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(feeling)

  • 1 feeling

    1) (power and ability to feel: I have no feeling in my little finger.) cit
    2) (something that one feels physically: a feeling of great pain.) pocit
    3) ((usually in plural) something that one feels in one's mind: His angry words hurt my feelings; a feeling of happiness.) city; pocit(y)
    4) (an impression or belief: I have a feeling that the work is too hard.) dojem
    5) (affection: He has no feeling for her now.) sympatia
    6) (emotion: He spoke with great feeling.) vzrušenie
    * * *
    • vedomie
    • vzrušenie
    • vyhovenie
    • sympatia
    • sympatie
    • hlboko pocitovaný
    • atmosféra
    • citlivý
    • cit
    • cítenie
    • cituplný
    • rozcúlenie
    • roztrpcenie
    • ovzdušie
    • pocit
    • pohnutie
    • porozumenie
    • nálada
    • názor
    • ohlad

    English-Slovak dictionary > feeling

  • 2 ill-feeling

    noun (an) unkind feeling (towards another person): The two men parted without any ill-feeling(s). nepriateľstvo

    English-Slovak dictionary > ill-feeling

  • 3 fellow-feeling

    noun (sympathy (especially for someone in a similar situation, of similar tastes etc): I had a fellow-feeling for the other patient with the broken leg.) pocit spolupatričnosti

    English-Slovak dictionary > fellow-feeling

  • 4 smart

    1. adjective
    1) (neat and well-dressed; fashionable: You're looking very smart today; a smart suit.) elegantný
    2) (clever and quick in thought and action: We need a smart boy to help in the shop; I don't trust some of those smart salesmen.) šikovný; bystrý; prefíkaný
    3) (brisk; sharp: She gave him a smart slap on the cheek.) rázny, ostrý
    2. verb
    1) ((of part of the body) to be affected by a sharp stinging feeling: The thick smoke made his eyes smart.) páliť
    2) (to feel annoyed, resentful etc after being insulted etc: He is still smarting from your remarks.) trpieť, sužovať
    3. noun
    (the stinging feeling left by a blow or the resentful feeling left by an insult: He could still feel the smart of her slap/insult.) (pálčivá) bolesť, utrpenie
    - smartly
    - smartness
    - smart bomb
    - smart card
    * * *
    • vkusný
    • utrpenie
    • vypit si to
    • vypadajúci ako nový
    • vtipný
    • silný
    • švihácky
    • štípat
    • tažký
    • tvrdý
    • prísny
    • elegantný
    • elegán
    • frajer
    • drzý
    • energický
    • inteligentný
    • jasný
    • bolest
    • bolestivý
    • boliet
    • bystrý
    • bezohladný
    • culý
    • citelný
    • cítit bolest
    • cistý
    • chytrácky
    • rezký
    • rýchly
    • pálivá bolest
    • ostrý
    • pálenie
    • pekný
    • pálit
    • pálcivost
    • poriadny
    • pôsobit pálcivý pocit
    • pohotový
    • luxusný
    • muka
    • módny
    • mat pálcivý pocit
    • moderný
    • odskákat si
    • odpykat
    • odniest si

    English-Slovak dictionary > smart

  • 5 giddy

    ['ɡidi]
    (feeling that one is going to fall over, or that everything is spinning round: I was dancing round so fast that I felt quite giddy; a giddy feeling.) majúci pocit závratu
    - giddiness
    * * *
    • závratný
    • trpiaci závratmi
    • bezmyšlienkovitý
    • povrchný
    • pôsobiaci závrat
    • nestály

    English-Slovak dictionary > giddy

  • 6 scare

    [skeə] 1. verb
    (to startle or frighten: You'll scare the baby if you shout; His warning scared her into obeying him.) vystrašiť
    2. noun
    1) (a feeling of fear or alarm: The noise gave me a scare.) strach
    2) (a feeling of fear or panic among a large number of people: a smallpox scare.) panika
    - scarecrow
    - scaremonger
    - scare away/off
    * * *
    • vzbudzovat hrôzu
    • vylakat sa
    • vyplašit
    • strašiak
    • strašit
    • strach
    • dostat strach
    • hrôza
    • hrôzostrašný
    • plašit
    • panika
    • postrašit
    • polakat
    • postrašit sa
    • laknutie
    • mat strach
    • odstrašit

    English-Slovak dictionary > scare

  • 7 sensation

    [sen'seiʃən]
    1) (the ability to feel through the sense of touch: Cold can cause a loss of sensation in the fingers and toes.) cit; vnem
    2) (a feeling: a sensation of faintness.) pocit
    3) (a general feeling, or a cause, of excitement or horror: The murder caused a sensation; His arrest was the sensation of the week.) vzrušenie, rozruch, senzácia
    - sensationally
    * * *
    • vnem
    • vzrušenie
    • zdanie
    • senzácia
    • cit
    • dojem
    • rozruch
    • pocit

    English-Slovak dictionary > sensation

  • 8 shame

    [ʃeim] 1. noun
    1) ((often with at) an unpleasant feeling caused by awareness of guilt, fault, foolishness or failure: I was full of shame at my rudeness; He felt no shame at his behaviour.) hanba
    2) (dishonour or disgrace: The news that he had accepted bribes brought shame on his whole family.) hanba, potupa
    3) ((with a) a cause of disgrace or a matter for blame: It's a shame to treat a child so cruelly.) hanba
    4) ((with a) a pity: What a shame that he didn't get the job!) škoda
    2. verb
    1) ((often with into) to force or persuade to do something by making ashamed: He was shamed into paying his share.) prinútiť
    2) (to cause to have a feeling of shame: His cowardice shamed his parents.) zahanbiť
    - shamefully
    - shamefulness
    - shameless
    - shamelessly
    - shamelessness
    - shamefaced
    - put to shame
    - to my
    - his shame
    * * *
    • zahanbit
    • zhanobit
    • zneuctenie
    • smola
    • škvrna
    • stud
    • urobit hanbu
    • hanbit sa
    • hanba
    • dat triumf
    • otrava
    • potupa
    • nepríjemnost

    English-Slovak dictionary > shame

  • 9 sympathy

    ['simpəði]
    1) (a feeling of pity or sorrow for a person in trouble: When her husband died, she received many letters of sympathy.) sústrasť
    2) (the state or feeling of being in agreement with, or of being able to understand, the attitude or feelings of another person: I have no sympathy with such a stupid attitude; Are you in sympathy with the strikers?) sympatia, súhlas, pochopenie
    - sympathetically
    - sympathize
    - sympathise
    * * *
    • vztah
    • záujem
    • solidárnost
    • smer
    • sklon
    • súlad
    • súhlas
    • sympatia
    • sústrast
    • súcit
    • tendencia
    • úcast
    • príchylnost
    • harmónia
    • duševná spriaznenost
    • kladný postoj
    • pochopenie
    • náklonnost
    • náchylnost

    English-Slovak dictionary > sympathy

  • 10 thrill

    [Ɵril] 1. verb
    (to (cause someone to) feel excitement: She was thrilled at/by the invitation.) rozochvieť
    2. noun
    1) (an excited feeling: a thrill of pleasure/expectation.) rozochvenie
    2) (something which causes this feeling: Meeting the Queen was a great thrill.) vzrušujúci zážitok
    - thrilling
    * * *
    • vzrušenie
    • vzrušovat sa
    • vzrušit
    • zachviet sa
    • záchvev
    • rozochvetie
    • napätie
    • napnút

    English-Slovak dictionary > thrill

  • 11 tickle

    ['tikl] 1. verb
    1) (to touch (sensitive parts of someone's skin) lightly, often making the person laugh: He tickled me / my feet with a feather.) štekliť
    2) ((of a part of the body) to feel as if it is being touched in this way: My nose tickles.) štekliť
    3) (to amuse: The funny story tickled him.) pobaviť
    2. noun
    1) (an act or feeling of tickling.) šteklenie
    2) (a feeling of irritation in the throat (making one cough).) dráždenie
    - be tickled pink
    * * *
    • zabávat
    • zabavit
    • šteklenie
    • svrbiet
    • šteklit
    • ulahodit
    • tešit

    English-Slovak dictionary > tickle

  • 12 vocation

    [və'keiʃən, ]( American[) vou-]
    1) (a feeling of having been called (by God), or born etc, to do a particular type of work: He had a sense of vocation about his work as a doctor.) poslanie
    2) (the work done, profession entered etc (as a result of such a feeling): Nursing is her vocation; Many people regard teaching as a vocation.) povolanie
    * * *
    • výzva
    • vyzvanie
    • zamestnanie
    • zmysel
    • sklon
    • schopnost
    • talent
    • súcost
    • úloha
    • funkcia
    • dispozícia
    • rola
    • povolanie
    • povolanost
    • nadanie
    • náklonnost
    • odpoved na výzvu

    English-Slovak dictionary > vocation

  • 13 afraid

    [ə'freid]
    1) (feeling fear or being frightened (of a person, thing etc): The child is not afraid of the dark; She was afraid to go.) vyľakaný
    2) (sorry (to have to say that): I'm afraid I don't agree with you.) bohužiaľ
    * * *
    • bát sa
    • bohužial
    • obávat sa

    English-Slovak dictionary > afraid

  • 14 aggression

    [-ʃən]
    noun ((a feeling of) hostility.) agresia, útok
    * * *
    • útok
    • agresia

    English-Slovak dictionary > aggression

  • 15 agitate

    ['æ‹iteit]
    1) (to make (someone) excited and anxious: The news agitated her.) rozrušiť
    2) (to try to arouse public feeling and action: That group is agitating for prison reform.) agitovať
    3) (to shake: The tree was agitated by the wind.) zmietať
    - agitation
    - agitator
    * * *
    • vzrušenie
    • zmietat(sa)
    • triast
    • agitovat
    • agitácia
    • rozrušit

    English-Slovak dictionary > agitate

  • 16 agitator

    noun (a person who tries constantly to stir up public feeling: a political agitator.) agitátor, -ka
    * * *
    • agitátor

    English-Slovak dictionary > agitator

  • 17 altogether

    [o:ltə'ɡeðə]
    1) (completely: I'm not altogether satisfied.) celkom
    2) (on the whole and considering everything: I'm wet, I'm tired and I'm cold. Altogether I'm not feeling very cheerful.) celkom
    * * *
    • vcelku
    • úplne
    • celkom
    • dohromady
    • naprosto

    English-Slovak dictionary > altogether

  • 18 anaesthesia

    [-'Ɵi:ziə, ]( American[) -ʒə]
    noun (loss of consciousness or of feeling caused by an anaesthetic.) anestézia, znecitlivenie
    * * *
    • umrtvenie
    • anestézia
    • narkóza

    English-Slovak dictionary > anaesthesia

  • 19 anaesthetic

    (a substance, used in surgery etc, that causes lack of feeling in a part of the body or unconsciousness.) anestetikum
    - anaesthetist
    - anaesthetize
    - anaesthetise
    * * *
    • anestetikum

    English-Slovak dictionary > anaesthetic

  • 20 anger

    ['æŋɡə] 1. noun
    (a violent, bitter feeling (against someone or something): He was filled with anger about the way he had been treated.) hnev, zlosť
    2. verb
    (to make someone angry: His words angered her very much.) rozhnevať
    - angrily
    * * *
    • zlost
    • hnev
    • rozhnevat
    • nahnevat

    English-Slovak dictionary > anger

См. также в других словарях:

  • feeling — [ filiŋ ] n. m. • 1922; mot angl. « sentiment », de to feel « sentir » ♦ Anglic. 1 ♦ Mus. Expressivité musicale des sentiments, notamment dans le jazz, le blues. 2 ♦ Cour. Fam. Intuition qui permet de bien sentir les événements, la situation.… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • feeling — n 1 sensibility, *sensation, sense Analogous words: reacting or reaction, behaving or behavior (see corresponding verbs at ACT): responsiveness (see corresponding adjective at TENDER): sensitiveness, susceptibility (see corresponding adjectives… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • feeling — [fēl′iŋ] adj. [ME feling: see FEEL & ING] full of or expressing emotion or sensitivity; sympathetic n. 1. that one of the senses by which sensations of contact, pressure, temperature, and pain are transmitted through the skin; sense of touch 2.… …   English World dictionary

  • Feeling — Feel ing, n. 1. The sense by which the mind, through certain nerves of the body, perceives external objects, or certain states of the body itself; that one of the five senses which resides in the general nerves of sensation distributed over the… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Feeling B — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Feeling B Información personal Nombre real Feeling B Origen …   Wikipedia Español

  • Feeling B — Жанр Панк рок Годы 1983 1993 2007 Страна …   Википедия

  • feeling — UK US /ˈfiːlɪŋ/ noun ► [C or U] something that you feel with your body or mind: »I had a funny feeling in my stomach before my interview. »The redundancies created bad feeling between the new manager and the remaining staff. ► [C, usually… …   Financial and business terms

  • Feeling B — était l un des premiers groupes de punk de République démocratique allemande (l Allemagne de l Est). Il a été fondé à Berlin en 1983 et a commencé dans une scène punk underground. Quelque temps après, la popularité de Feeling B a énormément… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • feeling — s.n. (Anglicism) Stare afectivă; intuiţie afectivă. ♦ (muz.) Sentiment, simţire, sensibilitate. [pron. filin. / < engl. feeling] Trimis de LauraGellner, 17.06.2007. Sursa: DN  FEELING FÍLIN/ s. n. stare afectivă; intuiţie afectivă. ♢ (muz.)… …   Dicționar Român

  • feeling — /ˈfilin(g), ingl. ˈfiːlɪŋ/ [vc. ingl., da to feel «sentire»] s. m. inv. 1. intesa, sintonia, simpatia 2. compassione, comprensione, partecipazione. SFUMATURE feeling sensazione Feeling è la corrente di simpatia, la sintonia che si instaura in… …   Sinonimi e Contrari. Terza edizione

  • feeling — [n1] sensation, especially of touch activity, awareness, consciousness, enjoyment, excitability, excitation, excitement, feel, innervation, motility, motor response, pain, perceiving, perception, pleasure, reaction, receptivity, reflex,… …   New thesaurus

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