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1 wind
I.wind1 [wɪnd]1. nouna. vent m• which way is the wind? d'où vient le vent ?b. ( = breath) souffle m3. compounds• a wind-chill factor of 10° une baisse de 10° due au vent ► wind-chimes plural noun carillon m éolienII.wind2 [waɪnd](verb: preterite, past participle wound)1. noun( = bend) coude mb. [+ clock, watch] remonter• to wind along [river, path] serpenter• the line of cars wound slowly up the hill la file de voitures a lentement gravi la colline en serpentant( = relax) (inf) se détendrea. [+ car window] baisserb. [+ department, service] réduire progressivement (en vue d'un démantèlement éventuel)► wind upb. [+ car window] monterc. [+ watch] remonter* * *I 1. [wɪnd]1) Meteorology vent m2) ( breath) souffle mto get one's second wind — fig reprendre ses forces
3) fig vent m4) ( flatulence) vents mpl5) Music2.the wind — les instruments mpl à vent
transitive verb1) ( make breathless) [blow] couper la respiration à; [exertion] essouffler2) faire son rot à [baby]••to get the wind up — (colloq) avoir la trouille (colloq)
II 1. [waɪnd]to put the wind up somebody — (colloq) flanquer la trouille (colloq) à quelqu'un
1) ( of road) tournant m2.transitive verb (prét, pp wound)1) ( coil up) enrouler2) (also wind up) remonter [clock, toy]3) donner un tour de [handle]4)3.to wind one's ou its way — serpenter
Phrasal Verbs:- wind in- wind on- wind up -
2 wind
Ⅰ.wind1 [wɪnd]1 noun(a) Meteorology vent m;∎ there's quite a wind il y a beaucoup de vent;∎ the wind has risen/dropped le vent s'est levé/est tombé;∎ the wind is changing le vent tourne;∎ Nautical into the wind contre le vent;∎ Nautical off the wind dans le sens du vent;∎ Nautical before the wind le vent en poupe;∎ figurative the winds of change are blowing il y a du changement dans l'air;∎ figurative with a fair wind si tout va bien;∎ the cold wind of recession le vent glacial de la récession;∎ to get wind of sth avoir vent de qch;∎ to run like the wind courir comme le vent;∎ to be scattered to the four winds être éparpillés aux quatre vents;∎ there's something in the wind il se prépare quelque chose;∎ to take the wind out of sb's sails couper l'herbe sous le pied à qn;∎ let's wait and see which way the wind blows attendons de voir quelle tournure les événements vont prendre∎ to get one's wind back reprendre haleine ou son souffle;∎ to get one's second wind reprendre haleine ou son souffle;∎ Sport he had the wind knocked out of him on lui a coupé le souffle, on l'a mis hors d'haleine;∎ the fall knocked the wind out of her la chute lui a coupé le souffle;∎ familiar to put the wind up sb flanquer la frousse à qn;∎ familiar to have the wind up avoir la frousse∎ his speech was just a lot of wind son discours n'était que du vent(d) (UNCOUNT) (air in stomach) vents mpl, gaz mpl;∎ broad beans give me wind les fèves me donnent des vents ou des gaz;∎ I've got terrible wind j'ai de terribles vents;∎ to break wind lâcher des vents;∎ to get a baby's wind up faire faire son renvoi à un bébé∎ the wind (section) les instruments mpl à vent, les vents mpl;∎ the wind is or are too loud les instruments à vent sont trop forts∎ to wind sb couper le souffle à qn;∎ the blow winded him le coup l'a mis hors d'haleine ou lui a coupé le souffle;∎ she was quite winded by the walk uphill la montée de la côte l'a essoufflée ou lui a coupé le souffle;∎ don't worry, I'm only winded ne t'inquiète pas, j'ai la respiration coupée, c'est tout►► wind chimes carillon m éolien;wind cone manche f à air;wind energy énergie f éolienne;wind farm champ m d'éoliennes;wind gauge anémomètre m;Music wind harp harpe f éolienne;Music wind instrument instrument m à vent;Theatre wind machine machine f à souffler le vent;wind power énergie f du vent ou éolienne;wind pump éolienne f;wind rose rose f des vents;Aviation wind sleeve manche f à air;wind speed vitesse f du vent;wind tunnel tunnel m aérodynamique;wind turbine éolienne fⅡ.(bend → procession, road) serpenter; (coil → thread) s'enrouler;∎ the river winds through the valley le fleuve décrit des méandres dans la vallée ou traverse la vallée en serpentant(a) (wrap → bandage, rope) enrouler;∎ I wound a scarf round my neck j'ai enroulé une écharpe autour de mon cou;∎ wind the string into a ball enrouler la ficelle pour en faire une pelote;∎ the snake had wound itself around the man's arm le serpent s'était enroulé autour du bras de l'homme;∎ literary to wind sb in one's arms enlacer qn;∎ to wind sb round or around one's little finger mener qn par le bout du nez∎ have you wound your watch? avez-vous remonté votre montre?3 noun∎ give the clock/the watch a wind remontez l'horloge/la montre;∎ she gave the handle another wind elle tourna la manivelle encore une fois, elle donna un tour de manivelle de plusrembobiner(b) (party, meeting) tirer à sa fin;∎ the party didn't begin to wind down until nearly 4 a.m. la fête a continué à battre son plein jusqu'à environ 4 heures du matin(b) (bring to an end → business) mener (doucement) vers sa fin(faire) avancerdérouler; (from a spool or reel) déviderenrouler➲ wind up∎ the chairman wound up the debate le président a clos le ou mis fin au débat;∎ the business will be wound up by the end of the year l'entreprise sera liquidée avant la fin de l'année∎ they're only winding you up ils te font marcher, ils essaient seulement de te mettre en boîte;∎ don't you know when you're being wound up? tu ne te rends même pas compte quand on te fait marcher ou quand on essaie de te mettre en boîte?∎ he wound up in jail il a fini ou s'est retrouvé en prison;∎ she'll wind up begging in the streets elle finira par mendier dans la rue;∎ he wound up with a broken nose il a fini avec le nez cassé;∎ we usually wind up back at my place généralement, nous finissons chez moi;∎ we wound up working for the same company nous nous sommes retrouvés à travailler pour la même compagnie(b) (end speech, meeting) conclure;∎ I'd like to wind up by saying… je voudrais conclure en disant… -
3 sail
sail [seɪl]1. nouna. [of boat] voile fb. ( = trip) to go for a sail faire un tour en bateau• to sail close to the wind ( = take a risk) jouer un jeu dangereux ; (when joking) friser la vulgarité• the plate sailed past my head and hit the door l'assiette est passée à côté de ma tête et a heurté la portea. [+ ocean] he sailed the Atlantic last year l'année dernière il a fait la traversée de l'Atlantique en bateau* * *[seɪl] 1.1) ( on boat) voile f2) ( navigation)to set sail from/for — partir en bateau de/pour
3) ( on windmill) aile f4) ( journey)2.transitive verb1) ( be in charge of) piloter [ship]; ( steer) manœuvrer [ship]2) ( travel across) traverser [quelque chose] en bateau [ocean, channel]3) ( own) avoir [yacht]3.1) ( travel) voyager en bateau2) ( move across water) [ship]to sail across — traverser [ocean]
to sail into — entrer dans [port]
3) ( set sail) prendre la mer4) ( as hobby) faire de la voile5) ( move smoothly)to sail past somebody — [person] passer près de quelqu'un sans même le/la remarquer
•Phrasal Verbs:•• -
4 puff
Ⅰ.puff1 [pʌf](a) (smoke → cigar, pipe) tirer des bouffées de(b) (emit, expel)∎ to puff (out) smoke/steam envoyer des nuages de fumée/des jets de vapeur;∎ he sat opposite me puffing smoke in my face! il était assis en face de moi et m'envoyait sa fumée en pleine figure!∎ "I can't go on", he puffed "je n'en peux plus", haleta-t-il(d) (swell → sail, parachute) gonfler∎ to puff (away) at one's pipe tirer sur sa pipe, tirer des bouffées de sa pipe∎ I was puffing as I climbed the stairs je haletais en montant l'escalier;∎ he was puffing and panting il soufflait comme un phoque;∎ I puffed along beside her je courais, tout essoufflé, à ses côtés∎ to puff on one's cigar tirer sur son cigare(d) (issue → smoke, steam) sortir∎ the train puffed into the station le train entra en gare dans un nuage de fumée;∎ the steam engine puffed into view la fumée indiqua l'arrivée du train3 noun∎ her breath came in short puffs elle haletait;∎ a puff of dust/smoke on the horizon un nuage de poussière/fumée à l'horizon;∎ figurative all our plans went up in a puff of smoke tous nos projets sont partis en fumée ou se sont évanouis(b) (on cigarette, pipe) bouffée f;∎ to have or to take a puff tirer une bouffée;∎ give me a puff (of your cigarette) passe-moi une bouffée(c) (sound → of train) teuf-teuf m∎ to be out of puff être à bout de souffle ou essoufflé□∎ puffs of cloud in the sky des moutons mpl ou des petits nuages mpl dans le ciel∎ (powder) puff houppe f (à poudrer), houpette f∎ cream puff chou m à la crème(i) familiar old-fashioned (free publicity) publicité f gratuite□ ; (favourable publicity) battage m;∎ to give sth a puff faire de la réclame ou du battage pour qch►► Zoology puff adder vipère f heurtante;puff sleeves manches fpl ballon➲ puff out(a) (extinguish) souffler, éteindre (en soufflant)(b) (inflate, make rounded → cheeks, sail) gonfler; (→ chest) bomber; (→ cushion, hair) faire bouffer;∎ the pigeon puffed out its feathers le pigeon fit gonfler ses plumes;∎ the wind puffed out the sails les voiles se gonflèrent∎ to puff out smoke/steam envoyer des nuages de fumée/de vapeur(a) (parachute, sail) se gonfler(b) (be emitted → smoke) s'échapper➲ puff up(b) (usu passive) (swell → lip, ankle etc) enfler;∎ her eyes were puffed up elle avait les yeux bouffis;∎ figurative to be puffed up with pride être bouffi d'orgueil(lip, ankle etc) enfler, bouffirⅡ.
См. также в других словарях:
take the wind out of one's sails — idi take the wind out of one s sails, to destroy one s self assurance; disconcert or deflate one … From formal English to slang
To take the wind out of one's sails — Wind Wind (w[i^]nd, in poetry and singing often w[imac]nd; 277), n. [AS. wind; akin to OS., OFries., D., & G. wind, OHG. wint, Dan. & Sw. vind, Icel. vindr, Goth winds, W. gwynt, L. ventus, Skr. v[=a]ta (cf. Gr. ah ths a blast, gale, ah^nai to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
take the wind out of one's sails — {v. phr.} To surprise someone by doing better or by catching him in an error. * /John came home boasting about the fish he had caught; it took the wind out of his sails when he found his little sister had caught a bigger one./ * /Dick took the… … Dictionary of American idioms
take the wind out of one's sails — {v. phr.} To surprise someone by doing better or by catching him in an error. * /John came home boasting about the fish he had caught; it took the wind out of his sails when he found his little sister had caught a bigger one./ * /Dick took the… … Dictionary of American idioms
take\ the\ wind\ out\ of\ one's\ sails — v. phr. To surprise someone by doing better or by catching him in an error. John came home boasting about the fish he had caught; it took the wind out of his sails when he found his little sister had caught a bigger one. Dick took the wind out of … Словарь американских идиом
take the wind out of one's sails — Digest 16/2002 to ruin or destroy someone s high expectations I was hoping to be accepted by that university. When the rejection letter arrived, it really took the wind out of my sails. The expression probably originates from the sport of racing… … Idioms and examples
take the wind out of one's sails — phrasal 1. : to sail to windward of a sailing vessel and so cut off the wind 2. : to frustrate by anticipating (as in argument) or by forestalling (as in action or movement) … Useful english dictionary
take the starch out of — {v. phr.}, {informal} 1. To make (someone) feel weak or tired. * /The hot weather took the starch out of Mrs. Jones, and she didn t feel like doing a thing./ * /The cross country run took all the starch out of the boys./ 2. See: TAKE THE WIND OUT … Dictionary of American idioms
take the starch out of — {v. phr.}, {informal} 1. To make (someone) feel weak or tired. * /The hot weather took the starch out of Mrs. Jones, and she didn t feel like doing a thing./ * /The cross country run took all the starch out of the boys./ 2. See: TAKE THE WIND OUT … Dictionary of American idioms
take\ the\ starch\ out\ of — v. phr. informal 1. To make (someone) feel weak or tired. The hot weather took the starch out of Mrs. Jones, and she didn t feel like doing a thing. The cross country run took all the starch out of the boys. 2. See: take the wind out of one s… … Словарь американских идиом
out of one's sails — See: TAKE THE WIND OUT OF ONE S SAILS … Dictionary of American idioms