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1 marchandise
marchandise [maʀ∫ɑ̃diz]feminine nouna. ( = article, unité) commodity• il a de la bonne marchandise he has or sells good stuffb. ( = cargaison, stock) la marchandise the merchandise* * *maʀʃɑ̃diz1) ( articles)des marchandises — goods, merchandise [U]
marchandises en gros/au détail — wholesale/retail goods
2) ( produit) goods (pl)tromper or voler quelqu'un sur la marchandise — to swindle somebody
••il a essayé de nous vendre sa marchandise — (colloq) he tried to win us over
vanter or étaler sa marchandise — (colloq) to parade one's wares
* * *maʀʃɑ̃diz nfgoods pl merchandise no pl* * *marchandise nf1 ( articles) des marchandises goods, merchandise ¢; exporter/transporter des marchandises to export/transport goods; les marchandises sont entreposées dans le hangar the goods are stored in the warehouse; 100 000 euros de marchandises 100,000 euros' worth of goods; marchandises en gros/au détail wholesale/retail goods;2 ( produit) goods (pl); livrer/fournir la marchandise to deliver/to provide the goods; les trafiquants ont essayé d'écouler la marchandise the traffickers tried to dispose of the goods; ce fromager a de la bonne marchandise this cheese shop has good produce; tromper or voler qn sur la marchandise to swindle sb.il a essayé de nous vendre sa marchandise○ he tried to win us over; vanter or étaler sa marchandise○ to parade one's wares.[marʃɑ̃diz] nom féminin[article interdit]2. [fret, stock]la marchandise the goods, the merchandisemarchandise en gros/au détail wholesale/retail goods3. (familier & figuré) -
2 rentrée
rentrée [ʀɑ̃tʀe]feminine nouna. rentrée (scolaire or des classes) start of the new school year• cette langue sera enseignée à partir de la rentrée 2004 this language will be part of the syllabus as from autumn 2004• les députés font leur rentrée aujourd'hui the deputies are returning today for the start of the new session• on craint une rentrée sociale agitée it is feared that there will be some social unrest this autumnc. [d'acteur, sportif] comebackd. ( = retour) return━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━La rentrée in September each year is not only the time when French children and teachers go back to school; it is also the time when political and social life begins again after the long summer break. The expression la rentrée is thus not restricted to an educational context, but can refer in general to the renewed activity that takes place throughout the country in the autumn.* * *The week at the beginning of September when the new school year starts and around which much of French administrative life revolves. The preceding weeks see intensive advertising of associated merchandise, from books and stationery to clothes and sports equipment. Many stores and supermarkets have a range of special purchases at bargain prices. The concept of the rentrée also extends to literary, political and other activities which are resumed after the period of the grandes vacances in July and August when businesses can close for up to a month. La rentrée littéraire marks the start of the literary year and la rentrée parlementaire signals the reassembly of Parliament after the recess* * *ʀɑ̃tʀe nf1) (rentrée d'argent) cash no pl coming in2) ÉDUCATIONla rentrée; la rentrée des classes — the start of the new school year
3) POLITIQUE4) [artiste, acteur]* * *ⓘ Rentrée The week at the beginning of September when the new school year starts and around which much of French administrative life revolves. The preceding weeks see intensive advertising of associated merchandise, from books and stationery to clothes and sports equipment. Many stores and supermarkets have a range of special purchases at bargain prices. The concept of the rentrée also extends to literary, political and other activities which are resumed after the period of the grandes vacances in July and August when businesses can close for up to a month. La rentrée littéraire marks the start of the literary year and la rentrée parlementaire signals the reassembly of Parliament after the recess.[rɑ̃tre] nom féminin1. ÉDUCATIONrentrée (scolaire ou des classes) start of the (new) academic yeardepuis la rentrée de Noël/Pâques since the spring/summer term began, since the Christmas/Easter breakla rentrée est fixée au 6 septembre school starts again ou schools reopen on September 6tha. [après les vacances] to start the new political season (after the summer)b. [après une absence] to make one's (political) comeback3. [saison artistique]b. [après une absence] for your Paris comeback4. [retour - des vacances d'été] (beginning of the) autumn (UK) ou fall (US) ; [ - de congé ou de week-end] return to workla rentrée a été dure it was hard to get back to work after the summer holidays (UK) ou vacation (US)6. [des foins] bringing ou taking in————————rentrées nom féminin plurielavoir des rentrées (d'argent) régulières to have a regular income ou money coming in regularlyrentrées fiscales tax receipts ou revenueThe time of the year when children go back to school has considerable cultural significance in France; coming after the long summer break or grandes vacances, it is the time when academic, political, social and commercial activity begins again in earnest. -
3 achalandé
achalandé, e [a∫alɑ̃de]adjective* * *achalandée aʃalɑ̃de adjectif controv ( approvisionné)bien/mal achalandé — well-/poorly-stocked
* * *aʃalɑ̃de adj achalandé, -ebien achalandé (en marchandises) (site, magasin, rayon) — well-stocked, (en clients) (site, magasin, station) with a large clientele
* * *( féminin achalandée) [aʃalɑ̃de] adjectif -
4 gondolier
gɔ̃dɔljenom masculin gondolier* * *ɡɔ̃dɔlje nm* * *( féminin gondolière) [gɔ̃dɔlje, ɛr] nom masculin et féminin————————nom masculin[batelier] gondolier -
5 groupage
gʀupaʒnom masculin ( pour transporter) bulking* * *groupage nm1 Transp bulking; groupage de marchandises bulking of merchandise; envoi en groupage collective shipment;2 Méd blood grouping.[grupaʒ] nom masculin -
6 parapharmacie
parapharmacie [paʀafaʀmasi]feminine noun* * *paʀafaʀmasinom féminin toiletries and vitamins (pl)* * *paʀafaʀmasi nf1) (= industrie, marché, secteur) over-the-counter drugs and personal hygiene products2) (= produits) over-the-counter drugs and personal hygiene products3) (= boutique) chemist's Grande-Bretagne drugstore USAdisponible en parapharmacie — available in chemists, sold in chemists
vendu en parapharmacie — sold in chemists, available in chemists
* * *parapharmacie nf toiletries and vitamins (pl).[parafarmasi] nom féminin -
7 rédhibitoire
rédhibitoire [ʀedibitwaʀ]adjective• un échec n'est pas forcément rédhibitoire one failure does not necessarily spell the end of everything* * *ʀedibitwaʀadjectif [coût] prohibitive; [obstacle] insurmountable; [condition] unacceptable; [timidité] crippling* * *ʀedibitwaʀ adj1) (défaut) crippling2) DROIT* * *rédhibitoire adj1 [coût] prohibitive; [obstacle] insurmountable; [condition] unacceptable; [timidité] crippling; être d'une bêtise rédhibitoire to be stupid beyond redemption;[redibitwar] adjectif1. DROIT2. (figuré)une mauvaise note à l'écrit, c'est rédhibitoire a bad mark in the written exam is enough to fail the candidate -
8 abattage
n. m. (also: abatage):1. Talking-to, scolding. J'ai pris un vache abattage du prof: Teacher gave me one hell of a slating.2. (of actor): 'Dash', brio, verve. Il ne manque pas d'abattage, lui! He certainly comes over well!3. De l'abattage (also: du travail d'abattage): Artistic work of little merit (book, painting etc.) executed purely for the purpose of bringing in money. Ce n'est pas de l'art, c'est de l'abattage! These are just pot-boilers!4. Winning throw at passe-anglaise, a popular hawkers' and market-traders' slang): Stall-dice-game with the underworld.5. (Street-goods, merchandise displayed on an open-air stand.6. Maison d'abattage: 'Cat-house',brothel. -
9 came
I.n. m. (abbr. camelot): Street-hawker, openair salesman.II.n. f. (abbr. camelote): The general and uncharismatic meaning of the word is 'goods'.1. Merchandise. Il n'y avait pas lerche de came sur son étalage: His stall wasn't exactly overloaded with goodies.2. 'Dope', drugs, narcotics. Ça fait un moment qu'il tâte de la came: He's been a junkie since a while back now.3. 'Brass', 'loot', money. Il en faut de la came pour une tire comme ça: You need a hell of a lot of dough for a car like that.4. Balancer la came: To 'juice off', to ejaculate. -
10 chenu
n. m. Du chenu: 'Quality stuff, topquality merchandise. Ne t'y trompe pas, c'est du chenu pour sûr! Make no mistake, this is the real stuff! (The expression is said to have applied originally to wines.) -
11 fer-blanc
n. m. Pacotille en fer-blanc: 'Tinpot goods', worthless merchandise. -
12 laver
v. trans.1. To sell off cheaply and quickly dubious merchandise (stolen goods).2. Laver la tête à quelqu'un: To 'give someone a dressingdown', to tell someone off in no uncertain manner.3. Laver son linge sale en famille: To keep a private quarrel out of the public eye. -
13 toc
I.n. m.2. Du toc: Fake goods, sham merchandise. Ses bijoux, mon vieux, c'est du toc! That jewellery of hers is really just paste!3. Des tocs (abbr. des papiers tocs): False I.D.s, fake identity papers. Marcher sous des tocs: To go about with forged papers. Marcher sous un toc: To go under an assumed name.II.adj. m.1. 'Trashy', 'sham', rubbishy.2. 'Bonkers', 'potty', mad.3. (of criminal): Vindictive, violent and dangerous. (With this meaning, the adjective refers to the kind of thug who is likely to end his days in a hospital for the criminally insane.)4. Ugly, afflicted with unattractive features.5. 'Thick', stupid.6. Unlucky, plagued by bad luck. -
14 vent
n. m.1. Du vent: 'Waffle', empty talk. Toutes ses promesses, mon vieux, c'est du vent! I wouldn't believe in his pie-crust promises if I were you!2. Vendre du vent: To sell fictitious goods (merchandise that does not exist).3. Faire du vent: To 'create', to make a big to-do about very little.4. Avoir du vent dans les voiles: To have had 'one too many', to be tipsy, to be slightly drunk.a To be 'with it', trendy, to be fashionable.b (of book, song, etc.): To be popular with the public.6. Du vent! Get lost! — Off with you! — Go away! -
15 marchandise
commodity, goods, merchandise, wares
См. также в других словарях:
Merchandise — Mer chan*dise, v. t. To make merchandise of; to buy and sell. Love is merchandised. Shak. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
merchandise — [n] goods for sale commodity, effects, job lot, line, material, number, produce, product, seconds, staple, stock, stuff, truck, vendible, wares; concept 338 merchandise [v] sell goods advertise, buy and sell, deal in, distribute, do business in,… … New thesaurus
Merchandise — Mer chan*dise, n. [F. marchandise, OF. marcheandise.] 1. The objects of commerce; whatever is usually bought or sold in trade, or market, or by merchants; wares; goods; commodities. Spenser. [1913 Webster] 2. The act or business of trading;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Merchandise — Mer chan*dise, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Merchandised}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Merchandising}.] To trade; to carry on commerce. Bacon. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
merchandise — I noun articles, articles of commerce, assets, belongings, capital goods, cargo, chattel, commodities, consumer durables, consumer goods, contents, effects, freight, goods, goods for sale, items for sale, line, line of goods, manufactured goods,… … Law dictionary
merchandise — is spelt ise (and normally pronounced iyz) for both the noun and the verb. In AmE, the verb is often spelt with a final ize … Modern English usage
merchandise — ► NOUN ▪ goods for sale. ► VERB (also merchandize) ▪ promote the sale of. DERIVATIVES merchandiser noun. ORIGIN from Old French marchand merchant … English terms dictionary
merchandise — [mʉr′chən dīz΄; ] for n., also [, mʉr′chəndīs΄] n. [ME marchandise < OFr < marchant: see MERCHANT] 1. things bought and sold; goods; commodities; wares 2. Obs. buying and selling; trade vt., vi. merchandised, merchandising 1. to … English World dictionary
merchandise — goods that may be sold or traded. Glossary of Business Terms All movable goods such as cars, textiles, appliances, etc. and f.o.b. means free on board. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary * * * ▪ I. merchandise mer‧chan‧dise 1 [ˈmɜːtʆndaɪz, daɪs ǁ… … Financial and business terms
Merchandise — All movable goods such as cars, textiles, appliances, etc. and f.o.b. means free on board. The New York Times Financial Glossary * * * ▪ I. merchandise mer‧chan‧dise 1 [ˈmɜːtʆndaɪz, daɪs ǁ ˈmɜːr ] noun [uncountable] formal COMMERCE goods that… … Financial and business terms
merchandise — n. 1) to buy, purchase; order merchandise 2) to hawk, sell merchandise 3) to ship merchandise 4) to carry (a line of) merchandise 5) assorted; first class, high quality; general merchandise * * * [ mɜːtʃ(ə)ndaɪz] first class general merchandise… … Combinatory dictionary