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1 protestation
protestation [pʀɔtεstasjɔ̃]feminine nouna. ( = plainte) protest• lettre/mouvement de protestation protest letter/movementb. (souvent pl = déclaration) protestation* * *pʀɔtɛstasjɔ̃1) ( réclamation) protest2) ( assurance) liter protestation* * *pʀɔtɛstasjɔ̃ nf1) (= plainte) protestsigner une protestation — to sign a letter of protest, to sign a petition
en dépit des protestations de qn — despite the protests of sb, despite sb's protests
2) (= assurance, déclaration) protestation, profession* * *protestation nf1 ( réclamation) protest (contre against); en signe de protestation as a (mark of) protest; paroles/gestes de protestation words/gestures of protest;3 Jur protesting.[prɔtɛstasjɔ̃] nom féminingrand mouvement/grande manifestation de protestation demain à 14 h a big protest rally/demonstration will be held tomorrow at 2 p.m2. [opposition] protest————————protestations nom féminin pluriel(littéraire) [déclarations]protestations d'amitié protestations ou assurances of friendshipfaire à quelqu'un des protestations d'amour/de loyauté to profess one's love/loyalty to somebody -
2 concert
concert [kɔ̃sεʀ]masculine noun* * *kɔ̃sɛʀ
1.
nom masculin1) Musique concert2) ( bruits émis)concert de klaxons — ® a blaring of horns
3) ( entente)
2.
de concert locution adverbiale* * *kɔ̃sɛʀ nm1) (musical) concert2)* * *A nm1 Mus concert; un concert de rock/jazz a rock/jazz concert; un concert de musique classique a concert of classical music; Max 80 en concert ce soir Max 80 in concert tonight; donner un concert en plein air to give an open-air concert; salle de concert concert hall;2 ( bruits émis) concert de klaxons® a blaring of horns; concert d'applaudissements roar of applause; concert de critiques barrage of criticism; concert d'aboiements dogs barking in unison;3 ( entente) le concert des nations the alliance of nations.B de concert loc adv ils ont agi de concert they worked together; étudier/militer de concert to study/campaign together; ils ont protesté de concert avec les étudiants they protested in unison with the students.[kɔ̃sɛr] nom masculinconcert rock/de musique classique rock/classical (music) concertconcert de louanges/protestations chorus of praises/protests————————de concert locution adverbialeagir de concert avec quelqu'un to act jointly ou in conjunction with somebody -
3 contestation
contestation [kɔ̃tεstasjɔ̃]feminine nouna. ( = opposition) la contestation protestb. ( = objection) dispute* * *kɔ̃tɛstasjɔ̃2) (de véracité, droit) challenging (de of)être sujet à contestation, prêter à contestation — to be questionable
il y a sujet or matière à contestation — there are grounds for dispute ou contention
* * *kɔ̃tɛstasjɔ̃ nf1) [affirmation, fait] questioning, contesting2) POLITIQUE* * *contestation nf2 (de véracité, droit) challenging (de of); être sujet à contestation, prêter à contestation to be questionable; il y a sujet or matière à contestation there are grounds for dispute ou contention; sans contestation possible beyond dispute;3 ( dispute) dispute.[kɔ̃tɛstasjɔ̃] nom féminin3. POLITIQUEla contestation protests, protesting, the protest movement -
4 cri
cri [kʀi]masculine nouna. ( = éclat de voix) [de personne] cry ; (très fort) scream ; (ton aigu) shriek ; (de douleur, de peur) cry• pousser des cris (de joie/triomphe) to cry out (in joy/triumph)• cri aigu or perçant piercing cry* * *kʀinom masculin1) ( de personne) cry; ( plus fort) shout; ( aigu) screamun cri de douleur/surprise — a cry of pain/surprise
pousser des cris de douleur/plaisir — to cry out in pain/pleasure
••pousser or jeter les hauts cris — to protest loudly
* * *kʀi nm1) (d'appel) cry, shout, (de peur, de surprise) screamJ'ai entendu un cri. — I heard a scream.
à grands cris [réclamer, s'indigner, dénoncer] — at the top of one's voice
2) [animal] cry, callIl sait reconnaître les cris des oiseaux. — He can identify the calls of birds.
c'est le dernier cri fig — it's the latest fashion, it's the in thing
Ces chaussures sont du dernier cri. — These shoes are the latest fashion., These shoes are the in thing.
* * *cri nm1 ( de personne) cry; ( plus fort) shout; ( aigu) scream; un cri de douleur/d'effroi/de surprise a cry of pain/of fright/of surprise; un cri de détresse a cry for help; des cris de joie/protestation cries of joy/protest; un cri déchirant a heart-rending cry; un cri perçant a piercing scream; un cri aigu a shriek; au cri de ‘vive la révolution’ shouting ‘long live the revolution’; à grands cris [réclamer, protester] loudly; un cri d'amour a passionate declaration of love; pousser un cri to scream (de in); pousser un grand cri to scream loudly; pousser des cris de douleur/plaisir to cry out in pain/pleasure; ⇒ dernier;2 ( d'animal) gén cry; ( d'oiseau) call; la pauvre bête poussait des cris lamentables the poor creature was crying out pitifully; comment s'appelle le cri du renard/paon? what noise does the fox/peacock make?cri d'alarme cry of alarm; cri du cœur cry from the heart, cri de cœur; cri de guerre lit, fig war cry; cri primal Psych primal scream.pousser or jeter les hauts cris to protest loudly.[kri] nom masculincri de douleur cry ou scream of paincri de joie cry ou shout of joycri d'indignation cry ou scream of indignationcri d'horreur shriek ou scream of horrorjeter ou pousser un cri to cry outpousser un cri de joie/douleur to cry out with joy/in paina. (sens propre) to cry out, to shoutjeter ou pousser des hauts cris to raise the roof, to raise a hue and cry, to kick up a fuss[d'un petit oiseau] chirp[d'une chouette, d'un paon, d'un singe] screech[d'une mouette] cry[d'un dindon] gobble[d'un perroquet] squawk[d'un canard] quack[d'une oie] honk[d'une souris] squeak[d'un porc] squeal3. [parole] cryjeter ou lancer un cri d'alarme to warn against the dangerdéfiler au cri de "des subventions!" to march chanting "subsidies!"cri du cœur cri de coeur, cry from the heart————————à grands cris locution adverbialedemander ou réclamer quelque chose à grands cris to cry out ou to clamour for something————————dernier cri locution adjectivale[voiture, vidéo] state-of-the-art————————dernier cri nom masculin invariablea. [vêtement] it's the (very) latest vogue ou fashion ou thingb. [machine, vidéo] it's state-of-the-art -
5 déclarer
déclarer [deklaʀe]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verba. ( = annoncer, proclamer) to declare ; ( = avouer) to admit• déclarer la guerre à une nation/à la pollution to declare war on a nation/on pollution• déclarer qn coupable/innocent to find sb guilty/innocentb. [+ naissance, décès] to register ; [+ marchandises, revenus, employés] to declare• avez-vous quelque chose à déclarer ? (à la douane) do you have anything to declare?2. reflexive verba. ( = se prononcer)se déclarer satisfait to declare o.s. satisfiedb. [incendie, épidémie] to break outc. [amoureux] to declare one's love* * *deklaʀe
1.
1) (dire, proclamer) to declare [indépendance, intentions]2) Administration to declare [marchandise, revenus, employé]; to report [vol]; to register [naissance, décès]non déclaré — [somme] undeclared; [travail] illegal
2.
se déclarer verbe pronominal1) ( commencer) [incendie, épidémie] to break out; [fièvre] to start; [maladie] to manifest itself2) ( se dire)se déclarer pour/contre quelque chose — to come out for/against something
3) ( avouer son amour) to declare one's love ( à quelqu'un to somebody)* * *deklaʀe vt1) (= annoncer) [le résultat d'une décision] to announce, [son attachement à qch, sa croyance en qch] to declaredéclarer que — to declare that, to announce that
Ils ont déclaré le résultat non valide. — They declared the result invalid.
2) ADMINISTRATION, [revenus, employés, marchandises] to declare, [décès, naissance] to register, [vol] (à la police) to report* * *déclarer verb table: aimerA vtr1 (dire, proclamer) to declare [indépendance, intentions]; déclarer son amour/sa passion to declare one's love/one's passion; a-t-il déclaré he declared; le président a déclaré the president declared; la transaction a été déclarée illégale the deal was declared illegal; déclarer qn responsable/vainqueur/mort to declare sb responsible/the winner/dead; il a été déclaré coupable he was found guilty; déclarer la séance ouverte to declare the meeting open; il a déclaré vouloir participer/avoir travaillé he declared that he wanted to take part/that he had worked; déclarer que to declare that; il s'est contenté de déclarer qu'il regrettait son acte all he did was to declare that he regretted his action; déclarer à qn que to tell sb that; il a déclaré à la presse qu'il n'était en rien responsable he told the press that he was in no way responsible; déclarer la guerre à qn/qch lit, fig to declare war on sb/sth;2 Admin to declare [marchandise, revenus, employé]; to report [vol]; ( faire enregistrer) to register [naissance, décès]; avez-vous qch à déclarer? ( à la douane) do you have anything to declare?; elle emploie des gens sans les déclarer she employs people without declaring them; non déclaré [somme] undeclared; [travail] illegal.B se déclarer vpr1 ( commencer) [incendie, épidémie] to break out; [fièvre] to start; [maladie] to manifest itself;2 ( se dire) se déclarer confiant/inquiet/heureux/convaincu to declare oneself confident/worried /happy/convinced; elle s'est déclarée prête à relever le défi she declared herself ready to take up the challenge; se déclarer pour/contre qch to come out for/against sth;3 ( avouer son amour) to declare one's love; se déclarer à qn to declare one's love to sb.[deklare] verbe transitifa. SPORT to withdrawil déclare être innocent he claims to be innocent ou protests his innocence5. [dire officiellement] to declaredéclarer ses revenus/employés to declare one's income/employees————————se déclarer verbe pronominal intransitif1. [se manifester - incendie, épidémie] to break out ; [ - fièvre, maladie] to set in2. [se prononcer] to take a standse déclarer pour/contre l'avortement to come out in favour of/against abortion, to declare for/against abortion3. (avec un adjectif ou une locution adjectivale) [se dire] to say4. (littéraire) [dire son amour] to declare one's love -
6 mai
c black mai [mε]masculine noun━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━✎ Les noms de mois s'écrivent avec une majuscule en anglais.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━LE PREMIER MAI/LE 8 MAILe premier mai is a public holiday in France. It is known as « la fête du Travail » (« Labor Day ») and commemorates the trades union demonstrations in the United States in 1886 when workers demanded the right to an eight-hour working day. Sprigs of lily of the valley are traditionally exchanged.Le 8 mai is also a public holiday and commemorates the surrender of the German army to Eisenhower on 7 May, 1945. It is marked by parades of ex-servicemen and ex-servicewomen in most towns.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━In 1968, unrest in French industry and among students resulted in huge demonstrations in May followed by a general strike. The events were perceived as a challenge to the established order and a cry for freedom. The government was not in fact overthrown and order soon returned. The term « soixante-huitard » literally means a person who participated in the events, but as an adjective it also describes the kind of ideals held by many of the demonstrators.* * *mɛnom masculin May* * *mɛ nmSee:* * *[mɛ] nom masculin[mois] Mayvoir aussi link=mars marsThe events of May 1968 came about when student protests, coupled with widespread industrial unrest, culminated in a general strike and rioting. De Gaulle's government survived the crisis, but the issues raised made the events a turning point in French social history. -
7 Soixante-huit
, or 68the milestone year in French life and politics in the second half of the 20th century, when protests by students and workers almost brought down the French government, and led to sweeping changes in French society. The events of 68 were inspired and led by the young generation of the time, wishing to break out of the rather stuffy and conventional society of the time. They coincided with, though initially took a different form to, the 'youth revolution' in Britain and the USA; but while the UK's youth revolution was essentially social and cultural, and led by pop music and op art, France's revolution was political and cultural, a protest against the weight of the Gaullist state.The events of May 68 started on the drab concrete campus of the sprawling university of Nanterre in the northern suburbs of Paris, and quickly spread to other universities, notably the Sorbonne. Student leaders, among them DanielCohn- Bendit and Alain Krivine, called for radical change and the end of the 'bourgeois state'; students erected barricades in the Latin Quarter, and were soon joined by workers, notably from the huge Renault plant at Boulogne Billancourt in the Paris suburbs. Though political, the movement sidelined all existing political parties, including the Communists, considered by the new left-wing as being an 'obsolete' political force.Faced with turmoil on the streets and a partial collapse of French society, President de Gaulle fled to Germany on 29th May, before returning and promising new elections. But by the time the elections took place, theGrenelle agreements had been negotiated with the trade unions, the heat had died down, and many French people had become seriously alarmed by the turn of events. In the June elections, the Gaullist majority was returned to power with an increased majority.The events nevertheless marked the beginning of the end for de Gaulle. In 1969 he organised a referendum on decentralisation, promising to step down if the referendum failed. To a certain extent, de Gaulle's vision of decentralisation was not that wanted by the voters; but in addition, the referendum became seen as a plebiscite on the Gaullist system, rather than on decentralisation. The referendum proposal was rejected by 52.4% of voters, and de Gaulle stepped down.It is certain that a new France, less hide-bound, more emancipated and more free, emerged in the aftermath of 68. Whether this would have happened anyway, and whether the means justified the end, are questions about which there is still considerable debate in France to this day.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Soixante-huit
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8 Instance de contrôle et de discipline
Organe de juridiction de l'UEFA, qui s'occupe notamment des cas disciplinaires lorsque des situations vont à l'encontre des statuts, des règles et des décisions de l' UEFA, qui statue sur l'arrêt des procédures, les acquittements, les condamnations, ainsi que sur l'acceptation ou le refus de protêts portées à sa connaissance.► L'Instance de contrôle et de discipline atteint le quorum si trois membres au moins sont présents.
Organ for the administration of justice, which mainly deals with disciplinary cases arising from the UEFA Statutes, regulations and decisions of UEFA, and decides on the halting of proceedings, acquittals, convictions, the dismissal or acceptance of protests.► Three members of the Control and Disciplinary Body constitute a quorum.
Dictionnaire Français-Anglais (UEFA Football) > Instance de contrôle et de discipline
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9 protester de son innocence
affirm or protests one's innocence (to)Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > protester de son innocence
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10 vague de protestations
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > vague de protestations
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