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moisture

  • 1 moisture

    ['mois ə]
    noun ((the quality of) dampness: This soil needs moisture.) vlhkost
    * * *
    • vlhkost

    English-Czech dictionary > moisture

  • 2 climate

    1) (the weather conditions of a region (temperature, moisture etc): Britain has a temperate climate.) klima
    2) (the conditions in a country etc: the economic/moral climate.) ovzduší, poměry
    * * *
    • podnebí
    • klima

    English-Czech dictionary > climate

  • 3 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
    * * *
    • rosa

    English-Czech dictionary > dew

  • 4 dry

    1. adjective
    1) (having little, or no, moisture, sap, rain etc: The ground is very dry; The leaves are dry and withered; I need to find dry socks for the children.) suchý
    2) (uninteresting and not lively: a very dry book.) suchopárný
    3) ((of humour or manner) quiet, restrained: a dry wit.) suchý
    4) ((of wine) not sweet.) suchý
    2. verb
    (to (cause to) become dry: I prefer drying dishes to washing them; The clothes dried quickly in the sun.) utírat; sušit
    - drier
    - dryer
    - drily
    - dryly
    - dryness
    - dry-clean
    - dry land
    - dry off
    - dry up
    * * *
    • vysušit
    • vyprahlý
    • suchý
    • sušit
    • sucho

    English-Czech dictionary > dry

  • 5 evaporated

    adjective (having had some moisture removed by evaporation: evaporated milk.) kondenzovaný
    * * *
    • vypařený

    English-Czech dictionary > evaporated

  • 6 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.) mlha
    2. verb
    ((usually with up) to cover with fog: Her glasses were fogged up with steam.) zamlžit (se)
    - fog-bound
    - fog-horn
    * * *
    • zamlžit
    • mlha

    English-Czech dictionary > fog

  • 7 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.) mlha
    - misty
    - mistiness
    - mist over
    - up
    * * *
    • mlha

    English-Czech dictionary > mist

  • 8 moist

    [moist]
    (damp; slightly wet: moist, fertile soil.) vlhký
    - moistness
    - moisten
    - moisture
    - moisturize
    - moisturise
    - moisturizer
    - moisturiser
    * * *
    • vlhký

    English-Czech dictionary > moist

  • 9 moisturise

    [-s ə-]
    verb (to keep the moisture in (skin): This cream is used to moisturize the skin.) zvlhčit
    * * *
    • navlhčit

    English-Czech dictionary > moisturise

  • 10 moisturize

    [-s ə-]
    verb (to keep the moisture in (skin): This cream is used to moisturize the skin.) zvlhčit
    * * *
    • zvlhčit
    • navlhčit

    English-Czech dictionary > moisturize

  • 11 perspiration

    [pə:spi-]
    noun (the moisture lost when perspiring: The perspiration was running down his face.) pot
    * * *
    • pot

    English-Czech dictionary > perspiration

  • 12 perspire

    (to lose moisture through the skin when hot; to sweat: He was perspiring in the heat.) potit se
    * * *
    • potit
    • potit se

    English-Czech dictionary > perspire

  • 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.) rez
    2. 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)rezivět, způsobit rezivění
    - rusty
    - rustily
    - rustiness
    * * *
    • rez
    • koroze

    English-Czech dictionary > rust

  • 14 sauce

    [so:s]
    (a usually thick liquid that is poured over other food in order to add moisture and flavour: tomato sauce; an expert at making sauces.) omáčka
    - saucily
    - sauciness
    - saucepan
    * * *
    • omáčka

    English-Czech dictionary > sauce

  • 15 succulent

    1. adjective
    1) ((of fruit or other food eg meat) juicy and delicious: a succulent peach.) šťavnatý
    2) ((of plants) having thick stems and leaves that are full of moisture.) sukulentní
    2. noun
    (a plant of this type: A cactus is a type of succulent.) sukulent
    * * *
    • šťavnatý

    English-Czech dictionary > succulent

  • 16 suck

    1. verb
    1) (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.) sát
    2) (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.) cucat
    3) (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.) vysát
    4) ((American) (slang) to be awful, boring, disgusting etc: Her singing sucks; This job sucks.) smrdět, zavánět podrazem
    2. noun
    (an act of sucking: I gave him a suck of my lollipop.) líznutí
    - suck up to
    * * *
    • sát
    • cucat

    English-Czech dictionary > suck

  • 17 sweat

    [swet] 1. noun
    (the moisture given out through the skin: He was dripping with sweat after running so far in the heat.) pot
    2. verb
    1) (to give out sweat: Vigorous exercise makes you sweat.) potit se
    2) (to work hard: I was sweating (away) at my work from morning till night.) dřít (se)
    - sweaty
    - sweatiness
    - a cold sweat
    * * *
    • pot
    • potit se

    English-Czech dictionary > sweat

  • 18 thirst

    [Ɵə:st] 1. noun
    1) (a feeling of dryness (in the mouth) caused by a lack of water or moisture: I have a terrible thirst.) žízeň
    2) (a strong and eager desire for something: thirst for knowledge.) žízeň
    2. verb
    (to have a great desire for: He's thirsting for revenge.) žíznit
    - thirstily
    - thirstiness
    * * *
    • žízeň

    English-Czech dictionary > thirst

  • 19 wet

    [wet] 1. adjective
    1) (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
    2) (rainy: a wet day; wet weather; It was wet yesterday.) deštivý
    2. verb
    (to make wet: She wet her hair and put shampoo on it; The baby has wet himself / his nappy / the bed.) namočit, pomočit (se)
    3. noun
    1) (moisture: a patch of wet.) vlhkost
    2) (rain: Don't go out in the wet.) déšť
    - wet blanket
    - wet-nurse
    - wetsuit
    - wet through
    * * *
    • vlhký
    • mokrý

    English-Czech dictionary > wet

См. также в других словарях:

  • Moisture — Mois ture, n. [Cf. OF. moistour, F. moiteur.] 1. A moderate degree of wetness. Bacon. [1913 Webster] 2. That which moistens or makes damp or wet; exuding fluid; liquid in small quantity. [1913 Webster] All my body s moisture Scarce serves to… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • moisture — (n.) mid 14c., from O.Fr. moistour moisture, dampness, wetness (13c., Mod.Fr. moiteur), from moiste (see MOIST (Cf. moist)) …   Etymology dictionary

  • moisture — [n] dampness; liquid damp, dankness, dew, drizzle, fog, humidity, mist, perspiration, precipitation, rain, sweat, water, wateriness, wet, wetness; concepts 467,524 Ant. dryness …   New thesaurus

  • 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 — [mois′chər] n. [OFr moisteur < moiste: see MOIST] water or other liquid causing a slight wetness or dampness moistureless adj …   English World dictionary

  • Moisture — Damp redirects here. For other uses, see Damp (disambiguation). Dew on a spider web Humidity is the amount of moisture the air can hold before it rains. Moisture refers to the presence of a liquid, especially water, often in trace amounts. Small… …   Wikipedia

  • moisture — 01. After I take a shower, the walls of our bathroom are covered with [moisture]. 02. You have to make sure that you turn the compost once in a while in order to get air and [moisture] in there to help all the stuff to break down. 03. Sea animals …   Grammatical examples in English

  • moisture — n in coal, that water in and on coal assayed in accordance with standard test methods in which the final step is the measurement of mass loss from a coal sample heated to 104 to 110°C at specified conditions of residence time, atmosphere, sample… …   Coke&Coal Terminology

  • moisture — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ excess ▪ soil ▪ body ▪ surface … OF MOISTURE ▪ bead …   Collocations dictionary

  • Moisture — (Roget s Thesaurus) < N PARAG:Moisture >N GRP: N 1 Sgm: N 1 moisture moisture Sgm: N 1 moistness moistness &c. >Adj. Sgm: N 1 humidity humidity humectation Sgm: N 1 madefaction| madefaction| dew Sgm: N 1 serein …   English dictionary for students

  • moisture — [[t]mɔ͟ɪstʃə(r)[/t]] N UNCOUNT Moisture is tiny drops of water in the air, on a surface, or in the ground. When the soil is dry, more moisture is lost from the plant... Rainfall affects the moisture content of the atmosphere …   English dictionary

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