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1 hole
[həul]1. noun1) an opening or gap in or through something:ثَقْبholes in my socks.
2) a hollow in something solid:جُحْر ، حُفْرَهMany animals live in holes in the ground.
3) (in golf) (the point scored by the player who takes the fewest strokes to hit his ball over) any one of the usually eighteen sections of the golf course between the tees and the holes in the middle of the greens:حُفْرَة الغولفWe played nine holes.
2. verb1) to make a hole in:يَثْقُبThe ship was badly holed when it hit the rock.
2) to hit (a ball etc) into a hole:يُدْخِل كُرة الغولف في الحُفْرَهThe golfer holed his ball from twelve metres away.
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2 into
إلى أو في داخِل \ into: (showing direction) in: He fell into a hole. She came into the house. -
3 hole
ثُقْب \ bore: a hole made by boring, esp. for water. hole: a small (and usu. round) opening in a flat surface, which may be made on purpose (as for a button) or by mistake or by wear (as in a shoe). puncture: a small hole, made by a sharp point (so that air or liquid forces its way through): A bee’s sting makes a small puncture in the skin. slot: a small narrow opening, into which sth. should fit: You must put a coin in the slot before a public telephone will work. tear: a torn place: a tear in my shirt. -
4 go in hole or going in hole
Drilling: GIH (usually relating to the drillstring, a casing string, or a wireline device that is being lowered into the hole)Универсальный русско-английский словарь > go in hole or going in hole
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5 trip in hole
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6 stoßen
to hit; to hustle; to impinge; to knock; to jab; to strike; to thrust; to push; to poke; to shove; to kick; to bump* * *sto|ßen ['ʃtoːsn] pret stieß [ʃtiːs] ptp gestoßen [gə'ʃtoːsn]1. vt1) (= einen Stoß versetzen) to push, to shove (inf); (leicht) to poke; (mit Faust) to punch; (mit Fuß) to kick; (mit Ellbogen) to nudge, to dig (Brit), to poke; (mit Kopf, Hörnern) to butt; (= stechen) Dolch to plunge, to thrust; (vulg) to fuck (vulg), to shag (Brit sl to poke (sl)an den Kopf etc stóßen — to hit one's head etc
jdm or jdn in die Seite stóßen — to nudge sb, to dig (Brit) or poke sb in the ribs
jdn von sich stóßen — to push sb away; (fig) to cast sb aside
jdn/etw zur Seite stóßen — to push sb/sth aside; (mit Fuß) to kick sb/sth aside or to one side
er stieß den Ball mit dem Kopf ins Tor — he headed the ball into the goal (Brit), he hit the ball into the goal with his head
ein Loch ins Eis stóßen — to make or bore a hole in the ice
2) (= werfen) to push; (SPORT ) Kugel to putjdn von der Treppe/aus dem Zug stóßen —
jdn aus dem Haus stóßen (fig) jdn ins Elend stóßen (liter) — to throw or turn sb out (of the house) to plunge sb into misery
3) (= zerkleinern) Zimt, Pfeffer, Zucker to pound4) (Sw = schieben, drücken) to push2. vrto bump or bang or knock oneselfstóßen (lit) — to bump etc oneself on or against sth; (fig) to take exception to sth, to disapprove of sth
er stößt sich daran, wenn Männer Ohrringe tragen — he takes exception to men wearing earrings
3. vi1) aux sein (= treffen, prallen) to run or bump into (auch fig); (= herabstoßen Vogel) to swoop down (auf +acc on)stóßen — to bump into or hit sth
gegen etw stóßen — to run into sth
zu jdm stóßen — to meet up with sb, to join sb
auf jdn stóßen — to bump or run into sb
auf Erdöl stóßen — to strike oil
auf Grundwasser stóßen — to discover underground water
auf Widerstand stóßen — to meet with or encounter resistance
auf Ablehnung/Zustimmung stóßen — to meet with disapproval/approval
an seine Grenzen stóßen — to reach one's limits
2) (mit den Hörnern) to butt (nach at)3) (TECH) to butt (an +acc against)4) (Gewichtheben) to jerk5) (old = blasen) to blow, to soundSee:→ Horn* * *1) (to poke: He dug his brother in the ribs with his elbow.) dig2) bump3) (to strike (someone or something) with the head: He fell over when the goat butted him.) butt4) (to make hard contact with (something), and force or cause it to move in some direction: The batsman hit the ball (over the wall).) hit5) (to push quickly and roughly: The man was hustled out of the office.) hustle6) ((often with against, on) to strike against or bump into: She knocked against the table and spilt his cup of coffee; I knocked my head on the car door.) knock7) shove8) (to push (something) violently or suddenly into: He plunged a knife into the meat.) plunge9) (to push something into; to prod: He poked a stick into the hole; He poked her in the ribs with his elbow.) poke10) (to press against something, in order to (try to) move it further away: He pushed the door open; She pushed him away; He pushed against the door with his shoulder; The queue can't move any faster, so stop pushing!; I had a good view of the race till someone pushed in front of me.) push11) stick12) (to hurt (especially a toe) by striking it against something hard: She stubbed her toe(s) against the bedpost.) stub13) (to push suddenly and violently: He thrust his spade into the ground; She thrust forward through the crowd.) thrust* * *sto·ßen<stößt, stieß, gestoßen>[ˈʃto:sn̩]I. vter hat sie die Treppe hinunterge\stoßen he shoved her down the stairsjdn aus dem Haus \stoßen (fig) to throw sb out [of the house]jdn von der Leiter/aus dem Zug \stoßen to push sb down the ladder/out of the trainjdn ins Elend \stoßen (fig) to plunge sb into miseryjdn mit der Faust/dem Fuß/dem Kopf \stoßen to punch/kick/butt sbjdn in die Seite \stoßen to poke sb in the ribssie stieß ihn mit dem Ellbogen in die Seite she poked him in the ribs with her elbowjdn/etw zur Seite \stoßen to push sb/sth aside; (mit dem Fuß) to kick sb/sth aside [or to one side]; s.a. Kopfein Loch ins Eis \stoßen to make [or bore] a hole in the icejdm einen Dolch/ein Messer in die Rippen \stoßen to plunge [or thrust] a dagger/knife into sb's ribsden Ball mit dem Kopf ins Tor \stoßen to head the ball into the goalman muss sie immer drauf \stoßen she always has to have things pointed out to her6. (zerstoßen)Pfeffer/Zimt/Zucker \stoßen to pound pepper/cinnamon/sugar▪ jdm etw \stoßen to hammer sth home to sbein Fahrrad \stoßen to push a bicycle▪ jdn \stoßen to give sb a pushkönnen Sie mich bitte mal \stoßen? can you please give me a push?10. (vulg)eine Frau \stoßen to poke a woman vulgII. vrsie stolperte und stieß sich das Knie am Tisch she tripped and banged her knee on the tableer stößt sich daran, wenn Frauen Zigarren rauchen he takes exception to women smoking cigarsIII. vi1. Hilfsverb: sein (aufschlagen)2. Hilfsverb: haben (zustoßen)er hat mit einem Messer nach mir ge\stoßen he trust at me with a knifeer stieß immer wieder mit dem Stock nach mir he tried again and again to hit me with the stickder Stier stieß [mit den Hörnern] nach dem Torero the bull charged the matador [with lowered horns]jdm in die Seite \stoßen to poke sb in the ribs3. Hilfsverb: sein (grenzen)mein Grundstück stößt im Süden an einen Bach my plot is bordered to the south by a stream, a stream borders my plot to the south4. Hilfsverb: sein (direkt hinführen)5. Hilfsverb: sein (zufällig begegnen)▪ auf jdn \stoßen to bump [or run] into sb6. Hilfsverb: sein (sich jdm anschließen)▪ zu jdm \stoßen to join sb7. Hilfsverb: sein (entdecken)▪ auf etw \stoßen to find [or come across [or upon]] sthauf Erdöl \stoßen to strike oilauf Grundwasser \stoßen to discover underground water8. Hilfsverb: sein (konfrontiert werden)auf Ablehnung/Zustimmung \stoßen to meet with disapproval/approvalauf Widerstand \stoßen to meet with [or encounter] resistancebitte \stoßen! please push!ins Horn/in die Trompete \stoßen to blow [or sound] the horn/trumpet11. Hilfsverb: sein (angreifen)* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) auch itr. (mit der Faust) punch; (mit dem Fuß) kick; (mit dem Kopf, den Hörnern) butt; (mit dem Ellbogen) digjemanden od. jemandem in die Seite stoßen — dig somebody in the ribs; (leicht) nudge somebody in the ribs
3) (stoßend hervorbringen) knock, bang < hole>4) (schleudern) pushdie Kugel stoßen — (beim Kugelstoßen) put the shot; (beim Billard) strike the ball
5) (zerstoßen) pound <sugar, cinnamon, pepper>2.unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb1) mit sein (auftreffen) bump ( gegen into)2) mit sein (begegnen)auf jemanden stoßen — bump or run into somebody
3) mit sein (entdecken)auf etwas (Akk.) stoßen — come upon or across something
auf Ablehnung stoßen — (fig.) meet with disapproval
4) mit seinzu jemandem stoßen — (jemanden treffen) meet up with somebody; (sich jemandem anschließen) join somebody
5) mit sein (zuführen)auf etwas (Akk.) stoßen — <path, road> lead [in]to something
6) (grenzen)3.an etwas (Akk.) stoßen — <room, property, etc.> be [right] next to something
unregelmäßiges reflexives Verb bump or knock oneselfich habe mich am Kopf gestoßen — I bumped or banged my head
sich (Dat.) den Kopf blutig stoßen — bang one's head and cut it
sich an etwas (Dat.) stoßen — (fig.) object to or take exception to something
* * *stoßen; stößt, stieß, hat oder ist gestoßenA. v/t (hat)1. push; mit einer Waffe: thrust; mit der Faust: punch; mit dem Fuß: kick; (puffen) nudge, jostle; mit einem Stock etc: poke; (rammen) ram; (treiben) drive; SPORT (Kugel) put; im Mörser: pound;jemanden in die Rippen stoßen nudge sb, give sb a dig in the ribs;jemanden vor einen Zug stoßen push sb in front of a train;jemanden mit dem Kopf stoßen butt sb with one’s head;jemandem das Messer in die Brust stoßen plunge a knife into sb’s chest;den Ball ins Tor stoßen drive the ball into the net;von sich stoßen push away; fig disown2. unabsichtlich:3. fig:jemanden aus dem Haus/Verein stoßen turn sb out of the house/expel sb from the club;4. vulg (Frau) fuck, bangB. v/r (hat) (sich wehtun) knock o.s., hurt o.s.;sich stoßen an (+dat) knock ( oder run, bump) against; fig take offence (US -se) at, take exception to;an der Unordnung darfst du dich nicht stoßen just ignore the mess, you mustn’t mind the messC. v/i1. (hat) Bock etc: butt;2. (ist)stoßen an (+akk) odergegen bump into, knock (o.s.) against;ich bin bei dem Marathon an meine (eigenen) Grenzen gestoßen I was touching my limits (of endurance) in the marathon;stoßen auf (+akk) fig, auf Erdöl: strike; Straße etc: lead onto, hit umg; (zufällig begegnen) (happen to) meet, come across, run ( oder bump) into; (entdecken) come across, stumble on; auf Ablehnung, Widerstand etc: meet with;zu jemandem, einer Partei etcstoßen join (up with);* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) auch itr. (mit der Faust) punch; (mit dem Fuß) kick; (mit dem Kopf, den Hörnern) butt; (mit dem Ellbogen) digjemanden od. jemandem in die Seite stoßen — dig somebody in the ribs; (leicht) nudge somebody in the ribs
3) (stoßend hervorbringen) knock, bang < hole>4) (schleudern) pushdie Kugel stoßen — (beim Kugelstoßen) put the shot; (beim Billard) strike the ball
5) (zerstoßen) pound <sugar, cinnamon, pepper>2.unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb1) mit sein (auftreffen) bump ( gegen into)2) mit sein (begegnen)auf jemanden stoßen — bump or run into somebody
3) mit sein (entdecken)auf etwas (Akk.) stoßen — come upon or across something
auf Ablehnung stoßen — (fig.) meet with disapproval
4) mit seinzu jemandem stoßen — (jemanden treffen) meet up with somebody; (sich jemandem anschließen) join somebody
5) mit sein (zuführen)auf etwas (Akk.) stoßen — <path, road> lead [in]to something
6) (grenzen)3.an etwas (Akk.) stoßen — <room, property, etc.> be [right] next to something
unregelmäßiges reflexives Verb bump or knock oneselfich habe mich am Kopf gestoßen — I bumped or banged my head
sich (Dat.) den Kopf blutig stoßen — bang one's head and cut it
sich an etwas (Dat.) stoßen — (fig.) object to or take exception to something
* * *(an, gegen) v.to impinge (on, upon) v. (nach) v.to thrust at v. adj.stricken adj. v.(§ p.,pp.: stieß, gestossen)= to bump v.to butt v.to hustle v.to knock (at) v.to poke v.to punt v.to push v.to ram v.to shove v.to strike v.(§ p.,p.p.: struck)or p.p.: stricken•)to thrust v.(§ p.,p.p.: thrust) -
7 حشا
حَشَا \ cram: to fill too full; push too much of sth. in: He crammed the food into his mouth. The cupboard was crammed with papers. fill: to put special material into a hole in a tooth: The dentist filled two of my teeth. jam: to press tightly: He jammed a bit of wood into the hole. load: to fill a gun, so that it is ready to fire: Don’t load (your guns) till I give the order. pack: to fill completely: The hall was packed with people. pad: to supply with a a pad: a padded seat. ram: to push heavily, with great force: He rammed some stones into the hole. stop: to fill or block (a hole, etc.): A hole in my tooth was stopped. stuff: to fill tightly: He stuffed his pockets with food, to press tightly He stuffed the books into the cupboard. \ See Also ردم (رَدَمَ)، سد (سَدَّ)، مَلاََ -
8 a pad
حَشَا \ cram: to fill too full; push too much of sth. in: He crammed the food into his mouth. The cupboard was crammed with papers. fill: to put special material into a hole in a tooth: The dentist filled two of my teeth. jam: to press tightly: He jammed a bit of wood into the hole. load: to fill a gun, so that it is ready to fire: Don’t load (your guns) till I give the order. pack: to fill completely: The hall was packed with people. pad: to supply with a a pad: a padded seat. ram: to push heavily, with great force: He rammed some stones into the hole. stop: to fill or block (a hole, etc.): A hole in my tooth was stopped. stuff: to fill tightly: He stuffed his pockets with food, to press tightly He stuffed the books into the cupboard. \ See Also ردم (رَدَمَ)، سد (سَدَّ)، مَلاََ -
9 cram
حَشَا \ cram: to fill too full; push too much of sth. in: He crammed the food into his mouth. The cupboard was crammed with papers. fill: to put special material into a hole in a tooth: The dentist filled two of my teeth. jam: to press tightly: He jammed a bit of wood into the hole. load: to fill a gun, so that it is ready to fire: Don’t load (your guns) till I give the order. pack: to fill completely: The hall was packed with people. pad: to supply with a a pad: a padded seat. ram: to push heavily, with great force: He rammed some stones into the hole. stop: to fill or block (a hole, etc.): A hole in my tooth was stopped. stuff: to fill tightly: He stuffed his pockets with food, to press tightly He stuffed the books into the cupboard. \ See Also ردم (رَدَمَ)، سد (سَدَّ)، مَلاََ -
10 fill
حَشَا \ cram: to fill too full; push too much of sth. in: He crammed the food into his mouth. The cupboard was crammed with papers. fill: to put special material into a hole in a tooth: The dentist filled two of my teeth. jam: to press tightly: He jammed a bit of wood into the hole. load: to fill a gun, so that it is ready to fire: Don’t load (your guns) till I give the order. pack: to fill completely: The hall was packed with people. pad: to supply with a a pad: a padded seat. ram: to push heavily, with great force: He rammed some stones into the hole. stop: to fill or block (a hole, etc.): A hole in my tooth was stopped. stuff: to fill tightly: He stuffed his pockets with food, to press tightly He stuffed the books into the cupboard. \ See Also ردم (رَدَمَ)، سد (سَدَّ)، مَلاََ -
11 jam
حَشَا \ cram: to fill too full; push too much of sth. in: He crammed the food into his mouth. The cupboard was crammed with papers. fill: to put special material into a hole in a tooth: The dentist filled two of my teeth. jam: to press tightly: He jammed a bit of wood into the hole. load: to fill a gun, so that it is ready to fire: Don’t load (your guns) till I give the order. pack: to fill completely: The hall was packed with people. pad: to supply with a a pad: a padded seat. ram: to push heavily, with great force: He rammed some stones into the hole. stop: to fill or block (a hole, etc.): A hole in my tooth was stopped. stuff: to fill tightly: He stuffed his pockets with food, to press tightly He stuffed the books into the cupboard. \ See Also ردم (رَدَمَ)، سد (سَدَّ)، مَلاََ -
12 load
حَشَا \ cram: to fill too full; push too much of sth. in: He crammed the food into his mouth. The cupboard was crammed with papers. fill: to put special material into a hole in a tooth: The dentist filled two of my teeth. jam: to press tightly: He jammed a bit of wood into the hole. load: to fill a gun, so that it is ready to fire: Don’t load (your guns) till I give the order. pack: to fill completely: The hall was packed with people. pad: to supply with a a pad: a padded seat. ram: to push heavily, with great force: He rammed some stones into the hole. stop: to fill or block (a hole, etc.): A hole in my tooth was stopped. stuff: to fill tightly: He stuffed his pockets with food, to press tightly He stuffed the books into the cupboard. \ See Also ردم (رَدَمَ)، سد (سَدَّ)، مَلاََ -
13 pack
حَشَا \ cram: to fill too full; push too much of sth. in: He crammed the food into his mouth. The cupboard was crammed with papers. fill: to put special material into a hole in a tooth: The dentist filled two of my teeth. jam: to press tightly: He jammed a bit of wood into the hole. load: to fill a gun, so that it is ready to fire: Don’t load (your guns) till I give the order. pack: to fill completely: The hall was packed with people. pad: to supply with a a pad: a padded seat. ram: to push heavily, with great force: He rammed some stones into the hole. stop: to fill or block (a hole, etc.): A hole in my tooth was stopped. stuff: to fill tightly: He stuffed his pockets with food, to press tightly He stuffed the books into the cupboard. \ See Also ردم (رَدَمَ)، سد (سَدَّ)، مَلاََ -
14 pad
حَشَا \ cram: to fill too full; push too much of sth. in: He crammed the food into his mouth. The cupboard was crammed with papers. fill: to put special material into a hole in a tooth: The dentist filled two of my teeth. jam: to press tightly: He jammed a bit of wood into the hole. load: to fill a gun, so that it is ready to fire: Don’t load (your guns) till I give the order. pack: to fill completely: The hall was packed with people. pad: to supply with a a pad: a padded seat. ram: to push heavily, with great force: He rammed some stones into the hole. stop: to fill or block (a hole, etc.): A hole in my tooth was stopped. stuff: to fill tightly: He stuffed his pockets with food, to press tightly He stuffed the books into the cupboard. \ See Also ردم (رَدَمَ)، سد (سَدَّ)، مَلاََ -
15 ram
حَشَا \ cram: to fill too full; push too much of sth. in: He crammed the food into his mouth. The cupboard was crammed with papers. fill: to put special material into a hole in a tooth: The dentist filled two of my teeth. jam: to press tightly: He jammed a bit of wood into the hole. load: to fill a gun, so that it is ready to fire: Don’t load (your guns) till I give the order. pack: to fill completely: The hall was packed with people. pad: to supply with a a pad: a padded seat. ram: to push heavily, with great force: He rammed some stones into the hole. stop: to fill or block (a hole, etc.): A hole in my tooth was stopped. stuff: to fill tightly: He stuffed his pockets with food, to press tightly He stuffed the books into the cupboard. \ See Also ردم (رَدَمَ)، سد (سَدَّ)، مَلاََ -
16 stop
حَشَا \ cram: to fill too full; push too much of sth. in: He crammed the food into his mouth. The cupboard was crammed with papers. fill: to put special material into a hole in a tooth: The dentist filled two of my teeth. jam: to press tightly: He jammed a bit of wood into the hole. load: to fill a gun, so that it is ready to fire: Don’t load (your guns) till I give the order. pack: to fill completely: The hall was packed with people. pad: to supply with a a pad: a padded seat. ram: to push heavily, with great force: He rammed some stones into the hole. stop: to fill or block (a hole, etc.): A hole in my tooth was stopped. stuff: to fill tightly: He stuffed his pockets with food, to press tightly He stuffed the books into the cupboard. \ See Also ردم (رَدَمَ)، سد (سَدَّ)، مَلاََ -
17 stuff
حَشَا \ cram: to fill too full; push too much of sth. in: He crammed the food into his mouth. The cupboard was crammed with papers. fill: to put special material into a hole in a tooth: The dentist filled two of my teeth. jam: to press tightly: He jammed a bit of wood into the hole. load: to fill a gun, so that it is ready to fire: Don’t load (your guns) till I give the order. pack: to fill completely: The hall was packed with people. pad: to supply with a a pad: a padded seat. ram: to push heavily, with great force: He rammed some stones into the hole. stop: to fill or block (a hole, etc.): A hole in my tooth was stopped. stuff: to fill tightly: He stuffed his pockets with food, to press tightly He stuffed the books into the cupboard. \ See Also ردم (رَدَمَ)، سد (سَدَّ)، مَلاََ -
18 entrer
entrer [ɑ̃tʀe]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━➭ TABLE 1━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. <━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► entrer se traduira par to come in ou par to go in suivant que le locuteur se trouve ou non à l'endroit en question.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━a. to go (or to come) in• entrez ! come in!• entrer chez qn to come (or go) into sb's houseb. [marchandises, devises] to enter• entrer dans un fichier/système (légalement) to enter a file/system ; (illégalement) to hack into a file/systemc. (Theatre) « entrent trois gardes » "enter three guards"d. ( = tenir) to go in• il faut que je perde 3 kg pour entrer dans cette robe I'll have to lose 3 kilos if I want to get into this dresse. ( = devenir membre de) entrer dans [+ club, parti, entreprise] to joinf. ( = heurter) entrer dans [+ arbre, poteau] to crash intoh. ( = commencer à être) entrer dans [+ phase, période] to enter• entrer dans la vie active or dans le monde du travail to begin one's working lifei. (locutions)• laisser entrer qn dans to let sb into► faire entrer [+ pièce, objet à emballer] to fit in ; (en fraude) [+ marchandises, immigrants] to smuggle in ; [+ accusé, témoin] to bring in ; [+ invité, visiteur] to show in2. <a. ( = faire entrer) comment allez-vous entrer cette armoire dans la chambre ? how are you going to get that wardrobe into the bedroom?b. [+ données] to key in* * *ɑ̃tʀe
1.
verbe transitif (+ v avoir)1) ( transporter) ( vu de l'intérieur) to bring [something] in; ( vu de l'extérieur) to take [something] in3) Informatique to enter4) Sport to score [but]
2.
verbe intransitif (+ v être)1) ( pénétrer) gén to get in, to enter; ( en allant) to go in; ( en venant) to come in; ( en roulant) to drive inl'eau est entrée par une fissure — the water came in ou got in through a crack
je suis entré dans Paris par le sud — ( en voiture) I drove into Paris from the south
‘défense d'entrer’ — ( sur une porte) ‘no entry’; ( sur une barrière) ‘no trespassing’
faire entrer la table par la fenêtre — ( vu de l'intérieur) to bring the table in through the window; ( vu de l'extérieur) to take the table in through the window
2) (tenir, s'adapter) to fitfaire entrer quelque chose dans quelque chose — to fit ou get something into a something
3) (s'intégrer, commencer)entrer dans — to enter [débat, période]; to join [opposition, gouvernement, armée]
entrer en — to enter into [pourparlers, négociations]
il entre dans la catégorie des... — he comes into the category of...
entrer dans la légende — [personne] to become a legend; [fait] to become legendary
j'ai fait entrer tes dépenses dans les frais généraux — I've included your expenses in the overheads
4) ( être un élément de)
3.
verbe impersonnel* * *ɑ̃tʀe1. vi1) (dans un lieu) (en allant) to go in, to enter, (en venant) to come in, to enterentrer dans [pièce, immeuble] (en allant) — to go into, to enter, (en venant) to come into, to enter
Ils sont tous entrés dans la maison. — They all went into the house.
2) [objet, meuble, pièce]Le piano a pu entrer par la fenêtre. — They managed to get the piano in through the window.
On l'a fait entrer par la fenêtre. — We got it in through the window.
3) (comme membre, patient)entrer dans [club, institution] — to join
entrer dans le système INFORMATIQUE — to log in, to log on
4) (= heurter)entrer dans [mélange] — to go into, [responsabilités] to form part of
6) (= se joindre)entrer dans [vues, craintes de qn] — to share
2. vt1) INFORMATIQUE to input, to enterentrer des données — to input data, to enter data
J'ai entré toutes les adresses de mon agenda sur mon ordinateur. — I've entered all the addresses in my diary onto my computer., I've put all the addresses in my diary onto my computer.
2) [marchandises] (en allant) to take in, (en venant) to bring in3) [meuble] to get inOn l'a entré par la fenêtre. — We got it in through the window.
4) [griffes] to sink inLe chat lui entrait ses griffes dans le bras. — The cat sank its claws into his arm.
* * *entrer verb table: aimerA vtr (+ v avoir)1 ( transporter) ( vu de l'intérieur) to bring [sth] in [objet, marchandise]; ( vu de l'extérieur) to take [sth] in [objet, marchandise]; entrer qch en fraude dans un pays to smuggle sth into a country;2 ( enfoncer) to stick [ongles, épée] (dans into);4 Sport to score [but].B vi (+ v être)1 ( pénétrer) gén to get in, to enter; ( en allant) to go in; ( en venant) to come in; ( en roulant) to drive in; je l'ai vu entrer dans la maison par la fenêtre/par la porte de derrière I saw him get into ou enter the house through the window/by the back door; la balle est entrée au-dessus de l'oreille the bullet entered above the ear; l'eau est entrée par une fissure the water came in ou got in through a crack; ils sont entrés en France par l'Italie they came into France via Italy; je suis entré dans Paris par le sud ( en voiture) I drove into Paris from the south; ils sont entrés sur le court/notre territoire/la scène politique they came onto the court/our territory/the political scene; nous sommes entrés dans l'eau/la boue jusqu'aux chevilles we sank up to our ankles in water/mud; les marchandises entrent et sortent sans aucun contrôle goods come and go without being checked at all; entrez! come in!; ‘défense d'entrer’ ( sur une porte) ‘no entry’; ( sur une barrière) ‘no trespassing’; je ne fais qu'entrer et sortir I can only stay a minute; laisse-moi entrer! let me in!; ne laisse pas/j'ai laissé le chat entrer dans la cuisine don't let/I let the cat into the kitchen; fais entrer le chat dans la cuisine let the cat into the kitchen; je vous ferai entrer par la cuisine I'll let you in through the kitchen; faire entrer la table par la fenêtre ( vu de l'intérieur) to bring the table in through the window; ( vu de l'extérieur) to take the table in through the window; fais-la entrer show her in; faites entrer show him/her/them etc in;2 (tenir, s'adapter) c'est trop gros, ça n'entrera jamais it's too big, it'll never fit; ça n'entre pas dans la valise it doesn't fit in the suitcase; la clé n'entre pas dans la serrure the key doesn't fit ou won't go in the lock; faire entrer qch dans une valise to fit ou get sth into a suitcase; je n'arrive pas à faire entrer la pièce dans la fente I can't get the coin into the slot; on peut faire entrer trente personnes dans la pièce you can fit ou get thirty people in the room; nous sommes entrés à dix dans la voiture we got ten of us into the car;3 (s'intégrer, commencer) entrer dans to enter [débat, période]; to join [opposition, entreprise]; entrer à to enter [école, hit-parade]; to join [gouvernement, parti, armée]; to get into [université]; entrer en to enter into [pourparlers, négociations]; il entre en deuxième année he's going into his second year; il entre dans sa quarantième année he's turned thirty-nine; il entre dans la quarantaine he's pushing forty; entrer dans la vie de qn to come into sb's life; le doute est entré dans mon esprit I'm beginning to have doubts; entrer dans l'hiver to enter the winter; entrer en convalescence to start to convalesce; n'entrons pas dans ces considérations/les détails let's not go into those matters/the details; faire entrer qn dans une organisation/qch dans un système to get sb into an organization/sth into a system; il m'a fait entrer au ministère he got me into the ministry; je ne sais pas comment cette idée lui est entrée dans la tête I don't know how he/she got that idea into his/her head; il entre dans la catégorie des… he comes into the category of…; expression entrée dans l'usage expression which has come into use; entrer dans l'histoire to go down in history; entrer dans la légende [personne] to become a legend; [fait] to become legendary; entrer dans le capital de… Fin to take a stake in…; acteur qui entre dans son personnage actor who gets into his/her character; mesure qui entre mal dans le cadre d'une politique libérale measure which does not fit the framework of a liberal policy; faire entrer un mot nouveau dans le dictionnaire to put a new word in the dictionary; cela n'entre pas dans mes attributions it's not part of my duties; la question n'entre pour rien dans ma décision the question has no bearing on my decision; j'ai fait entrer tes dépenses dans les frais généraux I've included your expenses in the overheads; entrer en mouvement/fusion to begin to move/to melt; entrer dans une colère noire or une rage folle to fly into a blind rage;4 ( être un élément de) les ingrédients qui entrent dans la recette the ingredients which go into ou make up the recipe; le carbone entre pour moitié dans ce composé carbon makes up half (of) this compound; leurs parts entrent pour 20% dans le capital their shares make up 20% of the capital.C v impers il entre une part de chance dans tout a certain amount of luck goes into everything; il n'entre pas dans mes intentions de faire I have no intention of doing; il n'entre pas dans mes habitudes de faire I am not in the habit of doing.[ɑ̃tre] verbe intransitif (auxiliaire être)A.[PÉNÉTRER]1. [personne - généralement] to enter ; [ - vu de l'intérieur] to come in ; [ - vu de l'extérieur] to go in ; [ - à pied] to walk in ; [ - à cheval, à bicyclette] to ride in[véhicule] to drive intoc, toc! — entrez! knock, knock! — come in!entrez, entrez! do come in!, come on in!empêche-les d'entrer keep them out, don't let them inentrer au port to come into ou to enter harbouret voici les joueurs qui entrent sur le terrain/court here are the players coming onto the field/courta. [en lui montrant le chemin] show her inb. [en l'appelant] call her in[vent, eau]par où entre l'eau? how does the water penetrate ou get in?laisser entrer: ce genre de fenêtre laisse entrer plus de lumière this kind of window lets more light in2. [adhérer]elle entre à la maternelle/en troisième année she's going to nursery school/moving up into the third yeara. [généralement] to get goods inb. [en fraude] to smuggle goods in4. [tenir, trouver sa place]a. [généralement] I can fit another bag under the seatb. [en serrant] I can squeeze another bag under the seat5. (familier) [connaissances, explication] to sink inl'informatique, ça entre tout seul avec elle learning about computers is very easy with her as a teacher6. RELIGIONB.[DÉBUTER] [une action]entrer en ébullition to reach boiling point, to begin to boil————————[ɑ̃tre] verbe transitif (auxiliaire avoir)1. [produits - généralement] to take in (separable), to bring in (separable), to import ; [ - en fraude] to smuggle in (separable)2. [enfoncer] to dig3. [passer]————————entrer dans verbe plus préposition[à pied] to walk intoil ne les laisse jamais entrer dans la chambre noire he never lets ou allows them into the black room2. [adhérer à - obj: club, association, parti] to join, to become a member of ; [ - obj: entreprise] to joinentrer dans une famille [par mariage] to marry into a family4. [constituant]l'eau entre pour moitié dans cette boisson water makes up 50% of this drink5. [se mêler de] to enter intoje ne veux pas entrer dans vos histoires I don't want to have anything to do with ou to be involved in your little schemes[se lancer dans]6. [être inclus dans]entrer dans l'usage [terme] to come into common use, to become part of everyday language7. [s'enfoncer, pénétrer dans]la balle/flèche est entrée dans son bras the bullet/arrow lodged itself in her arm8. [tenir dans] to get in, to go in, to fit intout n'entrera pas dans la valise we won't get everything in the suitcase, everything won't fit in the suitcasefaire entrer [en poussant]: faire entrer des vêtements dans une valise to press clothes in ou down in a suitcase9. [obj: période] to enterj'espère ne pas entrer dans cette catégorie de personnes I hope I don't belong to that category of people11. (familier) [obj: connaissances, explication]b. [à force de répéter] to drum ou to hammer something into somebody's headtu ne lui feras jamais entrer dans la tête que c'est impossible you'll never get it into his head ou convince him that it's impossible -
19 plug
[plag]1. noun1) a device for putting into a mains socket in order to allow an electric current to flow through the appliance to which it is attached by cable:قابِس كَهرُبائيShe changed the plug on the electric kettle.
2) an object shaped for fitting into the hole in a bath or sink to prevent the water from running away, or a piece of material for blocking any hole.سِدادَه2. verb– past tense, past participle pluggedto block (a hole) by putting a plug in it:يَسُدHe plugged the hole in the window with a piece of newspaper.
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20 أدخل
أَدْخَلَ \ admit: to let sb. enter: The cinema will not admit you without a ticket. enter: to write (a name, an amount of money, etc.) on a list: Have you entered (your name) for the next race? Did you enter that payment in your accounts?. get, got, gotten: (with various adverbs and prepositions); to cause sb. or sth. to move or go: Can you get your arm through that hole?. incorporate: to make sth. (a country, a company, a report, etc.) part of sth. larger; include: Your ideas were incorporated in our plans. insert: to put (sth.) into sth.; put (sth.) between two things: Please insert this notice in your newspaper. Insert the key in the lock. Insert my name in the list, between yours and his. introduce: to bring in (sth. new): Tobacco was introduced into Europe from America, about 400 years ago. \ أَدْخَلَ البرغي بالخشب \ screw: to force (a screw) into wood. \ أَدْخَلَ أو أَخْرَجَ خُلْسَةً \ smuggle: to take (sth.) or sb. secretly and unlawfully into or out of a country, etc.: He smuggles gold. We smuggled him out of prison. \ See Also هرب (هَرَّب) \ أَدْخَلَ بالقُوَّة \ ram: to push heavily, with great force: He rammed some stones into the hole. \ أَدْخَلَ في الحِساب \ count: to include: There was enough for everyone in the hotel, not counting the servants.
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