obscure |
1. adj. Obscur. | |
2. n. Obscur. | |
We threw away convention, and went in search of the obscure and the unknown. | |
3. v. Obscurcir. | |
4. v. Cacher, masquer. | |
confused |
1. adj. Embrouillé, perdu, paumé (intellectuellement). | |
I'm confused. Explain it again, but from the beginning this time. | |
2. adj. Confus. | |
I have only a confused memory of the event. | |
Il ne m'en reste qu'un souvenir confus de l'évènement. | |
3. v. Participe passé de confuse. | |
4. v. Prétérit de confuse. | |
confuse |
1. v. Confondre. | |
It's easy to confuse measles and mumps, since both are childhood diseases. | |
Just stick to the main point, or else you'll confuse them. | |
not |
1. v. (Ne) … pas. | |
He is not an American. — Il n'est pas américain. | |
2. conj. Non pas. | |
This is a pen, not a pencil. — C'est un stylo, non pas un crayon. | |
3. n. Variante de NOT (fonction logique). | |
clear |
1. adj. Clair, limpide. | |
It's a beautiful clear sky today. | |
2. adj. Évident, net, clair, limpide. | |
Is it clear what I'm saying? | |
He drove clear across the desert. | |
3. v. Débarrasser, dégager | |
4. v. Déboucher. | |
5. v. Franchir, sauter, passer (un obstacle). | |
6. v. Dégager (des bénéfices). | |
7. v. Accepter, compenser (action faite par une banque sur une remise de chèque). | |