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haste+(noun)

  • 1 haste

    [heist]
    ((too much) speed: Your work shows signs of haste - there are too many mistakes in it.) spěch
    - hasty
    - hastily
    - hastiness
    - in haste
    - make haste
    * * *
    • spěch

    English-Czech dictionary > haste

  • 2 post

    I [pəust] noun
    (a long piece of wood, metal etc, usually fixed upright in the ground: The notice was nailed to a post; a gate-post; the winning-post.) sloup
    - keep somebody posted
    - keep posted
    II 1. [pəust] noun
    ((the system of collecting, transporting and delivering) letters, parcels etc: I sent the book by post; Has the post arrived yet?; Is there any post for me?) pošta
    2. verb
    (to send (a letter etc) by post: He posted the parcel yesterday.) poslat poštou
    - postal
    - postage stamp
    - postal order
    - postbox
    - postcard
    - postcode
    - post-free
    - post-haste
    - posthaste
    - postman
    - postmark
    - postmaster
    - post office
    III 1. [pəust] noun
    1) (a job: He has a post in the government; a teaching post.) zaměstnání
    2) (a place of duty: The soldier remained at his post.) stanoviště
    3) (a settlement, camp etc especially in a distant or unpopulated area: a trading-post.) stanice
    2. verb
    (to send somewhere on duty: He was posted abroad.) poslat, přidělit
    IV [pəust]
    * * *
    • pošta
    • stanoviště

    English-Czech dictionary > post

  • 3 dispatch

    [di'spæ ] 1. verb
    1) (to send off: He dispatched several letters asking for financial help.) odeslat
    2) (to finish off or deal with quickly: She dispatched several pieces of business within the hour.) odbavit
    2. noun
    1) (a written official report: a dispatch from the commanding officer.) depeše
    2) (an act of sending away.) odeslání
    3) (haste.) urychlení, rychlost, spěch
    * * *
    • vyslat
    • poslat
    • odeslání
    • odeslat
    • expedice
    • depeše

    English-Czech dictionary > dispatch

См. также в других словарях:

  • haste — ► NOUN ▪ excessive speed or urgency of action. ● more haste, less speed Cf. ↑more haste, less speed ORIGIN Old French …   English terms dictionary

  • haste — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ great ▪ She worked with great haste. ▪ indecent (esp. BrE), undue, unseemly (esp. BrE) ▪ He accused the government of undue haste in bringing in the new law …   Collocations dictionary

  • haste — [ heıst ] noun uncount FORMAL great speed in doing something because of limited time: in someone s haste to do something: In my haste to escape, I tripped over a fallen branch. haste makes waste used for saying that if you do something too… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • haste — noun (U) 1 great speed in doing something, especially because you do not have enough time: I soon regretted my haste. | in your haste to do sth: In his haste to leave he forgot his briefcase. 2 in haste quickly or in a hurry: They left in haste,… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • haste — noun excessive speed or urgency of action. verb archaic term for hasten. Phrases make haste dated hurry; hasten. Origin ME: from OFr. haste (n.), haster (v.), of Gmc origin …   English new terms dictionary

  • haste — noun working with feverish haste in haste Syn: speed, hastiness, hurriedness, swiftness, rapidity, quickness, briskness; formal expedition Ant: delay …   Thesaurus of popular words

  • haste — I noun acceleration, alacrity, briskness, celerity, dash, dispatch, eagerness to act quickly, expedition, expeditiousness, festinatio, flurry, frenzy, hurriedness, hurry, hustle, inability to wait, precipitance, precipitancy, precipitation,… …   Law dictionary

  • haste — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Swiftness Nouns haste, urgency; dispatch; acceleration, spurt, forced march, rush, dash; velocity; precipitancy, precipitation, precipitousness; impatience, impetuosity; expedition, earliness; hurry,… …   English dictionary for students

  • haste — [13] Haste is a Germanic word, but English acquired it through Old French. The furthest back it can be traced is to a prehistoric West Germanic *khaistiz, which produced such now defunct offspring as Old English hǣst ‘violence’ and Old High… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • haste — [13] Haste is a Germanic word, but English acquired it through Old French. The furthest back it can be traced is to a prehistoric West Germanic *khaistiz, which produced such now defunct offspring as Old English hǣst ‘violence’ and Old High… …   Word origins

  • haste — UK [heɪst] / US noun [uncountable] formal great speed in doing something because of limited time in someone s haste to do something: In my haste to escape, I tripped over a fallen branch. • haste makes waste/more haste less speed used for saying… …   English dictionary

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