Перевод: с английского на чешский

с чешского на английский

bone+up

  • 21 bandage

    ['bændi‹] 1. noun
    ((a piece of) cloth for binding up a wound, or a broken bone: She had a bandage on her injured finger.) obvaz
    2. verb
    (to cover with a bandage: The doctor bandaged the boy's foot.) obvázat
    * * *
    • obvaz

    English-Czech dictionary > bandage

  • 22 bony

    1) (like bone: a bony substance.) kostěný
    2) (full of bones: This fish is very bony.) plný kostí
    3) (thin: bony fingers.) hubený, kost a kůže
    * * *
    • kostnatý

    English-Czech dictionary > bony

  • 23 collar

    ['kolə] 1. noun
    1) (the part of a garment at the neck especially of a shirt, jacket etc: This collar is too tight.) límec
    2) (something worn round the neck: The dog's name was on its collar.) obojek
    2. verb
    (to seize, get hold of: He collared the speaker as he left the room.) chytit
    * * *
    • límec

    English-Czech dictionary > collar

  • 24 cutlet

    (a small slice of meat (mutton, veal, pork) on a rib or other bone: lamb cutlets.) kotleta
    * * *
    • kotleta

    English-Czech dictionary > cutlet

  • 25 dislocate

    ['disləkeit, ]( American[) -lou-]
    (to put (a bone) out of joint; to displace: She dislocated her hip when she fell.) vykloubit (si), vymknout (si); přesunout
    * * *
    • vykloubit

    English-Czech dictionary > dislocate

  • 26 femur

    ['fi:mə]
    (the thigh bone.) stehenní kost
    * * *
    • stehenní kost

    English-Czech dictionary > femur

  • 27 gnaw

    [no:]
    (to bite or chew with a scraping movement: The dog was gnawing a large bone; The mice have gnawed holes in the walls of this room.) hryzat, okousávat
    * * *
    • hryzat

    English-Czech dictionary > gnaw

  • 28 joint

    [‹oint] 1. noun
    1) (the place where two or more things join: The plumber tightened up all the joints in the pipes.) spoj
    2) (a part of the body where two bones meet but are able to move in the manner of eg a hinge: The shoulders, elbows, wrists, hips, knees and ankles are joints.) kloub
    3) (a piece of meat for cooking containing a bone: A leg of mutton is a fairly large joint.) kýta
    2. adjective
    1) (united; done together: the joint efforts of the whole team.) spojený
    2) (shared by, or belonging to, two or more: She and her husband have a joint bank account.) společný
    3. verb
    (to divide (an animal etc for cooking) at the, or into, joints: Joint the chicken before cooking it.) rozčtvrtit
    - jointly
    - out of joint
    See also:
    * * *
    • společný
    • spojený
    • kloub

    English-Czech dictionary > joint

  • 29 kneecap

    noun (the flat, round bone on the front of the knee joint.) čéška
    * * *
    • čéška

    English-Czech dictionary > kneecap

  • 30 knit

    [nit]
    past tense, past participle - knitted; verb
    1) (to form (a garment) from yarn (of wool etc) by making and connecting loops, using knitting-needles: She is teaching children to knit and sew; She knitted him a sweater for Christmas.) (u)plést
    2) ((of broken bones) to grow together: The bone in his arm took a long time to knit.) srůst
    - knitting
    - knitting-needle
    - knit one's brows
    * * *
    • uplést
    • plést
    • knit/knit/knit

    English-Czech dictionary > knit

  • 31 pelvis

    ['pelvis]
    (the framework of bone around the body below the waist.) pánev
    * * *
    • pánvička ledvinová
    • pánev
    • pánvička ledvinná

    English-Czech dictionary > pelvis

  • 32 scrap

    I 1. [skræp] noun
    1) (a small piece or fragment: a scrap of paper.) kousek, útržek
    2) ((usually in plural) a piece of food left over after a meal: They gave the scraps to the dog.) zbytek
    3) (waste articles that are only valuable for the material they contain: The old car was sold as scrap; ( also adjective) scrap metal.) šrot(ový)
    4) (a picture etc for sticking into a scrapbook.) výstřižek
    2. verb
    (to discard: They scapped the old television set; She decided to scrap the whole plan.) vyřadit; opustit
    - scrappily
    - scrappiness
    - scrapbook
    - scrap heap
    II 1. [skræp] noun
    (a fight: He tore his jacket in a scrap with another boy.) zápas, rvačka
    2. verb
    (to fight: The dogs were scrapping over a bone.) rvát se
    * * *
    • šrot
    • šrotovat

    English-Czech dictionary > scrap

  • 33 smell out

    (to find (as if) by smelling: We buried the dog's bone, but he smelt it out again.) vyčenichat
    * * *
    • vyčenichat

    English-Czech dictionary > smell out

  • 34 tendon

    ['tendən]
    (a strong cord joining a muscle to a bone etc: He has damaged a tendon in his leg.) šlacha
    * * *
    • šlacha

    English-Czech dictionary > tendon

  • 35 tooth

    [tu:Ɵ]
    plural - teeth; noun
    1) (any of the hard, bone-like objects that grow in the mouth and are used for biting and chewing: He has had a tooth out at the dentist's.) zub
    2) (something that looks or acts like a tooth: the teeth of a comb/saw.) zub
    - toothed
    - toothless
    - toothy
    - toothache
    - toothbrush
    - toothpaste
    - toothpick
    - be
    - get long in the tooth
    - a fine-tooth comb
    - a sweet tooth
    - tooth and nail
    * * *
    • zub

    English-Czech dictionary > tooth

  • 36 shoulder-blade

    noun (the broad flat bone of the back of the shoulder.) lopatka

    English-Czech dictionary > shoulder-blade

См. также в других словарях:

  • Bone — (b[=o]n; 110), n. [OE. bon, ban, AS. b[=a]n; akin to Icel. bein, Sw. ben, Dan. & D. been, G. bein bone, leg; cf. Icel. beinn straight.] 1. (Anat.) The hard, calcified tissue of the skeleton of vertebrate animals, consisting very largely of… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Bone — heißen: Annaba (früher frz. Bône), algerische Stadt Bone (Comic), Serie von Jeff Smith Bone (Kabupaten), Region (Kabupaten) in Süd Sulawesi, Indonesien Bone (Reich), Sultanat der Bugis in Süd Sulawesi Watampone, Hauptstadt der indonesischen… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Bone — is the substance that forms the skeleton of the body. It is composed chiefly of calcium phosphate and calcium carbonate. It also serves as a storage area for calcium, playing a large role in calcium balance in the blood. The 206 bones in the body …   Medical dictionary

  • bone — ► NOUN 1) any of the pieces of hard, whitish tissue making up the skeleton in vertebrates. 2) the hard material of which bones consist. 3) a thing resembling a bone, such as a strip of stiffening for an undergarment. ► VERB 1) remove the bones… …   English terms dictionary

  • BONE — (or Bona, ancient Hippo Regius, named Annaba after Algerian independence from French rule), Mediterranean port in northeastern Algeria close to the Tunisian border. Located on a gulf between capes Garde and Rosa, it became one of the Maghreb s… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Bone — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Bone Formato Serie limitada Primera edición 1991 Última edición 2004 Editorial Self publishing Creador(es) Jeff Smith …   Wikipedia Español

  • bone — [bōn] n. [ME bon < OE ban, bone, esp. of a limb, akin to Ger bein, a leg; only Gmc] 1. any of the separate parts of the hard connective tissue forming the skeleton of most full grown vertebrate animals 2. this tissue, composed essentially of… …   English World dictionary

  • Bone — (b[=o]n), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Boned} (b[=o]nd); p. pr. & vb. n. {Boning}.] 1. To withdraw bones from the flesh of, as in cookery. To bone a turkey. Soyer. [1913 Webster] 2. To put whalebone into; as, to bone stays. Ash. [1913 Webster] 3. To… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Bone — Bone, v. t. [F. bornoyer to look at with one eye, to sight, fr. borgne one eyed.] To sight along an object or set of objects, to see if it or they be level or in line, as in carpentry, masonry, and surveying. Knight. [1913 Webster] Joiners, etc …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • bone up on — bone up (on (something)) to study or improve your understanding of something, esp. for a test. The test includes history, math, and languages, so I ll have to bone up on a lot of subjects. With new developments in medicine happening all the time …   New idioms dictionary

  • bone up — (on (something)) to study or improve your understanding of something, esp. for a test. The test includes history, math, and languages, so I ll have to bone up on a lot of subjects. With new developments in medicine happening all the time, doctors …   New idioms dictionary

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