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pli meaning in English

FrenchEnglish
collaborer; impliquer verbe

involve [involved, involving, involves]verb
[UK: ɪn.ˈvɒlv] [US: ˌɪn.ˈvɑːlv]

complication nom {f}

complication [complications]◼◼◼(a disease)
noun
[UK: ˌkɒm.plɪˈk.eɪʃ.n̩] [US: ˌkɑːm.pləˈk.eɪʃ.n̩]
There was a complication. = Il y a eu une complication.

complication [complications]◼◼◼(act of complicating)
noun
[UK: ˌkɒm.plɪˈk.eɪʃ.n̩] [US: ˌkɑːm.pləˈk.eɪʃ.n̩]
There was a complication. = Il y a eu une complication.

complice nom {m} nom {f}

accomplice [accomplices]◼◼◼(associate in the commission of a crime)
noun
[UK: əˈk.ʌm.plɪs] [US: əˈk.ɑːm.pləs]
They're accomplices. = Ils sont complices.

accomplice [accomplices]◼◼◼(cooperator)
noun
[UK: əˈk.ʌm.plɪs] [US: əˈk.ɑːm.pləs]
They're accomplices. = Ils sont complices.

shill◼◻◻(an accomplice at a confidence trick)
noun
[UK: ˈʃɪl] [US: ˈʃɪl]

abettor [abettors]◼◻◻(accomplice)
noun
[UK: ə.ˈbe.tə] [US: ə.ˈbe.tər]

complice adjectif

complicit◼◼◼(associated with or participating in an activity, especially one of a questionable nature)
adjective
[UK: kəm.ˈplɪ.sɪt] [US: kəm.ˈplɪ.sət]

privy◼◻◻(with knowledge of; party to; let in on)
adjective
[UK: ˈprɪ.vi] [US: ˈprɪ.vi]

complicité nom {f}

complicity◼◼◼(The state of being complicit)
noun
[UK: kəm.ˈplɪ.sɪ.ti] [US: kəm.ˈplɪ.sə.ti]

connection [connections]◼◼◻(feeling of understanding and ease of communication between two or more people)
noun
[UK: kə.ˈnek.ʃn̩] [US: kə.ˈnek.ʃn̩]

complies nom {f pl}

compline◼◼◼(last of the canonical hours)
noun
[UK: ˈkɒm.plɪn] [US: ˈkɒm.plɪn]

compliment nom {m}

compliment [compliments]◼◼◼(expression of praise, congratulation or respect)
noun
[UK: ˈkɒm.plɪ.ment] [US: ˈkɑːm.plə.ment]
He complimented me. = Il m'a fait un compliment.

complimenter verbe

compliment [complimented, complimenting, compliments]◼◼◼(to pay a compliment; to express a favorable opinion)
verb
[UK: ˈkɒm.plɪ.ment] [US: ˈkɑːm.plə.ment]
John complimented Mary. = John complimenta Marie.

compliqué adjectif

complicated◼◼◼(difficult or convoluted)
adjective
[UK: ˈkɒm.plɪk.eɪ.tɪd] [US: ˈkɑːm.pləˌk.e.təd]
This is complicated. = C'est compliqué.

tricky [trickier, trickiest]◼◼◻(hard to deal with)
adjective
[UK: ˈtrɪk.i] [US: ˈtrɪk.i]

intricate◼◼◻(having a great deal of fine detail or complexity)
adjective
[UK: ˈɪn.trɪkət] [US: ˈɪn.trəkət]

convoluted◼◻◻(complex)
adjective
[UK: ˌkɒn.və.ˈluː.tɪd] [US: ˈkɑːn.və.ˌluː.təd]

compliquer verbe

complicate [complicated, complicating, complicates]◼◼◼(to combine intricately)
verb
[UK: ˈkɒm.plɪk.eɪt] [US: ˈkɑːm.pləˌket]
Don't complicate your life. = Ne te complique pas la vie.

compliquer [situation] verbe

tangle [tangled, tangling, tangles]◼◼◼(to mix together or intertwine)
verb
[UK: ˈtæŋ.ɡl̩] [US: ˈtæŋ.ɡl̩]

couteau pliant nom {m}

folding knife◼◼◼(kind of knife whose blade or blades can be folded inside the handle)
noun
[UK: ˈfəʊld.ɪŋ naɪf] [US: ˈfoʊld.ɪŋ ˈnaɪf]

dédupliquer verbe

deduplicate◼◼◼(to eliminate redundant duplicate data from)
verb

pliant nom {m}

leaflet [leaflets]◼◼◼(small plant leaf)
noun
[UK: ˈliː.flɪt] [US: ˈliː.flət]
The teacher distributed the leaflets. = Le professeur a distribué des dépliants.

plier verbe

unfold [unfolded, unfolding, unfolds]◼◼◼(To undo a folding)
verb
[UK: ʌn.ˈfəʊld] [US: ʌnˈfoʊld]
John unfolded his napkin. = John déplia sa serviette.

unfold [unfolded, unfolding, unfolds]◼◼◼verb
[UK: ʌn.ˈfəʊld] [US: ʌnˈfoʊld]
John unfolded his napkin. = John déplia sa serviette.

discipline nom

discipline [disciplines]◼◼◼(category in which a certain activity belongs)
noun
[UK: ˈdɪ.sɪ.plɪn] [US: ˈdɪ.sə.plən]
John lacks discipline. = John manque de discipline.

discipline nom {f}

discipline [disciplines]◼◼◼(controlled behaviour, self-control)
noun
[UK: ˈdɪ.sɪ.plɪn] [US: ˈdɪ.sə.plən]
John lacks discipline. = John manque de discipline.

discipline [disciplines]◼◼◼(punishment)
noun
[UK: ˈdɪ.sɪ.plɪn] [US: ˈdɪ.sə.plən]
John lacks discipline. = John manque de discipline.

discipline [disciplines]◼◼◼(specific branch or knowledge or learning)
noun
[UK: ˈdɪ.sɪ.plɪn] [US: ˈdɪ.sə.plən]
John lacks discipline. = John manque de discipline.

subject [subjects]◼◼◻(particular area of study)
noun
[UK: sʌb.ˈdʒekt] [US: sʌb.ˈdʒekt]

discipliadjectif

disciplined◼◼◼(possessing mental discipline)
adjective
[UK: ˈdɪ.sɪ.plɪnd] [US: ˈdɪ.sə.plənd]

duplicat nom {m}

counterpart [counterparts]◼◼◼noun
[UK: ˈkaʊn.tə.pɑːt] [US: ˈkaʊn.tər.ˌpɑːrt]

duplicata nom {m}

duplicate [duplicates]◼◼◼(an identical copy)
noun
[UK: ˈdjuː.plɪk.eɪt] [US: ˈduː.pləkət]

replication [replications](copy, reproduction)
noun
[UK: ˈre.plɪk.eɪʃ.n̩] [US: ˌre.pləˈk.eɪʃ.n̩]

duplication nom {f}

duplication [duplications]◼◼◼(duplicating)
noun
[UK: ˌdjuː.plɪˈk.eɪʃ.n̩] [US: ˌdjuː.pləˈk.eɪʃ.n̩]

duplication de processus nom {f}

fork [forks](computer science: splitting of a process)
noun
[UK: fɔːk] [US: ˈfɔːrk]

duplicité nom {f}

duplicity [duplicities]◼◼◼(intentional deceptiveness)
noun
[UK: djuː.ˈplɪ.sɪ.ti] [US: duː.ˈplɪ.sə.ti]

dupliqué adjectif
{m}

duplicate◼◼◼(identical)
adjective
[UK: ˈdjuː.plɪk.eɪt] [US: ˈduː.pləkət]

dupliquée adjectif
{f}

duplicate◼◼◼(identical)
adjective
[UK: ˈdjuː.plɪk.eɪt] [US: ˈduː.pləkət]

dupliquer verbe

duplicate [duplicated, duplicating, duplicates]◼◼◼(to make a copy of)
verb
[UK: ˈdjuː.plɪk.eɪt] [US: ˈduː.pləkət]
Edison invented a device for duplication. = Edison a inventé un appareil à dupliquer.

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