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1 fatal
adjectivea. ( = funeste) [accident, issue, coup] fatal• erreur fatale ! fatal mistake!b. ( = inévitable) inevitablec. ( = marqué par le destin) [instant, heure] fateful* * *fatale fatal adjectif1) ( inévitable) inevitable2) ( désastreux) fatal (à quelqu'un/quelque chose to somebody/something), disastrous (à quelqu'un/quelque chose for somebody/something)3) ( mortel) fatal4) ( fatidique) [moment, jour] fateful* * *fatal adj fatal, -e1) (= aux conséquences funestes) (événement) fateful, (décision, erreur) fatalfatal à — fateful for, fatal to
2) (= mortel) (coup, issue) fatal, deadly3) (= fatidique) (moment) fated4) (= inévitable) inevitable, fatedC'était fatal. — It was fated to happen., It was inevitable.
* * *1 ( inévitable) inevitable; il était fatal que cela se produise it was bound to happen;2 ( désastreux) fatal (à qn/qch to sb/sth), disastrous (à qn/qch for sb/sth);3 ( mortel) fatal; le voyage lui a été/pourrait lui être fatal the journey proved/could be fatal;1. [fixé par le sort] fatefula. [frapper] to deliver a deadly ou mortal blow to4. [inévitable] inevitable -
2 mortel
mortel, -elle [mɔʀtεl]1. adjectivea. ( = qui meurt) mortalb. ( = entraînant la mort) fatal ; [poison] deadlyc. ( = intense) [pâleur, silence, haine] deadly ; [ennemi] mortal• allons, ce n'est pas mortel ! (inf) come on, it won't kill you!2. masculine noun, feminine noun* * *
1.
- elle mɔʀtɛl adjectif1) [coup, maladie, chute] fatal; [poison, dose, gaz] lethal; [venin] deadly; [champignon] deadly poisonous2) [froid, pâleur, silence] deathly; [angoisse, frayeur] mortal3) [ennemi] mortal4) [spectacle, personne, attente] deadly boring5) ( susceptible de mourir) [être] mortal
2.
nom masculin, féminin liter mortal* * *mɔʀtɛl mortel, -le1. adj2) (accident, blessure) fatal3) (danger, frayeur) mortal5) RELIGION (hommes, péché) mortal6) * (= excellent) wicked *2. nm/f* * *A adj1 ( qui provoque la mort) [coup, blessure, accident, chute] fatal; [poison, dose, gaz] lethal; [venin] deadly; [champignon] deadly poisonous; c'est une maladie mortelle it can be fatal; ⇒ plaie;3 ( implacable) [ennemi] mortal;5 ( susceptible de mourir) [être] mortal.1. [qui tue - accident] fatal ; [ - dose, poison] deadly, lethal ; [ - coup, blessure] fatal, lethal, mortal (soutenu) ; [ - maladie] fatalc'est un coup mortel porté à notre petite communauté (figuré) this is a deathblow for our little communitytu as raté l'examen mais ça n'est pas mortel! (familier) you've failed the exam but it's not the end of the world!3. (familier) [ennuyeux] deadly ou excruciatingly boring4. [qui rappelle la mort - pâleur, silence] deathly6. [qui n'est pas éternel] mortal————————, mortelle [mɔrtɛl] nom masculin, nom féminin[être humain] mortal
См. также в других словарях:
strike a mortal blow (to something) — strike/deal/a mortal blow (to something) phrase to completely destroy something This could deal a mortal blow to his credibility. Thesaurus: to destroy or severely damage somethingsynonym Main entry: mortal … Useful english dictionary
deal a mortal blow (to something) — strike/deal/a mortal blow (to something) phrase to completely destroy something This could deal a mortal blow to his credibility. Thesaurus: to destroy or severely damage somethingsynonym Main entry: mortal … Useful english dictionary
blow — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 hard knock that hits sb/sth ADJECTIVE ▪ hard, heavy, nasty, painful, powerful, severe, sharp, stinging, violent … Collocations dictionary
mortal — mor|tal1 [ mɔrtl ] adjective * 1. ) human and not able to live for ever: His heart attack made him realize that he is mortal. a ) mortal remains a dead body ─ opposite IMMORTAL 2. ) serious enough to cause death: a mortal wound/blow/injury a )… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
mortal — I UK [ˈmɔː(r)t(ə)l] / US [ˈmɔrt(ə)l] adjective * 1) human and not able to live for ever His heart attack made him realize that he is mortal. 2) a) serious enough to cause death a mortal wound/blow/injury b) likely to end with someone s death… … English dictionary
mortal — mor|tal1 [ˈmo:tl US ˈmo:rtl] adj [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: Latin mortalis, from mors death ] 1.) not able to live for ever ≠ ↑immortal ▪ Her father s death reminded her that she was mortal. 2.) mortal blow/danger/wound etc a) … Dictionary of contemporary English
mortal — 1 adjective 1 not living for ever: Her father s death reminded her that she was mortal. | mortal creatures opposite immortal (1) 2 mortal blow/injuries/danger etc causing death or likely to cause death: He was dealt a mortal blow in the battle. | … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
Mortal wound — A mortal wound is a very severe and serious injury (almost always a form of penetration or laceration) whether accidental or inflicted intentionally (by either suicide or homicide), which leads directly to the death of the victim. Death need not… … Wikipedia
mortal — 01. He is such a superb athlete that he hardly seems to be in the same class as a mere [mortal] such as myself. 02. She has a [mortal] fear of heights, and even feels nervous standing on a chair. 03. The aliens laughed at us [mortals], saying we… … Grammatical examples in English
blow — blow1 W3S2 [bləu US blou] v past tense blew [blu:] past participle blown [ US bloun] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(wind moving)¦ 2¦(wind moving something)¦ 3¦(air from your mouth)¦ 4¦(make a noise)¦ 5¦(violence)¦ 6¦(lose an opportunity)¦ 7¦(waste money)¦ … Dictionary of contemporary English
mortal — 1. adjective 1) mortal remains all men are mortal Syn: perishable, physical, bodily, corporeal, fleshly, earthly; human, impermanent, transient, ephemeral 2) a mortal blow Syn … Thesaurus of popular words