Перевод: с английского на чешский

с чешского на английский

the+thread

  • 1 thread

    [Ɵred] 1. noun
    1) (a thin strand of cotton, wool, silk etc, especially when used for sewing: a needle and some thread.) nit
    2) (the spiral ridge around a screw: This screw has a worn thread.) závit
    3) (the connection between the various events or details (in a story, account etc): I've lost the thread of what he's saying.) nit, souvislost
    2. verb
    1) (to pass a thread through: I cannot thread this needle; The child was threading beads.) navlékat
    2) (to make (one's way) through: She threaded her way through the crowd.) proplétat se
    * * *
    • vlákno
    • příze
    • nit

    English-Czech dictionary > thread

  • 2 shuttle

    1) (in weaving, a piece of equipment for carrying the thread backwards and forwards across the other threads.) člunek
    2) (a piece of machinery for making loops in the lower thread in a sewing-machine.) člunek
    3) (an air, train or other transport service etc which operates constantly backwards and forwards between two places: an airline shuttle between London and Edinburgh; space shuttle (= a craft travelling between space stations).) kyvadlová doprava
    * * *
    • raketoplán

    English-Czech dictionary > shuttle

  • 3 stamen

    ['steimən]
    (one of the thread-like spikes in a flower that bear the pollen.) tyčinka
    * * *
    • část rostliny

    English-Czech dictionary > stamen

  • 4 unravel

    past tense - unravelled; verb
    1) (to take (eg string, thread etc) out of its tangled condition; to disentangle: She could not unravel the tangled thread.) rozmotat
    2) ((especially of a knitted fabric) to undo or become undone: My knitting (got) unravelled when it fell off the needles.) rozpárat se
    3) (to solve (a problem, mystery etc): Is there no-one who can unravel this mystery?) rozluštit
    * * *
    • rozmotat
    • rozpadat
    • rozpárat

    English-Czech dictionary > unravel

  • 5 bobbin

    ['bobin]
    (a (usually wooden) reel or spool for winding thread etc: There's no thread left on the bobbin.) cívka, špulka
    * * *
    • cívka

    English-Czech dictionary > bobbin

  • 6 spool

    [spu:l]
    1) (a type of cylindrical holder: How can I wind this film back on to its spool?) cívka
    2) (the amount of thread, film etc held by such a holder: She used three spools of thread in one week.) cívka
    * * *
    • cívka

    English-Czech dictionary > spool

  • 7 line

    I 1. noun
    1) ((a piece of) thread, cord, rope etc: She hung the washing on the line; a fishing-rod and line.) šňůra; nit; vlasec
    2) (a long, narrow mark, streak or stripe: She drew straight lines across the page; a dotted/wavy line.) čára
    3) (outline or shape especially relating to length or direction: The ship had very graceful lines; A dancer uses a mirror to improve his line.) linka, linie
    4) (a groove on the skin; a wrinkle.) vráska
    5) (a row or group of objects or persons arranged side by side or one behind the other: The children stood in a line; a line of trees.) řada
    6) (a short letter: I'll drop him a line.) pár řádek
    7) (a series or group of persons which come one after the other especially in the same family: a line of kings.) rodová linie
    8) (a track or direction: He pointed out the line of the new road; a new line of research.) trasa; směr
    9) (the railway or a single track of the railway: Passengers must cross the line by the bridge only.) trať
    10) (a continuous system (especially of pipes, electrical or telephone cables etc) connecting one place with another: a pipeline; a line of communication; All (telephone) lines are engaged.) potrubí; síť; linka; spoj
    11) (a row of written or printed words: The letter contained only three lines; a poem of sixteen lines.) řádek
    12) (a regular service of ships, aircraft etc: a shipping line.) linka
    13) (a group or class (of goods for sale) or a field of activity, interest etc: This has been a very popular new line; Computers are not really my line.) druh, sortiment; obor
    14) (an arrangement of troops, especially when ready to fight: fighting in the front line.) linie
    2. verb
    1) (to form lines along: Crowds lined the pavement to see the Queen.) lemovat
    2) (to mark with lines.) nalinkovat
    - linear - linesman
    - hard lines!
    - in line for
    - in
    - out of line with
    - line up
    - read between the lines
    II verb
    1) (to cover on the inside: She lined the box with newspaper.) vyložit
    2) (to put a lining in: She lined the dress with silk.) podšít
    * * *
    • trať
    • potrubí
    • přímka
    • řádek
    • řada
    • rodokmen
    • šňůra
    • linie
    • lemovat
    • linkovat
    • linka
    • čára
    • dráha

    English-Czech dictionary > line

  • 8 gut

    1. noun
    1) (the tube in the lower part of the body through which food passes.) střevo
    2) (a strong thread made from the gut of an animal, used for violin strings etc.) struna (vyrobená ze střeva)
    2. verb
    1) (to take the guts out of: Her job was to gut fish.) vykuchat
    2) (to destroy completely, except for the outer frame: The fire gutted the house.) zničit vnitřek
    * * *
    • střevo

    English-Czech dictionary > gut

  • 9 wire

    1. noun
    1) (( also adjective) (of) metal drawn out into a long strand, as thick as string or as thin as thread: We need some wire to connect the battery to the rest of the circuit; a wire fence.) drát(ěný)
    2) (a single strand of this: There must be a loose wire in my radio somewhere.) drát
    3) (the metal cable used in telegraphy: The message came over the wire this morning.) telegraf
    4) (a telegram: Send me a wire if I'm needed urgently.) telegram
    2. verb
    1) (to fasten, connect etc with wire: The house has been wired (up), but the electricity hasn't been connected yet.) položit elektrické vedení
    2) (to send a telegram to: Wire me if anything important happens.) poslat telegram
    3) (to send (a message) by telegram: You can wire the details to my brother in New York.) telegrafovat
    - wiring
    - high wire
    - wire-netting
    * * *
    • drát

    English-Czech dictionary > wire

  • 10 reel

    [ri:l] 1. noun
    1) (a round wheel-shaped or cylindrical object of wood, metal etc on which thread, film, fishing-lines etc can be wound: a reel of sewing-cotton; He changed the reel in the projector.) cívka
    2) ((the music for) a type of lively Scottish, Irish or American dance: The fiddler played a reel; to dance a reel.) rejdovák
    2. verb
    (to stagger; to sway; to move in an unsteady way: The drunk man reeled along the road; My brain was reeling with all the information that he gave me.) motat se
    - reel off
    * * *
    • kotouč
    • motat
    • naviják
    • cívka

    English-Czech dictionary > reel

  • 11 bolt

    [boult] 1. noun
    1) (a bar to fasten a door etc: We have a bolt as well as a lock on the door.) závora
    2) (a round bar of metal, often with a screw thread for a nut: nuts and bolts.) šroub
    3) (a flash of lightning.) (zá)blesk
    4) (a roll (of cloth): a bolt of silk.) balík, role
    2. verb
    1) (to fasten with a bolt: He bolted the door.) zavřít na závoru
    2) (to swallow hastily: The child bolted her food.) (z)hltat
    3) (to go away very fast: The horse bolted in terror.) utéci
    - bolt-upright
    - boltupright
    - a bolt from the blue
    * * *
    • západka
    • šíp do kuše
    • šroub
    • čep

    English-Czech dictionary > bolt

  • 12 stitch

    [sti ] 1. noun
    1) (a loop made in thread, wool etc by a needle in sewing or knitting: She sewed the hem with small, neat stitches; Bother! I've dropped a stitch.) steh; oko
    2) (a type of stitch forming a particular pattern in sewing, knitting etc: The cloth was edged in blanket stitch; The jersey was knitted in stocking stitch.) steh; oko
    3) (a sharp pain in a person's side caused by eg running: I've got a stitch.) píchání
    2. verb
    (to sew or put stitches into: She stitched the two pieces together; I stitched the button on.) sešít, přišít
    - in stitches
    - stitch up
    * * *
    • šít
    • stehovat
    • steh
    • brožovat

    English-Czech dictionary > stitch

  • 13 hair

    [heə] 1. noun
    1) (one of the mass of thread-like objects that grow from the skin: He brushed the dog's hairs off his jacket.) chlup
    2) (the mass of these, especially on a person's head: He's got brown hair.) vlas(y)
    - - haired
    - hairy
    - hairiness
    - hair's-breadth
    - hair-breadth
    - hairbrush
    - haircut
    - hair-do
    - hairdresser
    - hairdressing
    - hair-drier
    - hairline
    - hair-oil
    - hairpin
    2. adjective
    ((of a bend in a road) sharp and U-shaped, especially on a mountain or a hill.) ostrá zatáčka
    - hairstyle
    - keep one's hair on
    - let one's hair down
    - make someone's hair stand on end
    - make hair stand on end
    - not to turn a hair
    - turn a hair
    - split hairs
    - tear one's hair
    * * *
    • vlasy
    • vous
    • vlas
    • srst
    • ochlupení
    • chlup
    • chlupy

    English-Czech dictionary > hair

  • 14 cotton

    I ['kotn] noun
    1) (a soft substance got from the seeds of the cotton plant, used in making thread or cloth.) bavlna
    2) (the yarn or cloth made from this: a reel of cotton; This shirt is made of cotton; ( also adjective) a cotton shirt.) bavlna; bavlněný
    - cottonwool II ['kotn]
    * * *
    • bavlněný
    • bavlna

    English-Czech dictionary > cotton

  • 15 needle

    ['ni:dl]
    1) (a small, sharp piece of steel with a hole (called an eye) at one end for thread, used in sewing etc: a sewing needle.) jehla
    2) (any of various instruments of a long narrow pointed shape: a knitting needle; a hypodermic needle.) jehla, jehlice
    3) ((in a compass etc) a moving pointer.) střelka
    4) (the thin, sharp-pointed leaf of a pine, fir etc.) jehlice
    - needlework
    * * *
    • jehla

    English-Czech dictionary > needle

  • 16 ping

    [piŋ] 1. noun
    (a sharp, ringing sound such as that of a glass being lightly struck, or a stretched wire, thread etc being pulled and released: His knife struck the wine-glass with a loud ping.) cinknutí
    2. verb
    (to make such a sound: The glass pinged.) cinknout
    * * *
    • zasvištění
    • zahvízdat
    • zahvízdnutí
    • hvízdat
    • klepat
    • cinknout
    • cinknutí

    English-Czech dictionary > ping

  • 17 snip

    [snip] 1. past tense, past participle - snipped; verb
    (to cut sharply, especially with a single quick action, with scissors etc: I snipped off two inches of thread.) ustřihnout
    2. noun
    1) (a cut with scissors: With a snip of her scissors she cut a hole in the cloth.) střihnutí
    2) (a small piece cut off: The floor was covered in snips of paper.) odstřižky
    3) (a bargain: It's a snip at $3!) výhodná koupě
    * * *
    • ustřihnout
    • střihnutí

    English-Czech dictionary > snip

  • 18 dexterity

    [dek'sterəti]
    (skill and/or quickness, especially with the hands: She showed her dexterity with a needle and thread.) zručnost, obratnost
    - dextrous
    * * *
    • zručnost
    • obratnost

    English-Czech dictionary > dexterity

  • 19 feeler

    noun ((in certain animals, insects etc) an organ for touching, especially one of the two thread-like parts on an insect's head.) tykadlo
    * * *
    • tykadlo

    English-Czech dictionary > feeler

  • 20 filament

    ['filəmənt]
    (something very thin shaped like a thread, especially the thin wire in an electric light bulb.) vlákno
    * * *
    • vlákno
    • nitka

    English-Czech dictionary > filament

См. также в других словарях:

  • (the) thread of life — thread of life, the thread of life, the imaginary thread spun and cut by the Fates. It is supposed to symbolize the course and termination of one s existence …   Useful english dictionary

  • There are seven that pull the thread — ”There are seven that pull the thread” is a song with words by W. B. Yeats, and music written by the English composer Edward Elgar in 1901.The song is from Act I of a play Grania and Diarmid co written in poetic prose by Yeats and the Irish… …   Wikipedia

  • lose the thread —    If you lose the thread of a conversation or story, you are unable to follow it.     There were so many interruptions during the film that I completely lost the thread …   English Idioms & idiomatic expressions

  • lose the thread of something — lose the thread (of (something)) to not be able to understand what someone is saying because you are not giving it all your attention. Jeb wasn t listening at all and lost the thread of what his father was saying …   New idioms dictionary

  • lose the thread of — lose the thread (of (something)) to not be able to understand what someone is saying because you are not giving it all your attention. Jeb wasn t listening at all and lost the thread of what his father was saying …   New idioms dictionary

  • lose the thread — (of (something)) to not be able to understand what someone is saying because you are not giving it all your attention. Jeb wasn t listening at all and lost the thread of what his father was saying …   New idioms dictionary

  • lose the thread — 1) to stop concentrating so that you do not understand what someone is saying More than once she lost the thread and had to ask them to speak more slowly. 2) to stop concentrating and forget what you intended to say next …   English dictionary

  • Thread-local storage — (TLS) is a computer programming method that uses static or global memory local to a thread.This is sometimes needed because all threads in a process share the same address space.In other words, data in a static or global variable is normally… …   Wikipedia

  • Thread (Pern) — Thread is the name of a deadly phenomenon that appears throughout Anne McCaffrey s series of science fiction novels about the fictional planet Pern. Thread are thin silver filaments of a space borne mycorrhizoid spore that devours all organic… …   Wikipedia

  • Thread — (thr[e^]d), n. [OE. threed, [thorn]red, AS. [thorn]r[=ae]d; akin to D. draad, G. draht wire, thread, OHG. dr[=a]t, Icel. [thorn]r[=a][eth]r a thread, Sw. tr[*a]d, Dan. traad, and AS. [thorn]r[=a]wan to twist. See {Throw}, and cf. {Third}.] 1. A… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Thread and thrum — Thread Thread (thr[e^]d), n. [OE. threed, [thorn]red, AS. [thorn]r[=ae]d; akin to D. draad, G. draht wire, thread, OHG. dr[=a]t, Icel. [thorn]r[=a][eth]r a thread, Sw. tr[*a]d, Dan. traad, and AS. [thorn]r[=a]wan to twist. See {Throw}, and cf.… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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