Перевод: с английского на чешский

с чешского на английский

flower+people

  • 1 press

    [pres] 1. verb
    1) (to use a pushing motion (against): Press the bell twice!; The children pressed close to their mother.) zmáčknout, tisknout (se)
    2) (to squeeze; to flatten: The grapes are pressed to extract the juice.) lisovat, (roz)mačkat
    3) (to urge or hurry: He pressed her to enter the competition.) nutit
    4) (to insist on: The printers are pressing their claim for higher pay.) trvat (na)
    5) (to iron: Your trousers need to be pressed.) žehlit
    2. noun
    1) (an act of pressing: He gave her hand a press; You had better give your shirt a press.) stisk, vyžehlení
    2) ((also printing-press) a printing machine.) tiskařský stroj
    3) (newspapers in general: It was reported in the press; ( also adjective) a press photographer.) tisk(ový)
    4) (the people who work on newspapers and magazines; journalists: The press is/are always interested in the private lives of famous people.) novináři
    5) (a device or machine for pressing: a wine-press; a flower-press.) lis
    - press conference
    - press-cutting
    - be hard pressed
    - be pressed for
    - press for
    - press forward/on
    * * *
    • tisknout
    • utiskovat
    • tisk
    • tlačit
    • urgovat
    • tiskový
    • tísnit
    • tlak
    • vylisovat
    • zatlačit
    • rekvizice
    • svírat
    • stlačit
    • stisknout
    • lisovat
    • lis
    • mandlovat
    • novináři

    English-Czech dictionary > press

  • 2 nose

    [nəuz] 1. noun
    1) (the part of the face by which people and animals smell and usually breathe: She held the flower to her nose; He punched the man on the nose.) nos
    2) (the sense of smell: Police dogs have good noses and can follow criminals' trails.) nos, čich
    3) (the part of anything which is like a nose in shape or position: the nose of an aeroplane.) příď, předek, špička
    2. verb
    1) (to make a way by pushing carefully forward: The ship nosed (its way) through the ice.) opatrně plout, rozrážet přídí
    2) (to look or search as if by smelling: He nosed about (in) the cupboard.) čmuchat
    - - nosed
    - nosey
    - nosy
    - nosily
    - nosiness
    - nose-bag
    - nosedive
    - nose job
    3. verb
    (to make such a dive: Suddenly the plane nosedived.) letět střemhlav
    - lead by the nose
    - nose out
    - pay through the nose
    - turn up one's nose at
    - under a person's very nose
    - under very nose
    - under a person's nose
    - under nose
    * * *
    • nos

    English-Czech dictionary > nose

  • 3 stimulus

    ['stimjuləs]
    plural - stimuli; noun
    1) (something that causes a reaction in a living thing: Light is the stimulus that causes a flower to open.) podnět
    2) (something that rouses or encourages a person etc to action or greater effort: Many people think that children need the stimulus of competition to make them work better in school.) hnací síla
    * * *
    • podnět
    • stimul

    English-Czech dictionary > stimulus

См. также в других словарях:

  • flower people — noun a youth subculture (mostly from the middle class) originating in San Francisco in the 1960s; advocated universal love and peace and communes and long hair and soft drugs; favored acid rock and progressive rock music • Syn: ↑hippies,… …   Useful english dictionary

  • flower people — flower children. [1965 70] * * * …   Universalium

  • flower people — noun plural Date: 1967 flower children …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • flower people — flow′er peo ple n. cvb flower children • Etymology: 1965–70 …   From formal English to slang

  • flower people — noun (plural) BrE young people in the 1960s and 70s who were against war and wanted peace and love in society …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • flower children — [flower children] (also flower people ; )noun [pl] young people in many countries in t …   Useful english dictionary

  • flower — n. & v. n. 1 the part of a plant from which the fruit or seed is developed. 2 the reproductive organ in a plant containing one or more pistils or stamens or both, and usu. a corolla and calyx. 3 a blossom, esp. on a stem and used in bunches for… …   Useful english dictionary

  • flower children — (also flower people) n [pl] young people in many countries in the 1960s who believed in peace and love, and were against war. They carried flowers or wore them in their hair as a symbol of their beliefs. They were part of the hippie movement, and …   Universalium

  • flower child — noun someone who rejects the established culture; advocates extreme liberalism in politics and lifestyle • Syn: ↑hippie, ↑hippy, ↑hipster • Hypernyms: ↑reformer, ↑reformist, ↑crusader, ↑social reformer, ↑ …   Useful english dictionary

  • Flower child — or Flower Children usually someone born between 1940 and 1955 originated as a synonym for hippie, especially those who gathered in San Francisco and environs during the summer of 1967, which was called the Summer of Love . It was the custom of… …   Wikipedia

  • Flower Communion — is a ritual service common in Unitarian Universalism, though the specific practices vary from one congregation to another.PDF| [http://www.uua.org/documents/zottolireginald/flowercommunion.pdf The Flower Communion: A Service of Celebration for… …   Wikipedia

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