anglais > français | |
flute | |
1. n. Flute, instrument de musique. | |
2. n. Rainure. | |
3. n. (Architecture) Canellure (d'une colonne). | |
4. n. (Usinage) Listel. | |
5. n. flautist (flutiste) | |
6. v. Rainurer. | |
anglais > anglais | |
flute | |
1. n. (musical instruments) A woodwind instrument consisting of a tube with a row of holes that produce sound through vibrations caused by air blown across the edge of the holes, often tuned by plugging one | |
2. n. (musical instruments, colloquial) A recorder, also a woodwind instrument. | |
3. n. A glass with a long, narrow bowl and a long stem, used for drinking wine, especially champagne. | |
4. n. a lengthwise groove, such as one of the lengthwise grooves on a classical column, or a groove on a cutting tool (such as a drill bit, endmill, or reamer), which helps to form both a cutting edge and a | |
5. n. (architecture, firearms) A semicylindrical vertical groove, as in a pillar, in plaited cloth, or in a rifle barrel to cut down the weight. | |
6. n. A long French bread roll. | |
7. n. An organ stop with a flute-like sound. | |
8. n. A shuttle in weaving tapestry etc. | |
9. v. (intransitive) To play on a flute. | |
10. v. (intransitive) To make a flutelike sound. | |
11. v. To utter with a flutelike sound. | |
12. v. To form flutes or channels in (as in a column, a ruffle, etc.); to cut a semicylindrical vertical groove in (as in a pillar, etc.). | |
13. n. A kind of flyboat; a storeship. | |
français > anglais | |
flûte | |
1. n-f. (musical instruments) flute (musical instrument) | |
2. interj. blow!, drat! (mildly impolite interjection) | |