-
1 trombe marine
-
2 gargouille
Dictionnaire d'ingénierie, d'architecture et de construction > gargouille
-
3 gargoulette
gargoulette nf (earthenware) water jug GB, water pitcher US; boire à la gargoulette to drink from a jug without letting one's lips touch the spout. -
4 descente d’eau de pluie
fconductor (US), down comer (UK), down-spout (US), rain leader (US), rain water pipe (UK)Dictionnaire d'ingénierie, d'architecture et de construction > descente d’eau de pluie
-
5 délayage
délayage [delεjaʒ]masculine noun* * *delɛjaʒ nm2) fig waffle* * *délayage nm1 (de peinture, liquide) thinning (avec with); (de farine, poudre) mixing (dans with);2 ○ péj waffle○; faire du délayage to waffle○.[delɛjaʒ] nom masculin1. [mélange - de farine, de poudre] mixing2. (figuré & péjoratif) [d'un exposé] toning down[d'une idée] watering down -
6 jus
n. m.1. Water.a Rain (also: jus de parapluie). Qu'est-ce qu'il tombé comme jus! It ain't half raining!b 'The drink', 'the soup' (the sea, a lake, a river). Tomber au jus: To fall overboard. Tout le monde au jus! Let's all have a swim!2. Coffee. Siroter un jus: To sip a quiet cup of coffee. Jus de chaussette: Bitter and nasty coffee. Jus de chapeau: Watery coffee.3. 'Juice', 'gas', petrol. Donner du jus: To 'step on it', to open the throttle. Aller plein jus: To 'belt along', to bomb along.5. 'Spunk', sperm. Lächer le jus: To 'juice off', to ejaculate.6. Avoir du jus de navet dans les veines: To be 'spunkless', 'spineless', to be weak-willed.7. Laisser mijoter (also: mariner) quelqu'un dans son jus: To 'let someone stew in his own juice', to let someone sweat it out (of the mess he got himself into).8. Y mettre du jus: To put some vim (and zest) into it, to 'pull out all the stops', to try one's darnedest.9. Lengthy 'blurb', verbose text. Se noyer dans le jus (sch.): To waffle on and on.10. Long-winded speech, lengthy allocution. Dévider un jus: To spout at length.11. Valoir le jus: To be worth-while. Ça vaut le jus, je t'assure! I can tell you it's well worth it!12. C'est le même jus: It's six of one and half a dozen of the other—It's the same thing.13. Jeter du jus: To 'look swell', to look great. Qu'est-ce qu'elle en jette! She's a sight for sore eyes!14. C'est du peu au jus! (mil.): Demob day is just around the corner!15. Etre dans son jus (of an antique): To be in its original (untampered-with) state.
См. также в других словарях:
water-spout — … Useful english dictionary
water — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) A clear liquid and major component of all living things Nouns 1. water, moisture, wetness; drinking water, spring water, mineral water; sea or salt water, fresh water; serum, serosity; lymph; rheum;… … English dictionary for students
Spout — Spout, n. [Cf. Sw. spruta a squirt, a syringe. See {Spout}, v. t.] 1. That through which anything spouts; a discharging lip, pipe, or orifice; a tube, pipe, or conductor of any kind through which a liquid is poured, or by which it is conveyed in… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
spout — [spout] n. [ME spute, spoute < the v.] 1. a lip, orifice, or projecting tube, as on a teapot, in a drinking fountain, etc., by which a liquid is poured or discharged 2. a) a stream, jet, or discharge of or as of liquid from a spout b) the… … English World dictionary
Spout — (spout), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Spouted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Spouting}.] [Cf. Sw. sputa, spruta, to spout, D. spuit a spout, spuiten to spout, and E. spurt, sprit, v., sprout, sputter; or perhaps akin to E. spit to eject from the mouth.] 1. To throw… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Spout — Spout, v. i. 1. To issue with violence, or in a jet, as a liquid through a narrow orifice, or from a spout; as, water spouts from a hole; blood spouts from an artery. [1913 Webster] All the glittering hill Is bright with spouting rills. Thomson.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
spout — 1 noun (C) 1 a small tube or pipe on a container that you pour liquid out through 2 a spout of water/blood etc a sudden strong stream of liquid which comes out of somewhere very fast: The whale blew a spout of water into the air. see also:… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
spout — [[t]spa͟ʊt[/t]] spouts, spouting, spouted 1) V ERG If something spouts liquid or fire or if liquid or fire spout out of something, it comes out very quickly with a lot of force. [V n] He replaced the boiler when the last one began to spout flames … English dictionary
spout — spout1 [spaut] n ↑spout 1.) a small pipe on the side of a container that you pour liquid out through 2.) spout of water/blood etc a sudden strong stream of liquid which comes out of somewhere very fast →↑waterspout 3.) up the spout BrE informal… … Dictionary of contemporary English
spout — I UK [spaʊt] / US noun [countable] Word forms spout : singular spout plural spouts 1) a part of a container that is shaped like a tube and is used for pouring liquid 2) a) a continuous and strong stream of liquid or steam, especially hot liquid… … English dictionary
spout — spouter, n. spoutless, adj. spoutlike, adj. /spowt/, v.t. 1. to emit or discharge forcibly (a liquid, granulated substance, etc.) in a stream or jet. 2. Informal. to state or declaim volubly or in an oratorical manner: He spouted his theories on… … Universalium