anglais > français | |
commune | |
1. n. Communauté de gens qui habitent et travaillent ensemble. | |
During the decade of the 1960's, living in a commune was popular with the counter-culture. | |
religious commune | |
2. n. (Moins courant) (Administration) Commune, division administrative. | |
3. v. Communier, être en communion avec quelque chose ou quelqu'un. | |
anglais > anglais | |
commune | |
1. n. A small community, often rural, whose members share in the ownership of property, and in the division of labour; the members of such a community. |  |
2. n. A local political division in many European countries. |  |
3. n. (obsolete) The commonalty; the common people. |  |
4. n. (obsolete) communion; sympathetic intercourse or conversation between friends |  |
5. v. To converse together with sympathy and confidence; to interchange sentiments or feelings; to take counsel. |  |
6. v. (intransitive, followed by with) To communicate (with) spiritually; to be together (with); to contemplate or absorb. |  |
He spent a week in the backcountry, communing with nature. |  |
7. v. (Christianity, intransitive) To receive the communion. |  |