a priori en el diccionario francés Oxford-Hachette

Traducciones de a priori en el diccionario inglés»francés

I.lot1 [ingl. brit. lɒt, ingl. am. lɑt] PRON.

1. lot:

a lot (a great deal)
beaucoup, pas mal coloq.

II.lot1 [ingl. brit. lɒt, ingl. am. lɑt] SUST.

1. lot (great deal):

a lot
thanks a lot coloq.!

Véase también: fat

I.fat [ingl. brit. fat, ingl. am. fæt] SUST.

II.fat [ingl. brit. fat, ingl. am. fæt] ADJ.

bit → bite

II.bit [ingl. brit. bɪt, ingl. am. bɪt] SUST.

2. bit (small amount) coloq.:

a bit

a bit coloq. (rather):

a bit
a bit of stuff coloq.
une gonzesse coloq.
bits and bobs coloq.
not a bit!
not a bit of it coloq.!
that's a bit off! coloq.
to do one's bit coloq.
faire sa part (de boulot) coloq.

Véase también: bite

I.bite [ingl. brit. bʌɪt, ingl. am. baɪt] SUST.

II.bite <pret. imperf. bit; part. pas. bitten> [ingl. brit. bʌɪt, ingl. am. baɪt] V. trans.

III.bite <pret. imperf. bit; part. pas. bitten> [ingl. brit. bʌɪt, ingl. am. baɪt] V. intr.

A1, a [ingl. brit. ə, eɪ, ingl. am. eɪ, ə] SUST.

a2 [ingl. brit. ə, eɪ, ingl. am. eɪ, ə] avant voyelle ou ‘h’ muet, an [æn, ən] DETMTE.

Véase también: lot1, many, lot2, little2, little1, job lot, few

I.lot1 [ingl. brit. lɒt, ingl. am. lɑt] PRON.

1. lot:

a lot (a great deal)
beaucoup, pas mal coloq.

II.lot1 [ingl. brit. lɒt, ingl. am. lɑt] SUST.

1. lot (great deal):

a lot
thanks a lot coloq.!

I.many <comp more; superl most> [ingl. brit. ˈmɛni, ingl. am. ˈmɛni] ADJ.

II.many <comp more; superl most> [ingl. brit. ˈmɛni, ingl. am. ˈmɛni] PRON.

III.many <comp more; superl most> [ingl. brit. ˈmɛni, ingl. am. ˈmɛni] SUST.

IV.many <comp more; superl most> [ingl. brit. ˈmɛni, ingl. am. ˈmɛni]

lot2 [ingl. brit. lɒt, ingl. am. lɑt] SUST.

little2 [ingl. brit. ˈlɪt(ə)l, ingl. am. ˈlɪdl] ADJ.

I.little1 <comp less, superl least> [ˈlɪtl] ADJ. When little is used as an adjective (little hope, little damage) it is translated by peu de: peu d'espoir, peu de dégâts.
For examples and particular usages see I. below.
When a little is used as a pronoun (give me a little) it is translated by un peu: donne m'en-un peu.
When little is used alone as a pronoun (there's little I can do) it is very often translated by pas grand-chose: je ne peux pas faire grand-chose.
For examples of these and other uses of little as a pronoun (to do as little as possible etc.) see II. below.
For uses of little and a little as adverbs see the entry below.
Note that less, and least are treated as separate entries in the dictionary.

II.little1 <comp less, superl least> [ˈlɪtl] PRON.

III.little1 <comp less, superl least> [ˈlɪtl] ADV.

job lot [ingl. brit., ingl. am. ˈdʒɑb ˈˌlɑt] SUST.

I.few <comp fewer, superl fewest> [ingl. brit. fjuː, ingl. am. fju] ADJ. When few is used as an adjective to indicate the smallness or insufficiency of a given number or quantity (few houses, few shops, few people) it is translated by peu de: peu de maisons, peu de magasins, peu de gens. Equally the few is translated by le peu de: the few people who knew her le peu de gens qui la connaissaient. For examples and particular usages see I. 1. in the entry.
When few is used as an adjective in certain expressions to mean several, translations vary according to the expression: see I. 2. in the entry.
When a few is used as an adjective(a few books), it can often be translated by quelques: quelques livres; however, for expressions such as quite a few books, a good few books, see II. in the entry.
For translations of few used as a pronoun (few of us succeeded, I only need a few) see II. and III. in the entry.
For translations of the few used as a noun (the few who voted for him) see IV. in the entry.

1. few (not many):

III.few <comp fewer, superl fewest> [ingl. brit. fjuː, ingl. am. fju] PRON.

2. few (some):

IV.few <comp fewer, superl fewest> [ingl. brit. fjuː, ingl. am. fju] SUST.

V.few <comp fewer, superl fewest> [ingl. brit. fjuː, ingl. am. fju]

Véase también: account

I.account [ingl. brit. əˈkaʊnt, ingl. am. əˈkaʊnt] SUST.

III.account [ingl. brit. əˈkaʊnt, ingl. am. əˈkaʊnt] V. trans.

a.m.2 [ingl. brit. eɪˈɛm, ingl. am. ˌeɪˈɛm] ADV.

a priori en el diccionario PONS

Traducciones de a priori en el diccionario inglés»francés

a.k.a. [ˌeɪkeɪˈeɪ, ingl. am. ˈækə]

a [ə] indet. art. (+ consonant) (single, not specified)

Véase también: account

a.o.b. [ˌeɪəʊˈbi:, ingl. am. -oʊ-]

a.o.b. abreviatura de any other business

A ELECTR. abreviatura de amp

inglés americano

Ejemplos monolingües (no verificados por la redacción de PONS)

inglés
Whatever may be the difficulties a priori, we have no question on which side of the line this case falls.
en.wikipedia.org
Conjugates are being developed as vaccines or are already being used without a priori knowledge.
en.wikipedia.org
This was the first attempt at using the method of a priori proof, which utilizes intuition and reason alone.
en.wikipedia.org
These are a priori directly influenced or controlled by those interested in a particular outcome of an event.
en.wikipedia.org
Yet, the similarity between these social phenomena is limited, as science is based in experimentation and development, whereas magic is an a priori belief.
en.wikipedia.org
Each router has a priori knowledge only of networks attached to it directly.
en.wikipedia.org
The main difficulty lies in showing that a distance-preserving map, which is a priori only continuous, is actually differentiable.
en.wikipedia.org
Practically this implies that our information processing capabilities come under increasing a priori control of our long-term hypercognitive maps and our self-definitions.
en.wikipedia.org
None of the finite set of models included in the map is recommended a priori.
en.wikipedia.org
Follow-up tests are often distinguished in terms of whether they are planned (a priori) or post hoc.
en.wikipedia.org

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