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121 almost
almost [ˈɔ:lməʊst]* * *['ɔːlməʊst]Note: When almost is used to mean practically it is translated by presque: we're almost ready = nous sommes presque prêts; it's almost dark = il fait presque nuit; the room was almost empty = la salle était presque videWhen almost is used with a verb in the past tense to describe something undesirable or unpleasant that nearly happened, it is translated using the verb faillir followed by an infinitive: I almost forgot = j'ai failli oublier; he almost fell = il a failli tomber1) ( practically) presque2) ( implying narrow escape) -
122 along
along [əˈlɒŋ]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. adverb• along here, along there par làb. ► all along depuis le début2. preposition• somewhere along the line someone made a mistake à un moment donné, quelqu'un a commis une erreur* * *Note: When along is used as a preposition meaning all along it can usually be translated by le long de: there were trees along the road = il y avait des arbres le long de la route. For particular usages see the entry belowalong is often used after verbs of movement. If the addition of along does not change the meaning of the verb, along will not be translated: as he walked along = tout en marchantHowever, the addition of along often produces a completely new meaning. This is the case in expressions like the project is coming along, how are they getting along?. For translations consult the appropriate verb entry (come, get etc)[ə'lɒŋ], US [ə'lɔːŋ] 1.2.to push/pull something along — pousser/tirer quelque chose
to run along the beach — [path etc] longer la plage
2) ( the length of)3) ( at a point along)3.somewhere along the way — lit quelque part en chemin; fig quelque part
along with prepositional phrase ( accompanied by) accompagné de; ( at same time as) en même temps que -
123 and
and [ænd, ənd, nd, ən]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► For set expressions containing the word and, eg now and then, wait and see, look under the other words.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━a. et• and? et alors ?c. (+ infinitive verb) try and come tâchez de venird. (repetition, continuation) better and better de mieux en mieux* * *[ænd], unstressed [ənd]Note: When used as a straightforward conjunction, and is translated by et: to shout and sing = crier et chanter; Tom and Linda = Tom et Linda; my friend and colleague = mon ami et collègueand is sometimes used between two verbs in English to mean ‘in order to’ ( wait and see, try and relax etc). To translate these expressions, look under the appropriate verb entry (wait, try etc)For examples and other uses, see the entry below1) ( joining words or clauses) et2) ( in numbers)3) ( with repetition)4) ( for emphasis)5) ( in phrases)and that — (colloq) GB et tout ça
and how! — (colloq) et comment!
6) ( alike)7) ( with negative) -
124 behind
behind [bɪˈhaɪnd]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. adverba. ( = in or at the rear) derrière• to follow a long way behind/not far behind suivre de loin/d'assez prèsb. ( = late) en retard2. prepositiona. derrière• what is behind this? qu'y a-t-il là-dessous ?c. ( = responsible for) who was behind the attack? qui est derrière cet attentat ?d. ( = less advanced than) en retard sur3. noun* * *Note: When used as a preposition to talk about the physical position of something, behind is translated by derrière: behind the house = derrière la maisonbehind is sometimes used in verb combinations ( fall behind, lag behind etc). For translations, consult the appropriate verb entry (fall, lag etc)[bɪ'haɪnd] 1.(colloq) noun derrière (colloq) m2.3.to be behind with — avoir du retard dans [studies, work]
adverb [follow on, trail] derrière; [look, glance] en arrière4.1) derrièrebehind my back — fig derrière mon dos
to be behind the others — [pupil] être en retard par rapport aux autres
2) fig ( motivating)the reasons behind his declaration — les raisons qui motivent/motivaient sa déclaration
3) fig ( supporting) -
125 below
below [bɪˈləʊ]1. prepositiona. ( = under) sous ; ( = lower than) au-dessous de2. adverb• below, we could see the valley en bas, on apercevait la vallée• several thousand feet below (from mountain top) plusieurs milliers de mètres plus bas ; (from aeroplane) plusieurs milliers de mètres au-dessousb. ( = downstairs) en basd. ( = below zero) au-dessous• it will be extremely cold, with temperatures at zero or below il fera très froid, avec des températures tombant à zéro ou au-dessous* * *Note: When below is used as a preposition to talk about the physical position of something, it is most often translated by au-dessous de: the apartment below mine = l'appartement au-dessous du mien; below the knee = au-dessous du genouThe most notable exceptions are for the expressions below the ground and below the surface, when sous is used: sous le sol, sous la surfaceFor other prepositional uses of below and for adverbial uses see the entry below[bɪ'ləʊ] 1.1) ( under) en dessous dethe valley below them/you etc — la vallée en contrebas
2) ( less than) en dessous de, inférieur àbelow 10% — en dessous de or inférieur à 10%
3) ( in rank)those below the rank of Major — Military les militaires qui sont au-dessous du grade de major
4) ( south of) au sud de, au-dessous de; ( downstream from) en aval de5) ( unworthy of) beneath 1. 22.the people/cars (down) below — les gens/voitures en bas
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126 beneath
beneath [bɪˈni:θ]1. prepositiona. ( = under) sousb. ( = unworthy of) indigne de• they took jobs that were far beneath them ils ont accepté des emplois qui étaient vraiment indignes d'eux2. adverb* * *Note: When used as a preposition (= under), beneath is translated by au-dessous de: beneath his feet = au-dessous de ses pieds. When used as an adverb (the trees beneath), beneath is translated by en dessous: the trees beneath = les arbres en dessous. For particular and figurative usages see below[bɪ'niːθ] 1.1) sousthe valley beneath them/you etc — la vallée en contrebas
2)2.adverb en dessous -
127 herself
herself [hɜ:ˈself]a. (reflexive) se• "why not?" she said to herself « pourquoi pas ? » se dit-elle* * *[hə'self]Note: When used as a reflexive pronoun, direct and indirect, herself is translated by se (s' before a vowel): she's enjoying herself = elle s'amuse bien; she's cut herself = elle s'est coupéeWhen used in emphasis, the translation is elle-même: she herself didn't know = elle ne le savait pas elle-mêmeAfter a preposition the translation is elle or elle-même: she can be proud of herself = elle peut être fière d'elle or d'elle-mêmefor herself — pour elle, pour elle-même
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128 himself
himself [hɪmˈself]a. (as reflexive) se• "why not?" he said to himself « pourquoi pas ? » se dit-ild. ( = normal) he hasn't been himself lately il n'est pas dans son état normal ces temps-ci ; ( = not feeling well) il n'est pas dans son assiette ces temps-ci* * *[hɪm'self]Note: When used as a reflexive pronoun, direct and indirect, himself is translated by se (s' before a vowel): he's enjoying himself = il s'amuse bien; he's cut himself = il s'est coupéWhen used in emphasis the translation is lui-même: he himself didn't know = il ne le savait pas lui-mêmeAfter a preposition, the translation is lui or lui-même: he can be proud of himself = il peut être fier de lui or de lui-mêmefor himself — pour lui, pour lui-même
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