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1 protest
∎ to make a protest against or about sth élever une protestation contre qch, protester contre qch;∎ to register or to lodge a protest with sb protester auprès de qn;∎ in protest against or at sth en signe de protestation contre qch;∎ they did it without the slightest protest ils l'ont fait sans élever la moindre protestation ou sans protester le moins du monde;∎ despite their protests, the children had to go to school malgré leurs protestations, les enfants ont dû aller à l'école;∎ to stage a protest (complaint) organiser une protestation; (demonstration) organiser une manifestation;∎ she resigned in protest (at this decision) elle a démissionné en signe de protestation (contre cette décision);∎ to do sth under protest faire qch en protestant(a) (innocence, love etc) protester de;∎ "no one told me", she protested "personne ne me l'a dit", protesta-t-elle;∎ she protested that it was unfair elle déclara que ce n'était pas juste[prə'test] protester;∎ to protest at or against/about sth protester contre qch;∎ I must protest in the strongest terms at or about… je m'élève avec la dernière energie ou énergiquement contre…;∎ really, I protest, that's too much! non, vraiment, je proteste, c'est trop!►► protest demonstration, protest march manifestation f;protest marcher manifestant(e) m,f;protest song chanson f engagée;protest vote vote m de protestationⓘ The lady protests too much, methinks Cette phrase ("la dame fait trop de serments, me semble-t-il") vient de Hamlet de Shakespeare, et est prononcée par Gertrude lorsqu'elle assiste à la représentation de la Souricière, la pièce écrite par son fils Hamlet, et dans laquelle le personnage de la reine, calqué sur la reine Gertrude elle-même, jure de ne jamais se remarier après la mort de son mari. On utilise cette expression en plaçant methinks en début de phrase et en ajoutant la forme archaïque doth avant le verbe, lorsqu'on estime que quelqu'un proteste trop de son innocence pour être honnête. On se sert souvent de l'expression à propos de l'attitude de personnes de sexe féminin, mais pas exclusivement; ainsi on pourra dire the minister has spoken loudly on the issue, but methinks he doth protest too much ("le ministre a beaucoup parlé du problème, et son insistance même me semble suspecte"). -
2 protest
1. nouna. ( = declare) protester ; [+ loyalty] protester de4. compounds━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━✦ Lorsque protest est un nom, l'accent tombe sur la première syllabe: ˈprəʊtest, lorsque c'est un verbe, sur la seconde: prəˈtest.* * *1. ['prəʊtest]1) [U] ( disapproval) protestation f2) [C] ( complaint) réclamation fas a protest against ou at something — pour protester contre quelque chose
3) ( demonstration) manifestation f2. ['prəʊtest] 3. [prə'test]transitive verb1) ( declare) affirmer [truth]2) ( complain)‘that's unfair!’ they protested — ‘c'est injuste!’ s'écrièrent-ils
3) US ( complain about) protester contre (to auprès de)4. [prə'test]1) ( complain) protester2) ( demonstrate) manifester -
3 protest
A n1 ¢ ( disapproval) protestation f ; in protest en signe de protestation ; without protest sans protester ; in protest at ou against sth pour protester contre qch ; I paid/followed him under protest je l'ai payé/suivi contre mon gré ;2 ∁ ( complaint) réclamation f, plainte f (about, at à propos de ; from de la part de) ; as a protest against ou at sth pour protester contre qch ; to lodge/register a protest faire/déposer une réclamation ;3 ( demonstration) manifestation f (against contre) ; to stage a protest organiser une manifestation ;4 Jur protêt m.C vtr2 ( complain) ‘that's unfair!’ they protested ‘c'est injuste!’ s'écrièrent-ils ; to protest that protester que ;3 US ( complain about) protester contre (to auprès de) ;D vi1 ( complain) protester (about, at, over à propos de ; to auprès de) ; to protest at being chosen/ignored protester contre le fait d'avoir été choisi/ignoré ;2 ( demonstrate) manifester (against contre). -
4 innocence
См. также в других словарях:
innocence — in|no|cence [ ınəsns ] noun uncount * 1. ) the state of not being guilty of a crime: The jury s role is to decide the guilt or innocence of the defendant. prove someone s innocence: This new evidence would hopefully prove his innocence.… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
innocence — in|no|cence [ˈınəsəns] n [U] 1.) the fact of being not guilty of a crime ≠ ↑guilt ▪ Can you prove your innocence ? protest/maintain your innocence (=say repeatedly that you are not guilty) ▪ The prisoners continued to protest their innocence. 2.) … Dictionary of contemporary English
innocence — noun (U) 1 the fact of being not guilty of a crime: Can you prove your innocence? | protest your innocence (=say repeatedly that you are not guilty): The prisoners continued to protest their innocence. 2 the state of not having much experience of … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
innocence */ — UK [ˈɪnəs(ə)ns] / US noun [uncountable] 1) a) the state of not being guilty of a crime The jury s role is to decide the guilt or innocence of the defendant. prove someone s innocence: This new evidence would hopefully prove his innocence.… … English dictionary
protest — 1 noun 1 (C, U) a strong complaint that shows you disagree with, or are angry about something that you think is wrong or unfair: a written protest alleging police brutality | I turned off the TV, despite loud protests from the kids. (+ against):… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
protest — I. noun Etymology: Middle English, from protester Date: 15th century 1. a solemn declaration of opinion and usually of dissent: as a. a sworn declaration that payment of a note or bill has been refused and that all responsible signers or debtors… … New Collegiate Dictionary
protest — mid 14c. (implied in protestation) solemn declaration, from L. protestari declare publicly, testify, protest, from pro forth, before + testari testify, from testis witness (see TESTAMENT (Cf. testament)). Original sense preserved in to protest… … Etymology dictionary
protest — 1. The noun is pronounced with the stress on the first syllable, and the verb with the stress on the second syllable. 2. • Anatoly Koryagin, who has been imprisoned for protesting the use of psychiatry for political purposes New Yorker, 1987.… … Modern English usage
protest — ► NOUN 1) a statement or action expressing disapproval or objection. 2) an organized public demonstration objecting to an official policy or course of action. ► VERB 1) express an objection to what someone has said or done. 2) take part in a… … English terms dictionary
innocence — noun 1 being not guilty of a crime, etc. ADJECTIVE ▪ total VERB + INNOCENCE ▪ declare, proclaim, profess ▪ The prisoners passionately proclaimed their innocence in front of the jury … Collocations dictionary
protest — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ angry, strong, violent ▪ non violent, peaceful ▪ sit down (BrE) ▪ mass … Collocations dictionary