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1 bundle
bundle ['bʌndəl]1 noun(a) (of clothes, linen) paquet m; (wrapped in a cloth) paquet m; Commerce (of goods) paquet m, ballot m; (of sticks, twigs) faisceau f; Finance & Administration (of banknotes, papers) liasse f;∎ he's a bundle of nerves c'est un paquet de nerfs;∎ a bundle of firewood un fagot;∎ she's a bundle of contradictions elle est pleine de contradictions;∎ familiar a bundle of fun or laughs marrant, amusant;∎ familiar the trip wasn't exactly a bundle of laughs le voyage n'était pas vraiment marrant;∎ ironic he's a real bundle of fun c'est fou ce qu'on s'amuse avec lui;∎ bundle of joy (baby) bout m de chou∎ to cost a bundle coûter bonbon ou la peau des fesses;∎ to make a bundle faire son beurre∎ to go a bundle on sth s'emballer pour qch;(a) Textiles (clothes) mettre en paquet; Transport (for a journey) empaqueter; (linen) mettre en paquet; Commerce (goods) mettre en paquet; Finance, Administration (banknotes, papers) mettre en liasses; (sticks, twigs) mettre en faisceaux; (firewood) mettre en fagots; Agriculture (straw) botteler, mettre en bottes∎ she bundled the papers into the drawer elle fourra les papiers dans le tiroir;∎ he was bundled into the car on l'a poussé dans la voiture brusquement ou sans ménagement;∎ he quickly bundled them out of the room il les a poussés précipitamment hors de la pièce∎ to bundle sth with sth offrir qch en plus de qch;∎ to come bundled with sth être livré avec qch;∎ Computing bundled software logiciel m livré avec le matériel∎ they bundled me off the train ils m'ont fait descendre du train en toute hâte;∎ the children were bundled off to school les enfants furent envoyés ou expédiés à l'école vite fait(b) (dress warmly) emmitoufler;∎ she bundled the baby up in a warm blanket elle emmitoufla le bébé dans une grosse couvertures'emmitoufler -
2 bale
См. также в других словарях:
bundle — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ big, large, thick ▪ She was carrying a large bundle of clothes. ▪ little, small, tiny VERB + BUNDLE … Collocations dictionary
bundle — ► NOUN 1) a collection of things or quantity of material tied or wrapped up together. 2) a set of nerve, muscle, or other fibres running in parallel. 3) informal a large amount of money. ► VERB 1) tie or roll up in or as if in a bundle. 2) (be… … English terms dictionary
bundle — noun 1》 a collection of things or quantity of material tied or wrapped up together. ↘Anatomy a set of nerve, muscle, or other fibres running in parallel close together. 2》 informal a large amount of money. verb 1》 tie or roll up in or as if… … English new terms dictionary
bundle of laughs — noun Something or someone very funny or fun. When she was alone with you, she could be a bundle of laughs. But if we were going to a large party, Sunny would break out in welts from nerves. Syn: barrel of laughs … Wiktionary
bundle — Noun. A large quantity of money … English slang and colloquialisms
bundle — The simultaneous sale or purchase of one each of a series of consecutive futures contracts. Bundles provide a readily available, widely accepted method for executing multiple futures contracts with a single transaction. Chicago Mercantile… … Financial and business terms
bundle — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. package, parcel, packet; bunch, bale; informal, riches, wealth. See assemblage, money. II (Roget s IV) n. Syn. packet, parcel, bunch; see package 1 . See Synonym Study at package . III (Roget s 3… … English dictionary for students
Collective noun — In linguistics, a collective noun is a word used to define a group of objects, where objects can be people, animals, emotions, inanimate things, concepts, or other things. For example, in the phrase a pride of lions , pride is a collective noun.… … Wikipedia
bal´er — bale1 «bayl», noun, verb, baled, bal|ing. –n. a large bundle of merchandise or material securely wrapped or bound for shipping or storage: »a bale of cotton, a bale of hay. –v.t. to make into bales; tie in large bundles: »We saw a big machine… … Useful english dictionary
bale — I. noun Etymology: Middle English, from Old English bealu; akin to Old High German balo evil, Old Church Slavic bolĭ sick person Date: before 12th century 1. great evil 2. woe, sorrow II. noun Etymology: Middle English, from Middle French, of… … New Collegiate Dictionary
bale — I. /beɪl / (say bayl) noun 1. a large bundle or package prepared for storage or transportation, especially one closely compressed and secured by cords, wires, hoops or the like, sometimes with a wrapping: *The sale of the first few bales of fine… …