anglais > français | |
fold | |
1. v. Plier, replier. | |
2. v. (Poker) Se coucher. | |
3. v. Mettre la clé sous la porte, faire faillite. | |
4. v. Serrer (dans ses bras) | |
5. v. Croiser (les bras). | |
6. n. Pliage. | |
7. n. Pli, pliure. | |
8. n. (Poker) Passe. | |
anglais > anglais | |
fold | |
1. v. To bend (any thin material, such as paper) over so that it comes in contact with itself. | |
2. v. To make the proper arrangement (in a thin material) by bending. | |
If you fold the sheets, they'll fit more easily in the drawer. | |
3. v. (intransitive) To become folded; to form folds. | |
Cardboard doesn't fold very easily. | |
4. v. (intransitive, informal) To fall over; to be crushed. | |
The chair folded under his enormous weight. | |
5. v. To enclose within folded arms (see also enfold). | |
6. v. (intransitive) To give way on a point or in an argument. | |
7. v. (intransitive, poker) To withdraw from betting. | |
With no hearts in the river and no chance to hit his straight, he folded. | |
8. v. (intransitive, by extension) To withdraw or quit in general. | |
9. v. (transitive, cooking) To stir gently, with a folding action. | |
Fold the egg whites into the batter. | |
10. v. (intransitive, business) Of a company, to cease to trade. | |
The company folded after six quarters of negative growth. | |
11. v. To double or lay together, as the arms or the hands. | |
He folded his arms in defiance. | |
12. v. To cover or wrap up; to conceal. | |
13. n. An act of folding. | |
14. n. A bend or crease. | |
15. n. Any correct move in origami. | |
16. n. (newspapers) The division between the top and bottom halves of a broadsheet: headlines above the fold will be readable in a newsstand display; usually the fold. | |
17. n. (by extension, web design) The division between the part of a web page visible in a web browser window without scrolling; usually the fold. | |
18. n. That which is folded together, or which enfolds or envelops; embrace. | |
19. n. A group of sheep or goats. | |
20. n. A group of people who adhere to a common faith and habitually attend a given church. | |
21. n. A group of people with shared ideas or goals or who live or work together. | |
22. n. (geology) The bending or curving of one or a stack of originally flat and planar surfaces, such as sedimentary strata, as a result of plastic (i.e. permanent) deformation. | |
23. n. (computing, programming) In functional programming, any of a family of higher-order functions that process a data structure recursively to build up a value. | |
24. n. A pen or enclosure for sheep or other domestic animals. | |
25. n. (figuratively) Home, family. | |
26. n. (religion, Christian) A church congregation, a church, the Christian church as a whole, the flock of Christ. | |
John, X, 16: "Other sheep I have which are not of this fold.". | |
27. n. (obsolete) A boundary or limit. | |
28. v. To confine animals in a fold. | |
29. n. (dialectal, poetic, or obsolete) The Earth; earth; land, country. | |
français > anglais | |
pli | |
1. n-m. fold | |
2. n-m. pleat | |
3. n-m. letter | |
4. n-m. (card games) trick | |