Перевод: с английского на чешский

с чешского на английский

he+went+up

  • 61 exception

    [-ʃən]
    1) (something or someone not included: They all work hard, without exception; With the exception of Jim we all went home early.) výjimka
    2) (something not according to the rule: We normally eat nothing at lunchtime, but Sunday is an exception.) výjimka
    * * *
    • výjimka

    English-Czech dictionary > exception

  • 62 fancy dress

    clothes representing a particular character, nationality, historical period etc: He went to the party in fancy dress; (also adjective) (a fancy-dress party.) maškarní kostým; maškarní
    * * *
    • maškarní kostým

    English-Czech dictionary > fancy dress

  • 63 far

    1. adverb
    1) (indicating distance, progress etc: How far is it from here to his house?) daleko
    2) (at or to a long way away: She went far away/off.) daleko
    3) (very much: She was a far better swimmer than her friend (was).) mnohem
    2. adjective
    1) (distant; a long way away: a far country.) daleký, vzdálený
    2) (more distant (usually of two things): He lives on the far side of the lake.) druhý, vzdálenější
    - farthest
    - faraway
    - far-fetched
    - as far as
    - by far
    - far and away
    - far from
    - so far
    * * *
    • vzdálený
    • daleký
    • daleko

    English-Czech dictionary > far

  • 64 fated

    adjective (controlled or intended by fate: He seemed fated to arrive late wherever he went.) předurčený
    * * *
    • osudový

    English-Czech dictionary > fated

  • 65 firewood

    noun (wood that is suitable for burning as fuel: I went into the garden to cut firewood.) palivové dříví
    * * *
    • palivové dříví

    English-Czech dictionary > firewood

  • 66 flat

    [flæt] 1. adjective
    1) (level; without rise or fall: a flat surface.) plochý
    2) (dull; without interest: She spent a very flat weekend.) nudný, všední
    3) ((of something said, decided etc) definite; emphatic: a flat denial.) rozhodný, jasný
    4) ((of a tyre) not inflated, having lost most of its air: His car had a flat tyre.) prázdný, splasklý
    5) ((of drinks) no longer fizzy: flat lemonade; ( also adverb) My beer has gone flat.) zvětralý
    6) (slightly lower than a musical note should be: That last note was flat; ( also adverb) The choir went very flat.) nižší o půl tónu
    2. adverb
    (stretched out: She was lying flat on her back.) roztažený
    3. noun
    1) ((American apartment) a set of rooms on one floor, with kitchen and bathroom, in a larger building or block: Do you live in a house or a flat?) byt
    2) ((in musical notation) a sign (♭) which makes a note a semitone lower.) předznamenání bé
    3) (a level, even part: the flat of her hand.) dlaň
    4) ((usually in plural) an area of flat land, especially beside the sea, a river etc: mud flats.) nížina
    - flatten
    - flat rate
    - flat out
    * * *
    • byt

    English-Czech dictionary > flat

  • 67 follow suit

    (to do just as someone else has done: He went to bed and I followed suit.) udělat totéž
    * * *
    • přizpůsobit se
    • sledovat příklad

    English-Czech dictionary > follow suit

  • 68 forth

    [fo:Ɵ]
    (forward; onward: They went forth into the desert.) dále; dopředu
    * * *
    • dále

    English-Czech dictionary > forth

  • 69 frontier

    1) (a boundary between countries: We crossed the frontier; ( also adjective) a frontier town.) hranice; pohraniční
    2) (the farthest area of land on which people live and work, before the country becomes wild and deserted: Many families went to make a new life on the frontier.) pohraničí
    3) (the limits or boundaries (of knowledge etc): the frontiers of scientific knowledge.) hranice
    * * *
    • hranice
    • hraniční

    English-Czech dictionary > frontier

  • 70 gallop

    ['ɡæləp] 1. noun
    ((a period of riding at) the fastest pace of a horse: He took the horse out for a gallop; The horse went off at a gallop.) trysk, cval
    2. verb
    1) ((of a horse) to move at a gallop: The horse galloped round the field.) cválat
    2) ((with through) to do, say etc (something) very quickly: He galloped through the work.) udělat v trysku; oddrmolit
    * * *
    • způsob běhu koně
    • cval

    English-Czech dictionary > gallop

  • 71 go for

    (to attack physically or in words: The two dogs went for each other as soon as they met.) jít po (kom)
    * * *
    • usilovat o
    • stát za
    • napadnout

    English-Czech dictionary > go for

  • 72 go over

    1) (to study or examine carefully: I want to go over the work you have done before you do any more.) projít, prozkoumat
    2) (to repeat (a story etc): I'll go over the whole lesson again.) zopakovat
    3) (to list: He went over all her faults.) projít, vyjmenovat
    4) ((of plays, behaviour etc) to be received (well or badly): The play didn't go over at all well the first night.) být přijat
    * * *
    • projít
    • přejít
    • prohledat
    • prozkoumat

    English-Czech dictionary > go over

  • 73 gone

    * * *
    • pryč
    • go/went/gone

    English-Czech dictionary > gone

  • 74 grow

    [ɡrəu]
    past tense - grew; verb
    1) ((of plants) to develop: Carrots grow well in this soil.) růst
    2) (to become bigger, longer etc: My hair has grown too long; Our friendship grew as time went on.) (na)růst
    3) (to cause or allow to grow: He has grown a beard.) nachat si narůst
    4) ((with into) to change into, in becoming mature: Your daughter has grown into a beautiful woman.) vyrůst (v)
    5) (to become: It's growing dark.) stávat se
    - grown
    - growth
    - grown-up
    - grown-up
    - grow on
    - grow up
    * * *
    • vyrůst
    • pěstovat
    • růst
    • grow/grew/grown

    English-Czech dictionary > grow

  • 75 hill

    [hil]
    1) (noun a piece of high land, smaller than a mountain: We went for a walk in the hills yesterday.) kopec
    2) (a slope on a road: This car has difficulty going up steep hills.) stoupání
    - hilly
    - hillside
    * * *
    • vrch
    • pahorek
    • hora
    • kopec

    English-Czech dictionary > hill

  • 76 home

    [həum] 1. noun
    1) (the house, town, country etc where a person etc usually lives: I work in London but my home is in Bournemouth; When I retire, I'll make my home in Bournemouth; Africa is the home of the lion; We'll have to find a home for the kitten.) domov
    2) (the place from which a person, thing etc comes originally: America is the home of jazz.) vlast
    3) (a place where children without parents, old people, people who are ill etc live and are looked after: an old folk's home; a nursing home.) domov
    4) (a place where people stay while they are working: a nurses' home.) internát; ubytovna
    5) (a house: Crumpy Construction build fine homes for fine people; He invited me round to his home.) dům
    2. adjective
    1) (of a person's home or family: home comforts.) domácí
    2) (of the country etc where a person lives: home produce.) tuzemský, zdejší
    3) ((in football) playing or played on a team's own ground: the home team; a home game.) domácí
    3. adverb
    1) (to a person's home: I'm going home now; Hallo - I'm home!) domů, doma
    2) (completely; to the place, position etc a thing is intended to be: He drove the nail home; Few of his punches went home; These photographs of the war brought home to me the suffering of the soldiers.) pevně; na místo určení; úplně
    - homely
    - homeliness
    - homing
    - home-coming
    - home-grown
    - homeland
    - home-made
    - home rule
    - homesick
    - homesickness
    - homestead
    - home truth
    - homeward
    - homewards
    - homeward
    - homework
    - at home
    - be/feel at home
    - home in on
    - leave home
    - make oneself at home
    - nothing to write home about
    * * *
    • domov
    • domácí
    • domů
    • dům
    • doma

    English-Czech dictionary > home

  • 77 homesick

    adjective (missing one's home: When the boy first went to boarding-school he was very homesick.) tesknící po domově
    * * *
    • tesknící po domově
    • nostalgický

    English-Czech dictionary > homesick

  • 78 honeymoon

    noun (a holiday spent immediately after one's marriage: We went to London for our honeymoon; ( also adjective) a honeymoon couple.) líbánky; svatební cesta; novomanželský
    * * *
    • svatební cesta
    • líbánky

    English-Czech dictionary > honeymoon

  • 79 horizon

    (the line at which the earth and the sky seem to meet: The sun went down below the horizon; A ship could be seen on the horizon.) obzor
    - horizontally
    * * *
    • obzor

    English-Czech dictionary > horizon

  • 80 hunger strike

    (a refusal to eat, as a form of protest or to force (someone) to agree to certain demands etc: The prisoners went on hunger strike as a protest against prison discipline.) hladovka
    * * *
    • hladovka

    English-Czech dictionary > hunger strike

См. также в других словарях:

  • Went the Day Well ? — Went the Day Well? Went the Day Well? Titre original Went the Day Well? Réalisation Alberto Cavalcanti Acteurs principaux Leslie Banks Elizabeth Allan Scénario John Dighton Angus MacPhail Diana Morgan d après une nouvelle de Graham Greene Genre …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Went the Day Well? — Données clés Titre original Went the Day Well? Réalisation Alberto Cavalcanti Scénario John Dighton Angus MacPhail Diana Morgan d après une nouvelle de Graham Greene Acteurs principaux Leslie Banks …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Went — is a surname and may refer to: * Frits Went (1863 1935), Dutch botanist * Frits Warmolt Went (1903 1990), Dutch biologist * Johanna Went, US Performance Artist * John Stewart Went (1944 ), Anglican Bishop of Tewkesbury * Joseph J. Went (1930 ),… …   Wikipedia

  • went — (wĕnt) v. ▸ Past tense of GO(Cf. ↑go)1. ╂ [Middle English, from Old English wende, past tense and past participle of wendan, to go.] Word History: Why do we say went and not goed? Go has always had an unusual past tense, formed from a completely… …   Word Histories

  • Went — Went, n. Course; way; path; journey; direction. [Obs.] At a turning of a wente. Chaucer. [1913 Webster] But here my weary team, nigh overspent, Shall breathe itself awhile after so long a went. Spenser. [1913 Webster] He knew the diverse went of… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Went — Went, imp. & p. p. of {Wend}; now obsolete except as the imperfect of go, with which it has no etymological connection. See {Go}. [1913 Webster] To the church both be they went. Chaucer. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • went gone out with the ark — went/had gone out with the ark British & Australian, humorous if an object or method went out with the ark, it is not used any more. These old manual printing presses went out with the ark everything s computerized these days …   New idioms dictionary

  • went — [went] [Date: 1400 1500; Origin: From the old past tense of wend] the past tense of ↑go …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • went — past tense of GO (Cf. go); originally past tense and pp. of WEND (Cf. wend). The original past tense forms of wend were wende, wended, but variants wente, went developed from c.1200 and began to replace older past tenses of go. By c.1500 they… …   Etymology dictionary

  • went — [went] vi., vt. [old pt. of WEND, used to replace missing form of GO1] pt. of GO1 …   English World dictionary

  • went — /went/, v. 1. pt. of go. 2. Nonstandard. a pp. of go1. 3. Archaic. a pt. and pp. of wend. * * * …   Universalium

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