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1 vivre
vivre [vivʀ]➭ TABLE 461. intransitive verba. to live• quand l'ambulance est arrivée, il vivait encore he was still alive when the ambulance arrived• vivre à Londres/en France to live in London/in France• vivre dans le passé/dans la crainte to live in the past/in fear• être facile/difficile à vivre to be easy/difficult to get on with• vivre de laitages/de rentes to live on dairy produce/a private income• travailler/écrire pour vivre to work/write for a living• faire vivre qn [personne] to support sb• elle ne vit plus depuis que son fils est pilote she's been living on her nerves since her son became a pilotb. [idée, rue, paysage] to be alive2. transitive verba. ( = passer) to spendb. [+ événement, guerre] to live through3. plural masculine noun* * *vivʀ
1.
1) ( connaître) to live through [époque, période]; to go through [heures difficiles, enfer]; to experience [amour, passion]2) ( ressentir) to cope with [divorce, échec]
2.
verbe intransitif1) Biologie ( être vivant) to livevivre vieux/centenaire — to live to a great age/to be a hundred
cesser de vivre — euph to pass away
vive moi/nous! — three cheers for me/us!
2) ( habiter) to liveêtre facile à vivre — [conjoint] to be easy to live with; [ami] to be easy to get on with
3) ( exister) [personne] to liveapprendre à vivre à quelqu'un — (colloq) to teach somebody some manners (colloq)
savoir vivre — ( profiter de la vie) to know how to enjoy life
4) ( survivre) [personne] to live5) ( durer) [relation, mode] to lastavoir vécu — [personne] to have seen a great deal of life; ( être usé) hum to have had its day
6) ( être animé) [ville, rue] to be full of life••* * *vivʀ1. vi1) (= résider) to liveJ'aimerais vivre à l'étranger. — I'd like to live abroad.
Je vis en Écosse. — I live in Scotland.
Il vit chez ses parents. — He lives with his parents.
Il a vécu à Paris pendant dix ans. — He lived in Paris for ten years.
2) (= être vivant) to be aliveavoir vécu; Ce régime a vécu. — This regime has had its day.
3) (= exister, mener son existence) to liveOn vit de plus en plus longtemps. — People are living longer and longer.
se laisser vivre — to let o.s. go
ne plus vivre (= être anxieux) — to live on one's nerves
Il a vécu. — He has seen life.
4) (= subsister) to liveIls avaient à peine de quoi vivre. — They had barely enough to live on.
vivre de [salaire, allocations] — to live on
vivre mal (= chichement) — to have a meagre existence
2. vt1) [vie] to live, [aventures] to go through, [temps] to spendIls y ont vécu des jours heureux. — They spent some happy times there.
2) (= ressentir)Il a très mal vécu son licenciement. — He took his redundancy very hard.
3. nm4. vivres nmplprovisions, food supplies* * *vivre verb table: vivreA vtr1 ( connaître) to live through [époque, période]; to go through [heures difficiles, cauchemar, enfer]; to experience [amour, passion]; vivre son mariage comme un sacrifice to view one's marriage as self-sacrifice; être vécu comme un affront to be taken as an insult; vivre une vie tranquille/agitée to lead a quiet/hectic life; la vie vaut d'être vécue life is worth living; vivre sa vie to lead one's own life;2 ( ressentir) to cope with [divorce, échec, changement]; comment as-tu vécu votre séparation? how did you cope with your separation?; vivre sa foi to put one's faith into practiceGB?B vi1 Biol ( être vivant) [personne, animal, plante] to live; vivre longtemps/vieux/centenaire to live for a long time/to a great age/to be a hundred; cesser de vivre euph to pass away; vive la révolution/le président! long live the revolution/the president!; vive(nt) les vacances! three cheers for the holidays GB ou the vacation US!; vive la vie! life is wonderful!; vive moi/nous! three cheers for me/us!; vive Paul! hurray for Paul!;2 ( habiter) [personne, animal, plante] to live; vivre à la campagne/en démocratie to live in the country/in a democracy; il vit avec quelqu'un he's living with somebody; vivre à cinq dans une chambre to live five to a room; être facile/difficile à vivre [conjoint, concubin] to be easy/difficult to live with; [ami, collègue] to be easy/difficult to get on with; vivre les uns sur les autres to live on top of each other;3 ( exister) [personne] to live; vivre en ermite to live like a hermit; vivre dans la crainte/pour ses enfants to live in fear/for one's children; vivre avec son temps to move with the times; vivre à contre-courant to go one's own way; vivre en pyjama to live in one's pyjamas GB ou pajamas US; se laisser vivre to take things easy; apprendre à qn à vivre○ to teach sb some manners○; savoir vivre ( profiter de la vie) to know how to enjoy life; ( être poli) to know how things are done;4 ( survivre) [personne] to live; bien vivre to live well; vivre de peu to live on very little; de quoi vit-elle? what does she live on?; avoir de quoi vivre to have enough to live on; vivre avec presque rien/sur son capital/de la charité to live on next to nothing/on one's capital/on charity; vivre de légumes to live on vegetables; vivre sur sa réputation to live on one's reputation; vivre de ses rentes to have a private income; faire vivre qn ( matériellement) to keep sb; vivre aux dépens de qn to live off sb; vivre d'espoir to live in hope; qu'est-ce qui te fait vivre? what keeps you going?;5 ( durer) [relation, mode, idéologie] to last; le gouvernement ne vivra pas longtemps the government won't last long; avoir vécu [personne] to have seen a great deal of life; hum ( être usé) [objet, idée] to have had its day; mes chaussures ont vécu my shoes have had their day; leur souvenir vivra dans nos mémoires their memory will live on in our hearts;6 ( être animé) [ville, rue] to be full of life.C se vivre vpr ( être ressenti) le divorce se vit souvent très mal divorce is often very hard to cope with.D vivres nmpl1 ( nourriture) food, supplies;2 ( moyens de subsistance) couper les vivres à qn to cut off sb's allowance.le vivre et le couvert board and lodging; vivre de l'air du temps to live on air; vivre sur un grand pied to live in great style; qui vivra verra what will be will be.I[vivr] nom masculin————————vivres nom masculin plurielII[vivr] verbe intransitif[cellule, plante] to livevivre vieux ou longtemps to live to a great age ou ripe old age2. [mener une existence] to livevivre à l'heure de l'Europe/du XXIe siècle to live in the world of the European community/of the 21st centuryvivre dans le luxe/l'angoisse to live in luxury/anxietyne vivre que pour la musique/sa famille to live only for music/one's familyil fait bon vivre ici life is good ou it's a good life herea. [on est inquiet] we're worried sickb. [on est harassé] this isn't a life, this isn't what you can call livinga. [il est impoli] he has no mannersb. [il est trop nerveux] he doesn't know how to enjoy life3. [résider] to livevivre au Brésil/dans un château to live in Brazil/in a castlevivre dans une ou en communauté to live communally ou in a communitya. [maritalement] to live with somebodyb. [en amis] to share ou to live with somebodyvivre ensemble [couple non marié] to live togetherêtre facile à vivre to be easygoing ou easy to get on with4. [subsister] to livevivre sur un seul salaire to live ou to exist on just one salarya. [personne] to provide a living for ou to support a familyb. [commerce] to provide a living for a familyvivre bien/chichement to have a good/poor standard of livingils vivaient de la cueillette et de la chasse they lived on what they gathered and hunted ou off the landil faut bien vivre! one's got to keep the wolf from the door ou to live (somehow)!5. [se perpétuer - croyance, coutume] to be alive6. [donner l'impression de vie - sculpture, tableau]————————[vivr] verbe transitif1. [passer par - époque, événement] to live through (inseparable)vivre des temps difficiles to live through ou to experience difficult timesvivre des jours heureux/paisibles to spend one's days happily/peacefully2. [assumer - divorce, grossesse, retraite] to experienceelle a mal/bien vécu mon départ she couldn't cope/she coped well after I left3. (locution) -
2 loger
loger [lɔʒe]➭ TABLE 31. intransitive verb2. transitive verbto accommodate ; [+ amis] to put up3. reflexive verb• va-t-on tous pouvoir se loger dans la voiture ? will we all fit into the car?* * *lɔʒe
1.
1) ( fournir un logement permanent à) [mairie, service social] to house [famille, étudiant, réfugié]2) ( héberger temporairement) [personne] to put [somebody] up [ami]; [mairie, école] to provide accommodation for [sinistrés, stagiaires]3) ( contenir) [hôtel, pensionnat] to have accommodation for4) ( placer)loger quelque chose dans un placard — to put something in a cupboard [objet, livres]
je n'ai pas pu loger tous mes meubles dans le salon — I couldn't fit all my furniture in the living room
5) ( faire pénétrer)
2.
verbe intransitif1) ( habiter) to live2) ( résider temporairement) to stay
3.
se loger verbe pronominalavec cette somme, je dois me nourrir et me loger — with that I have to pay for food and accommodation ou housing
2) ( se placer)se loger dans quelque chose — ( en se fixant) to get stuck in something; [poussière, saletés] to collect in something
la balle est venue se loger dans le genou — the bullet lodged in his/her knee
* * *lɔʒe1. vt1) [ami, famille] to put up, [officiel, représentant] to provide accommodation for2) (= placer, faire entrer)Il a réussi à loger six valises dans le coffre. — He managed to put six cases in the boot., He managed to get six cases in the boot.
2. viloger quelque part (en permanence) — to live somewhere, (temporairement) to stay somewhere
loger chez qn (en permanence) — to live with sb, (temporairement) to stay with sb
Elle loge chez sa cousine quand elle revient dans la région. — She stays with her cousin when she comes back to the area.
* * *loger verb table: mangerA vtr1 ( fournir un logement permanent à) [mairie, service social] to house [famille, étudiant, réfugié];2 ( héberger temporairement) [personne] to put [sb] up [ami, stagiaire]; [mairie, école] to provide accommodation for [sinistrés, stagiaires]; pourrais-tu me loger cette semaine? could you put me up this week?; les élèves seront logés chez l'habitant the students will be put up with local families; loger qn dans to put sb up in; on logera le stagiaire dans la petite chambre we'll put the student in the small room;3 ( contenir) [hôtel, pensionnat] to have accommodation for;4 ( placer) loger qch dans un placard to put sth in a cupboard [objet, livres]; je n'ai pas pu loger tous mes meubles dans le salon I couldn't fit all my furniture in the living room; loger le ballon dans un coin du filet to slam the ball into a corner of the net;5 ( faire pénétrer) loger une balle dans la tête/le bras de qn to shoot sb in the head/the arm; loger une idée dans la tête de qn to put an idea into sb's head.B vi1 ( habiter) to live; loger à Rennes/en banlieue to live in Rennes/in the suburbs; loger chez qn to live in sb's house; loger chez un particulier to have a room in a private house;2 ( résider temporairement) to stay; elle ne sait pas où loger she doesn't know where to stay; loger à l'hôtel/en auberge de jeunesse to stay at a hotel/at a youth hostel; loger chez qn to stay with sb; loger chez l'habitant to stay with a family.C se loger vpr1 ( trouver un logement) [personne] to find accommodation, to find a place to live;2 ( avoir un lieu d'habitation) avec cette somme, je dois me nourrir et me loger with that I have to pay for food and accommodation ou housing;3 ( se placer) se loger dans qch [ballon] to land in sth; ( en se fixant) to get stuck in sth; [poussière, saletés] to collect in sth; la balle est venue se loger dans le genou the bullet lodged in his knee; c'est une bactérie qui se loge dans les canalisations it's a bacterium that establishes itself in pipes; se loger une balle dans la tête to shoot oneself in the head.[lɔʒe] verbe intransitifpour l'instant je loge chez lui I'm living ou staying at his place at the momentles soldats logeaient chez l'habitant the soldiers were billeted ou quartered with the local populationles touristes logeaient chez l'habitant the tourists were staying in boarding houses ou in bed-and-breakfastsje suis bien/mal logéa. [chez moi] I'm comfortably/badly housedb. [en pension] I've got comfortable/poor lodgingsêtre logé, nourri et blanchi to get board and lodging with laundry (service) included————————[lɔʒe] verbe transitif2. [contenir - personnes] to accommodate ; [ - choses] to putle placard peut loger trois grosses valises the cupboard can take ou hold three big suitcases3. [mettre]————————se loger verbe pronominal transitif————————se loger verbe pronominal intransitif1. [à long terme - couple, famille] to find somewhere to live2. [provisoirement - touriste, étudiant] to find accommodation3. [pénétrer] -
3 subsistance
subsistance [sybzistɑ̃s]feminine noun( = moyens d'existence) subsistence• assurer la subsistance de sa famille/de qn to support one's family/sb• assurer sa (propre) subsistance to support o.s.• économie/agriculture de subsistance subsistence economy/agriculture* * *sybzistɑ̃s(moyens de) subsistance — means of support, livelihood
* * *sybzistɑ̃s nfpourvoir à la subsistance de qn — to keep sb, to provide for sb's keep
* * *A nf ( de personne) subsistence; ( de plante) sustenance; ( moyens de survie) (moyens de) subsistance means of support, livelihood; frais/économie de subsistance subsistence allowance/economy; avoir la subsistance assurée to have a secure livelihood; perdre ses moyens de subsistance to lose one's means of support; assurer sa propre subsistance/la subsistance de sa famille to support oneself/one's family; contribuer à la subsistance du ménage to contribute to household expenses; tirer sa subsistance d'un bout de terrain to eke out a living from a small piece of land.[sybzistɑ̃s] nom féminin[existence matérielle] subsistencepourvoir à ou assurer la subsistance de quelqu'un to support ou to maintain ou to keep somebodyelle arrive tout juste à assurer sa subsistance she just manages to survive, she has just enough to keep body and soul together
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