drawing in the Oxford-Hachette French Dictionary

Translations for drawing in the English»French Dictionary

drawing [Brit ˈdrɔː(r)ɪŋ, Am ˈdrɔɪŋ] N

2. drawing card Am (marketable skill, asset):

drawing card

drawing in the PONS Dictionary

Translations for drawing in the English»French Dictionary

II.draw <drew, drawn> [drɔ:, Am drɑ:] VB trans

III.draw <drew, drawn> [drɔ:, Am drɑ:] VB intr

drawing Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

a rough drawing
charcoal drawing
back to the drawing board
drawing after Picasso
pencil drawing
drawing pad
a drawing of Paul's (he owns it)
a drawing of Paul's (he drew it)
a drawing of Paul (he is on it)

drawing Glossary of Refrigeration Technology courtesy of GEA Bock GmbH

Translations for drawing in the French»English Dictionary

American English

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
His drawing is first class and his dialogue superb, adding credibility to his characterization while moving the story along at a laconic lick.
en.wikipedia.org
He enjoys drawing, especially airbrushing, and stated a desire to work on tattoos.
en.wikipedia.org
The paneling in the drawing room conceals a secret doorway leading to a set of stairs.
en.wikipedia.org
Another strongroom was provided in the engineering drawing office for the storage of plans.
en.wikipedia.org
Algorithms can also separately shade vertices, and interpolate the lighting value of the vertices when drawing pixels.
en.wikipedia.org
It is formed by drawing out a thin wire, sharpening the tip, and adding a head.
en.wikipedia.org
Note that you can determine the line of movement by drawing a line connecting either the right or left tips of the tracks.
en.wikipedia.org
The drawing done afterwards would capture the essentials without extraneous detail.
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
His book certainly is serious, while frequently frivolous; it's a fascinating history of some of our most beloved items of stationery, including drawing pins, highlighter pens and staples.
www.independent.co.uk

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