rubbish

rubbish
rubbish [ˈrʌbɪ∫]
1. noun
   a. ( = waste material) détritus mpl ; (British = household rubbish) ordures fpl ; ( = worthless things) camelote (inf) f
   b. ( = nonsense) bêtises fpl
• to talk rubbish dire des bêtises
• (what a lot of) rubbish! (inf) n'importe quoi ! (inf)
• that's just rubbish c'est n'importe quoi (inf)
2. adjective
( = useless) (inf) nul
• I'm rubbish at golf je suis nul en golf
3. compounds
► rubbish bin noun (British) poubelle f
► rubbish collection noun ramassage m des ordures
► rubbish dump noun (public) décharge f publique
* * *
['rʌbɪʃ] 1.
noun
1) (refuse) déchets mpl; (domestic) ordures fpl; (from garden) détritus mpl; (on site) gravats mpl
2) (inferior goods) camelote (colloq) f; (discarded objects) saletés (colloq) fpl
3) (nonsense)

to talk rubbish — raconter n'importe quoi

this book is rubbish! — (colloq) ce livre est nul! (colloq)

2.
transitive verb GB descendre [quelqu'un/quelque chose] en flammes

English-French dictionary. 2013.

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  • Rubbish — Rub bish, n. [OE. robows, robeux, rubble, originally an Old French plural from an assumed dim. of robe, probably in the sense of trash; cf. It. robaccia trash, roba stuff, goods, wares, robe. Thus, etymologically rubbish is the pl. of rubble. See …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Rubbish — Rub bish, a. Of or pertaining to rubbish; of the quality of rubbish; trashy. De Quincey. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • rubbish — [n1] garbage debris, dregs, dross, junk, litter, lumber, offal, refuse, rubble, rummage, scrap, sweepings, trash, waste; concept 260 Ant. possessions, property rubbish [n2] nonsense balderdash, bilge*, bunkum, drivel, gibberish, hogwash, hooey*,… …   New thesaurus

  • rubbish — (n.) c.1400, from Anglo Fr. rubouses (late 14c.), of unknown origin. Apparently somehow related to RUBBLE (Cf. rubble). The verb sense of disparage, criticize harshly is first attested 1953 in Australian and New Zealand slang …   Etymology dictionary

  • rubbish — n *refuse, waste, trash, debris, garbage, offal …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • rubbish — is used in BrE to mean ‘household refuse’. The corresponding term in AmE, and in some other non British varieties, is garbage or (in some contexts) trash, and a dustbin outside Britain is a garbage can or trash can …   Modern English usage

  • rubbish — ► NOUN chiefly Brit. 1) waste material; refuse or litter. 2) unimportant or valueless material. 3) nonsense; worthless talk or ideas. ► VERB Brit. informal ▪ criticize and reject as worthless. ► ADJECTIVE Brit. informal ▪ very bad …   English terms dictionary

  • rubbish — [rub′ish] n. [ME robous, robys: ult. < base of RUB] 1. any material rejected or thrown away as worthless; trash; refuse 2. worthless, foolish ideas, statements, etc.; nonsense vt. [Brit. Informal] TRASH1 (vt. 3a) rubbishy adj …   English World dictionary

  • rubbish — noun ⇨ See also ↑garbage, ↑trash 1 (esp. BrE) waste material ADJECTIVE ▪ domestic, household ▪ garden … OF RUBBISH ▪ bag …   Collocations dictionary

  • rubbish — rub|bish1 S3 [ˈrʌbıʃ] n [U] especially BrE [Date: 1300 1400; : Anglo French; Origin: rubbous, perhaps from Old French robe; ROBE] 1.) food, paper etc that is no longer needed and has been thrown away American Equivalent: garbage American… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • rubbish — 01. Nigel, can you please take the [rubbish] out? It s starting to smell. 02. The old man found some bits of fruit and uneaten food in the [rubbish]. 03. This music is absolute [rubbish]. How could anyone listen to it? 04. The man is talking… …   Grammatical examples in English

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