-
121 injure
injure [ɛ̃ʒyʀ]feminine nouna. ( = insulte) term of abuse* * *ɛ̃ʒyʀ* * *ɛ̃ʒyʀ1. nfIl a pris ça comme une injure. — He took this as an insult.
2. injures nfplabuse no pl insultslancer des injures à quelqu'un — to hurl abuse at somebody, to hurl insults at somebody
* * *injure nf1 ( insulte) abuse ¢; couvrir qn d'injures to heap abuse on sb; proférer des injures to pour out abuse;2 ( offense) injury (à to); faire injure à qn to insult sb;3 Jur être inculpé d'injure à qn to be charged with abusing sb;[ɛ̃ʒyr] nom fémininun chapelet d'injures a stream of abuse ou insultsaccabler ou couvrir quelqu'un d'injures to heap abuse on somebody -
122 investir
investir [ɛ̃vεstiʀ]➭ TABLE 21. transitive verba. [+ capital] to investb. [armée, police] to surround2. reflexive verb• s'investir dans son travail/une relation to put a lot into one's work/a relationship* * *ɛ̃vɛstiʀ
1.
2) ( charger) to invest [personne, ambassadeur] (de with)3) ( se répandre dans) [policiers] to go into; [touristes, manifestants] to take over4) ( encercler) [armée] to besiege
2.
s'investir verbe pronominals'investir dans — ( énergiquement) to put a lot of oneself into; ( sentimentalement) to invest emotionally in
* * *ɛ̃vɛstiʀ vt1) [argent, avoirs] to invest2) [temps, efforts] to invest, to put in3)investir qn de [mission, rôle, autorité] — to vest sb with
4) [secteur, quartier] to move into* * *investir verb table: finirA vtr2 ( charger) to invest [personne] (de with); to invest [ambassadeur, ministre]; to induct [juge, magistrat]; être investi d'un droit to be invested with a right; investir qn de sa confiance to put one's trust in sb;3 ( se répandre dans) [policiers] to go into [locaux, place]; [touristes, manifestants] to take over [lieu];4 ( dépenser) to invest [énergie] (dans in);5 Psych to invest emotionally in [personne, enfant];6 ( encercler) [armée] to besiege [lieu].B s'investir vpr ( énergiquement) to put oneself (dans into); ( sentimentalement) to invest a lot of emotion (dans into).[ɛ̃vɛstir] verbe transitifinvestir à court/long terme to make a short-/long-term investment3. (soutenu) [d'un pouvoir, d'une fonction]par l'autorité dont je suis investi by the authority vested in ou conferred upon me4. [encercler - suj: armée] to surround, to besiege————————s'investir dans verbe pronominal plus prépositions'investir dans son métier to be involved ou absorbed in one's job -
123 large
large [laʀʒ]1. adjectivea. ( = grand) wide ; [lame, dos, visage, main, nez, front] broad ; [jupe] full ; [chemise] loose-fitting ; [pantalon] baggyb. [pouvoirs, diffusion, extraits] extensive ; [choix, gamme] widec. ( = généreux) generousd. ( = tolérant) il est large d'esprit2. adverb• prends un peu plus d'argent, il vaut mieux prévoir large take a bit more money, it's better to allow a bit extra3. masculine nouna. ( = largeur) une avenue de 8 mètres de large an avenue 8 metres wideb. ( = haute mer) le large the open sea* * *laʀʒ
1.
1) ( de grande dimension) [épaules, hanches, paumes] broad; [couloir, avenue, rivière, lit] wide; [sillon] broad; [manteau] loose-fitting; [pantalon] loose; [jupe, cape] full; [chandail] big; [geste, mouvement] sweeping; [sourire] broad; [courbe, détour] longlarge de trois mètres — three metres [BrE] wide
2) ( important) [avance, bénéfice] substantial; [choix, public] wide; [concertation, coalition] broad; [extrait, majorité] large4) ( ais é) [vie] comfortable5) ( ouvert)avoir les idées larges, être large d'esprit — to be broad-minded
2.
1) ( généreusement) [prévoir] on a generous scale; [calculer, mesurer] on the generous side2)
3.
nom masculin1) ( largeur)faire quatre mètres de large — to be four metres [BrE] wide
2) Nautisme open seaprendre le large — Nautisme to sail; grand
••ne pas en mener large — (colloq) to be worried stiff (colloq)
* * *laʀʒ1. adj1) (passage, boulevard, étendue, couverture, éventail) wide, (majorité) large, (épaules, visage, sourire) broad2)3) fig (= généreux) generous2. adv1) [voir, prévoir, calculer]Nous avons préféré voir large au cas où les invités viendraient avec leurs familles. — We thought we'd better allow plenty in case our guests brought their families.
En calculant large, je pense que l'on devrait être à Édimbourg dans une heure. — Allowing plenty of time, I think we should be in Edinburgh in an hour.
2)3. nm1) (= largeur)5 m de large — 5 m wide, 5 m in width
2) (= mer)Le bateau est actuellement au large du Portugal. — The boat is off the coast of Portugal at the moment.
3)en long et en large [expliquer, décrire, parcourir] — in every detail
* * *A adj1 ⇒ Les mesures de longueur ( de grande dimension) [front, épaules, hanches, paumes, nez] broad; [couloir, avenue, rivière, lit] wide; [sillon] broad; [manteau] loose-fitting; [pantalon] loose; [jupe, cape] full; [chandail] big; [geste, mouvement] sweeping; [sourire] broad; [courbe, détour] long; une caisse aussi large que haute a box as wide as it is high; faire de larges gestes des bras to make sweeping gestures with one's arms; former un large cercle to form a big circle; être large d'épaules/de hanches to have broad shoulders/hips; être large de trois mètres to be three metresGB wide;2 ( important) [avance, bénéfice] substantial; [choix, gamme, public] wide; [concertation, coalition] broad; [extrait, majorité] large; remporter une large victoire to win by a wide margin; dans une large mesure, pour une large part to a large extent; au sens large in a broad sense; prendre une large part dans qch to take a large part in sth; bénéficier d'un large soutien to have widespread support;3 ( généreux) [personne] generous (avec to);5 ( ouvert) avoir les idées larges, être large d'idées to be broad-minded, to be liberal; avoir l'esprit large, être large d'esprit to be broad-minded.B adv1 ( généreusement) [prévoir] on a generous scale; [calculer, mesurer] on the generous side; il vaut mieux prévoir large it's better to plan on a generous scale; et quand je dis dix je suis large○! and when I say ten I'm erring on the generous side!; trois kilos de spaghetti, tu as vu large○! three kilos of spaghetti, you don't believe in skimping, do you?;2 Mode s'habiller large to wear loose-fitting clothes; un modèle qui chausse large a wide-fitting shoe.C nm1 ( largeur) faire quatre mètres de large to be four metresGB wide; un ruban de deux centimètres de large a ribbon five centimetresGB wide; être au large○ to have plenty of room;2 Naut open sea; gagner le large to reach the open sea; au large offshore; au large de Marseille/des côtes bretonnes off Marseilles/the coast of Brittany; l'air/le vent du large the sea air/breeze; prendre le large Naut to sail; fig○ to make oneself scarce○; ⇒ grand.ne pas en mener large○ to be worried stiff○.[larʒ] adjectif3. [considérable] largeelle a une large part de responsabilité she must bear a large ou major share of the blameavoir un large vocabulaire to have a wide ou wide-ranging vocabularyelle a fait de larges concessions/un large tour d'horizon she made generous concessions/an extensive survey of the situationles journaux ont publié de larges extraits de son discours the papers quoted extensively from his speech4. [généralementéral]5. [généralementéreux] generous6. [ouvert] openleur père a l'esprit large their father is open-minded ou broad-minded7. [excessif]————————[larʒ] nom masculin1. [dimension] width2. NAUTIQUEau large offshore, at sea————————[larʒ] adverbecalculer ou prévoir large to allow a good margin for error————————en large locution adverbiale -
124 lycée
lycée [lise]masculine noun━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━Lycées are state secondary schools where pupils study for their « baccalauréat » after leaving the « collège ». The lycée covers the school years known as « seconde » (15-16 year-olds), « première » (16-17 year-olds) and « terminale » (up to leaving age at 18). The term lycée professionnel refers to a lycée which provides vocational training as well as the more traditional core subjects. → BACCALAURÉAT COLLÈGE ÉDUCATION NATIONALE* * *lisenom masculin secondary school ( school preparing students aged 15-18 for the baccalaureat)Phrasal Verbs:* * *lise nmsecondary school Grande-Bretagne (with pupils from 15 to 18 years old), high school USA (with pupils from 15 to 18 years old)* * *lycée nm1 Scol secondary school (covering the final three years before the baccalauréat); lycée Carnot/Voltaire Lycée Carnot/Voltaire;2 Philos lyceum.ⓘ Lycée A school providing secondary education for the three years after collège. The students enter the first year or seconde at the age of 15/16, then première, and finally complete the cycle in terminale at age 17/18, when they sit for the baccalauréat. As well as those which provide a conventional academic education, there are a number of different types of lycée offering a more vocationally-based education. ⇒ baccalauréat[lise] nom masculin(upper) secondary school (UK), high school (US) (providing three years' teaching after the "collège", in preparation for the baccalauréat examination)lycée professionnel vocational (high) school, technical college -
125 macaroni
makaʀɔni nmpldes macaronis au fromage; un gratin de macaronis — macaroni cheese Grande-Bretagne macaroni and cheese USA
* * *[makarɔni] nom masculin————————[makarɔni] nom masculin et féminin -
126 maghrébin
maghrébin, e [magʀebɛ̃, in]1. adjectiveof or from North Africa2. masculine noun, feminine noun* * *maghrébine magʀebɛ̃, in adjectif North African, Maghrebi* * *maɡʀebɛ̃, in nm/f Maghrébin, -e* * *maghrébin, maghrébine adj North African, Maghrebi.( féminin maghrébine) [magrebɛ̃, in] adjectif————————This term usually refers to people from Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia, although it can also refer to Libyans and Mauritanians. It has a particular resonance in contemporary France, where immigrants from these countries continue to suffer from racial prejudice. -
127 magistrat
magistrat [maʒistʀa]masculine nounmagistrate ; ( = juge) judge* * *maʒistʀanom masculin magistrate* * *maʒistʀa nm* * *magistrat, magistrate nm,f2 Admin magistrate.[maʒistra] nom masculin3. MILITAIREThe word magistrat can refer either to a judge or to any public servant who exercises judicatory or administrative power: mayors and the president of France are magistrats. The term magistrat municipal refers to a member of a local council. -
128 magistrature
magistrature [maʒistʀatyʀ]feminine noun• entrer dans la magistrature ( = devenir juge) to be appointed a judge* * *maʒistʀatyʀ1) Droit magistracy2) Administration ( fonction) public office* * *maʒistʀatyʀ nfmagistracy, magistraturemagistrature assise — judges pl bench
* * *magistrature nf1 Jur magistracy;2 Admin ( fonction) public office; ( durée de cette fonction) term ou tenure of office; arriver à la magistrature suprême to reach the highest office in the land.la magistrature assise the judges (pl); la magistrature debout the state ou public prosecutors (pl).[maʒistratyr] nom féminin1. [personnes]la magistrature debout DROIT the (body of) public prosecutors (UK), the (body of) prosecuting attorneys (US)2. [fonction] office
См. также в других словарях:
Term — Term, n. [F. terme, L. termen, inis, terminus, a boundary limit, end; akin to Gr. ?, ?. See {Thrum} a tuft, and cf. {Terminus}, {Determine}, {Exterminate}.] 1. That which limits the extent of anything; limit; extremity; bound; boundary. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
term — n often attrib 1: a specified period of time the policy term 2: the whole period for which an estate is granted; also: the estate itself 3 a: the period in which the powers of a court may be validly exercised b … Law dictionary
Term — may refer to: *Term (computers) or terminal emulator, a program that emulates a video terminal *Term (language) or terminology, a word or compound word used in a specific context *Term (mathematics), a component of a mathematical expression… … Wikipedia
Term — Term, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Termed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Terming}.] [See {Term}, n., and cf. {Terminate}.] To apply a term to; to name; to call; to denominate. [1913 Webster] Men term what is beyond the limits of the universe imaginary space. Locke.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
term — ► NOUN 1) a word or phrase used to describe a thing or to express a concept. 2) (terms) language used on a particular occasion: a protest in the strongest possible terms. 3) (terms) stipulated or agreed requirements or conditions. 4) (terms)… … English terms dictionary
term — term1 [tʉrm] n. [ME terme < OFr < L terminus, a limit, boundary, end < IE * termṇ, a boundary stake < base * ter , to cross over, go beyond > TRANS , Gr terma, goal] 1. Archaic a point of time designating the beginning or end of a… … English World dictionary
term — [n1] description of a concept appellation, article, caption, denomination, designation, expression, head, indication, language, locution, moniker*, name, nomenclature, phrase, style, terminology, title, vocable, word; concepts 275,683 term [n2]… … New thesaurus
term — (n.) early 13c., terme limit in time, set or appointed period, from O.Fr. terme limit of time or place (11c.), from L. terminus end, boundary line, related to termen boundary, end (see TERMINUS (Cf. terminus)). Sense of period of time during… … Etymology dictionary
term|er — «TUR muhr», noun. a person who is serving a term as a public official: »a fourth termer … Useful english dictionary
Term — der; s, e <aus gleichbed. fr. terme, eigtl. »Grenze, Begrenzung«, dies aus (m)lat. terminus, vgl. ↑Termin>: 1. [Reihe von] Zeichen in einer formalisierten Theorie, mit der od. dem eines der in der Theorie betrachteten Objekte dargestellt… … Das große Fremdwörterbuch
term — англ. [тэ/эм] terme фр. [тэрм] termine ит. [тэ/рминэ] Terminus нем. [тэрминус] термин … Словарь иностранных музыкальных терминов