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81 langue maternelle
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82 fourchelangue
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83 glacier flottant
Dictionnaire français-anglais de géographie > glacier flottant
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84 langue de glace
Dictionnaire français-anglais de géographie > langue de glace
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85 langue de glacier flottant
floating glacier; floating glacier tongueDictionnaire français-anglais de géographie > langue de glacier flottant
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86 langue glaciaire
Dictionnaire français-anglais de géographie > langue glaciaire
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87 oves et dards
Architecture française et le dictionnaire de construction > oves et dards
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88 astre
n. m. Etre beau comme un astre (iron.): To be incredibly good-looking. (The expression is nearly always uttered within a tongue-in-cheek context.) -
89 B.A.
n. f. (abbr. bonne action) Faire sa B.A. (joc. & iron.): To do one's daily good deed. (The expression originates from the language of Scouting; in colloquial speech, the good deed can have a variety of tongue-in-cheek meanings.) -
90 bagou
n. m. (also: bagout) Avoir du bagou: To have the gift of the gab, to have a glib tongue. -
91 battant
I.n. m.1. 'Ticker', heart (also: palpitant).2. Tongue. Avoir un sacré battant: To have the gift of the gab.3. 'Heavy', muscleman (individual whose awe- inspiring muscular physique gets him all the tough jobs. In the boxing fraternity un battant is a powerful puncher with plenty of stamina).4. Avoir du battant: To be full of fight, to be not lacking in stamina.5. Se remplir le battant: To 'stuff one's face', to have a good tuck-in. ( Battant here refers to the stomach but does not have this meaning on its own.)II.adj. inv. Battant neuf. Brand spanking new.III.adv. 'On the dot', right on time. Il s'est radiné à huit heures battant: He got there right on the stroke of eight. -
92 bavarde
n. f.1. 'Licker', 'clapper', tongue.2. Let ter, item of correspondence. -
93 baveuse
n. f. 'Licker', 'clapper', tongue. -
94 cabane
n. f.1. 'Nick', 'clink', jail. Faire de la cabane: To do time. (The word is an abbreviated version of la cabane aux mille lourdes.)2. (joc.): House (often a résidence secondaire or weekend dwelling). The tongue-in-cheek jocularity derives from the primary meaning: shack, equated with the grandeur of the residence described.3. Attiger la cabane: To 'lay it on a bit thick', to exaggerate. -
95 calpette
n. f. 'Clapper', tongue. -
96 clapette
n. f. 'Licker', tongue (also: clapoteuse, menteuse). -
97 copeau
n. m.1. Arracher son copeau: To 'juice off', to ejaculate.2. Couper le copeau a quelqu'un: To silence someone. (In this instance, copeau means tongue but is never encountered in other expressions.)3. Avoir les copeaux: To 'have the jitters', to be 'in a blue funk', to be very frightened.4. Des copeaux! Fuck all! — Bugger all! — Nothing at all! On a pensé qu'on ferait des affaires—des copeaux! We thought we'd do some business, but it was nothing doing! -
98 cravateur
n. m.1. 'Mouthpiece', barrister.2. 'Slick-tongue', smooth-talker. -
99 escalope
n. f.2. Divot, piece of turf scooped out by a golf club.3. (pl.): 'Flappers', 'lugs', ears. -
100 excuser
v. trans. Excusez-moi de vous demander pardon! This jocular and slightly tongue-incheek expression became famous in the 60s through Fernand Raynaud, one of the top French comedians of the period. Raynaud's forte was in portraying the subservient underdog in French society.
См. также в других словарях:
tongue — [tuŋ] n. [ME tunge < OE, akin to Ger zunge < IE base * dṇĝhū , tongue > L lingua (OL dingua)] 1. the movable muscular structure attached to the floor of the mouth in most vertebrates: it is an important organ in the ingestion of food,… … English World dictionary
Tongue — Tongue, n. [OE. tunge, tonge, AS. tunge; akin to OFries. tunge, D. tong, OS. tunga, G. zunge, OHG. zunga, Icel. & Sw. tunga, Dan tunge, Goth. tugg[=o], OL. dingua, L. lingua. [root]243 Cf.{Language}, {Lingo}. ] [1913 Webster] 1. (Anat.) an organ… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Tongue — TONGUE, a parish, in the county of Sutherland, 250 miles (N. by W.) from Edinburgh; containing, with the island of Roan, and the villages of Tongue, Skianid, and Torrisdale, 2041 inhabitants, of whom 1558 are in the rural districts. This place … A Topographical dictionary of Scotland
tongue — ► NOUN 1) the fleshy muscular organ in the mouth, used for tasting, licking, swallowing, and (in humans) articulating speech. 2) the tongue of an ox or lamb as food. 3) a person s style or manner of speaking: a debater with a caustic tongue. 4) a … English terms dictionary
Tongue — (gaélico escocés, Tunga del antiguo escandinavo Tunga) es un pueblo costero en el noroeste de las Tierras Altas, Escocia (en la parte occidental del anterior condado de Sutherland. Queda en la costa este sobre la base del Kyle de Tongue y al… … Wikipedia Español
Tongue — Tongue, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Tongued}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Tonguing}.] 1. To speak; to utter. Such stuff as madmen tongue. Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. To chide; to scold. [1913 Webster] How might she tongue me. Shak. [1913 Webster] 3. (Mus.) To modulate … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Tongue — bezeichnet: Tongue (Highlands), Ort in den schottischen Highlands Tongue (Mali), Ort in Mali auf Englisch die Zunge Tongue ist der Name folgender Personen: Nicholas Tongue (* 1973), ehemaliger neuseeländischer Schwimmer Thomas H. Tongue… … Deutsch Wikipedia
Tongue — Tongue, v. i. 1. To talk; to prate. Dryden. [1913 Webster] 2. (Mus.) To use the tongue in forming the notes, as in playing the flute and some other wind instruments. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
tongue|y — «TUHNG ee», adjective. 1. Informal. talkative; loquacious; garrulous. 2. of or like a tongue; produced by the tongue; lingual … Useful english dictionary
Tongué — Géographie Pays Mali Région Ségou Cercle … Wikipédia en Français
tongue in — ( ● tongue … Useful english dictionary