look at in the Oxford-Hachette French Dictionary

Translations for look at in the English»French Dictionary

I.look at VB [Brit lʊk -, Am lʊk -] (look at [sth])

Translations for look at in the English»French Dictionary

I.hand [Brit hand, Am hænd] N

1. hand ANAT:

hands off inf!
pas touche! inf
hands off inf!

7. hand (possession):

I.length [Brit lɛŋ(k)θ, lɛn(t)θ, Am lɛŋ(k)θ, lɛnth] N

1. length (linear measurement):

2. length (duration):

See also full-length

I.all [Brit ɔːl, Am ɔl] PRON

1. all (everything):

II.all [Brit ɔːl, Am ɔl] DET

III.all [Brit ɔːl, Am ɔl] ADV

IV.all [Brit ɔːl, Am ɔl] N

2. all+ (in the highest degree) → all-consuming

XVI.all [Brit ɔːl, Am ɔl]

it's all go inf here! Brit
it's all up with us inf Brit
all in Brit sl
all in Brit sl

See also worst, thing, place, people, best, bad, all-important, all-embracing, all-consuming

I.worst [Brit wəːst, Am wərst] N

1. worst (most difficult, unpleasant):

le/la pire m/f

II.worst [Brit wəːst, Am wərst] ADJ superlative of bad

III.worst [Brit wəːst, Am wərst] ADV

IV.worst [Brit wəːst, Am wərst] VB trans form

I.thing [Brit θɪŋ, Am θɪŋ] N

1. thing (object):

truc m inf
à quoi sert ce truc? inf

2. thing (action, task, event):

3. thing (matter, fact):

the thing is, (that) …
ce qu'il y a, c'est que
ce qu'il y a de bien, c'est que

2. things (situation, circumstances, matters):

III.thing [Brit θɪŋ, Am θɪŋ]

to make a big thing (out) of it inf

I.place [Brit pleɪs, Am pleɪs] N

1. place (location, position):

2. place (town, hotel etc):

IV.place [Brit pleɪs, Am pleɪs] VB trans

I.people [Brit ˈpiːp(ə)l, Am ˈpipəl] N (nation) gens is masculine plural and never countable (you CANNOT say ‘trois gens’). When used with gens, some adjectives such as vieux, bon, mauvais, petit, vilain placed before gens take the feminine form: les vieilles gens.

II.people [Brit ˈpiːp(ə)l, Am ˈpipəl] N npl

1. people:

gens mpl

III.people [Brit ˈpiːp(ə)l, Am ˈpipəl] VB trans liter

I.best [Brit bɛst, Am bɛst] N

II.best [Brit bɛst, Am bɛst] ADJ superlative of good

1. best (most excellent or pleasing):

III.best [Brit bɛst, Am bɛst] ADV

best superlative of well

IV.best [Brit bɛst, Am bɛst] VB trans (defeat, outdo)

II.bad <comp worse, superl worst> [Brit bad, Am bæd] ADJ

1. bad (poor, inferior, incompetent, unacceptable):

bad attr joke
not bad inf

III.bad [Brit bad, Am bæd] ADV inf esp Am

I.once [Brit wʌns, Am wəns] N

II.once [Brit wʌns, Am wəns] ADV

1. once (one time):

IV.once [Brit wʌns, Am wəns] CONJ

at [Brit at, ət, Am æt, ət] PREP

I.look [Brit lʊk, Am lʊk] N

1. look (glance):

4. look (appearance):

air m
il a l'air sympa inf

3. look (appear, seem):

+ subj it looks certain that

5. look:

‘tu as des ennuis?’ ‘à ton avis?’ iron

look at in the PONS Dictionary

Translations for look at in the English»French Dictionary

American English

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Remain here peacefully and look at the cakra on top of the temple and offer obeisances.
en.wikipedia.org
Studies investigating music and emotion in children primarily play a musical excerpt for children and have them look at pictorial expressions of faces.
en.wikipedia.org
A trio of privacy groups want federal regulators to take a close look at ad networks that track web surfers' and sell targeted ads.
www.wired.com
If you look at bond fund managers, they've got analysts and lawyers looking at all the caveats.
www.ft.com
One possible way will be to look at how ecologically overdrawn an economy, industry or company is.
www.worldchanging.com
You will arrive at the showing-off belching stage, and the "look at this, it's like dough" (while gripping and waggling your spare tyre), moment.
www.telegraph.co.uk
Look at any noticeboard outside a school or village hall and often last year's jumble sale poster is damply loitering behind the condensation.
www.bucksfreepress.co.uk
Look beyond the product it creates, and look at how it creates it, and the lessons tumble out.
www.niemanlab.org
But it falls to us to behave in a more statesmanlike way, and to look at the bigger issues.
www.huffingtonpost.co.uk
These studies not only illustrate the importance of attentional bias in addiction and cravings but also how we look at addiction from a scientific standpoint.
en.wikipedia.org

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