-
1 entrecouper
entrecouper [ɑ̃tʀəkupe]➭ TABLE 1 transitive verb* * *ɑ̃tʀəkupe
1.
verbe transitif to punctuate (de by)
2.
s'entrecouper verbe pronominal [lignes, routes] to intersect* * *ɑ̃tʀəkupe vt* * *entrecouper verb table: aimerA vtr to punctuate (de by); film entrecoupé de publicité film interrupted by adverts; voix entrecoupée de sanglots voice broken with sobs; il dit cela d'une voix entrecoupée he spoke in a broken voice.B s'entrecouper vpr [lignes, routes] to intersect.[ɑ̃trəkupe] verbe transitif1. [interrompre]la conversation a été entrecoupée de sonneries de téléphone the phone kept interrupting the conversation2. [émailler]entrecouper quelque chose de to intersperse ou to pepper something with————————s'entrecouper verbe pronominal (emploi réciproque) -
2 entrelarder
ɑ̃tʀəlaʀdeverbe transitif lit, fig* * *ɑ̃tʀəlaʀde vtCUISINE to lard, fig* * *[ɑ̃trəlarde] verbe transitif2. [entrecouper]entrelarder quelque chose de to intersperse ou to interlard something with -
3 mêler
mêler [mele]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verba. ( = unir) to mix• mêler à or avec to mix withb. ( = impliquer) mêler qn à to involve sb in2. reflexive verb► se mêler à ( = se joindre à) to join ; ( = s'associer à) to mix with ; [cris, sentiments] to mingle with ; ( = s'impliquer dans) to get involved in ; ( = s'ingérer dans) to interfere with• mêle-toi de ce qui te regarde ! mind your own business!• mêle-toi de tes oignons ! (inf) mind your own business!• de quoi je me mêle ! (inf) what business is it of yours?* * *mele
1.
1) ( mélanger) to mix [produits, couleurs]; to blend [ingrédients, cultures]; to combine [thèmes, influences]2) ( allier en soi)3) ( impliquer)mêler quelqu'un à — ( à un scandale) to get somebody involved in; ( à des négociations) to involve somebody in; ( à une conversation) to bring somebody into
être mêlé à — (à un scandale, des négociations) to be involved in; ( à une conversation) to be included in
2.
se mêler verbe pronominal1) ( s'unir) [cultures, religions] to mix; [odeurs, voix, eaux] to mingle2)se mêler à — ( se joindre à) to mingle with; ( être sociable) to mix with; ( participer à) to join in
3) ( s'occuper)mêle-toi de tes affaires (colloq) or oignons — (sl)mind your own business
de quoi je me mêle! — (colloq) what's it got to do with you?
* * *mele vt1) (= mélanger) to mixmêler qch et qch; mêler qch avec qch — to mix sth with sth
2) (= embrouiller) [idées, souvenirs] to muddle up, to mix up3) (= impliquer)* * *mêler verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( mélanger) to mix [produits, couleurs]; to blend [ingrédients, essences]; to blend [cultures, peuples]; to combine [thèmes, influences]; servis seuls ou mêlés à d'autres fruits served on their own or mixed with other fruits; mêler le vrai et le faux to mix truth and falsehood; mêler ses souvenirs de considérations générales to mix personal memories with general observations; mêler le narratif de brèves descriptions to intersperse the narrative with short descriptions; mêler ironie et tendresse to combine irony and tenderness;2 ( allier en soi) mêler l'utile à l'agréable [séjour, activité] to be both useful and pleasurable; mêler l'ironie à la colère to be ironic and angry at the same time; elle mêla ses larmes aux miennes her tears mingled with mine;3 ( impliquer) mêler qn à ( à un scandale) to get sb involved ou mixed up in; ( à des négociations) to involve sb in; ( à une conversation) to bring sb into; être mêlé à ( à un scandale) to be mixed up ou involved in; ( à des négociations) to be involved in; ( à une conversation) to be included in.B se mêler vpr1 ( s'unir) [ethnies, cultures, religions] to mix; [odeurs, parfums, voix, eaux] to mingle; jazz et reggae se mêlent dans leur musique their music is a mixture of jazz and reggae; intelligence et naïveté se mêlent chez cet acteur he's both intelligent and naive as an actor; un magazine où se mêlent littérature et sciences a magazine that covers both literature and science;2 se mêler à ( se joindre à) to mingle with; ( être sociable) to mix with; ( participer à) to join in; se mêler à la foule to mingle with the crowd; ils ne se mêlent pas aux gens du village they don't mix with the villagers; se mêler à la conversation to join in the conversation; il s'est mêlé à une affaire douteuse he got mixed up in some shady business;3 ( s'occuper) se mêler de to meddle in; il se mêle de tout he interferes ou meddles in everything; mêle-toi de tes affaires○ or oignons◑ mind your own business; de quoi je me mêle○! what's it got to do with you?; se mêler de faire to take it upon oneself to do; quand il se mêle de préparer le repas when he takes it upon himself to prepare the meal; s'il se mêle de pleuvoir if it goes and rains (now); il n'avait pas à se mêler de faire ça he had no business doing that; quand l'amour s'en mêle! when love comes into it![mele] verbe transitif1. [mélanger] to mixelle mêle la rigueur à la fantaisie she combines ou mixes seriousness with light-heartedness3. [embrouiller - documents, papiers] to mix ou to muddle ou to jumble up (separable) ; [ - cartes, dominos] to shuffle4. [impliquer]mêler quelqu'un à to involve somebody in, to get somebody involved in————————se mêler verbe pronominal intransitif2. [s'unir]se mêler à ou avec to mix ou to mingle with3. [participer]se mêler à la conversation to take part ou to join in the conversation————————se mêler de verbe pronominal plus prépositionsi le mauvais temps s'en mêle, la récolte est perdue if the weather decides to turn nasty, the crop will be ruined
См. также в других словарях:
Intersperse — In ter*sperse , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Interspersed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Interspersing}.] [L. interspersus interspersed; inter between, among + spargere to scatter. See {Sparse}.] [1913 Webster] 1. To scatter or set here and there among other things; … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
intersperse — I verb diffuse, disseminate, distribute, immiscere, interfuse, interlard, intermingle, interpenetrate, interpolate, interpose, interweave, mix, pepper, put between, scatter, shake, sprinkle, work in II index diffuse, dissolve (disperse) … Law dictionary
intersperse — (v.) 1560s, from L. interspersus strewn, scattered, sprinkled upon, pp. of *interspergere, from inter between (see INTER (Cf. inter )) + spargere to scatter (see SPARSE (Cf. sparse)). Related: Interspersed; interspersing … Etymology dictionary
intersperse — [v] scatter bestrew, diffuse, distribute, infuse, interfuse, interlard, intermix, intersow, intersprinkle, pepper, sprinkle; concepts 201,222 Ant. collect, gather … New thesaurus
intersperse — ► VERB (usu. be interspersed) 1) scatter among or between other things. 2) diversify with other things at intervals. DERIVATIVES interspersion noun. ORIGIN Latin interspergere scatter between … English terms dictionary
intersperse — [in΄tər spʉrs′] vt. interspersed, interspersing [< L interspersus, pp. of interspergere < inter , among + spargere, to scatter: see SPARK1] 1. to scatter among other things; put here and there or at intervals 2. to decorate or diversify… … English World dictionary
intersperse — interspersedly /in teuhr sperr sid lee/, adv. interspersion /in teuhr sperr zheuhn/ or, esp. Brit., / sheuhn/, interspersal, n. /in teuhr sperrs /, v.t., interspersed, interspersing. 1. to scatter here and there or place at intervals among other… … Universalium
intersperse — [[t]ɪ̱ntə(r)spɜ͟ː(r)s[/t]] intersperses, interspersing, interspersed VERB If you intersperse one group of things with another or among another, you put or include the second things between or among the first things. [V n with n] Originally the … English dictionary
intersperse — UK [ˌɪntə(r)ˈspɜː(r)s] / US [ˌɪntərˈspɜrs] verb [transitive] Word forms intersperse : present tense I/you/we/they intersperse he/she/it intersperses present participle interspersing past tense interspersed past participle interspersed to put… … English dictionary
intersperse — in•ter•sperse [[t]ˌɪn tərˈspɜrs[/t]] v. t. spersed, spers•ing 1) to scatter here and there or place at intervals among other things: to intersperse flowers among shrubs[/ex] 2) to diversify with something placed or scattered at intervals: to… … From formal English to slang
intersperse — transitive verb ( spersed; spersing) Etymology: Latin interspersus interspersed, from inter + sparsus, past participle of spargere to scatter more at spark Date: 1566 1. to place something at intervals in or among < intersperse a book with… … New Collegiate Dictionary