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1 cliqueter
cliqueter [klik(ə)te]➭ TABLE 4 intransitive verb* * *klikteverbe intransitif [clés] to jingle; [chaîne] to rattle; [mécanisme] to go clickety-clack; [aiguilles à tricoter] to click* * *klik(ə)te vi[ferraille, clefs, monnaie] to jingle, [verres] to chink* * *cliqueter verb table: jeter vi [clés, pièces de monnaie] to jingle; [chaîne, ferraille] to rattle; [mécanisme, engrenage] to go clickety-clack; [aiguilles à tricoter] to click; [couverts] to clink; [épées] to rattle.[klikte] verbe intransitif[clefs] to jangle[petite serrure] to click[épées] to click[machine à écrire] to clack[assiettes] to clatter[verres] to clink -
2 sonner
sonner [sɔne]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verbb. [+ messe] to ring the bell for ; [+ réveil, rassemblement, retraite] to soundc. ( = appeler) [+ portier, infirmière] to ring for• on ne t'a pas sonné ! (inf) nobody asked you!2. intransitive verb• elle a mis le réveil à sonner pour or à 7 heures she set the alarm for 7 o'clockb. ( = actionner une sonnette) to ring• « sonner avant d'entrer » "please ring before you enter"• sonner bien [nom] to sound goodd. [midi, minuit] to strike* * *sɔne
1.
1) ( faire tinter) to ring [cloche]2) ( annoncer) [horloge] to strike [heure]; [personne] to sound [charge, retraite, alarme]; to ring out [vêpres, angélus]3) ( faire venir) to ring foron ne t'a pas sonné! — (colloq) did anyone ask you?
4) (colloq) ( faire vaciller) [coup, boxeur] to make [somebody] dizzy [personne]; [nouvelle, événement] to stagger [personne]; [vin, alcool] to knock [somebody] out [personne]
2.
sonner de verbe transitif indirect to sound [cor, trompette]; to play [cornemuse]
3.
verbe intransitif1) ( se faire entendre) [cloches, téléphone] to ring; [heure] to strike; [r éveil] to go off; [alerte, alarme, trompette] to sound2) ( rendre un son) [mot, expression] to soundça sonne bien/mal — that sounds good/bad
3) ( actionner une sonnerie) to ring* * *sɔne1. vi1) (= retentir) [téléphone, cloches, carillon] to ring, [réveil] to go offLe téléphone a sonné. — The phone rang.
On entendait sonner les cloches de l'église voisine. — We could hear the bells ringing at the church nearby.
Minuit vient de sonner. — It has just struck midnight.
2) (à la porte) [personne] to ring the doorbell, to ring at the doorsonner chez qn — to ring sb's doorbell, to ring at sb's door
On a sonné. — Somebody rang at the door.
3) MUSIQUEsonner faux [instrument] — to be out of tune
4) (donner une impression) to soundsonner bien [formule] — to sound good
sonner creux [objet] — to sound hollow, [excuse] to ring hollow
sonner faux [rire] — to ring false
2. vt1) (= faire résonner) [cloche] to ring, [glas, tocsin] to sound2) (= appeler) [portier, infirmière] to ring for3) (= annoncer, signaler) [messe] to ring the bell for4) * [choc, coup] to knock out5) MILITAIREsonner le clairon; sonner du clairon — to sound the bugle
* * *sonner verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( faire tinter) to ring [cloche];2 ( annoncer) [horloge] to strike [heure]; [personne] to sound [charge, retraite, alarme]; to ring out [vêpres, angélus]; l'horloge sonne les heures et les demies the clock strikes on the hour and on the half-hour;3 ( faire venir) to ring for [domestique, gardien, infirmière]; on ne t'a pas sonné○! did anyone ask you?;4 ○( faire vaciller) [coup, boxeur] to make [sb] dizzy [personne]; [nouvelle, événement] to stagger [personne]; [vin, alcool] to knock [sb] out [personne].C vi1 ( se faire entendre) [cloches, téléphone] to ring; [heure] to strike; [réveil] to go off; [alerte, alarme, trompette] to sound; minuit vient de sonner midnight has just struck; l'heure n'a pas encore sonné it hasn't struck the hour yet; leur dernière heure a sonné their last hour has come; ta dernière heure a sonné○! ( menace) your time's run out!; le temps de la retraite a sonné the time has come to retire; la fin des cours va sonner dans cinq minutes the bell for the end of lessons will ring in five minutes; il fait sonner son réveil à 5 heures he sets his alarm for 5 o'clock; les bottes faisaient sonner les dalles du palais the floor of the palace rang with the sound of boots;2 ( rendre un son) [mot, expression] to sound; ça sonne bien/mal that sounds good/bad; ta remarque sonnerait mal aux oreilles d'un peintre your comment isn't the sort of thing a painter likes to hear; mots qui sonnent mal dans la bouche d'un prêtre words that are most unsuitable coming from a priest;3 ( actionner une sonnerie) to ring; pour appeler l'infirmière, sonnez deux fois to call the nurse, ring twice; on a sonné à la porte the doorbell has just rung; va voir qui sonne go and see who's at the door; ça sonne chez le voisin ( à la porte) the neighbourGB's bell's ringing; ( au téléphone) the neighbourGB's phone's ringing.[sɔne] verbe intransitif1. [téléphone, cloche] to ring[minuterie, réveil] to go off[carillon, pendule] to chime2. [instrument en cuivre] to sound[personne]a. [monnaie] to ring trueb. [marteau] to give ou to have a clear ringa. to sound hollow, to give a hollow sound3. [heure] to strike4 h ont sonné it has struck 4 o'clock, 4 o'clock has struckattendez que la fin du cours sonne! wait for the bell!, wait till the bell goes ou rings!4. [personne] to ring5. [accentuer]————————[sɔne] verbe transitif2. [pour faire venir - infirmière, valet] to ring forMadame a sonné? you rang, Madam?3. [pour annoncer - messe, vêpres] to ring (the bells) for[MILITAIRE - charge, retraite, rassemblement] to sound4. [suj: horloge] to strike6. TECHNOLOGIE [sonder - installation, monnaie] to sound7. (Belgique) [appeler] to telephone -
3 retentir
blare, jangle, peal, resound, ring
См. также в других словарях:
Jangle — Jan gle, n. [Cf. OF. jangle.] [1913 Webster] 1. Idle talk; prate; chatter; babble. Chaucer. [1913 Webster] 2. Discordant sound; wrangling. [1913 Webster] 3. The unmelodious ringing of multiple metallic objects striking together, such as a set of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
jangle — [jaŋ′gəl] vi. jangled, jangling [ME janglen < OFr jangler, to jangle, prattle, prob. < Frank * jangelon, to jeer] 1. to quarrel or argue noisily 2. to make a harsh, inharmonious sound, as of a bell out of tune vt. 1. to utter in a harsh,… … English World dictionary
jangle — [n] cacophony of noises babel, clang, clangor, clash, din, dissonance, hubbub*, hullabaloo*, jar, pandemonium, racket, rattle, reverberation, roar, tumult, uproar; concept 595 jangle [v] make clinking noises chime, clank, clash, clatter, conflict … New thesaurus
Jangle — Jan gle, v. t. To cause to sound harshly or inharmoniously; to produce discordant sounds with. [1913 Webster] Like sweet bells jangled, out of tune, and harsh. Shak. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Jangle — Jan gle, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Jangled}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Jangling}.] [OE. janglen to quarrel, OF. jangler to rail, quarrel; of Dutch or German origin; cf. D. jangelen, janken, to whimper, chide, brawl, quarrel.] [1913 Webster] 1. To sound harshly … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
jangle — index altercation, brawl (noun), brawl (verb), controversy (argument), fracas, fray, noise Burton s L … Law dictionary
jangle — ► VERB 1) make or cause to make a ringing metallic sound. 2) (of one s nerves) be set on edge. ► NOUN ▪ an instance of jangling. DERIVATIVES jangly adjective. ORIGIN Old French jangler … English terms dictionary
jangle — {{11}}jangle (n.) late 13c., gossip, slanderous conversation, dispute, from O.Fr. jangle, from jangler (see JANGLE (Cf. jangle) (v.)). Meaning discordant sound is from 1795. {{12}}jangle (v.) c.1300, jangeln, to talk excessively, chatter, talk… … Etymology dictionary
jangle — v. (D; intr.) to jangle on ( to irritate ) (to jangle on smb. s nerves) * * * [ dʒæŋg(ə)l] (D; intr.) to jangle on (to jangle on smb. s nerves; to irritate ) … Combinatory dictionary
jangle — jan|gle [ˈdʒæŋgəl] v [I and T] [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: jangler] 1.) if metal objects jangle, or if you jangle them, they make a sound when they hit each other ▪ Her bracelets jangled on her wrist. ▪ Dev jangled his car keys. 2.)… … Dictionary of contemporary English
jangle — [[t]ʤæ̱ŋg(ə)l[/t]] jangles, jangling, jangled 1) V ERG When objects strike against each other and make an unpleasant ringing noise, you can say that they jangle or are jangled. Her bead necklaces and bracelets jangled as she walked... [V n] Jane… … English dictionary