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wickedness

  • 1 wickedness

    noun špatnost
    * * *
    • zlo
    • podlost
    • špatnost

    English-Czech dictionary > wickedness

  • 2 enormity

    1) (great wickedness.) ohavnost
    2) (hugeness.) obrovitost
    * * *
    • obrovitost

    English-Czech dictionary > enormity

  • 3 evil

    ['i:vl] 1. adjective
    (very bad; wicked; sinful: evil intentions; an evil man; He looks evil; evil deeds; an evil tongue.) špatný, zlý
    2. noun
    1) (wrong-doing, harm or wickedness: He tries to ignore all the evil in the world; Do not speak evil of anyone.) zlo, něco zlého
    2) (anything evil, eg crime, misfortune etc: London in the eighteenth century was a place of crime, filth, poverty and other evils.) pohroma
    - evilly
    - evilness
    - evil-doer
    * * *
    • zle
    • zlý
    • zlo

    English-Czech dictionary > evil

  • 4 grieve

    [ɡri:v]
    1) (to cause to feel great sorrow: Your wickedness grieves me deeply.) rmoutit
    2) (to feel sorrow.) trápit se
    * * *
    • truchlit
    • rmoutit

    English-Czech dictionary > grieve

  • 5 inconceivable

    [inkən'si:vəbl]
    (not able to be imagined or believed: inconceivable wickedness.) nepředstavitelný
    * * *
    • nemyslitelný
    • nepředstavitelný

    English-Czech dictionary > inconceivable

  • 6 iniquity

    [i'nikwiti]
    plural - iniquities; noun
    ((an act of) wickedness.) zločinnost
    * * *
    • hanebnost
    • ničemnost
    • nespravedlnost
    • nespravedlivost

    English-Czech dictionary > iniquity

  • 7 melodrama

    1) (a (type of) play in which emotions and the goodness or wickedness of the characters are exaggerated greatly.) melodrama
    2) ((an example of) behaviour similar to a play of this sort: He makes a melodrama out of everything that happens.) melodrama
    - melodramatically
    * * *
    • melodrama

    English-Czech dictionary > melodrama

  • 8 notorious

    [nə'to:riəs]
    (well-known for badness or wickedness: a notorious murderer.) nechvalně známý
    - notoriously
    * * *
    • známý
    • proslulý
    • notorický

    English-Czech dictionary > notorious

  • 9 pardon

    1. verb
    1) (to forgive: Pardon my asking, but can you help me?) prominout
    2) (to free (from prison, punishment etc): The king pardoned the prisoners.) udělit milost
    2. noun
    1) (forgiveness: He prayed for pardon for his wickedness.) odpuštění
    2) (a (document) freeing from prison or punishment: He was granted a pardon.) amnestie
    3. interjection
    (used to indicate that one has not heard properly what was said: Pardon? Could you repeat that last sentence?) prosím?
    - I beg your pardon
    - pardon me
    * * *
    • prominout
    • pardon
    • odpustit
    • omluvit
    • milost

    English-Czech dictionary > pardon

  • 10 prevail

    [pri'veil]
    1) ((with over or against) to win or succeed: With God's help we shall prevail over sin and wickedness; Truth must prevail in the end.) zvítězit
    2) (to be most usual or common: This mistaken belief still prevails in some parts of the country.) převládat; trvat
    - prevalent
    - prevalence
    - prevail on
    - upon
    * * *
    • zvítězit

    English-Czech dictionary > prevail

  • 11 sin

    [sin] 1. noun
    (wickedness, or a wicked act, especially one that breaks a religious law: It is a sin to envy the possessions of other people; Lying and cheating are both sins.) hřích
    2. verb
    (to do wrong; to commit a sin, especially in the religious sense: Forgive me, Father, for I have sinned.) (z)hřešit
    - sinful
    - sinfully
    - sinfulness
    * * *
    • zhřešit
    • hřešit
    • hřích

    English-Czech dictionary > sin

  • 12 villainy

    plural - villainies; noun ((an instance of) wickedness: His villainy was well known.) ničemnost
    * * *
    • ničemnost
    • ničemně
    • darebáctví

    English-Czech dictionary > villainy

  • 13 wicked

    ['wikid]
    (evil; sinful: He is a wicked man; That was a wicked thing to do.) špatný, hříšný
    - wickedness
    * * *
    • zlý
    • zlomyslný
    • prostopášný
    • hříšný
    • nemravný

    English-Czech dictionary > wicked

См. также в других словарях:

  • Wickedness — Wick ed*ness, n. 1. The quality or state of being wicked; departure from the rules of the divine or the moral law; evil disposition or practices; immorality; depravity; sinfulness. [1913 Webster] God saw that the wickedness of man was great. Gen …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • wickedness — index atrocity, corruption, delinquency (misconduct), dishonor (shame), disrepute, mischief, mis …   Law dictionary

  • wickedness — c.1300, from WICKED (Cf. wicked) + NESS (Cf. ness) …   Etymology dictionary

  • wickedness — The Socratic thesis or paradox that nobody does wrong willingly is challenged by wickedness, which in some moral systems is universal (see original sin ), and in others at least occasional. Wickedness is often assimilated to loss of control (see… …   Philosophy dictionary

  • wickedness — noun /ˈwɪkɪdnəs/ a) The state of being wicked; evil disposition; immorality. We speak of wickedness as something in the soul different from virtue. b) A wicked or sinful thing or act; morally bad or …   Wiktionary

  • wickedness — wicked ► ADJECTIVE 1) evil or morally wrong. 2) playfully mischievous. 3) informal excellent; wonderful. DERIVATIVES wickedly adverb wickedness noun. ORIGIN probably from WICCA(Cf. ↑ …   English terms dictionary

  • wickedness — noun Date: 14th century 1. the quality or state of being wicked 2. something wicked …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • wickedness — /wik id nis/, n. 1. the quality or state of being wicked. 2. wicked conduct or practices. 3. a wicked act or thing. [1250 1300; ME; see WICKED, NESS] * * * …   Universalium

  • wickedness — Synonyms and related words: aberrance, aberrancy, abnormality, arrantness, badness, baseness, bitchiness, corruption, criminality, cussedness, damnability, debt, delinquency, depravity, deviance, deviancy, devilishness, devilment, devilry,… …   Moby Thesaurus

  • wickedness — I (Roget s IV) n. Syn. evil, depravity, immorality, sinfulness; see blasphemy . II (Roget s Thesaurus II) noun 1. That which is morally bad or objectionable: evil, iniquity, peccancy, sin, wrong. See RIGHT. 2. Degrading, immoral acts or habits:… …   English dictionary for students

  • wickedness — sb. Pol. S. 230 …   Oldest English Words

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