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81 air
n. m.1. De l'air! Get lost! — Go away! (literally: Give me breathing space!)2. Mettre en l'air: To 'bump off', to 'do in', to kill.a To 'have it off', to have intercourse.b To get high on drugs.4. Foutre en l'air: To dump, to chuck out, to throw away.5. Se foutre en l'air: To 'do oneself in', to commit suicide.a To be gutsy, to be brave.b To be as cheeky as they come.7. Pomper l'air à quelqu'un: To 'get on someone's wick', to be a darned nuisance. Ecoute, mon vieux, tu me pompes l'air! I've just about had as much as I can take from you!8. Parler en l'air: To talk without thinking.9. Se déguiser en courant d'air: To make oneself scarce, to disappear in a flash. (The expression 'to vanish into thin air' does not convey the connotation of urgency that the French has.)10. Jouer la fille de l'air: To escape from custody. (In a humorous context, the expression can mean 'to make a lucky escape' from a 'captive' situation, e.g. a boring committee meeting.) -
82 harponner
v. trans.1. To 'nab', to 'collar', to arrest. Il s'est fait harponner bêtement: The way he got pulled in was just too silly for words!2. To 'buttonhole someone', to grab someone and talk him into the ground. Si onfait pas un detour, on va encore se faire harponner par lui: We'd better give him a wide berth, or it'll be 'yap, yap, yap' for the next half hour. -
83 pouèt-pouèt
I.n. m. (also: pouette-pouette):1. (interj.): Honk! Honk! (Onomatopoeic transcription of the honking of a motor car horn, more the vintage type than the modern saloon.)2. Faire pouèt-pouèt ( à quelqu'un): To 'sweet-talk' someone, to make up to someone with amorous intentions. (The popularity of this expression can be traced to a pre-1940s song where the lyrics went: 'Je lui fais pouèt-pouèt, elle me fait pouèt-pouèt, on se fait pouèt-pouèt'¼, etc.—hardly highbrow stuff!)II.adj. inv. & adv. (also: pouettepouette): 'So-so', not very reliable. Les affaires vont pouèt-pouèt: Business is just about chugging along.
См. также в других словарях:
just talk — merely words, only unimportant chatter … English contemporary dictionary
talk big — {v.}, {informal} To talk boastfully; brag. * /He talks big about his pitching, but he hasn t won a game./ … Dictionary of American idioms
talk big — {v.}, {informal} To talk boastfully; brag. * /He talks big about his pitching, but he hasn t won a game./ … Dictionary of American idioms
talk — 1 verb 1 CONVERSATION (I) to say things to someone, especially in a conversation: talk to: Who was that you were talking to at the party? | talk with: Bob was talking with a pretty woman from the fire department. | talk about/of: We were talking… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
talk — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 a conversation ADJECTIVE ▪ brief, little (often ironic), short ▪ I will have to have a little talk with that young lady (= tell her that I disapprove of sth). ▪ good … Collocations dictionary
talk — talk1 W1S1 [to:k US to:k] v ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(conversation)¦ 2¦(serious subject)¦ 3¦(say words)¦ 4¦(a speech)¦ 5¦(secret information)¦ 6 talk sense/rubbish/nonsense etc 7 talk (some) sense into somebody 8 talk to yourself 9 know what you are talking… … Dictionary of contemporary English
talk — talk1 [ tɔk ] verb *** ▸ 1 communicate ▸ 2 discuss ▸ 3 give lecture ▸ 4 give secret information ▸ 5 achieve something by talking ▸ 6 send information ▸ 7 have power to persuade ▸ + PHRASES 1. ) intransitive to use words to communicate: Can their… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
talk */*/*/ — I UK [tɔːk] / US [tɔk] verb Word forms talk : present tense I/you/we/they talk he/she/it talks present participle talking past tense talked past participle talked Other ways of saying talk: chat to talk informally in a friendly way: We sat… … English dictionary
talk — [[t]tɔ͟ːk[/t]] ♦ talks, talking, talked 1) VERB When you talk, you use spoken language to express your thoughts, ideas, or feelings. He was too distressed to talk... A teacher reprimanded a girl for talking in class... The boys all began to talk… … English dictionary
talk at — phrasal : to speak to (a person) urgently or unremittingly goes into company not to contradict but to talk at you William Hazlitt whenever she could get me into a corner, she talked at me Gladys Schmitt * * * talk at 1. To address remarks to… … Useful english dictionary
talk at — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms talk at : present tense I/you/we/they talk at he/she/it talks at present participle talking at past tense talked at past participle talked at talk at someone to talk a lot without letting anyone else say… … English dictionary