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81 emmerdement
n. m. Serious problem, grave difficulty. Avoir des emmerdements d'argent: To be badly in debt. -
82 encroumé
adj. 'Hocked to the eyeballs', deeply in debt. -
83 enkroumé
adj. 'Hocked to the eyeballs', deeply in debt. -
84 enkroumer
v. pronom. To get into debt. -
85 monnaie
n. f.1. Rendre à quelqu'un la monnaie de sa piéce: To 'give as good as one got', to engineer tit-for-tat reprisals.2. Payer quelqu'un en monnaie de singe: To 'bilk', to skilfully avoid paying a debt.3. Commencer à rendre la monnaie (iron.; of woman): To 'be getting on' where physical attributes are concerned (in effect, if the woman were a prostitute, she would have to give a partial refund). -
86 ongle
n. m.1. Payer rubis sur l'ongle: To pay 'cash on the nail', to settle a debt promptly and in full.2. Avoir les ongles en deuil: To have dirty fingernails. (This expression is self-evident to the French for whom all correspondence relating to mourning is edged in black.) -
87 payer
I.v. intrans.1. Avoir payé: To have paid one's debt to society, to have done time and wiped the slate clean. J'ai payé, c'est fini! Maintenant foutez-moi la paix! I'm out now, been paroled, why can't you leave me alone?!2. Je suis payé pour! ( le savoir): I should know! (It's my business to know!)3. C'est payant! (also: ça paie!): It's a scream! — It's a laugh! — It's hilarious! (Strange as it may seem, the adjective impayable has the meaning of 'too funny for words', 'hilarious'. A famous comedian, when told by his optimistic yet near-bankrupt producer: 'Mon cher, vous êtes impayable!', retorted sadly, 'Hélas, oui, je le sais!')II.v. trans. reflex.a To treat oneself to something. Il se paye une bagnole neuve tous les six mois: He gets himself a new car twice a year.b To go through a gruelling experience, to have to put up with something very unpleasant. On s'est payé une grippe carabinée! We were all down with a dose of that awful flu!2. S'en payer: To 'whoop it up', to have the time of one's life. -
88 quitte
adj. Etre quitte: To have paid one's debt to society, to have done time (in prison) and be back on the straight and narrow. -
89 Niches fiscales
a raft of tax avoidance mechanisms designed to allow those with high income to pay little or no income tax, thanks to careful investment in a range of fiscally attractive niches, including investment in French overseas territories, small firms, newbuild property for rent, the French cinema, and many more. The reduction of niches fiscales is seen in 2011 as one of the means of bringing down France's massive mountain of debt.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Niches fiscales
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90 créance faisant l'objet d'un contentieux
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > créance faisant l'objet d'un contentieux
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91 créance garantie par nantissement
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > créance garantie par nantissement
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92 créance gelée
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > créance gelée
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93 créance irrécouvrable
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > créance irrécouvrable
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94 créance litigieuse
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > créance litigieuse
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95 créance privilégiée
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > créance privilégiée
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96 créances réciproques
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > créances réciproques
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97 désendettement de l'État
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > désendettement de l'État
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98 dette de premier rang
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > dette de premier rang
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99 dette de rang inférieur
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > dette de rang inférieur
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100 dette des ménages
household indebtedness (or household debt)Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > dette des ménages
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