfamiliar un peu partout;∎ her things were scattered here, there and everywhere ses affaires étaient éparpillées un peu partout -
5 there
there [ðeə(r), unstressed ðə(r)]1 adverb(a) (in or to a particular place) là, y;∎ they aren't there ils ne sont pas là, ils n'y sont pas;∎ we never go there nous n'y allons jamais;∎ we're there! nous voilà arrivés!;∎ who's there? qui est là?;∎ is Margot there? est-ce que Margot est là?;∎ see that woman there? that's Marlene tu vois cette femme là-bas? c'est Marlene;∎ so there we were/I was donc, on était/j'étais là;∎ she got there in the end (reached a place) elle a fini par arriver; (completed a task) elle a fini par y arriver;∎ put it there mets-le là; (shake my hand) serre-moi la main;∎ it's there on the desk c'est là sur le bureau;∎ she just sat/stood there elle était assise/debout là;∎ move along there, please! circulez, s'il vous plaît;∎ we go to Paris and from there to Rome nous allons à Paris et de là à Rome;∎ here and there çà et là;∎ there it is le voilà;∎ it's around there somewhere c'est quelque part par là;∎ back there là-bas;∎ in there là-dedans;∎ on there là-dessus;∎ over there là-bas;∎ under there là-dessous;∎ that car there cette voiture-là;∎ those cars there ces voitures-là;∎ your friend there votre ami;∎ familiar I've been there before non merci, j'ai déjà donné;∎ familiar been there, done that (got the T-shirt) non merci, j'ai déjà donné(b) (available) là;∎ it's there if you need it c'est là si tu en as besoin;∎ she's always been there for me elle a toujours été là quand j'avais besoin d'elle(c) (in existence) là;∎ I couldn't believe he was really there je n'arrivais pas à croire qu'il était vraiment là;∎ the central problem is still there le principal problème est toujours là∎ we disagree there, there we disagree nous ne sommes pas d'accord là-dessus;∎ there's or there lies the difficulty voilà le problème, le problème est là;∎ there you're wrong là vous vous trompez;∎ you're right there là vous avez raison;∎ let's leave it there restons-en là;∎ we'll have to stop there for today nous nous arrêterons là pour aujourd'hui;∎ could I just stop you there? puis-je vous interrompre ici?;∎ as for the food, I've no complaints there pour ce qui est de la nourriture, là je n'ai pas à me plaindre;∎ familiar you've got me there! là, je ne sais pas quoi vous répondre ou dire!□∎ hello or hi there! salut!;∎ hey there! hep, vous là-bas!;∎ there they are! les voilà!;∎ there they come les voilà (qui arrivent);∎ there you go again! ça y est, vous recommencez!;∎ there she goes, complaining again! voilà qu'elle recommence à se plaindre!;∎ there's the bell, I must be going tiens ça sonne, je dois partir;∎ ironic there's gratitude for you c'est beau la reconnaissance!;∎ now finish your homework, there's a good boy maintenant sois un grand garçon et finis tes devoirs∎ he's not all or not quite there (stupid) il n'a pas toute sa tête; (senile) il n'a plus toute sa tête2 pronoun∎ there is (used before singular noun) il y a;∎ there are (used before plural noun) il y a;∎ there was/were il y avait;∎ there will be il y aura;∎ there is or there's a book on the table il y a un livre sur la table;∎ there are some books on the table il y a des livres sur la table;∎ there isn't any il n'y en a pas;∎ there's a bus coming il y a un bus qui arrive;∎ well, there's that girl I was telling you about before… il y a bien cette fille dont je t'ai déjà parlé…;∎ what happens if there's a change of plan? qu'est-ce qui se passe si on change d'idée?;∎ there must have been a mistake il a dû y avoir une erreur;∎ there was once a king il était ou il y avait une fois un roi;∎ there was singing and dancing on a chanté et dansé;∎ there were some pieces missing il manquait des pièces;∎ there weren't any more, were there? il n'en restait pas, si?;∎ there's one slice left il reste une tranche;∎ there are or familiar there's two slices left il reste deux tranches;∎ there's nothing we can do to help them on ne peut rien faire pour les aider;∎ there's no stopping her rien ne peut l'arrêter;∎ there's no knowing what he'll do next il est impossible de prévoir ce qu'il fera ensuite;∎ there was no denying it c'était indéniable;∎ there now follows a party political broadcast = formule annonçant la diffusion télévisée des messages électoraux des différents partis;∎ there comes a time when you have to slow down il arrive un moment où il faut ralentir le rythme;∎ there still remain several points to be resolved il reste encore plusieurs problèmes à résoudre;∎ there arose a murmur of disapproval un murmure de désapprobation s'éleva∎ there now, don't cry! allons ou là! ne pleure pas!;∎ there, that wasn't so bad, was it? voilà, ça n'était pas si terrible que ça, si?;∎ there, there! allez!∎ there (now), what did I say? voilà, qu'est-ce que je t'avais dit?;∎ there, now you've made me lose count! et voilà, tu m'as fait perdre le compte!∎ there (now), that's done! là! voilà qui est fait!∎ but, there, it's not surprising mais enfin, ce n'est pas surprenantvoilà!après tout;∎ but there again, no one really knows mais après tout, personne ne sait vraiment∎ we did the trip there and back in three hours nous avons fait l'aller retour en trois heures;∎ it will take you about an hour/cost you about £50 there and back l'aller retour vous prendra à peu près une heure/vous coûtera environ 50 livressur-le-champ;∎ I decided there and then to have no more to do with him j'ai tout de suite décidé de ne plus avoir affaire à lui∎ it wasn't the ideal solution, but there you are or go ce n'était pas l'idéal, mais enfin ou mais qu'est-ce que vous voulez∎ just press the button and there you are or go! vous n'avez qu'à appuyer sur le bouton et ça y est!(c) (I told you so) voilà, ça y est(d) (here you are) tenez, voilà -
6 here
[hiə] 1. adverb1) ((at, in or to) this place: He's here; Come here; He lives not far from here; Here they come; Here is / Here's your lost book.) ici; voici2) (at this time; at this point in an argument: Here she stopped speaking to wipe her eyes; Here is where I disagree with you.) là3) (beside one: My colleague here will deal with the matter.) que voici2. interjection1) (a shout of surprise, disapproval etc: Here! what do you think you're doing?) hé là!2) (a shout used to show that one is present: Shout `Here!' when I call your name.) présent•- hereabouts- hereabout - hereafter - the hereafter - hereby - herein - herewith - here and there - here goes - here's to - here - there and everywhere - here you are - neither here nor there -
7 there and everywhere
(in, or to, a larger number of places; in all directions: People were running around here, there and everywhere.) un peu partout -
8 Currencies and money
write say25 c vingt-cinq cents1 €* un euro1,50† € un euro cinquante or un euro cinquante cents2 € deux euros2,75 € deux euros soixante-quinze20 € vingt euros100 € cent euros1000 € mille euros1000000 € un million d’euros* Note that French normally puts the abbreviation after the amount, unlike British (£1) or American English ($1). However, in some official documents amounts may be given as €10000 etc.† French uses a comma to separate units (e.g. 2,75 €), where English normally has a period (e.g. £5.50).there are 100 cents in one euro= il y a 100 cents dans un euroa hundred-euro note= un billet de cent eurosa twenty-euro note= un billet de vingt eurosa two-euro coin= une pièce de deux eurosa 50-cent piece= une pièce de cinquante centsBritish moneywrite say1p un penny25p vingt-cinq pence or vingt-cinq pennies50p cinquante pence or cinquante pennies£1 une livre£1.50 une livre cinquante or une livre cinquante pence£2.00 deux livresa five-pound note= un billet de cinq livresa pound coin= une pièce d’une livrea 50p piece= une pièce de cinquante penceAmerican moneywrite say12c douze cents$1 un dollar$1.50 un dollar cinquante or un dollar cinquante centsa ten-dollar bill= un billet de dix dollarsa dollar bill= un billet d’un dollara dollar coin= une pièce d’un dollarHow much?how much is it? or how much does it cost?= combien est-ce que cela coûte?it’s 15 euros= cela coûte 15 eurosthe price of the book is 30 euros= le prix du livre est de§ 30 eurosthe car costs 15,000 euros= la voiture coûte 15000 eurosit costs over 500 euros= ça coûte plus de 500 eurosjust under 1,000 euros= un peu moins de 1000 eurosmore than 200 euros= plus de 200 eurosless than 200 euros= moins de 200 eurosit costs 15 euros a metre= cela coûte 15 euros le mètreanother ten pounds= encore dix livres§ The de is obligatory here.In the following examples, note the use of à in French to introduce the amount that something costs:a two-euro stamp= un timbre à deux eurosa £10 ticket= un billet à 10 livresand the use of de to introduce the amount that something consists of:a £500 cheque= un chèque de 500 livresa two-thousand-pound grant= une bourse de deux mille livresHandling money200 euros in cash= 200 euros en liquidea cheque for 500 euros= un chèque de 500 eurosto change a 100-euro note= faire la monnaie d’un billet de 100 eurosa dollar travellers’ check= un chèque de voyage en dollarsa sterling travellers’ cheque= un chèque de voyage en livresa £100 travellers’ cheque= un chèque de voyage de 100 livresthere are 1.12 euros to the dollar= le dollar vaut 1,12 eurosto pay in pounds= payer en livresto make a transaction in euros= faire une transaction en euros -
9 French provinces and regions
Both traditional pre-Revolution regions and modern administrative regions usually take the definite article as in l’Alsace, la Champagne etc.:I like Alsace= j’aime l’AlsaceChampagne is beautiful= la Champagne est belleFor names which have a compound form, such as Midi-Pyrénées or Rhône-Alpes, it is safer to include the words la région:do you know Midi-Pyrénées?= connaissez-vous la région Midi-Pyrénées?In, to and from somewhereThere are certain general principles regarding names of French provinces and regions. However, usage is sometimes uncertain ; doubtful items should be checked in the dictionary.For in and to, with feminine names and with masculine ones beginning with a vowel, use en without the definite article:to live in Burgundy= vivre en Bourgogneto go to Burgundy= aller en Bourgogneto live in Anjou= vivre en Anjouto go to Anjou= aller en AnjouFor in and to with masculine names beginning with a consonant, use dans le:to live in the Berry= vivre dans le Berryto go to the Berry= aller dans le BerryFor from with feminine names and with masculine ones beginning with a vowel, use de without the definite article:to come from Burgundy= venir de Bourgogneto come from Anjou= venir d’AnjouFor from with masculine names beginning with a consonant, use du:to come from the Berry= venir du BerryRegional adjectivesRelated adjectives and nouns exist for most of the names of provinces and regions. Here is a list of the commonest:an Alsace accent= un accent alsacienAlsace costume= le costume alsacienthe Alsace countryside= les paysages alsaciensAlsace traditions= les traditions alsaciennesAlsace villages= les villages alsaciensThese words can also be used as nouns, meaning a person from X ; in this case they are written with a capital letter:a person from Alsace= un Alsacienan Alsace woman= une Alsaciennethe people of Alsace= les Alsaciens mplBig English-French dictionary > French provinces and regions
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10 Towns and cities
Occasionally the gender of a town is clear because the name includes the definite article, e.g. Le Havre or La Rochelle. In most other cases, there is some hesitation, and it is always safer to avoid the problem by using la ville de:Toulouse is beautiful= la ville de Toulouse est belleIn, to and from somewhereFor in and to with the name of a town, use à in French ; if the French name includes the definite article, à will become au, à la, à l’ or aux:to live in Toulouse= vivre à Toulouseto go to Toulouse= aller à Toulouseto live in Le Havre= vivre au Havreto go to Le Havre= aller au Havreto live in La Rochelle= vivre à La Rochelleto go to La Rochelle= aller à La Rochelleto live in Les Arcs= vivre aux Arcsto go to Les Arcs= aller aux ArcsSimilarly, from is de, becoming du, de la, de l’ or des when it combines with the definite article in town names:to come from Toulouse= venir de Toulouseto come from Le Havre= venir du Havreto come from La Rochelle= venir de La Rochelleto come from Les Arcs= venir des ArcsBelonging to a town or cityEnglish sometimes has specific words for people of a certain city or town, such as Londoners, New Yorkers or Parisians, but mostly we talk of the people of Leeds or the inhabitants of San Francisco. On the other hand, most towns in French-speaking countries have a corresponding adjective and noun, and a list of the best-known of these is given at the end of this note.The noun forms, spelt with a capital letter, mean a person from X:the inhabitants of Bordeaux= les Bordelais mplthe people of Strasbourg= les Strasbourgeois mplThe adjective forms, spelt with a small letter, are often used where in English the town name is used as an adjective:Paris shops= les magasins parisiensHowever, some of these French words are fairly rare, and it is always safe to say les habitants de X, or, for the adjective, simply de X. Here are examples of this, using some of the nouns that commonly combine with the names of towns:a Bordeaux accent= un accent de BordeauxToulouse airport= l’aéroport de Toulousethe La Rochelle area= la région de La RochelleLimoges buses= les autobus de Limogesthe Le Havre City Council= le conseil municipal du HavreLille representatives= les représentants de LilleLes Arcs restaurants= les restaurants des Arcsthe Geneva road= la route de GenèveBrussels streets= les rues de Bruxellesthe Angers team= l’équipe d’Angersthe Avignon train= le train d’Avignonbut noteOrleans traffic= la circulation à OrléansNames of cities and towns in French-speaking countries and their adjectivesRemember that when these adjectives are used as nouns, meaning a person from X or the people of X, they are spelt with capital letters.Aix-en-Provence = aixois(e)Alger = algérois(e)Angers = angevin(e)Arles = arlésien(ne)Auxerre = auxerrois(e)Avignon = avignonnais(e)Bastia = bastiais(e)Bayonne = bayonnais(e)Belfort = belfortain(e)Berne = bernois(e)Besançon = bisontin(e)Béziers = biterrois(e)Biarritz = biarrot(e)Bordeaux = bordelais(e)Boulogne-sur-Mer = boulonnais(e)Bourges = berruyer(-ère)Brest = brestois(e)Bruges = brugeois(e)Bruxelles = bruxellois(e)Calais = calaisien(ne)Cannes = cannais(e)Carcassonne = carcassonnais(e)Chambéry = chambérien(ne)Chamonix = chamoniard(e)Clermont-Ferrand = clermontois(e)Die = diois(e)Dieppe = dieppois(e)Dijon = dijonnais(e)Dunkerque = dunkerquois(e)Fontainebleau = bellifontain(e)Gap = gapençais(e)Genève = genevois(e)Grenoble = grenoblois(e)Havre, Le = havrais(e)Lens = lensois(e)Liège = liégeois(e)Lille = lillois(e)Lourdes = lourdais(e)Luxembourg = luxembourgeois(e)Lyon = lyonnais(e)Mâcon = mâconnais(e)Marseille = marseillais(e) or phocéen(ne)Metz = messin(e)Modane = modanais(e)Montpellier = montpelliérain(e)Montréal = montréalais(e)Moulins = moulinois(e)Mulhouse = mulhousien(ne)Nancy = nancéien(ne)Nantes = nantais(e)Narbonne = narbonnais(e)Nevers = nivernais(e)Nice = niçois(e)Nîmes = nîmois(e)Orléans = orléanais(e)Paris = parisien(ne)Pau = palois(e)Périgueux = périgourdin(e)Perpignan = perpignanais(e)Poitiers = poitevin(e)Pont-à-Mousson = mussipontain(e)Québec = québécois(e)Reims = rémois(e)Rennes = rennais(e)Roanne = roannais(e)Rouen = rouennais(e)Saint-Étienne = stéphanois(e)Saint-Malo = malouin(e)Saint-Tropez = tropézien(ne)Sancerre = sancerrois(e)Sète = sétois(e)Sochaux = sochalien(ne)Strasbourg = strasbourgeois(e)Tarascon = tarasconnais(e)Tarbes = tarbais(e)Toulon = toulonnais(e)Toulouse = toulousain(e)Tours = tourangeau(-elle)Tunis = tunisois(e)Valence = valentinois(e)Valenciennes = valenciennois(e)Versailles = versaillais(e)Vichy = vichyssois(e) -
11 Illnesses, aches and pains
Where does it hurt?where does it hurt?= où est-ce que ça vous fait mal? or (more formally) où avez-vous mal?his leg hurts= sa jambe lui fait malhe has a pain in his leg= il a mal à la jambeNote that with avoir mal à French uses the definite article (la) with the part of the body, where English has a possessive (his), hence:his head was aching= il avait mal à la têteEnglish has other ways of expressing this idea, but avoir mal à fits them too:he had toothache= il avait mal aux dentshis ears hurt= il avait mal aux oreillesAccidentsshe broke her leg= elle s’est cassé la jambeElle s’est cassé la jambe means literally she broke to herself the leg ; because the se is an indirect object, the past participle cassé does not agree. This is true of all such constructions:she sprained her ankle= elle s’est foulé la chevillethey burned their hands= ils se sont brûlé les mainsChronic conditionsNote that the French often use fragile (weak) to express a chronic condition:he has a weak heart= il a le cœur fragilehe has kidney trouble= il a les reins fragileshe has a bad back= il a le dos fragileBeing illMostly French uses the definite article with the name of an illness:to have flu= avoir la grippeto have measles= avoir la rougeoleto have malaria= avoir la malariaThis applies to most infectious diseases, including childhood illnesses. However, note the exceptions ending in -ite (e.g. une hépatite, une méningite) below.When the illness affects a specific part of the body, French uses the indefinite article:to have cancer= avoir un cancerto have cancer of the liver= avoir un cancer du foieto have pneumonia= avoir une pneumonieto have cirrhosis= avoir une cirrhoseto have a stomach ulcer= avoir un ulcère à l’estomacMost words in -ite ( English -itis) work like this:to have bronchitis= avoir une bronchiteto have hepatitis= avoir une hépatiteWhen the illness is a generalized condition, French tends to use du, de l’, de la or des:to have rheumatism= avoir des rhumatismesto have emphysema= avoir de l’emphysèmeto have asthma= avoir de l’asthmeto have arthritis= avoir de l’arthriteOne exception here is:to have hay fever= avoir le rhume des foinsWhen there is an adjective for such conditions, this is often preferred in French:to have asthma= être asthmatiqueto have epilepsy= être épileptiqueSuch adjectives can be used as nouns to denote the person with the illness, e.g. un/une asthmatique and un/une épileptique etc.French has other specific words for people with certain illnesses:someone with cancer= un cancéreux/une cancéreuseIf in doubt check in the dictionary.English with is translated by qui a or qui ont, and this is always safe:someone with malaria= quelqu’un qui a la malariapeople with Aids= les gens qui ont le SidaFalling illThe above guidelines about the use of the definite and indefinite articles in French hold good for talking about the onset of illnesses.French has no general equivalent of to get. However, where English can use catch, French can use attraper:to catch mumps= attraper les oreillonsto catch malaria= attraper la malariato catch bronchitis= attraper une bronchiteto catch a cold= attraper un rhumeSimilarly where English uses contract, French uses contracter:to contract Aids= contracter le Sidato contract pneumonia= contracter une pneumonieto contract hepatitis= contracter une hépatiteFor attacks of chronic illnesses, French uses faire une crise de:to have a bout of malaria= faire une crise de malariato have an asthma attack= faire une crise d’asthmeto have an epileptic fit= faire une crise d’épilepsieTreatmentto be treated for polio= se faire soigner contre la polioto take something for hay fever= prendre quelque chose contre le rhume des foinshe’s taking something for his cough= il prend quelque chose contre la touxto prescribe something for a cough= prescrire un médicament contre la touxmalaria tablets= des cachets contre la malariato have a cholera vaccination= se faire vacciner contre le cholérato be vaccinated against smallpox= se faire vacciner contre la varioleto be immunized against smallpox= se faire immuniser contre la varioleto have a tetanus injection= se faire vacciner contre le tétanosto give sb a tetanus injection= vacciner qn contre le tétanosto be operated on for cancer= être opéré d’un cancerto operate on sb for appendicitis= opérer qn de l’appendicite -
12 at intervals
(here and there; now and then: Trees grew at intervals along the road.) par intervalles -
13 Usage note : be
I am tired= je suis fatiguéCaroline is French= Caroline est françaisethe children are in the garden= les enfants sont dans le jardinIt functions in very much the same way as to be does in English and it is safe to assume it will work as a translation in the great majority of cases.Note, however, that when you are specifying a person’s profession or trade, a/an is not translated:she’s a doctor= elle est médecinClaudie is still a student= Claudie est toujours étudianteThis is true of any noun used in apposition when the subject is a person:he’s a widower= il est veufButLyons is a beautiful city= Lyon est une belle villeFor more information or expressions involving professions and trades consult the usage note Shops, Trades and Professions.For the conjugation of the verb être see the French verb tables.Grammatical functionsThe passiveêtre is used to form the passive in French just as to be is used in English. Note, however, that the past participle agrees in gender and number with the subject:the rabbit was killed by a fox= le lapin a été tué par un renardthe window had been broken= la fenêtre avait été casséetheir books will be sold= leurs livres seront vendusour doors have been repainted red= nos portes ont été repeintes en rougeIn spoken language, French native speakers find the passive cumbersome and will avoid it where possible by using the impersonal on where a person or people are clearly involved : on a repeint nos portes en rouge.Progressive tensesIn French the idea of something happening over a period of time cannot be expressed using the verb être in the way that to be is used as an auxiliary verb in English.The presentFrench uses simply the present tense where English uses the progressive form with to be:I am working= je travailleBen is reading a book= Ben lit un livreIn order to accentuate duration être en train de is used: je suis en train de travailler ; Ben est en train de lire un livre.The futureFrench also uses the present tense where English uses the progressive form with to be:we are going to London tomorrow= nous allons à Londres demainI’m (just) coming!= j’arrive!I’m (just) going!= j’y vais!The pastTo express the distinction between she read a newspaper and she was reading a newspaper French uses the perfect and the imperfect tenses: elle a lu un journal/elle lisait un journal:he wrote to his mother= il a écrit à sa mèrehe was writing to his mother= il écrivait à sa mèreHowever, in order to accentuate the notion of describing an activity which went on over a period of time, the phrase être en train de (= to be in the process of) is often used:‘what was he doing when you arrived?’‘he was cooking the dinner’= ‘qu’est-ce qu’il faisait quand tu es arrivé?’ ‘il était en train de préparer le dîner’she was just finishing her essay when …= elle était juste en train de finir sa dissertation quand …The compound pastCompound past tenses in the progressive form in English are generally translated by the imperfect in French:I’ve been looking for you= je te cherchaisFor progressive forms + for and since (I’ve been waiting for an hour, I had been waiting for an hour, I’ve been waiting since Monday etc.) see the entries for and since.ObligationWhen to be is used as an auxiliary verb with another verb in the infinitive ( to be to do) expressing obligation, a fixed arrangement or destiny, devoir is used:she’s to do it at once= elle doit le faire tout de suitewhat am I to do?= qu’est-ce que je dois faire?he was to arrive last Monday= il devait arriver lundi derniershe was never to see him again= elle ne devait plus le revoir.In tag questionsFrench has no direct equivalent of tag questions like isn’t he? or wasn’t it? There is a general tag question n’est-ce pas? (literally isn’t it so?) which will work in many cases:their house is lovely, isn’t it?= leur maison est très belle, n’est-ce pas?he’s a doctor, isn’t he?= il est médecin, n’est-ce pas?it was a very good meal, wasn’t it?= c’était un très bon repas, n’est-ce pas?However, n’est-ce pas can very rarely be used for positive tag questions and some other way will be found to express the extra meaning contained in the tag: par hasard ( by any chance) can be very useful as a translation:‘I can’t find my glasses’ ‘they’re not in the kitchen, are they?’= ‘je ne trouve pas mes lunettes’ ‘elles ne sont pas dans la cuisine, par hasard?’you haven’t seen Gaby, have you?= tu n’as pas vu Gaby, par hasard?In cases where an opinion is being sought, si? meaning more or less or is it? or was it? etc. can be useful:it’s not broken, is it?= ce n’est pas cassé, si?he wasn’t serious, was he?= il n’était pas sérieux, si?In many other cases the tag question is simply not translated at all and the speaker’s intonation will convey the implied question.In short answersAgain, there is no direct equivalent for short answers like yes I am, no he’s not etc. Where the answer yes is given to contradict a negative question or statement, the most useful translation is si:‘you’re not going out tonight’ ‘yes I am’= ‘tu ne sors pas ce soir’ ‘si’In reply to a standard enquiry the tag will not be translated:‘are you a doctor?’ ‘yes I am’= ‘êtes-vous médecin?’ ‘oui’‘was it raining?’ ‘yes it was’= ‘est-ce qu’il pleuvait?’ ‘oui’ProbabilityFor expressions of probability and supposition ( if I were you etc.) see the entry be.Other functionsExpressing sensations and feelingsIn expressing physical and mental sensations, the verb used in French is avoir:to be cold= avoir froidto be hot= avoir chaudI’m cold= j’ai froidto be thirsty= avoir soifto be hungry= avoir faimto be ashamed= avoir hontemy hands are cold= j’ai froid aux mainsIf, however, you are in doubt as to which verb to use in such expressions, you should consult the entry for the appropriate adjective.Discussing health and how people areIn expressions of health and polite enquiries about how people are, aller is used:how are you?= comment allez-vous?( more informally) comment vas-tu?( very informally as a greeting) ça va?are you well?= vous allez bien?how is your daughter?= comment va votre fille?my father is better today= mon père va mieux aujourd’huiDiscussing weather and temperatureIn expressions of weather and temperature faire is generally used:it’s cold= il fait froidit’s windy= il fait du ventIf in doubt, consult the appropriate adjective entry.Visiting somewhereWhen to be is used in the present perfect tense to mean go, visit etc., French will generally use the verbs venir, aller etc. rather than être:I’ve never been to Sweden= je ne suis jamais allé en Suèdehave you been to the Louvre?= est-ce que tu es déjà allé au Louvre?or est-ce que tu as déjà visité le Louvre?Paul has been to see us three times= Paul est venu nous voir trois foisNote too:has the postman been?= est-ce que le facteur est passé?The translation for an expression or idiom containing the verb to be will be found in the dictionary at the entry for another word in the expression: for to be in danger see danger, for it would be best to … see best etc.This dictionary contains usage notes on topics such as the clock, time units, age, weight measurement, days of the week, and shops, trades and professions, many of which include translations of particular uses of to be. -
14 about
about [əˈbaʊt]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. adverba. ( = approximately) à peu près, environ• there were about 25 and now there are about 30 il y en avait environ or à peu près 25 et maintenant il y en a une trentaine• it's about 11 o'clock il est environ or à peu près 11 heures• it's about time! ce n'est pas trop tôt !• I've had about enough! (inf) je commence à en avoir assez !b. ( = here and there) çà et làc. ( = near, in circulation) par ici• is anyone about? il y a quelqu'un ?• you should be out and about! ne restez donc pas enfermé !d. ( = round) all about tout autoure. ( = opposite direction) to turn sth the other way about retourner qch• it's the other way about ( = the opposite) c'est le contraire• I was about to go out when... j'étais sur le point de sortir or j'allais sortir quand...2. prepositiona. ( = concerning) I heard nothing about it je n'en ai pas entendu parler• what is it about? de quoi s'agit-il ?• well, what about it? (inf) ( = does it matter?) et alors ? (inf) ; ( = what do you think?) alors, qu'est-ce que tu en penses ?• what about me? et moi alors ? (inf)• how about going to the cinema? (inf) et si on allait au cinéma ?• how about a coffee? (inf) et si on prenait un café ?b. ( = somewhere in) quelque part dansc. ( = round) autour ded. ( = with, on) I've got it about me somewhere je l'ai quelque part sur moif. ( = occupied with) while we're about it pendant que nous y sommes* * *Note: about is used after certain nouns, adjectives and verbs in English ( information about, a book about, curious about, worry about etc). For translations, consult the appropriate entries (information, book, curious, worry etc)about often appears in British English as the second element of certain verb structures ( move about, jump about, lie about etc). For translations, consult the relevant verb entries (move, jump, lie etc)[ə'baʊt] 1.2) ( awake)2.1) ( approximately) environ, à peu prèsat about 6 pm — vers 18 h, à environ 18 h
2) ( almost) presque3) ( in circulation)4) ( in the vicinity)3.1) ( concerning)what's it about? — (of book, film etc) ça parle de quoi?
it's about... — il s'agit de...
about your overdraft... — pour ce qui est de votre découvert...
2) ( in the nature of)3) ( bound up with)business is about profit — ce qui compte dans les affaires, ce sont les bénéfices
4) ( occupied with)while you're about it... — tant que tu y es..., par la même occasion...
5) ( around)6) (in invitations, suggestions)how ou what about some tea? — et si on prenait un thé?
7) ( when soliciting opinions)8) sout (on)hidden about one's person — [drugs, arms] caché sur soi
••it's about time (that) — il serait temps que (+ subj)
about time too! — ce n'est pas trop tôt! (colloq)
that's about it — ( that's all) c'est tout
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15 place
place [pleɪs]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. noun3. compounds━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. nouna. endroit m• we came to a place where... nous sommes arrivés à un endroit où...━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► A more specific word is often used to translate place.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• it's a small place ( = village) c'est un village━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► Note adjective + place translated by adjective alone.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► place of + noun• place of birth/work lieu m de naissance/de travail• he'll go places all right! ( = make good) il ira loin !• we're going places at last ( = make progress) nous avançons enfin• your place or mine? on va chez moi ou chez toi ?• his business is growing, he needs a bigger place son affaire s'agrandit, il lui faut des locaux plus grandsd. ( = position) place f• (if I were) in your place... (si j'étais) à votre place...• to take the place of sb/sth prendre la place de qn/qch• to fit into place ( = become clear) devenir clair• the moment I changed jobs everything fell into place ( = turned out well) il a suffi que je change de travail pour que tout s'arrangee. (in competition) place f• Paul won the race with Robert in second place Paul a gagné la course et Robert est arrivé deuxième• my personal life has had to take second place to my career ma vie privée a dû passer après ma carrière• he has risen to second place in the opinion polls il occupe maintenant la deuxième place dans les sondagesf. ( = job) place fg. (for student, player) place f• I've looked for him all over the place je l'ai cherché partout► to be in place [object] être à sa place ; [measure, policy, elements] être en place ; [conditions] être rassemblé ; [law, legislation] être en vigueur► in places ( = here and there) par endroits• the snow is very deep in places la neige est très profonde par endroits► in place of à la place de• in the first place, it will be much cheaper d'abord, ça sera beaucoup moins cher• we need to consider why so many people are in prison in the first place nous devons d'abord nous demander pourquoi tant de gens sont en prison• he shouldn't have been there in the first place d'abord, il n'aurait même pas dû être là► in the second place ensuite► out of place [object, remark] déplacéa. ( = put) mettre• events have placed the president in a difficult position les événements ont mis le président en mauvaise posture• we are now well placed to... nous sommes maintenant bien placés pour...b. ( = rank) placer• he places good health among his greatest assets il considère sa bonne santé comme l'un de ses meilleurs atouts• to place local interests above those of central government placer les intérêts locaux avant ceux de l'Étatc. ( = classify) classerd. ( = make) [+ order, contract] passer ; [+ bet] engagere. ( = find job for) trouver un emploi pour• we have so far placed 28 people in permanent jobs jusqu'à présent nous avons réussi à trouver des emplois permanents à 28 personnes• the agency is trying to place him with a building firm l'agence essaie de lui trouver une place dans une entreprise de constructionf. ( = identify) situer• he looked familiar, but I couldn't immediately place him sa tête me disait quelque chose mais je n'arrivais pas à le situer3. compounds━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━‼|/b] The French word [b]place is not the commonest translation for place.* * *[pleɪs] 1.1) (location, position) endroit msame time, same place — même heure, même endroit
in places — [hilly, damaged, worn] par endroits
in several places — ( in region) dans plusieurs endroits; ( on body) à plusieurs endroits
place of birth/work — lieu m de naissance/travail
in Oxford, of all places! — à Oxford, figure-toi!
to lose/find one's place — ( in book) perdre/retrouver sa page; (in paragraph, speech) perdre/retrouver le fil
he had no place to go — (colloq) surtout US il n'avait nulle part où aller
some place — (colloq) surtout US quelque part
2) (town, hotel etc) endroit ma little place called... — un petit village du nom de...
all over the place — ( everywhere) partout; fig (colloq) [speech, lecture] complètement décousu; [hair] en bataille
3) ( home)4) (seat, space) (on bus, at table, in queue) place f; ( setting) couvert mto keep a place — garder une place ( for pour)
to lay ou set a place for somebody — mettre un couvert pour quelqu'un
5) (on team, with firm) place f (on dans); (on committee, board) siège m (on au sein de)a place as — une place comme [au pair, cook, cleaner]
6) GB University place f (at à)to get a place on — obtenir une place dans [course]
7) (in competition, race) place fto finish in first place — terminer premier/-ière or à la première place
to take second place — fig ( in importance) passer au deuxième plan
in the first place — fig ( firstly) en premier lieu; ( at the outset) pour commencer
8) (in order, correct position)in place — [law, system, scheme] en place
to put somebody in his/her place — remettre quelqu'un à sa place
9) ( role)to have no place in — n'avoir aucune place dans [organization, philosophy]
10) ( situation)in my/his place — à ma/sa place
11) ( moment) moment m2.in places — [funny, boring, silly] par moments
out of place adjectival phrase déplacé3.to look out of place — [building, person] détonner
in place of prepositional phrase à la place de [person, object]4.transitive verb1) ( put) placer, mettre [object]; mettre [advertisement]to place something back on — remettre quelque chose sur [shelf, table]
2) ( locate) placer3) ( rank) ( in competition) classer; ( in exam) GB classerto be placed third — [horse, athlete] arriver troisième
4) ( identify) situer [person]; reconnaître [accent]5) Administration (send, appoint) placer [student, trainee] (in dans); ( find home for) placer [child]••that young man is really going places — (colloq) voilà un jeune homme qui ira loin
to fall ou fit into place — devenir clair; take place
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16 around
around [ə'raʊnd]1 adverb(a) (in all directions) autour;∎ the fields all around les champs tout autour;∎ for five miles around sur ou dans un rayon de cinq miles∎ stay or stick around reste dans les parages;∎ he's around somewhere il n'est pas loin, il est dans le coin;∎ will you be around this afternoon? tu seras là cet après-midi?;∎ see you around! à un de ces jours!∎ that firm has been around for years cette société existe depuis des années;∎ he's one of the most promising actors around at the moment c'est un des acteurs les plus prometteurs que l'on puisse voir en ce moment;∎ there wasn't much money around in those days les gens n'avaient pas beaucoup d'argent à l'époque;∎ he won't be around long! il ne fera pas de vieux os!(d) (here and there) ici et là;∎ to travel around voyager;∎ to wander around faire un tour;∎ I don't know my way around yet je suis encore un peu perdu;∎ familiar he's been around (has travelled widely) il a pas mal roulé sa bosse; (is experienced) il n'est pas né d'hier(a) (encircling) autour de;∎ seated around a table assis autour d'une table;∎ the people around us les gens qui nous entourent ou autour de nous;∎ the area around Berlin les alentours mpl ou les environs mpl de Berlin;∎ the tree measures two metres around the trunk l'arbre mesure deux mètres de circonférence;∎ figurative find a way (to get) around the problem trouvez un moyen de contourner le problème;∎ my keys are somewhere around here mes clés sont quelque part par ici∎ they travelled around Europe ils ont voyagé à travers l'Europe;∎ we strolled around town nous nous sommes promenés en ville(c) (approximately) autour de;∎ around midnight autour de ou vers minuit;∎ around five o'clock vers cinq heures;∎ around 1920 vers ou aux alentours de 1920;∎ he's around your age il a environ ou à peu près votre âge -
17 around
1. preposition, adverb1) (on all sides of or in a circle about (a person, thing etc): Flowers grew around the tree; They danced around the fire; There were flowers all around.) autour, alentour2) (here and there (in a house, room etc): Clothes had been left lying around (the house); I wandered around.) ici et là2. preposition(near to (a time, place etc): around three o'clock.) vers, aux alentours de3. adverb1) (in the opposite direction: Turn around!) demi-tour2) (near-by: If you need me, I'll be somewhere around.) dans les parages -
18 strike out
1) (to erase or cross out (a word etc): He read the essay and struck out a word here and there.) rayer2) (to start fighting: He's a man who strikes out with his fists whenever he's angry.) donner un coup -
19 about
1. preposition(on the subject of: We talked about our plans; What's the book about?) sur; de2. preposition, adverb1) ((sometimes round about) near (in place, time, size etc): about five miles away; (round) about six o'clock; just about big enough.) environ2) (in different directions; here and there: The children ran about (the garden).) ici et là3) (in or on some part (of a place etc): You'll find him somewhere about (the office).) quelque part4) (around or surrounding: She wore a coat about her shoulders; He lay with his clothes scattered about.) autour3. adverb((in military commands etc) in the opposite direction: About turn!) demi-tour -
20 scattering
noun (a small amount scattered here and there: a scattering of sugar.) petite quantité
См. также в других словарях:
here and there — {adv. phr.} 1. In one place and then in another. * /I looked here and there for my pen, but I didn t look everywhere./ * /Here and there in the yard little yellow flowers had sprung up./ 2. In various directions. * /We went here and there looking … Dictionary of American idioms
here and there — {adv. phr.} 1. In one place and then in another. * /I looked here and there for my pen, but I didn t look everywhere./ * /Here and there in the yard little yellow flowers had sprung up./ 2. In various directions. * /We went here and there looking … Dictionary of American idioms
Here and there — Here Here (h[=e]r), adv. [OE. her, AS. h[=e]r; akin to OS. h[=e]r, D. hier, OHG. hiar, G. hier, Icel. & Goth. h[=e]r, Dan. her, Sw. h[ a]r; fr. root of E. he. See {He}.] 1. In this place; in the place where the speaker is; opposed to {there}.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Here and there — There There, adv. [OE. ther, AS. [eth][=ae]r; akin to D. daar, G. da, OHG. d[=a]r, Sw. & Dan. der, Icel. & Goth. [thorn]ar, Skr. tarhi then, and E. that. [root]184. See {That}, pron.] 1. In or at that place. [They] there left me and my man, both… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Here and There — Infobox Album | Name = Here and There Type = Live album Artist = Elton John Released = April 30 1976 (UK) May 3 1976 (U.S.) Recorded = Here The Royal Festival Hall, London, May 18, 1974 There Madison Square Garden, New York City, November 28,… … Wikipedia
here and there — adverb a) in one place and another They thanked him and bade him good bye, and turned toward the West, walking over fields of soft grass dotted here and there with daisies and buttercups. b) from time to time Here and there the brilliant rays… … Wiktionary
here and there — adverb Date: 14th century 1. in one place and another 2. from time to time … New Collegiate Dictionary
Now and Then, Here and There — Promotional image for Now and Then, Here and There depicting Shu and Lala Ru 今、そこに いる僕 (Ima, Soko ni Iru Boku) … Wikipedia
Halfway Between Here and There — Infobox Album | Name = Halfway Between Here and There Type = Album Artist = Rx Bandits Released = October 26, 1999 Recorded = Westbeach Recorders, Hollywood, California Genre = Ska, punk rock, pop punk Length = 44:38 Label = Drive Thru Producer … Wikipedia
Now and Then, Here and There — Seriendaten Originaltitel 今、そこにいる僕 Ima, Soko ni iru Boku Produktionsland Japan … Deutsch Wikipedia
Now and then, here and there — Seriendaten Originaltitel: 今、そこにいる僕 Ima, Soko ni iru Boku Produktionsland: Japan Produktionsjahr(e): 1999/2000 Produzent: Kazuaki Morijiri, Shouchi Kumabe Episodenlänge: etwa 25 Minuten … Deutsch Wikipedia