Mots en English pour 'Between manors.'
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noun
verb
- (figuratively) To suppress and hide away in one's mind.
- (figuratively) To put an end to; to abandon.
- To render imperceptible by other, more prominent stimuli; to drown out.
- (often figurative) To hide or conceal as if by covering with earth or another substance.
- To place in the ground.
- (professional wrestling slang) To ruin the image or character of another wrestler; usually by embarrassing or defeating them in dominating fashion.
- (figurative, slang) To kill or murder.
- (by extension) To overwhelm.
- (figurative, humorous) To outlive.
- (sports) To score (a goal).
- place in a grave or tomb
- embed deeply
- dismiss from the mind; stop remembering
- enclose or envelop completely, as if by swallowing
- cover from sight
- place in the earth and cover with soil
noun
- (Scotland) The farm attached to a mansion house.
- The main course of a meal.
- plural of main
- (chiefly British) A large-scale network or grid supplying any of various other services, such as water, gas or sewerage, to properties.
- (chiefly British) The domestic electrical power supply, especially as connected to a network or grid.
verb
noun
- the large room of a manor or castle
- a large building used by a college or university for teaching or research
- a large building for meetings or entertainment
- a large and imposing house
- a college or university building containing living quarters for students
- an interior passage or corridor onto which rooms open
- a large room for gatherings, receiving guests, or entertainment
- a large entrance or reception room or area
- The principal room of a secular medieval building.
- A manor house (originally because a magistrate's court was held in the hall of his mansion).
- A place for special professional education, or for conferring professional degrees or licences.
- A building providing student accommodation at a university.
- A corridor; a hallway.
- (Oxbridge) A college's canteen, which is often but not always coterminous with a traditional hall.
- A large meeting room.
- (India) A living room.
- (Oxbridge slang) A meal served and eaten at a college's hall.
noun
- The main house of such an estate or a similar residence; a mansion.
- the mansion of a lord or wealthy person
- A landed estate.
- (UK, slang) Any home area or territory in which authority is exercised, often in a police or criminal context.
- (London, slang) One's neighbourhood.
- The lord's residence and seat of control in such a district.
- A district over which a feudal lord could exercise certain rights and privileges in medieval western Europe.
- the landed estate of a lord (including the house on it)
noun
- a yard or lawn adjoining a house
- a plot of ground where plants are cultivated
- the flowers or vegetables or fruits or herbs that are cultivated in a garden
- (in the plural, used in street names) A road, street, or similar thoroughfare, which sometimes occupies a former garden.
- (attributive) Taking place in, or used in, such a garden.
- An outdoor area containing one or more types of plants, usually plants grown for food or ornamental purposes.
- (in the plural) Such an ornamental place to which the public have access.
- (slang) Pubic hair or the genitalia it masks.
- (figuratively) A cluster; a bunch.
- (cartomancy) The twentieth Lenormand card.
- (British, Ireland, Appalachia, New York City) The grounds at the front or back of a house.
adj
verb
noun
- The back side of an estate: the backyard and outbuildings behind a main house, especially (UK dialect, euphemistic) an outhouse.
- (figuratively) The reverse or opposite of anything.
- (euphemistic) A person's buttocks.
- The back side of anything, the part opposite its front, particularly:
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see back, side.
- the side of an object that is opposite its front
- the fleshy part of the human body that you sit on
adj
noun
- dwelling that is usually a farmhouse and adjoining land
- A house together with surrounding land and buildings, especially on a farm; the property comprising these.
- the home and adjacent grounds occupied by a family
- land acquired from the United States public lands by filing a record and living on and cultivating it under the homestead law
- (South Africa) A cluster of several houses occupied by an extended family.
- (Canada, US) A parcel of land in the interior of North America, usually 160 acres, that was distributed to settlers from Europe or eastern North America under the Dominion Lands Act of 1870 in Canada or the Homestead Act of 1862 in the United States.
- The place that is one's home.
verb
name
- A medieval manor in Devon, England.
- An unincorporated community in Georgia; named for Raleigh Bowden.
- A male given name, transferred from the surname.
- A neighborhood of Memphis, Tennessee; named for the city in North Carolina.
- A census-designated place in Florida.
- A census-designated place in North Dakota; named for Sir Walter Raleigh.
- A town in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada; named for Sir Walter Raleigh.
- The capital city of North Carolina, United States and the county seat of Wake County; named for Sir Walter Raleigh.
- An English habitational surname from the manor in England.
- Sir Walter Raleigh, English explorer and soldier.
- A locality in the Bellingen council area, north-eastern New South Wales, Australia.
- An unincorporated community in Indiana; named for the city in North Carolina.
- An unincorporated community in Raleigh County, West Virginia; named for its county, which was named for Sir Walter Raleigh.
- A village in Illinois; named for the city in North Carolina.
- An unincorporated community in Iowa.
- A town, the county seat of Smith County, Mississippi; named for Sir Walter Raleigh.
noun
- the grounds in back of a house
- (Australia, Canada, New Zealand, US) A yard to the rear of a house or similar residence.
- (Australia, Canada, New Zealand, US, colloquial) An area nearby to a country or other jurisdiction's legal boundaries, particularly an area in which the country feels it has an interest.
- (Australia, Canada, New Zealand, US, colloquial) A person's neighborhood, or an area nearby to a person's usual residence or place of work and where the person is likely to go.
noun
noun
- (chiefly Scotland) A courtyard behind a housing block or tenement building.
- (basketball) A team's defensive half of the court; the part of the court where the other team's basket is located, or the guards playing in that area.
- (handball) The area farthest from the opponent's goal around the nine-metre line, where a team's defensive centre players are located.
noun
noun
- the enclosed land around a house or other building
- your basis for belief or disbelief; knowledge on which to base belief
- a justification for something existing or happening
- a tract of land cleared for some special purposes (recreation or burial etc.)
- dregs consisting of solid particles (especially of coffee) that form a residue
- The collective land areas that compose a larger area.
- (law) Basis or justification for something.
- The sediment at the bottom of a liquid, or from which a liquid has been filtered.
- plural of ground
verb
noun
- the enclosed land around a house or other building
- a unit of volume (as for sand or gravel)
- a unit of length equal to 3 feet; defined as 91.44 centimeters; originally taken to be the average length of a stride
- the cardinal number that is the product of 10 and 100
- an area having a network of railway tracks and sidings for storage and maintenance of cars and engines
- a tract of land enclosed for particular activities (sometimes paved and usually associated with buildings)
- an enclosure for animals (as chicken or livestock)
- a long horizontal spar tapered at the end and used to support and spread a square sail or lateen
- a tract of land where logs are accumulated
- (nautical) A long tapered timber hung on a mast to which is bent a sail, and may be further qualified as a square, lateen, or lug yard. The first is hung at right angles to the mast, the last two hang obliquely.
- (finance) 10⁹, A short scale billion; a long scale thousand millions or milliard.
- A unit of length equal to 3 feet in the US customary and British imperial systems of measurement, equal to precisely 0.9144 m since 1959 (US) or 1963 (UK).
- (US, Canada, Australia) The property surrounding one's house, typically dominated by one's lawn.
- (slang, drugs) One hundred, usually referring to currency or money's worth.
- (US, slang, uncommon) 100 dollars.
- A place where moose or deer herd together in winter for pasture, protection, etc.
- (obsolete outside of fossil forms) A tall, slender, hollow receptacle or tool.
- Units of similar composition or length in other systems.
- An enclosed outdoors area designated for a specific purpose, e.g. on farms, railways etc.
- (informal) Ellipsis of cubic yard, a unit of volume; common in mining and earthmoving.
- (nautical) Any spar carried aloft.
- (Jamaica, MLE) One’s house or home.
- (informal) Ellipsis of square yard, a unit of area; common with textiles.
- A small, usually uncultivated area adjoining or (now especially) within the precincts of a house or other building.
verb
noun
- a house (usually large and impressive) on an estate in the country
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see country, house: a house in the country: one not in town.
- (especially British) A house serving as a weekend and holiday residence, used as a retreat from city life; traditionally and archetypically in the country, and especially of wealthy owners.
- (especially British) Such a house, even as a primary residence and even in an area that is no longer rural, but with an aesthetic in keeping with that traditional distinction of country ways.
noun
- (UK) A family house, often semi-detached in Victorian or Edwardian style, in a middle class street.
- pretentious and luxurious country residence with extensive grounds
- (Ancient Rome) A country house, with farm buildings around a courtyard.
- A house, often larger and more expensive than average, in the countryside or on the coast, often used as a retreat.
- (Nigeria, slang) One’s village or ancestral homeland.
- country house in ancient Rome consisting of residential quarters and farm buildings around a courtyard
- detached or semidetached suburban house
name
- (UK) A baronetcy house.
- (historical) A former provincial electoral district in Saskatchewan, Canada.
- A town in Saskatchewan, Canada, within the rural municipality.
- A town in Tatiara council area, South Australia, Australia; formerly named Tatiara; named for Garnet Wolseley, 1st Viscount Wolseley.
- (countable) A habitational surname.
- A provincial electoral district in Manitoba, Canada.
- Ellipsis of Rural Municipality of Wolseley No. 155: a rural municipality in Saskatchewan, Canada.
- A town in Breede River Valley, Western Cape, South Africa.
- (UK) A viscountcy title.
- A river in north-east Ontario, Canada; in full, Wolseley River.
- A locality in Colwich parish, Stafford borough, Staffordshire, England (OS grid ref SK0220).
- A neighbourhood of Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
noun
noun
- A lord's chief manor place, with that part of the lands belonging thereto which has not been granted out in tenancy; a house, and the land adjoining, kept for the proprietor's own use.
- A region or area; a domain.
- territory over which rule or control is exercised
- extensive landed property (especially in the country) retained by the owner for their own use
name
noun
- a large and stately mansion
- a large building formerly occupied by a ruler and fortified against attack
- interchanging the positions of the king and a rook
- (chess) the piece that can move any number of unoccupied squares in a direction parallel to the sides of the chessboard
- (cricket, colloquial) The wicket.
- (shogi) A defense structure in shogi formed by defensive pieces surrounding the king.
- A large residential building or compound that is fortified and contains many defences; in previous ages often inhabited by a nobleman or king. Also, a house or mansion with some of the architectural features of medieval castles.
- (chess) An instance of castling.
- (chess, informal) A rook; a chess piece shaped like a castle tower.
verb
- move the king two squares toward a rook and in the same move the rook to the square next past the king
- (transitive, figurative) To protect or separate in a similar way.
- (usually intransitive, shogi) To create a similar defensive position in Japanese chess through several moves.
- (usually intransitive, chess) To move the king 2 squares right or left and, in the same turn, the nearest rook to the far side of the king. The move now has special rules: the king cannot be in, go through, or end in check; the squares between the king and rook must be vacant; and neither piece may have been moved before castling.
- (cricket) To bowl a batsman with a full-length ball or yorker such that the stumps are knocked over.
- (transitive) To house or keep in a castle.
noun
- a large and stately mansion
- the governing group of a kingdom
- official residence of an exalted person (as a sovereign)
- a large ornate exhibition hall
- A large and lavishly ornate residence.
- A large, ornate public building used for entertainment or exhibitions.
- Official residence of a head of state or other dignitary, especially in a monarchical or imperial governmental system.
adj
- Of a house: not joined to another house on either side.
- Not physically attached; separated from something to which it could connect.
- Having or showing no bias or emotional involvement; disinterested.
- Not influenced by anyone else; characterized by an impersonal objectivity; impartial.
- not fixed in position
- no longer connected or joined
- being or feeling set or kept apart from others
- used of buildings; standing apart from others
- lacking affection or warm feeling
- showing lack of emotional involvement
verb
noun
- a type of house built in New England; has two stories in front and one behind
- A similar box formerly used as a percussion instrument in burlesque music.
- (US) A distinctively shaped wooden-frame house with two stories at the front and one behind, characteristic of New England.
- A box for keeping salt in.
- A roof where one side slopes farther down than the other.
- (UK, slang, historical) The cell in Newgate prison for a prisoner condemned to death.
noun
- (Scotland, historical) The bounds of a royal burgh.
- People of royal rank, plus their families, treated as a group.
- (figuratively) Someone in a privileged position.
- The rank, status, power or authority of a monarch.
- The payment received by an owner of real property for exploitation of mineral rights in the property.
- A royal right or prerogative, such as the exploitation of a natural resource; the granting of such a right; payment received for such a right.
- (by extension) Payment made to a writer, composer, inventor etc for the sale or use of intellectual property, invention etc.
- (authorship) To make more money from a book than it cost to run an advertising campaign for it; to make enough in royalties to cover the advance a book received.
- (poker, slang) A king and a queen as a starting hand in Texas hold 'em.
- payment to the holder of a patent or copyright or resource for the right to use their property
- royal persons collectively
noun
noun
verb
- (figuratively) To suppress and hide away in one's mind.
- (figuratively) To put an end to; to abandon.
- To render imperceptible by other, more prominent stimuli; to drown out.
- (often figurative) To hide or conceal as if by covering with earth or another substance.
- To place in the ground.
- (professional wrestling slang) To ruin the image or character of another wrestler; usually by embarrassing or defeating them in dominating fashion.
- (figurative, slang) To kill or murder.
- (by extension) To overwhelm.
- (figurative, humorous) To outlive.
- (sports) To score (a goal).
- place in a grave or tomb
- embed deeply
- dismiss from the mind; stop remembering
- enclose or envelop completely, as if by swallowing
- cover from sight
- place in the earth and cover with soil
noun
- (Scotland) The farm attached to a mansion house.
- The main course of a meal.
- plural of main
- (chiefly British) A large-scale network or grid supplying any of various other services, such as water, gas or sewerage, to properties.
- (chiefly British) The domestic electrical power supply, especially as connected to a network or grid.
verb
noun
- the large room of a manor or castle
- a large building used by a college or university for teaching or research
- a large building for meetings or entertainment
- a large and imposing house
- a college or university building containing living quarters for students
- an interior passage or corridor onto which rooms open
- a large room for gatherings, receiving guests, or entertainment
- a large entrance or reception room or area
- The principal room of a secular medieval building.
- A manor house (originally because a magistrate's court was held in the hall of his mansion).
- A place for special professional education, or for conferring professional degrees or licences.
- A building providing student accommodation at a university.
- A corridor; a hallway.
- (Oxbridge) A college's canteen, which is often but not always coterminous with a traditional hall.
- A large meeting room.
- (India) A living room.
- (Oxbridge slang) A meal served and eaten at a college's hall.
noun
- The main house of such an estate or a similar residence; a mansion.
- the mansion of a lord or wealthy person
- A landed estate.
- (UK, slang) Any home area or territory in which authority is exercised, often in a police or criminal context.
- (London, slang) One's neighbourhood.
- The lord's residence and seat of control in such a district.
- A district over which a feudal lord could exercise certain rights and privileges in medieval western Europe.
- the landed estate of a lord (including the house on it)
noun
- a yard or lawn adjoining a house
- a plot of ground where plants are cultivated
- the flowers or vegetables or fruits or herbs that are cultivated in a garden
- (in the plural, used in street names) A road, street, or similar thoroughfare, which sometimes occupies a former garden.
- (attributive) Taking place in, or used in, such a garden.
- An outdoor area containing one or more types of plants, usually plants grown for food or ornamental purposes.
- (in the plural) Such an ornamental place to which the public have access.
- (slang) Pubic hair or the genitalia it masks.
- (figuratively) A cluster; a bunch.
- (cartomancy) The twentieth Lenormand card.
- (British, Ireland, Appalachia, New York City) The grounds at the front or back of a house.
adj
verb
noun
- The back side of an estate: the backyard and outbuildings behind a main house, especially (UK dialect, euphemistic) an outhouse.
- (figuratively) The reverse or opposite of anything.
- (euphemistic) A person's buttocks.
- The back side of anything, the part opposite its front, particularly:
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see back, side.
- the side of an object that is opposite its front
- the fleshy part of the human body that you sit on
adj
noun
- dwelling that is usually a farmhouse and adjoining land
- A house together with surrounding land and buildings, especially on a farm; the property comprising these.
- the home and adjacent grounds occupied by a family
- land acquired from the United States public lands by filing a record and living on and cultivating it under the homestead law
- (South Africa) A cluster of several houses occupied by an extended family.
- (Canada, US) A parcel of land in the interior of North America, usually 160 acres, that was distributed to settlers from Europe or eastern North America under the Dominion Lands Act of 1870 in Canada or the Homestead Act of 1862 in the United States.
- The place that is one's home.
verb
noun
- the grounds in back of a house
- (Australia, Canada, New Zealand, US) A yard to the rear of a house or similar residence.
- (Australia, Canada, New Zealand, US, colloquial) An area nearby to a country or other jurisdiction's legal boundaries, particularly an area in which the country feels it has an interest.
- (Australia, Canada, New Zealand, US, colloquial) A person's neighborhood, or an area nearby to a person's usual residence or place of work and where the person is likely to go.
noun
noun
- (chiefly Scotland) A courtyard behind a housing block or tenement building.
- (basketball) A team's defensive half of the court; the part of the court where the other team's basket is located, or the guards playing in that area.
- (handball) The area farthest from the opponent's goal around the nine-metre line, where a team's defensive centre players are located.
noun
noun
- the enclosed land around a house or other building
- your basis for belief or disbelief; knowledge on which to base belief
- a justification for something existing or happening
- a tract of land cleared for some special purposes (recreation or burial etc.)
- dregs consisting of solid particles (especially of coffee) that form a residue
- The collective land areas that compose a larger area.
- (law) Basis or justification for something.
- The sediment at the bottom of a liquid, or from which a liquid has been filtered.
- plural of ground
verb
noun
- the enclosed land around a house or other building
- a unit of volume (as for sand or gravel)
- a unit of length equal to 3 feet; defined as 91.44 centimeters; originally taken to be the average length of a stride
- the cardinal number that is the product of 10 and 100
- an area having a network of railway tracks and sidings for storage and maintenance of cars and engines
- a tract of land enclosed for particular activities (sometimes paved and usually associated with buildings)
- an enclosure for animals (as chicken or livestock)
- a long horizontal spar tapered at the end and used to support and spread a square sail or lateen
- a tract of land where logs are accumulated
- (nautical) A long tapered timber hung on a mast to which is bent a sail, and may be further qualified as a square, lateen, or lug yard. The first is hung at right angles to the mast, the last two hang obliquely.
- (finance) 10⁹, A short scale billion; a long scale thousand millions or milliard.
- A unit of length equal to 3 feet in the US customary and British imperial systems of measurement, equal to precisely 0.9144 m since 1959 (US) or 1963 (UK).
- (US, Canada, Australia) The property surrounding one's house, typically dominated by one's lawn.
- (slang, drugs) One hundred, usually referring to currency or money's worth.
- (US, slang, uncommon) 100 dollars.
- A place where moose or deer herd together in winter for pasture, protection, etc.
- (obsolete outside of fossil forms) A tall, slender, hollow receptacle or tool.
- Units of similar composition or length in other systems.
- An enclosed outdoors area designated for a specific purpose, e.g. on farms, railways etc.
- (informal) Ellipsis of cubic yard, a unit of volume; common in mining and earthmoving.
- (nautical) Any spar carried aloft.
- (Jamaica, MLE) One’s house or home.
- (informal) Ellipsis of square yard, a unit of area; common with textiles.
- A small, usually uncultivated area adjoining or (now especially) within the precincts of a house or other building.
verb
noun
- a house (usually large and impressive) on an estate in the country
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see country, house: a house in the country: one not in town.
- (especially British) A house serving as a weekend and holiday residence, used as a retreat from city life; traditionally and archetypically in the country, and especially of wealthy owners.
- (especially British) Such a house, even as a primary residence and even in an area that is no longer rural, but with an aesthetic in keeping with that traditional distinction of country ways.
noun
- (UK) A family house, often semi-detached in Victorian or Edwardian style, in a middle class street.
- pretentious and luxurious country residence with extensive grounds
- (Ancient Rome) A country house, with farm buildings around a courtyard.
- A house, often larger and more expensive than average, in the countryside or on the coast, often used as a retreat.
- (Nigeria, slang) One’s village or ancestral homeland.
- country house in ancient Rome consisting of residential quarters and farm buildings around a courtyard
- detached or semidetached suburban house
noun
- A lord's chief manor place, with that part of the lands belonging thereto which has not been granted out in tenancy; a house, and the land adjoining, kept for the proprietor's own use.
- A region or area; a domain.
- territory over which rule or control is exercised
- extensive landed property (especially in the country) retained by the owner for their own use
noun
- a large and stately mansion
- a large building formerly occupied by a ruler and fortified against attack
- interchanging the positions of the king and a rook
- (chess) the piece that can move any number of unoccupied squares in a direction parallel to the sides of the chessboard
- (cricket, colloquial) The wicket.
- (shogi) A defense structure in shogi formed by defensive pieces surrounding the king.
- A large residential building or compound that is fortified and contains many defences; in previous ages often inhabited by a nobleman or king. Also, a house or mansion with some of the architectural features of medieval castles.
- (chess) An instance of castling.
- (chess, informal) A rook; a chess piece shaped like a castle tower.
verb
- move the king two squares toward a rook and in the same move the rook to the square next past the king
- (transitive, figurative) To protect or separate in a similar way.
- (usually intransitive, shogi) To create a similar defensive position in Japanese chess through several moves.
- (usually intransitive, chess) To move the king 2 squares right or left and, in the same turn, the nearest rook to the far side of the king. The move now has special rules: the king cannot be in, go through, or end in check; the squares between the king and rook must be vacant; and neither piece may have been moved before castling.
- (cricket) To bowl a batsman with a full-length ball or yorker such that the stumps are knocked over.
- (transitive) To house or keep in a castle.
noun
- a large and stately mansion
- the governing group of a kingdom
- official residence of an exalted person (as a sovereign)
- a large ornate exhibition hall
- A large and lavishly ornate residence.
- A large, ornate public building used for entertainment or exhibitions.
- Official residence of a head of state or other dignitary, especially in a monarchical or imperial governmental system.
noun
- a type of house built in New England; has two stories in front and one behind
- A similar box formerly used as a percussion instrument in burlesque music.
- (US) A distinctively shaped wooden-frame house with two stories at the front and one behind, characteristic of New England.
- A box for keeping salt in.
- A roof where one side slopes farther down than the other.
- (UK, slang, historical) The cell in Newgate prison for a prisoner condemned to death.
noun
- (Scotland, historical) The bounds of a royal burgh.
- People of royal rank, plus their families, treated as a group.
- (figuratively) Someone in a privileged position.
- The rank, status, power or authority of a monarch.
- The payment received by an owner of real property for exploitation of mineral rights in the property.
- A royal right or prerogative, such as the exploitation of a natural resource; the granting of such a right; payment received for such a right.
- (by extension) Payment made to a writer, composer, inventor etc for the sale or use of intellectual property, invention etc.
- (authorship) To make more money from a book than it cost to run an advertising campaign for it; to make enough in royalties to cover the advance a book received.
- (poker, slang) A king and a queen as a starting hand in Texas hold 'em.
- payment to the holder of a patent or copyright or resource for the right to use their property
- royal persons collectively
noun
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adj
- Of a house: not joined to another house on either side.
- Not physically attached; separated from something to which it could connect.
- Having or showing no bias or emotional involvement; disinterested.
- Not influenced by anyone else; characterized by an impersonal objectivity; impartial.
- not fixed in position
- no longer connected or joined
- being or feeling set or kept apart from others
- used of buildings; standing apart from others
- lacking affection or warm feeling
- showing lack of emotional involvement