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feed+up

  • 1 feed

    [fi:d] 1. past tense, past participle - fed; verb
    1) (to give food to: He fed the child with a spoon.) krmit
    2) ((with on) to eat: Cows feed on grass.) živit se, pást se na
    2. noun
    (food especially for a baby or animals: Have you given the baby his feed?; cattle feed.) dávka krmení, jídlo; krmení, žrádlo
    * * *
    • feed/fed/fed
    • krmit
    • nakrmit
    • napájet

    English-Czech dictionary > feed

  • 2 feed on

    • žít z

    English-Czech dictionary > feed on

  • 3 feed back

    • působit zpětně

    English-Czech dictionary > feed back

  • 4 feed with liquid

    • napájet

    English-Czech dictionary > feed with liquid

  • 5 spoon-feed

    past tense, past participle - spoon-fed; verb
    1) (to feed with a spoon.) krmit lžící
    2) (to teach or treat (a person) in a way that does not allow him to think or act for himself.) dávat už rozžvýkané
    * * *
    • krmit lžičkou

    English-Czech dictionary > spoon-feed

  • 6 bottle-feed

    • uměle živit

    English-Czech dictionary > bottle-feed

  • 7 breast-feed

    • kojit

    English-Czech dictionary > breast-feed

  • 8 chicken feed

    • krmivo pro drůbež

    English-Czech dictionary > chicken feed

  • 9 force-feed

    • přívod pod tlakem
    • násilím krmit

    English-Czech dictionary > force-feed

  • 10 fed

    [fed]
    past tense, past participle; = feed
    * * *
    • živený
    • feed/fed/fed
    • krmený
    • agent FBI

    English-Czech dictionary > fed

  • 11 live

    I 1. [liv] verb
    1) (to have life; to be alive: This poison is dangerous to everything that lives.) žít
    2) (to survive: The doctors say he is very ill, but they think he will live; It was difficult to believe that she had lived through such an experience.) přežít
    3) (to have one's home or dwelling (in a particular place): She lives next to the church; They went to live in Bristol / in a huge house.) bydlit
    4) (to pass (one's life): He lived a life of luxury; She lives in fear of being attacked.) žít
    5) ((with by) to make enough money etc to feed and house oneself: He lives by fishing.) žít (z)
    - - lived
    - living 2. noun
    (the money etc needed to feed and house oneself and keep oneself alive: He earns his living driving a taxi; She makes a good living as an author.) živobytí
    - live-in
    - live and let live
    - live down
    - live in
    - out
    - live on
    - live up to
    - within living memory
    - in living memory
    II 1. adjective
    1) (having life; not dead: a live mouse.) živý
    2) ((of a radio or television broadcast etc) heard or seen as the event takes place; not recorded: I watched a live performance of my favourite opera on television; Was the performance live or recorded?) přímý
    3) (full of energy, and capable of becoming active: a live bomb) nevybuchlý; čilý; aktivní
    4) (burning: a live coal.) žhavý
    2. adverb
    ((of a radio or television broadcast etc) as the event takes place: The competition will be broadcast live.) přímo
    - liveliness
    - livestock
    - live wire
    * * *
    • živý
    • žít
    • živoucí
    • skutečný
    • naživu
    • bydlit
    • bydlet

    English-Czech dictionary > live

  • 12 browse

    1. verb
    1) ((of animals) to feed (on shoots or leaves of plants).) pást se
    2) ((of people) to glance through a book etc casually: I don't want to buy a book - I'm just browsing.) prohlížet, listovat
    3) (to search computer material, especially on a worldwide network.) prohledávat, hledat
    2. noun
    1) (shoots, twigs or leaves as food for cattle.) pastva
    2) (an act of browsing.) prohlížení
    * * *
    • prohlížet
    • pročítat
    • brouzdat

    English-Czech dictionary > browse

  • 13 carrion

    ['kæriən]
    (dead animal flesh, eaten by other animals: Vultures feed on carrion.) zdechlina, mršina
    * * *
    • zdechlina
    • mrcha

    English-Czech dictionary > carrion

  • 14 livelihood

    (a means of living, especially of earning enough money to feed oneself etc.) živobytí
    * * *
    • živobytí
    • obživa
    • bydlo

    English-Czech dictionary > livelihood

  • 15 mammal

    ['mæməl]
    (any member of the class of animals (including man) in which the females feed the young with their own milk: Monkeys are mammals.) savec
    * * *
    • savec

    English-Czech dictionary > mammal

  • 16 mulberry

    plural - mulberries; noun
    1) (a type of tree on whose leaves silkworms feed.) morušovník
    2) (its (usually purple) fruit.) moruše
    * * *
    • moruše

    English-Czech dictionary > mulberry

  • 17 priority

    [-'o-]
    1) (the right to be or go first: An ambulance must have priority over other traffic.) přednost
    2) ((plural priorities) something that must be considered or done first: Our (first) priority is to feed the hungry.) první úkol
    * * *
    • priorita

    English-Czech dictionary > priority

  • 18 rear

    I 1. [riə] noun
    1) (the back part of something: There is a second bathroom at the rear of the house; The enemy attacked the army in the rear.) zadní část; týl
    2) (the buttocks, bottom: The horse kicked him in his rear.) zadek
    2. adjective
    (positioned behind: the rear wheels of the car.) zadní
    - rearguard II [riə] verb
    1) (to feed and care for (a family, animals etc while they grow up): She has reared six children; He rears cattle.) (vy)chovat, pěstovat
    2) ((especially of a horse) to rise up on the hind legs: The horse reared in fright as the car passed.) vzpínat se
    3) (to raise (the head etc): The snake reared its head.) vztyčit
    * * *
    • zadek
    • zadní

    English-Czech dictionary > rear

  • 19 spoon

    [spu:n] 1. noun
    1) (an instrument shaped like a shallow bowl with a handle for lifting food (especially soup or pudding) to the mouth, or for stirring tea, coffee etc: a teaspoon/soup-spoon.) lžíce, lžička
    2) (a spoonful.) lžíce
    2. verb
    (to lift or scoop up with a spoon: She spooned food into the baby's mouth.) krmit lžící
    - spoon-feed
    * * *
    • vařečka
    • lžíce

    English-Czech dictionary > spoon

  • 20 sufficient

    adjective (enough: We haven't sufficient food to feed all these people; Will $10 be sufficient for your needs?) dost
    * * *
    • vhodný
    • postačující
    • dostatečný
    • dostačující

    English-Czech dictionary > sufficient

См. также в других словарях:

  • Feed — Feed, n. 1. That which is eaten; esp., food for beasts; fodder; pasture; hay; grain, ground or whole; as, the best feed for sheep. [1913 Webster] 2. A grazing or pasture ground. Shak. [1913 Webster] 3. An allowance of provender given to a horse,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • feed — Feed, n. 1. That which is eaten; esp., food for beasts; fodder; pasture; hay; grain, ground or whole; as, the best feed for sheep. [1913 Webster] 2. A grazing or pasture ground. Shak. [1913 Webster] 3. An allowance of provender given to a horse,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Feed — may refer to:* As a verb, to feed means to give food to, or to eat food. See feeding. * Feed as a noun often refers to animal feed, food given to or meant for livestock (see also fodder )Inserting one thing into another: * Card feed * Paper… …   Wikipedia

  • Feed — (f[=e]d), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Fed} (f[e^]d); p. pr. & vb. n. {Feeding}.] [AS. f[=e]dan, fr. f[=o]da food; akin to OS. f[=o]dian, OFries. f[=e]da, f[=o]da, D. voeden, OHG. fuottan, Icel. f[ae][eth]a, Sw. f[ o]da, Dan. f[ o]de. [root]75. See… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • feed — vb Feed, nourish, pasture, graze are comparable when they mean to provide the food that one needs or desires. Feed is the comprehensive term applicable not only to persons and animals but also to plants and, by extension, to whatever consumes… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • feed — [fēd] vt. fed, feeding [ME feden < OE fedan < base of foda, FOOD] 1. to give food to; provide food for 2. a) to provide as food [to feed oats to horses] b) to serve as food for …   English World dictionary

  • Feed — Feed, v. i. 1. To take food; to eat. [1913 Webster] Her kid . . . which I afterwards killed because it would not feed. De Foe. [1913 Webster] 2. To subject by eating; to satisfy the appetite; to feed one s self (upon something); to prey; with on… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Feed — (englisch feed „Einspeisung“, „Zufuhr“) oder Newsfeed wird im Deutschen als jargon sprachliche Bezeichnung verwendet für elektronische Nachrichten aus dem Internet, die kostenlos abonniert und automatisch in einen Feedreader oder auch in den …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • feed up — ˌfeed ˈup [intransitive/transitive] [present tense I/you/we/they feed up he/she/it feeds up present participle feeding up past tense …   Useful english dictionary

  • feed — fēd vb, fed fed; feed·ing vt 1 a) to give food to b) to give as food 2) to produce or provide food for vi to consume food: EAT feed n …   Medical dictionary

  • Feed — [fi:d], der; s, s [engl. feed, eigtl. = Versorgung, Einspeisung] (Jargon): elektronische Nachricht aus dem Internet, die kostenlos abonniert u. in ein E Mail Programm o. Ä. eingespeist werden kann …   Universal-Lexikon

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