anglais > français | |
sap | |
1. n. (Botanique) Jus, suc, sève. | |
2. n. (Ellipse de sap wook) Aubier. | |
3. n. Nigaud. | |
4. v. Saper, miner. | |
Nor safe their dwellings were, for sapped by floods | |
The excessive heat slowly sapped my strength. | |
anglais > anglais | |
sap | |
1. n. The juice of plants of any kind, especially the ascending and descending juices or circulating fluid essential to nutrition. |  |
2. n. The sapwood, or alburnum, of a tree. |  |
3. n. Any juice. |  |
4. n. (figurative) Vitality. |  |
5. n. (slang) a naive person; a simpleton |  |
6. v. To drain, suck or absorb from (tree, etc.). |  |
7. v. (transitive, figurative) To exhaust the vitality of. |  |
8. n. (US, slang) A short wooden club; a leather-covered hand weapon; a blackjack. |  |
9. v. (transitive, slang) To strike with a sap (with a blackjack). |  |
10. n. (military) A narrow ditch or trench made from the foremost parallel toward the glacis or covert way of a besieged place by digging under cover of gabions, etc. |  |
11. v. To subvert by digging or wearing away; to mine; to undermine; to destroy the foundation of. |  |
12. v. (transitive, military) To pierce with saps. |  |
13. v. To make unstable or infirm; to unsettle; to weaken. |  |
14. v. To gradually weaken. |  |
to sap one’s conscience |  |
15. v. (intransitive) To proceed by mining, or by secretly undermining; to execute saps. |  |
français > anglais | |
sève | |
1. n-f. (botany) sap |  |
2. n-f. (figuratively) sap, vital essence, life |  |