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1 abonder en
abound (in, with) -
2 regorger (de)
abound (in, with) -
3 abonder
abonder [abɔ̃de]➭ TABLE 1 intransitive verba. ( = être nombreux) to aboundb. ( = être plein) abonder en to be full ofc. ( = être d'accord) je ne peux qu'abonder dans son sens I agree absolutely* * *abɔ̃deverbe intransitif1) ( être en quantité) [fruits, produits, exemples] to abound; [gibier, poisson] to be plentiful2) ( avoir en quantité)••* * *abɔ̃de1. vi1) (exister en grand nombre) [gibier, occasions, preuves] to abound, to be plentiful2)abonder en [lieu] — to abound in
3) soutenuabonder dans le sens de qn [personne] — to concur with sb
4) FINANCE2. vtFINANCE, [caisse, budget, fonds] to contribute to* * *abonder verb table: aimer vi1 ( être en quantité) [fruits, produits] to abound; [gibier, poisson] to be plentiful; les exemples de ce type abondent examples of this kind abound; un quartier où abondaient les artistes an area where artists abounded;2 ( avoir en quantité) abonder en or de to be full of; la région abonde en gibier/en sites archéologiques the area is teeming with game/rich in archaeological sites.abonder dans le sens de qn to agree wholeheartedly with sb; j'abondai dans le même sens I agreed wholeheartedly with this.[abɔ̃de] verbe intransitif1. [foisonner] to be plentifulabonder en to abound in, to be full of2. (figuré & soutenu)abonder dans le sens de to be in complete agreement with, to go along with -
4 surabonder
syʀabɔ̃deverbe intransitif1) ( être en nombre) to abound2) ( être rempli)surabonder de or en — to abound in ou with
* * *syʀabɔ̃de vi* * *surabonder verb table: aimer vi1 ( être en nombre) to abound; les illustrations/erreurs surabondent dans le manuel illustrations/mistakes abound in the manual;2 ( être rempli) surabonder de or en to have an overabundance of; région qui surabonde de bons vins/de sites touristiques a region with an overabundance of good wines/of tourist spots; cette année surabonde en festivals there is an overabundance of festivals this year.[syrabɔ̃de] verbe intransitifles activités culturelles surabondent dans cette ville the town offers a wide range of cultural activities————————surabonder de verbe plus préposition,surabonder en verbe plus prépositionto abound with ou in -
5 foisonner
foisonner [fwazɔne]➭ TABLE 1 intransitive verb[idées, erreurs] to abound* * *fwazɔneverbe intransitif [idées, erreurs] to aboundfoisonner de or en — to have an abundance of
* * *fwazɔne vifoisonner en qch; foisonner de qch — to abound in sth
* * *foisonner verb table: aimer vi1 ( abonder) [idées, erreurs] to abound; le gibier foisonne dans le parc the estate is teeming with game; les erreurs foisonnent dans le texte the text is bristling with errors;2 ( regorger) foisonner de or en to have an abundance of; le pays foisonne de richesses/talents the country has an abundance of riches/talent; le jardin foisonne de fleurs the garden is full of flowers; le livre foisonne d'idées/d'erreurs the book is teeming with ideas/bristling with errors;3 ( augmenter de volume) [substance] to expand.[fwazɔne] verbe intransitif1. [abonder] to aboundnotre littérature foisonne en jeunes auteurs de talent our literature abounds in ou is full of talented young authors -
6 fourmiller
fourmiller [fuʀmije]➭ TABLE 1 intransitive verb[insectes, personnes] to swarm* * *fuʀmije
1.
fourmiller de verbe transitif indirectfourmiller de — to be chock-full of [erreurs]; to be swarming with [visiteurs]; to be teeming with [animaux]
2.
verbe intransitifles rats fourmillent dans le quartier — the neighbourhood [BrE] is swarming with rats
2) ( picoter)* * *fuʀmije vi* * *fourmiller verb table: aimerA fourmiller de vtr ind [texte, traduction] to be chock-full of [erreurs]; [musée, ville] to be swarming with [touristes, visiteurs]; [forêt, région] to be teeming with [animaux]; [ville] to be bustling with [activités].B vi1 ( abonder) to abound (dans in); les rats fourmillent dans le quartier the neighbourhoodGB is swarming with rats; livre où fourmillent les exemples book bursting with examples;2 ( picoter) j'ai les jambes qui fourmillent I've got pins and needles in my legs.[furmije] verbe intransitif1. [s'agiter] to swarm2. [être abondant] to abounda. [insectes, personnes] to swarm withb. [fautes, idées] to be full of, to be packed with3. [picoter] to tingle -
7 pulluler
pulluler [pylyle]➭ TABLE 1 intransitive verb( = grouiller) to swarm ; [erreurs, contrefaçons] to abound* * *pylyleverbe intransitif1) ( se multiplier) to proliferatedepuis dix ans les romans de mauvaise qualité pullulent — over the last ten years there has been a glut of bad novels
2) ( grouiller)* * *pylyle vi1) [insectes, rats, lapins] to proliferate2) [personnes] to swarmune île privée des Caraïbes où pullulent les milliardaires du showbiz — a private Caribbean island swarming with showbiz billionaires
3) [choses] [erreurs] to abound* * *pulluler verb table: aimer vi1 ( se multiplier) to proliferate; depuis dix ans les romans de mauvaise qualité pullulent for the last ten years there has been an abundance of poor quality novels;2 ( grouiller) les touristes/insectes pullulent dans la région the area is swarming with tourists/insects; les poissons pullulent dans la rivière the river is teeming with fish; les erreurs pullulent dans le texte the text abounds with mistakes.[pylyle] verbe intransitifles mauvaises herbes pullulaient dans le jardin abandonné weeds were taking over the abandoned garden3. [fourmiller de]pulluler de to swarm ou to be alive with -
8 regorger
regorger [ʀ(ə)gɔʀʒe]➭ TABLE 3 intransitive verb• sa maison regorgeait de livres/d'invités his house was packed with books/guests• son livre regorge de bonnes idées/de fautes his book is packed with good ideas/is riddled with mistakes* * *ʀ(ə)gɔʀʒeverbe intransitif [magasin, maison] to be packed (de with); [ville, région] to have an abundance (de of); [discours, film] to be crammed (de with)* * *ʀ(ə)ɡɔʀʒe viregorger de — to overflow with, to be bursting with
* * *regorger verb table: manger vi [magasin, maison, entrepôt] to be packed (de with); [ville, pays, région] to have an abundance (de of); [discours, film] to be crammed (de with); ses livres regorgent d'anecdotes/de clichés his books are crammed with anecdotes/with clichés; le lac regorge de poissons the lake is brimming with fish.[rəgɔrʒe] verbe intransitif(littéraire) [liquide] to overflow————————regorger de verbe plus préposition -
9 proliférer
proliférer [pʀɔlifeʀe]➭ TABLE 6 intransitive verb* * *pʀɔlifeʀeverbe intransitif to proliferate* * *pʀɔlifeʀe vi* * *proliférer verb table: céder vi to proliferate.[prɔlifere] verbe intransitif -
10 Champagne
The most famous sparkling wine in the world, produced in the 34,000 hectares of registered vineyards in the Champagne-Ardenne region of north-east France. The two main centres for Champagne production are the areas of Reims and Epernay. Champagne is an Appellation contrôlée, and the name can only be used to describe sparkling wine produced in the Champagne area. Other areas used to label traditionally produced sparkling wines as being "méthode champenoise", but even this adjectival use of the word is now prohibited.The Champagne region contains the most northerly of France's major vineyards. Unlike most French wines, champagnes are blended in order to produce either non vintage champagnes (blended from different years) or vintage champagne, blended from wines of the same harvest. Consequently, since the quality of the champagne ultimately depends on a balance between the quality of the grapes and the skill of the blenders, Champagnes are also ranked and promoted by producer, not by any more finely delimited appellation. Among the most highly rated of blends are Krug, Mumm, Bollinger and Heidsieck, not to mention the very well known brands of Moët & Chandon and Taittinger.The distinct taste and purity of real champagne is certainly due to the chalky soil and the continental growing conditions that abound in the Champagne region. Several of the main French Champagne producers have set up branches and vineyards in California, but in spite of bringing over their best master-blenders, have never been able to achieve quite the same result.Although many people imagine that Champagnes are all white, this is not the case. Rosé champagnes also exist.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Champagne
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11 foisonner
COS bolle, cresceEN to abound, to increase
См. также в других словарях:
Abound — A*bound , v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Abounded}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Abounding}.] [OE. abounden, F. abonder, fr. L. abundare to overflow, abound; ab + unda wave. Cf. {Undulate}.] 1. To be in great plenty; to be very prevalent; to be plentiful. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
abound — can have as its subject things that are plentiful or (followed by in or with) the place where things are plentiful: • Mulberry trees abound in Oxford [note that in goes with Oxford, not abound!] Jan Morris, 1978 • A few years since this country… … Modern English usage
abound — [ə bound′] vi. [ME abounden < OFr abonder < L abundare, to overflow < ab , away + undare, to rise in waves < unda, a wave: see WATER] 1. to be plentiful; exist in large numbers or amounts [tropical plants abound in the jungle] 2. to… … English World dictionary
abound in/with — [phrasal verb] abound in/with (something) : to be filled with (something) : to contain a very large amount of (something) They live in a region that abounds in/with oil. a stream abounding in/with fish • • • Main Entry: ↑abound … Useful english dictionary
abound — (v.) early 14c., from O.Fr. abonder to abound, be abundant, come together in great numbers (12c.), from L. abundare overflow, run over, from L. ab off (see AB (Cf. ab )) + undare rise in a wave, from unda water, wave (see WATER (Cf … Etymology dictionary
abound — abound; su·per·abound; … English syllables
abound — ► VERB 1) exist in large numbers or amounts. 2) (abound in/with) have in large numbers or amounts. ORIGIN Latin abundare overflow … English terms dictionary
abound — index increase, proliferate Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
abound — overflow, *teem, swarm Analogous words: predominate, preponderate (see corresponding adjectives at DOMINANT) Antonyms: fail, fall short Contrasted words: want, *lack, need, require: scant, skimp, scrimp (see corresponding adjectives at MEAGER) … New Dictionary of Synonyms
abound — [v] exist in abundance be alive with, be all over the place*, be knee deep in*, be no end to*, be plentiful, be thick with*, be up to one’s ears in*, crawl with*, crowd, flourish, flow, have a full plate*, infest, overflow, proliferate, swarm,… … New thesaurus
abound — a|bound [əˈbaund] v [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: abonder, from [i]Latin abundare, from ab away + unda wave ] to exist in very large numbers ▪ Rumours abound as to the reasons for his resignation. ▪ Examples of this abound in her book.… … Dictionary of contemporary English