-
1 percer
percer [pεʀse]➭ TABLE 31. transitive verba. ( = perforer) to pierce ; (avec perceuse) to drill through ; [+ chaussette, chaussure] to wear a hole in ; [+ coffre-fort] to break open ; [+ abcès] to lancec. ( = traverser) percer les nuages to break through the cloudsd. ( = découvrir) [+ mystère] to penetratee. [bébé] percer ses dents to be teething2. intransitive verba. [soleil] to come outb. [sentiment, émotion] to showc. ( = réussir, acquérir la notoriété) to make a name for o.s.* * *pɛʀse
1.
1) ( transpercer) to pierce [corps, surface]; ( crever) to burst [abcès, tympan]2) ( faire un trou dans)percer un trou dans — gén to make a hole in; ( avec une perceuse) to drill a hole through; ( avec une pointe fine) to pierce a hole in
3) ( créer) to make [fenêtre, porte]; to build [route, tunnel]4) ( traverser) to pierce [silence, air]; to break through [nuages]5) ( découvrir) to penetrate [secret]; to uncover [complot]6)
2.
verbe intransitif1) ( apparaître) [soleil] to break through; [plante] to come up; [dent] to come through2) Armée, Sport to break through3) ( se révéler) [inquiétude] to show4) ( réussir) [acteur, écrivain] to become known* * *pɛʀse1. vt1) [ouverture, trou] to make, [tunnel] to bore2) [oreilles] to pierceChristèle s'est fait percer les oreilles. — Christèle has had her ears pierced.
3) [mystère, énigme] to penetrate4)2. vi1) (= passer à travers) to come through2) (= réussir) to break through* * *percer verb table: placerA vtr1 ( transpercer) to pierce [corps, surface, armure]; ( crever) to burst [abcès, tympan]; se faire percer les oreilles to have one's ears pierced; avoir les oreilles percées to have pierced ears; un cœur percé d'une flèche a heart pierced by an arrow; cela me perce le cœur it breaks my heart; percer qn de coups de couteau to stab sb repeatedly with a knife; il avait la poitrine percée de coups de couteau he had knife-wounds in the chest;2 ( faire un trou dans) percer qch, percer un trou dans qch gén to make a hole in [seau, poche]; ( avec une perceuse) to drill ou bore a hole through [mur, bois]; ( avec une pointe fine) to pierce a hole in [coquille, couvercle] ; percer un coffre-fort to break open a safe; ma poche est percée there's a hole in my pocket; avoir des souliers percés to have holes in one's shoes;3 (créer une ouverture, une voie) to make [fenêtre, porte] (dans in); to build [route, canal, tunnel] (dans, à travers through); percer le front ennemi to break through the ennemi front lines; un mur percé de meurtrières a wall with loopholes in it;4 ( traverser) to pierce [silence, air]; to break through [nuages]; une lumière perça l'obscurité a ray of light pierced the darkness; mes yeux avaient du mal à percer l'obscurité I had difficulty in making anything out in the darkness;5 ( découvrir) to penetrate [secret, mystère]; to uncover [complot]; percer qn à jour to see through sb;B vi1 ( apparaître) [soleil, rayon] to break through; [plante] to come up; [dent] to come through; elle a une dent qui perce she is cutting a tooth;3 ( se révéler) [agacement, inquiétude] to show; laisser percer to show [dépit, émotion]; rien n'a percé de leur rencontre nothing has emerged about their meeting;4 ( réussir) [acteur, écrivain] to become known, to make it○.[pɛrse] verbe transitif1. [trouer - généralement] to pierce (through)il a eu le tympan percé dans l'accident he suffered a burst ou perforated eardrum in the accidentpercer une porte dans un mur to put a door in ou into a wallpercer un tunnel dans la montagne to drive ou to build a tunnel through the mountain3. [pénétrer avec difficulté] to push throughpercer quelqu'un/quelque chose à jour to see right through somebody/something4. MÉDECINE5. [suj: bébé]percer une dent to cut a tooth ou have a tooth coming through————————[pɛrse] verbe intransitif1. [poindre] to come through2. [abcès] to burst4. [réussir] to become famous -
2 transpercer
transpercer [tʀɑ̃spεʀse]➭ TABLE 3 transitive verbto pierce ; (d'un coup d'épée) to run through ; (d'un coup de couteau) to stab ; [épée, lame] to pierce ; [balle, pluie, froid] to go through* * *tʀɑ̃spɛʀse1) [flèche, lance] to pierce [corps]; [balle] to go through; [personne] (avec une épée, flèche, lance) to pierce [corps]; to run [somebody] through [personne]2) [douleur] to shoot through; [froid] to go right through* * *tʀɑ̃spɛʀse vt* * *transpercer verb table: placer vtr1 [épée, flèche, lance] to pierce [corps]; [balle] to go through; [personne] (avec une épée, flèche, lance) to pierce [corps, bras, jambe]; to run [sb] through [personne]; transpercer qn de son épée or d'un coup de son épée to run sb through with one's sword; transpercer qn du regard fig to give sb a piercing look;2 ( passer au travers) [pluie, produit] to go through [vêtement, papier];3 [douleur] to shoot through; [froid] to go right through [personne].[trɑ̃spɛrse] verbe transitif2. [pénétrer - suj: pluie] to get through (inseparable) -
3 trouer
trouer [tʀue]➭ TABLE 1 transitive verb[+ vêtement] to make a hole in ; ( = transpercer) to pierce• il a troué son pantalon (avec une cigarette) he's burnt a hole in his trousers ; (en tombant) he's torn or ripped a hole in his trousers• trouer la peau à qn (inf!) to put a bullet in sb* * *tʀue1) ( perforer) ( d'un trou) to make a hole in; ( de plusieurs trous) to make holes introuer un drap avec une cigarette — to make ou burn a hole in a sheet with a cigarette
j'ai troué mes chaussures — ( à la longue) I've worn holes in my shoes
2) ( transpercer) [lumière, cri] to pierce [nuit]••trouer la peau (colloq) à quelqu'un — to put a bullet in somebody (colloq)
* * *tʀue vt1) (= percer) (d'un seul trou) to make a hole in, (de plusieurs trous) to make holes inIl a troué la moquette avec sa cigarette. — He made a hole in the carpet with his cigarette.
2) [grisaille, silence] to pierce* * *trouer verb table: aimer vtr1 ( perforer) ( d'un trou) to make a hole in; ( de plusieurs trous) to make holes in; trouer de balles to riddle with bullets; tu as troué ta chemise you've made a hole in your shirt; trouer un drap avec une cigarette to make ou burn a hole in a sheet with a cigarette; j'ai troué mes chaussures ( à la longue) I've worn a hole in my shoe, I've worn holes in my shoes;2 ( former une ouverture) [passage, porte] to form an opening in [muraille, mur]; de larges brèches trouaient la muraille there were large openings in the wall;trouer la peau à qn○ to put a bullet in sb○; tu vas te faire trouer la peau○ you 're going to get yourself shot.[true] verbe transitif1. [percer - carton, tissu] to make a hole in ; [ - tôle] to pierce ; [ - cloison] to make ou to bore a hole in3. [cribler] to pit————————se trouer verbe pronominal intransitif[d'un seul trou] to get a hole -
4 perforer
perforer [pεʀfɔʀe]➭ TABLE 1 transitive verb* * *pɛʀfɔʀe1) ( percer) gén to pierce; ( de trous réguliers) to perforate2) ( poinçonner) to punchcarte perforée — Informatique punch card
* * *pɛʀfɔʀe vt1) (= trouer) to perforate, to punch holes in2) [ticket, bande, carte] to punch* * *perforer verb table: aimer vtr1 ( percer) gén to pierce; ( de trous réguliers) to perforate; Méd to perforate; ulcère perforé perforated ulcer;[pɛrfɔre] verbe transitif1. [percer] to pierce -
5 vriller
vriller [vʀije]➭ TABLE 1 transitive verb* * *vʀije vtto bore into, to pierce* * *vriller verb table: aimerA vtr [percer] to bore, to pierce [bois].B vi1 [avion] to spiral;2 [fil] to twist, to become twisted.C se vriller vpr [fil] to twist.[vrije] verbe intransitif————————[vrije] verbe transitif -
6 crever
crever [kʀəve]➭ TABLE 51. transitive verba. [+ pneu] to puncture ; [+ ballon] to burstc. crever la faim or la dalle (inf!) to be starving (inf)2. intransitive verba. [fruit, sac, abcès] to burst• crever de faim/froid to starve/freeze to death3. reflexive verb• se crever au travail to work o.s. to death* * *kʀəve
1.
1) ( percer) to puncture, to burst [pneu, ballon]; to burst [bulle, abcès, tympan]crever les yeux de quelqu'un — ( accidentellement) to blind somebody; ( volontairement) to put somebody's eyes out
ça te crève les yeux — fig it's staring you in the face
ça crève les yeux — fig it's blindingly obvious
ça crève le cœur — fig it's heartbreaking
2) (colloq) ( épuiser) [travail, chaleur] to wear [somebody] out; [patron] to work [somebody] into the groundcrever un cheval — ( au galop) to ride a horse into the ground
2.
verbe intransitif1) ( se percer) [pneu, nuage, abcès, tympan] to burst; [paquet] to burst open2) [automobiliste, cycliste] to have a puncture3) ( mourir) [plante, animal] to diecrever de faim/froid — to be starving/freezing
4) ( éclater) pejcrever d'envie/de jalousie — to be eaten up ou consumed with envy/with jealousy
3.
se crever verbe pronominal••* * *kʀəve1. vt1) [tambour, ballon] to burst2) [pneu] (délibérément) to slash, (accidentellement) to puncture3)2. vi1) [pneu] to burst, [automobiliste] to have a puncture Grande-Bretagne to have a flat USAJ'ai crevé sur l'autoroute. — I had a puncture on the motorway.
2) [abcès, sac, paquet] to burst, to burst open3) * (= mourir) to die, to snuff it *4) * figOn crève de chaud ici. — It's boiling in here.
* * *crever verb table: leverA vtr1 ( percer) to puncture, to burst [pneu, ballon]; to burst [bulle, abcès, tympan]; crever les yeux de qn ( accidentellement) to blind sb; ( volontairement) to put ou gouge littér sb's eyes out; ça te crève les yeux fig it's staring you in the face; ça crève les yeux fig it's blindingly obvious; ça me crève le cœur fig it breaks my heart; ça crève le cœur fig it's heartbreaking;2 ○( épuiser) [travail, chaleur] to wear [sb] out; [patron] to work [sb] into the ground; cet enfant me crève this child is wearing me out; crever ses hommes (au travail) to work one's men into the ground; crever un animal ( au travail) to work an animal into the ground; crever un cheval ( au galop) to ride a horse into the ground;3 ○( être affamé) la crever◑, crever la faim○ or la dalle◑ to be famished; on la crève◑ ici they're starving us here.B vi1 ( se percer) [pneu, ballon, bulle, nuage, abcès, tympan] to burst; [paquet, sac] to burst open; faire crever les groseilles cook the redcurrants gently until they burst (open);2 [automobiliste, cycliste] to have a puncture; j'ai crevé deux fois en route I had two punctures on the way;3 ( mourir) [plante, animal] to die; laisser crever des plantes/un chien to let plants/a dog die; faire crever des plantes to kill plants;4 ◑( mourir) [personne] to snuff it○ GB, to croak○, to die; qu'il crève! he can go to hell○!, he can die for all I care!; plutôt crever (que de…) I'd rather die (than…); crever de faim/froid to be starving/freezing; laisser qn crever de faim/froid to let sb starve/freeze to death; on crève de froid/chaleur dans cette maison it's freezing/baking ou boiling in this house; il fait un froid/une chaleur à crever it's terribly cold/hot; tu veux nous faire crever! are you trying to finish us off?; crever de rire to kill oneself○ laughing; c'est à crever de rire it's hysterically funny○; crever d'envie/de jalousie to be eaten up ou consumed with envy/with jealousy; crever d'orgueil to be terribly full of oneself.C se crever vpr1 ( se percer) se crever un tympan to burst an eardrum; il s'est crevé un œil he put one of his eyes out;2 ◑( s'épuiser) to wear oneself out; se crever au travail to work oneself to death; se crever à faire qch to wear oneself out ou get worn out doing sth; je me suis crevé à le peindre I wore myself out painting it; je me suis crevé pendant deux ans dans cette usine I've slaved away for two years in this factory.marche ou crève sink or swim.[krəve] verbe transitif1. [faire éclater - abcès] to burst (open) ; [ - bulle, ballon, sac] to burst ; [ - pneu] to puncture, to burst ; [ - tympan] to puncture, to pierceun cri vint crever le silence a cry pierced ou rent the silencea. [agression] to gouge ou to put out somebody's eyeb. [accident] to blind somebody in one eyecela crève le cœur it's heartbreaking ou heart-rendinga. (familier) [c'est évident] it's as plain as the nose on your face, it sticks out a mileb. [c'est visible] it's staring you in the face, it's plain for all to see2. (familier) [fatiguer] to wear out3. (locution)————————[krəve] verbe intransitif3. [mourir - animal, végétal] to die (off)————————crever de verbe plus préposition1. [éprouver]a. [par pauvreté] to be starvingb. [être en appétit] to be starving ou famishedje crève de chaud! I'm baking ou boiling!on crève de froid ici it's freezing cold ou you could freeze to death herecrever de peur/d'inquiétude to be scared/worried to death2. [être plein de]crever d'orgueil to be puffed up ou bloated with pride————————se crever verbe pronominal (emploi réfléchi)se crever au boulot ou à la tâche to work oneself to death -
7 déchirer
déchirer [de∫iʀe]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verba. [+ papier] to tear up ; [+ vêtement] to tear ; ( = arracher) [+ page] to tear out (de from ) ; ( = ouvrir) [+ sac, enveloppe] to tear open• elle est déchirée par le remords/la douleur she is torn by remorse/racked by pain• ça déchire ! (inf) ( = c'est génial !) it's great!2. reflexive verba. [vêtement] to tear ; [sac] to burst* * *deʃiʀe
1.
1) ( mettre en morceaux) to tear [something] up [papier, tissu]; to rip [something] up [chair]; to break [something] up [surface]déchirer un contrat — fig to go back on a contract
2) ( détériorer) to tear [vêtement, sac]4) ( diviser) [conflit] to split [groupe, pays]5) ( faire souffrir) to torture [personne]
2.
se déchirer verbe pronominal1) ( se rompre) [papier, tissu, vêtement] to tear2) Médecine3) ( s'affronter) [personnes] to tear each other apart* * *deʃiʀe vt1) [tissu] to tear, to rip2) (pour jeter) [lettre, document] to tear up, (pour ouvrir) to tear open3) (= arracher) to tear out4) fig, [couple, groupes sociaux] to tear apart* * *déchirer verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( mettre en morceaux) to tear [sth] up [papier, tissu]; to rip [sth] up [chair]; to break [sth] up [surface]; déchirer un contrat/un accord fig to go back on a contract/an agreement; déchirer le voile fig to lift the veil;2 ( détériorer) to rip, to tear [vêtement, sac];3 fml ( troubler) [bruit] to shatter [silence, nuit]; [éclair, lumière] to rend [obscurité, ciel]; [événement] to shatter [vie, illusion];4 ( diviser) [conflit] to split [groupe, pays]; couple/pays déchiré divided couple/country; il était déchiré entre son devoir et son désir de rester he was torn between his duty and his desire to stay; déchiré entre sa famille et son travail torn between his family and his work;5 ( faire souffrir) [spectacle, douleur, personne] to torture [personne]; humanité déchirée tortured humanity.B se déchirer vpr1 ( se rompre) [papier, tissu, vêtement] to tear, to rip; ma robe s'est déchirée my dress has torn ou ripped;2 Méd se déchirer un muscle to tear a muscle;3 ( s'affronter) [groupes, personnes] to tear each other apart;4 fml ( souffrir) [cœur] to break; [âme] to be in torment; mon cœur se déchire à l'idée de partir the thought of leaving breaks my heart.[deʃire] verbe transitifattention, tu vas déchirer ton collant mind not to rip your tights2. [mettre en deux morceaux] to tear[mettre en morceaux] to tear up ou to pieces3. [arracher] to tear off (separable)4. [ouvrir]déchirer une enveloppe to tear ou to rip open an envelopeun bruit qui déchire les tympans an earpiercing ou earsplitting noisedéchirer quelqu'un ou le cœur de quelqu'un (littéraire) to break somebody's heart, to make somebody's heart bleed7. [diviser] to tear apart————————se déchirer verbe pronominal (emploi réciproque)[se faire souffrir] to tear each other apart————————se déchirer verbe pronominal (emploi passif)————————se déchirer verbe pronominal intransitif[membrane] to break————————se déchirer verbe pronominal transitifse déchirer un muscle/tendon/ligament to tear a muscle/tendon/ligament -
8 traverser
traverser [tʀavεʀse]➭ TABLE 1 transitive verba. [personne, véhicule] to cross ; [+ ville, forêt, tunnel] to go throughb. [tunnel] to cross under ; [pont, route] to cross• le fleuve/cette route traverse tout le pays the river/this road runs right across the countryc. ( = percer) [projectile, infiltration] to go or come through━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► traverser se traduira par to come through ou par to go through suivant que le locuteur se trouve ou non à l'endroit en question.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━d. ( = passer à travers) traverser la foule to make one's way through the crowde. (dans le temps) [+ période, crise] to go through* * *tʀavɛʀse1) ( passer d'un côté à l'autre) to cross [route, pont, frontière]; to cross, to go across [ville, montagne, océan, pays, pièce]; ( passer à travers) to go through, to pass through [ville, pays, forêt, tunnel]; to make one's way through [groupe, foule]il traversa le jardin en courant — he ran across the garden GB ou yard US
2) ( franchir) [rivière] to run through, to flow through [région, plaine]; [route, tunnel] to go through [ville, région, montagne]; [pont, rivière] to cross [voie ferrée, ville]3) ( transpercer) [humidité, pluie] to come through [vêtement, mur]la balle lui a traversé le bras — the bullet went ou passed right through his/her arm
4) ( passer par une période) to go through [crise, difficulté]; to live through, to go through [guerre, occupation]5) fig ( se présenter de manière fugitive) [douleur] to shoot through* * *tʀavɛʀse vt1) (= franchir) [rue, mer, pont] to crossTraversez la rue. — Cross the street.
2) (= passer par) [ville, tunnel] to go throughNous avons traversé la France pour aller en Espagne. — We went through France on the way to Spain.
3) (= percer) to go through4) (= pénétrer) to go throughLa pluie a traversé mon manteau. — The rain went through my coat.
5) [ligne, trait] to run across* * *traverser verb table: aimer vtr1 ( passer d'un côté à l'autre) to cross [route, pont, frontière]; to cross, to go across [ville, montagne, océan, pays, pièce]; ( passer à travers) to go through, to pass through [ville, pays, forêt, tunnel]; to make one's way through [groupe, foule]; il traversa le salon pour aller dans la chambre he went ou passed through the living-room to get to the bedroom; l'avion traverse une zone de turbulences the aircraft is going through a spot of turbulence; il traversa le jardin en courant he ran across the garden GB ou yard US; traverser le lac en bateau to cross ou go across the lake in a boat; traverser le lac à la nage to swim across the lake; traverser (une rivière) à gué to ford a river; il a traversé sans regarder he crossed the road without looking; maintenant, on traverse now let's cross over;2 ( franchir) [rivière] to go through, to flow through [région, plaine]; [route, tunnel] to go through [ville, région, montagne]; [pont, rivière] to cross [voie ferrée, ville];3 ( transpercer) [humidité, pluie] to come through [vêtement, mur]; la balle lui a traversé le bras the bullet went ou passed right through his arm;4 ( passer par une période) [population, pays, entreprise] to go through [crise, difficulté]; [personne] to live through, to go through [guerre, occupation]; ( subsister) liter [manuscrit, nom] to live on through [siècles]; [pratique, tradition] to persist through [temps, générations]; ils ont traversé des moments difficiles they've gone through some difficult times;5 fig ( se présenter de manière fugitive) [douleur] to shoot through [personne, membre]; traverser l'esprit de qn to cross sb's mind.[travɛrse] verbe transitif1. [parcourir - mer, pièce, route] to go across (inseparable), to cross, to traverse (soutenu) ; [ - pont] to go over ou across (inseparable) ; [ - tunnel] to go ou to pass through (inseparable)traverser quelque chose à la nage/à cheval/en voiture/en bateau/en avion to swim/to ride/to drive/to sail/to fly across somethingtraverser une pièce en courant/en sautillant to run/to skip through a room2. [s'étirer d'un côté à l'autre de - suj: voie] to cross, to run ou to go across (inseparable) ; [ - suj: pont] to cross, to span ; [ - suj: tunnel] to cross, to run ou to go under (inseparable)3. [vivre - époque] to live ou to go through (inseparable) ; [ - difficultés] to pass ou to go through (inseparable)4. [transpercer - suj: épée] to run through (inseparable), to pierce ; [ - suj: balle] to go through (inseparable) ; [ - suj: pluie, froid] to come ou to go through (inseparable)une image me traversa l'esprit an image passed ou flashed through my mind -
9 percer
drill, lance, pierce
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