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61 Soixante-huit
, or 68the milestone year in French life and politics in the second half of the 20th century, when protests by students and workers almost brought down the French government, and led to sweeping changes in French society. The events of 68 were inspired and led by the young generation of the time, wishing to break out of the rather stuffy and conventional society of the time. They coincided with, though initially took a different form to, the 'youth revolution' in Britain and the USA; but while the UK's youth revolution was essentially social and cultural, and led by pop music and op art, France's revolution was political and cultural, a protest against the weight of the Gaullist state.The events of May 68 started on the drab concrete campus of the sprawling university of Nanterre in the northern suburbs of Paris, and quickly spread to other universities, notably the Sorbonne. Student leaders, among them DanielCohn- Bendit and Alain Krivine, called for radical change and the end of the 'bourgeois state'; students erected barricades in the Latin Quarter, and were soon joined by workers, notably from the huge Renault plant at Boulogne Billancourt in the Paris suburbs. Though political, the movement sidelined all existing political parties, including the Communists, considered by the new left-wing as being an 'obsolete' political force.Faced with turmoil on the streets and a partial collapse of French society, President de Gaulle fled to Germany on 29th May, before returning and promising new elections. But by the time the elections took place, theGrenelle agreements had been negotiated with the trade unions, the heat had died down, and many French people had become seriously alarmed by the turn of events. In the June elections, the Gaullist majority was returned to power with an increased majority.The events nevertheless marked the beginning of the end for de Gaulle. In 1969 he organised a referendum on decentralisation, promising to step down if the referendum failed. To a certain extent, de Gaulle's vision of decentralisation was not that wanted by the voters; but in addition, the referendum became seen as a plebiscite on the Gaullist system, rather than on decentralisation. The referendum proposal was rejected by 52.4% of voters, and de Gaulle stepped down.It is certain that a new France, less hide-bound, more emancipated and more free, emerged in the aftermath of 68. Whether this would have happened anyway, and whether the means justified the end, are questions about which there is still considerable debate in France to this day.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Soixante-huit
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62 vivre
vivre [vivʀ]➭ TABLE 461. intransitive verba. to live• quand l'ambulance est arrivée, il vivait encore he was still alive when the ambulance arrived• vivre à Londres/en France to live in London/in France• vivre dans le passé/dans la crainte to live in the past/in fear• être facile/difficile à vivre to be easy/difficult to get on with• vivre de laitages/de rentes to live on dairy produce/a private income• travailler/écrire pour vivre to work/write for a living• faire vivre qn [personne] to support sb• elle ne vit plus depuis que son fils est pilote she's been living on her nerves since her son became a pilotb. [idée, rue, paysage] to be alive2. transitive verba. ( = passer) to spendb. [+ événement, guerre] to live through3. plural masculine noun* * *vivʀ
1.
1) ( connaître) to live through [époque, période]; to go through [heures difficiles, enfer]; to experience [amour, passion]2) ( ressentir) to cope with [divorce, échec]
2.
verbe intransitif1) Biologie ( être vivant) to livevivre vieux/centenaire — to live to a great age/to be a hundred
cesser de vivre — euph to pass away
vive moi/nous! — three cheers for me/us!
2) ( habiter) to liveêtre facile à vivre — [conjoint] to be easy to live with; [ami] to be easy to get on with
3) ( exister) [personne] to liveapprendre à vivre à quelqu'un — (colloq) to teach somebody some manners (colloq)
savoir vivre — ( profiter de la vie) to know how to enjoy life
4) ( survivre) [personne] to live5) ( durer) [relation, mode] to lastavoir vécu — [personne] to have seen a great deal of life; ( être usé) hum to have had its day
6) ( être animé) [ville, rue] to be full of life••* * *vivʀ1. vi1) (= résider) to liveJ'aimerais vivre à l'étranger. — I'd like to live abroad.
Je vis en Écosse. — I live in Scotland.
Il vit chez ses parents. — He lives with his parents.
Il a vécu à Paris pendant dix ans. — He lived in Paris for ten years.
2) (= être vivant) to be aliveavoir vécu; Ce régime a vécu. — This regime has had its day.
3) (= exister, mener son existence) to liveOn vit de plus en plus longtemps. — People are living longer and longer.
se laisser vivre — to let o.s. go
ne plus vivre (= être anxieux) — to live on one's nerves
Il a vécu. — He has seen life.
4) (= subsister) to liveIls avaient à peine de quoi vivre. — They had barely enough to live on.
vivre de [salaire, allocations] — to live on
vivre mal (= chichement) — to have a meagre existence
2. vt1) [vie] to live, [aventures] to go through, [temps] to spendIls y ont vécu des jours heureux. — They spent some happy times there.
2) (= ressentir)Il a très mal vécu son licenciement. — He took his redundancy very hard.
3. nm4. vivres nmplprovisions, food supplies* * *vivre verb table: vivreA vtr1 ( connaître) to live through [époque, période]; to go through [heures difficiles, cauchemar, enfer]; to experience [amour, passion]; vivre son mariage comme un sacrifice to view one's marriage as self-sacrifice; être vécu comme un affront to be taken as an insult; vivre une vie tranquille/agitée to lead a quiet/hectic life; la vie vaut d'être vécue life is worth living; vivre sa vie to lead one's own life;2 ( ressentir) to cope with [divorce, échec, changement]; comment as-tu vécu votre séparation? how did you cope with your separation?; vivre sa foi to put one's faith into practiceGB?B vi1 Biol ( être vivant) [personne, animal, plante] to live; vivre longtemps/vieux/centenaire to live for a long time/to a great age/to be a hundred; cesser de vivre euph to pass away; vive la révolution/le président! long live the revolution/the president!; vive(nt) les vacances! three cheers for the holidays GB ou the vacation US!; vive la vie! life is wonderful!; vive moi/nous! three cheers for me/us!; vive Paul! hurray for Paul!;2 ( habiter) [personne, animal, plante] to live; vivre à la campagne/en démocratie to live in the country/in a democracy; il vit avec quelqu'un he's living with somebody; vivre à cinq dans une chambre to live five to a room; être facile/difficile à vivre [conjoint, concubin] to be easy/difficult to live with; [ami, collègue] to be easy/difficult to get on with; vivre les uns sur les autres to live on top of each other;3 ( exister) [personne] to live; vivre en ermite to live like a hermit; vivre dans la crainte/pour ses enfants to live in fear/for one's children; vivre avec son temps to move with the times; vivre à contre-courant to go one's own way; vivre en pyjama to live in one's pyjamas GB ou pajamas US; se laisser vivre to take things easy; apprendre à qn à vivre○ to teach sb some manners○; savoir vivre ( profiter de la vie) to know how to enjoy life; ( être poli) to know how things are done;4 ( survivre) [personne] to live; bien vivre to live well; vivre de peu to live on very little; de quoi vit-elle? what does she live on?; avoir de quoi vivre to have enough to live on; vivre avec presque rien/sur son capital/de la charité to live on next to nothing/on one's capital/on charity; vivre de légumes to live on vegetables; vivre sur sa réputation to live on one's reputation; vivre de ses rentes to have a private income; faire vivre qn ( matériellement) to keep sb; vivre aux dépens de qn to live off sb; vivre d'espoir to live in hope; qu'est-ce qui te fait vivre? what keeps you going?;5 ( durer) [relation, mode, idéologie] to last; le gouvernement ne vivra pas longtemps the government won't last long; avoir vécu [personne] to have seen a great deal of life; hum ( être usé) [objet, idée] to have had its day; mes chaussures ont vécu my shoes have had their day; leur souvenir vivra dans nos mémoires their memory will live on in our hearts;6 ( être animé) [ville, rue] to be full of life.C se vivre vpr ( être ressenti) le divorce se vit souvent très mal divorce is often very hard to cope with.D vivres nmpl1 ( nourriture) food, supplies;2 ( moyens de subsistance) couper les vivres à qn to cut off sb's allowance.le vivre et le couvert board and lodging; vivre de l'air du temps to live on air; vivre sur un grand pied to live in great style; qui vivra verra what will be will be.I[vivr] nom masculin————————vivres nom masculin plurielII[vivr] verbe intransitif[cellule, plante] to livevivre vieux ou longtemps to live to a great age ou ripe old age2. [mener une existence] to livevivre à l'heure de l'Europe/du XXIe siècle to live in the world of the European community/of the 21st centuryvivre dans le luxe/l'angoisse to live in luxury/anxietyne vivre que pour la musique/sa famille to live only for music/one's familyil fait bon vivre ici life is good ou it's a good life herea. [on est inquiet] we're worried sickb. [on est harassé] this isn't a life, this isn't what you can call livinga. [il est impoli] he has no mannersb. [il est trop nerveux] he doesn't know how to enjoy life3. [résider] to livevivre au Brésil/dans un château to live in Brazil/in a castlevivre dans une ou en communauté to live communally ou in a communitya. [maritalement] to live with somebodyb. [en amis] to share ou to live with somebodyvivre ensemble [couple non marié] to live togetherêtre facile à vivre to be easygoing ou easy to get on with4. [subsister] to livevivre sur un seul salaire to live ou to exist on just one salarya. [personne] to provide a living for ou to support a familyb. [commerce] to provide a living for a familyvivre bien/chichement to have a good/poor standard of livingils vivaient de la cueillette et de la chasse they lived on what they gathered and hunted ou off the landil faut bien vivre! one's got to keep the wolf from the door ou to live (somehow)!5. [se perpétuer - croyance, coutume] to be alive6. [donner l'impression de vie - sculpture, tableau]————————[vivr] verbe transitif1. [passer par - époque, événement] to live through (inseparable)vivre des temps difficiles to live through ou to experience difficult timesvivre des jours heureux/paisibles to spend one's days happily/peacefully2. [assumer - divorce, grossesse, retraite] to experienceelle a mal/bien vécu mon départ she couldn't cope/she coped well after I left3. (locution) -
63 descente
descente [desɑ̃t]1. feminine nouna. ( = action) descentb. ( = raid, incursion) raidc. ( = partie descendante) (downward) slope2. compounds* * *desɑ̃t1) (parcours d'un véhicule, d'une personne) descent2) ( sortie)descente hommes/dames — men's/women's downhill
4) Sport (en alpinisme, cyclisme, spéléologie) descentla police a fait une descente dans l'immeuble/le bar — the police raided the building/bar
•Phrasal Verbs:* * *desɑ̃t nf1) (cheminement vers l'aval) descent, going down, (= chemin, parcours) way downà la descente — on the way down, going down
C'est plus difficile à la descente. — It's more difficult going down.
Je t'attendrai au bas de la descente. — I'll wait for you at the bottom of the hill.
Freinez dans les descentes. — Use the brakes going downhill.
2) SKI downhill, downhill race3) (descente de police) raid, police raid* * *descente nf1 (parcours d'un véhicule, d'une personne) descent; nous amorçons notre descente sur Paris we're beginning our descent toward(s) Paris; la descente a été plus dure que la montée it was much more difficult coming down than going up, the climb down ou descent was more difficult than the climb up; la descente a pris une heure it took an hour to come down; freiner dans les descentes to brake going downhill; la descente est verglacée/dangereuse it's icy/dangerous on the way down; au milieu de la descente halfway down; ralentir/avoir peur dans la descente to go slower/be scared on the way down; tomber dans la descente to fall on the way down; au bas de la descente at the bottom; faire la descente d'une rivière en canoë to canoe down a river; faire la descente d'une rivière en péniche to go down a river in a barge; la descente du fleuve a été très agréable sailing down the river was most pleasant;2 ( sortie) à ma descente du train/bus/bateau/de l'avion when I got off the train/bus/boat/plane; accueillir qn à sa descente d'avion to meet sb off the plane; ‘la descente se fait à l'avant de l'appareil’ ‘please disembark at the front of the aircraft’;3 Sport ( en ski) ( épreuve) downhill (event); ( parcours) run; descente hommes/dames men's/women's downhill; faire une descente to make a run; c'est ma troisième descente depuis ce matin it's my third run since this morning;4 Sport (en alpinisme, cyclisme, spéléologie) descent; ( en parachutisme) drop; descente en chute libre free fall;5 ( raid) raid (dans en); descente de police police raid; la police a fait une descente dans l'immeuble/le bar the police raided the building/bar; faire une descente dans la cuisine hum to raid the kitchen;6 Pol descente dans la rue demonstration; une descente à Paris des agriculteurs a farmers' demonstration in Paris;7 ( exploration) exploration; descente dans les profondeurs or au cœur de l'inconscient exploration of the depths of the subconscious.descente de croix Art, Relig descent from the cross; descente d'eaux pluviales Constr downpipe; descente aux enfers descent into hell; descente de lit ( tapis) (bedside) rug; descente d'organe Méd prolapse; descente en rappel Sport ( principe) abseiling ¢; une descente en rappel a descent.il a une bonne descente○ he can really knock it back○.[desɑ̃t] nom féminincourir/déraper dans la descente to run/to skid downon ira vite, il n'y a que des descentes we'll do it in no time, it's all downhill2. [progression] going downà sa descente d'avion as he disembarked ou got off the aircraftà sa descente du bateau as he landed ou disembarked4. [en ski] downhill raceSPORT [alpinisme]descente en spirale spinning dive, spiral descentdescente en vol plané glide, gliding fall6. MÉDECINEdescente d'organe ou d'organes prolapse7. [contrôle] inspection[attaque] raidil a encore fait une descente sur le chocolat! he's been raiding ou he's been at the chocolate again!8. (familier & locution)a. [boire beaucoup] to be able to take one's drinkb. [manger beaucoup] to be a big eaterdescente de lit nom féminin1. [tapis] bedside rug2. (familier & péjoratif) toady -
64 peu
I.n. m.1. Ça a été du peu au jus! It was a close shave! — It was a near thing! (I'm glad I got away scot-free!)2. Excusez du peu! (iron.): Is that all?! — You are modest!II.adv.1. Un peu: Very much, a lot. (Strange as it may seem, the colloquial meaning of un peu is the exact opposite of the straight acceptation.) Il est un peu bon, ton gâteau! That cake of yours tastes smashing! 'C'est cher, la Côte d'Azur?' 'Un peu!' 'Is the Riviera expensive?' 'Not half!' (Although, strictly speaking, there is no rhyming slang in French, the expression: Un peu, mon neveu! could loosely be translated by 'And how! — You bet'. The mon neveu is totally meaningless, as is Auguste in Tout juste, Auguste!)2. Un peu beaucoup (iron.): Far too much. Son père, sa mère, sa sœur et le beaufrère, c'est un peu beaucoup! With her mother, her father, her sister and that brother-in-law, there wasn't room to swing a cat!3. Très peu pour moi! (iron.): Definitely not for me! Une soirée devant la télé, très peu pour moi! Sat sitting watching the telly till the dot disappears isn't my cup of tea! -
65 circulation maritime
циркуляция морской воды
—
[ http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]EN
sea circulation
Large-scale horizontal water motion within an ocean. The way energy from the sun, stored in the sea, is transported around the world. The currents explain, for example, why the UK has ice-free ports in winter, while St. Petersburg, at the same latitude as the Shetland Islands, needs ice breakers. Evidence is growing that the world's ocean circulation was very different during the last ice age and has changed several times in the distant past, with dramatic effects on climate. The oceans are vital as storehouses, as they absorb more than half the sun's heat reaching the earth. This heat, which is primarily absorbed near the equator is carried around the world and released elsewhere, creating currents which last up to 1.000 years. As the Earth rotates and the wind acts upon the surface, currents carry warm tropical water to the cooler parts of the world. The strength and direction of the currents are affected by landmasses, bottlenecks through narrow straits, and even the shape of the sea-bed. When the warm water reaches polar regions its heat evaporates into the atmosphere, reducing its temperature and increasing its density. When sea-water freezes it leaves salt behind in the unfrozen water and this cold water sinks into the ocean and begins to flow back to the tropics. Eventually it is heated and begins the cycle all over again. (Source: MGH / WRIGHT)
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Франко-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > circulation maritime
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