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Reden
oreille

Oxford-Hachette French Dictionary

ear [ingl. brit. ɪə, ingl. am. ɪr] SUST.

1. ear:

ear ANAT., ZOOL.
inner/middle/outer ear atrbv. infection, operation (of one ear)

2. ear (hearing, perception):

ear

3. ear BOT. (of wheat, corn):

ear
to be all ears coloq.
to be on one's ear ingl. irland. (drunk) coloq.
être rond coloq.
to be on one's ear ingl. irland. (drunk) coloq.
to bend sb's ear
to be out on one's ear coloq. (from job)
to get a thick ear coloq.
to give sb a thick ear coloq.
coller une baffe à qn coloq.
to have a word in sb's ear
to close or shut one's ear(s) to sth/sb
to have the ear of sb
to play it/sth by ear fig.
to set or put sb on his/her ear ingl. am. coloq.

I. flap [ingl. brit. flap, ingl. am. flæp] SUST.

1. flap (on pocket, envelope, hat, tent):

2. flap (made of wood):

3. flap (movement):

battement m (of de)
claquement m (of de)

4. flap AERO.:

5. flap (panic) coloq.:

6. flap LING.:

II. flap <part. pres. flapping; pret. imperf., part. pas. flapped> [ingl. brit. flap, ingl. am. flæp] V. trans.

flap wind: sail, cloth
flap paper, clothes
flap person: sheet, cloth etc
flap paper, letter
to flap sth at sb/sth

III. flap <part. pres. flapping; pret. imperf., part. pas. flapped> [ingl. brit. flap, ingl. am. flæp] V. intr.

1. flap (move):

flap wing:
flap sail, flag, material, door:
flap paper, clothes:

2. flap coloq. (panic):

I. deaf [ingl. brit. dɛf, ingl. am. dɛf] SUST. Ce mot peut être perçu comme injurieux dans cette acception. Lui préférer hearing-impaired.

the deaf + v. pl.
the deaf + v. pl.

II. deaf [ingl. brit. dɛf, ingl. am. dɛf] ADJ.

1. deaf person, animal:

sourd voir note

2. deaf fig.:

to fall on deaf ears request, advice:

III. deaf [ingl. brit. dɛf, ingl. am. dɛf]

to be as deaf as a post coloq.

I. bend [ingl. brit. bɛnd, ingl. am. bɛnd] SUST.

1. bend (gen):

pli m

2. bend NÁUT. (knot):

II. the bends SUST. MED.

the bends sust. pl. + v. sing. ou pl.

III. bend <pret. imperf., part. pas. bent> [ingl. brit. bɛnd, ingl. am. bɛnd] V. trans.

1. bend:

bend (force into a curve) knee, arm, leg
bend head
bend body
bend back
bend pipe, bar
bend wire
bend light
bend ray
bend (by mistake) pipe, mudguard, nail
to bend sb to one's will fig.

2. bend (distort):

bend truth, facts
bend principle

3. bend (direct):

IV. bend <pret. imperf., part. pas. bent> [ingl. brit. bɛnd, ingl. am. bɛnd] V. intr.

1. bend:

bend (become curved) road, path:
bend river: (once)
bend frame, bar:
bend branch:
bend nail, mudguard:

2. bend (stoop):

bend person:

3. bend (submit):

to bend to person, will

V. bend [ingl. brit. bɛnd, ingl. am. bɛnd]

round ingl. brit. or around ingl. am. the bend coloq.
to go (a)round the bend coloq.
to drive sb (a)round the bend coloq.

ear trumpet SUST.

ear shell SUST.

ear shell

ear-splitting [ingl. brit., ingl. am. ˈɪ(ə)rˌsplɪdɪŋ] ADJ.

ear-splitting scream, shout
ear-splitting noise

ear candle [ˈɪə(r) ˌkændl] SUST.

ear candle

ear flap SUST. (on hat)

ear flap

I. ear-piercing [ingl. brit., ingl. am. ˈɪ(ə)rˌpɪ(ə)rsɪŋ] SUST.

II. ear-piercing [ingl. brit., ingl. am. ˈɪ(ə)rˌpɪ(ə)rsɪŋ] ADJ.

ear-piercing scream:

glue ear SUST.

glue ear

inner ear SUST.

inner ear

middle ear SUST.

middle ear

en el diccionario PONS

inglés
inglés
francés
francés

ear1 [ɪəʳ, ingl. am. ɪr] SUST.

ear
to smile from ear to ear

locuciones, giros idiomáticos:

to have a good ear for sth
to have sb's ear

ear2 [ɪəʳ, ingl. am. ɪr] SUST. BOT.

ear

ear infection SUST.

inner ear SUST.

inner ear
francés
francés
inglés
inglés
ear wax
ear lobe
en el diccionario PONS
inglés
inglés
francés
francés

ear1 [ɪr] SUST.

ear
to smile from ear to ear

locuciones, giros idiomáticos:

to have a good ear for sth
sb's ears are burning coloq.
to have sb's ear
to play it by ear fig. coloq.

ear2 [ɪr] SUST. BOT.

ear

ear infection SUST.

inner ear SUST.

inner ear
francés
francés
inglés
inglés
ear wax
ear
dog-ear

PONS OpenDict

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Ejemplos de uso en el diccionario PONS (revisados por la redacción)

Ejemplos monolingües (no verificados por la redacción de PONS)

I tingle just thinking about the full-body sensation accompanying a cotton bud exploring the inside of my ear canal.
www.gizmodo.com.au
Substantial research and significant contribution in the prevention and treatment of middle ear infection was made by researchers who were awarded grants.
en.wikipedia.org
This wave information travels across the air-filled middle ear cavity via a series of delicate bones: the malleus (hammer), incus (anvil) and stapes (stirrup).
en.wikipedia.org
Stokes was definitely having a word in the ear and now he too gets a ticking off.
www.dailymail.co.uk
Recently, in-ear monitoring has become more common, with a smaller lapel microphone clipped to the shirt.
en.wikipedia.org