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lass’
o'er

Oxford-Hachette French Dictionary

o'er [Brit ɔː, ˈəʊə, Am ɔr, oʊr] liter

o'er → over

over2 [Brit ˈəʊvə, Am ˈoʊvər] N SPORTS

I. over1 [Brit ˈəʊvə, Am ˈoʊvər] PREP Over is used after many verbs in English (change over, fall over, lean over etc.). For translations, consult the appropriate verb entry (change, fall, lean etc.).
over is often used with another preposition in English (to, in, on) without altering the meaning. In this case over is usually not translated in French: to be over in France = être en France; to swim over to sb = nager vers qn.
over is often used with nouns in English when talking about superiority (control over, priority over etc.) or when giving the cause of something (delays over, trouble over etc.). For translations, consult the appropriate noun entry (control, priority, delay, trouble etc.).
over is often used as a prefix in verb combinations (overeat), adjective combinations (overconfident) and noun combinations (overcoat). These combinations are treated as headwords in the dictionary.
For particular usages see the entry below.

1. over (across the top of):

2. over (from or on the other side of):

3. over (above but not touching):

4. over (covering, surrounding):

5. over (physically higher than):

6. over (more than):

7. over (in rank, position):

to be over sb (gen)
to be over sb MIL

8. over (in the course of):

9. over (recovered from):

to be over illness, operation, loss

10. over (by means of):

11. over (everywhere in):

12. over (because of):

rire de qc

13. over MATH:

12 over 3 is 4

II. over and above PREP

III. over1 [Brit ˈəʊvə, Am ˈoʊvər] ADJ ADV

1. over (use with verbs not covered in NOTE):

2. over (finished):

to be over term, meeting, incident:
to be over war:

3. over (more):

4. over (remaining):

2 into 5 goes 2 and 1 over

5. over (to one's house, country):

to invite or ask sb over

6. over RADIO, TV:

7. over (showing repetition):

8. over Brit (excessively):