crime of passion en el diccionario francés Oxford-Hachette

Traducciones de crime of passion en el diccionario inglés»francés (Ir a francés»inglés)

Traducciones de crime of passion en el diccionario francés»inglés (Ir a inglés»francés)

Traducciones de crime of passion en el diccionario inglés»francés

I.passion [ingl. brit. ˈpaʃ(ə)n, ingl. am. ˈpæʃən] SUST.

crime [ingl. brit. krʌɪm, ingl. am. kraɪm] SUST.

I.course [ingl. brit. kɔːs, ingl. am. kɔrs] SUST.

2. course (route):

cap m
to be on or hold or steer a course AERO., NÁUT.
to be on course for literal
to change course (gen) literal
to change course AERO., NÁUT.
to set (a) course for AERO., NÁUT.

II.course [ingl. brit. kɔːs, ingl. am. kɔrs] V. trans. CAZA

of [ingl. brit. ɒv, (ə)v, ingl. am. əv] PREP.

Véase también: late, old

I.late [ingl. brit. leɪt, ingl. am. leɪt] ADJ.

1. late (after expected time):

tardif/-ive

2. late (towards end of day, season, life etc):

tardif/-ive
tardif/-ive
to take a late holiday ingl. brit. or vacation ingl. am.

II.late [ingl. brit. leɪt, ingl. am. leɪt] ADV.

2. late (towards end of time period):

à tout à l'heure!

I.old [ingl. brit. əʊld, ingl. am. oʊld] SUST. The irregular form vieil of the adjective vieux/vieille is used before masculine nouns beginning with a vowel or a mute ‘h’.

III.old [ingl. brit. əʊld, ingl. am. oʊld] ADJ.

2. old (of a particular age):

I.all [ingl. brit. ɔːl, ingl. am. ɔl] PRON.

1. all (everything):

II.all [ingl. brit. ɔːl, ingl. am. ɔl] DETMTE.

2. all (the whole of):

III.all [ingl. brit. ɔːl, ingl. am. ɔl] ADV.

1. all (emphatic: completely):

IV.all [ingl. brit. ɔːl, ingl. am. ɔl] SUST.

2. all+ (in the highest degree) → all-consuming

XVI.all [ingl. brit. ɔːl, ingl. am. ɔl]

to be as mad/thrilled as all get out coloq. ingl. am.
he's not all there coloq.
it's all go coloq. here! ingl. brit.
on s'active ici! coloq.
it's all up with us coloq. ingl. brit.
all in ingl. brit. argot
crevé argot
all in ingl. brit. argot

Véase también: worst, thing, place, people, best, bad, all-important, all-embracing, all-consuming

I.worst [ingl. brit. wəːst, ingl. am. wərst] SUST.

1. worst (most difficult, unpleasant):

le/la pire m/f

3. worst (most unbearable):

II.worst [ingl. brit. wəːst, ingl. am. wərst] ADJ. superlative of bad

III.worst [ingl. brit. wəːst, ingl. am. wərst] ADV.

IV.worst [ingl. brit. wəːst, ingl. am. wərst] V. trans. form.

I.thing [ingl. brit. θɪŋ, ingl. am. θɪŋ] SUST.

1. thing (object):

truc m coloq.
à quoi sert ce truc? coloq.

2. thing (action, task, event):

3. thing (matter, fact):

the thing is, (that) …
ce qu'il y a, c'est que
ce qu'il y a de bien, c'est que

2. things (situation, circumstances, matters):

III.thing [ingl. brit. θɪŋ, ingl. am. θɪŋ]

it's the in thing coloq.
il a trouvé le bon filon coloq.
to have a thing about (like) coloq.
craquer pour coloq.
it's a girl/guy thing coloq.
to make a big thing (out) of it coloq.

I.place [ingl. brit. pleɪs, ingl. am. pleɪs] SUST.

1. place (location, position):

2. place (town, hotel etc):

all over the place fig., coloq. speech, lecture

I.people [ingl. brit. ˈpiːp(ə)l, ingl. am. ˈpipəl] SUST. (nation) gens is masculine plural and never countable (you CANNOT say ‘trois gens’). When used with gens, some adjectives such as vieux, bon, mauvais, petit, vilain placed before gens take the feminine form: les vieilles gens.

II.people [ingl. brit. ˈpiːp(ə)l, ingl. am. ˈpipəl] SUST. sust. pl.

1. people:

gens mpl

III.people [ingl. brit. ˈpiːp(ə)l, ingl. am. ˈpipəl] V. trans. liter.

I.best [ingl. brit. bɛst, ingl. am. bɛst] SUST.

6. best (peak, height):

II.best [ingl. brit. bɛst, ingl. am. bɛst] ADJ. superlative of good

1. best (most excellent or pleasing):

III.best [ingl. brit. bɛst, ingl. am. bɛst] ADV.

best superlative of well

you'd best do coloq.

IV.best [ingl. brit. bɛst, ingl. am. bɛst] V. trans. (defeat, outdo)

I.bad [ingl. brit. bad, ingl. am. bæd] SUST.

II.bad <comp worse, superl worst> [ingl. brit. bad, ingl. am. bæd] ADJ.

1. bad (poor, inferior, incompetent, unacceptable):

bad atrbv. joke
not bad coloq.
pas mauvais, pas mal coloq.

3. bad (morally or socially unacceptable):

bad atrbv. language, word
grossier/-ière
+ subj. it will look bad

7. bad (ill, with a weakness or injury):

to be in a bad way coloq.

III.bad [ingl. brit. bad, ingl. am. bæd] ADV. coloq. esp ingl. am.

IV.bad [ingl. brit. bad, ingl. am. bæd]

I.late [ingl. brit. leɪt, ingl. am. leɪt] ADJ.

1. late (after expected time):

tardif/-ive

2. late (towards end of day, season, life etc):

tardif/-ive
tardif/-ive
to take a late holiday ingl. brit. or vacation ingl. am.

II.late [ingl. brit. leɪt, ingl. am. leɪt] ADV.

2. late (towards end of time period):

à tout à l'heure!

crime of passion en el diccionario PONS

Traducciones de crime of passion en el diccionario inglés»francés

inglés americano

Ejemplos monolingües (no verificados por la redacción de PONS)

inglés
Let no one believe this was a crime of passion.
www.bbc.co.uk
But the evidence suggests that this was a crime of passion.
www.news24.com
We would have every reason to believe that that was a crime of passion, and we've seen that a million times in movies.
www.vulture.com
A local man convicted in a deadly crime of passion will be spending his life in prison.
www.kens5.com
This was a crime of passion under considerable provocation.
www.dailymail.co.uk
A crime of passion, no way can the gallows stop.
www.freemalaysiatoday.com
Sickles was acquitted on the basis of temporary insanity, a crime of passion, in one of the most controversial trials of the 19th century.
en.wikipedia.org
Or it was a crime of passion.
www.chicagomag.com
But let no one make the mistake of thinking that this was a crime of passion.
www.telegraph.co.uk
A crime of passion that ended horribly.
www.chroniclelive.co.uk

¿Quieres añadir alguna palabra, frase o traducción?

Proponnos una nueva entrada.

Consultar "crime of passion" en otros idiomas


Página en Deutsch | Ελληνικά | English | Español | Français | Italiano | Polski | Português | Русский | Slovenščina | Srpski