splinter in the Oxford-Hachette French Dictionary

Translations for splinter in the English»French Dictionary (Go to French»English)

I.splinter [Brit ˈsplɪntə, Am ˈsplɪn(t)ər] N

II.splinter [Brit ˈsplɪntə, Am ˈsplɪn(t)ər] VB trans lit

III.splinter [Brit ˈsplɪntə, Am ˈsplɪn(t)ər] VB intr lit

Your search term in other parts of the dictionary
dig out splinter, nail
extract (pull out) tooth, bullet, splinter
pull out splinter
draw out splinter, nail, cork

Translations for splinter in the French»English Dictionary (Go to English»French)

splinter in the PONS Dictionary

Translations for splinter in the English»French Dictionary (Go to French»English)

Translations for splinter in the French»English Dictionary (Go to English»French)

splinter Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

to splinter into small groups
American English

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
The relationship between leftwing splinter groups and the communists was notoriously bad.
en.wikipedia.org
He was again then wounded, receiving heavy splinter injuries in face and knee.
en.wikipedia.org
The executioners were gruesomely soiled with blood, brain matter, and bone splinters.
en.wikipedia.org
It connected to a 12.7-32mm in splinter bulkhead on the lower deck behind the waterline belt.
en.wikipedia.org
The cyclone's impact on the resort was greatly destructive; buildings in splinters, facilities in ruins and gardens stripped bare.
en.wikipedia.org
If left embedded the mouthparts cause a foreign body reaction and are usually eventually sloughed like a splinter.
en.wikipedia.org
Wounds which he received from shell splinters in the right leg and shoulder were probably sustained at that time.
en.wikipedia.org
Some members, including myself, strongly opposed such splinter group and warned that such a move will split our community into small groups.
en.wikipedia.org
By 1922, the core group splintered and two contrasting, adverse factions formed.
en.wikipedia.org
The exposed end of the floating tree is splintered and worn but wide and buoyant enough to support a person's weight.
en.wikipedia.org

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