répercuter, v.a., to repercuss, to drive back; to reverberate, to echo; to reflect; (med.) to repel, to drive in.
reperdre, v.a., to lose again.
repère, n.m., mark, land-mark; (arts) bench-mark; joining-mark; (mec.) datum. Point de —; land-mark, indication, direction.
répertoire, n.m., table, list, catalogue; repertory; (com.) alphabet, alphabetical index. Pièce qui fait partie du —, pièce restée au —; (thea.) stock-piece. Être un —; (pers.) to be a living chronicle. Pièce de —; stock-piece.
répétailler, v.a., to repeat over and over again, to keep on repeating.
répéter, v.a., to repeat; to say again, to tell again; to recite; to reflect; (jur.) to claim again, to demand again; to give private lessons to, to be private tutor to; (thea.) to rehearse. Faire — à quelqu’un sa leçon; to hear any one say his lesson. Il répète ces deux élèves; (at school) he is private tutor to these two boys. — une comédie; to rehearse a comedy. — une chose contre quelqu’un; (jur.) to claim (a thing) from any one, to redemand.
se répéter, v.r., to be repeated; to copy one’s self; to be renewed, to occur again; always to say the same thing.
répétiteur, n.m., tutor, private master; assistant professor (of certain schools); (nav.) repeater, repeating-ship; call-boy.
répétition, n.f., repetition; action for; (jur.) renewal, reproduction; replica, duplicate; recovery of money; private tuition; (thea.) rehearsal. Pièce en —; play in rehearsal. Montre à —; repeating-watch, repeater. Donner des —s; to give private tuition, to give private lessons.
repétrir, v.a., to knead again; to form again.