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41 trahir
trahir [tʀaiʀ]➭ TABLE 21. transitive verba. to betray ; [+ promesse, engagement] to breakb. ( = mal exprimer) to misrepresent ; [+ vérité] to distort2. reflexive verb► se trahir to betray o.s.* * *tʀaiʀ
1.
1) ( manquer de fidélité à) to betray [pays, ami, secret, confiance]; to break [promesse]2) ( révéler) to betray3) ( rendre infidèlement) [traducteur, mots] to misrepresent4) ( faire défaut) [jambes, forces] to fail [person]
2.
se trahir verbe pronominal ( se dévoiler) to give oneself away, to betray oneself* * *tʀaiʀ vt1) [camp, ami] to betray2) [sentiment] to give away, to reveal* * *trahir verb table: finirA vtr1 ( manquer de fidélité à) to betray [pays, ami, secret, cause, confiance]; to break [parole, serment, promesse];2 ( révéler) [rougeur, voix] to betray, to give away [confusion, peur, impatience]; [écriture] to betray, to reveal [personnalité]; [paroles] to betray, to reveal [pensée];3 ( rendre infidèlement) [traducteur, metteur en scène, mots] to misrepresent;4 ( faire défaut) [jambes, forces] to fail [person].[trair] verbe transitifA.1. [son camp] to betrayceux qui trahissent traitors, those who betray their country2. [renier - idéal, foi] to betray3. (littéraire) [tromper - ami, amant]trahir quelqu'un to deceive somebody, to be unfaithful to somebody4. [manquer à] to break, to go againsttrahir sa promesse/ses engagements to break one's promise/one's commitmentstrahir la vérité to distort ou to twist the truth6. [dénaturer - pensée] to misinterpret, to distort, to do an injustice to ; [ - en traduisant] to give a false rendering of7. [ne pas correspondre à]8. [faire défaut à - suj: forces, mémoire] to failB.2. [démasquer] to give away (separable)3. [exprimer] to betray————————se trahir verbe pronominal intransitif1. [se révéler]3. [se faire découvrir] to give oneself away -
42 traquer
traquer [tʀake]➭ TABLE 1 transitive verb* * *tʀake1) ( poursuivre) to track down, to hunt [somebody] down; ( importuner) [photographe] to hound [vedette]2) ( contrôler) to monitor [dépenses, surplus]3) ( à la chasse) to track down, to stalk [animal]* * *tʀake vt1) (= chercher) to track down2) (= harceler) to hound* * *traquer verb table: aimer vtr1 ( poursuivre) to track down [sb], to hunt [sb] down; ( importuner) [photographe] to hound [vedette];2 ( contrôler) to monitor [dépenses, surplus];3 Chasse to track down, to stalk [animal].[trake] verbe transitif1. [criminel, fuyard] to track ou to hunt down (separable)[vedette] to hound[erreur] to hunt down (separable)en le traquant, ils ont découvert où il habitait they tracked him down to his home[rabattre] to drive -
43 venger
venger [vɑ̃ʒe]➭ TABLE 31. transitive verb2. reflexive verb• venge-toi ! get your own back!* * *vɑ̃ʒe
1.
verbe transitif to avenge
2.
se venger verbe pronominal to get ou take one's revenge ( de quelqu'un on somebody)se venger sur quelqu'un/quelque chose — to take it out on somebody/something
se venger de quelque chose — to get ou take one's revenge for something
* * *vɑ̃ʒe vt* * *venger verb table: mangerA vtr to avenge [crime, injustice, personne]; venger l'honneur/la mort de qn to avenge sb's honourGB/death.B se venger vpr to get ou take one's revenge (de qn on sb; en faisant by doing); se venger sur qn/qch to take it out on sb/sth; je me vengerai! I shall have ou get my revenge!; se venger de qch to get ou take one's revenge for [humiliation, duperie]; il l'a fait pour se venger he did it in revenge.[vɑ̃ʒe] verbe transitif1. [réparer] to avenge2. [dédommager]————————se venger verbe pronominal (emploi réfléchi)se venger de quelqu'un/quelque chose to take one's revenge on somebody/for something2. [calmer sa colère] -
44 victime
victime [viktim]feminine noun• il est mort, victime d'une crise cardiaque he died of a heart attack• être victime de [+ escroc, accident, calomnie] to be the victim of* * *viktim1) (d'accident, de désastre, phénomène) victim, casualtyle joueur, victime d'une blessure au genou... — the player, suffering from a knee injury...
victime d'une panne, il a abandonné la course — hit by mechanical problems, he abandoned the race
2) Droit victim3) ( créature offerte en sacrifice) sacrificial victim* * *viktim nf1) [crime, injustice, malheur] victim2) [accident] victim, casualty* * *victime nf1 (d'accident, de désastre, phénomène) victim, casualty (de of); le cyclone a fait de nombreuses victimes the cyclone claimed many victims ou casualties; les victimes des accidents de la route road accident victims, road casualties; leur entreprise fut l'une des victimes de la crise du pétrole fig their firm was one of the casualties of the oil crisis; être victime de calomnies/d'une idéologie/des circonstances fig to be a victim of slander/of an ideology/of circumstances; être victime d'un infarctus to be the victim of a heart attack; être victime d'un complot fig to be the victim of a conspiracy; les victimes du cancer cancer victims; arrête de jouer les victimes iron stop playing the victim iron; le joueur, victime d'une blessure au genou… the player, suffering from a knee injury…; victime d'une panne, il a abandonné la course hit by mechanical problems, he abandoned the race; il a été victime de son succès/bon cœur/orgueil his success/kind-heartedness/pride has been his undoing;2 Jur victim;3 ( créature offerte en sacrifice) sacrificial victim.[viktim] nom fémininaccident de la route, trois victimes car crash, three casualties4. [d'un préjudice] victimêtre la victime d'un escroc to fall prey to ou to be the victim of a con man -
45 énormité
énormité [enɔʀmite]feminine nouna. [de poids, somme] hugeness ; [de demande, injustice] enormity* * *enɔʀmite1) (de chiffre, taille) hugeness; (de faute, mensonge) enormity2) ( propos aberrant) outrageous remark* * *enɔʀmite nf1) (= taille, importance) enormity, hugeness2) (= propos) outrageous remark* * *énormité nf1 (de chiffre, taille) hugeness; (de faute, mensonge, requête) enormity; te rends-tu compte de l'énormité de tes paroles? fig do you realize the enormity of what you're saying?;2 ( propos aberrant) outrageous remark.[enɔrmite] nom féminin1. [ampleur - d'une difficulté] enormity ; [ - d'une tâche, d'une somme, d'une population] enormity, size3. [propos] piece of utter ou outrageous nonsense -
46 se perpétuer
pɛʀpetɥe vpr/pass1) [usage, injustice] to be perpetuated2) [espèces] to survive -
47 être injuste envers
be hard on, do (someone) an injustice
См. также в других словарях:
injustice — [ ɛ̃ʒystis ] n. f. • XIIe; lat. injustitia 1 ♦ Caractère d une personne, d une chose injuste; manque de justice. ⇒ iniquité. L injustice des hommes. L injustice d une sentence. ⇒ partialité. « La puissance ne se montre que si l on en use avec… … Encyclopédie Universelle
Injustice — • The violation of another s strict right against his reasonable will, and the value of the word right is determined to be the moral power of having or doing or exacting something in support or furtherance of one s own advantage Catholic… … Catholic encyclopedia
injustice — injustice, injury, wrong, grievance are comparable when they denote an act that inflicts undeserved damage, loss, or hardship on a person. Injustice is the general term applicable not only to an act which involves unfairness to another or a… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
injustice — Injustice. s. f. Habitude, ou action contraire à la justice. L injustice regnoit en ce siecle là. il a fait une grande injustice. commettre des injustices. son procedé est plein d injustice … Dictionnaire de l'Académie française
Injustice — In*jus tice, n. [F. injustice, L. injustitia. See {In } not, and {Justice}, and cf. {Unjust}.] 1. Lack of justice and equity; violation of the rights of another or others; iniquity; wrong; unfairness; imposition. [1913 Webster] If this people… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
injustice — in·jus·tice n 1: absence of justice: violation of what is considered right and just or of the rights of another 2: an unjust act Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 … Law dictionary
injustice — late 14c., from O.Fr. injustice, from L. injustitia injustice, from injustus unjust, wrongful, oppressive, from in not (see IN (Cf. in ) (1)) + justus just (see JUST (Cf. just) (adj.)) … Etymology dictionary
Injustice — is the lack of or opposition to justice, either in reference to a particular event or act, or as a larger status quo.The term generally refers to the misuse, abuse, neglect, or malfeasance of a justice system, with regard to a particular case or… … Wikipedia
injustice — [n] unfair treatment; bias abuse, breach, crime, crying shame*, damage, dirty deal*, discrimination, encroachment, favoritism, grievance, inequality, inequity, infraction, infringement, iniquity, malfeasance, malpractice, maltreatment,… … New thesaurus
injustice — Injustice, Iniustitia, Pseudodica … Thresor de la langue françoyse
injustice — ► NOUN 1) lack of justice. 2) an unjust act or occurrence … English terms dictionary