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41 love
love [lʌv]1. nouna. (for person) amour m► for love• don't give me any money, I'm doing it for love ne me donnez pas d'argent, je le fais parce que ça me fait plaisir• all my love, Jim bises, Jimd. (British term of address) (inf) (to child) mon petit, ma petite ; (to man) mon chéri ; (to woman) ma chérie ; (between strangers) (to man) mon petit monsieur (inf) ; (to woman) ma petite dame (inf)━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► En Grande-Bretagne, ne vous étonnez pas si une vendeuse ou un conducteur d'autobus vous appelle love ou dear - cette manière de s'adresser à des inconnus n'a aucune connotation sexuelle.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━a. [+ person] aimer• he didn't just like her, he loved her il ne l'aimait pas d'amitié, mais d'amour• he loves reading/photography il adore lire/la photographie• I'd love to! (in answer to question) avec plaisir !• I'd love to but unfortunately... j'aimerais bien, malheureusement...• she's going to love that! (sarcastic) elle va être ravie !3. compounds• my loved ones les êtres qui me sont chers ► love handles (inf) plural noun poignées fpl d'amour (inf)• they have a love-hate relationship ils s'aiment et se détestent à la fois ► love letter noun lettre f d'amour* * *[lʌv] 1.1) (affection, devotion) amour mto be/fall in love — être/tomber amoureux/-euse ( with de)
to make love — ( have sex) faire l'amour
2) ( in polite formulas)with love from Bob —
love Bob — affectueusement, Bob
3) ( object of affection) amour mbe a love — (colloq) GB sois gentil
4) GB ( term of address) ( to adult) mon amour m, mon chéri/ma chérie m/f; ( to child) mon chéri/ma chérie m/f5) ( in tennis) zéro m2. 3.transitive verb1) ( feel affection for) aimer2) ( appreciate) aimer beaucoup ( to do faire); ( accepting invitation)‘I'd love to!’ — ‘avec plaisir!’
3) (colloq) ( in exaggerated speech) adorershe'll love that! — iron elle sera vraiment ravie! iron
••there's no love lost between them — ils/elles se détestent cordialement
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42 noise
noise [nɔɪz]bruit m• to make reassuring noises ( = say reassuring things) tenir des propos rassurants* * *[nɔɪz]••to be a big noise (in something) — (colloq) être une grosse légume (de quelque chose) (colloq)
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43 only
only [ˈəʊnlɪ]1. adjective• you're the only one to think of that vous êtes le seul (or la seule) à y avoir pensé• I'm tired! -- you're not the only one! je suis fatigué ! -- vous n'êtes pas le seul !2. adverbne... que• "ladies only" « réservé aux dames »• it's only that I thought he might... c'est que je pensais qu'il pourrait...• only yesterday, he... hier encore il...3. conjunction• I would buy it, only it's too expensive je l'achèterais bien, seulement c'est trop cher4. compounds* * *['əʊnlɪ] 1.conjunction ( but) mais2.1) ( sole) seulthe only one left — le seul/la seule m/f qui reste
the only thing is, I'm broke — (colloq) le seul problème, c'est que je suis fauché (colloq)
2) (best, preferred)3.skiing is the only sport for me — pour moi, aucun sport ne vaut le ski
1) ( exclusively)only in Italy can one... — il n'y a qu'en Italie que l'on peut...
‘men only’ — ‘réservé aux hommes’
‘for external use only’ — ‘usage externe’
2) ( nothing more than)3) ( in expressions of time)4) ( merely)5) ( just)I can only think that Claire did it — la seule explication qui me vienne à l'esprit c'est que c'est Claire qui l'a fait
open up, it's only me — ouvre, c'est moi
4.I got home only to find (that) I'd been burgled — quand je suis rentré à la maison j'ai découvert que j'avais été cambriolé
only just adverbial phrase1) ( very recently)2) ( barely)5.I caught the bus, but only just — j'ai eu le bus mais de justesse
only too adverbial phrase••goodness ou God ou Heaven only knows! — Dieu seul le sait!
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44 pleasant
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45 purely
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46 should
should [∫ʊd]a. ( = ought to)━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• shouldn't you go and see her? est-ce que vous ne devriez pas aller la voir ?what should I do? qu'est-ce que je dois faire ?• should I go too? -- yes you should est-ce que je dois y aller aussi ? -- oui tu devraisb. (past time)━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• he thought I should tell her, so I'm going to il pensait que je devais lui dire, alors je vais le faire━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► When should have implies that something did not happen, it is translated by the conditional of avoir + dû.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► When should have means that something probably has happened, it is translated by the present tense of devoir.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• he should have finished by now ( = probably has) il doit avoir terminé à l'heure qu'il est ; ( = but he hasn't) il aurait dû terminer à l'heure qu'il estc. ( = would)━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► When should has conditional meaning, it is translated by the conditional of the French verb.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• I should go if he invited me s'il m'invitait, j'irais• we should have come if we had known si nous avions su, nous serions venus• will you come? -- I should like to est-ce que vous viendrez ? -- j'aimerais bien• why should he suspect me? pourquoi me soupçonnerait-il ?• how should I know? comment voulez-vous que je le sache ?• he's coming to apologize -- I should think so too! il vient présenter ses excuses -- j'espère bien !• and who should come in but Paul! et devinez qui est entré ? Paul bien sûr !* * *[ʃʊd, ʃəd]1) ( ought to)as it should be — ( in order) en ordre
...which is only as it should be —...ce qui est parfaitement normal
2) ( in conditional sentences)had he asked me, I should have accepted — s'il me l'avait demandé, j'aurais accepté
I don't think it will happen, but if it should... — je ne pense pas que cela arrive, mais si toutefois cela arrivait...
if you should change your mind,... — si vous changez d'avis,...
3) ( expressing purpose)4) ( in polite formulas)5) (expressing opinion, surprise)‘how long?’ - ‘an hour, I should think’ — ‘combien de temps?’ - ‘une heure, je suppose’
I should think she must be about 40 — à mon avis, elle doit avoir 40 ans environ
and then what should happen, but it began to rain! — et devine quoi - il s'est mis à pleuvoir!
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47 society
society [səˈsaɪətɪ]1. nouna. ( = social community) société fb. ( = high society) haute société f2. compounds[correspondent, news, photographer, wedding] mondain* * *[sə'saɪətɪ] 1.1) ( community) société f2) ( club) ( for social) association f; ( for mutual hobbies) club m; (for intellectual, business, contact) société f3) ( upper classes) (also high society) haute société f2.society gossip — échos mpl mondains
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48 stiffly
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49 terribly
terribly [ˈterəblɪ][important, upset, hard] extrêmement ; [difficult, disappointed, sorry] terriblement ; [behave] de manière lamentable ; [play, sing] terriblement mal* * *['terəblɪ]1) ( very) [flattered, pleased, obvious] très; [clever, easy, hot, polite] extrêmementterribly well/badly — fort bien/mal
2) ( badly) [limp, suffer, injured] horriblement; [worry] terriblement; [sing, drive, write] affreusement mal -
50 would
would [wʊd]1. modal verba.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► When would is used to form the conditional, the French conditional is used.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• I wouldn't worry, if I were you à ta place, je ne m'inquiéterais pas• to my surprise, he agreed -- I never thought he would à ma grande surprise, il a accepté -- je ne l'aurais jamais pensé• who would have thought it? qui l'aurait pensé ?• I said I'd go, so I'm going j'ai dit que j'irais, alors j'y vais• I said I'd go, so I went j'avais dit que j'irais, alors j'y suis allé━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• if you would come with me, I'd go to see him si vous vouliez bien m'accompagner, j'irais le voir━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━would you wait here please! attendez ici s'il vous plaît !• would you close the window please voulez-vous fermer la fenêtre, s'il vous plaît► would you like ( = do you want)would you like some tea? voulez-vous du thé ?• would you like to go for a walk? est-ce que vous aimeriez faire une promenade ?• 50 years ago the streets would be empty on Sundays il y a 50 ans, les rues étaient vides le dimanche• I saw him come out of the shop -- when would this be? je l'ai vu sortir du magasin -- quand ?d. (inevitability) you would go and tell her! évidemment tu es allé le lui dire !• it would have to rain! évidemment il fallait qu'il pleuve !e. (conjecture) it would have been about 8 o'clock when he came il devait être 8 heures à peu près quand il est venu2. modifier* * *[wʊd, wəd]Note: When would is used with a verb in English to form the conditional tense, would + verb is translated by the present conditional of the appropriate verb in French and would have + verb by the past conditional of the appropriate verb: I would do it if I had time = je le ferais si j'avais le temps; I would have done it if I had had time = je l'aurais fait si j'avais eu le temps; he said he would fetch the car = il a dit qu'il irait chercher la voitureFor more examples, particular usages and all other uses of would see the entry below1) (in sequence of past tenses, in reported speech)if we'd left later we would have missed the train — si nous étions partis plus tard nous aurions raté le train
wouldn't it be nice if... — ce serait bien si...
they couldn't find anyone who would take the job — ils n'arrivaient pas à trouver quelqu'un qui accepte le poste
5) (expressing desire, preference)switch off the radio, would you? — éteins la radio, tu veux bien?
8) ( when giving advice)9) ( expressing exasperation)‘he denies it’ - ‘well he would, wouldn't he?’ — ‘il le nie’ - ‘évidemment!’
‘she put her foot in it (colloq)’ - ‘she would!’ — ‘elle a mis les pieds dans le plat (colloq)’ - ‘tu m'étonnes!’
10) ( expressing an assumption)let's see, that would be his youngest son — voyons, ça doit être son plus jeune fils
11) (indicating habitual event or behaviour in past: used to) -
51 Politesse
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52 bring up
1) (to rear or educate: Her parents brought her up to be polite.) élever2) (to introduce (a matter) for discussion: Bring the matter up at the next meeting.) soulever -
53 ceremonious
[-'məu-]adjective ((negative unceremonious) carefully formal or polite.) cérémonieux -
54 civil
['sivl]1) (polite, courteous.) poli2) (of the state or community: civil rights.) civique3) (ordinary; not military or religious: civil life.) civil4) (concerned with law cases which are not criminal.) civil•- civilian- civility - civilly - civil defence - civil disobedience - civil engineer - civil liberties/rights - civil servant - civil service - civil war -
55 courteous
['kə:tiəs](polite; considerate and respectful: It was courteous of him to write a letter of thanks.) poli- courteousness -
56 dear
[diə] 1. adjective1) (high in price: Cabbages are very dear this week.) cher2) (very lovable: He is such a dear little boy.) adorable3) ((with to) much loved: She is very dear to me.) cher4) (used as a polite way of addressing someone, especially in a letter: Dear Sir.) cher2. noun1) (a person who is lovable or charming: He is such a dear!) amour2) (a person who is loved or liked (especially used to address someone): Come in, dear.) cher/-ère•- dearly- dear - dear! / oh dear! -
57 discourteous
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58 etiquette
['etiket](rules for correct or polite behaviour between people, or within certain professions: medical/legal etiquette.) convenances -
59 genteel
[‹ən'ti:l](acting, talking etc with a very great (often too great) attention to the rules of polite behaviour: She was laughed at for being too genteel.) maniéré- genteelness -
60 gentlemanly
adjective ((of men) polite; well-mannered: gentlemanly behaviour.) distingué
См. также в других словарях:
Polite — Po*lite , a. [Compar. {Politer}; superl. {Politest}.] [L. politus, p. p. of polire to polish: cf. F. poli. See {Polish}, v.] 1. Smooth; polished. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] Rays of light falling on a polite surface. Sir I. Newton. [1913 Webster] 2.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
polite — [pə līt′] adj. [L politus, pp. of polire, to POLISH] 1. having or showing culture or good taste; polished; cultured; refined [polite society, polite letters] 2. having or showing good manners; esp., courteous, considerate, tactful, etc. SYN.… … English World dictionary
Polite — Po*lite , v. t. To polish; to refine; to render polite. [Obs.] Ray. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
polite — ► ADJECTIVE (politer, politest) 1) courteous and well mannered. 2) cultured and refined: polite society. DERIVATIVES politely adverb politeness noun. ORIGIN Latin politus polished, made smooth , from polire … English terms dictionary
polite — index diplomatic, discreet, formal, obeisant Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
polite — (adj.) mid 13c., from L. politus refined, elegant, lit. polished, pp. of polire to polish, to make smooth. Used literally at first in English; sense of elegant, cultured is first recorded c.1500, that of behaving courteously is 1762 … Etymology dictionary
polite — *civil, courteous, courtly, gallant, chivalrous Analogous words: *suave, urbane, diplomatic, politic: *thoughtful, considerate, attentive Antonyms: impolite … New Dictionary of Synonyms
polite — [adj] mannerly, civilized affable, amenable, amiable, attentive, bland, civil, complaisant, concerned, conciliatory, condescending, considerate, cordial, courteous, courtly, cultured, deferential, diplomatic, elegant, friendly, genteel, gentle,… … New thesaurus
polite — po|lite S3 [pəˈlaıt] adj [Date: 1400 1500; : Latin; Origin: , past participle of polire; POLISH1] 1.) behaving or speaking in a way that is correct for the social situation you are in, and showing that you are careful to consider other people s… … Dictionary of contemporary English
polite — adjective 1 behaving or speaking in a way that is correct for the social situation you are in, and showing that you are careful to consider other people s needs and feelings: a polite refusal | What polite well behaved children! | it is polite to … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
polite */ — UK [pəˈlaɪt] / US adjective Word forms polite : adjective polite comparative politer superlative politest a) someone who is polite behaves towards other people in a pleasant way that follows all the usual rules of society polite to: You must be… … English dictionary