-
1 excited
-
2 keyed up
(excited; tense.) rozrušený; napätý -
3 excite
1) (to cause or rouse strong feelings of expectation, happiness etc in: The children were excited at the thought of the party.) vzrušiť2) (to cause or rouse (feelings, emotions etc): The book did not excite my interest.) vyvolať•- excitability
- excited
- excitedly
- excitement
- exciting* * *• vzrušit• budit• rozlúcit -
4 agitate
['æ‹iteit]1) (to make (someone) excited and anxious: The news agitated her.) rozrušiť2) (to try to arouse public feeling and action: That group is agitating for prison reform.) agitovať3) (to shake: The tree was agitated by the wind.) zmietať•- agitated- agitation
- agitator* * *• vzrušenie• zmietat(sa)• triast• agitovat• agitácia• rozrušit -
5 agog
[ə'ɡoɡ](eager and excited: We were all agog at the news.) dychtivý, plný očakávania* * *• posadnutý -
6 calm
1. adjective1) (still or quiet: a calm sea; The weather was calm.) pokojný2) (not anxious or excited: a calm person/expression; Please keep calm!) pokojný2. noun1) ((a period of) absence of wind and large waves.) bezvetrie2) (peace and quiet: He enjoyed the calm of the library.) ticho3. verb(to make calm: Calm yourself!) upokojiť sa- calmly- calmness
- calm down* * *• sebaistý• samozrejmý• tichý• ticho• upokojit (sa)• drzý• bezvetrie• cynický• chladný• pokoj• pokojný• nevzrušený -
7 carry
['kæri]1) (to take from one place etc to another: She carried the child over the river; Flies carry disease.) (pre)niesť, prenášať2) (to go from one place to another: Sound carries better over water.) niesť sa3) (to support: These stone columns carry the weight of the whole building.) niesť4) (to have or hold: This job carries great responsibility.) niesť so sebou5) (to approve (a bill etc) by a majority of votes: The parliamentary bill was carried by forty-two votes.) schváliť (hlasovaním)6) (to hold (oneself) in a certain way: He carries himself like a soldier.) niesť sa, držať sa•((slang) a fuss; excited behaviour.)
výstredné správanie- carry-cot((of bags or cases) that passengers can carry with them on board a plane.)
príručná batožina
- be/get carried away
- carry forward
- carry off
- carry on
- carry out
- carry weight* * *• uverejnit• viest• vydržat• vzdat poctu• vyhrat• zapôsobit• zaniest• zmocnit sa• zvážat• strhnút• tahat• uchvátit• presadit sa• predávat• prenášat• predlžovat• prenos• priniest• dorucit• dopravovat• dopravit• držat• delit• mat pri sebe• natahovat• nosit• niest• odprevadit -
8 ferment
1. [fə'ment] verb1) (to (make something) go through a particular chemical change (as when yeast is added to dough in the making of bread): Grape juice must be fermented before it becomes wine.) kvasiť2) (to excite or be excited: He is the kind of person to ferment trouble.) pôsobiť2. ['fə:ment] noun(a state of excitement: The whole city was in a ferment.) nepokoj* * *• kvasenie• kvas• kvasit -
9 feverish
1) (having a slight fever: She seems a bit feverish tonight.) horúčkový2) (restlessly excited: a feverish air.) horúčkovitý, nepokojný* * *• vyvolávajúci horúcku• zimnicný• horúckovitý -
10 frantic
['fræntik]1) (anxious or very worried: The frantic mother searched for her child.) zúfalý2) (wildly excited: the frantic pace of modern life.) rušný, horúčkovitý•* * *• zúrivý• šialený (cím) -
11 mania
-
12 manic
['mænik]1) (of, or suffering from, mania: She's in a manic state.) maniakálny, maniacky2) (extremely energetic, active and excited: The new manager is one of those manic people who can't rest even for a minute.) maniakálny* * *• šialený• maniacký -
13 nerves
noun plural (the condition of being too easily excited or upset: She suffers from nerves.) nervozita* * *• nervové stavy• nervozita• nervstvo -
14 phlegmatic
adjective (calm; not easily excited: She's very phlegmatic - nothing would ever make her panic.) flegmatický* * *• flegmatický -
15 squawk
-
16 stolid
['stolid]((of a person etc) not easily excited and rather dull.) nechápavý, ľahostajný- stolidness
- stolidly* * *• tupý• flegmatický• lahostajný• netecný -
17 stutter
-
18 thrill
[Ɵril] 1. verb(to (cause someone to) feel excitement: She was thrilled at/by the invitation.) rozochvieť2. noun1) (an excited feeling: a thrill of pleasure/expectation.) rozochvenie2) (something which causes this feeling: Meeting the Queen was a great thrill.) vzrušujúci zážitok•- thriller- thrilling* * *• vzrušenie• vzrušovat sa• vzrušit• zachviet sa• záchvev• rozochvetie• napätie• napnút -
19 triumphant
adjective ((glad and excited because of) having won a victory, achieved something difficult etc: He gave a triumphant shout.) víťazný* * *• vítazoslávny• vítazný• triumfujúci• jasajúci• plesajúci -
20 whirl
[wə:l] 1. verb(to move rapidly (round, away etc): She whirled round when I called her name; The wind whirled my hat away before I could grab it.) prudko sa otočiť; odniesť2. noun1) (an excited confusion: a whirl of activity; My head's in a whirl - I can't believe it's all happening!) zhon, zmätok2) (a rapid turn.) vírenie, kúdol•- whirlwind* * *• vír• otácat sa• kúdol• krúžit• krútit sa
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
Excited delirium — is a controversial term used to explain deaths of individuals in police custody, in which the person being arrested, detained, or restrained is highly agitated and may be under the influence of stimulants. [cite web… … Wikipedia
excited utterance — ex·cit·ed ut·ter·ance n: a statement that concerns a startling event (as a physical assault) and that is made by a person while under stress caused by the event see also res gestae; spontaneous declaration at declaration compare dying declaration … Law dictionary
excited vs exciting — Excited is an adjective that describes when someone feels happy and enthusiastic about something. For example: She was so excited that she couldn t sleep. Exciting is an adjective that means something is making you excited. For example:… … English dictionary of common mistakes and confusing words
excited vs exciting — Excited is an adjective that describes when someone feels happy and enthusiastic about something. For example: She was so excited that she couldn t sleep. Exciting is an adjective that means something is making you excited. For example:… … English dictionary of common mistakes and confusing words
excited — excited; un·excited; pho·to·excited; … English syllables
excited — index eager, ecstatic, fervent, frenetic, restive, vehement Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
excited — 1650s, magnetically or electrically stimulated; modern sense of agitated attested 1855; pp. adj. from EXCITE (Cf. excite). Related: Excitedly … Etymology dictionary
excited — [adj] inspired; upset aflame, agitated, animated, annoyed, aroused, awakened, beside oneself*, charged, delighted, discomposed, disconcerted, disturbed, eager, enthusiastic, feverish, fired up*, frantic, high*, hot*, hot and bothered*,… … New thesaurus
excited — [ek sīt′id, ik sīt′id] adj. 1. emotionally aroused; agitated 2. Physics in a state of excitation excitedly adv … English World dictionary
Excited state — Excitation is an elevation in energy level above an arbitrary baseline energy state. In physics there is a specific technical definition for energy level which is often associated with an atom being excited to an excited state.In quantum… … Wikipedia
excited */*/ — UK [ɪkˈsaɪtɪd] / US [ɪkˈsaɪtəd] adjective Collocations: Excited describes how you feel: I m excited about my holiday. ♦ She didn t seem very excited. Exciting describes things or situations that make you feel excited: I find circuses very… … English dictionary