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1 moisture
['mois ə]noun ((the quality of) dampness: This soil needs moisture.) vlhkosť* * *• vlaha• vlhkost• rosa -
2 climate
1) (the weather conditions of a region (temperature, moisture etc): Britain has a temperate climate.) podnebie2) (the conditions in a country etc: the economic/moral climate.) pomery•- climatic* * *• podnebie -
3 fog
[foɡ] 1. noun(a thick cloud of moisture or water vapour in the air which makes it difficult to see: I had to drive very slowly because of the fog.) hmla2. verb((usually with up) to cover with fog: Her glasses were fogged up with steam.) zahmliť sa- foggy- fog-bound
- fog-horn* * *• závojovat• závoj• zákal• zahmlit sa• zahalit sa hmlou• zmiast• tráva ponechaná cez zimu• hmla• dat výstražné znamenie• popliest• potiahnut sa závojom -
4 mist
[mist](a cloud of moisture in the air but very close to the ground, which makes it difficult to see any distance: The hills are covered in thick mist.) hmla- mistily- misty
- mistiness
- mist over
- up* * *• zahalit sa• závoj• zahmlit• zahmlievat sa• zákal• zakalenie zraku• zakalovat sa• zatemnenie• zakalit sa• zarosit sa• zahmlenie• hmlit sa• hmla• rosit sa• pokryt sa hmlou• mrholit• opar -
5 sauce
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6 succulent
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7 suck
1. verb1) (to draw liquid etc into the mouth: As soon as they are born, young animals learn to suck (milk from their mothers); She sucked up the lemonade through a straw.) sať2) (to hold something between the lips or inside the mouth, as though drawing liquid from it: I told him to take the sweet out of his mouth, but he just went on sucking; He sucked the end of his pencil.) cmúľať3) (to pull or draw in a particular direction with a sucking or similar action: The vacuum cleaner sucked up all the dirt from the carpet; A plant sucks up moisture from the soil.) vysať, vsať4) ((American) (slang) to be awful, boring, disgusting etc: Her singing sucks; This job sucks.) unavovať, otráviť, nudiť2. noun(an act of sucking: I gave him a suck of my lollipop.) liznutie- sucker- suck up to* * *• sat• satie• srkat• pridájat• hlt• cmúlat• cumlat• cucat• cicat• dojcit• lízat• kojit• nasávanie• odsávanie -
8 sweat
[swet] 1. noun(the moisture given out through the skin: He was dripping with sweat after running so far in the heat.) pot2. verb1) (to give out sweat: Vigorous exercise makes you sweat.) potiť sa2) (to work hard: I was sweating (away) at my work from morning till night.) drieť (sa)•- sweater- sweaty
- sweatiness
- a cold sweat* * *• vypotenie sa• výmysel• vypotenie• vytriet• vylucovat pot• vykoristovat• zaparit sa• zapotenie• zaparenie• zvlhnutie• spotit sa• štvat• tažko pracovat• presiaknut• pripravit• predpísat vypotenie• fermentovat• dusit• driet• dostávat s námahou• fuška• drina• honit• hrdlacenie• byt zvedavý• byt poliaty potom• dat vypotit• chorobné potenie• ronit• robota• potit sa• pot• krátky beh pre zahriate• lámat si hlavu• lopota• nedockavý• napätý• odskákat si• odniest si -
9 thirst
[Ɵə:st] 1. noun1) (a feeling of dryness (in the mouth) caused by a lack of water or moisture: I have a terrible thirst.) smäd2) (a strong and eager desire for something: thirst for knowledge.) (veľká) túžba, smäd2. verb(to have a great desire for: He's thirsting for revenge.) túžiť, prahnúť- thirsty- thirstily
- thirstiness* * *• smäd• túžba (pren.)• túžit (pren.)• dychtit (pren.)• chciet pit -
10 wet
[wet] 1. adjective1) (containing, soaked in, or covered with, water or another liquid: We got soaking wet when it began to rain; His shirt was wet through with sweat; wet hair; The car skidded on the wet road.) mokrý, vlhký2) (rainy: a wet day; wet weather; It was wet yesterday.) daždivý2. verb(to make wet: She wet her hair and put shampoo on it; The baby has wet himself / his nappy / the bed.) namočiť, premočiť; pomočiť (sa)3. noun1) (moisture: a patch of wet.) vlhkosť2) (rain: Don't go out in the wet.) dážď, daždivé počasie•- wetness- wet blanket
- wet-nurse
- wetsuit
- wet through* * *• vlhko• vlhkost• vlhký• zmácat• zvlhnutý• slopanica• daždivé pocasie• daždivý• chlast• dážd• pijatika• mokro• mokrý• navlhcit• namocit -
11 dew
[dju:](tiny drops of moisture coming from the air as it cools, especially at night: The grass is wet with early-morning dew.) rosa -
12 perspiration
[pə:spi-]noun (the moisture lost when perspiring: The perspiration was running down his face.) pot -
13 rust
1. noun(the reddish-brown substance which forms on iron and steel, caused by air and moisture: The car was covered with rust.) hrdza2. verb(to (cause to) become covered with rust: The rain has rusted the gate; There's a lot of old metal rusting in the garden.) (z)hrdzavieť- rusty
- rustily
- rustiness
См. также в других словарях:
moisture — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ excess ▪ soil ▪ body ▪ surface … OF MOISTURE ▪ bead … Collocations dictionary
moisture — ► NOUN ▪ water or other liquid diffused in a small quantity as vapour, within a solid, or condensed on a surface … English terms dictionary
moisture — noun /ˈmɔɪstʃɚ/ a) A moderate degree of wetness. . All my body’s moisture Scarce serves to quench my furnace burning heat. b) That which moistens or makes damp or wet; exuding fluid;liquid in small quantity. See Also: moist, moisten, moisturise,… … Wiktionary
moisture scan — noun The use of a mechanical device (capacitance, infrared or nuclear) to detect the presence of moisture within an assembly … Wiktionary
moisture — noun (U) small amounts of water that are present in the air, in a substance, or on a surface: Plants use their roots to absorb moisture from the soil … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
moisture — noun too much moisture is bad for the tiny seedlings Syn: wetness, wet, water, liquid, condensation, dew, steam, vapor, dampness, damp, humidity, clamminess, mugginess, dankness, wateriness … Thesaurus of popular words
moisture equivalent — noun : the water content expressed as a percentage of the dry weight that a soil can retain against a centrifugal force one thousand times the force of gravity and used as a convenient laboratory measure of soil moisture conditions … Useful english dictionary
moisture meter — noun : an instrument for determining the percentage of moisture in a material (as timber, flour, soil, or tobacco) commonly by measuring its electrical resistivity … Useful english dictionary
moisture — noun Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French, from moiste Date: 14th century liquid diffused or condensed in relatively small quantity … New Collegiate Dictionary
moisture — noun water or other liquid diffused in a small quantity as vapour, within a solid, or condensed on a surface. Derivatives moistureless adjective … English new terms dictionary
moisture — noun Syn: wetness, wet, water, liquid, condensation, steam, vapour, dampness, damp, humidity … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary