Le mot anglais pour trou est
hole

Définition en anglais
trou | |
1. n-m. hole | |
2. n-m. blank (memory) | |
3. n-m. pause in conversation |
Traductions de trou et leurs définitions
bubble | ![]() | ||
1. n. Bulle. | |||
2. v. Bouillonner. | |||
3. v. Glouglouter. |
bubble | ![]() | ||
1. n. A spherically contained volume of air or other gas, especially one made from soapy liquid. | |||
2. n. A small spherical cavity in a solid material. | |||
bubbles in window glass, or in a lens | |||
3. n. Anything resembling a hollow sphere. | |||
4. n. (economics) A period of intense speculation in a market, causing prices to rise quickly to irrational levels as the metaphorical bubble expands, and then fall even more quickly as the bubble bursts (e | |||
5. n. (obsolete) Someone who has been ‘bubbled’ or fooled; a dupe. | |||
6. n. (figurative) The emotional and/or physical atmosphere in which the subject is immersed; circumstances, ambience. | |||
7. n. (Cockney rhyming slang) a Greek (also: bubble and squeak) | |||
8. n. A small, hollow, floating bead or globe, formerly used for testing the strength of spirits. | |||
9. n. The globule of air in the spirit tube of a level. | |||
10. n. Anything lacking firmness or solidity; a cheat or fraud; an empty project. | |||
11. n. (Cockney rhyming slang) A laugh. (also: bubble bath) | |||
Are you having a bubble?! | |||
12. n. (computing) Any of the small magnetized areas that make up bubble memory. | |||
13. n. (poker) The point in a poker tournament when the last player without a prize loses all their chips and leaves the game, leaving only players that are going to win prizes. (e.g., if the last remaining | |||
Many players tend to play timidly (not play many hands) around the bubble, to keep their chips and last longer in the game. | |||
14. v. (intransitive) To produce bubbles, to rise up in bubbles (such as in foods cooking or liquids boiling). | |||
15. v. (intransitive, figurative) To churn or foment, as if wishing to rise to the surface. | |||
Rage bubbled inside him. | |||
16. v. (intransitive, figurative) To rise through a medium or system, similar to the way that bubbles rise in liquid. | |||
17. v. (transitive, archaic) To cheat, delude. | |||
18. v. (intransitive, Scotland, and Northern England) To cry, weep. |
opening | ||
1. n. Ouverture. | ||
2. v. Participe présent du verbe open. | ||
3. adj. (Cricket) Premier, qui commence. |
opening | ||
1. v. present participle of open | ||
2. n. An act or instance of making or becoming open. | ||
The daily openings of the day lily bloom gives it its name. | ||
He remembered fondly the Christmas morning opening of presents. | ||
3. n. Something that is open. | ||
A salamander darted out of an opening in the rocks. | ||
He slipped through an opening in the crowd. | ||
4. n. An act or instance of beginning. | ||
There have been few factory and store openings in the US lately. | ||
Their opening of the concert with Brass in Pocket always fires up the crowd. | ||
5. n. Something that is a beginning. | ||
6. n. The first performance of a show or play by a particular troupe. | ||
They were disappointed at the turnout for their opening, but hoped that word would spread. | ||
7. n. The initial period a show at an art gallery or museum is first opened, especially the first evening. | ||
8. n. The first few measures of a musical composition. | ||
9. n. (chess) The first few moves in a game of chess. | ||
John spends two hours a day studying openings, and another two hours studying endgames. | ||
10. n. A vacant position, especially in an array. | ||
Are there likely to be any openings on the Supreme Court in the next four years? | ||
11. n. A time available in a schedule. | ||
If you'd like to make a booking with us, we have an opening at twelve o'clock. | ||
The only two-hour openings for the hockey rink are between 1AM and 5AM. | ||
12. n. An unoccupied employment position. | ||
We have an opening in our marketing department. | ||
13. n. An opportunity, as in a competitive activity. | ||
14. n. (math) In mathematical morphology, the dilation of the erosion of a set. | ||
15. adj. (cricket) describing the first period of play, usually up to the fall of the first wicket; describing a batsman who opens the innings or a bowler who opens the attack |
hole | ![]() | ||
1. n. Trou. | |||
How big a hole did you dig? | |||
2. n. (Golf) Trou. | |||
An eighteen hole golf course. | |||
3. n. Faille. | |||
There's a hole in your logic. | |||
4. v. Faire des trous dans, trouer. |
hole | ![]() | ||
1. n. A hollow place or cavity; an excavation; a pit; an opening in or through a solid body, a fabric, etc.; a perforation; a rent; a fissure. | |||
There’s a hole in my shoe. Her stocking has a hole in it. | |||
2. n. An opening in a solid. | |||
There’s a hole in my bucket. | |||
3. n. In games.: | |||
4. n. (golf) A subsurface standard-size hole, also called cup, hitting the ball into which is the object of play. Each hole, of which there are usually eight | |||
5. n. (golf) The part of a game in which a player attempts to hit the ball into one of the holes. | |||
I played 18 holes yesterday. The second hole today cost me three strokes over par. | |||
6. n. (baseball) The rear portion of the defensive team between the shortstop and the third baseman. | |||
The shortstop ranged deep into the hole to make the stop. | |||
7. n. (chess) A square on the board, with some positional significance, that a player does not, and cannot in future, control with a friendly pawn. | |||
8. n. (stud poker) A card (also called a hole card) dealt face down thus unknown to all but its holder; the status in which such a card is. | |||
9. n. In the game of fives, part of the floor of the court between the step and the pepperbox. | |||
10. n. (archaeology, slang) An excavation pit or trench. | |||
11. n. (figuratively) A weakness, a flaw | |||
I have found a hole in your argument. | |||
12. n. (informal) A container or receptacle. | |||
car hole; brain hole | |||
13. n. (physics) In semiconductors, a lack of an electron in an occupied band behaving like a positively charged particle. | |||
14. n. (computing) A security vulnerability in software which can be taken advantage of by an exploit. | |||
15. n. (slang anatomy) An orifice, in particular the anus. When used with shut it always refers to the mouth. | |||
Just shut your hole! | |||
16. n. (Ireland, Scotland, particularly in the phrase "get one's hole") Sex, or a sex partner. | |||
Are you going out to get your hole tonight? | |||
17. n. (informal, with "the") Solitary confinement, a high-security prison cell often used as punishment. | |||
18. n. (slang) An undesirable place to live or visit; a hovel. | |||
His apartment is a hole! | |||
19. n. (figurative) Difficulty, in particular, debt. | |||
If you find yourself in a hole, stop digging. | |||
20. n. (graph theory) A chordless cycle in a graph. | |||
21. v. To make holes in (an object or surface). | |||
Shrapnel holed the ship's hull. | |||
22. v. (transitive, by extension) To destroy. | |||
She completely holed the argument. | |||
23. v. (intransitive) To go into a hole. | |||
24. v. To drive into a hole, as an animal, or a billiard ball or golf ball. | |||
Woods holed a standard three foot putt | |||
25. v. To cut, dig, or bore a hole or holes in. | |||
to hole a post for the insertion of rails or bars | |||
26. v. simple past tense of hele | |||
27. adj. obsolete form of whole | |||
Such was the arrangement of the alphabet over the hole North | |||
- A grammar of the Icelandic or Old Norse tongue |
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