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1 stomach
A n estomac m ; ( belly) ventre m ; to have a pain in one's stomach avoir mal au ventre or à l'estomac ; to lie on one's stomach être à plat ventre ; to do sth on a full/empty stomach faire qch le ventre plein/vide ; the pit of one's stomach le creux de l'estomac ; to be sick to one's stomach être profondément dégoûté ; I'm sick to my stomach of politics la politique me dégoûte or me donne la nausée ; to have a strong stomach lit avoir un estomac d'autruche ○ ; fig avoir l'estomac bien accroché ○ ; to turn sb's stomach écœurer qn.B modif [ulcer, operation] à l'estomac ; [cancer, disease] de l'estomac ; to have (a) stomach ache avoir mal au ventre ; to have stomach trouble avoir des troubles gastriques.C vtr digérer [food] ; fig encaisser ○, supporter [person, attitude, behaviour, violence] ; I can't stomach oysters je ne digère pas les huîtres ; I can't stomach that guy! je ne peux pas encaisser ○ ce type ○ !an army marches on its stomach il faut nourrir son homme ; to have no stomach for a fight n'avoir aucune envie de se battre ; your eyes are bigger than your stomach tu as les yeux plus grands que le ventre. -
2 stomach
stomach [ˈstʌmək]1. noun[+ behaviour] supporter3. compounds* * *['stʌmək] 1.to have a pain in one's stomach — avoir mal au ventre or à l'estomac
2. 3.to have a strong stomach — lit, fig avoir l'estomac bien accroché (colloq)
transitive verb supporter [person, attitude]I can't stomach that guy! — (colloq) je ne peux pas encaisser (colloq) ce type! (colloq)
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3 sick
sick [sɪk]1. adjectivea. ( = ill) maladeb. to be sick ( = vomit) vomir• to feel sick ( = nauseous) avoir mal au cœurc. ( = disgusted) to make sb sick écœurer qne. ( = offensive) malsain2. plural noun3. compounds* * *[sɪk] 1.1)the sick — (+ v pl) les malades mpl
2) (colloq) GB ( vomit) vomi m2.1) ( ill) maladeto take sick — GB tomber malade
off sick — GB absent pour cause de maladie
to go sick — (colloq) se faire porter malade
2) ( nauseous)to have a sick feeling in one's stomach — ( from nerves) avoir l'estomac noué
3) ( tasteless) [joke, story] malsain, de mauvais goût4) ( disturbed) [mind, imagination] malsain5) ( disgusted) écœuré, dégoûté6) (colloq) ( fed-up)to be sick of something/somebody — (colloq) en avoir assez or marre (colloq) de quelqu'un/quelque chose
to be sick and tired of something/somebody — (colloq) en avoir ras le bol (colloq) de quelque chose/quelqu'un
to be sick of the sight of something/somebody — (colloq) ne plus supporter quelque chose/quelqu'un
•Phrasal Verbs:- sick up -
4 sick
A nB adj1 ( ill) malade ; to feel sick ne pas se sentir bien ; to fall ou take sick GB tomber malade ; to be off sick GB être absent pour cause de maladie ; to go sick ○ se faire porter malade ;2 ( nauseous) to be sick vomir ; to feel sick avoir mal au cœur, avoir envie de vomir ; rhubarb makes him sick il ne supporte pas la rhubarbe ; you'll make yourself sick if you eat all that chocolate tu vas te rendre malade si tu manges tout ce chocolat ; to have a sick feeling in one's stomach ( from nerves) avoir l'estomac noué ; ( from food) avoir l'estomac barbouillé ;3 ( tasteless) [joke, story] malsain, de mauvais goût ; he has a really sick sense of humour son sens de l'humour est plus que douteux ;4 ( disturbed) [mind, imagination] malsain ; what a sick thing to do! il faut avoir l'esprit dérangé pour faire une chose pareille! ;5 ( disgusted) écœuré, dégoûté ; you make me sick! tu m'écœures! ; it's enough to make you sick! il y a de quoi vous rendre malade! ; it makes me sick to think of how they treated him ça me rend malade de voir comment ils l'ont traité ;6 ○ ( fed-up) to be sick of sth/sb ○ en avoir assez or marre ○ de qn/qch ; to be sick and tired of sth/sb ○ en avoir ras le bol ○ de qch/qn ; to be sick to death of sth/sb ○ en avoir par-dessus la tête de qch/qn ; to be sick of the sight of sth/sb ○ ne plus supporter qch/qn.to be sick at heart avoir la mort dans l'âme ; to be worried sick ○ about sth être malade d'inquiétude au sujet de qch.■ sick up ○ GB:▶ sick up [sth], sick [sth] up ○ vomir, dégueuler ◑ [food]. -
5 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)
См. также в других словарях:
sick to one's stomach — 1. About to vomit 2. Disgusted • • • Main Entry: ↑sick * * * nauseous ■ disgusted … Useful english dictionary
sick to one's stomach — adjective Nauseated, queasy. [H]e had torn the paper from one of his cigarettes and was chewing the tobacco. This was his last resort, an expedient which he fell back upon only in great extremity, as it invariably made him sick to his stomach … Wiktionary
sick to one's stomach — 1》 nauseous. 2》 disgusted. → sick … English new terms dictionary
sick — sick1 /sik/, adj., sicker, sickest, n. adj. 1. afflicted with ill health or disease; ailing. 2. affected with nausea; inclined to vomit. 3. deeply affected with some unpleasant feeling, as of sorrow, disgust, or boredom: sick at heart; to be sick … Universalium
sick — adj. 1) sick at (sick at heart; sick at the prospect of leaving home) 2) sick of (we are sick of the red tape) 3) (misc.) sick to one s stomach; worried sick; to be sick and tired of smt. * * * [sɪk] to be sick and tired of smt. worried sick… … Combinatory dictionary
sick — I. adjective Etymology: Middle English sek, sik, from Old English sēoc; akin to Old High German sioh sick Date: before 12th century 1. a. (1) affected with disease or ill health ; ailing (2) of, relating to, or intended for use in sickness < sick … New Collegiate Dictionary
sick — adj 1. ill, ailing, unwell, unhealthy, sickly, delicate; indisposed, laid up, bedridden, infirm, valetudinarian, confined, shut in; hurt, afflicted, injured, lame, disabled, crippled; not up to snuff, Inf. out of sorts, Inf. under the weather, on … A Note on the Style of the synonym finder
sick — sick1 adjective 1》 affected by physical or mental illness. 2》 feeling nauseous and wanting to vomit. ↘informal disappointed, mortified, or miserable. ↘archaic pining or longing. 3》 (sick of) bored by or annoyed with through excessive… … English new terms dictionary
sick — 1. Unwell; suffering from disease. 2. SYN: nauseated. [A.S. seóc] * * * sick sik adj 1 a) affected with disease or ill health b) of, relating to, or intended for use in sickness <a sick ward> c) affected with nausea: inclined to vomit or… … Medical dictionary
SICK, VISITING THE — (Heb. בִּקּוּר חוֹלִים; bikkur ḥolim). Visiting the sick in order to cheer, aid, and relieve their suffering is one of the many social obligations which Judaism has clothed with religious significance. God Himself is said to have observed this… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
turn one's stomach — {v. phr.}, {informal} To make you feel sick. * /The smell of that cigar was enough to turn your stomach./ * /The sight of blood turns my stomach./ … Dictionary of American idioms