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1 persistance
persistance [pεʀsistɑ̃s]feminine noun* * *pɛʀsistɑ̃snom féminin persistence* * *pɛʀsistɑ̃s nf* * *persistance nf persistence; ta persistance à vouloir faire your persistent attempts to do; avec persistance persistently; ta persistance à nier l'évidence or les faits your persistent denial of the facts.persistance optique Physiol persistence of vision.[pɛrsistɑ̃s] nom féminin1. [de quelque chose] persistencepersistance du mauvais temps sur tout le territoire demain bad weather will continue in all areas tomorrow2. [de quelqu'un - dans le travail] persistence, perseverance, tenacity ; [ - dans le refus] obdurateness (soutenu), obstinacy, stubbornnessje ne comprends pas sa persistance à vouloir partir ce soir I don't understand why he persists in wanting to leave tonightavec persistance locution adverbiale -
2 Extremism
Compared to most of its European neighbours, France is a country with a surprising level of tolerance of extremism. For instance, in the first round of the 2002 Presidential elections, virtually a third of all votes cast went to an extremist candidate in the first round of voting, on a turnout of 71% of the electorate. Almost 20% of votes went to the extreme right-wing Front National or ex-FN candidates, and 13.81% was split among four trotskyist or communist candidates. While this can be seen in part as a form of protest vote, or lack of confidence in mainstream political parties, it also illustrates the degree to which France remains a polarised society.Extremism has long historic roots in France, going back to absolutism and the collaboration of the Vichy régime on the one hand, and the excesses of the French Revolution on the other. However its current vigour can also be attributed to the fact that mainstream political parties in modern France, on the left and on the right, have done their bit to strenghten the position of extremist parties. Conservative parties have a long history of assimilating centre-left and socialist parties with the Communists and other far-left parties, while the Socialists have persistently sought to make political capital by portraying the mainstream conservative parties as the natural bedfellows of the far right. The paradoxical result has been to give credence and respectability to extremist parties and leaders such as Jean Marie Le Pen of the National Front, or Arlette Laguiller of Lutte Ouvrière.Furthermore, in their keenness to demonstrate even-handedness, French television stations and the media have persistently given coverage to charismatic politicians of the left and the right, turning people such as Le Pen, Laguiller or more recently Olivier Besancenot, into popular chat-show guests.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Extremism
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3 dévisager
dévisager [devizaʒe]➭ TABLE 3 transitive verb* * *devizaʒe* * *devizaʒe vt* * *dévisager verb table: manger vtr to stare at [personne]; dévisager qn avec insistance to stare hard at sb.[devizaʒe] verbe transitif -
4 obstinément
obstinément [ɔpstinemɑ̃]adverb* * *ɔpstinemɑ̃adverbe obstinately* * *ɔpstinemɑ̃ adv* * *obstinément adv obstinately.[ɔpstinemɑ̃] adverbel'enfant tenait obstinément à rester avec sa mère the child was obstinately ou doggedly determined to stay with his mother -
5 opiniâtrement
opiniâtrement adv doggedly.[ɔpinjatrəmɑ̃] adverbe -
6 persister
persister [pεʀsiste]➭ TABLE 1 intransitive verb• je persiste à croire que... I still believe that...* * *pɛʀsisteverbe intransitif1) ( durer) [symptôme, douleur] to persist; [mauvais temps, inflation] to continue; [doute, problème] to remain; [odeur] to linger2) ( s'obstiner)je persiste à croire que... — I still think that...
••il persiste et signe — (colloq) he's sticking to his guns (colloq)
* * *pɛʀsiste vi* * *persister verb table: aimer vi1 ( durer) [symptôme, douleur] to persist; [mauvais temps, inflation, pénurie] to continue; [doute, problème] to remain; [odeur] to linger; le mauvais temps persistera sur la Bretagne the bad weather will continue in Brittany;2 ( s'obstiner) persister dans son erreur/sa tentative to persist in one's error/attempt; persister dans son refus or à refuser to continue to refuse; je persiste à croire que… I still believe that…; persister dans le mensonge to lie persistently; persister dans son opinion to stick to one's opinion; ils persistent dans leur intention de sortir par ce mauvais temps they still insist on going out in this bad weather; je persiste à vouloir les embaucher I still insist on employing them.il persiste et signe○ he's sticking to his guns○.[pɛrsiste] verbe intransitif2. [s'obstiner]persister dans une attitude to continue with ou to maintain an attitude3. DROIT -
7 ramener
ramener [ʀam(ə)ne]➭ TABLE 51. transitive verba. [+ personne] to bring back ; [+ paix, ordre] to restoreb. ( = tirer) il a ramené la couverture sur lui he pulled the blanket up• ramener ses cheveux sur son front/en arrière to brush one's hair forward/backc. ( = faire revenir à) ramener à to bring back to• ramener à la vie [+ personne] to revived. ( = réduire à) ramener à to reduce to• ramener l'inflation à moins de 3% to bring inflation back down to below 3%e. (locutions) la ramener (inf!) ramener sa fraise (inf!) ( = protester) to kick up a fuss ; ( = intervenir) to interfere2. reflexive verb* * *ʀamne
1.
1) ( réduire)ramener l'inflation à 5% — to reduce inflation to 5 per cent
ramener quelque chose à de justes proportions or à sa juste mesure — to get something into proportion
2) ( faire revenir) to restore [ordre, paix]ramener quelqu'un à la vie or à soi — to bring somebody round
ramener quelqu'un à la raison — to bring somebody to his/her senses
3) ( reconduire) to take [somebody/something] backramener quelqu'un en voiture — to give somebody a lift GB ou ride US home
4) ( faire rentrer) to bring [somebody/something] back5) ( rapporter) to bring back [pain, photos, maladie] (de from); to return [objet prêté]; to win [médaille, titre]6) ( déplacer)‘ramener les genoux vers le menton’ — ‘draw your knees up to your chin’
ramener ses cheveux en arrière — ( avec un peigne) to comb one's hair back; ( avec la main) to sweep one's hair back
2.
se ramener verbe pronominal1) ( être réductible)se ramener à — to come down to, to boil down to
2) (sl) ( venir) to come over••la ramener — (sl) ( intervenir intempestivement) to stick one's oar in (colloq); ( se vanter avec ostentation) to show off (colloq)
* * *ʀam(ə)ne vt1) (= rapporter) to bring backJe t'ai ramené un souvenir de Grèce. — I've brought you back a present from Greece.
2) (= reconduire) to take backramener qn à la raison [homme] — to bring sb to his senses, [femme] to bring sb to her senses
Nous n'avons pas réussi à le ramener à la raison. — We couldn't bring him to his senses.
3) (= rabattre) [couverture, visière]4) (= réduire)Ils ont ramené la durée du mandat de sept à cinq ans. — They reduced the length of the mandate from seven to five years.
Il ramène systématiquement le problème à une question d'argent. — He persistently brings the problem back to a question of money.
* * *ramener verb table: leverA vtr1 ( réduire) ramener l'inflation à 5% to reduce inflation to 5 per cent; ramener les impôts au-dessous de 30% to reduce taxation to below 30 per cent; ramener qch de 10%/20 personnes/30 euros à to reduce sth from 10%/20 people/30 euros to; ramener la semaine de travail de 39 à 32 heures to reduce the working week from 39 to 32 hours; ramener qch à de justes proportions or à sa juste mesure to get sth into proportion;2 ( faire revenir) ramener qn/qch à to bring sb/sth back to; ramener qn à la réalité to bring sb back to reality; ramener qn à l'obéissance to bring sb back into line; ramener les prix à leur niveau antérieur to restore prices to their previous levels; ramener l'ordre/la paix/le calme to restore order/peace/calm; ramener qn à de bons or meilleurs sentiments to put sb into a better frame of mind; ramener qn sur terre to bring sb down to earth; ramener qn à la vie or à soi to bring sb round; ramener qn à la raison to bring sb to his/her senses; ramener toujours tout à soi always to relate everything to oneself;3 ( reconduire) to take [sb/sth] back; ramener qn à la maison to take sb home; l'avion qui les ramenait s'est écrasé the plane which was taking them back crashed; ramener un malade à l'hôpital to take a patient back to hospital; ramener qn en voiture to give sb a lift GB ou ride US home; ramener un fugitif en prison to take an escapee back to prison;4 ( faire rentrer) to bring [sb/sth] back; j'attends qu'on ramène ma sœur/voiture I'm waiting for my sister/car to be brought back; ramener qn sur la Terre to bring sb back to Earth;5 ( rapporter) to bring back [pain, souvenir, photos, maladie] (de from); to return [objet prêté]; to win [médaille, titre]; ramener un cadeau de Paris to bring back a gift from Paris; ramener des livres à la bibliothèque to return books to the library; ramener qch dans ses bagages fig to bring back sth from one's trip [accord, expérience];6 ( déplacer) ramener les genoux vers le menton draw your knees up to your chin; ramener la farine des bords vers le centre draw the flour into the centreGB from around the edge; ramener ses cheveux en arrière/sur le côté ( avec un peigne) to comb one's hair back/to the side; ( avec la main) to sweep one's hair back/to the side; ramener son manteau sur ses genoux to pull one's coat over one's knees; ramener sa couverture sur son menton to pull one's blanket up to one's chin.B se ramener vpr1 ( être réductible) se ramener à to come down to, to boil down to; se ramener à une question d'argent to come ou boil down to a question of money;la ramener○ ( intervenir intempestivement) to stick one's oar in○; ( se vanter avec ostentation) to show off○.[ramne] verbe transitif1. [personne, véhicule - au point de départ] to take back (separable) ; [ - à soi] to bring back (separable)a. [chez vous] shall I give you a lift home?b. [à votre point de départ] shall I give you a lift back?ramener à [un endroit] to take back to2. [rapporter]4. [placer]5. [faire revenir]ramener à: ramener le débat au sujet principal to lead ou to steer the discussion back to the main subjectce qui nous ramène au problème de... which brings us back to the problem of...ramener la conversation à ou sur quelque chose to bring the conversation back (round) to somethingramener quelqu'un à la vie to bring somebody back to life, to revive somebody6. [réduire]cela ramène le problème à sa dimension financière it reduces the problem to its purely financial aspectsramener tout à soi to bring everything back to ou to relate everything to oneself7. (locution)la ramener, ramener sa fraisea. (familier) [vouloir s'imposer] to stick one's oar inb. [faire l'important] to show off————————se ramener verbe pronominal intransitif(familier) [arriver] to turn ou to show upramène-toi en vitesse! come on, hurry up!————————se ramener à verbe pronominal plus préposition[se réduire à] to boil down totoute l'affaire se ramenait finalement à une querelle de famille in the end the whole business boiled down to ou was nothing more than a family quarrel -
8 soie
n. f.1. Péter dans la soie (also: coucher dans des draps de soie): To 'lead the life of Riley', to 'live it up', to have an opulent lifestyle.2. Avoir quelque chose sur la soie: To be burdened with a problem. Il m'est tombé un de ces pataquès sur la soie! You'll never believe the shit I've landed myself in!3. Avoir quelqu'un sur la soie: To have someone 'on one's back', to be persistently tracked down by someone. Depuis quinze jours il a les mecs du fisc sur la soie: For a fortnight, I think he's had the Inland Revenue on him! -
9 traînard
n. m.1. Straggler, one who persistently lags behind.2. Ramasser (also: faire) un traînard: To 'come a cropper', to fall flat on one's face. (This expression is only encountered with the literal meaning of falling down.) -
10 Free.fr
The second biggest French Internet service provider after Orange (France Télécom), Free has been a pioneer in the world of Internet since its launch in 1999. It was one of the first ISPs to offer Internet dial-up access without the use of a premium rate number, and one of the first to offerADSL broadband. If not the cheapest, Free has persistently offered Internet packages at very competitive rates; in 2003 it was the first ISP to include free national telephone services by VoIP. Free international calls began in 2005, as did free television for subscribers with unbundled access. In 2008, about 3 million customers were using Free's broadband packages, representing a market share of slightly under 20%. Free is traded on the Paris stock exchange under the name of its parent company Iliad SA.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Free.fr
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11 puisage des eaux souterraines
добыча подземных вод
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[ http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]EN
groundwater extraction
The process, deliberate or inadvertent, of extracting ground water from a source at a rate so in excess of the replenishment that the ground water level declines persistently, threatening exhaustion of the supply or at least a decline of pumping levels to uneconomic depths. (Source: BJGEO)
[http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]Тематики
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Франко-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > puisage des eaux souterraines
См. также в других словарях:
Persistently — Per*sist ent*ly, adv. In a persistent manner. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
persistently — [[t]pə(r)sɪ̱stəntli[/t]] 1) ADV GRADED: ADV with v, ADV adj If something happens persistently, it happens again and again or for a long time. The allegations have been persistently denied by ministers... People with rail season tickets will get… … English dictionary
persistently — adv. Persistently is used with these verbs: ↑repeat … Collocations dictionary
persistently — persistent ► ADJECTIVE 1) persisting or having a tendency to persist. 2) continuing or recurring; prolonged. 3) Botany & Zoology (of a horn, leaf, etc.) remaining attached instead of falling off in the normal manner. DERIVATIVES persistence noun… … English terms dictionary
persistently — adverb 1. in a persistent manner (Freq. 1) he was asking questions, unavoidable questions, persistently... • Derived from adjective: ↑persistent 2. with persistence (Freq. 1) • Derived from adjective: ↑persistent … Useful english dictionary
persistently — adverb see persistent … New Collegiate Dictionary
persistently — See persistent. * * * … Universalium
persistently — adverb In a persistent manner … Wiktionary
persistently — Synonyms and related words: and night, assiduously, bec et ongles, chronically, committedly, day after day, decidedly, decisively, determinedly, devotedly, diligently, doggedly, earnestly, enduringly, faithfully, firmly, fixedly, for an age, for… … Moby Thesaurus
persistently — pÉ™(r) sɪstÉ™ntlɪ adv. stubbornly; diligently; industriously … English contemporary dictionary
persistently — per·sist·ent·ly … English syllables