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fée

  • 1 Fee

    Fee f <Fee; Feen> víla f

    Deutsch-Tschechisch Wörterbuch > Fee

  • 2 fée

    fée
    víla f

    Dictionnaire français-tchèque > fée

  • 3 fee

    [fi:]
    (the price paid for work done by a doctor, lawyer etc or for some special service or right: the lawyer's fee; an entrance fee; university fees.) honorář; vstupné; poplatek
    * * *
    • poplatek

    English-Czech dictionary > fee

  • 4 fée Carabosse

    fée Carabosse
    ježibaba

    Dictionnaire français-tchèque > fée Carabosse

  • 5 avoir des doigts de fée

    avoir des doigts de fée
    mít zlaté ruce

    Dictionnaire français-tchèque > avoir des doigts de fée

  • 6 mauvaise fée

    mauvaise fée
    zlá víla

    Dictionnaire français-tchèque > mauvaise fée

  • 7 méchante fée

    méchante fée
    zlá víla

    Dictionnaire français-tchèque > méchante fée

  • 8 charge

    1. verb
    1) (to ask as the price (for something): They charge 50 cents for a pint of milk, but they don't charge for delivery.) účtovat
    2) (to make a note of (a sum of money) as being owed: Charge the bill to my account.) připsat (na účet)
    3) ((with with) to accuse (of something illegal): He was charged with theft.) obvinit z
    4) (to attack by moving quickly (towards): We charged (towards) the enemy on horseback.) zaútočit, napadnout
    5) (to rush: The children charged down the hill.) hnát se
    6) (to make or become filled with electricity: Please charge my car battery.) nabít
    7) (to make (a person) responsible for (a task etc): He was charged with seeing that everything went well.) pověřit
    2. noun
    1) (a price or fee: What is the charge for a telephone call?) cena, poplatek
    2) (something with which a person is accused: He faces three charges of murder.) obvinění
    3) (an attack made by moving quickly: the charge of the Light Brigade.) výpad
    4) (the electricity in something: a positive or negative charge.) náboj
    5) (someone one takes care of: These children are my charges.) chovanec
    6) (a quantity of gunpowder: Put the charge in place and light the fuse.) náplň
    - in charge of
    - in someone's charge
    - take charge
    * * *
    • poplatek
    • obvinění
    • nálož

    English-Czech dictionary > charge

  • 9 due

    [dju:] 1. adjective
    1) (owed: I think I'm still due some pay; Our thanks are due to the doctor.) dlužný; patřící
    2) (expected according to timetable, promise etc: The bus is due in three minutes.) očekávaný
    3) (proper: Take due care.) náležitý
    2. adverb
    (directly South: sailing due east.) přímo
    3. noun
    1) (what is owed, especially what one has a right to: I'm only taking what is my due.) dluh
    2) ((in plural) charge, fee or toll: He paid the dues on the cargo.) poplatky
    - due to
    - give someone his due
    - give his due
    * * *
    • zapřičiněný
    • způsoben
    • povinnost
    • přiměřený
    • přímo
    • příspěvky
    • rovnou
    • splatnost
    • patřičný
    • náležitý
    • nezaplacený

    English-Czech dictionary > due

  • 10 tuition

    [tju'ʃən]
    1) (teaching, especially private: he gives music tuition / tuition in music.) vyučování
    2) ((American) tuition fee; the money a student pays to a college, university or private school: How much is the tuition at your university?) školné
    * * *
    • vyučování

    English-Czech dictionary > tuition

  • 11 Kaffee

    'Kaffee nebo Kaf'fee m <Kaffees; Kaffees> káva f;
    Kaffee mit Milch bílá káva f;
    Kaffee kochen <u>vařit kávu

    Deutsch-Tschechisch Wörterbuch > Kaffee

См. также в других словарях:

  • fée — fée …   Dictionnaire des rimes

  • fee — n [Middle English, fief, from Old French fé fief, ultimately from a Germanic word akin to Old High German fehu cattle] 1: an inheritable freehold estate in real property; esp: fee simple compare leasehold; life estate at estate …   Law dictionary

  • fée — [ fe ] n. f. • v. 1140; sens fig. XVIIIe; lat. pop. Fata, n. pr., déesse des destinées, de fatum « destin » 1 ♦ Être imaginaire de forme féminine auquel la légende attribue un pouvoir surnaturel et une influence sur la destinée des humains. Bonne …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Fee — Fée Take the Fair Face of Woman… de Sophie Anderson Une fée (du latin fata, pluriel neutre de fatum, « destin », interprété comme un féminin) est une créature surnaturelle, issue des croyances populaires (folklore), des mythologies… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Fee — (f[=e]), n. [OE. fe, feh, feoh, cattle, property, money, fief, AS. feoh cattle, property, money; the senses of property, money, arising from cattle being used in early times as a medium of exchange or payment, property chiefly consisting of… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • FEE — steht für Fédération des Experts Comptables Européens, Interessenvertretung der Wirtschaftsprüfer in Europa FEE (Band), Vertreter der Neuen Deutschen Welle Fördergesellschaft Erneuerbare Energien e.V., Vereins zur Wissensverbreitung über… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • fée — (fée) s. f. 1°   Être fantastique à qui l on attribuait un pouvoir surnaturel, le don de divination et une très grande influence sur la destinée, et que l on se figurait avec une baguette, signe de puissance. •   On a banni les démons et les fées …   Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré

  • fee — FÉE, fee, s.f. (livr.) Zână. – Din fr. fée. Trimis de LauraGellner, 17.05.2004. Sursa: DEX 98  FÉE s. v. zână. Trimis de siveco, 13.09.2007. Sursa: Sinonime  fée s. f., art. féea, g. d …   Dicționar Român

  • Fee — Fee, Darstellung von Sophie Gengembre Anderson Feen sind nach romanischer und keltischer Volkssage geisterhafte, mit höheren Kräften begabte Fabelwesen, die sowohl weiblich als auch männlich sein können. Begriff und Name entwickelten sich aus den …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • fee — (fē) n. 1. A fixed sum charged, as by an institution or by law, for a privilege: »a license fee; tuition fees. 2. A charge for professional services: »a surgeon s fee. 3. A tip; a gratuity. 4. Law See …   Word Histories

  • fee — W2S2 [fi:] n [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: fé, fief, from Medieval Latin feudum; FEUDAL] an amount of money that you pay to do something or that you pay to a professional person for their work ▪ school fees ▪ The health club charges an… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

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