so that nell'Oxford-Hachette French Dictionary

Traduzioni di so that nel dizionario inglese»francese

I.so [ingl brit səʊ, ingl am soʊ] AVV

1. so (so very):

10. so (avoiding repetition):

so I see

so long as colloq → long

IX.so [ingl brit səʊ, ingl am soʊ]

Vedi anche: much, without, long, ever, as

I.much [ingl brit mʌtʃ, ingl am mətʃ] AVV When much is used as an adverb, it is translated by beaucoup: it's much longer = c'est beaucoup plus long; she doesn't talk much = elle ne parle pas beaucoup.
For particular usages, see I. below.
When much is used as a pronoun, it is usually translated by beaucoup: there is much to learn = il y a beaucoup à apprendre. However, in negative sentences grand-chose is also used: I didn't learn much = je n'ai pas beaucoup appris or je n'ai pas appris grand-chose.
When much is used as an adjective, it is translated by beaucoup de: they don't have much money = ils n'ont pas beaucoup d'argent.
For particular usages see III. below.

1. much (to a considerable degree):

4. much (specifying degree to which something is true):

+ congt thanks very much

II.much [ingl brit mʌtʃ, ingl am mətʃ] PRON

1. much:

2. much (expressing a relative amount, degree):

it's too much! lett

3. much (focusing on limitations, inadequacy):

it's not up to much ingl brit

III.much [ingl brit mʌtʃ, ingl am mətʃ] AGG

VIII.much [ingl brit mʌtʃ, ingl am mətʃ]

I.without [ingl brit wɪðˈaʊt, ingl am wəˈðæʊt, wəˈθaʊt] PREP

1. without (lacking, not having):

II.without [ingl brit wɪðˈaʊt, ingl am wəˈðæʊt, wəˈθaʊt] AVV (on the outside)

I.long [ingl brit lɒŋ, ingl am lɔŋ, lɑŋ] SOST (syllable, signal)

II.long [ingl brit lɒŋ, ingl am lɔŋ, lɑŋ] AGG

1. long (lengthy, protracted):

2. long (in expressions of time):

3. long (in measuring):

20 m long

4. long (in expressions of distance):

III.long [ingl brit lɒŋ, ingl am lɔŋ, lɑŋ] AVV

1. long (a long time):

V.long [ingl brit lɒŋ, ingl am lɔŋ, lɑŋ] VB vb intr

I.ever [ingl brit ˈɛvə, ingl am ˈɛvər] AVV

1. ever (at any time):

2. ever (when making comparisons):

3. ever (at all times, always):

bien à toi or à vous

4. ever (expressing anger, irritation):

I.as [ingl brit az, əz, ingl am æz, əz] CONG

1. as (in the manner that):

as I see it
as you were! MILIT

II.as [ingl brit az, əz, ingl am æz, əz] PREP

2. as (showing function, status):

with Lauren Bacall as Vivien CINEM, TEATR

III.as [ingl brit az, əz, ingl am æz, əz] AVV

1. as (expressing degree, extent):

Traduzioni di so that nel dizionario inglese»francese

I.so [ingl brit səʊ, ingl am soʊ] AVV

1. so (so very):

10. so (avoiding repetition):

so I see

so long as colloq → long

IX.so [ingl brit səʊ, ingl am soʊ]

Vedi anche: much, without, long, ever, as

I.much [ingl brit mʌtʃ, ingl am mətʃ] AVV When much is used as an adverb, it is translated by beaucoup: it's much longer = c'est beaucoup plus long; she doesn't talk much = elle ne parle pas beaucoup.
For particular usages, see I. below.
When much is used as a pronoun, it is usually translated by beaucoup: there is much to learn = il y a beaucoup à apprendre. However, in negative sentences grand-chose is also used: I didn't learn much = je n'ai pas beaucoup appris or je n'ai pas appris grand-chose.
When much is used as an adjective, it is translated by beaucoup de: they don't have much money = ils n'ont pas beaucoup d'argent.
For particular usages see III. below.

1. much (to a considerable degree):

4. much (specifying degree to which something is true):

+ congt thanks very much

II.much [ingl brit mʌtʃ, ingl am mətʃ] PRON

1. much:

2. much (expressing a relative amount, degree):

it's too much! lett

3. much (focusing on limitations, inadequacy):

it's not up to much ingl brit

III.much [ingl brit mʌtʃ, ingl am mətʃ] AGG

VIII.much [ingl brit mʌtʃ, ingl am mətʃ]

I.without [ingl brit wɪðˈaʊt, ingl am wəˈðæʊt, wəˈθaʊt] PREP

1. without (lacking, not having):

II.without [ingl brit wɪðˈaʊt, ingl am wəˈðæʊt, wəˈθaʊt] AVV (on the outside)

I.long [ingl brit lɒŋ, ingl am lɔŋ, lɑŋ] SOST (syllable, signal)

II.long [ingl brit lɒŋ, ingl am lɔŋ, lɑŋ] AGG

1. long (lengthy, protracted):

2. long (in expressions of time):

3. long (in measuring):

20 m long

4. long (in expressions of distance):

III.long [ingl brit lɒŋ, ingl am lɔŋ, lɑŋ] AVV

1. long (a long time):

V.long [ingl brit lɒŋ, ingl am lɔŋ, lɑŋ] VB vb intr

I.ever [ingl brit ˈɛvə, ingl am ˈɛvər] AVV

1. ever (at any time):

2. ever (when making comparisons):

3. ever (at all times, always):

bien à toi or à vous

4. ever (expressing anger, irritation):

I.as [ingl brit az, əz, ingl am æz, əz] CONG

1. as (in the manner that):

as I see it
as you were! MILIT

II.as [ingl brit az, əz, ingl am æz, əz] PREP

2. as (showing function, status):

with Lauren Bacall as Vivien CINEM, TEATR

III.as [ingl brit az, əz, ingl am æz, əz] AVV

1. as (expressing degree, extent):

I.that <pl those> AGG dimostr [ingl am ðæt]

II.that <pl those> PRON dimostr [ingl brit ðat, ingl am ðæt]

2. that (the thing or person observed or mentioned):

III.that PRON rel [ingl brit ðat, ðət, ingl am ðæt]

IV.that CONG [ingl brit ðat, ðət, ingl am ðæt]

V.that AVV [ingl brit ðat, ingl am ðæt]

and (all) that
et tout ça
that is (to say)…

I.much [ingl brit mʌtʃ, ingl am mətʃ] AVV When much is used as an adverb, it is translated by beaucoup: it's much longer = c'est beaucoup plus long; she doesn't talk much = elle ne parle pas beaucoup.
For particular usages, see I. below.
When much is used as a pronoun, it is usually translated by beaucoup: there is much to learn = il y a beaucoup à apprendre. However, in negative sentences grand-chose is also used: I didn't learn much = je n'ai pas beaucoup appris or je n'ai pas appris grand-chose.
When much is used as an adjective, it is translated by beaucoup de: they don't have much money = ils n'ont pas beaucoup d'argent.
For particular usages see III. below.

1. much (to a considerable degree):

4. much (specifying degree to which something is true):

+ congt thanks very much

II.much [ingl brit mʌtʃ, ingl am mətʃ] PRON

1. much:

2. much (expressing a relative amount, degree):

it's too much! lett

3. much (focusing on limitations, inadequacy):

it's not up to much ingl brit

III.much [ingl brit mʌtʃ, ingl am mətʃ] AGG

VIII.much [ingl brit mʌtʃ, ingl am mətʃ]

Vedi anche: so

I.so [ingl brit səʊ, ingl am soʊ] AVV

1. so (so very):

10. so (avoiding repetition):

so I see

so long as colloq → long

IX.so [ingl brit səʊ, ingl am soʊ]

so that nel dizionario PONS

Traduzioni di so that nel dizionario inglese»francese (Vai a francese»inglese)

Traduzioni di so that nel dizionario francese»inglese (Vai a inglese»francese)

Traduzioni di so that nel dizionario inglese»francese

Vedi anche: much, many, far

II.many <more, most> [ˈmen·i] PRON

III.many <more, most> [ˈmen·i] SOST

I.far <farther, farthest [or further, furthest]> [far] AVV

1. far (a long distance):

far a. fig

II.far <farther, farthest [or further, furthest]> [far] AGG

I.that [ðæt] dimostr pron, pl: those

1. that (sth shown):

II.that [ðæt] dimostr agg, pl: those

Vedi anche: this

Inglese britannico

Esempi monolingue (non verificati dalla Redazione di PONS)

inglese
As the angle increases the value decreases so that higher frequency components are more and more attenuated.
en.wikipedia.org
The function of the garbage disposer is to grind food waste (e.g. chicken bones, fruit, coffee grinds, meat) so that it can be sent down standard household plumbing without clogging.
en.wikipedia.org
Both apparatus types have an adjustable drawing-head with rules attached to a protractor scale so that the angle of the rules may be adjusted.
en.wikipedia.org
So that's your wedding guest look sorted, then!
www.fashion.ie
Our diplomatic mission today is to preserve the Latvian state, so that no Latvian ever has to flee into exile.
en.wikipedia.org
He later acknowledged that he appended the rider that the instructor must be attractive so that more soldiers would attend the sessions.
en.wikipedia.org
The set was very deliberately built to be offbeat and off the track, so that the huge ballroom would never actually fit inside.
en.wikipedia.org
In a money-makes-money scenario, endowment funds generate income over time, so that the donations the foundation initially receives are multiplied.
www.thewhig.com
Instead, the people should retreat into introspection, seeking to learn more about themselves so that they could grow in wisdom and strength.
en.wikipedia.org
They then lean forward and drop to their knees, sliding the opponent down their back so that their shoulders are against the mat and their chin is against their chest.
en.wikipedia.org

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