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télévision

  • 121 scriptwriter

    noun (a person who writes the texts for radio or television programmes.) autor textu
    * * *
    • scenárista
    • scénárista

    English-Czech dictionary > scriptwriter

  • 122 see

    I [si:] past tense - saw; verb
    1) (to have the power of sight: After six years of blindness, he found he could see.) vidět
    2) (to be aware of by means of the eye: I can see her in the garden.) vidět
    3) (to look at: Did you see that play on television?) vidět
    4) (to have a picture in the mind: I see many difficulties ahead.) tušit
    5) (to understand: She didn't see the point of the joke.) chápat
    6) (to investigate: Leave this here and I'll see what I can do for you.) uvidět
    7) (to meet: I'll see you at the usual time.) vidět
    8) (to accompany: I'll see you home.) doprovodit
    - seeing that
    - see off
    - see out
    - see through
    - see to
    - I
    - we will see
    II [si:] noun
    (the district over which a bishop or archbishop has authority.) (arci)biskupství
    * * *
    • uvidět
    • zahlédnout
    • vidět
    • viz
    • vídat
    • zhlédnout
    • pozorovat
    • sídlo
    • see/saw/seen
    • rozumět
    • stolec
    • spatřit
    • hledět
    • nahlížet
    • chápat

    English-Czech dictionary > see

  • 123 seek

    [si:k]
    past tense, past participle - sought; verb
    1) ((sometimes with for) to try to find, get or achieve: He is seeking (for) an answer; You should seek your lawyer's advice; She's seeking fame in the world of television.) (vy)hledat
    2) (to try: These men are seeking to destroy the government.) snažit se
    * * *
    • žádat
    • seek/sought/sought
    • hledání
    • hledat

    English-Czech dictionary > seek

  • 124 self-respect

    [selfri'spekt]
    (respect for oneself and concern for one's reputation: Well-known personalities should have more self-respect than to take part in television advertising.) sebeúcta
    * * *
    • sebeúcta

    English-Czech dictionary > self-respect

  • 125 shock

    I 1. [ʃok] noun
    1) (a severe emotional disturbance: The news gave us all a shock.) otřes
    2) ((often electric shock) the effect on the body of an electric current: He got a slight shock when he touched the live wire.) rána
    3) (a sudden blow coming with great force: the shock of an earthquake.) otřes
    4) (a medical condition caused by a severe mental or physical shock: He was suffering from shock after the crash.) šok
    2. verb
    (to give a shock to; to upset or horrify: Everyone was shocked by his death; The amount of violence shown on television shocks me.) otřást
    - shocking
    - shockingly
    - shock-absorber
    II [ʃok] noun
    (a bushy mass (of hair) on a person's head.) chomáče vlasů
    * * *
    • rána
    • šok
    • otřes
    • okovat

    English-Czech dictionary > shock

  • 126 slave

    [sleiv] 1. noun
    1) (a person who works for a master to whom he belongs: In the nineteenth century many Africans were sold as slaves in the United States.) otrok, -yně
    2) (a person who works very hard for someone else: He has a slave who types his letters and organizes his life for him.) otrok
    2. verb
    (to work very hard, often for another person: I've been slaving away for you all day while you sit and watch television.) otročit
    * * *
    • otrok

    English-Czech dictionary > slave

  • 127 slot

    [slot] 1. noun
    1) (a small narrow opening, especially one to receive coins: I put the correct money in the slot, but the machine didn't start.) zdířka
    2) (a (usually regular) position (in eg the schedule of television/radio programmes): The early-evening comedy slot.) programový blok
    2. verb
    ((with in or into) to fit (something) into a small space: He slotted the last piece of the puzzle into place; I managed to slot in my tea-break between two jobs.) vsunout
    * * *
    • vybrání
    • slot na křídle letadla
    • štěrbina
    • divadelní propadlo
    • dělat štěrbinu

    English-Czech dictionary > slot

  • 128 smut

    (vulgar or indecent talk etc: There is too much smut on television nowadays!) oplzlost
    - smuttiness
    * * *
    • prasečinka
    • pornografie
    • prasečina
    • saze
    • sprosťárna
    • oplzlost
    • obscénnost

    English-Czech dictionary > smut

См. также в других словарях:

  • TÉLÉVISION — La télévision est devenue un fait social de première importance puisque, dans les pays les plus développés, il y avait, en 1990, environ dix récepteurs de télévision pour vingt cinq habitants. Grâce à l’électronique, certains spectacles,… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Television — Télévision « Télé » et « TV » redirigent ici. Pour les autres significations, voir Télé (homonymie) et TV (homonymie). Pour les articles homonymes, voir télévi …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Television — Основная информация Жанры …   Википедия

  • television — UK US /ˈtelɪvɪʒən/ noun [U] (also TV) ► COMMUNICATIONS a system of broadcasting images and sound using electrical signals, and the programmes that are shown: on (the) television »Consumer programmes on the television have enjoyed a rise in… …   Financial and business terms

  • televisión — sustantivo femenino 1. Área: tecnología Uso/registro: coloquial. Sistema de transmisión de imágenes y sonidos a distancia por medio de ondas hertzianas: programa de televisión, presentador de televisión, estudios de televisión. Veo poca… …   Diccionario Salamanca de la Lengua Española

  • television — [tel′ə vizh΄ən] n. [ TELE + VISION] 1. the practice or science of transmitting scenes or views by radio or, sometimes, by wire: the television transmitter, by means of a camera tube, such as an image orthicon or vidicon, converts light rays into… …   English World dictionary

  • Television — Sf Fernsehen (meist TV abgekürzt) erw. fach. (20. Jh.) Neoklassische Bildung. Entlehnt aus ne. television; dieses ist eine Hybridbildung aus gr. tẽle fern und l. visio Sicht .    Ebenso nndl. televisie, ne. television, nfrz. télévision, nschw.… …   Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen sprache

  • television — (n.) 1907, the action of seeing by means of Hertzian waves or otherwise, what is existing or happening at a place concealed or distant from the observer s eyes [OED]; in theoretical discussions about sending images by radio transmission, formed… …   Etymology dictionary

  • television — ► NOUN 1) a system for converting visual images (with sound) into electrical signals, transmitting them by radio or other means, and displaying them electronically on a screen. 2) the activity, profession, or medium of broadcasting on television …   English terms dictionary

  • Television — actorvist adrenaline television appointment television backstory baked potato barking head begathon …   New words

  • Television —    Television (TV) was only just developing at the end of the 1930s, with only one station in New York City and about 1,000 sets in operation by 1939. By 1941, there were 13 stations and the 521 lines of signal had become standard, but World War… …   Historical Dictionary of the Roosevelt–Truman Era

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