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1 bousculer
bousculer [buskyle]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verbb. [+ objet] ( = heurter) to bump into ; ( = faire tomber) to knock overc. [+ idées, traditions] to shake up ; [+ habitudes, emploi du temps] to upset2. reflexive verb► se bousculer ( = se heurter) to jostle each other* * *buskyle
1.
1) ( heurter) ( involontairement) to bump into [personne]; ( volontairement) to knock about [personne]2) ( malmener) to jostle [équipe]3) ( presser) to rush [personne, programme]
2.
se bousculer verbe pronominal1) ( se heurter) to bump into each other2) ( être nombreux) to fall over each other ( pour faire to do)* * *buskyle vt1) (= pousser) to push, to shoveQuelqu'un m'a bousculé, j'ai perdu l'équilibre. — Someone pushed me and I lost my balance.
2) [traditions, habitudes] to shake up3) (= faire se dépêcher) to rushJe n'aime pas qu'on me bouscule. — I don't like to be rushed.
* * *bousculer verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( heurter) ( involontairement) to bump into [personne]; ( volontairement) to knock about [personne, mobilier];2 ( remettre en question) to shake up [idée, programme];3 ( malmener) to jostle [équipe, parti];4 ( presser) to rush [personne, programme].B se bousculer vpr1 ( se heurter) to bump into each other;2 ( être nombreux) to fall over each other (pour faire to do); on se bouscule there are queues GB ou lines US; on ne se bouscule pas iron people are not exactly queuing GB ou lining US up; surtout ne vous bousculez pas pour venir m'aider! iron don't all rush at once to help me!; ⇒ portillon.[buskyle] verbe transitif1. [pousser - voyageur, passant] to jostle, to push, to shove ; [ - chaise, table] to bump ou to knock intoj'ai été très bousculé I've had a lot to do ou a very busy time————————se bousculer verbe pronominal intransitif2. [affluer] to rush -
2 coude
coude [kud]masculine nouna. [de personne] elbow• être au coude à coude [coureurs, candidats] to be neck and neck• j'ai or je garde votre dossier sous le coude I am holding on to your fileb. [de rivière, route, tuyau, barre] bend* * *kudnom masculin1) Anatomie elbowdonner un coup de coude à quelqu'un — ( pour attirer l'attention) to nudge somebody, give somebody a nudge; ( en se battant) to jab somebody with one's elbow
2) ( partie de manche) elbow; ( pièce) elbow patch3) (de chemin, tuyau) bend; ( de fleuve) bend, elbow••se serrer or se tenir les coudes — to stick together
lever le coude — (colloq) to drink a bit
* * *kud nm1) ANATOMIE elbowcoude à coude — shoulder to shoulder, side by side
jouer des coudes pour entrer; Il a fallu jouer des coudes pour entrer. — We had to elbow our way in.
se mettre le doigt dans l'œil jusqu'au coude (se méprendre totalement) — to be completely mistaken, to get it completely wrong
2) [tuyau, route] bend* * *coude ⇒ Le corps humain nm1 Anat elbow; coudes au corps with elbows tucked in; donner un coup de coude à qn ( pour attirer l'attention) to nudge sb, give sb a nudge; ( en se battant) to jab sb with one's elbow; jouer des coudes pour atteindre le buffet to elbow one's way to the buffet;3 (de chemin, tuyau) bend; ( de fleuve) bend, elbow; la route fait un coude there's a bend in the road; le tuyau du lave-linge fait un coude there's a kink in the washing machine waste pipe.coude à coude solidarity; travailler coude à coude to work shoulder to shoulder; être au coude à coude to be neck and neck.se serrer or se tenir les coudes to stick together; lever le coude○ to drink a bit; garder qch sous le coude to put sth on the back burner.[kud] nom masculina. (sens propre) to push and shove, to jostlecoude à coude [marcher, travailler] shoulder to shoulder, side by sidegarder ou mettre ou tenir quelque chose sous le coude to keep something shelved indefinitely, to keep something on the back burnerse serrer ou se tenir les coudes to stick together2. [d'un vêtement] elbow[pièce en cuir, en tissu] elbow patch[d'une route] bend -
3 entrechoquer
ɑ̃tʀəʃɔke
1.
verbe transitif to clatter [vaisselle]; to clink, to chink [verres]; to crash [cymbales]; to knock ou bang [something] together [cailloux, cuillères]
2.
s'entrechoquer verbe pronominal1) [verres] to clink, to chink; [dents] to chatter; [casseroles] to clatter2) [idées, passions] to clash* * *entrechoquer verb table: aimerA vtr to clatter [casseroles, vaisselle]; to clink, to chink [verres]; to crash [cymbales]; to knock ou bang [sth] together [cailloux, cuillères].B s'entrechoquer vpr1 [verres] to clink, to chink; [dents] to chatter; [casseroles] to clatter;2 [projets, idées, passions] to clash.[ɑ̃trəʃɔke] verbe transitifto knock ou to bang together————————s'entrechoquer verbe pronominal (emploi réciproque)1. [se heurter - verres] to clink (together) ; [ - épées] to clash (together) ; [ - dents] to chatter2. [affluer - images, mots] to jostle together -
4 frôler
frôler [fʀole]➭ TABLE 1 transitive verba. ( = toucher) to brush against ; ( = passer près de) to skimb. ( = confiner à) to border on* * *fʀole
1.
1) ( toucher) [personne, main, genou] to brush; [projectile] to graze2) ( passer près) [balle, pierre, voiture] to miss narrowly; [personne] to brush past [personne]; to brush against [objet, mur]frôler les 200 km/h — to nearly touch 200km per hour
2.
se frôler verbe pronominal1) ( se toucher) [personnes, mains, genoux] to brush against each other2) ( sans se toucher) [objets, voitures, conducteurs] to just miss each other; [personnes] to brush past each other* * *fʀole vt1) (= effleurer) to brush against, [projectile] to skim pastLe chat m'a frôlé au passage. — The cat brushed against me as it went past., The cat brushed past me.
2) fig (= manquer de peu) to come very close toNous avons frôlé la catastrophe. — We came very close to disaster.
* * *frôler verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( toucher) [personne, main, genou] to brush; [ballon, balle, pierre] to graze; [voiture, conducteur] to scrape;2 ( passer près) [balle, ballon, pierre, voiture] to miss narrowly; [personne] to brush past [personne]; to brush against [objet, mur]; to come close to [succès]; to approach [somme, taux]; il a frôlé la mort he came within a hair's breadth of dying, he had a brush with death; ses blagues frôlent le mauvais goût his jokes border on bad taste; l'automobiliste a frôlé les 200 km/h the driver almost reached a speed of 200 km per hour; il frôlait les 200 kg it weighed close to 200 kg.B se frôler vpr1 ( se toucher) [personne, main, genou] to brush against each other;2 ( sans se toucher) [objet, voiture, conducteur] to just miss each other; [personne] to brush past each other; ils se sont frôlés sans se voir they brushed past (each other) without seeing each other.[frole] verbe transitifl'avion a frôlé les arbres the plane skimmed ou grazed the treetops2. [passer très près de] to come close to touching————————se frôler verbe pronominal(emploi réciproque) to brush against ou to jostle each other -
5 heurter
heurter [ˈœʀte]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verba. ( = cogner) [+ objet] to hit ; [+ personne] to collide with ; [+ voiture] to bump into ; ( = bousculer) to jostleb. ( = choquer) [+ personne, préjugés] to offend ; [+ bon goût, bon sens] to go against ; [+ amour-propre] to injure ; [+ opinions] to clash with2. reflexive verba. ( = s'entrechoquer) to collideb. ( = s'opposer) [personnes, opinions] to clashc. ( = rencontrer) se heurter à un problème to come up against a problem* * *’œʀte
1.
1) ( cogner contre) [objet] to hit; [personne] to collide with [passant, véhicule]; to bump into [objet, personne à l'arrêt]2) ( cogner)heurter quelque chose avec or contre quelque chose — to knock something against something
3) ( offenser) to offend [personne, morale]; to go against [convenances]; to hurt [sentiment]heurter l'opinion publique — [action] to run counter to public opinion; [personne] to conflict with public opinion
2.
verbe intransitif
3.
se heurter verbe pronominal1) ( se cogner) [véhicules, personnes] to collide; [tasses] to knock against each otherse heurter contre or à quelqu'un/quelque chose — to bump into somebody/something
2) ( rencontrer)se heurter à — to come up against [préjugé, refus]
3) ( s'affronter) to clash (à with)* * *'œʀte vt1) [mur] to hit, [personne] to collide with2) (= offenser, blesser) to upset3)* * *heurter verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( cogner contre) [objet] to hit, strike; [personne] to collide with [personne, véhicule]; to bump into [objet, personne à l'arrêt]; la voiture a heurté un piéton the car hit ou struck a pedestrian; la bicyclette a heurté le bord du trottoir the bicycle hit the kerb GB ou curb US; sa tête heurta le mur his head hit ou struck the wall; heurter qn avec qch to knock sb with sth; heurter qch avec qch to knock against sth with sth; il a heurté la table avec sa valise he knocked against the table with his suitcase;2 ( cogner) heurter qch avec or contre qch to knock sth against sth;3 ( offenser) to offend [personne, nation, bonne conscience]; to go against [convenances]; to hurt [sentiment]; heurter l'opinion publique [action] to run counter to public opinion; [personne] to conflict with public opinion; heurter qn de front to clash with sb head-on.C se heurter vpr1 ( se cogner) [véhicules, personnes] to collide; [verres, tasses] to bang ou knock against each other; les idées se heurtaient dans sa tête ideas were jostling ou whirling about in his head; se heurter contre or à qn/qch to bump into sb/sth;2 ( rencontrer) se heurter à to come up against [préjugé, crainte, problème]; se heurter à un refus to come up against a refusal;3 ( s'affronter) [idées, couleurs] to clash ou conflict (à with); [personne] to clash (à with).[ʼɶrte] verbe transitifen descendant du train, je l'ai heurté avec mon sac I caught him with my bag ou I bumped into him with my bag as I got off the train————————heurter à verbe plus préposition(littéraire) [porte] to knock at————————heurter contre verbe plus préposition————————se heurter verbe pronominal (emploi réciproque)2. [être en désaccord] to clash (with each other)nous nous sommes heurtés à la dernière réunion we crossed swords ou clashed at the last meeting————————se heurter à verbe pronominal plus préposition[rencontrer] to come up against -
6 radeuse
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7 bousculer
hustle, jostle -
8 houspiller
COS maltrattà, scuzzulàEN to hustle, to jostle, to bully
См. также в других словарях:
Jostle — Jos tle, v. i. To push; to crowd; to hustle. [1913 Webster] None jostle with him for the wall. Lamb. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Jostle — Jos tle, n. A conflict by collisions; a crowding or bumping together; interference. [1913 Webster] The jostle of South African nationalities and civilization. The Nation. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
jostle — ► VERB 1) push or bump against roughly. 2) (jostle for) struggle or compete forcefully for. ► NOUN ▪ the action of jostling. ORIGIN from JOUST(Cf. ↑jouster) … English terms dictionary
Jostle — Jos tle, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Jostled}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Jostling}.] [A dim. of joust, just, v. See {Joust}, and cf. {Justle}.] [Written also {justle}.] To run against and shake; to push out of the way; to elbow; to hustle; to disturb by… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
jostle — I (bump into) verb bang into, buffet, bump, bump against, butt, collide, crash into, crowd, elbow, fodicare, graze against, hit against, hustle, jab, jar, jolt, knock, knock against, nudge, poke, press, prod, push, run against, shake, shove,… … Law dictionary
jostle — (v.) 1540s, justle, to knock against, formed from jousten (see JOUST (Cf. joust)) + frequentative suffix tle. The usual spelling 17c. 18c. was justle. An earlier meaning of the word was to have sex with (c.1400). Meaning to contend for the best… … Etymology dictionary
jostle — [v] bump, shake bang into, bulldoze*, bump heads*, butt*, crash, crowd, elbow, hustle, jab, jog, joggle, jolt, nudge, press, push, push around, push aside, rough and tumble*, scramble, shoulder, shove, squeeze, thrust; concepts 152,189,208 … New thesaurus
jostle — [jäs′əl] vt., vi. jostled, jostling [earlier justle, freq. < ME justen: see JOUST] 1. to bump or push, as in a crowd; elbow or shove roughly 2. to push (one s way) by shoving or bumping 3. to come or bring into close contact 4. to contend… … English World dictionary
jostle for something — ˈjostle for sth derived to compete strongly and with force with other people for sth • People in the crowd were jostling for the best positions. Main entry: ↑jostlederived … Useful english dictionary
jostle — v. 1) (d; intr.) to jostle for (to jostle for position) 2) (d; intr.) to jostle with (the children were jostling with each other) * * * [ dʒɒs(ə)l] (d; intr.) to jostle with (the children were jostleling with each other) (d; intr.) to jostle for… … Combinatory dictionary
jostle — UK [ˈdʒɒs(ə)l] / US [ˈdʒɑs(ə)l] verb Word forms jostle : present tense I/you/we/they jostle he/she/it jostles present participle jostling past tense jostled past participle jostled 1) [intransitive] to compete for something two candidates… … English dictionary