Перевод: с английского на чешский

с чешского на английский

cattle

  • 1 cattle

    ['kætl]
    (grass-eating animals, especially cows, bulls and oxen: That farmer does not keep sheep but he keeps several breeds of cattle.) dobytek
    * * *
    • hovado
    • hovězí dobytek
    • dobytek

    English-Czech dictionary > cattle

  • 2 all hat and no cattle

    • předstírání bohatství

    English-Czech dictionary > all hat and no cattle

  • 3 dairy cows/cattle

    plural; see dairy cow

    English-Czech dictionary > dairy cows/cattle

  • 4 brand

    [brænd] 1. noun
    1) (a maker's name or trademark: a new brand; ( also adjective) a brand name.) obchodní značka
    2) (a variety: He has his own brand of humour.) druh, typ
    3) (a mark on cattle etc to show who owns them, made with a hot iron.) cejch
    2. verb
    1) (to mark cattle etc with a hot iron.) (o)cejchovat
    2) (to make a permanent impression on: His name is branded on my memory.) vrýt
    3) (to attach (permanent) disgrace to: branded for life as a thief.) poznamenat, ocejchovat
    * * *
    • značka
    • označit
    • obchodní značka
    • cejchovat
    • druh zboží

    English-Czech dictionary > brand

  • 5 mad cow disease

    noun (a fatal disease of cattle, which can affect also humans who eat meat from infected cattle.) nemoc šílených krav
    * * *
    • nemoc šílených krav

    English-Czech dictionary > mad cow disease

  • 6 browse

    1. verb
    1) ((of animals) to feed (on shoots or leaves of plants).) pást se
    2) ((of people) to glance through a book etc casually: I don't want to buy a book - I'm just browsing.) prohlížet, listovat
    3) (to search computer material, especially on a worldwide network.) prohledávat, hledat
    2. noun
    1) (shoots, twigs or leaves as food for cattle.) pastva
    2) (an act of browsing.) prohlížení
    * * *
    • prohlížet
    • pročítat
    • brouzdat

    English-Czech dictionary > browse

  • 7 butcher

    ['bu ə] 1. noun
    (a person whose business is to kill cattle etc for food and/or sell their flesh.) řezník
    2. verb
    1) (to kill for food.) porážet (dobytek)
    2) (to kill cruelly: All the prisoners were butchered by the dictator.) povraždit, zavraždit
    * * *
    • řezník
    • řeznice

    English-Czech dictionary > butcher

  • 8 clover

    ['kləuvə]
    (a plant with leaves in three parts, used as food for cattle etc.) jetel
    * * *
    • jetel

    English-Czech dictionary > clover

  • 9 collective

    [-tiv]
    1) (of a number of people etc combined into one group: This success was the result of a collective effort.) kolektivní
    2) (of a noun, taking a singular verb but standing for many things taken as a whole: `Cattle' is a collective noun.) hromadný
    * * *
    • sdílený
    • společný
    • kolektivní
    • kolektiv

    English-Czech dictionary > collective

  • 10 cow

    I noun
    1) (the female of cattle used for giving milk: He has ten cows and a bull.) kráva
    2) (the female of certain other animals eg the elephant, whale.) samice
    - cowherd
    - cowhide
    II verb
    (to subdue or control through fear: The pupil was cowed by the headmaster's harsh words.) vyděsit
    * * *
    • kráva

    English-Czech dictionary > cow

  • 11 cowboy

    noun (in the United States, a man who looks after cattle on a ranch.) kovboj, honák
    * * *
    • kovboj

    English-Czech dictionary > cowboy

  • 12 die off

    (to die quickly or in large numbers: Herds of cattle were dying off because of the drought.) vymírat
    * * *
    • vymřít

    English-Czech dictionary > die off

  • 13 drive

    1. past tense - drove; verb
    1) (to control or guide (a car etc): Do you want to drive (the car), or shall I?) řídit
    2) (to take, bring etc in a car: My mother is driving me to the airport.) (od)vézt
    3) (to force or urge along: Two men and a dog were driving a herd of cattle across the road.) hnát
    4) (to hit hard: He drove a nail into the door; He drove a golf-ball from the tee.) zatlouci; odpálit
    5) (to cause to work by providing the necessary power: This mill is driven by water.) pohánět
    2. noun
    1) (a journey in a car, especially for pleasure: We decided to go for a drive.) projížďka
    2) (a private road leading from a gate to a house etc: The drive is lined with trees.) příjezdová cesta
    3) (energy and enthusiasm: I think he has the drive needed for this job.) energie, elán
    4) (a special effort: We're having a drive to save electricity.) kampaň
    5) (in sport, a hard stroke (with a golf-club, a cricket bat etc).) úder
    6) ((computers) a disk drive.) mechanika, jednotka
    - driver's license
    - drive-in
    - drive-through
    - driving licence
    - be driving at
    - drive off
    - drive on
    * * *
    • vézt
    • vozit
    • zavézt
    • řídit
    • odpal
    • jezdit
    • honit
    • hnát
    • drive/drove/driven
    • disk

    English-Czech dictionary > drive

  • 14 feed

    [fi:d] 1. past tense, past participle - fed; verb
    1) (to give food to: He fed the child with a spoon.) krmit
    2) ((with on) to eat: Cows feed on grass.) živit se, pást se na
    2. noun
    (food especially for a baby or animals: Have you given the baby his feed?; cattle feed.) dávka krmení, jídlo; krmení, žrádlo
    * * *
    • feed/fed/fed
    • krmit
    • nakrmit
    • napájet

    English-Czech dictionary > feed

  • 15 float

    [fləut] 1. verb
    (to (make something) stay on the surface of a liquid: A piece of wood was floating in the stream.) plout
    2. noun
    1) (something that floats on a fishing-line: If the float moves, there is probably a fish on the hook.) splávek
    2) (a vehicle for transporting certain things: a milk-float; a cattle-float.) valník
    - floating restaurant
    * * *
    • vznášet se
    • plovák
    • plavit
    • plavat
    • plout
    • fluktuovat
    • oběh

    English-Czech dictionary > float

  • 16 forage

    ['fori‹] 1. verb
    ((often with about) to search thoroughly: He foraged about in the cupboard; He foraged for food in the cupboard.) slídit, shánět se (po)
    2. noun
    (food for horses and cattle.) píce
    * * *
    • shánět
    • krmivo
    • drancovat

    English-Czech dictionary > forage

  • 17 goad

    [ɡəud] 1. verb
    (to urge or force (a person etc) to do something by annoying (him etc): I was goaded into being rude to him.) přimět, donutit
    2. noun
    (a sharp-pointed stick used for driving cattle etc.) bodec
    * * *
    • podněcovat
    • popohánět
    • osten
    • bodec

    English-Czech dictionary > goad

  • 18 hay

    [hei]
    (grass, cut and dried, used as food for cattle etc.) seno
    - hayrick
    - haywire
    * * *
    • seno

    English-Czech dictionary > hay

  • 19 herd

    [hə:d] 1. noun
    (a group of animals of one kind that stay, or are kept, together: a herd of cattle; a herd of elephant(s).) stádo
    2. verb
    (to gather together, or be brought together, in a group: The dogs herded the sheep together; The tourists were herded into a tiny room.) shoufovat se, nahnat (do houfu)
    - - herd
    - herdsman
    - the herd instinct
    * * *
    • stádo

    English-Czech dictionary > herd

  • 20 livestock

    noun (domestic animals, especially horses, cattle, sheep, and pigs.) živý inventář
    * * *
    • dobytek

    English-Czech dictionary > livestock

См. также в других словарях:

  • Cattle — Cat tle (k[a^]t t l), n. pl. [OE. calet, chatel, goods, property, OF. catel, chatel, LL. captale, capitale, goods, property, esp. cattle, fr. L. capitals relating to the head, chief; because in early ages beasts constituted the chief part of a… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • CATTLE —    Cattle had been reared since the Neolithic in central Italy, although it has recently been suggested by geneticists that some of the white cattle distinctive of northern Etruria today may have had a more recent eastern Mediterranean origin.… …   Historical Dictionary of the Etruscans

  • cattle — mid 13c., from Anglo Fr. catel property (O.N.Fr. catel, O.Fr. chatel), from M.L. capitale property, stock, neuter of Latin adj. capitalis principal, chief, from caput head (gen. capitis; see HEAD (Cf. head)). Cf. sense development of FEE …   Etymology dictionary

  • cattle — [n] bovine animals beasts, bovid mammals, bulls, calves, cows, dogies*, herd, livestock, longhorn*, moo cows*, oxen, shorthorns, stock, strays; concept 394 …   New thesaurus

  • cattle — ► PLURAL NOUN ▪ large ruminant animals with horns and cloven hoofs, domesticated for meat or milk or as beasts of burden; cows and oxen. ORIGIN Old French chatel chattel …   English terms dictionary

  • cattle — [kat′ l] pl.n. [ME & Anglo Fr catel (OFr chatel) < ML captale, property, stock < L capitalis, principal, chief < caput, HEAD: orig. sense in var. CHATTEL] 1. Archaic farm animals collectively; livestock 2. domesticated oxen collectively; …   English World dictionary

  • Cattle — Cow redirects here. For other uses, see Cow (disambiguation). For other uses, see Cattle (disambiguation). Cattle …   Wikipedia

  • cattle — n. 1) to breed; raise (esp. AE), rear (BE) cattle 2) to drive; graze; round up cattle 3) to brand cattle 4) dairy; prize cattle 5) cattle graze 6) a head of cattle; a herd of cattle 7) young cattle are calves 8) female cattle are cows 9) male… …   Combinatory dictionary

  • CATTLE — The domestication of cattle began in prehistoric times. Ancient Sumerian inscriptions refer to the raising of cattle, and from the third millennium B.C.E. they are depicted in Egyptian, Assyrian, and Babylonian drawings as used for plowing (see… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • cattle — cattleless, adj. /kat l/, n. (used with a pl. v.) 1. bovine animals, esp. domesticated members of the genus Bos. 2. Bib. such animals together with other domesticated quadrupeds, as horses, swine, etc. 3. Disparaging. human beings. [1175 1225; ME …   Universalium

  • cattle — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ beef, dairy ▪ Highland, longhorn, shorthorn ▪ native ▪ wild ▪ …   Collocations dictionary

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