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1 rudeness
rudeness n manque m de correction (to, towards envers) ; she was brusque to the point of rudeness elle était d'une brusquerie qui frisait l'impolitesse. -
2 rudeness
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3 rudeness
rudeness ['ru:dnɪs](c) (suddenness) violence f, brutalité f -
4 rudeness
noun grossièreté -
5 allow
allow [əˈlaʊ]• to allow sb in/out/past permettre à qn d'entrer/de sortir/de passer• to allow o.s. to be persuaded se laisser persuader• no children/dogs allowed interdit aux enfants/chiensb. ( = grant) accorder• to allow sb £30 a month accorder à qn 30 livres par moisc. ( = make provision) to allow space for prévoir de la place pourd. ( = concede) admettre• allowing that... en admettant que... + subja. ( = plan for) prévoir• the budget did not allow for these extra expenses ces dépenses supplémentaires n'étaient pas prévues au budgetb. ( = take into account) tenir compte de* * *[ə'laʊ] 1.transitive verb1) ( authorize) autoriser [person, organization] ( to do à faire); autoriser [action, change]; laisser [choice, freedom] ( to do de faire)2) ( let) laisser3) ( enable)to allow somebody/something to do — permettre à quelqu'un/quelque chose de faire
4) ( allocate) prévoir5) ( concede) [referee] accorder [goal]; [insurer] agréer [claim]; [supplier] accorder, consentir [discount]6) ( admit) [club] admettre [non-member]‘no dogs allowed’ — ‘interdit aux chiens’
7) ( condone) tolérer [rudeness, swearing]2.1) ( grant) s'accorder [drink, treat]2) ( allocate) prévoir3) ( let) se laisser•Phrasal Verbs: -
6 excuse
a. excuser• one can be excused for not understanding what she says il est excusable qu'on ne comprenne pas ce qu'elle dit• and now if you will excuse me, I... et maintenant, si vous voulez bien m'excuser, je...• excuse me for wondering if... permettez-moi de me demander si...• excuse me! excusez-moi !2. nounexcuse f• his success was a good excuse for a family party ce succès a fourni le prétexte à une fête de famille━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━✦ Lorsque excuse est un verbe, le s se prononce z: ɪksˈkju:z ; lorsque c'est un nom, il se prononce s: ɪksˈkju:s.* * *1. [ɪk'skjuːs]noun ( self-justification) excuse f; ( pretext) prétexte m ( for something à quelque chose; for doing pour faire; to do pour faire)to be an excuse to do ou for doing — servir de prétexte pour faire
2. [ɪk'skjuːz]that's no excuse — ce n'est pas une excuse or une raison
transitive verbexcuse me! — ( bumping into somebody) excusez-moi!, pardon!; (beginning an inquiry, making polite correction) excusez-moi; ( making angry correction) je regrette, mais; ( not hearing properly) pardon?
may I be excused? — GB euph est-ce que je peux aller aux toilettes?
2) ( justify) justifier [intervention, procedure]; excuser [person]3) ( exempt) dispenser ( from something de quelque chose; from doing de faire) -
7 insufferable
insufferable [ɪnˈsʌfərəbl]* * *[ɪn'sʌfrəbl]adjective [heat, conditions] insupportable; [rudeness] intolérable -
8 needless
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9 suffer
suffer [ˈsʌfər]a. ( = undergo) subir ; [+ headaches, hunger] souffrir deb. ( = allow) [+ opposition, sb's rudeness, refusal] tolérera. [person] souffrir• I'll make him suffer for it! il me le paiera !b. ( = be afflicted by) to suffer from [+ rheumatism, heart trouble, the cold, hunger] souffrir de ; [+ deafness] être atteint de ; [+ flu, frostbite, bad memory] avoir• to suffer from the effects of [+ fall, illness] se ressentir de ; [+ alcohol, drug] subir le contrecoup dec. ( = be impaired) souffrir* * *['sʌfə(r)] 1.transitive verb1) ( undergo) gen subir; souffrir de [hunger]2) ( tolerate) supporter2.1) ( with illness)to suffer from — gen souffrir de; avoir [headache, cold]
to suffer from depression — être dépressif/-ive
2) ( experience pain) souffrir3) ( do badly) [company, profits, popularity] souffrir; [health, quality, work] s'en ressentirthe project suffers from a lack of funds — le problème du projet, c'est qu'il est insuffisamment financé
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10 vulgarity
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11 answer for
1) ((often with to) to bear the responsibility or be responsible for (something): I'll answer to your mother for your safety.) répondre de2) (to suffer or be punished (for something): You'll answer for your rudeness one day!) payer pour -
12 antagonise
verb (to make an enemy of (someone): You are antagonizing her by your rudeness.) contrarier -
13 antagonize
verb (to make an enemy of (someone): You are antagonizing her by your rudeness.) contrarier -
14 apologise
(to say that one is sorry, for having done something wrong, for a fault etc: I must apologize to her for my rudeness.) s'excuser (de/pour)- apologetically - apology -
15 apologize
(to say that one is sorry, for having done something wrong, for a fault etc: I must apologize to her for my rudeness.) s'excuser (de/pour)- apologetically - apology -
16 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 -
17 disrespect
[disrə'spekt](rudeness or lack of respect: He spoke of his parents with disrespect.) irrespect- disrespectfully -
18 endurance
noun (the power or ability to bear or to last: He has amazing (power of) endurance; Her rudeness is beyond endurance; ( also adjective) endurance tests.) endurance; de résistance -
19 endure
[in'djuə]1) (to bear patiently; to tolerate: She endures her troubles bravely; I can endure her rudeness no longer.) supporter2) (to remain firm; to last: You must endure to the end; The memory of her great acting has endured.) tenir, durer•- endurance -
20 enough
1. adjective(in the number or quantity etc needed: Have you enough money to pay for the books?; food enough for everyone.) assez2. pronoun(the amount needed: He has had enough to eat; I've had enough of her rudeness.) assez3. adverb1) (to the degree needed: Is it hot enough?; He swam well enough to pass the test.) assez2) (one must admit; you must agree: She's pretty enough, but not beautiful; Oddly enough, it isn't raining.) assez
См. также в других словарях:
Rudeness — (also called impudence or effrontery) is the disrespect and failure to behave within the context of a society or a group of people s social laws or etiquette. These laws have already unspokenly been established as the essential boundaries of… … Wikipedia
rudeness — index contempt (disobedience to the court), contumely, disparagement, disregard (lack of respect), disrespect, ingratitude, rebuff … Law dictionary
rudeness — n. 1) to display, show rudeness 2) rudeness to * * * show rudeness to display rudeness to … Combinatory dictionary
rudeness — noun Property of being rude. His rudeness was inexcusable … Wiktionary
rudeness — Roughness; incivility; violence. Touching another with rudeness may constitute a battery … Black's law dictionary
rudeness — rude ► ADJECTIVE 1) offensively impolite or ill mannered. 2) referring to sex in a way considered improper and offensive. 3) very abrupt: a rude awakening. 4) chiefly Brit. vigorous or hearty: rude health. 5) dated roughly made or done; lacking… … English terms dictionary
Rudeness — Rude Rude, a. [Compar. {Ruder}; superl. {Rudest}.] [F., fr. L. rudis.] 1. Characterized by roughness; umpolished; raw; lacking delicacy or refinement; coarse. [1913 Webster] Such gardening tools as art, yet rude, . . . had formed. Milton. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
rudeness — noun Date: 14th century 1. the quality or state of being rude 2. a rude action … New Collegiate Dictionary
rudeness — See rudely. * * * … Universalium
rudeness — Synonyms and related words: Gothicism, bad manners, bad taste, barbarism, barbarousness, bombasticness, brashness, brassiness, brazenfacedness, brazenness, cacology, cacophony, caddishness, callowness, cheekiness, clumsiness, coarseness,… … Moby Thesaurus
rudeness — I (Roget s IV) n. Syn. discourtesy, bad manners, vulgarity, incivility, impoliteness, impudence, disrespect, misbehavior, barbarity, unmannerliness, ill breeding, crudity, brutality, barbarism, tactlessness, boorishness, unbecoming conduct, lack… … English dictionary for students