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1 slippery
slippery ['slɪpərɪ](a) (surface, soap) glissant;∎ the path is slippery le chemin est glissant;∎ it's slippery (underfoot) ça glisse;∎ figurative to be on slippery ground être sur un terrain glissant;∎ figurative we're on the slippery slope to bankruptcy nous allons droit à la faillite∎ he's a slippery customer c'est le genre de type à qui on ne peut pas se fier;∎ he's as slippery as an eel il glisse comme une ou est aussi insaisissable qu'une anguille -
2 slippery
slippery [ˈslɪpərɪ]a. [surface] glissantb. ( = unreliable) he's a slippery customer c'est quelqu'un sur qui on ne peut pas compter* * *['slɪpərɪ]1) ( difficult to grip) [road, fish] glissant2) ( difficult to deal with) [subject] délicata slippery customer — (colloq) un personnage suspect
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3 slippery
1 ( difficult to grip) [road, path, fish, material] glissant ;2 ( difficult to deal with) [subject, situation] délicat ;to be on the slippery slope être sur une pente savonneuse. -
4 slippery
1) (so smooth as to cause slipping: The path is slippery - watch out!) glissant2) (not trustworthy: He's rather a slippery character.) fuyant -
5 slippery floor
sol glissantEnglish-French dictionary of labour protection > slippery floor
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6 glassy
['glɑːsɪ], US ['glæsɪ]1) ( resembling glass) [substance] vitreux/-euse4) [eyes] (from drink, illness) vitreux/-euse; ( hostile) glacé -
7 slick
slick [slɪk]1. adjectivea. ( = efficient, skilful) it was a slick operation ça a été rondement menéc. [hair] lissé ; [road, surface] glissant2. noun* * *[slɪk] 1.2) ( tyre) slick m2.1) ( adept) [production, campaign] habile; [operation, deal] mené rondement2) péj ( superficial) qui a un éclat plutôt superficielslick salesman — vendeur qui a du bagou (colloq)
4) US ( slippery) [road] glissant; [hair] lissé -
8 slippy
(colloq) ['slɪpɪ] adjective ( slippery) [path, surface] glissant -
9 treacherously
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10 when
when [wen]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. adverb2. conjunction━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. adverb• when does the term start? quand commence le trimestre ?• when did it happen? quand cela s'est-il passé ? ça s'est passé quand ?• when was the Channel Tunnel opened? quand a-t-on ouvert le tunnel sous la Manche ?• when's the wedding? quand a lieu le mariage ?━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► There is no inversion after quand in indirect questions.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• when does the train leave? à quelle heure part le train ?• when do you finish work? à quelle heure est-ce tu quittes le travail ?2. conjunctiona. ( = at the time that) quand━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► If the when clause refers to the future, the future tense is used in French.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• when you're older, you'll understand quand tu seras plus grand, tu comprendras━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► en + present participle may be used, if the subject of both clauses is the same, and the verb is one of action.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► when + noun/adjective• when a student at Oxford, she... quand elle était étudiante à Oxford, elle...• my father, when young, had a fine tenor voice quand mon père était jeune il avait une belle voix de ténorb. (with day, time, movement) où• there are times when I wish I'd never met him il y a des moments où je souhaiterais ne l'avoir jamais rencontréc. ( = which is when) he arrived at 8 o'clock, when traffic is at its peak il est arrivé à 8 heures, heure à laquelle la circulation est la plus intense• in August, when peaches are at their best en août, époque où les pêches sont les plus savoureusesd. ( = the time when) he told me about when you got lost in Paris il m'a raconté le jour où vous vous êtes perdu dans Parise. ( = after) quand• when he had made the decision, he felt better après avoir pris la décision, il s'est senti soulagéf. ( = whereas) alors que• he thought he was recovering, when in fact... il pensait qu'il était en voie de guérison alors qu'en fait...g. ( = if) how can I be self-confident when I look like this? comment veux-tu que j'aie confiance en moi en étant comme ça ?• how can you understand when you won't listen? comment voulez-vous comprendre si vous n'écoutez pas ?* * *[wen], US [hwen] 1.1) ( with prepositions) quandsince when? — depuis quand? also iron
2) ( the time when)2.that's when I was born — ( day) c'est le jour où je suis né; ( year) c'est l'année où je suis né
1) ( as interrogative) quand (est-ce que)I forget exactly when — ( time) j'ai oublié l'heure exacte; ( date) j'ai oublié la date exacte
tell me ou say when — ( pouring drink) dis-moi stop
2) ( as relative)at the time when — ( precise moment) au moment où; ( during same period) à l'époque où
one morning when he was getting up, he... — un matin en se levant, il...
3) ( then)she resigned in May, since when we've had no applicants — elle a démissionné en mai, et depuis (lors) nous n'avons reçu aucune candidature
4) ( whenever) quand3.when I sunbathe, I get freckles — chaque fois que je prends un bain de soleil, j'ai des taches de rousseur
1) ( at the precise time when) quand, lorsque2) ( during the period when) quand, lorsque3) ( as soon as) quand, dès queI was strolling along when all of a sudden... — je marchais tranquillement quand tout d'un coup...
4) ( when it is the case that) alors quewhy buy their products when ours are cheaper? — pourquoi acheter leurs produits alors que les nôtres sont moins chers?
5) ( whereas) alors que -
11 foothold
noun (a place to put one's feet when climbing: to find footholds on the slippery rock.) prise pour le pied -
12 greasy
1) (of or like grease: greasy food.) graisseux2) (covered in grease: greasy hands.) graisseux3) (slippery, as if covered in grease: greasy roads.) glissant -
13 ooze
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14 slide
1. past tense, past participle - slid; verb1) (to (cause to) move or pass along smoothly: He slid the drawer open; Children must not slide in the school corridors.) (faire) glisser2) (to move quietly or secretly: I slid hurriedly past the window; He slid the book quickly out of sight under his pillow.) (se) glisser2. noun1) (an act of sliding.) glissade/glissement2) (a slippery track, or apparatus with a smooth sloping surface, on which people or things can slide: The children were taking turns on the slide in the playground.) toboggan3) (a small transparent photograph for projecting on to a screen etc: The lecture was illustrated with slides.) diapositive4) (a glass plate on which objects are placed to be examined under a microscope.) lame porte-objet5) ((also hair-slide) a (decorative) hinged fastening for the hair.) barrette•- sliding door -
15 slime
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16 slip
I 1. [slip] past tense, past participle - slipped; verb1) (to slide accidentally and lose one's balance or footing: I slipped and fell on the path.) glisser2) (to slide, or drop, out of the right position or out of control: The plate slipped out of my grasp.) glisser entre les doigts3) (to drop in standard: I'm sorry about my mistake - I must be slipping!) décliner, baisser4) (to move quietly especially without being noticed: She slipped out of the room.) sortir (sans être vu)5) (to escape from: The dog had slipped its lead and disappeared.) se dégager de qqch.6) (to put or pass (something) with a quick, light movement: She slipped the letter back in its envelope.) glisser2. noun1) (an act of slipping: Her sprained ankle was a result of a slip on the path.) faux pas2) (a usually small mistake: Everyone makes the occasional slip.) gaffe3) (a kind of undergarment worn under a dress; a petticoat.) combinaison4) ((also slipway) a sloping platform next to water used for building and launching ships.) cale•- slipper- slippery - slipperiness - slip road - slipshod - give someone the slip - give the slip - let slip - slip into - slip off - slip on - slip up II [slip] noun(a strip or narrow piece of paper: She wrote down his telephone number on a slip of paper.) bout -
17 eel
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18 glassy
4 ( cold) [air, chill] glacé, glacial ; -
19 slick
A nB adj1 ( adeptly executed) [production, performance, campaign, handling] habile ; [operation, deal, takeover] mené rondement ; it's a slick piece of work c'est du travail vite fait bien fait ○ ;3 péj ( insincere) [person] roublard ○ ; [answer, chat] astucieux/-ieuse ; [excuse] facile ; slick salesman vendeur qui a du bagou ○ ; a slick operator ○ un rusé, un malin ;■ slick back:▶ slick [sth] back, slick back [sth] lisser [qch] en arrière [hair] ; slicked-back hair des cheveux gominés.■ slick down:▶ slick [sth] down, slick down [sth] (with hand, comb) se lisser [hair] ; ( with cream) se gominer [hair]. -
20 slippy
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См. также в других словарях:
Slippery — Slip per*y, a. [See {Slipper}, a.] 1. Having the quality opposite to adhesiveness; allowing or causing anything to slip or move smoothly, rapidly, and easily upon the surface; smooth; glib; as, oily substances render things slippery. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
slippery — having a slippery surface, c.1500, from M.E. sliper (adj.), from O.E. slipor slippery (see SLIP (Cf. slip) (v.)) + Y (Cf. y) (2). Metaphoric sense of deceitful is first recorded 1550s. Related: Slipperiness. In a figurative sense, slippery slope… … Etymology dictionary
slippery — [slip′ər ē, slip′rē] adj. slipperier, slipperiest [altered < ME sliper, slippery < OE slipor, akin to MHG slupferic: for IE base see SLIP1] 1. causing or liable to cause sliding or slipping, as a wet, waxed, or greasy surface 2. tending to… … English World dictionary
slippery — [adj1] smooth, slick glacé, glassy, glazed, glistening, greasy, icy, like a skating rink*, lubricious, lustrous, perilous, polished, satiny, silky, sleek, slimy, soapy, unctuous, unsafe, unstable, unsteady, waxy, wet; concept 606 Ant. dry,… … New thesaurus
slippery — index deceptive, elusive, evasive, insecure, machiavellian, perfidious, precarious, sly, undependable … Law dictionary
slippery — ► ADJECTIVE 1) difficult to hold firmly or stand on through being smooth, wet, or slimy. 2) (of a person) evasive and unpredictable. 3) (of a word or concept) changing in meaning according to context or point of view. DERIVATIVES slipperiness… … English terms dictionary
slippery — adj. VERBS ▪ be, feel, look ▪ become, get ▪ The concrete gets slippery when it s wet. ▪ make sth … Collocations dictionary
slippery — slip|per|y [ˈslıpəri] adj [Date: 1500 1600; Origin: slipper slippery (11 19 centuries), from Old English slipor] 1.) something that is slippery is difficult to hold, walk on etc because it is wet or ↑greasy ▪ In places, the path can be wet and… … Dictionary of contemporary English
slippery — [[t]slɪ̱pəri[/t]] 1) ADJ GRADED Something that is slippery is smooth, wet, or oily and is therefore difficult to walk on or to hold. The tiled floor was wet and slippery... Motorists were warned to beware of slippery conditions. 2) ADJ GRADED… … English dictionary
slippery — adjective 1 something that is slippery is difficult to hold, walk on etc because it is wet or greasy: Be careful! The floor s very slippery. 2 informal someone who is slippery cannot be trusted and usually manages to avoid being punished:… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
slippery — UK [ˈslɪpərɪ] / US [ˈslɪp(ə)rɪ] adjective Word forms slippery : adjective slippery comparative slipperier superlative slipperiest 1) a slippery surface, object etc is difficult to move on or to hold because it is smooth, wet, or covered in… … English dictionary