slang |
1. n. Argot. | |
2. n. Langage spécialisé dans un sujet, une profession particulière. | |
3. n. Langage codé propre à un groupe social donné et permettant uniquement à ses membres de le comprendre. | |
4. adj. Argotique. | |
5. v. (Vieilli) Insulter, hurler sur quelqu'un. | |
6. v. Passé simple de : to sling. | |
chiefly |
1. v. Principalement, surtout. | |
Relating chiefly to some remarkable Conversation, and some remarkable Proceedings to which it gives rise. - (The Life And Adventures Of Nicholas Nickleby Charles Dickens) | |
Ayant trait principalement à une conversation intéressante, et aux résultats intéressants de cette conversation. | |
2. v. Essentiellement. | |
3. v. Majoritairement. | |
us |
1. n. Nous. | |
crack |
1. v. Craquer, se fendre. | |
It's been so dry, the ground is starting to crack. | |
2. v. Craquer, se casser. | |
When I tried to stand on the chair, it cracked. | |
3. v. Craquer psychologiquement, sous la pression. | |
When we showed him the pictures of the murder scene, he cracked. | |
4. v. Raconter des cracks. | |
5. v. Informatique Casser un verrou, un système de sécurité informatique. | |
They finally cracked the code. | |
It took twenty minutes to crack the safe open. | |
6. v. (Désuet) Se vanter. | |
Cardan cracks that he can cure all diseases with water alone, as Hippocrates of old did most infirmities with one medicine. | |
7. n. Fissure, fente. | |
A large crack had formed in the roadway. | |
8. n. Petite ouverture. | |
9. n. Informatique Crack. | |
10. n. Crépitement. | |
The crack of a gunshot. | |
11. n. (Narcotique) Crack. | |
12. n. Crack, champion. | |
cocaine |
1. n. (Alcaloïdes) Cocaïne. | |