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gin-fizz
abattage

Oxford-Hachette French Dictionary

inglés
inglés
francés
francés

felling [ingl. brit. ˈfɛlɪŋ, ingl. am. ˈfɛlɪŋ] SUST.

felling

I. fell [ingl. brit. fɛl, ingl. am. fɛl] V. pret.

fell → fall

II. fell [ingl. brit. fɛl, ingl. am. fɛl] SUST.

III. fell [ingl. brit. fɛl, ingl. am. fɛl] V. trans.

fell tree
fell person

IV. fell [ingl. brit. fɛl, ingl. am. fɛl]

fall away V. [ingl. brit. fɔːl -, ingl. am. fɔl -]

1. fall away paint, plaster:

se détacher (from de)

2. fall away ground:

descendre en pente (to vers)

3. fall away demand, support, numbers:

I. fall [ingl. brit. fɔːl, ingl. am. fɔl] SUST.

1. fall literal:

chute f (from de)
chutes fpl

2. fall:

baisse f (in de)
chute f (in de)
a fall of 10% to 125

3. fall:

4. fall:

the Fall REL.

5. fall ingl. am. (autumn):

in the fall of 1992

6. fall (in pitch, intonation):

7. fall:

II. falls SUST.

falls sust. pl.:

chutes fpl

III. fall <pret. imperf. fell, part. pas. fallen> [ingl. brit. fɔːl, ingl. am. fɔl] V. intr.

1. fall (come down):

to fall from or out of boat, nest, bag, hands
to fall off or from chair, table, roof, bike, wall
to fall on person, town
to fall in or into bath, river, sink
to fall down hole, shaft, stairs
to fall under table
to fall under bus, train
to fall through ceiling, hole

2. fall:

fall (drop) speed, volume, quality, standard, level:
fall temperature, price, inflation, wages, production, number, attendance, morale:
chuter coloq.
to fall (by) amount, percentage
to fall to amount, place

3. fall (yield position):

to fall to enemy, allies

4. fall (die):

fall eufem.

5. fall (descend) fig.:

fall darkness, night, beam, silence, gaze:
tomber (on sur)
fall blame:
retomber (on sur)
fall shadow:
se projeter (over sur)

6. fall (occur):

fall stress:
tomber (on sur)

7. fall (be incumbent on):

8. fall (throw oneself):

to fall at sb's feet
to fall on sb's neck

9. fall ground → fall away

10. fall REL.:

11. fall ingl. brit. (get pregnant):

fall regio.

IV. fall [ingl. brit. fɔːl, ingl. am. fɔl]

fell-walking [ˈfelwɔːkɪŋ] SUST. ingl. brit.

uncontrolled drainage, felling, use
it fell off the back of a lorry coloq. hum.
francés
francés
inglés
inglés
felling uncountable
fell boots ingl. brit.
felling area
coupe claire literal
heavy felling
periodic felling
light felling

en el diccionario PONS

inglés
inglés
francés
francés

fell1 [fel] V.

fell pret. of fall

I. fall <fell, fallen> [fɔ:l] V. intr.

1. fall (drop down from a height):

to fall flat fig.
to fall flat on one's face thing, scheme

2. fall (land):

fall a bomb, missile

3. fall (become lower, decrease):

fall demand, numbers, prices
fall dramatically
to fall by 10%
chuter de 10 %

4. fall (be defeated or overthrown):

fall city, government, dictator

5. fall DEP. (in cricket):

fall wicket

6. fall REL. (do wrong, sin):

7. fall (happen at a particular time):

8. fall (happen):

fall night, darkness

9. fall (belong):

10. fall (hang down):

fall hair, cloth, fabric

11. fall (become):

to fall vacant a room
to fall vacant a position, post
to fall prey to sb/sth

12. fall (enter a particular state):

to fall in love with sb/sth

locuciones, giros idiomáticos:

to fall on deaf ears cries, pleas, shouts
to fall on stony ground appeal, message

II. fall <fell, fallen> [fɔ:l] SUST.

1. fall (act of falling):

2. fall (downward movement):

fall of a leaf, of the curtain
fall of a level, popularity
fall of the tide

3. fall (defeat):

fall of a government, city
fall of a castle

4. fall ingl. am. (autumn):

5. fall pl. (waterfall):

chutes fpl

locuciones, giros idiomáticos:

to take a fall for sb ingl. am.

III. fall <fell, fallen> [fɔ:l] ADJ. ingl. am. (of autumn)

fell2 [fel] V. trans.

fell tree
fell person

clear-cut V. trans., clear-fell V. trans.

francés
francés
inglés
inglés
abattage d'un arbre
felling
en el diccionario PONS
inglés
inglés
francés
francés

fell1 [fel] V.

fell pret. of fall

I. fall <fell, fallen> [fɔl] V. intr.

1. fall (drop down from a height):

to fall flat fig.
tomber à plat coloq.
to fall flat on one's face thing, scheme

2. fall (land):

fall a bomb, missile

3. fall (become lower, decrease):

fall demand, numbers, prices
fall dramatically
to fall by 10%
chuter de 10 %

4. fall (be defeated or overthrown):

fall city, government, dictator

5. fall sports (in cricket):

fall wicket

6. fall REL. (do wrong, sin):

7. fall (happen at a particular time):

8. fall (happen):

fall night, darkness

9. fall (belong):

10. fall (hang down):

fall hair, cloth, fabric

11. fall (become):

to fall vacant a room
to fall vacant a position, post
to fall prey to sb/sth

12. fall (enter a particular state):

to fall in love with sb/sth

locuciones, giros idiomáticos:

to fall on deaf ears cries, pleas, shouts
to fall on stony ground an appeal, message

II. fall <fell, fallen> [fɔl] SUST.

1. fall (act of falling):

2. fall (downward movement):

fall of a leaf, of the curtain
fall of a level, popularity
fall of the tide

3. fall (defeat):

fall of a government, city
fall of a castle

4. fall (autumn):

5. fall pl. (waterfall):

chutes fpl

locuciones, giros idiomáticos:

III. fall <fell, fallen> [fɔl] ADJ. (of autumn)

fell2 [fel] V. trans.

fell tree
fell person

clear-cut V. trans., clear-fell V. trans.

francés
francés
inglés
inglés
abattage d'un arbre
felling
Present
Ifell
youfell
he/she/itfells
wefell
youfell
theyfell
Past
Ifelled
youfelled
he/she/itfelled
wefelled
youfelled
theyfelled
Present Perfect
Ihavefelled
youhavefelled
he/she/ithasfelled
wehavefelled
youhavefelled
theyhavefelled
Past Perfect
Ihadfelled
youhadfelled
he/she/ithadfelled
wehadfelled
youhadfelled
theyhadfelled

PONS OpenDict

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Ejemplos monolingües (no verificados por la redacción de PONS)

Moreover, memories may even be distorted to become more favourable-people typically remember exam grades as having been better than they actually were.
en.wikipedia.org
The boys, who never actually watched the movie that their parents are so graphically describing, are speechless.
en.wikipedia.org
Some people familiar with the field expressed the opinion, that those processes have actually occurred.
en.wikipedia.org
Betting parlors worldwide took bets as to which one of the 10 or so principal characters had actually pulled the trigger.
en.wikipedia.org
He continues: unlike oh so many others, the man never actually failed a steroids test.
en.wikipedia.org

Consultar "felling" en otros idiomas