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1 optimism
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2 optimism
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3 optimism
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4 optimism
['optimizəm](a state of mind in which one always hopes or expects that something good will happen: Even when it was obvious to the others that he was not going to succeed he was full of optimism.) optimisme- optimist- optimistic - optimistically -
5 optimism
xxxoptimisme m -
6 to err on the side of optimism
Pol. pécher par excès d'optimismeEnglish-French dictionary of law, politics, economics & finance > to err on the side of optimism
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7 naive optimism
optimisme naïf; angélismeEnglish-French dictionary of law, politics, economics & finance > naive optimism
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8 ecological optimism
English-French dictionary of Geography > ecological optimism
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9 unfailing
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10 wither
wither ['wɪðə(r)](a) (flower, plant) se flétrir, se faner; (body → from age) se ratatiner; (→ from sickness) s'atrophier;∎ figurative to wither on the vine (project) ne rien donner, ne pas aboutir;∎ this new initiative must not be allowed to wither on the vine il ne faut pas que cette nouvelle initiative finisse par tomber dans l'oubli∎ without the steel industry the region will simply wither and die sans l'industrie sidérurgique, la région va mourir lentement;∎ the party gradually withered and died le parti s'est peu à peu éteint∎ figurative to wither sb with a look foudroyer qn du regard -
11 cause
cause [kɔ:z]1. nouncause f• to cause damage/an accident causer des dégâts/un accident• a few fans were determined to cause trouble quelques supporters étaient décidés à semer la pagaille* * *[kɔːz] 1.1) ( reason) cause f, raison f (of de)there is/he has cause for concern/optimism — il y a/il a des raisons de s'inquiéter/d'être optimiste
2) ( objective) cause f4) Law ( court action) action f2.transitive verb causer, occasionner [damage, grief, problem]; provoquer [chaos, delay, controversy, reaction]; susciter [excitement, surprise]; entraîner [suffering]; amener [dismay, confusion]to cause somebody to cry/leave — faire pleurer/partir quelqu'un
to cause cancer/migraine — donner or provoquer un cancer/la migraine
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12 cautious
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13 cheerful
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14 cold
cold [kəʊld]1. adjectivea. froid• to pour cold water on [+ optimism] tempérer• he's a cold fish! (inf) qu'est-ce qu'il est froid !2. nouna. (in temperature) froid m• don't go out in this cold! ne sors pas par ce froid !b. ( = illness) rhume m3. compounds► cold-blooded adjective [animal] à sang froid ; [person] insensible ; [murder, attack] commis de sang-froid• to put into cold storage [+ food] mettre en chambre froide ; [+ idea, book, scheme] mettre de côté ► cold store noun entrepôt m frigorifique• to go cold turkey ( = stop) arrêter la drogue d'un seul coup ; ( = suffer withdrawal symptoms) être en manque ► the cold war noun la guerre froide* * *[kəʊld] 1.1) [U] ( chilliness) froid mto feel the cold — être sensible au froid, être frileux/-euse
to come in from ou out of the cold — lit se mettre à l'abri du froid; fig rentrer en grâce
to be left out in the cold — fig être isolé
2) [C] Medicine rhume m2.to have a cold — être enrhumé, avoir un rhume
1) ( chilly) froid; fig [colour, light] froidto be ou feel cold — [person] avoir froid
it's ou the weather's cold — il fait froid
to go cold — [food, water] se refroidir
to keep something cold — tenir [quelque chose] au frais [food]
2) ( unemotional) [manner, logic] froidto be cold to ou towards somebody — être froid avec quelqu'un
3) ( unconscious)3.to knock somebody out cold — assommer quelqu'un, mettre quelqu'un KO (colloq)
1) (colloq) ( without preparation) [speak, perform] à froid (colloq)2) US ( thoroughly) [learn, know] par cœur••to have ou get cold feet — avoir les jetons (colloq)
to be as cold as ice — [feet] être gelé; [room] être glacial
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15 diminish
diminish [dɪˈmɪnɪ∫][+ strength, power, effect] diminuer ; [+ numbers, cost, speed] réduire ; [+ enthusiasm, optimism] tempérer* * *[dɪ'mɪnɪʃ] 1.transitive verb1) ( reduce) diminuer2) ( weaken) amoindrir [influence, strength]; diminuer [emotion]3) ( denigrate) dénigrer4) Music diminuer2.1) ( decrease) diminuer2) ( weaken) [emotion] s'amenuiser; [influence, strength] s'amoindrir -
16 diminished
diminished [dɪˈmɪnɪ∫t][strength, power] amoindri ; [capacity, cost, numbers, resources] réduit ; [enthusiasm, optimism] tempéré ; [reputation] terni* * *[dɪ'mɪnɪʃd]1) [amount, enthusiasm, level] réduit; [awareness, support] amoindri2) Law3) Music diminué -
17 ground
I.ground1 [graʊnd]1. noun• to lie/sit on the ground se coucher/s'asseoir par terre• to run o.s. into the ground with work s'épuiser au travailc. ( = area for special purpose) terrain m2. plural nounb. ( = gardens) parc mc. ( = reason) motif m• there are grounds for believing that... il y a lieu de penser que...• the latest figures give us grounds for optimism les derniers chiffres nous permettent d'être optimistes• on personal/medical grounds pour (des) raisons personnelles/médicales• on what grounds? à quel titre ?• on the grounds that... en raison du fait que...a. [+ plane, pilot] interdire de voler à ; ( = keep on ground) retenir au solb. [+ teenager] (inf) priver de sortiec. [+ ship] faire s'échouer4. compounds• we can't change the ground rules at this stage on ne peut pas changer les règles du jeu maintenant ► ground staff noun personnel m au solII.ground2 [graʊnd]1. verbpast tense, past participle of grind2. adjective[coffee, spices] moulu3. compounds* * *[graʊnd] 1. 2.1) ( surface underfoot) sol m, terre fto get off the ground — [plane] décoller; fig [idea] prendre fig
to prepare the ground — fig ouvrir la voie ( for à)
to clear the ground — lit, fig déblayer le terrain
2) (area, territory) lit, fig terrain mto cover a lot of ground — lit faire beaucoup de chemin; fig avancer beaucoup
to break fresh ou new ground — innover
on dangerous ground — ( in discussion) sur un terrain miné; ( in dealings) dans une position délicate
3) gen, Sport ( for specific activity) terrain m4) ( reason) gen, Law motifs mpl, raisons fpl5) fig (in contest, discussion)to gain ground — gagner du terrain (on, over sur)
to lose ground — perdre du terrain (to au profit de)
to give ground — céder du terrain (to devant; on, over au niveau de)
to hold ou stand (one's) ground — tenir bon
to shift one's ground — fig changer son fusil d'épaule (on au sujet de)
6) US Electricity terre f7) Art fond m3.grounds plural noun1) (of house, institution) parc m (of de)private grounds — propriété f privée
2) ( reasons)grounds for — motifs de [divorce, criticism, hope]
4.on (the) grounds of — en raison de [cost, public interest]; pour cause de [adultery, negligence]
ground past participle adjective [coffee, pepper] moulu5.transitive verb1) Aviation immobiliser [aircraft]2) Nautical3) ( base)to ground something on ou in — fonder quelque chose sur
4) (colloq) ( keep in) priver [quelqu'un] de sortie5) US Electricity relier [quelque chose] à la terre••to run somebody/something to ground — dénicher (colloq) quelqu'un/quelque chose
to run ou drive oneself into the ground — s'user au travail
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18 growing
growing [ˈgrəʊɪŋ]1. adjectivea. [child] en pleine croissanceb. [number, friendship, hatred] grandissant2. compounds* * *['grəʊɪŋ] 1.noun Agriculture culture f2.1) ( physically) [child] en pleine croissance; [business] en expansion2) ( increasing) [number, demand] croissant; [pressure, optimism, opposition] grandissant -
19 guarded
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20 hope
hope [həʊp]1. noun• in the hope that... dans l'espoir que...• to lose all hope of sth/of doing perdre tout espoir de qch/de faire• my hope is that... ce que j'espère c'est que...• to hope for money/for success espérer gagner de l'argent/avoir du succès• they were still hoping for a peaceful solution to the crisis ils espéraient toujours trouver une solution pacifique à la crise• it was too much to hope for (that...) ça aurait été trop beau (que... + subj)* * *[həʊp] 1.1) (desire, expectation) espoir m (of de); ( cause for optimism) espoir mto have high hopes of somebody/something — fonder de grands espoirs sur quelqu'un/quelque chose
to be beyond (all) hope —
2) ( chance) chance f, espoir mwhat a hope! — (colloq)
some hope! — (colloq) il ne faut pas rêver!
he hasn't got a hope in hell — (colloq) il n'a pas la moindre chance
3) ( promising person) espoir m2.transitive verb espérer ( that que)it is to be hoped that — il faut espérer que (+ indic)
I only ou just hope he remembers — j'espère seulement qu'il s'en souviendra
3.I (do) hope so/not — j'espère (bien) que oui/que non
intransitive verb espérer••
См. также в других словарях:
Optimism — • A metaphysical theory or an emotional disposition. Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Optimism Optimism † … Catholic encyclopedia
optimism — op‧ti‧mis‧m [ˈɒptmɪzm ǁ ˈɑːp ] noun [uncountable] a feeling or belief that things will get better or be more successful in the future: • There is an air of optimism now in Taiwan. optimism about • Shares gained from renewed optimism about… … Financial and business terms
optimism — OPTIMÍSM s.n. Concepţie filozofică potrivit căreia în lume binele precumpăneşte asupra răului, iar lumea existentă este cea mai bună dintre lumile posibile; atitudine a omului care priveşte cu încredere viaţa şi viitorul; tendinţă de a vedea… … Dicționar Român
Optimism — Op ti*mism, n. [L. optimus the best; akin to optio choice: cf. F. optimisme. See {Option}.] [1913 Webster] 1. (Metaph.) The opinion or doctrine that everything in nature, being the work of God, is ordered for the best, or that the ordering of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
optimism — index confidence (faith), faith, longanimity Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
optimism — (n.) 1759, in translations of Voltaire, from Fr. optimisme (1737), from Mod.L. optimum, used by Leibnitz (in Théodicée, 1710) to mean the greatest good, from L. optimus the best (see OPTIMUM (Cf. optimum)). The doctrine holds that the actual… … Etymology dictionary
optimism — [n] state of having positive beliefs anticipation, assurance, brightness, buoyancy, calmness, certainty, cheer, cheerfulness, confidence, easiness, elation, encouragement, enthusiasm, exhilaration, expectation, good cheer, happiness, hopefulness … New thesaurus
optimism — ► NOUN 1) hopefulness and confidence about the future or success of something. 2) Philosophy the doctrine that this world is the best of all possible worlds. DERIVATIVES optimist noun optimistic adjective optimistically adverb. ORIGIN French… … English terms dictionary
optimism — [äp′tə miz΄əm] n. [Fr optimisme < L optimus, best: see OPTIMUM] 1. Philos. a) the doctrine held by Leibniz and others that the existing world is the best possible b) the doctrine or belief that good ultimately prevails over evil 2. the… … English World dictionary
Optimism — Positive thinking redirects here. For songs of that title, see Positive Thinking. The Oxford English Dictionary defines optimism as having hopefulness and confidence about the future or successful outcome of something; a tendency to take a… … Wikipedia
optimism — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ considerable, great, tremendous (esp. BrE) ▪ sunny (esp. AmE) ▪ some ▪ cautious, guarded … Collocations dictionary