s’entre-dévorer, v.r., to devour one another; to ruin one another.

s’entre-dire, v.r., to tell one another. S’— des injures; to call one another names.

s’entre-donner, v.r., to give one another.

entrée, n.f., entry, entrance; mouth; entering, coming in; reception; beginning; introduction, inlet; (cook.) first-course, side-dish; admission-money, entrance-money; custom-duty; entrée (dancing). L’— d’un port; the mouth of a harbor. — et sortie d’un acteur; entrance and exit of an actor. Avoir ses —s; to have free admission or access to, to be on the free-list of a theatre. Droit d’—; custom-duty. Payer l’—; to pay a town-due; (custom-house) to pay duty. Tuyau d’—; (tech.) inlet-pipe. ☉D’—; at first, at the first.

s’entre-fâcher, v.r., to anger one another.

entrefaites, n.f.pl., interval, meantime. Dans ces —, Sur ces —; meanwhile.

entre-filet, n.m., a short paragraph, note.

s’entre-fouetter, v.r., to whip or lash one another.

s’entre-frapper, v.r., to strike one another.

entregent, n.m., (fam.) shrewdness, address, tact. Cet homme fera son chemin, il a de l’—; that man will get on, he possesses tact.