Engleză | Franceză |
---|---|
de- (reversal, undoing or removing) adjective | dé-◼◼◼adjectif |
de-escalation [de-escalations] (a decrease in scope, extension or severity) noun [UK: də ˌe.skə.ˈleɪʃ.n̩] [US: ˈdiː ˌe.skə.ˈleɪʃ.n̩] | désescalade◼◼◼nom {f} |
de facto (in fact or in practice) adjective [UK: ˈdiː.ˈfæk.təʊ] [US: ˈdiː.ˈfæk.təʊ] | de facto◼◼◼adjectif de fait◼◼◼adjectif |
de-ice [de-iced, de-icing, de-ices] (remove ice) verb [UK: ˈdiː.ˈaɪs] [US: aɪs] | déglacer◼◼◼verbe |
de jure (by right) adjective [UK: diː.ˈdʒʊə.rɪ] [US: diː.ˈdʒʊə.rɪ] | de jure◼◼◼adjectif de droit◼◼◼adjectif |
De Lesseps (placename) proper noun | de Lesseps◼◼◼nom propre |
De Lesseps (surname) proper noun | de Lesseps◼◼◼nom propre |
de Lesseps proper noun | de Lesseps◼◼◼nom propre |
de rigueur (necessary according to etiquette) adjective | de rigueur◼◼◼adjectif |
DEA (diethanolamine) noun [UK: ˈdiː] [US: ˈdiː] | DEA◼◼◼nom {f} |
DEA (Drug Enforcement Administration) noun [UK: ˈdiː] [US: ˈdiː] | DEA◼◼◼nom {f} stups◼◼◻nom {m pl} |
deacetylation (reaction that removes acetyl groups from a molecule) noun | désacétylation◼◼◼nom {f} |
deacon [deacons] (a clergyman ranked directly below a priest) noun [UK: ˈdiːkən] [US: ˈdiːkən] | diacre◼◼◼nom {m} |
deacon [deacons] (a designated minister of charity in the early Church) noun [UK: ˈdiːkən] [US: ˈdiːkən] | diacre◼◼◼nom {m} |
deacon [deacons] (lay leader of a Protestant congregation) noun [UK: ˈdiːkən] [US: ˈdiːkən] | diacre◼◼◼nom {m} diaconesse◼◻◻nom {f} |
deaconess [deaconesses] (female deacon) noun [UK: ˈdiːk.ə.nes] [US: ˈdiːk.ə.nəs] | diaconesse◼◼◼nom {f} |
deactivatable adjective | désactivable◼◼◼adjectif |
deactivate [deactivated, deactivating, deactivates] (to make something inactive or no longer effective) verb [UK: ˌdiː.ˈæk.tɪ.veɪt] [US: ˌdi.ˈæk.tɪ.ˌvet] | désactiver◼◼◼verbeI deactivated my Twitter account yesterday. = J'ai désactivé mon compte Twitter hier. |
dead [deader, deadest] (no longer alive) adjective [UK: ded] [US: ˈded] | mort◼◼◼adjectifIt's dead. = Il est mort. |
dead (time when coldness, darkness, or stillness is most intense) noun [UK: ded] [US: ˈded] | milieu◼◼◻nom {m}It's the dead of the night. = C'est le milieu de la nuit. cœur◼◼◻nom {m} profondeurs◼◻◻nom {f pl} |
dead and buried (moot, passed) adjective [UK: ded ənd ˈbe.rɪd] [US: ˈded ænd ˈbe.rid] | mort et enterré◼◼◼adjectif |
dead as a dodo (unquestionably dead) adjective [UK: ded əz ə ˈdəʊ.dəʊ] [US: ˈded ˈæz ə ˈdodoʊ] | aussi mort qu'un dodoadjectif |
dead as a doornail (unquestionably dead) adjective [UK: ded əz ə ˈdɔː.neɪl] [US: ˈded ˈæz ə ˈdɔːr.ˌnel] | mort et bien mortadjectif |
dead donkey (news item of no real significance) noun | chiens écrasésnom {m} |
dead drop (location used to pass items between two people in secret) noun | boite aux lettres morte◼◼◼nom {f} |
dead duck (person or project that is in serious trouble or doomed to fail) noun [UK: ded dʌk] [US: ˈded ˈdək] | être fait comme un rat◼◼◼nom |
dead end (position that offers no hope of progress) noun [UK: ded end] [US: ˈded ˈend] | impasse◼◼◼nom {f} voie sans issue◼◼◻nom {f} voie de garage◼◻◻nom {f} |
dead end (street or path that goes nowhere) noun [UK: ded end] [US: ˈded ˈend] | impasse◼◼◼nom {f} cul-de-sac◼◼◻nom {m} voie sans issue◼◼◻nom {f} |
dead-end (blocked) adjective [UK: ˈded.ˈend] [US: end] | sans issue◼◼◼adjectif |
dead fish (sexual partner who lies flat during sex) noun |