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wrong+practice

  • 1 pain

    n. m.
    1. 'Sock', 'clout', blow. Prendre un pain sur le coin de la gueule: To get a 'knucklesandwich', to get punched in the face.
    2. Un pain (Music): A wrong note. Aux répétitions, les pains tombaient dru: Band practice was enough to make you gnash your teeth!
    3. Le pain de fesse (joc.): Profits from prostitution.
    4. Pain au lait: 'Prick', 'cock', penis.
    5. Pain dur. 'Crummy enterprise', worthless venture.
    6. Etre bon comme du bon pain: To be 'the salt of the earth', to have a heart of gold.
    7. Ça se vend comme des petits pains: It sells like hot cakes— These goods don't stay long on the shelf.
    8. Ça mange pas de pain: There's no risk entailed—This venture is self-supporting. (This expression got a new lease of life when it became the title of a San-Antonio novel.)
    9. Ne pas manger de ce pain-là: To be 'dead against', to be firmly opposed to something. Je ne mange pas de ce pain-là! I'd rather starve than do that!
    10. Perdre le goût du pain (iron.): To 'croak', to 'snuff it', to die. Je vais lui faire perdre le goût du pain! He's going to get the thrashing of his life from me! (Contrary to logic, in direct speech the expression loses a lot of its virulence.)

    Dictionary of Modern Colloquial French > pain

  • 2 Tutoyer

       To use the pronoun tu rather than vous - a concept that English-speakers often find hard to master correctly, tutoyer means addressing someone using the familiar singular tu form of the second person pronoun, rather than the more formal vous form. Fifty years ago, in formal family circles, children would address their parents using vous rather than tu; this practice has now more or less completely disappeared, and tutoiement is the common form of address within families and within groups of friends or workplace colleagues who know each other. The change is generational, and President Sarkozy has brought tutoiement right into the formal surroundings of presidential affairs. Vouvoiement (using vous) remains the norm in formal circumstances, when addressing a hierarchical superior, a stranger or someone with whom one has only occasional working relations - though the French are now quite used to speakers of other languages, notably English-speakers, getting it wrong.
       Usage in France varies from usage in Quebec, where speakers often use "tu" as a singular form of "vous" to address each other even in a business context or between strangers.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Tutoyer

См. также в других словарях:

  • Wrong — (?; 115), a. [OE. wrong, wrang, a. & n., AS. wrang, n.; originally, awry, wrung, fr. wringan to wring; akin to D. wrang bitter, Dan. vrang wrong, Sw. vr[*a]ng, Icel. rangr awry, wrong. See {Wring}.] [1913 Webster] 1. Twisted; wry; as, a wrong… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • practice — prac·tice n 1: the form and manner of conducting judicial and quasi judicial proceedings 2 a: the continuous exercise of a profession; also: the performance of services that are considered to require an appropriate license engaged in the… …   Law dictionary

  • wrong-foot — [rôŋ′foot΄] vt. 〚< the practice in sports of causing an opponent to put weight on the wrong foot〛 Chiefly Brit. to confuse or disconcert so as to make less able to act or respond effectively, reasonably, etc. * * * …   Universalium

  • wrong-foot — [rôŋ′foot΄] vt. [< the practice in sports of causing an opponent to put weight on the wrong foot] Chiefly Brit. to confuse or disconcert so as to make less able to act or respond effectively, reasonably, etc …   English World dictionary

  • wrong use — index abuse (corrupt practice), misapplication, misusage, misuse Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • practice — I UK [ˈpræktɪs] / US noun Word forms practice : singular practice plural practices *** Get it right: practice: Don t confuse practice (a noun) with practise (a verb). These two words sound exactly the same: Wrong: Soldiers had only a few days in… …   English dictionary

  • wrong — wronger, n. wrongly, adv. wrongness, n. /rawng, rong/, adj. 1. not in accordance with what is morally right or good: a wrong deed. 2. deviating from truth or fact; erroneous: a wrong answer. 3. not correct in action, judgment, opinion, method,… …   Universalium

  • wrong — [[t]rɔŋ, rɒŋ[/t]] adj. 1) not in accordance with what is morally right or good: a wrong deed[/ex] 2) deviating from truth or fact; erroneous: a wrong answer[/ex] 3) not correct in action, judgment, opinion, etc., as a person; in error 4) not… …   From formal English to slang

  • wrong — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) I adj. immoral (see wrong); mistaken, unfactual; unsuitable, improper. See error, disagreement. n. evil, harm, injury. See wrong, malevolence. II Deviation from moral right Nouns 1. wrong, wrongfulness …   English dictionary for students

  • practice — Repeated or customary action; habitual performance; a succession of acts of similar kind; custom; usage. Application of science to the wants of men. The exercise of any profession. The form or mode or proceeding in courts of justice for the… …   Black's law dictionary

  • The Practice — infobox television show name = The Practice caption = Title Screen format = Legal drama runtime = 60 minutes creator = David E. Kelley starring = Dylan McDermott Michael Badalucco Lisa Gay Hamilton Steve Harris Camryn Manheim Kelli Williams Lara… …   Wikipedia

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