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1 vendre
vendre [vɑ̃dʀ]➭ TABLE 411. transitive verb• vendre au mètre/au kilo to sell by the metre/by the kilo• « (maison/terrain) à vendre » "(house/land) for sale"2. reflexive verb► se vendre [marchandise] to be sold* * *vɑ̃dʀ
1.
1) gén to sellvendre en gros — to wholesale, to sell [something] wholesale
‘à vendre’ — ‘for sale’
2) ( trahir) to betray, to shop (colloq) GB [personne, complice] (à to)
2.
se vendre verbe pronominalse vendre à la pièce/au poids — to be sold singly/by weight
se vendre bien/mal — to sell well/badly
se vendre — [personne] to sell oneself
* * *vɑ̃dʀ vtIl m'a vendu son vélo. — He sold me his bike.
"à vendre" — "for sale"
* * *vendre verb table: rendreA vtr1 Comm, Écon, Fin to sell (à to); vendre à crédit to sell on credit; vendre en gros to wholesale, to sell [sth] wholesale; vendre au détail to retail; vendre à la pièce to sell [sth] singly; vendre au poids to sell [sth] by weight; vendre qch par trois/quatre to sell sth in sets of three/four ou in threes/fours; vendre à perte to sell [sth] at a loss; vendre bon marché/cher to sell [sth] cheaply/at a high price; il m'a vendu sa voiture 5 000 euros he sold me the car for 5,000 euros; ça fait vendre it boosts sales; vendre ses charmes/faveurs to sell one's charms/favoursGB; ‘à vendre’ ‘for sale’; ma voiture n'est pas à vendre my car is not for sale; être vendu comme neuf to be sold as new; être vendu comme esclave to be sold into slavery;B se vendre vpr1 ( être vendu) to be sold; ces produits ne se vendent pas en France these products are not sold ou are not available in France; ça se vend uniquement en pharmacie it's only sold ou available in chemists' GB ou pharmacies; se vendre à la pièce/au poids to be sold singly/by the weight;2 ( trouver acquéreur) to sell; se vendre bien/mal to sell well/badly; savoir se vendre fig [personne] to know how to sell oneself;3 ( se compromettre) to sell out (à to); ( pour de l'argent) to sell oneself (à to); se vendre à l'ennemi to sell out to the enemy. ⇒ lentille, ours.il vendrait père et mère pour arriver à ses fins he' d give anything to get what he wants.[vɑ̃dr] verbe transitif1. [céder - propriété, brevet, marchandise] to sellil vend ses melons (à) deux euros he sells his melons at ou for two euros eachvendre quelque chose à la pièce/à la douzaine/au poids to sell something by unit/by the dozen/by weighta. [généralement] to auction somethingb. [pour s'en débarrasser] to auction something offvendre quelque chose à quelqu'un to sell somebody something, to sell something to somebody‘à vendre’ ‘for sale’ils vendent cher/ne vendent pas cher chez Zapp Zapp's is expensive/cheapil ne faut jamais vendre la peau de l'ours avant de l'avoir tué (proverbe) don't count your chickens before they are hatched (proverbe)2. [commercialiser] to sellce qui les intéresse, c'est de vendre they're interested in selling ou salesnous vendons beaucoup à l'étranger we sell a lot abroad, we get a lot of sales abroad3. [trahir - secret] to sell ; [ - associé, confident] to sell down the rivera. [exprès] to give the game ou show awayb. [par accident] to let the cat out of the bag————————se vendre verbe pronominal (emploi passif)ça se vend bien/mal actuellement it is/isn't selling well at the momentse vendre comme des petits pains to sell ou to go like hot cakes————————se vendre verbe pronominal (emploi réfléchi)1. [se mettre en valeur] to sell oneself2. [traître] to sell oneselfse vendre à l'adversaire to sell oneself to ou to sell out to the opposite side -
2 ours
ours [uʀs]1. masculine nouna. ( = animal) bearb. ( = jouet) ours en peluche teddy bear2. compounds* * *uʀsnom masculin invariable2) ( personne)•Phrasal Verbs:••vendre la peau de l'ours avant de l'avoir tué — Proverbe to count one's chickens before they're hatched
* * *uʀs nm1) (= animal) bear2) (= peluche) teddy3) (= personne)* * *ours nm inv2 ( personne) il est un peu ours he's a bit surly;3 Presse ≈ masthead.ours blanc Zool polar bear; ours brun Zool brown bear; ours mal léché boor; ours de mer Zool Northern fur seal; ours en peluche Jeux teddy bear; ours polaire = ours blanc.vendre la peau de l'ours avant de l'avoir tué Prov to count one's chickens before they're hatched.[urs] nom masculinours blanc ou polaire polar bear2. [personne]3. [jouet] -
3 hypothèque
hypothèque [ipɔtεk]feminine nouna. mortgageb. ( = obstacle) obstacle* * *ipɔtɛk1) mortgage* * *ipɔtɛk nf* * *hypothèque nf1 mortgage; prendre/rembourser une hypothèque to take out/pay off a mortgage; prendre une hypothèque sur l'avenir fig to mortgage one's future;2 fig ( doute) doubt; ( danger) threat, danger; lever l'hypothèque ( doute) to remove the doubt; ( danger) to remove the threat.[ipɔtɛk] nom féminin2. (figuré)lever l'hypothèque to remove the stumbling block ou the obstacle
См. также в других словарях:
count one's chickens before they are hatched — To plan or act on the basis of expectations or future results without conclusive evidence that they will be fulfilled • • • Main Entry: ↑chick count one s chickens before they are hatched see under ↑chick1 • • • Main Entry: ↑hatch … Useful english dictionary
count\ one's\ chickens\ before\ they\ are\ hatched — v. phr. informal To depend on getting a profit or gain before you have it; make plans that suppose something will happen; be too sure that something will happen. Usually used in negative sentences: Don t count on things to turn out exactly as you … Словарь американских идиом
count\ one's\ chickens\ before\ they're\ hatched — v. phr. informal To depend on getting a profit or gain before you have it; make plans that suppose something will happen; be too sure that something will happen. Usually used in negative sentences: Don t count on things to turn out exactly as you … Словарь американских идиом
count one's chickens before they're hatched — {v. phr.}, {informal} To depend on getting a profit or gain before you have it; make plans that suppose something will happen; be too sure that something will happen. Usually used in negative sentences. * /When Jim said that he would be made… … Dictionary of American idioms
count one's chickens before they're hatched — {v. phr.}, {informal} To depend on getting a profit or gain before you have it; make plans that suppose something will happen; be too sure that something will happen. Usually used in negative sentences. * /When Jim said that he would be made… … Dictionary of American idioms
count one's chickens before they're hatched — assume that something will be successful before it is certain Don t count your chickens before they re hatched. You re spending your money and you don t even have a job yet … Idioms and examples
not\ count\ one's\ chickens\ before\ they\ are\ hatched — v. phr. informal To depend on getting a profit or gain before you have it; make plans that suppose something will happen; be too sure that something will happen. Usually used in negative sentences: Don t count on things to turn out exactly as you … Словарь американских идиом
count\ one's\ chickens\ until\ they\ are\ hatched — v. phr. informal To depend on getting a profit or gain before you have it; make plans that suppose something will happen; be too sure that something will happen. Usually used in negative sentences: Don t count on things to turn out exactly as you … Словарь американских идиом
don’t count your chickens before they are hatched — An instruction not to make, or act upon, an assumption (usually favourable) which might turn out to be wrong. The metaphorical phrase to count one’s chickens is also used. c 1570 T. HOWELL New Sonnets C2 Counte not thy Chickens that vnhatched be … Proverbs new dictionary
count — count1 W3S1 [kaunt] v ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(find the total)¦ 2¦(say numbers)¦ 3¦(be allowed)¦ 4¦(include)¦ 5¦(consider something)¦ 6¦(important)¦ 7 I/you can count somebody/something on (the fingers of) one hand 8 don t count your chickens (before they re… … Dictionary of contemporary English
count — 1 /kaUnt/ verb 1 SAY NUMBERS also count up (I) to say numbers in their correct order (+ to): Sarah can count up to five now. | Try to count to ten before you lose your temper. 2 FIND THE TOTAL also count up (T) to count the people, objects,… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English