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1 Bohemian
I [bohímjən]proper namečeški; Čeh(inja); bohem, -mkaII [bouhí:mjən]adjectivečeški; ciganski; bohemski razuzdanIII [bouhí:mjən]nounČeh(inja); cigan(ka); bohem, lahkoživec, -vka -
2 smack
I 1. [smæk] verb(to strike smartly and loudly; to slap: She smacked the child's hand/bottom.) klofniti2. noun((the sound of) a blow of this kind; a slap: He could hear the smack of the waves against the side of the ship.) tlesk3. adverb(directly and with force: He ran smack into the door.) naravnost vII 1. [smæk] verb((with of) to have a suggestion of: The whole affair smacks of prejudice.) dišati po2. nounThere's a smack of corruption about this affair.) primes* * *I [smæk]1.noun(pri)okus (of po), zadah; buket; sled, majhna količina, malček, malce, mrvica; primes (of česa); nekaj, kar spominja nathere is a smack of the Bohemian in him — nekaj bohemskega (ciganskega) je v njem;2.intransitive verbimeti okus (of po); dišati po; spominjati na; dajati vtisII [smæk]1.nounplosk (glasen) udarec s plosko roko; tlesk(anje) (z jezikom), pok(anje) z bičem, cmok(anje), glasen poljub; colloquially poskus, drzno (tvegano) dejanjea smack in the eye (face) — udarec v obraz, klofutato catch s.o. a smack — klofniti kogato have a smack at s.th. — napraviti poskus s čim;2.adverbtlesk, bum, štrbunk;3.transitive verb & intransitive verboklofutati, klofniti (koga), prisoliti (komu) zaušnico; pomlaskati, pocmakati; švrkniti, oplaziti, tleskati (z bičem, jezikom); mlaskniti, cmoknitito smack s.o.'s face — pripeljati komu klofutoto smack the hands together — ploskniti, ploskati z rokamiIII [smæk]nounnautical ribiška ladja
См. также в других словарях:
Bohemian FC — Bohemian Football Club Bohemian FC Généralités Nom complet Bohe … Wikipédia en Français
Bohemian — Bo*he mi*an, a. 1. Of or pertaining to Bohemia, or to the language of its ancient inhabitants or their descendants. See {Bohemian}, n., 2. [1913 Webster] 2. Of or pertaining to a social gypsy or Bohemian (see {Bohemian}, n., 3); vagabond;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
bohemian — a gypsy of society, 1848, from Fr. bohemién (1550s), from the country name (see BOHEMIA (Cf. Bohemia)). The modern sense is perhaps from the use of this country name since 15c. in French for gypsy (they were wrongly believed to have come from… … Etymology dictionary
Bohemian — [bō hē′mē ən, bōhēm′yən] n. 1. a person born or living in Bohemia 2. CZECH1 (n. 2) 3. [Fr Bohémien: from the fact that the Gypsies passed through Bohemia to reach W Europe] a Gypsy 4. [usually b ] a person, esp. an artist, poet, etc., who lives… … English World dictionary
Bohemian — Bo*he mi*an, n. 1. A native of Bohemia. [1913 Webster] 2. The language of the Czechs (the ancient inhabitants of Bohemia), the richest and most developed of the dialects of the Slavic family. [1913 Webster] 3. A restless vagabond; originally, an… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Bohemian — index nonconforming Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
bohemian — [n] nonconformist artist, beatnik*, dilettante, flower child*, free spirit, gypsy, hippie*, iconoclast, writer; concept 423 … New thesaurus
Bohemian — ► NOUN 1) a person from Bohemia, a region of the Czech Republic. 2) a socially unconventional person, especially an artist or writer. ► ADJECTIVE 1) relating to Bohemia. 2) socially unconventional. DERIVATIVES Bohemianism noun … English terms dictionary
Bohemian F.C. — Football club infobox clubname = Bohemian |nat=Ireland fullname = Bohemian Football Club nickname = Bohs The Gypsies founded = 1890 ground = Dalymount Park, Phibsborough, Dublin 7 capacity = 12,200 chairman = Gerry Cuffe (President) manager = Pat … Wikipedia
bohemian — [[t]boʊhi͟ːmiən[/t]] bohemians ADJ GRADED: usu ADJ n You can use bohemian to describe artistic people who live in an unconventional way. ...a bohemian writer. ...bohemian café society. ...the bohemian lifestyle of the French capital. N COUNT A… … English dictionary
Bohemian — Bohemians are the people of Bohemia, in the Czech Republic, inhabitants of the former Kingdom of Bohemia, located in the modern day Czech Republic. The name derives from the Latin term for the Celtic tribe inhabiting that area, the Boii, who were … Wikipedia