-
81 incomparablement
ɛ̃kɔ̃paʀabləmɑ̃ adv* * *incomparablement adv incomparablement meilleur marché/plus agréable/moins difficile far cheaper/more pleasant/less difficult.[ɛ̃kɔ̃parabləmɑ̃] adverbeil est incomparablement plus beau que moi he's incomparably ou infinitely more handsome than me -
82 juste
juste [ʒyst]1. adjectivea. ( = équitable) [personne, notation] fair ; [sentence, guerre, cause] justb. ( = légitime) [revendication, vengeance, fierté] just ; [colère] justifiable• il en est fier, et à juste titre he's proud of it and rightly soc. ( = précis) right ; [appareil, montre] accurated. ( = pertinent) [idée, raisonnement] sound ; [remarque, expression] apt• très juste ! good point!e. [note, voix] true ; [instrument] in tunef. ( = insuffisant) [vêtement, chaussure] tight ; (en longueur, hauteur) on the short side• 1 kg pour six, c'est un peu juste 1 kg for six people is not really enough• trois heures pour faire cette traduction, c'est juste three hours to do that translation is not really enough2. adverba. ( = avec précision) [compter, viser] accurately ; [raisonner] soundly ; [deviner] correctly ; [chanter] in tune• juste à temps [arriver] just in timeb. ( = exactement) just• que veut-il au juste ? what exactly does he want?c. ( = seulement) justd. ( = pas assez) [compter, prévoir] not quite enough* * *ʒyst
1.
1) ( impartial) [personne] fair2) ( équitable) [règlement, partage] fair; [récompense, sanction, cause] justjuste retour des choses, il a été renvoyé — it was poetic justice that he got expelled
juste ciel! — (dated) good heavens!
3) ( légitime) [colère, certitude] righteous (épith); [revendication] legitimate; [crainte] justifiable; [raisonnement, remarque, comparaison] validà juste raison or titre — with good reason
4) ( adéquat) rightcomme de juste (colloq) il était en retard — of course, he was late
5) ( exact) [calcul, proportion, heure, analyse] correctle juste prix des choses — fig the true value of things
6) ( précis) [instrument de mesure] accurate7) Musique [piano, voix] in tune (jamais épith); [note] true8) ( trop ajusté) [vêtement, chaussure] tight9) ( à la limite)nous sommes un peu justes (colloq) en ce moment — money is a bit tight (colloq) at the moment
2.
1) ( sans erreur) [chanter] in tune; [sonner] true; [deviner] rightviser juste — lit to aim straight; fig to hit the nail on the head
2) ( précisément) just3) ( seulement) just4) ( depuis peu)5) ( à peine) hardlyj'ai réussi à éviter le bus mais ça a été juste — (colloq) I managed to avoid the bus but it was a close shave (colloq)
3.
au juste locution adverbiale exactly
4.
nom masculin righteous man* * *ʒyst1. adj1) (= équitable) (personne, partage) fairIl est sévère, mais juste. — He's strict but fair.
2) (= légitime) (réclamation) just, justifiedà juste titre — justifiably, rightfully
On peut se demander à juste titre s'ils n'ont pas été trop loin. — We may justifiably ask ourselves if they have gone too far.
Il a réclamé, à juste titre. — He complained, and rightfully so.
3) (= exact) (compte) right4) (= étroit) tightCette veste est un peu juste. — This jacket is a bit tight.
5) (= insuffisant)Ce sera un peu juste, tu aurais dû prendre plus de vin. — It's only just going to be enough, you should have got more wine.
2. adv1) (= seulement) just2) [aller, être] (vêtement, budget) tight3) [chanter] in tune4) [prévoir, calculer] right3. nm1) (= personne)2)comme de juste — of course, naturally
au juste — exactly, actually
* * *A adj1 ( impartial) [personne] fair;2 ( équitable) [règlement, partage] fair; [récompense, sanction, cause] just; ce n'est pas juste! it's not fair!; il est juste que/de faire it is fair that/to do; il est juste qu'il ait réussi it is fair that he succeeded; il ne serait pas juste de tout te donner it wouldn't be fair to give you everything; juste retour des choses, il a été dédommagé it was poetic justice that he got compensation; trouver un juste milieu to find a happy medium; juste ciel†! good heavens!;3 ( légitime) [colère, certitude] righteous ( épith); [revendication] legitimate; [raison] good; [crainte] justifiable; [raisonnement, remarque, comparaison] valid; j'ai de justes raisons de ne pas le croire I have good reason not to believe him; à juste raison or titre quite rightly, with good reason; ta remarque est très juste your remark is very valid; dire des choses justes to make some valid points;4 ( adéquat) right; trouver le mot juste to find the right word; c'est (très) juste! that's (quite) right!; comme de juste il était en retard as one might expect ou as per usual, he was late;5 ( exact) [calcul, proportion, heure, analyse] correct; j'ai tout juste I've got everything right; avoir l'heure juste to have the correct time; connaître le juste prix des choses fig to know the true value of things; apprécier qn/qch à sa juste valeur to appreciate sb fully/the true value of sth;6 ( précis) [instrument de mesure] accurate; ma montre n'est pas très juste my watch is not very accurate;7 Mus [piano, voix] in tune ( jamais épith); [note] true; ton piano n'est pas juste your piano is out of tune;9 ( à la limite) un poulet pour six c'est un peu juste one chicken for six people is stretching it a bit; une heure pour y aller c'est un peu juste one hour to get there is cutting it a bit fine; nous sommes un peu justes en ce moment○ money is a bit tight○ at the moment; j'ai réussi à éviter le bus mais ça a été juste○ I managed to avoid the bus but it was a close shave○.B adv1 ( sans erreur) [chanter] in tune; [sonner] true; [deviner] right; elle a vu juste dans ses prévisions she was right in her forecasts; viser juste lit to aim straight; fig to hit the nail on the head;2 ( précisément) just; juste quand j'arrivais just as I was arriving; c'est juste ce qu'il me faut that is just or exactly what I need; c'est juste avant/après la poste it's just before/after the post office; juste après les informations just ou straight after the news; j'ai juste assez (d'argent) I've got just enough (money); juste à temps just in time; ‘tu as eu ton train?’-‘oui mais tout juste’ ‘did you catch your train?’-‘yes, but only just’;3 ( seulement) just; j'en prends juste un I'm just taking one; ils ont juste eu le temps de manger they just had time to eat;4 ( depuis peu) (tout) juste only just; j'arrive juste I've only just arrived; il vient juste de partir he's only just left; il a tout juste vingt ans he's only just twenty;5 ( à peine) hardly; c'est tout juste s'il sait lire/tient debout he can hardly read/stand;6 ( parcimonieusement) j'ai prévu trop/un peu juste pour le repas I didn't prepare enough/quite enough food; calculer les prix au plus juste to calculate the prices down to the last penny.C au juste loc adv exactly; que s'est-il passé au juste? what happened exactly?; je ne sais pas au juste combien nous serons I don't know exactly how many of us there will be.[ʒyst] adverbe1. [avec justesse]tomber juste to guess right, to hit the nail on the headtu as vu ou deviné juste! you guessed correctly ou right!juste quand ou comme le téléphone sonnait just as ou when the phone was ringing3. [à peine, seulement] justil est juste 9 h, vous n'allez pas partir déjà it's only 9 o'clock, you're not going to leave alreadytout juste: j'ai tout juste le temps de prendre un café I've just about enough ou I've just got enough time to have a cup of coffeec'est tout juste s'il ne m'a pas frappé he very nearly ou all but hit mec'est tout juste s'il dit bonjour he hardly bothers to say hello, you're lucky if he says hello4. [en quantité insuffisante]un gâteau pour 8, ça fait (un peu) juste one cake for 8 people, that won't go very far————————[ʒyst] adjectif1. [équitable - partage, décision, personne] fairêtre juste envers ou avec quelqu'un to be fair to somebodyil ne serait que juste qu'il soit remboursé it would only be fair ou right for him to get his money back(avant le nom) [justifié - cause, récompense, punition] just ; [ - requête] legitimate ; [ - colère] just, legitimate2. (après le nom) [exact - calcul, compte, réponse] rightas-tu l'heure juste? have you got the right ou exact time?la nappe est un peu juste en longueur/largeur the tablecloth is a bit on the short/narrow sideune heure pour aller à l'aéroport, c'est trop juste an hour to get to the airport, that's not enoughses notes sont trop justes pour que vous le laissiez passer his marks are too borderline for you to pass him[de justesse]elle a réussi l'examen, mais c'était juste she passed her exam, but it was a close thing5. (après le nom) [compétent] goodavoir l'oreille/le coup d'œil juste to have a good ear/eyetrès juste! quite right!, good point!j'ai moins d'expérience que lui — c'est juste I'm less experienced than he is — that's true ou right6. (avant le nom) [approprié]apprécier quelque chose à son juste prix to appreciate the true value ou worth of somethingapprécier quelqu'un à sa juste valeur to appreciate the true worth ou value of somebody————————[ʒyst] nom masculin————————au juste locution adverbiale————————au plus juste locution adverbialecomme de juste locution adverbialecomme de juste, elle avait oublié she'd forgotten, of coursejuste ciel, juste Dieu interjection -
83 nettement
nettement [nεtmɑ̃]adverba. ( = clairement) clearlyb. ( = incontestablement) [s'améliorer, se différencier] distinctly ; [mériter] definitely* * *nɛtmɑ̃1) [augmenter, se détériorer] markedly; [devancer] clearly; [préférer] definitely2) [voir, dire] clearly; [refuser] flatly; [se souvenir] distinctly* * *nɛtmɑ̃ adv1) (= distinctement) clearly2) (avec comparatif, superlatif) farCe magasin est nettement plus cher. — This shop is far more expensive.
* * *nettement adv1 ( indiscutablement) [augmenter, se détériorer] markedly; [devancer] clearly; [préférer] definitely; nettement meilleur/plus propre/moins froid decidedly better/cleaner/warmer; gagner nettement to be a clear winner;[nɛtmɑ̃] adverbe -
84 retrait
retrait [ʀ(ə)tʀε]masculine nounwithdrawal ; [de bagages] collection• on vient d'annoncer le retrait du marché de ce produit it's just been announced that this product has been withdrawn from sale• faire un retrait de 500 € to withdraw 500 euros• les étudiants réclament le retrait du projet de loi the students are demanding that the bill be withdrawn• rester en retrait [personne] to stay in the background• notre chiffre d'affaires est en léger retrait par rapport aux années précédentes our turnover is slightly down compared to previous years* * *ʀ(ə)tʀɛ
1.
nom masculin1) (de valise, commande, dossier) collection; ( d'argent) withdrawal2) (d'autorisation, de soutien, monnaie) withdrawal (de of); Commerce ( d'article défectueux) recall (de of)3) ( départ) withdrawalle retrait des eaux a révélé l'ampleur du désastre — when the water went down ou subsided, the scale of the disaster became apparent
2.
en retrait locution adverbiale ( à l' écart)maison (située) en retrait de — house set back from [route]; house a little way out of [village]
se tenir en retrait — lit to stand back; fig to occupy a back seat
rester en retrait — fig to stay in the background
* * *ʀ(ə)tʀɛ nm1) [soutien, troupes] withdrawal2) [argent] withdrawal3) [billets] collection4)retrait de (la compétition, du marché) — withdrawal from
5) (= rétrécissement) [bois, béton] shrinkage6) (= confiscation)retrait du permis; retrait du permis de conduire — disqualification from driving Grande-Bretagne revocation of driver's license USA
7) (alignement)8) figêtre en retrait [personne] — to be in the background
9) TYPOGRAPHIE (en début de paragraphe) indentation* * *A nm1 (de valise, paquet, commande, dossier) collection; ( d'argent) withdrawal; s'adresser au guichet n° 2 pour le retrait des colis parcels can be collected for counter n°. 2; présentez un reçu pour le retrait de toute commande a receipt must be produced when collecting orders;2 (annulation, suppression) (d'autorisation, de soutien, monnaie) withdrawal (de of); Comm ( d'article défectueux) recall (de of); réclamer le retrait d'une mesure to call for a measure to be lifted; après le retrait de la candidature du maire sortant after the outgoing mayor stood down; retrait du permis (de conduire) disqualification from driving;3 ( départ) withdrawal; le retrait des troupes de la zone occupée the withdrawal of the troops from the occupied zone; le retrait du pilote du championnat the driver's withdrawal from the championships; faire un retrait de fonds to withdraw funds; le retrait des eaux a révélé l'ampleur du désastre when the water went down ou subsided, the scale of the disaster became apparent;4 ( après accouplement) withdrawal.B en retrait loc adv1 ( à l'écart) maison (située) en retrait de house set back from [route]; house a little way out of [village]; se tenir en retrait lit to stand back; se mettre/tenir en retrait fig to take/to occupy a back seat; rester en retrait fig to stay in the background; la police reste en retrait the police are keeping a low profile; ce secteur reste en retrait de l'automobile this sector is somewhat behind the automotive sector; le texte est en retrait par rapport aux déclarations du ministre fig the bill is less drastic than the minister had led us to expect;2 ( en baisse) les recettes sont en retrait de 10% par rapport à or sur l'année dernière takings are 10% down on last year;retrait à vue withdrawal on demand.[rətrɛ] nom masculin1. [annulation - d'une licence] cancelling ; [ - d'un mot d'ordre] calling offa. [par un prestataire] withdrawal of applicationb. [par un député] standing down, withdrawal2. BANQUE withdrawalje veux faire un retrait de 3 000 euros I want to take out ou to withdraw 3,000 euros3. [récupération]le retrait des billets/bagages se fera dès 11 h tickets/luggage may be collected from 11 o'clock onwards4. [départ - d'un joueur, du contingent] withdrawal5. [recul - des eaux d'inondation] subsiding, receding ; [ - de la marée] ebbing ; [ - des glaces] retreat6. DROIT [d'un acte administratif] revocation[d'un acte de vente] redemption————————en retrait locution adverbialea. [clôture] set back from the wallb. [étagère] recessed————————en retrait de locution prépositionnelle -
85 syndicat
syndicat [sɛ̃dika]masculine noun[de travailleurs] trade union ; [d'employeurs] syndicate* * *sɛ̃dikanom masculin gén trade union; ( d'employeurs) associationPhrasal Verbs:* * *sɛ̃dika nm1) [ouvriers, employés] trade union2) (= association d'intérêts) union, association* * *syndicat agricole farmers' union; syndicat du crime underworld; syndicat financier financial syndicate; syndicat de fonctionnaires civil service union; syndicat d'initiative tourist information office; syndicat intercommunal association of communes (in France); syndicat ouvrier trade union; syndicat patronal employers' association; syndicat professionnel trade association; syndicat de propriétaires association of property owners.ⓘ Syndicats Although it plays a less central role than in the first half of the 20th century with only 10% of employees unionized, the trade union movement is still a significant actor in French public life and has considerable power and influence. The unions which have the broadest national base are the CGT (traditionally allied with the parti communiste), the CFDT (traditionally allied with the parti socialiste), FO, the CFTC, the CGC and the FEN. There is also an employers' association, the MEDEF. ⇒ MEDEF[sɛ̃dika] nom masculinse former ou se regrouper en syndicat to form a trade unionsyndicat patronal employers' confederation ou association2. DROIT [association] association3. FINANCEsyndicat d'émission/de garantie issuing/underwriting syndicate————————syndicat d'initiative nom masculintourist office, tourist information bureau -
86 Syndicats
Although it plays a less central role than in the first half of the 20th century with only 10% of employees unionized, the trade union movement is still a significant actor in French public life and has considerable power and influence. The unions which have the broadest national base are the CGT (traditionally allied with the parti communiste), the CFDT (traditionally allied with the parti socialiste), FO, the CFTC, the CGC and the FEN. There is also an employers' association, the MEDEF -
87 chaud
I.n. m. Ça ne me fait ni chaud ni froid! That leaves me cold! — I couldn't care less!II.adj.1. Avoir eu chaud: To have had 'a narrow squeak', a narrow escape.2. Etre chaud pour: To be keen on, to be enthusiastic about. Je ne suis pas chaud pour passer des vacances à la maison: Holidays at home isn't my idea of fun.3. Etre un chaud lapin: To be a randy so-and-so, to have more than a passing interest in sex.4. 'Chauds, les marrons chauds!' This ironical and untranslatable taunt is often heard at the ringside during boxing bouts. The expression puns on the double meaning of marron and originated as the chestnut street-vendor's sales-cry.III. -
88 gertrude
-
89 vieille
n. f.1. La vieille: The 'old lady', mother. Ma vieille et mafemme ne s'entendent pas! My wife and her mother-in-law don't get on!2. Ma vieille: 'Old girl'. (This term of familiarity is less frequent than its masculine equivalent.) -
90 Boulogne
France's major fishing port, located on the north coast of France in the department of Pas de Calais. Also a port for cross-Channel ferries, though less used for this purpose than in the past.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Boulogne
-
91 Cannes, Festival de Film
After the Academy Awards, the Cannes film festival is the biggest annual event in world cinema. It is held each year in May, in the Mediterranean coastal resort of Cannes, near Nice, and attracts the glitterati of the world's film industry. A number of different awards are distributed at the Cannes festival, the most important being Cannes' equivalent of the Oscar for the best film, the Palme d'Or ( golden palm); this is one of the most coveted prizes in world cinema. Less "commercial" than the Academy awards, the Cannes festival shows a broader range of films from a much wider range of countries, and is in particular the best showcase for the European cinema industry, and for "art" cinema.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Cannes, Festival de Film
-
92 CFDT
one of the three big trade unions in France, traditionally less hard-line and more consensual than the CGT (see below).Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > CFDT
-
93 Contrat Première Embauche
, CPEThe CPE was introduced by the Villepin government in 2006, in an attempt to reduce France's high levels of youth unemployment. It created a new form of work contract for young people, with less guarantees of job security than normal French work contracts. Left-wing student unions, encouraged by opposition parties, protested vigorously against the new contract, calling it discriminatory against youth, and an attack on the acquired social rights of employees. It was portrayed as a contract by which employers would be free to sack young employees without reason. In scenes reminiscent of 1968 (seesoixante- huit), students closed down a number of universities and set up barricades. After initially refusing to give in, the government eventually decided to scrap the CPE which by the, according to opinion polls, had become a very unpopular plan.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Contrat Première Embauche
-
94 Corse, la Question
Corsica, the large island lying between France and Italy, has long been the scene of periodic violence, including bombings and assassinations, perpetrated by radical nationalists against symbols of French government. Corsican nationalist parties and factions have strong local support, though it is clear that most Corsicans do not want independence from France. The Corsican question has dragged on for four decades or more, damaging the Island's economy and tourist industry; and while there is less in the way of violence today than there was at times in the past, the problem shows no sign of going away.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Corse, la Question
-
95 Demonstrations
(Fr. Manifestations)Form of protest popular with students and trade unions, though less so than in the past.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Demonstrations
-
96 FO
one of the biggest trade unions in France, traditionally less militant and more consensual than the CGT. -
97 Intermittents du Spectacle
People working intermittently in the media and culture sector, including part-time actors, stage hands and technicians. At the start of the twenty-first century, les Intermittents du Spectaclebenefited from extremely attractive conditions for obtaining unemployment benefit - far less stringent that conditions applied to other types of worker. Judging that the system was being abused and exploited both by many workers themselves and by the media and production companies employing them, the government decided in 2003 to tighten the conditions of entitlement to unemployment benefit. This led to massive strikes and protest actions by the Intermittents, and even to the cancellation of the 2003 Avignon theatre festival. The rules were eventually tightened up in 2006, though Intermittents still benefit from an easier entitlement to benefits than most other employees.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Intermittents du Spectacle
-
98 President
The head of state, under the constitution of the French Fifth Republic (Cinquième république). The French president is elected by direct universal suffrage, for a term of five years in office. Since the 2008 constitutional reform introduced by President Sarkozy, a president may serve no more than two five-year terms in office. Election by universal suffrage was first introduced following a referendum organised by General de Gaulle in 1962. Originally the presidential term in office was seven years, with one president, F. Mitterrand, serving a full two terms. With presidential and legislative elections operating according to different calendars, swings in the popularity of parties and their leaders led in the mid eighties to situations or " Cohabitation", with presidents and parliamentary majorities from different sides of the political spectrum. In 2002, presidential and legislative elections were held within two months of each other, each leading to five year terms in office for those elected; thus president Chirac emerged for a second term in office with a solid parliamentary majority of his own supporters.The president is responsible for choosing his Prime Minister (see Premier Ministre), who proposes a team of government ministers which the president must approve. He is the chief of the executive, who oversees weekly cabinet meetings (see Conseil des ministres), and promulgates new laws. He is also the commander in chief of French forces. He has the power to dissolve theNational Assembly and call legislative elections - a power used rather disastrously in 1997 by Jacques Chirac, who dissolved the Assembly in attempt to give his "presidential majority" a rather less slender majority, only to see the Socialist opposition voted into power.In exceptional cases of national emergency, Article 16 of the Constitutiongives the president the power to rule without the consent of parliament.See also Giscard d'Estaing, PompidouDictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > President
-
99 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
-
100 Achatine
land snail, or escargot, imported from China and Indonesia; less prized than other varieties.
См. также в других словарях:
less than — (something) not something. The weekend was less than wonderful, but parts of it were pretty good. The result was less than thrilling television – you could even call it boring. Usage notes: used to describe a quality you had expected or hoped for … New idioms dictionary
less than — adverb : by no means : far from : not at all the road … was something less than smooth M.W.Fishwick America s friends abroad would be less than candid if they did not report the fact Barbara Ward * * * less than phrase used before a number or… … Useful english dictionary
less than — used before a number or amount to say that the actual number or amount is smaller than this It costs less than £50 to fly to Rome. His death was the second skiing tragedy in less than a week. In some areas there is a less than 30% turnout in… … English dictionary
less than — {adv.} Not; little. * /We were busy and less than delighted to have company that day./ * /The boys were less than happy about having a party./ Contrast: MORE THAN … Dictionary of American idioms
less than — {adv.} Not; little. * /We were busy and less than delighted to have company that day./ * /The boys were less than happy about having a party./ Contrast: MORE THAN … Dictionary of American idioms
less\ than — adv Not; little. We were busy and less than delighted to have company that day. The boys were less than happy about having a party. Contrast: more than … Словарь американских идиом
less than — noun the character 2 < 3 Ant: greater than See Also: less than or equal to, inequality … Wiktionary
less than — phrasal by no means ; not at all < less than honest in his replies > … New Collegiate Dictionary
Less Than Jake — performing in August 2006. Background information Origin Gainesville, Florida, United States … Wikipedia
Less than Perfect — Original cast Format Situation comedy Created by Terri Minsky … Wikipedia
Less than truckload shipping — Less Than Truckload (LTL) shipping is the transportation of relatively small freight. The alternatives to LTL carriers are parcel carriers or full truckload carriers. Parcel carriers usually handle small packages and freight that can be broken… … Wikipedia