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21 line up
1) ( side by side) se mettre en rang; ( one behind the other) se mettre en file2) ( take sides)line up [somebody], line [somebody] up ( in row) faire s'aligner; line [something] up, line up [something]4) ( organize) sélectionner [team]to have somebody/something lined up — avoir quelqu'un/quelque chose en vue [work, candidate]
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22 manage
manage [ˈmænɪdʒ]a. [+ business, hotel, shop, time, capital] gérer ; [+ organization] diriger ; [+ football team, boxer, actors] être le manager deb. ( = handle) [+ boat, vehicle] manœuvrer ; [+ animal, person] savoir s'y prendre avecc. ( = succeed) to manage to do sth arriver à faire qch• how did you manage not to spill it? comment as-tu fait pour ne pas le renverser ?d. how much will you give? -- I can manage £50 combien allez-vous donner ? -- je peux mettre 50 livres• surely you could manage another biscuit? tu mangeras bien encore un biscuit ?• can you manage the suitcases? pouvez-vous porter les valises ?( = get by) se débrouiller• can you manage? tu y arriveras ?• thanks, I can manage merci, ça va• she manages on $100 a week elle se débrouille avec 100 dollars par semaine* * *['mænɪdʒ] 1.transitive verb1) ( succeed)to manage to do — réussir à faire, se débrouiller (colloq) pour faire
he managed to offend everybody — iron il a réussi à froisser tout le monde
2) ( find possible)3) ( administer) diriger, administrer [project, finances]; diriger [organization]; gérer [business, shop, hotel, estate]4) ( organize) gérer [money, time]5) ( handle) savoir s'y prendre avec [person, animal]; manier [tool, boat]2.intransitive verb se débrouiller (colloq) -
23 nationally
nationally [ˈnæ∫nəlɪ][distribute] dans l'ensemble du pays ; [broadcast] sur l'ensemble du pays ; [organize] à l'échelon national* * *['næʃnəlɪ]1) ( at national level) à l'échelon national2) ( nationwide) [broadcast, enforce, employ, distribute] sur l'ensemble du pays; [known, respected, available] dans tout le pays -
24 put
put [pʊt]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━3. compounds━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► vb: pret, ptp put━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► For set combinations consisting of put + noun, eg put out of business, put an end to, look up the noun. For put + preposition/adverb combinations, see also phrasal verbs.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━a. ( = place) mettre► to put + on• he put me on the train il m'a accompagné au train► to put + over• he put his head round the door il a passé la tête par la porte► to put + throughc. ( = rank) placerd. ( = express) dire• how shall I put it? comment dire ?• let me put it this way... disons que...e. ( = suggest) I put it to you that... n'est-il pas vrai que... ?f. ( = submit) [+ case, problem, opinion, suggestion] présenter ; [+ proposal] soumettre ; [+ question] poser• he put the arguments for and against the project il a présenté les arguments pour et contre le projetg. ( = cause to be) mettre• to put sb in a good/bad mood mettre qn de bonne/mauvaise humeurh. ( = invest)► to put + intoi. ( = estimate)► to put + at estimer• they put the loss at £10,000 ils estiment à 10 000 livres la perte subie• the population was put at 50,000 la population a été estimée à 50 000 habitants3. compounds( = feigned) affectéa. [+ rumour] faire courir( = communicate) [+ ideas, intentions, desires] faire comprendre• he knows his stuff but he can't put it across il connaît son sujet à fond mais il n'arrive pas à transmettre son savoir► put aside separable transitive verba. [+ object, food, money] mettre de côtéa. ( = put in proper place) [+ clothes, toys, books] rangerb. (Sport) [+ ball] mettre au fond des filetsa. ( = replace) remettre en place• put it back! remets-le à sa place !b. ( = retard) retarder[+ money] mettre de côté► put down[aircraft, pilot] se posera. [+ parcel, book, child] poser ; [+ passenger] déposer• put it down! pose ça !• he put down £500 on the car il a versé 500 livres d'arrhes pour la voiturec. ( = suppress) [+ revolt, movement] réprimere. ( = record) noterf. (British = have destroyed) [+ dog, cat] faire piquer ; [+ horse] faire abattre► put down as separable transitive verb( = consider, assess) considérer comme• I had put him down as a complete fool je le considérais comme un parfait imbécile► put down to separable transitive verb( = attribute) mettre sur le compte• I put it down to his inexperience je mets ça sur le compte de son inexpérience► put forth separable transitive verb[+ idea, proposal] émettre[ship] mouiller (at dans le port de)• have you put in the camera? ( = pack) est-ce que tu as pris l'appareil photo ?b. ( = insert) [+ word, paragraph] ajouter ; [+ remark] glisserc. ( = submit) to put in a request for sth faire une demande de qchd. ( = install) [+ political party] élire ; [+ central heating, double glazing] faire installere. ( = spend) [+ time] passerf. ( = work) travailler• can you put in a few hours at the weekend? pourrais-tu travailler quelques heures ce week-end ?► put in for inseparable transitive verb[+ job] poser sa candidature à ; [+ promotion] demanderb. ( = discourage) dissuader ; ( = repel) dégoûter• the failure may put them off trying again il est possible que cet échec les dissuade d'essayer à nouveau• the divorce figures don't seem to put people off marriage les statistiques de divorce ne semblent pas dégoûter les gens du mariagec. ( = distract) talking in the audience put him off les bavardages de l'auditoire le déconcentraienta. [+ clothes, glasses, lotion] mettreb. ( = increase) [+ speed] augmenterc. ( = assume) [+ air, accent] prendre• to put it on ( = pretend) faire semblantd. ( = deceive) faire marcher (inf)e. ( = organize) organiser ; [+ extra train, bus] mettre en serviceg. ( = switch on) allumer ; [+ tape, CD, music] mettreh. ( = begin to cook) I'll just put the potatoes on je vais juste mettre les pommes de terre à cuire• a fellow journalist put me onto the story c'est un collègue journaliste qui m'a mis sur l'affaire (inf)• what put you onto it? qu'est-ce qui vous en a donné l'idée ?► put out[ship] to put out to sea quitter le porta. ( = put outside) [+ rubbish] sortir ; ( = expel) [+ person] expulserb. ( = stretch out) [+ arm, leg] allonger ; [+ foot] avancer ; [+ tongue] tirer ; [+ shoots] produirec. ( = lay out in order) étalerd. ( = extinguish) éteindree. ( = make unconscious) endormirf. ( = inconvenience) déranger• the government will put out a statement about it le gouvernement va faire une déclaration à ce sujeth. ( = broadcast) passeri. to put out to tender [+ contract, service] mettre en adjudicationj. ( = dislocate) [+ shoulder, back] se démettre• a knee injury put him out of the first two games une blessure au genou l'a empêché de jouer les deux premiers matchs► put over separable transitive verb= put acrossa. ( = make) [+ change] effectuer ; [+ plan] mener à bienb. ( = connect) [+ call] passer ; [+ caller] mettre en communication• put me through to Mr Smith passez-moi M. Smithd. ( = make suffer) to put sb through hell mener la vie dure à qn• they really put him through it (inf) ils lui en ont fait voir de dures (inf)► put together separable transitive verb• it's more important than all the other factors put together c'est plus important que tous les autres facteurs confondus• he's worth more than the rest of the family put together à lui tout seul il vaut plus que toute la famille réuniea. ( = raise) [+ hand] lever ; [+ flag] hisser ; [+ tent] monter ; [+ umbrella] ouvrir ; [+ notice] afficher ; [+ picture] accrocher ; [+ building] construire ; [+ fence, barrier] érigerb. ( = increase) augmenter ; [+ prices] faire monter• that puts up the total to over 1,000 cela fait monter le total à plus de 1 000c. ( = offer) [+ proposal] soumettre ; [+ resistance] opposer• he put up a real fight to keep you in your job il s'est vraiment battu pour que tu conserves ton posted. ( = provide) fournir( = incite)* * *[pʊt] 1.1) ( place) mettre [object, person]2) ( cause to go or undergo)to put something through — glisser quelque chose dans [letterbox]; passer quelque chose par [window]
to put somebody through — envoyer quelqu'un à [university, college]; faire passer quelqu'un par [suffering, ordeal]; faire passer [quelque chose] à quelqu'un [test]; faire suivre [quelque chose] à quelqu'un [course]
to put one's hand to — porter la main à [mouth]
3) (devote, invest)to put money/energy into something — investir de l'argent/son énergie dans quelque chose
to put a lot into — s'engager à fond pour [work, project]; sacrifier beaucoup à [marriage]
4) ( add)to put tax/duty on something — taxer/imposer quelque chose
to put a penny on income tax — GB augmenter l'impôt sur le revenu d'un pourcent
5) ( express)6) ( offer for consideration) présenter [point of view, proposal]to put something to — soumettre quelque chose à [meeting, conference, board]
7) (rate, rank) placer8) ( estimate)9) Sport lancer [shot]2.to put oneself in a strong position/in somebody's place — se mettre dans une position de force/à la place de quelqu'un
Phrasal Verbs:- put away- put back- put by- put down- put in- put off- put on- put out- put over- put up- put upon••to put one over ou across GB on somebody — (colloq) faire marcher quelqu'un (colloq)
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25 seating
seating [ˈsi:tɪŋ]• what are the seating arrangements? où va-t-on faire asseoir les gens ? ► seating plan noun (at dinner) plan m de table* * *['siːtɪŋ] 1. 2.noun modifierseating capacity — nombre m de places assises
seating plan — plan m de table
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26 set up
set up ( establish oneself) [business person, trader] s'établirset [something] up, set up [something]1) ( erect) monter [stand, stall]; assembler [equipment, easel]; déplier [deckchair]; ériger [roadblock]; dresser [statue]to set up home ou house — s'installer
2) ( prepare) préparer [experiment]3) (found, establish) créer [business, company]; implanter [factory]; former [group, charity]; constituer [committee]; ouvrir [fund]; lancer [scheme]4) ( start) provoquer [vibration]; susciter [reaction]5) ( organize) organiser [conference, meeting]; mettre [quelque chose] en place [procedures]6) ( in printing) composer [page]set [somebody] up7) ( establish in business)8) (improve one's health, fortune) remettre [quelqu'un] sur pied9) (colloq) GB ( trap) [police] tendre un piège à [criminal]; [colleague, friend] monter un coup contre [person]10) Computing installer, configurerset [oneself] up11) Commerce12) ( claim) -
27 skilfully
skilfully [ˈskɪlfəlɪ]* * *GB, skillfully US ['skɪlfəlɪ] adverb1) ( with ability) [play, write] habilement; [written] de façon habile2) ( with agility) adroitement -
28 sort out
sort [something] out, sort out [something]1) ( resolve) régler [problem, matter]it will take me hours to sort this mess out — il va me falloir des heures pour remettre de l'ordre dans tout ça
2) ( organize) s'occuper de [details, arrangements]; clarifier [ideas]; trouver [replacement]3) (tidy up, put in order) ranger [desk]; classer [files]; mettre de l'ordre dans [finances, affairs]4) ( select) trier5) ( mend) réparersort out [something]6) ( separate)7) ( establish)we're still trying to sort out what happened — nous essayons toujours de comprendre ce qui s'est passé
sort [somebody] out (colloq)8) ( punish) régler son compte à quelqu'un (colloq)9) ( help) aider -
29 throw
throw [θrəʊ]1. noun[of javelin, discus] jet m• it costs $10 a throw (inf) ça coûte 10 dollars à chaque fois• to throw o.s. to the ground se jeter à terrec. ( = put suddenly) jeter• to throw into confusion [+ person] semer la confusion dans l'esprit de ; [+ meeting, group] semer la confusion dans• to throw open [+ door, window] ouvrir tout grand ; [+ house, gardens] ouvrir au public ; [+ competition] ouvrir à tout le monded. [+ switch] actionnere. [+ pottery] tournerf. ( = disconcert) (inf) déconcerter3. compounds► throw about, throw around separable transitive verb• to be thrown about (in boat, bus) être ballotté[+ rubbish] jeter ; [+ one's life, happiness, chance, talents] gâcher► throw in( = give) donner( = get rid of) se libérer de ; [+ cold, infection] se débarrasser deb. ( = make wrong) fausserb. [+ people] réunir (par hasard)► throw up* * *[θrəʊ] 1.1) Sport, Games ( in football) touche f; (of javelin, discus etc) lancer m; (in judo, wrestling etc) jeté m; ( of dice) coup m2) (colloq) ( each)2.CDs £5 a throw! — les compacts à cinq livres (la) pièce!
1) gen, Games, Sport ( project) ( with careful aim) lancer; ( downwards) jeter; ( with violence) projeterto throw a six — ( in dice) faire un six
2) fig ( direct) lancer [punch, question]; jeter [glance, look]; envoyer [kiss]; projeter [image, light, shadow] (on sur); faire [shadow] (on sur)we are ready for all the problems that Europe can throw at us — fig nous somme prêts à affronter tous les problèmes que l'Europe nous pose
to throw suspicion on somebody/something — faire naître des soupçons sur quelqu'un/quelque chose
3) fig ( disconcert) désarçonnerto throw [something/somebody] into confusion ou disarray — semer la confusion dans [meeting, group]; semer la confusion parmi [people]
4) Technology actionner [switch, lever]the operator threw the machine into gear/reverse — l'opérateur a embrayé l'engin/passé la marche arrière
5) (colloq) ( indulge in)to throw a fit — fig piquer une crise (colloq)
6) (colloq) ( organize)to throw a party — faire une fête (colloq)
7) ( in pottery)3. 4.to throw oneself — se jeter ( onto sur)
to throw oneself into — lit se jeter dans; fig se plonger dans
Phrasal Verbs:- throw in- throw on- throw up••it's throwing it down! — (colloq) GB ça dégringole! (colloq)
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30 direct
[di'rekt] 1. adjective1) (straight; following the quickest and shortest way: Is this the most direct route?) direct2) ((of manner etc) straightforward and honest: a direct answer.) franc3) (occurring as an immediate result: His dismissal was a direct result of his rudeness to the manager.) direct4) (exact; complete: Her opinions are the direct opposite of his.) absolu5) (in an unbroken line of descent from father to son etc: He is a direct descendant of Napoleon.) en ligne directe2. verb1) (to point, aim or turn in a particular direction: He directed my attention towards the notice.) diriger2) (to show the way to: She directed him to the station.) indiquer le chemin de3) (to order or instruct: We will do as you direct.) ordonner4) (to control or organize: A policeman was directing the traffic; to direct a film.) diriger•- directional - directive - directly - directness - director - directory -
31 enlist
[in'list]1) (to join an army etc: My father enlisted on the day after war was declared.) (s')engager2) (to obtain the support and help of: He has enlisted George to help him organize the party.) recruter3) (to obtain (support and help) from someone: They enlisted the support of five hundred people for their campaign.) (s')assurer le concours de -
32 form
I 1. [fo:m] noun1) ((a) shape; outward appearance: He saw a strange form in the darkness.) forme, silhouette2) (a kind, type or variety: What form of ceremony usually takes place when someone gets a promotion?) genre3) (a document containing certain questions, the answers to which must be written on it: an application form.) formulaire4) (a fixed way of doing things: forms and ceremonies.) convenances5) (a school class: He is in the sixth form.) classe2. verb1) (to make; to cause to take shape: They decided to form a drama group.) former2) (to come into existence; to take shape: An idea slowly formed in his mind.) prendre forme3) (to organize or arrange (oneself or other people) into a particular order: The women formed (themselves) into three groups.) (s')organiser4) (to be; to make up: These lectures form part of the medical course.) faire partie (de)•- be in good form - in the form of II [fo:m] noun(a long, usually wooden seat: The children were sitting on forms.) banc -
33 get up
1) (to (cause to) get out of bed: I got up at seven o'clock; Get John up at seven o'clock.) se/faire lever2) (to stand up.) (se) lever3) (to increase (usually speed).) prendre (de la vitesse)4) (to arrange, organize or prepare (something): We must get up some sort of celebration for him when he leaves.) organiser -
34 mount
1. verb1) (to get or climb up (on or on to): He mounted the platform; She mounted (the horse) and rode off.) monter2) (to rise in level: Prices are mounting steeply.) monter3) (to put (a picture etc) into a frame, or stick it on to card etc.) monter, coller sur carton4) (to hang or put up on a stand, support etc: He mounted the tiger's head on the wall.) fixer (sur un support)5) (to organize: The army mounted an attack; to mount an exhibition.) monter2. noun1) (a thing or animal that one rides, especially a horse.) monture2) (a support or backing on which anything is placed for display: Would this picture look better on a red mount or a black one?) support•- mounted- Mountie -
35 promote
[prə'məut]1) (to raise (to a higher rank or position): He was promoted to head teacher.) promouvoir2) (to encourage, organize, or help the progress of: He worked hard to promote peace / this scheme.) pro- mouvoir3) (to encourage the buying of; to advertise: We are promoting a new brand of soap-powder.) promouvoir•- promoter- promotion -
36 regiment
1. ['re‹imənt] noun(a body of soldiers commanded by a colonel.) régiment2. [-ment] verb(to organize or control (people) very strictly: Children in schools are no longer regimented as they used to be.) enrégimenter- regimental -
37 reorganise
(to organize differently; to put in a different order: We'll have to reorganize our filing system.) réorganiser- reorganisation -
38 reorganize
(to organize differently; to put in a different order: We'll have to reorganize our filing system.) réorganiser- reorganisation -
39 run
1. present participle - running; verb1) ((of a person or animal) to move quickly, faster than walking: He ran down the road.) courir2) (to move smoothly: Trains run on rails.) marcher, rouler3) ((of water etc) to flow: Rivers run to the sea; The tap is running.) couler4) ((of a machine etc) to work or operate: The engine is running; He ran the motor to see if it was working.) marcher, fonctionner5) (to organize or manage: He runs the business very efficiently.) diriger6) (to race: Is your horse running this afternoon?) courir7) ((of buses, trains etc) to travel regularly: The buses run every half hour; The train is running late.) assurer le service8) (to last or continue; to go on: The play ran for six weeks.) tenir l'affiche9) (to own and use, especially of cars: He runs a Rolls Royce.) avoir10) ((of colour) to spread: When I washed my new dress the colour ran.) déteindre11) (to drive (someone); to give (someone) a lift: He ran me to the station.) conduire12) (to move (something): She ran her fingers through his hair; He ran his eyes over the letter.) passer13) ((in certain phrases) to be or become: The river ran dry; My blood ran cold (= I was afraid).) devenir2. noun1) (the act of running: He went for a run before breakfast.) course2) (a trip or drive: We went for a run in the country.) promenade3) (a length of time (for which something continues): He's had a run of bad luck.) période4) (a ladder (in a stocking etc): I've got a run in my tights.) échelle5) (the free use (of a place): He gave me the run of his house.) entière disposition6) (in cricket, a batsman's act of running from one end of the wicket to the other, representing a single score: He scored/made 50 runs for his team.) poulailler7) (an enclosure or pen: a chicken-run.)•- runner- running 3. adverb(one after another; continuously: We travelled for four days running.) d'affilée- runny- runaway - rundown - runner-up - runway - in - out of the running - on the run - run across - run after - run aground - run along - run away - run down - run for - run for it - run in - run into - run its course - run off - run out - run over - run a temperature - run through - run to - run up - run wild -
40 stage
I 1. [stei‹] noun(a raised platform especially for performing or acting on, eg in a theatre.) scène2. verb1) (to prepare and produce (a play etc) in a theatre etc: This play was first staged in 1928.) mettre en scène2) (to organize (an event etc): The protesters are planning to stage a demonstration.) organiser•- staging- stage direction - stage fright - stagehand - stage manager - stagestruck II [stei‹]1) (a period or step in the development of something: The plan is in its early stages; At this stage, we don't know how many survivors there are.) stade2) (part of a journey: The first stage of our journey will be the flight to Singapore.) étape3) (a section of a bus route.) section4) (a section of a rocket.) étage•
См. также в других словарях:
organize — or‧gan‧ize [ˈɔːgənaɪz ǁ ˈɔːr ] also organise verb 1. [transitive] to plan and arrange an event or other activity: • Publishers, writers and booksellers are joining forces to organize alternative distribution networks. 2. [transitive] to arrange… … Financial and business terms
organize — [ôr′gə nīz΄] vt. organized, organizing [ME organyzen < ML organizare < L organum: see ORGAN] 1. to provide with an organic structure; esp., a) to arrange in an orderly way [to organize files] b) to make into a whole with unified and… … English World dictionary
organize — or·ga·nize vb nized, niz·ing vt 1 a: to set up an administrative structure for b: to persuade to associate in an organization (as a union) 2: to arrange by systematic planning and united effort organize a strike vi: to form an orga … Law dictionary
Organize — Or gan*ize, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Organized}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Organizing}.] [Cf. F. organiser, Gr. ?. See {Organ}.] 1. (Biol.) To furnish with organs; to give an organic structure to; to endow with capacity for the functions of life; as, an… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
organize — (Amer.) or·gan·ize || É”rgÉ™naɪz / É”Ëg v. arrange, order, systematize; establish, set up; unite; coordinate something; orchestrate, manage; unionize, form a union; organize into a labor union (also organise) … English contemporary dictionary
organize — (v.) early 15c., from M.Fr. organiser or directly from M.L. organizare, from L. organum instrument, organ (see ORGAN (Cf. organ)). Related: ORGANIZED (Cf. Organized); organizing … Etymology dictionary
organize — 1 systematize, methodize, *order, arrange, marshal Analogous words: design, project, plan, scheme (see under PLAN n): form, fashion, shape, *make Antonyms: disorganize 2 institute, *found, establish Analogous words: *begin, commence, start,… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
organize — [v] arrange, systematize adapt, adjust, be responsible for, catalogue, classify, codify, combine, compose, constitute, construct, coordinate, correlate, create, dispose, establish, fashion, fit, form, formulate, frame, get going*, get together,… … New thesaurus
organize — (also organise) ► VERB 1) arrange systematically; order. 2) Brit. make arrangements or preparations for. 3) form (people) into a trade union or other political group. DERIVATIVES organizer noun. ORIGIN Latin organizare, from organum in … English terms dictionary
organize — [[t]ɔ͟ː(r)gənaɪz[/t]] ♦♦ organizes, organizing, organized (in BRIT, also use organise) 1) VERB If you organize an event or activity, you make sure that the necessary arrangements are made. [V n] In the end, we all decided to organize a concert… … English dictionary
organize — or|gan|ize W2S1 also organise BrE [ˈo:gənaız US ˈo:r ] v 1.) [T] to make the necessary arrangements so that an activity can happen effectively ▪ The course was organized by a training company. ▪ Students need to learn how to organize their work.… … Dictionary of contemporary English