-
121 name
name [neɪm]nom ⇒ 1 (a)-(d) réputation ⇒ 1 (c) personnage ⇒ 1 (d) nommer ⇒ 3 (a)-(c) désigner ⇒ 3 (b), 3 (c) citer ⇒ 3 (b)1 noun(a) (of person, animal) nom m; (of company) raison f sociale; Finance (of account) intitulé m; (of ship) devise f, nom m; (of play, novel etc) titre m;∎ full name nom et prénoms mpl;∎ what's your name? quel est votre nom?, comment vous appelez-vous?;∎ my name's Richard je m'appelle Richard;∎ what name shall I say? (to caller) qui dois-je annoncer?;∎ the house is in his wife's name la maison est au nom de sa femme;∎ I know her only by name je ne la connais que de nom;∎ she knows all the children by name elle connaît le nom de tous les enfants;∎ to mention sb/sth by name nommer qn/qch;∎ the shares are in my name les actions sont à mon nom;∎ he is known or he goes by the name of Penn il est connu sous le nom de Penn, il se fait appeler Penn;∎ someone by or of the name of Penn quelqu'un du nom de ou qui s'appelle Penn;∎ I know it by or under a different name je le connais sous un autre nom;∎ he writes novels under the name of A.B. Alderman il écrit des romans sous le pseudonyme de A.B. Alderman;∎ our dog answers to the name of Oscar notre chien répond au nom d'Oscar;∎ to put a name to a face mettre un nom sur un visage;∎ have you put your name down for evening classes? est-ce que vous vous êtes inscrit aux cours du soir?;∎ she was his wife in all but name ils n'étaient pas mariés, mais c'était tout comme;∎ Football he had his name taken il a eu un carton jaune;∎ he is president in name only il n'a de président que le nom, c'est un président sans pouvoir;∎ Cannon Gait is a huge name in the publishing business Cannon Gait est une entreprise très importante dans le monde de l'édition;∎ what's in a name? on n'a pas toujours le nom que l'on mérite;∎ to call sb names injurier ou insulter qn;∎ she called me a rude name elle m'a insulté;∎ money is the name of the game c'est une affaire d'argent;∎ ah well, that's the name of the game c'est comme ça!, c'est la vie!;∎ not to have a penny/a decent pair of shoes to one's name ne pas avoir un centime/une paire de chaussures convenable à soi;∎ to have several books to one's name être l'auteur de plusieurs livres;∎ the company trades under the name of Scandia la société a pour dénomination Scandia(b) (sake, authority) nom m;∎ in the name of freedom au nom de la liberté;∎ in God's name!, in the name of God! pour l'amour de Dieu!;∎ familiar what in the name of God or Heaven are you doing? que diable faites-vous là?;∎ in the name of the law au nom de la loi;∎ halt in the name of the King! halte-là, au nom du Roi!(c) (reputation → professional or business) nom m, réputation f;∎ to make or to win a name for oneself se faire un nom ou une réputation;∎ we have the company's (good) name to think of il faut penser au renom de la société;∎ they have a name for efficiency ils ont la réputation d'être efficaces;∎ to have a good/bad name avoir (une) bonne/mauvaise réputation;∎ to get a bad name se faire une mauvaise réputation(d) (famous person) nom m, personnage m;∎ he's a big name in the art world c'est une figure de proue du monde des arts;∎ all the great political names were there tous les ténors de la scène politique étaient présents;∎ famous name (person) célébrité f∎ they named the baby Felix ils ont appelé ou prénommé le bébé Felix;∎ she wanted to name her son after the President elle voulait donner à son fils le prénom du président, elle voulait que son fils porte le prénom du président;∎ American the building is named for Abraham Lincoln on a donné au bâtiment le nom d'Abraham Lincoln;∎ the guy named Chip le dénommé Chip∎ the journalist refused to name his source le journaliste a refusé de révéler ou de donner le nom de son informateur;∎ whatever you need, just name it vos moindres désirs seront exaucés;∎ you name it, we've got it demandez-nous n'importe quoi, nous l'avons;∎ name the books of the Old Testament citez les livres de l'Ancien Testament;∎ to name names donner des noms;∎ let us name no names ne nommons personne;∎ he is named as one of the consultants son nom est cité ou mentionné en tant que consultant;∎ Law to name sb as a beneficiary (in one's will) désigner qn comme bénéficiaire;∎ Law to name sb as a witness citer qn comme témoin;∎ to name and shame dénoncer publiquement les responsables∎ she has been named as president elle a été nommée présidente;∎ she was named (as) best supporting actress elle a été élue pour le meilleur second rôle féminin;∎ 22 June has been named as the date for the elections la date du 22 juin a été retenue ou choisie pour les élections;∎ name your price votre prix sera le mien, dites votre prix;∎ they've finally named the day ils ont enfin fixé la date de leur mariage∎ to name an MP ≃ suspendre un député= titre réservé aux membres investissant leur fortune personnelle dans la compagnie d'assurances Lloyd's et s'engageant à avoir une responsabilité illimitée en cas de sinistre►► Marketing name brand marque f;∎ today is his name day c'est aujourd'hui sa fête;Marketing name licensing cession f de licence de nom;British Cinema & Theatre name part vrai rôle m; (title role) = rôle qui donne son titre à la pièce ou au film;Marketing name product marque f -
122 slip
slip [slɪp]1. nouna. ( = mistake) erreur fb. ( = underskirt) combinaison fc. (in filing system) fiche fa. ( = slide) glisserb. ( = move quickly) se glissera. ( = slide) glisserb. ( = escape from) échapper à4. compounds[guest] partir discrètement[person] entrer discrètement[+ object] (faire) glisser ; [+ remark, comment] glisser[person] sortir• the words slipped out before he realized it les mots lui ont échappé avant même qu'il ne s'en rende compte[person, error] s'introduire( = make mistake) se ficher dedans (inf)* * *[slɪp] 1.1) ( error) gen erreur f; ( by schoolchild) faute f d'étourderie; ( faux pas) gaffe (colloq) fto make a slip — faire une erreur or une faute d'étourderie
2) ( piece of paper) bout m de papier; ( receipt) reçu m4) (colloq & dated) ( slender person)2.transitive verb (p prés etc - pp-)1) ( slide)to slip [something] into something — glisser [quelque chose] dans quelque chose [note, coin, joke]
to slip [something] out of something — sortir [quelque chose] de quelque chose [object, foot, hand]
she slipped the shirt over her head — ( put on) elle a enfilé la chemise; ( take off) elle a retiré la chemise
2) (colloq) ( give surreptitiously)to slip somebody something —
3) ( escape from) [dog] se dégager de [leash]; [boat] filer [moorings]it slipped my notice ou attention that — je ne me suis pas aperçu que
to let slip an opportunity ou a chance (to do) — laisser échapper une occasion (de faire)
4) ( in knitting)5) Medicine6) Automobile3.intransitive verb (p prés etc - pp-)1) ( slide)slip into — passer [dress]; s'adapter à [rôle]; tomber dans [coma]; sombrer doucement dans [madness]
to slip out of — enlever [dress, coat]
2) ( slide quietly)to slip into/out of — se glisser dans/hors de [room, building]
3) ( slide accidentally) [person, vehicle] glisser (on sur; off de); [knife, pen] glisser, déraper; [load] tomberto slip through somebody's fingers — fig filer entre les doigts de quelqu'un
4) (colloq) ( lose one's grip)I must be slipping! — je baisse! (colloq)
•Phrasal Verbs:- slip by- slip in- slip off- slip on- slip out- slip up••to give somebody the slip — semer (colloq) quelqu'un
-
123 struggle
struggle [ˈstrʌgl]1. nouna. lutter ; ( = fight) se battre ; ( = thrash around) se débattre ; ( = try hard) se démener ( to do sth pour faire qch)b. ( = move with difficulty) he struggled up the cliff il s'est hissé péniblement jusqu'au sommet de la falaise( = continue the struggle) poursuivre la lutte* * *['strʌgl] 1.2) ( scuffle) rixe f3) ( difficult task)I find it a real struggle to do ou doing — il m'est très difficile de faire
2.they had a struggle to do ou doing — ils ont eu du mal à faire
to struggle with a problem/one's conscience — être aux prises avec un problème/sa conscience
3) ( have difficulty) éprouver des difficultés4) ( move with difficulty)he struggled into/out of his jeans — il a enfilé/enlevé son jean avec difficulté
•Phrasal Verbs: -
124 throw
throw [θrəʊ]1. noun[of javelin, discus] jet m• it costs $10 a throw (inf) ça coûte 10 dollars à chaque fois• to throw o.s. to the ground se jeter à terrec. ( = put suddenly) jeter• to throw into confusion [+ person] semer la confusion dans l'esprit de ; [+ meeting, group] semer la confusion dans• to throw open [+ door, window] ouvrir tout grand ; [+ house, gardens] ouvrir au public ; [+ competition] ouvrir à tout le monded. [+ switch] actionnere. [+ pottery] tournerf. ( = disconcert) (inf) déconcerter3. compounds► throw about, throw around separable transitive verb• to be thrown about (in boat, bus) être ballotté[+ rubbish] jeter ; [+ one's life, happiness, chance, talents] gâcher► throw in( = give) donner( = get rid of) se libérer de ; [+ cold, infection] se débarrasser deb. ( = make wrong) fausserb. [+ people] réunir (par hasard)► throw up* * *[θrəʊ] 1.1) Sport, Games ( in football) touche f; (of javelin, discus etc) lancer m; (in judo, wrestling etc) jeté m; ( of dice) coup m2) (colloq) ( each)2.CDs £5 a throw! — les compacts à cinq livres (la) pièce!
1) gen, Games, Sport ( project) ( with careful aim) lancer; ( downwards) jeter; ( with violence) projeterto throw a six — ( in dice) faire un six
2) fig ( direct) lancer [punch, question]; jeter [glance, look]; envoyer [kiss]; projeter [image, light, shadow] (on sur); faire [shadow] (on sur)we are ready for all the problems that Europe can throw at us — fig nous somme prêts à affronter tous les problèmes que l'Europe nous pose
to throw suspicion on somebody/something — faire naître des soupçons sur quelqu'un/quelque chose
3) fig ( disconcert) désarçonnerto throw [something/somebody] into confusion ou disarray — semer la confusion dans [meeting, group]; semer la confusion parmi [people]
4) Technology actionner [switch, lever]the operator threw the machine into gear/reverse — l'opérateur a embrayé l'engin/passé la marche arrière
5) (colloq) ( indulge in)to throw a fit — fig piquer une crise (colloq)
6) (colloq) ( organize)to throw a party — faire une fête (colloq)
7) ( in pottery)3. 4.to throw oneself — se jeter ( onto sur)
to throw oneself into — lit se jeter dans; fig se plonger dans
Phrasal Verbs:- throw in- throw on- throw up••it's throwing it down! — (colloq) GB ça dégringole! (colloq)
-
125 head
[hed] 1. noun1) (the top part of the human body, containing the eyes, mouth, brain etc; the same part of an animal's body: The stone hit him on the head; He scratched his head in amazement.) tête2) (a person's mind: An idea came into my head last night.) esprit3) (the height or length of a head: The horse won by a head.) tête4) (the chief or most important person (of an organization, country etc): Kings and presidents are heads of state; ( also adjective) a head waiter; the head office.) chef; principal5) (anything that is like a head in shape or position: the head of a pin; The boy knocked the heads off the flowers.) tête6) (the place where a river, lake etc begins: the head of the Nile.) source7) (the top, or the top part, of anything: Write your address at the head of the paper; the head of the table.) tête, haut, bout8) (the front part: He walked at the head of the procession.) (en) tête (de)9) (a particular ability or tolerance: He has no head for heights; She has a good head for figures.) bosse10) (a headmaster or headmistress: You'd better ask the Head.) directeur/-trice11) ((for) one person: This dinner costs $10 a head.) par personne12) (a headland: Beachy Head.) cap13) (the foam on the top of a glass of beer etc.) faux col2. verb1) (to go at the front of or at the top of (something): The procession was headed by the band; Whose name headed the list?) venir en tête (de)2) (to be in charge of; to be the leader of: He heads a team of scientists investigating cancer.) être à la tête (de)3) ((often with for) to (cause to) move in a certain direction: The explorers headed south; The boys headed for home; You're heading for disaster!) se diriger (vers)4) (to put or write something at the beginning of: His report was headed `Ways of Preventing Industrial Accidents'.) intituler5) ((in football) to hit the ball with the head: He headed the ball into the goal.) renvoyer d'un coup de tête•- - headed- header - heading - heads - headache - headband - head-dress - headfirst - headgear - headlamp - headland - headlight - headline - headlines - headlong - head louse - headmaster - head-on - headphones - headquarters - headrest - headscarf - headsquare - headstone - headstrong - headwind - above someone's head - go to someone's head - head off - head over heels - heads or tails? - keep one's head - lose one's head - make head or tail of - make headway - off one's head -
126 round
round [raʊnd]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. adverba. ( = around) autour• you can't get through here, you'll have to go round vous ne pouvez pas passer par ici, il faut faire le tour• the idea was going round and round in his head il tournait et retournait l'idée dans sa tête► all + round• this ought to make life much easier all round ( = for everybody) cela devrait simplifier la vie de tout le monde2. preposition• they went round the cafés looking for... ils ont fait le tour des cafés à la recherche de...• round about £800 800 livres environ• the house is just round the corner la maison est au coin de la rue ; ( = near) la maison est tout près3. adjectivea. ( = circular) rond ; ( = rounded) arrondib. ( = complete) a round dozen une douzaine tout rond4. nouna. ( = circle) rond m, cercle m• to make one's round(s) [watchman, policeman] faire sa ronde ; [postman, milkman] faire sa tournée ; [doctor] faire ses visites• to make the rounds of... faire le tour de...c. [of cards, golf, competition] partie f ; (Boxing) round m ; [of election] tour m ; [of talks, discussions] série fd. [of drinks] tournée f( = go round) [+ corner] tourner ; [+ bend] prendre6. compounds► round robin noun ( = petition) pétition f (où les signatures sont disposées en rond) ; ( = letter) lettre envoyée à plusieurs destinataires ; (especiallyUS) (Sport) poule f• this plane does three round trips a week cet avion effectue trois rotations fpl par semaine ► round trip ticket noun billet m aller-retour[+ prices] arrondir (au chiffre inférieur)[+ speech, meal] terminer ; [+ debate, meeting] mettre fin à• and now, to round off, I must say... et maintenant, pour conclure, je dois dire...► round up separable transitive verba. ( = bring together) [+ people] réunir ; [+ cattle] rassemblerb. [+ prices] arrondir (au chiffre supérieur)* * *Note: round often appears after verbs in English ( change round, gather round, pass round). For translations, consult the appropriate verb entry (change, gather, pass)[raʊnd] 1.1) GB ( on all sides)2) GB ( in circles)to go round and round — [carousel] tourner (en rond); [person] fig tourner en rond; lit aller et venir
3) GB (to specific place, home)4) GB5) GB ( as part of cycle)2.preposition GB1) ( expressing location) autour de [table etc]2) ( expressing direction)to go round a bend — ( in road) prendre un virage
3) ( on visit)3.round about adverbial phrase1) ( approximately) à peu près, environ2) ( vicinity)4.1) (set, series) série f (of de)2) ( in competition) rencontre fqualifying round — match m de qualification
3) (in golf, cards) partie f; (in boxing, wrestling) round m4) ( in showjumping) parcours m5) ( in election) tour m6) ( of drinks) tournée f7) Military ( unit of ammunition) balle f8) Military ( shot fired) salve f9) ( burst)round of applause — salve f d'applaudissements
10) ( of bread)11) ( route) tournée fto do one's rounds — [doctor] visiter ses malades; [postman] faire sa tournée; [guard] faire sa ronde
to do ou go the rounds — [rumour, flu] circuler
to go ou do the rounds of — faire le tour de
12) ( circular shape) rondelle f (of de)5.1) (circular, spherical, curved) rond2) ( complete) [figure] rondin round figures, that's £100 — ça fait 100 livres sterling en arrondissant
6.a nice round sum — une somme rondelette (colloq)
transitive verb contourner [headland]Phrasal Verbs:- round on- round up -
127 mix
[miks] 1. verb1) (to put or blend together to form one mass: She mixed the butter and sugar together; He mixed the blue paint with the yellow paint to make green paint.) mélanger2) (to prepare or make by doing this: She mixed the cement in a bucket.) préparer3) (to go together or blend successfully to form one mass: Oil and water don't mix.) se mélanger4) (to go together socially: People of different races were mixing together happily.) se mêler2. noun1) (the result of mixing things or people together: London has an interesting racial mix.) mélange2) (a collection of ingredients used to make something: (a) cake-mix.) préparation•- mixed- mixer - mixture - mix-up - be mixed up - mix up -
128 home
A n1 ( dwelling) gen logement m ; ( house) maison f ; new homes for sale journ logements neufs à vendre ; he doesn't have a home il n'a pas de logement ; you have a beautiful home vous avez une belle maison/un bel appartement ; to be far from/near home être loin de/près de chez soi ; a home of one's own un chez-soi ; to work from home travailler à domicile ; to set up home in France/in Madrid s'installer en France/à Madrid ; I've made my home in France now je suis installé or je vis en France maintenant ; birds make their home in… les oiseaux font leur nid dans… ; his home has been a tent for the last two weeks il habite dans une tente depuis deux semaines ; the island is home to 3,000 people l'île abrite 3 000 personnes ;2 ( for residential care) maison f ; retirement/nursing home maison de retraite/de santé ; to put sb in a home mettre qn dans un établissement spécialisé ;3 ( family base) foyer m ; broken home foyer désuni ; to make a home for créer un foyer pour ; ‘good home wanted’ ‘cherche foyer accueillant’ ; to leave home quitter la maison ;5 ( source) home of [country] pays m de [speciality] ; [place] lieu m privilégié pour [tennis, golf] ; [jungle, region] habitat m de [species] ;B modifC adv1 [come, go, arrive] ( to house) à la maison, chez soi ; ( to country) dans son pays ; on the journey home ( to house) en rentrant à la maison ; (to apartment, room) en rentrant chez moi/nous etc ; (by boat, plane) pendant le voyage de retour ; to see sb home raccompagner qn à la maison ; to take sb home ( accompany) raccompagner qn à la maison ; ( to meet family) emmener qn à la maison ; is she home? est-ce qu'elle est à la maison? ; is she home yet? elle est déjà rentrée? ;2 (to required position, effect) to hammer ou drive sth home lit enfoncer complètement [nail] ; fig bien faire passer [message] ; to press ou push one's point home enfoncer le clou fig ; to bring sth home to fig faire voir qch à ; to strike home fig toucher juste.1 ( in house) [be, work, stay] à la maison ; to live at home habiter chez ses parents ; at home and abroad dans notre pays et à l'étranger ; Madam is not at home† Madame ne reçoit personne ;2 Sport ( on own ground) [play] à domicile ; they're at home on Saturday ils jouent à domicile samedi ; X are playing Y at home X reçoit Y ;3 fig ( comfortable) [be, feel] à l'aise (with avec) ; make yourself at home mets-toi à l'aise, fais comme chez toi.E vi [pigeon, animal] savoir retourner chez soi.it's/he's nothing to write home about ça/il n'a rien d'extraordinaire ; it's home from home GB, it's home away from home US c'est un second chez-soi ; home sweet home, there's no place like home Prov on n'est nulle part si bien que chez soi ; to be a bit too close to home être blessant ; he found it a bit close to home ça l'a touché au vif ; let's talk about something nearer home parlons de ce qui nous concerne plus particulièrement ; to be home and dry être sauvé.
См. также в других словарях:
put one's best foot forward — {v. phr.}, {informal} To try to make a good impression; try to make a good appearance; do one s best. * /During courtship, it is natural to put your best foot forward./ * /When Ted applied for the job he put his best foot forward./ … Dictionary of American idioms
put one's best foot forward — {v. phr.}, {informal} To try to make a good impression; try to make a good appearance; do one s best. * /During courtship, it is natural to put your best foot forward./ * /When Ted applied for the job he put his best foot forward./ … Dictionary of American idioms
put one's foot in it — or[put one s foot in one s mouth] {v. phr.}, {informal} To speak carelessly and rudely; hurt another s feelings without intending to; make a rude mistake. * /He put his foot in it with his remark about self made men because Jones was one of… … Dictionary of American idioms
put one's foot in it — or[put one s foot in one s mouth] {v. phr.}, {informal} To speak carelessly and rudely; hurt another s feelings without intending to; make a rude mistake. * /He put his foot in it with his remark about self made men because Jones was one of… … Dictionary of American idioms
put\ one's\ foot\ in\ one's\ mouth — • put one s foot in it • put one s foot in one s mouth v. phr. informal To speak carelessly and rudely; hurt another s feelings without intending to; make a rude mistake. He put his foot in it with his remark about self made men because Jones was … Словарь американских идиом
put\ one's\ foot\ in\ it — • put one s foot in it • put one s foot in one s mouth v. phr. informal To speak carelessly and rudely; hurt another s feelings without intending to; make a rude mistake. He put his foot in it with his remark about self made men because Jones was … Словарь американских идиом
put one's best foot forward — see under ↑foot • • • Main Entry: ↑best put one s best foot forward To make one s best effort • • • Main Entry: ↑foot * * * embark on an undertaking with as much effort and determination as possible … Useful english dictionary
put one on his feet — Foot Foot (f[oo^]t), n.; pl. {Feet} (f[=e]t). [OE. fot, foot, pl. fet, feet. AS. f[=o]t, pl. f[=e]t; akin to D. voet, OHG. fuoz, G. fuss, Icel. f[=o]tr, Sw. fot, Dan. fod, Goth. f[=o]tus, L. pes, Gr. poy s, Skr. p[=a]d, Icel. fet step, pace… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
put one's nose out of joint — {v. phr.}, {informal} 1. To make you jealous; leave you out of favor. * /When Jane accepted Tom s invitation it put Jack s nose out of joint./ 2. To ruin your plans; cause you disappointment. * /Joe s mother put his nose out of joint by not… … Dictionary of American idioms
put one's nose out of joint — {v. phr.}, {informal} 1. To make you jealous; leave you out of favor. * /When Jane accepted Tom s invitation it put Jack s nose out of joint./ 2. To ruin your plans; cause you disappointment. * /Joe s mother put his nose out of joint by not… … Dictionary of American idioms
put one's foot in one's mouth — idi put one s foot in one s mouth, to make an embarrassing blunder … From formal English to slang