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1 snatch
snatch [snæt∫]1. noun( = small piece) fragment m[+ object, opportunity] saisir ; [+ sandwich, drink] avaler à la hâte ; ( = steal) voler ( from sb à qn) saisir ; ( = kidnap) enlever• to snatch some sleep/rest réussir à dormir/se reposer un peu► snatch away, snatch off separable transitive verb* * *[snætʃ] 1.1) ( fragment) ( of conversation) bribe f; (of poem, poet) quelques vers mpl; (of concerto, composer) quelques mesures fpl; ( of tune) quelques notes fpl2) ( grab)3) ( theft) vol m4) Sport ( in weightlifting) arraché m2.transitive verb1) ( grab) attraper [book, key]; saisir [opportunity]; arracher [victory]; prendre [lead]3) ( take hurriedly)3.to snatch at something — tendre vivement la main vers [rope, letter]
Phrasal Verbs: -
2 snatch up
snatch up [something] ramasser [quelque chose] en vitesse [clothes, papers]; saisir [child] -
3 snatch away
snatch [something] away arracher quelque chose ( from somebody à quelqu'un) -
4 pull
pull [pʊl]1. nounb. ( = swig) gorgée fa. tirer• to pull sb clear of [+ wreckage, rubble] dégager qn deb. [+ trigger] presser• to pull to bits démolir ; [+ argument, scheme, play, film] (inf) démolir ; [+ person] (inf) éreinter• pull the other one! (inf!) à d'autres !d. [+ muscle, tendon, ligament] se déchirerb. ( = move) the train pulled into/out of the station le train est entré en gare/est sorti de la gare• to pull sharply to the left [car, driver] virer brusquement à gauchec. ( = swig) he pulled at his beer il a bu une gorgée de bière4. compounds► pull-out noun (in magazine) supplément m détachable ; [of troops] retrait m adjective [magazine section] détachablea. ( = pull to pieces) démonter ; ( = break) mettre en pièces• the police pulled the house apart looking for drugs (inf) la police a mis la maison sens dessus dessous pour trouver de la drogue• nationalism was threatening to pull the country apart le nationalisme menaçait de déchirer le paysb. ( = separate) séparerc. ( = criticize) éreinter ; [+ argument, suggestion] démolir[vehicle, train] démarrer( = withdraw) retirer brusquement ( from sb à qn ) ; ( = snatch) arracher ( from sb à qn, des mains de qn)a. [+ blind] baisserb. ( = demolish) démolirc. ( = weaken) affaiblir► pull ina. [+ rope] ramener• to pull sb in (into room, car) faire entrer qn ; (into pool) faire piquer une tête dans l'eau à qn• pull your stomach in! rentre le ventre !b. ( = pick up) (inf) the police pulled him in for questioning la police l'a appréhendé pour l'interroger► pull offa. ( = remove) [+ gloves, shoes, coat, hat] ôter• to pull off the road [vehicle, driver] quitter la route► pull on[+ gloves, coat, cover] enfiler ; [+ shoes, hat] mettre► pull outa. ( = leave) [train, bus] démarrerb. ( = withdraw) se retirerc. ( = change lane) déboîterb. ( = withdraw) [+ troops] retirer[driver] he pulled over to let the ambulance past il s'est garé sur le côté pour laisser passer l'ambulanceb. ( = stop) [+ motorist, car] (inf) forcer à s'arrêterc. ( = topple) he pulled the bookcase over on top of himself il a entraîné la bibliothèque dans sa chute[sick person] s'en sortir[+ rope] faire passer[+ illness] réchapper à ; [+ difficulties, crisis] se sortir de( = cooperate) se serrer les coudesa. ( = join) data exists but it needs pulling together les données existent mais il faut les rassemblerb. to pull o.s. together se ressaisir► pull upa. ( = stop) [vehicle] s'arrêterb. ( = draw level with) he pulled up with the leaders il a rattrapé les premiers• he leaned down from the wall and pulled the child up il s'est penché du haut du mur et a hissé l'enfant jusqu'à luib. [+ weed] arracherc. ( = halt) arrêter* * *[pʊl] 1.1) ( tug) coup m2) ( attraction) lit force f; fig attrait m (of de)3) (colloq) ( influence) influence f (over, with sur)4) (colloq) ( swig) lampée (colloq) f5) (colloq) ( on cigarette etc) bouffée f7) ( snag) ( in sweater) maille f tirée2.transitive verb1) ( tug) tirer [chain, curtain, hair, tail]; tirer sur [cord, rope]to pull a sweater over one's head — ( put on) enfiler un pull-over; ( take off) retirer un pull-over
2) (tug, move) ( towards oneself) tirer ( towards vers); ( by dragging) traîner ( along le long de); ( to show something) entraîner [quelqu'un] par le bras [person]to pull somebody/something through — faire passer quelqu'un/quelque chose par [hole, window]
3) ( draw) gen tirer; [vehicle] tracter4) ( remove)to pull something off — [child, cat] faire tomber quelque chose de
to pull something out of — tirer quelque chose de [pocket, drawer]
to pull somebody out of — retirer quelqu'un de [wreckage]; sortir quelqu'un de [river]
5) (colloq) sortir [gun, knife]6) ( operate) appuyer sur [trigger]; tirer [lever]7) Medicine se faire une élongation à [muscle]8) (steer, guide)9) Sport [golfer, batsman] hookerto pull one's punches — lit retenir ses coups; fig
10) (colloq) GB tirer [pint of beer]11) (colloq) ( attract) attirer12) ( make)3.1) ( tug) tirer (at, on sur)2) (move, resist restraint) tirer (at, on sur)to pull ahead of somebody — [athlete, rally driver] prendre de l'avance sur quelqu'un; [company] avoir de l'avance sur
•Phrasal Verbs:- pull in- pull off- pull out- pull up••pull the other one, (it's got bells on)! — (colloq) à d'autres (mais pas à moi)! (colloq)
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5 grab
grab [græb]1. nouna. [+ object] saisirb. ( = seize unlawfully) [+ land, power] s'emparer de• don't grab! (to child) doucement !4. compounds* * *[græb] 1.1) ( snatch)to make a grab at ou for — essayer d'attraper
to be up for grabs — (colloq) être bon à prendre
2) ( on excavator) pelle f automatique2.transitive verb (p prés etc - bb-)1) ( seize) empoigner [money, toy]; saisir [arm, person, opportunity]2) ( illegally) accaparer3) ( snatch)4) (colloq) ( impress) -
6 rip
rip [rɪp]1. nouna. [cloth] se déchirerb. (inf) the fire/explosion ripped through the house l'incendie/l'explosion a ravagé la maison• they're ripping you off! c'est de l'arnaque ! (inf)* * *[rɪp] 1. 2.transitive verb (p prés etc - pp-)1) ( tear) déchirerto rip something to pieces ou shreds — réduire quelque chose en pièces
2) (snatch, pull)3.to rip something down ou out — arracher quelque chose
intransitive verb (p prés etc - pp-) [fabric] se déchirerPhrasal Verbs:- rip off- rip open- rip up••to let rip — (colloq) tempêter (colloq)
to let rip at somebody — engueuler (sl) quelqu'un
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7 tear
I.tear1 [tεər]1. noun( = rip) déchirure fa. ( = rip) déchirer• to tear a hole in... faire un accroc à...• to tear to pieces [+ paper] déchirer en petits morceaux ; [+ prey] mettre en pièces ; [+ play, performance] éreinter ; [+ argument, suggestion] descendre en flammes (inf)• to tear open [+ envelope] déchirer ; [+ letter] déchirer l'enveloppe de ; [+ parcel] ouvrir en déchirant l'emballage• to tear a muscle/ligament se déchirer un muscle/un ligament► to be torn [person]• to be torn between two things/people être tiraillé entre deux choses/personnesa. [cloth, paper] se déchirerb. ( = rush) to tear out/down sortir/descendre à toute vitesse• to tear along the road [person]( = leave quickly) [person]• I couldn't tear myself away from it/him je n'arrivais pas à m'en détacher/à me détacher de lui[+ poster, flag] arracher ; [+ building] démolir► tear off( = leave quickly) partir à toute vitessea. [+ label, wrapping] arracherb. [+ one's clothes] enlever à la hâtea. [+ paper] déchirerb. [+ weed] arracher ; [+ forest] déracinerII.tear2 [tɪər]larme f• it will end in tears! ça va finir mal !• it's a real tear-jerker ça fait pleurer dans les chaumières ► tear-stained adjective baigné de larmes* * *I 1. [teə(r)]noun gen accroc m; Medicine déchirure f2.1) ( rip) déchirer [garment, paper]; mettre [quelque chose] en pièces [flesh, prey]to tear something from ou out of — arracher quelque chose de [book, notepad]
to tear something to pieces ou bits ou shreds — lit mettre quelque chose en morceaux; fig démolir (colloq) [proposal, book, film]
to tear somebody to pieces — fig descendre quelqu'un en flammes
to tear one's hair (out) — lit, fig s'arracher les cheveux
to be torn between — fig être tiraillé entre [options, persons]
2) ( remove by force) arracher3.1) ( rip) se déchirer2) ( rush)to tear out/off/past — sortir/partir/passer en trombe
to tear up/down the stairs — monter/descendre les escaliers quatre à quatre
3) ( pull forcefully)to tear at — [animal] déchiqueter [flesh, prey]; [person] s'attaquer à [rubble]
4) (colloq) ( criticize)4.to tear into — enguirlander (colloq) [person]; démolir (colloq) [play, film, book]
tearing present participle adjective1)2) (colloq)to be in a tearing hurry — GB être terriblement pressé ( to do de faire)
•Phrasal Verbs:- tear off- tear out- tear up••II [tɪə(r)]that's torn it! — (colloq) GB il ne manquait plus que ça!
noun larme fit brought tears to her eyes —
••to end in tears — [game, party] finir par des pleurs; [campaign, experiment] mal se terminer
См. также в других словарях:
snatch at something — … Useful english dictionary
snatch at — To try to snatch or seize • • • Main Entry: ↑snatch * * * snatch at [phrasal verb] snatch at (something) : to grab or try to grab (something) quickly or eagerly chaotic city streets where thieves snatch at tourists wallets often used figuratively … Useful english dictionary
snatch — [[t]snæ̱tʃ[/t]] snatches, snatching, snatched 1) VERB If you snatch something or snatch at something, you take it or pull it away quickly. [V n prep] Mick snatched the cards from Archie s hand... [V n with adv] He snatched up the telephone... [V… … English dictionary
snatch squad — noun 1. A group of policemen, etc who force a sudden quick passage into eg a disorderly or rioting crowd in order to arrest troublemakers or ringleaders 2. A swift, organized sally by a group of people in order to seize something • • • Main Entry … Useful english dictionary
snatch something from someone's grasp — snatch something from someone’s grasp phrase to manage to prevent someone from getting something She had snatched the prize from his grasp at the last minute. Thesaurus: to get something or someonesynonym Main entry: snatch … Useful english dictionary
Snatch — Snatch, v. i. To attempt to seize something suddenly; to catch; often with at; as, to snatch at a rope. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
snatch — I UK [snætʃ] / US verb [transitive] Word forms snatch : present tense I/you/we/they snatch he/she/it snatches present participle snatching past tense snatched past participle snatched * 1) to pull or take something away quickly Her brother… … English dictionary
snatch — snatch1 [ snætʃ ] verb transitive * 1. ) to pull or take something away quickly: Katherine angrily snatched her hand out of his grasp. Her brother snatched the letter and tore it open. a ) to quickly steal something from someone: Someone snatched … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
snatch — snatch1 [snætʃ] v [T] [Date: 1100 1200; Origin: Perhaps from Middle Dutch snacken; SNACK2] 1.) to take something away from someone with a quick, often violent, movement = ↑grab ▪ The thief snatched her purse and ran. snatch sth away/back from sb… … Dictionary of contemporary English
snatch — /snætʃ / (say snach) verb (i) 1. (sometimes followed by at) to make a sudden effort to seize something, as with the hand. 2. Rowing to make a hurried, jerky movement at the beginning of a stroke. –verb (t) 3. to seize by a sudden or hasty grasp:… …
snatch — 1 verb (T) 1 to take something away from someone with a quick violent movement; grab 1 (1): The thief snatched her purse and ran. 2 to quickly take the opportunity to do something for an hour etc because you do not have much time: I managed to… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English