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lycée [lise]masculine noun━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━Lycées are state secondary schools where pupils study for their « baccalauréat » after leaving the « collège ». The lycée covers the school years known as « seconde » (15-16 year-olds), « première » (16-17 year-olds) and « terminale » (up to leaving age at 18). The term lycée professionnel refers to a lycée which provides vocational training as well as the more traditional core subjects. → BACCALAURÉAT COLLÈGE ÉDUCATION NATIONALE* * *lisenom masculin secondary school ( school preparing students aged 15-18 for the baccalaureat)Phrasal Verbs:* * *lise nmsecondary school Grande-Bretagne (with pupils from 15 to 18 years old), high school USA (with pupils from 15 to 18 years old)* * *lycée nm1 Scol secondary school (covering the final three years before the baccalauréat); lycée Carnot/Voltaire Lycée Carnot/Voltaire;2 Philos lyceum.ⓘ Lycée A school providing secondary education for the three years after collège. The students enter the first year or seconde at the age of 15/16, then première, and finally complete the cycle in terminale at age 17/18, when they sit for the baccalauréat. As well as those which provide a conventional academic education, there are a number of different types of lycée offering a more vocationally-based education. ⇒ baccalauréat[lise] nom masculin(upper) secondary school (UK), high school (US) (providing three years' teaching after the "collège", in preparation for the baccalauréat examination)lycée professionnel vocational (high) school, technical college -
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lycéelyceum (státní střední škola) m
См. также в других словарях:
LYCEUM — gy mnasium celeberrimum iuxta Athenas, a Pisistrato vel Pericle exstructum, in quo Aristoteles frequentissimo auditorio Philosophiam profitebatur, quemadmodum Plato in Academia. Cic. 1. Acad. Qui erant cum Aristotele, Peripatetici dicti sunt,… … Hofmann J. Lexicon universale
Lyceum — Ly*ce um, n.; pl. E. {Lyceums}, L. {Lycea}. [L. lyceum, Gr. ?, so named after the neighboring temple of ? ? Apollo the wolf slayer, prob. fr. ? belonging to a wolf, fr ? wolf. See {Wolf}.] 1. A place of exercise with covered walks, in the suburbs … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
lyceum — 1580s, Latin form of Gk. lykeion, name of a grove or garden with covered walks near Athens where Aristotle taught, from neut. of Lykeios wolf slayer, an epithet of Apollo, whose temple was nearby, from lykos wolf. Hence lycée, name given in… … Etymology dictionary
Lyceum — [lī sē′əm, lī′sēəm] [L < Gr Lykeion, the Lyceum: so called from the neighboring temple of Apollōn Lykeios] the grove at Athens where Aristotle taught … English World dictionary
lyceum — [lī sē′əm, lī′sēəm] n. [after the LYCEUM in Athens] 1. a hall where public lectures or discussions are held 2. an organization presenting public lectures, concerts, etc. 3. LYCÉE … English World dictionary
Lycēum — (lat.), 1) so v.w. Lykeion (s.d.); nach diesem Gymnasium nannte Cicero u. Kaiser Hadrian so 2) den Platz des Gymnasiums jener auf seinem Tusculanum, dieser auf seinem Tiburtinum; 3) gelehrte Schule, welche die Schüler für höhere Klassen eines… … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
Lyceum — Lyceum, s. Lyzeum … Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon
Lyceum — Lyceum, dem Apollo geheiligter Platz bei Athen, in welchem Aristoteles lehrte; ursprünglich zu körperlichen Uebungen bestimmt, daher jetzt Name höherer Lehranstalten, der Vorschulen für die Universität … Herders Conversations-Lexikon
lyceum — index institute Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
Lyceum — Lyceum, højere skole, gymnasium … Danske encyklopædi
Lyceum — This article is about Lyceum as school or as public hall. Lyceum can also be short for Lyceum Theatre. For the blogging platform, see Lyceum (software). For the Open University synchronous CMC software see Lyceum (synchronous CMC software) A… … Wikipedia