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1 to incur somebody's wrath
s'attirer les foudres/l'ire/la colère de qqnEnglish-French dictionary of law, politics, economics & finance > to incur somebody's wrath
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2 incur
(blame, loss, penalty) s'exposer à, encourir; (debt) contracter; (losses) subir; (expenses) engager;∎ the expenses incurred les dépenses encourues;∎ to incur sb's wrath s'attirer les foudres de qn►► Accountancy incurred expenditure, incurred expenses dépenses fpl engagées -
3 incur
incur [ɪnˈkɜ:r]* * *[ɪn'kɜː(r)]transitive verb (p prés etc - rr-) contracter [debts]; subir [loss]; encourir [expense, penalty, risk, wrath] -
4 incur
2 ( bring down) encourir [wrath, displeasure].
См. также в других словарях:
incur — [in kʉr′] vt. incurred, incurring [ME incurren < L incurrere, to run into or toward, attack < in , in, toward + currere, to run: see CURRENT] 1. to come into or acquire (something undesirable) [to incur a debt] 2. to become subject to… … English World dictionary
incur */ — UK [ɪnˈkɜː(r)] / US [ɪnˈkɜr] verb [transitive] Word forms incur : present tense I/you/we/they incur he/she/it incurs present participle incurring past tense incurred past participle incurred 1) to lose money, owe money, or have to pay money as a… … English dictionary
incur — in|cur [ ın kɜr ] verb transitive * 1. ) to experience something unpleasant as a result of something you have done: Each stage of the process incurs an additional risk. incur someone s wrath/displeasure (=make someone angry): I do not wish to… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
wrath — n. (formal) 1) to bring down, incur smb. s wrath 2) to visit one s wrath upon smb. 3) one s righteous wrath * * * [rɒθ] incur smb. s wrath (formal) to bring down one s righteous wrath to visit one s wrath upon smb … Combinatory dictionary
wrath — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ full, great ▪ divine, righteous ▪ They saw the floods as a sign of divine wrath. VERB + WRATH ▪ arouse … Collocations dictionary
incur — in|cur [ınˈkə: US ˈkə:r] v past tense and past participle incurred present participle incurring [T] formal [Date: 1400 1500; : Latin; Origin: incurrere to run into , from currere to run ] 1.) if you incur a cost, debt, or a fine, you have to pay… … Dictionary of contemporary English
incur — verb /ɪnˈkəː,ɪnˈkɝ/ a) To bring upon or expose oneself to, especially something inconvenient, harmful, or onerous; to become liable or subject to. [T]he master in his wrath may easily incur worse evil himself than he inflicts [...] b) To render… … Wiktionary
incur — verb Incur is used with these nouns as the object: ↑casualty, ↑charge, ↑cost, ↑damage, ↑debt, ↑displeasure, ↑enmity, ↑expenditure, ↑expense, ↑fee, ↑injury, ↑ … Collocations dictionary
incur — [[t]ɪnkɜ͟ː(r)[/t]] incurs, incurring, incurred VERB If you incur something unpleasant, it happens to you because of something you have done. [WRITTEN] [V n] The government had also incurred huge debts... [V n] She falls in love and incurs the… … English dictionary
incur — verb it is astonishing how many expenses they incurred in just one evening these actions are likely to incur the coach s wrath Syn: bring upon oneself, expose oneself to, lay oneself open to; run up; attract, invite, earn, arouse, cause, give… … Thesaurus of popular words
Caesar III — Infobox VG| title = Caesar III developer = Impressions Games publisher = Sierra Entertainment designer = engine = released = 1998 genre = City building game modes = Single player ratings = ELSPA: +3, ESRB: Everyone (E) platforms = Windows, Apple… … Wikipedia