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1 nice
1) (pleasant; agreeable: nice weather; a nice person.) príjemný2) (used jokingly: We're in a nice mess now.) pekný3) (exact; precise: a nice sense of timing.) presný•- nicely- nicety
- to a nicety* * *• vlúdny• vhodný• úzkostlivý• vkusný• zhovievavý• zlatý• slušný• svedomitý• priebercivý• precízny• priatelský• príjemný• priaznivý• presný• prívetivý• elegantný• jemný• bystrý• chúlostivý• dobrý• dôkladný• delikátny• chutný• charakterný• cistý• rozkošný• roztomilý• pekný• podarený• pozorný• láskavý• kultivovaný• milý• ohladuplný -
2 natural
['næ ərəl] 1. adjective1) (of or produced by nature, not made by men: Coal, oil etc are natural resources; Wild animals are happier in their natural state than in a zoo.) prírodný2) (born in a person: natural beauty; He had a natural ability for music.) vrodený3) ((of manner) simple, without pretence: a nice, natural smile.) prirodzený4) (normal; as one would expect: It's quite natural for a boy of his age to be interested in girls.) prirodzený5) (of a musical note, not sharp or flat: G natural is lower in pitch than G sharp.) bez predznamenania2. noun1) (a person who is naturally good at something.) rodený majster2) (in music (a sign () indicating) a note which is not to be played sharp or flat.) odrážka•- naturally
- natural gas
- natural history
- natural resources* * *• vrodený• výhra z ruky• základný (tón)• slabomyselný• skutocný• telová farba• prírodný benzín• predurcený clovek• prirodzený život• prírodný• prirodzený• hlupák• duševne zaostalý clovek• fyzikálny• fyzický• idiot• bez predsudkom• rodený• pôvodný• nemanželský• nepestovaný• nevlastný• nenútený• normálny• odrážka -
3 put off
1) (to switch off (a light etc): Please put the light off!) zhasnúť, vypnúť2) (to delay; to postpone: He put off leaving / his departure till Thursday.) odložiť3) (to cancel an arranged meeting etc with (a person): I had to put the Browns off because I had 'flu.) odsunúť4) (to cause (a person) to feel disgust or dislike (for): The cheese looked nice but the smell put me off; The conversation about illness put me off my dinner.) znechutiť* * *• vyzliect• odložený• odložit -
4 straightforward
1) (without difficulties or complications; simple: a straightforward task.) jednoduchý2) ((of a person, his manner etc) frank and honest: a nice straightforward boy.) úprimný* * *• zrejmý• zretelný• smerujúci priamo• úprimný• upriamene• priamo• priamociary• priamy• jasný• cestný• cestne• rovno• rovný• poctivý• poctivo• otvorený -
5 patronise
['pæ-, ]( American[) 'pei-]1) (to behave towards (someone) in a way which is kind and friendly but which nevertheless shows that one thinks oneself to be more important, clever etc than that person: He's a nice fellow but he does patronize his assistants.) správať sa blahosklonne2) (to visit (a shop, theatre, society etc) regularly: That's not a shop I patronize nowadays.) pravidelne chodiť -
6 patronize
['pæ-, ]( American[) 'pei-]1) (to behave towards (someone) in a way which is kind and friendly but which nevertheless shows that one thinks oneself to be more important, clever etc than that person: He's a nice fellow but he does patronize his assistants.) správať sa blahosklonne2) (to visit (a shop, theatre, society etc) regularly: That's not a shop I patronize nowadays.) pravidelne chodiť
См. также в других словарях:
nice person — friendly person, good guy, pleasant person … English contemporary dictionary
nice — W2S1 [naıs] adj ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(good)¦ 2¦(friendly)¦ 3¦(something you want)¦ 4 it s nice to know (that) 5 have a nice day! 6 nice to meet you 7 (it s been) nice meeting/talking to you 8¦(not nice)¦ 9 nice try 10 ni … Dictionary of contemporary English
Nice — (n[imac]s), a. [Compar. {Nicer} (n[imac] s[ e]r); superl. {Nicest}.] [OE., foolish, fr. OF. nice ignorant, fool, fr. L. nescius ignorant; ne not + scius knowing, scire to know. Perhaps influenced by E. nesh delicate, soft. See {No}, and {Science} … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
nice figure — nice person, pleasant person; attractive body, good looking body … English contemporary dictionary
nice — adjective (nicer; nicest) Etymology: Middle English, foolish, wanton, from Anglo French, silly, simple, from Latin nescius ignorant, from nescire not to know more at nescience Date: 14th century 1. obsolete a. wanton, dissolute b. coy, reticent … New Collegiate Dictionary
person — per|son W1S2 [ˈpə:sən US ˈpə:r ] n [Date: 1100 1200; : Old French; Origin: persone, from Latin persona actor s mask, character in a play, person , probably from Etruscan phersu mask ] 1.) plural people [ˈpi:pəl] a human being, especially… … Dictionary of contemporary English
Nice Girls Don't Stay for Breakfast — Studio album by Julie London Released … Wikipedia
nice´-Nel´lie — nice Nelly or nice Nellie, plural nice Nellies. Slang. a person who is overly modest or prudish: »By 1916, Dreiser was the hero of the avant garde and the pet peeve of the nice Nellies, who denounced “The Genius” as literary sewage and got it… … Useful english dictionary
nice´-Nel´ly — nice Nelly or nice Nellie, plural nice Nellies. Slang. a person who is overly modest or prudish: »By 1916, Dreiser was the hero of the avant garde and the pet peeve of the nice Nellies, who denounced “The Genius” as literary sewage and got it… … Useful english dictionary
nice as pie — If a person is nice as pie, they are surprisingly very kind and friendly. After our argument, she was nice as pie! … The small dictionary of idiomes
nice nelly — nice′ nel′ly (or Nel′ly) [[t]ˈnɛl i[/t]] n. a person who professes or exhibits excessive modesty, prudishness, or the like • Etymology: 1925–30 nice′ nel′ly, nice′ Nel′ly, adj … From formal English to slang