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heavily

  • 1 heavily

    adverb ťažko
    * * *
    • husto

    English-Slovak dictionary > heavily

  • 2 heavily insulated

    • silne izolovaný

    English-Slovak dictionary > heavily insulated

  • 3 pound

    I noun
    1) ((also pound sterling: usually abbreviated to $L when written with a number) the standard unit of British currency, 100 (new) pence.) libra
    2) ((usually abbreviated to lb(s) when written with a number) a measure of weight (0.454 kilograms).) libra
    II noun
    (an enclosure or pen into which stray animals are put: a dog-pound.) ohrada
    III verb
    1) (to hit or strike heavily; to thump: He pounded at the door; The children were pounding on the piano.) búchať
    2) (to walk or run heavily: He pounded down the road.) dupať
    3) (to break up (a substance) into powder or liquid: She pounded the dried herbs.) roztĺcť
    * * *
    • anglická váhová jednotka
    • libra
    • libra (váhová jednotka)
    • libra (peniaz)

    English-Slovak dictionary > pound

  • 4 battleship

    noun (a heavily armed and armoured warship.) bojová loď
    * * *
    • vojnová lod

    English-Slovak dictionary > battleship

  • 5 clump

    I noun
    (a group (eg of trees or bushes).) skupina
    II verb
    (to walk heavily and noisily.) dupať
    * * *
    • skupina
    • pokrivkávat

    English-Slovak dictionary > clump

  • 6 dump

    1. verb
    1) (to set (down) heavily: She dumped the heavy shopping-bag on the table.) hodiť
    2) (to unload and leave (eg rubbish): People dump things over our wall.) odhodiť
    2. noun
    (a place for leaving or storing unwanted things: a rubbish dump.) smetisko
    * * *
    • vypnút
    • vypísat
    • výpis (z pamäte)
    • vysypat
    • zložit
    • smetisko
    • odpojit
    • odložit na smetisko

    English-Slovak dictionary > dump

  • 7 flop

    [flop] 1. past tense, past participle - flopped; verb
    1) (to fall or sit down suddenly and heavily: She flopped into an armchair.) hodiť sa
    2) (to hang or swing about loosely: Her hair flopped over her face.) viať
    3) ((of a theatrical production) to fail; to be unsuccessful: the play flopped.) prepadnúť
    2. noun
    1) ((a) flopping movement.) pád
    2) (a failure: The show was a complete flop.) fiasko
    - floppy disk
    * * *
    • vybuchnút
    • zhoriet
    • zapadák
    • žblnknutie
    • so žblnknutím
    • s plesknutím
    • priamo
    • prepadnút
    • prepadák
    • prepadnutie
    • fiasko
    • flop
    • hodit sebou
    • buchnút
    • búchat sa
    • prudký pokles
    • rovno
    • padavka
    • plieskat
    • plesknutie
    • pád
    • praštit sebou
    • kymácat sa
    • letiet
    • mávat
    • náhly obrat
    • neúspešný
    • obrátit sa

    English-Slovak dictionary > flop

  • 8 hard

    1. adjective
    1) (firm; solid; not easy to break, scratch etc: The ground is too hard to dig.) tvrdý
    2) (not easy to do, learn, solve etc: Is English a hard language to learn?; He is a hard man to please.) ťažký
    3) (not feeling or showing kindness: a hard master.) prísny
    4) ((of weather) severe: a hard winter.) drsný
    5) (having or causing suffering: a hard life; hard times.) ťažký
    6) ((of water) containing many chemical salts and so not easily forming bubbles when soap is added: The water is hard in this part of the country.) tvrdý
    2. adverb
    1) (with great effort: He works very hard; Think hard.) usilovne
    2) (with great force; heavily: Don't hit him too hard; It was raining hard.) silno
    3) (with great attention: He stared hard at the man.) uprene
    4) (to the full extent; completely: The car turned hard right.) úplne
    - hardness
    - hardship
    - hard-and-fast
    - hard-back
    - hard-boiled
    - harddisk
    - hard-earned
    - hard-headed
    - hard-hearted
    - hardware
    - hard-wearing
    - be hard on
    - hard at it
    - hard done by
    - hard lines/luck
    - hard of hearing
    - a hard time of it
    - a hard time
    - hard up
    * * *
    • tvrdý
    • tažký
    • usilovne
    • tvrdo
    • tažko
    • prísny
    • pevný
    • krutý
    • namáhavý
    • namáhavo

    English-Slovak dictionary > hard

  • 9 heavy

    ['hevi]
    1) (having great weight; difficult to lift or carry: a heavy parcel.) ťažký
    2) (having a particular weight: I wonder how heavy our little baby is.) ťažký
    3) (of very great amount, force etc: heavy rain; a heavy blow; The ship capsized in the heavy seas; heavy taxes.) hustý; silný; rozbúrený; ťaživý
    4) (doing something to a great extent: He's a heavy smoker/drinker.) veľký
    5) (dark and dull; looking or feeling stormy: a heavy sky/atmosphere.) zamračený; dusný
    6) (difficult to read, do, understand etc: Books on philosophy are too heavy for me.) ťažký
    7) ((of food) hard to digest: rather heavy pastry.) ťažký
    8) (noisy and clumsy: heavy footsteps.) ťažký, ťažkopádny
    - heaviness
    - heavy-duty
    - heavy industry
    - heavyweight
    - heavy going
    - a heavy heart
    - make heavy weather of
    * * *
    • silný
    • tažký
    • tažkopádny

    English-Slovak dictionary > heavy

  • 10 laden

    ['leidn]
    (carrying a lot; heavily loaded (with): People left the shops laden with purchases; Several laden lorries turned out of the yard.) naložený
    * * *
    • zatažený
    • postihnutý
    • naložený

    English-Slovak dictionary > laden

  • 11 lash

    [læʃ] 1. noun
    1) (an eyelash: She looked at him through her thick lashes.) riasa
    2) (a stroke with a whip etc: The sailor was given twenty lashes as a punishment.) rana bičom
    3) (a thin piece of rope or cord, especially of a whip: a whip with a long, thin lash.) remienok
    2. verb
    1) (to strike with a lash: He lashed the horse with his whip.) bičovať
    2) (to fasten with a rope or cord: All the equipment had to be lashed to the deck of the ship.) priviazať
    3) (to make a sudden or restless movement (with) (a tail): The tiger crouched in the tall grass, its tail lashing from side to side.) šibať
    4) ((of rain) to come down very heavily.) šľahať
    * * *
    • uviazat
    • vyvolat
    • vyšibat
    • vyhrešit
    • zbicovat
    • zlahnút (obilie)
    • zaväzovat
    • šibnút
    • šlahnutie
    • šlahat
    • šibat
    • švihnút
    • udierat
    • prebúdzat
    • karhat
    • bicovanie
    • bicovat
    • bodnutie
    • plieskat
    • pokarhat

    English-Slovak dictionary > lash

  • 12 lumber

    I 1. noun
    1) (old unwanted furniture etc.) haraburda
    2) (timber sawn up.) rezivo
    2. verb
    (to give (someone) an unwanted responsibility: to lumber someone with a job.) zaťažiť
    II verb
    (to move about heavily and clumsily.) vliecť sa
    * * *
    • stavebné drevo
    • haraburdie
    • cárachy
    • rezivo

    English-Slovak dictionary > lumber

  • 13 pant

    [pænt]
    1) (to gasp for breath: He was panting heavily as he ran.) lapať po dychu, dychčať
    2) (to say while gasping for breath: `Wait for me!' she panted.) (za)dychčať
    * * *
    • vzdychat
    • žíznit
    • tažko dýchat
    • túžit
    • týkajúci sa nohavíc
    • fontána
    • dychcat
    • dychtit
    • fucat
    • jajkat
    • búšit
    • pulzovat
    • prudký vzdych
    • lapat dych
    • nádržka
    • nadúvanie
    • oddychovanie
    • nohavicový

    English-Slovak dictionary > pant

  • 14 pitch

    I 1. [pi ] verb
    1) (to set up (a tent or camp): They pitched their tent in the field.) postaviť, (u)táboriť (sa)
    2) (to throw: He pitched the stone into the river.) hodiť
    3) (to (cause to) fall heavily: He pitched forward.) padnúť, dopadnúť, zletieť
    4) ((of a ship) to rise and fall violently: The boat pitched up and down on the rough sea.) húpať sa
    5) (to set (a note or tune) at a particular level: He pitched the tune too high for my voice.) nasadiť
    2. noun
    1) (the field or ground for certain games: a cricket-pitch; a football pitch.) ihrisko
    2) (the degree of highness or lowness of a musical note, voice etc.) výška
    3) (an extreme point or intensity: His anger reached such a pitch that he hit her.) stupeň
    4) (the part of a street etc where a street-seller or entertainer works: He has a pitch on the High Street.) stanovište
    5) (the act of pitching or throwing or the distance something is pitched: That was a long pitch.) hod, vrh
    6) ((of a ship) the act of pitching.) hojdanie
    - pitcher
    - pitched battle
    - pitchfork
    II [pi ] noun
    (a thick black substance obtained from tar: as black as pitch.) asfalt
    - pitch-dark
    * * *
    • výška tónu
    • rozstup
    • postavit (stan)
    • krok
    • odstup

    English-Slovak dictionary > pitch

  • 15 plant

    1. noun
    1) (anything growing from the ground, having a stem, a root and leaves: flowering/tropical plants.) rastlina
    2) (industrial machinery: engineering plant.) zariadenie
    3) (a factory.) továreň
    2. verb
    1) (to put (something) into the ground so that it will grow: We have planted vegetables in the garden.) (za)sadiť
    2) (to make (a garden etc); to cause (a garden etc) to have (plants etc) growing in it: The garden was planted with shrubs; We're going to plant an orchard.) vysadiť
    3) (to place heavily or firmly: He planted himself between her and the door.) postaviť (sa)
    4) (to put in someone's possession, especially as false evidence: He claimed that the police had planted the weapon on his brother.) podstrčiť
    - planter
    * * *
    • vkladat
    • vložit
    • závod
    • zariadenie
    • továren
    • prevádzka
    • prevádzkáren zariadenia
    • agregát
    • regulovaná sústava
    • rastlina
    • podnik

    English-Slovak dictionary > plant

  • 16 pour

    [po:]
    1) (to (cause to) flow in a stream: She poured the milk into a bowl; Water poured down the wall; People were pouring out of the factory.) (vy)liať; valiť sa
    2) ((only with it as subject) to rain heavily: It was pouring this morning.) liať ako z krhly
    * * *
    • silne pršat

    English-Slovak dictionary > pour

  • 17 slug

    I noun
    (a kind of animal like a snail.) slimák
    - sluggishly
    - sluggishness
    II 1. noun
    (a piece of metal, especially an irregularly shaped lump used as a bullet.) strela, guľka
    2. verb
    (to strike (a person) heavily usually causing unconsciousness: The man had been slugged on the back of the neck with a heavy object.) udrieť
    * * *
    • zbierat slimákov
    • známka
    • slimák
    • strela
    • trhlina
    • gulka
    • gulatý pliešok
    • klinec
    • hrudka
    • kalištek
    • brok
    • panák
    • písací válec
    • povalovat sa
    • liatie naprázdno
    • lenošit
    • ležiak
    • nabit broky
    • nabit strelou
    • nepredajný tovar

    English-Slovak dictionary > slug

  • 18 slump

    1. verb
    1) (to fall or sink suddenly and heavily: He slumped wearily into a chair.) klesnúť
    2) ((of prices, stocks, trade etc) to become less; to lose value suddenly: Business has slumped.) prudko klesnúť
    2. noun
    1) (a sudden fall in value, trade etc: a slump in prices.) náhly pokles
    2) (a time of very bad economic conditions, with serious unemployment etc; a depression: There was a serious slump in the 1930s.) kríza
    * * *
    • vyprchat
    • zosuv pôdy
    • zosunút sa
    • zrútit sa
    • sklesnút
    • sadnutie
    • spadnút
    • sadnút si
    • stagnácia
    • spôsobit pokles
    • prevalenie
    • prepadnút sa
    • prevalit sa
    • prepadnutie
    • klesnutie cien
    • klesnút
    • depresia
    • prudko klesnút
    • padnút
    • kríza
    • náhly pokles
    • opadnút

    English-Slovak dictionary > slump

  • 19 snow

    [snəu] 1. noun
    (frozen water vapour that falls to the ground in soft white flakes: We woke up to find snow on the ground; We were caught in a heavy snow-shower; About 15 centimetres of snow had fallen overnight.) sneh
    2. verb
    (to shower down in, or like, flakes of snow: It's snowing heavily.) snežiť
    - snowball
    - snowboard
    - snow-capped
    - snowdrift
    - snowfall
    - snowflake
    - snowstorm
    - snow-white
    - snowed under
    * * *
    • vlasy ako sneh
    • zima
    • snehová pokrývka
    • snehová plán
    • sneženie
    • snežit
    • sneh
    • striebro
    • chumelica
    • ovocný sneh
    • pena
    • koks

    English-Slovak dictionary > snow

  • 20 spice

    1. noun
    1) (a usually strong-smelling, sharp-tasting vegetable substance used to flavour food (eg pepper or nutmeg): We added cinnamon and other spices.) korenie
    2) (anything that adds liveliness or interest: Her arrival added spice to the party.) príchuť, pikantnosť
    2. verb
    (to flavour with spice: The curry had been heavily spiced.) okoreniť
    - spicy
    - spiciness
    * * *
    • korenie
    • korenit
    • okorenit

    English-Slovak dictionary > spice

См. также в других словарях:

  • Heavily — Heav i*ly, adv. [From 2d {Heavy}.] 1. In a heavy manner; with great weight; as, to bear heavily on a thing; to be heavily loaded. [1913 Webster] Heavily interested in those schemes of emigration. The Century. [1913 Webster] 2. As if burdened with …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • heavily — [hev′ə lē] adv. in a heavy manner; specif., a) with a heavy weight [heavily burdened] b) as if with a heavy weight; slowly; clumsily; laboriously [to rise heavily from one s seat] c) oppressively; severely [heavily taxed] d) abundantly [heavily… …   English World dictionary

  • heavily — UK US /ˈhevɪli/ adverb ► a lot or to a large degree: »In France and Switzerland, the agriculture sector is heavily subsidised. »China is heavily dependent on coal, which currently accounts for about 68% of its energy. »We are looking to invest… …   Financial and business terms

  • heavily — O.E. hefiglice violently, intensely; sorrowfully; sluggishly, from hefig (see HEAVY (Cf. heavy)) + LY (Cf. ly) (2) …   Etymology dictionary

  • heavily — heav|i|ly [ hevıli ] adverb *** ▸ 1 in large amounts ▸ 2 very ▸ 3 to a large degree ▸ 4 with a lot of force ▸ 5 in uncomfortable way ▸ 6 slowly and sadly ▸ 7 slowly and loudly ▸ + PHRASES 1. ) in large amounts: They had borrowed heavily to buy… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • heavily */*/*/ — UK [ˈhevɪlɪ] / US adverb 1) to a large degree an area that relied heavily on the mines for jobs heavily populated urban areas Her work was heavily influenced by her father s. 2) very Both of us are heavily involved in charity work. heavily… …   English dictionary

  • heavily — heav|ily W3 [ˈhevıli] adv 1.) in large amounts, to a high degree, or with great severity = ↑very ▪ I became heavily involved in politics. ▪ The report was heavily criticized in the press. ▪ a heavily populated area ▪ thousands of heavily armed… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • heavily — [ˈhevɪli] adv 1) very, or to a large degree heavily populated areas[/ex] Her work was heavily influenced by her father s.[/ex] The men were heavily armed (= carrying a lot of weapons).[/ex] 2) in large amounts She had been smoking heavily since… …   Dictionary for writing and speaking English

  • heavily — adverb 1. to a considerable degree (Freq. 23) he relied heavily on others data • Syn: ↑to a great extent • Derived from adjective: ↑heavy 2. in a heavy footed manner (Freq. 7) …   Useful english dictionary

  • heavily — /hev euh lee/, adv. 1. with a great weight or burden: a heavily loaded wagon. 2. in a manner suggestive of carrying a great weight; ponderously; lumberingly: He walked heavily across the room. 3. in an oppressive manner: Cares weigh heavily upon… …   Universalium

  • heavily — heav•i•ly [[t]ˈhɛv ə li[/t]] adv. 1) with a great weight: heavily loaded[/ex] 2) ponderously; lumberingly: to walk heavily[/ex] 3) oppressively: Cares weigh heavily upon him[/ex] 4) severely; intensely: to suffer heavily[/ex] 5) densely; thickly …   From formal English to slang

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