Перевод: с английского на чешский

с чешского на английский

on+earth+(other)

  • 1 bank

    I 1. [bæŋk] noun
    1) (a mound or ridge (of earth etc): The child climbed the bank to pick flowers.) násep
    2) (the ground at the edge of a river, lake etc: The river overflowed its banks.) břeh
    3) (a raised area of sand under the sea: a sand-bank.) mělčina
    2. verb
    1) ((often with up) to form into a bank or banks: The earth was banked up against the wall of the house.) navršit, navézt
    2) (to tilt (an aircraft etc) while turning: The plane banked steeply.) naklánět se
    II 1. [bæŋk] noun
    1) (a place where money is lent or exchanged, or put for safety and/or to acquire interest: He has plenty of money in the bank; I must go to the bank today.) banka
    2) (a place for storing other valuable material: A blood bank.) banka
    2. verb
    (to put into a bank: He banks his wages every week.) vložit do banky
    - bank book
    - banker's card
    - bank holiday
    - bank-note
    - bank on
    III [bæŋk] noun
    (a collection of rows (of instruments etc): The modern pilot has banks of instruments.) řada
    * * *
    • spořitelna
    • stráň
    • svah
    • mělčina
    • násep
    • bankovní
    • banka
    • břeh

    English-Czech dictionary > bank

  • 2 Pole

    I [pəul] noun
    1) (the north or south end of the Earth's axis: the North/South Pole.) pól
    2) (the points in the heavens opposite the Earth's North and South Poles, around which stars seem to turn.) pól
    3) (either of the opposite ends of a magnet: The opposite poles of magnets attract each other.) pól
    4) (either of the opposite terminals of an electric battery: the positive/negative pole.) pól
    - polar bear
    - the pole star
    - be poles apart
    II [pəul]
    (a long, thin, rounded piece of wood, metal etc: a telegraph pole; a tent pole.) sloup, tyč
    * * *
    • Polák
    • Pole

    English-Czech dictionary > Pole

  • 3 pole

    I [pəul] noun
    1) (the north or south end of the Earth's axis: the North/South Pole.) pól
    2) (the points in the heavens opposite the Earth's North and South Poles, around which stars seem to turn.) pól
    3) (either of the opposite ends of a magnet: The opposite poles of magnets attract each other.) pól
    4) (either of the opposite terminals of an electric battery: the positive/negative pole.) pól
    - polar bear
    - the pole star
    - be poles apart
    II [pəul]
    (a long, thin, rounded piece of wood, metal etc: a telegraph pole; a tent pole.) sloup, tyč
    * * *
    • tyč
    • pól
    • kůl

    English-Czech dictionary > pole

  • 4 Sun

    1. noun
    1) (the round body in the sky that gives light and heat to the earth: The Sun is nearly 150 million kilometres away from the Earth.) Slunce
    2) (any of the fixed stars: Do other suns have planets revolving round them?) slunce
    3) (light and heat from the sun; sunshine: We sat in the sun; In Britain they don't get enough sun; The sun has faded the curtains.) slunce
    2. verb
    (to expose (oneself) to the sun's rays: He's sunning himself in the garden.) slunit se
    - sunny
    - sunniness
    - sunbathe
    - sunbeam
    - sunburn
    - sunburned
    - sunburnt
    - sundial
    - sundown
    - sunflower
    - sunglasses
    - sunlight
    - sunlit
    - sunrise
    - sunset
    - sunshade
    - sunshine
    - sunstroke
    - suntan
    - catch the sun
    - under the sun
    * * *
    • Slunce
    • Sun

    English-Czech dictionary > Sun

  • 5 sun

    1. noun
    1) (the round body in the sky that gives light and heat to the earth: The Sun is nearly 150 million kilometres away from the Earth.) Slunce
    2) (any of the fixed stars: Do other suns have planets revolving round them?) slunce
    3) (light and heat from the sun; sunshine: We sat in the sun; In Britain they don't get enough sun; The sun has faded the curtains.) slunce
    2. verb
    (to expose (oneself) to the sun's rays: He's sunning himself in the garden.) slunit se
    - sunny
    - sunniness
    - sunbathe
    - sunbeam
    - sunburn
    - sunburned
    - sunburnt
    - sundial
    - sundown
    - sunflower
    - sunglasses
    - sunlight
    - sunlit
    - sunrise
    - sunset
    - sunshade
    - sunshine
    - sunstroke
    - suntan
    - catch the sun
    - under the sun
    * * *
    • výsluní
    • slunit
    • sluneční
    • sluníčko

    English-Czech dictionary > sun

  • 6 world

    [wə:ld]
    1) (the planet Earth: every country of the world.) svět
    2) (the people who live on the planet Earth: The whole world is waiting for a cure for cancer.) svět
    3) (any planet etc: people from other worlds.) svět
    4) (a state of existence: Many people believe that after death the soul enters the next world; Do concentrate! You seem to be living in another world.) svět
    5) (an area of life or activity: the insect world; the world of the international businessman.) svět
    6) (a great deal: The holiday did him a/the world of good.) velmi mnoho
    7) (the lives and ways of ordinary people: He's been a monk for so long that he knows nothing of the (outside) world.) svět
    - worldliness
    - worldwide
    - World Wide Web
    - the best of both worlds
    - for all the world
    - out of this world
    - what in the world? - what in the world
    * * *
    • svět
    • světový

    English-Czech dictionary > world

  • 7 moon

    [mu:n] 1. noun
    1) (the heavenly body that moves once round the earth in a month and reflects light from the sun: The moon was shining brightly; Spacemen landed on the moon.) měsíc
    2) (any of the similar bodies moving round the other planets: the moons of Jupiter.) měsíc
    - moonbeam
    - moonlight
    2. verb
    (to work at a second job, often at night, in addition to one's regular job: He earns so little that he has to moonlight.) mít druhé zaměstnání (často v noci)
    - moonlit
    - moon about/around
    * * *
    • měsíc

    English-Czech dictionary > moon

  • 8 rake

    [reik] 1. noun
    1) (a tool which consists of a usually metal bar with teeth at the end of a long handle, used for smoothing earth, gathering eg leaves together etc.) hrábě
    2) (any similar tool: a croupier's rake in a casino.) hrabičky
    3) (the act of raking: to give the soil a rake.) (u)hrabání
    2. verb
    1) (to smooth or gather with a rake: I'll rake these grass-cuttings up later.) hrabat
    2) ((often with out) to remove the ashes from (a fire) with a poker etc.) prohrábnout
    3) (to fire guns at (a target) from one end of it to the other: The soldiers raked the entire village with machine-gun fire.) pokropit palbou
    - rake up
    * * *
    • hrabat
    • hrábě

    English-Czech dictionary > rake

  • 9 salt

    [so:lt] 1. noun
    1) ((also common salt) sodium chloride, a white substance frequently used for seasoning: The soup needs more salt.) sůl
    2) (any other substance formed, like common salt, from a metal and an acid.) sůl
    3) (a sailor, especially an experienced one: an old salt.) mořský vlk
    2. adjective
    (containing, tasting of, preserved in salt: salt water; salt pork.) slaný
    3. verb
    (to put salt on or in: Have you salted the potatoes?) (o)solit
    - saltness
    - salty
    - saltiness
    - bath salts
    - the salt of the earth
    - take something with a grain/pinch of salt
    - take with a grain/pinch of salt
    * * *
    • soli
    • sůl
    • nasolit

    English-Czech dictionary > salt

  • 10 space

    [speis] 1. noun
    1) (a gap; an empty or uncovered place: I couldn't find a space for my car.) místo; mezera
    2) (room; the absence of objects; the area available for use: Have you enough space to turn round?; Is there space for one more?) prostor; vůle
    3) ((often outer space) the region outside the Earth's atmosphere, in which all stars and other planets etc are situated: travellers through space.) mimozemský prostor
    2. verb
    ((also space out) to set (things) apart from one another: He spaced the rows of potatoes half a metre apart.) rozmístit
    - spacious
    - spaciously
    - spaciousness
    - space-age
    - spacecraft
    - spaceship
    - spacesuit
    * * *
    • vesmír
    • prostranství
    • prostor
    • mezera
    • místo

    English-Czech dictionary > space

  • 11 star

    1. noun
    1) (the fixed bodies in the sky, which are really distant suns: The Sun is a star, and the Earth is one of its planets.) hvězda
    2) (any of the bodies in the sky appearing as points of light: The sky was full of stars.) hvězda
    3) (an object, shape or figure with a number of pointed rays, usually five or six, often used as a means of marking quality etc: The teacher stuck a gold star on the child's neat exercise book; a four-star hotel.) hvězdička
    4) (a leading actor or actress or other well-known performer eg in sport etc: a film/television star; a football star; ( also adjective) She has had many star rôles in films.) hvězda; hlavní role
    2. verb
    1) (to play a leading role in a play, film etc: She has starred in two recent films.) hrát hlavní roli
    2) ((of a film etc) to have (a certain actor etc) as its leading performer: The film starred Elvis Presley.) uvést v hlavní roli
    - starry
    - starfish
    - starlight
    - starlit
    - star turn
    - see stars
    - thank one's lucky stars
    * * *
    • hvězda

    English-Czech dictionary > star

  • 12 steam

    [sti:m] 1. noun
    1) (a gas or vapour that rises from hot or boiling water or other liquid: Steam rose from the plate of soup / the wet earth in the hot sun; a cloud of steam; ( also adjective) A sauna is a type of steam bath.) pára; parní
    2) (power or energy obtained from this: The machinery is driven by steam; Diesel fuel has replaced steam on the railways; ( also adjective) steam power, steam engines.) pára; parní
    2. verb
    1) (to give out steam: A kettle was steaming on the stove.) vypouštět páru
    2) ((of a ship, train etc) to move by means of steam: The ship steamed across the bay.) plout
    3) (to cook by steam: The pudding should be steamed for four hours.) vařit v páře
    - steamer
    - steamy
    - steamboat
    - steamship
    - steam engine
    - steam roller
    - full steam ahead
    - get steamed up
    - get up steam
    - let off steam
    - run out of steam
    - steam up
    - under one's own steam
    * * *
    • vařit v páře
    • pára

    English-Czech dictionary > steam

  • 13 terrace

    ['terəs] 1. noun
    1) ((one of a number of) raised level banks of earth etc, like large steps, on the side of a hill etc: Vines are grown on terraces on the hillside.) terasa
    2) (a row of houses connected to each other.) řada domů
    2. verb
    (to make into a terrace or terraces: The hillside has been terraced to make new vineyards.) terasovitě upravit
    * * *
    • terasa
    • balkon

    English-Czech dictionary > terrace

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