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1 blow
blow [bləʊ]1. nouna. [wind] [+ ship] pousser ; [+ leaves] faire voler• the wind blew the door open/shut un coup de vent a ouvert/fermé la porte• to blow smoke in sb's face souffler la fumée à la figure de qn ; (US figurative) induire qn en erreurc. [+ bubbles] faire ; [+ glass] soufflerd. [+ trumpet, horn] souffler danse. ( = destroy) [+ safe] faire sauter• to blow a tyre [driver, vehicle] crever• blow the expense! (inf!) au diable la dépense !a. [wind] souffler• the government has been blowing hot and cold on this issue le gouvernement souffle le chaud et le froid sur ce problèmeb. ( = move with wind) the door blew open/shut un coup de vent a ouvert/a fermé la portec. [whistle] retentird. [person] to blow on one's fingers souffler dans ses doigtse. [fuse, light bulb] sauter ; [tyre] éclater4. exclamation5. compounds• to blow-dry sb's hair faire un brushing à qn ► blow-up noun ( = enlargement) agrandissement m adjective [mattress, toy] gonflable► blow away (inf!) separable transitive verb[tree, fence] être abattu par le vent[wind] faire tomber► blow off[hat] s'envoler[+ hat] emporter► blow out[tyre] éclatera. [+ candle] souffler[storm, dispute] se calmer[+ tree] renverser► blow upa. [bomb] exploserb. [storm] se préparerd. [affair, crisis] se déclenchera. [+ mine, building, bridge] faire sauterb. [+ tyre] gonfler* * *[bləʊ] 1.1) ( stroke) coup mto come to blows — en venir aux mains ( over au sujet de)
to strike a blow for — fig frapper un grand coup pour [freedom, rights]
2) fig (shock, knock) coup mto be a blow — être un coup terrible ( to something porté à quelque chose; to, for somebody pour quelqu'un)
3)2.1) [wind]to be blown off course/onto the rocks — être dévié/poussé sur les rochers par le vent
2) faire [bubble, smoke ring]; souffler [glass]3)4) gen, Music souffler dans [trumpet, whistle]5) [explosion] provoquer [hole] (in dans)to be blown to pieces ou bits by — être réduit en poussière par
6) Electricity, Technology faire sauter [fuse, gasket]; griller [lightbulb]7) (colloq) ( spend) claquer (colloq) [money] (on dans)8) (colloq) ( expose) faire tomber [cover]9) (colloq) ( make a mess of)3.to blow it — tout ficher en l'air (colloq)
1) [wind] souffler2) ( move with wind)to blow in the wind — [leaves, clothes] voler au vent
3) [person] souffler ( into dans; on sur)4) ( sound) [whistle] retentir; [trumpet] sonner, retentir; [foghorn] rugir5) (break, explode) [fuse, gasket] sauter; [bulb] griller; [tyre] éclater•Phrasal Verbs:- blow in- blow off- blow out- blow up••to blow a fuse (colloq) ou a gasket (colloq) ou one's top (colloq) — piquer une crise (colloq)
it really blew my mind (colloq) ou blew me away! — (colloq) j'en suis resté baba (colloq)
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2 break
[breik] 1. past tense - broke; verb1) (to divide into two or more parts (by force).) briser, casser2) ((usually with off/away) to separate (a part) from the whole (by force).) casser3) (to make or become unusable.) casser4) (to go against, or not act according to (the law etc): He broke his appointment at the last minute.) désobéir à, manquer à5) (to do better than (a sporting etc record).) battre6) (to interrupt: She broke her journey in London.) interrompre7) (to put an end to: He broke the silence.) rompre8) (to make or become known: They gently broke the news of his death to his wife.) annoncer9) ((of a boy's voice) to fall in pitch.) muer10) (to soften the effect of (a fall, the force of the wind etc).) amortir11) (to begin: The storm broke before they reached shelter.) éclater2. noun1) (a pause: a break in the conversation.) pause2) (a change: a break in the weather.) changement3) (an opening.) brèche, ouverture4) (a chance or piece of (good or bad) luck: This is your big break.) chance•3. noun((usually in plural) something likely to break.) objet fragile- breakage- breaker - breakdown - break-in - breakneck - breakout - breakthrough - breakwater - break away - break down - break into - break in - break loose - break off - break out - break out in - break the ice - break up - make a break for it -
3 Usage note : might
Although usage shows that may and might are interchangeable in many contexts, might indicates a more remote possibility than may. French generally translates this element of possibility using peut-être with the appropriate verb tense:it might snow= il va peut-être neiger(It is also possible to translate this more formally using il se peut + subjunctive: il se peut qu’il neige). For particular examples see might1 1.It is possible to translate might differently depending on the nature of the context and the speaker’s point of view:he might not come= il risque de ne pas venirimplies that this is not a desirable outcome for the speaker ;he might not come= il pourrait ne pas venir or il se peut qu’il ne vienne pashowever, is neutral in tone. Where there is the idea of a possibility in the past which has not in fact occurred (see might1 2), French uses the past conditional of the verb (which is often pouvoir):it might have been serious (but wasn’t in fact)= ça aurait pu être graveThis is also the case where something which could have taken place did not, thus causing annoyance:you might have said thanks!= tu aurais pu dire merci!(see might1 7).might, as the past tense of may, will automatically occur in instances of reported speech:he said you might be hurt= il a dit que tu serais peut-être blesséFor more examples see the entry might1 and bear in mind the rules for the agreement of tenses.Where there is a choice between may and might in making requests, might is more formal and even rather dated. French uses inversion (je peux = puis-je?) in this context and puis-je me permettre de…? (= might I…?) is extremely formal.Might can be used to polite effect - to soften direct statements: you might imagine that…or to offer advice tactfully: it might be wise to…In both cases, French uses the conditional tense of the verb: on pourrait penser que… ; ce serait peut-être une bonne idée de… The use of well in phrases such as he might well be right etc. implies a greater degree of likelihood.For translations of might well, may well, see B2 in the entry well1.
См. также в других словарях:
soften something up — soften (someone/something) up to weaken someone or something. Constant bombing was designed to soften the enemy up and weaken him. The ads were just a way to soften up public opinion to accept a big price increase … New idioms dictionary
soften — [[t]sɒ̱f(ə)n, AM sɔ͟ːf [/t]] softens, softening, softened 1) V ERG If you soften something or if it softens, it becomes less hard, stiff, or firm. [V n] Soften the butter mixture in a small saucepan... Fry for about 4 minutes, until the onion has … English dictionary
soften up — 1. To lessen resistance in (informal) 2. To wear down by continuous shelling and bombing • • • Main Entry: ↑soft * * * ˌsoften ˈup [transitive] [present tense … Useful english dictionary
soften someone up — soften (someone/something) up to weaken someone or something. Constant bombing was designed to soften the enemy up and weaken him. The ads were just a way to soften up public opinion to accept a big price increase … New idioms dictionary
soften up — soften (someone/something) up to weaken someone or something. Constant bombing was designed to soften the enemy up and weaken him. The ads were just a way to soften up public opinion to accept a big price increase … New idioms dictionary
soften the blow — soften the blow/impact/effect/ phrase to make something unpleasant seem less severe He tried to soften the blow by telling her himself. Thesaurus: to reduce, or to remove the bad effects of somethingsynonym Main entry … Useful english dictionary
soften — UK US /ˈsɒfən/ verb ► [I] FINANCE, STOCK MARKET if demand, a price, a market, etc. softens, it stops increasing or it goes down: »Share prices softened with continued worries about the country s economic recovery. »Although demand softened again… … Financial and business terms
soften the impact — soften the blow/impact/effect/ phrase to make something unpleasant seem less severe He tried to soften the blow by telling her himself. Thesaurus: to reduce, or to remove the bad effects of somethingsynonym Main entry … Useful english dictionary
soften the effect — soften the blow/impact/effect/ phrase to make something unpleasant seem less severe He tried to soften the blow by telling her himself. Thesaurus: to reduce, or to remove the bad effects of somethingsynonym Main entry … Useful english dictionary
soften the blow — soften/cushion the blow ► to make the bad effects of something seem to be not as bad as they could have been: »If things go wrong there are no mechanisms to soften the blow. Main Entry: ↑blow … Financial and business terms
soften/cushion the blow — ► to make the bad effects of something seem to be not as bad as they could have been: »If things go wrong there are no mechanisms to soften the blow. Main Entry: ↑blow … Financial and business terms