Перевод: с английского на чешский

с чешского на английский

are+built

  • 1 shipyard

    noun (a place where ships are built or repaired.) loděnice
    * * *
    • loděnice

    English-Czech dictionary > shipyard

  • 2 family

    ['fæməli]
    plural - families; noun
    1) ((singular or plural) a man, his wife and their children: These houses were built for families; The (members of the) Smith family are all very athletic; ( also adjective) a family holiday.) rodina; rodinný
    2) (a group of people related to each other, including cousins, grandchildren etc: He comes from a wealthy family; ( also adjective) the family home.) rodina; rodinný
    3) (the children of a man and his wife: When I get married I should like a large family.) rodina
    4) (a group of plants, animals, languages etc that are connected in some way: In spite of its name, a koala bear is not a member of the bear family.) čeleď, druh, třída
    - family tree
    * * *
    • třída
    • rodina
    • rodokmen

    English-Czech dictionary > family

  • 3 rise

    1. past tense - rose; verb
    1) (to become greater, larger, higher etc; to increase: Food prices are still rising; His temperature rose; If the river rises much more, there will be a flood; Her voice rose to a scream; Bread rises when it is baked; His spirits rose at the good news.) stoupat
    2) (to move upwards: Smoke was rising from the chimney; The birds rose into the air; The curtain rose to reveal an empty stage.) stoupat
    3) (to get up from bed: He rises every morning at six o'clock.) vstávat
    4) (to stand up: The children all rose when the headmaster came in.) vstát
    5) ((of the sun etc) to appear above the horizon: The sun rises in the east and sets in the west.) vycházet
    6) (to slope upwards: Hills rose in the distance; The ground rises at this point.) zvedat se
    7) (to rebel: The people rose (up) in revolt against the dictator.) povstat
    8) (to move to a higher rank, a more important position etc: He rose to the rank of colonel.) povýšit
    9) ((of a river) to begin or appear: The Rhône rises in the Alps.) pramenit
    10) ((of wind) to begin; to become stronger: Don't go out in the boat - the wind has risen.) zdvíhat se; sílit
    11) (to be built: Office blocks are rising all over the town.) vyrůst (budova), být postaven
    12) (to come back to life: Jesus has risen.) vstát z mrtvých
    2. noun
    1) ((the) act of rising: He had a rapid rise to fame; a rise in prices.) vzestup
    2) (an increase in salary or wages: She asked her boss for a rise.) zvýšení (platu)
    3) (a slope or hill: The house is just beyond the next rise.) stoupání, návrší
    4) (the beginning and early development of something: the rise of the Roman Empire.) počátek, vzestup
    3. adjective
    the rising sun; rising prices; the rising generation; a rising young politician.) stoupající, nastupující, nadějný
    - late riser
    - give rise to
    - rise to the occasion
    * * *
    • tyčit se
    • vzrůstat
    • vstal
    • vstát
    • vzestup
    • vzrůst
    • vstane
    • zvýšení
    • povstání
    • povstat
    • rise/rose/risen
    • stoupání
    • stoupat

    English-Czech dictionary > rise

  • 4 extension

    [-ʃən]
    1) (an added part: He built an extension to his house; a two-day extension to the holiday; He has telephone extensions (= telephones) in every bedroom.) přístavba; prodloužení
    2) ((a program by which) part of a university located somewhere else offers courses to people who are not fulltime students.) nástavba
    3) (the process of extending.) zvětšení
    4) (a telephone that operates on the same line as another: They have a phone in the living-room and an extension in the bedroom.) přípojka
    * * *
    • rozšíření
    • linka

    English-Czech dictionary > extension

  • 5 go up

    1) (to increase in size, value etc: The temperature/price has gone up.) stoupat, jít nahoru
    2) (to be built: There are office blocks going up all over town.) vyrůstat, být stavěn
    * * *
    • stoupat

    English-Czech dictionary > go up

  • 6 hoarding

    ['ho:diŋ]
    1) (a temporary fence of boards, eg round a place where a building is being knocked down or built.) ohrada
    2) (a usually large wooden board on which advertisements, posters etc are stuck.) plakátovací stěna
    * * *
    • hromadění

    English-Czech dictionary > hoarding

  • 7 house

    1. plural - houses; noun
    1) (a building in which people, especially a single family, live: Houses have been built on the outskirts of the town for the workers in the new industrial estate.) dům
    2) (a place or building used for a particular purpose: a hen-house; a public house.) kurník; hostinec
    3) (a theatre, or the audience in a theatre: There was a full house for the first night of the play.) sál
    4) (a family, usually important or noble, including its ancestors and descendants: the house of David.) dům
    2. verb
    1) (to provide with a house, accommodation or shelter: All these people will have to be housed; The animals are housed in the barn.) ubytovat (se)
    2) (to store or keep somewhere: The electric generator is housed in the garage.) umístit
    - housing benefit
    - house agent
    - house arrest
    - houseboat
    - housebreaker
    - housebreaking
    - house-fly
    - household
    - householder
    - household word
    - housekeeper
    - housekeeping
    - houseman
    - housetrain
    - house-warming
    3. adjective
    a house-warming party.) oslavující nový byt
    - housework
    - like a house on fire
    * * *
    • stavení
    • sněmovna
    • house
    • dům
    • domovní

    English-Czech dictionary > house

  • 8 new

    [nju:] 1. adjective
    1) (having only just happened, been built, made, bought etc: She is wearing a new dress; We are building a new house.) nový
    2) (only just discovered, experienced etc: Flying in an aeroplane was a new experience for her.) nový
    3) (changed: He is a new man.) nový
    4) (just arrived etc: The schoolchildren teased the new boy.) nový, nově příchozí
    2. adverb
    (freshly: new-laid eggs.) čerstvě
    - newcomer
    - newfangled
    - new to
    * * *
    • nový
    • nedávný
    • nově
    • čerstvý

    English-Czech dictionary > new

  • 9 shape

    [ʃeip] 1. noun
    1) (the external form or outline of anything: People are all (of) different shapes and sizes; The house is built in the shape of a letter L.) tvar
    2) (an indistinct form: I saw a large shape in front of me in the darkness.) obrys
    3) (condition or state: You're in better physical shape than I am.) forma
    2. verb
    1) (to make into a certain shape, to form or model: She shaped the dough into three separate loaves.) tvarovat
    2) (to influence the nature of strongly: This event shaped his whole life.) určit, utvářet
    3) ((sometimes with up) to develop: The team is shaping (up) well.) vyvíjet se
    - shapeless
    - shapelessness
    - shapely
    - shapeliness
    - in any shape or form
    - in any shape
    - out of shape
    - take shape
    * * *
    • tvar

    English-Czech dictionary > shape

  • 10 wall

    [wo:l] 1. noun
    1) (something built of stone, brick, plaster, wood etc and used to separate off or enclose something: There's a wall at the bottom of the garden: The Great Wall of China; a garden wall.) zeď
    2) (any of the sides of a building or room: One wall of the room is yellow - the rest are white.) stěna
    2. verb
    ((often with in) to enclose (something) with a wall: We've walled in the playground to prevent the children getting out.) obezdít
    - - walled
    - wallpaper
    3. verb
    (to put such paper on: I have wallpapered the front room.) (vy)tapetovat
    - have one's back to the wall
    - up the wall
    * * *
    • zeď
    • zeď zdi
    • stěna

    English-Czech dictionary > wall

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