anglais > français | |
hat | |
1. n. Chapeau. | |
Mr Swiveller walked into Sampson Brass's office at the usual hour placed his hat upon the desk, and taking from his pocket a small parcel of black crape, applied himself to folding and pinning the same upon it, after the manner of a hatband. ( | |
M. Swiveller se rendit, à l'heure accoutumée, à l'étude de Sampson Brass. Il posa son chapeau sur le pupitre ; puis, tirant de sa poche une étroite bande de crêpe noir, il se mit à l'appliquer autour de sa coiffure, et à l'y fixer avec des épi | |
2. n. Toque. | |
anglais > anglais | |
hat | |
1. n. A covering for the head, often in the approximate form of a cone or a cylinder closed at its top end, and sometimes having a brim and other decoration. | |
2. n. (figuratively) A particular role or capacity that a person might fill. | |
3. n. (figuratively) Any receptacle from which numbers/names are pulled out in a lottery. | |
4. n. (figuratively, by extension) The lottery or draw itself. | |
We're both in the hat: let's hope we come up against each other. | |
5. n. (video games) A hat switch. | |
6. n. (typography, nonstandard, rare) The háček symbol. | |
7. n. (programming, informal) The caret symbol ^. | |
8. n. (internet slang) User rights on a website, such as the right to edit pages others cannot. | |
9. v. To place a hat on. | |
10. v. To appoint as cardinal. | |
11. v. (Scotland, Northern England, or obsolete) simple past tense of hit | |
When I axed him why he hat 'im, he said, "I ne know, I ne know, mate.". | |
français > anglais | |
chapeau | |
1. n-m. hat | |
2. n-m. (law) introductory text | |
3. n-m. (printing) lead of an article | |
4. n-m. cap (of a mushroom) | |
5. interj. Used to express appreciation. | |
Chapeau, monsieur. | |