Перевод: с английского на чешский

с чешского на английский

things+up

  • 81 contrast

    1. verb
    1) (to show marked difference from: His words contrast with his actions.) být v rozporu
    2) (to compare so as to show differences: Contrast fresh and frozen vegetables and you'll find the fresh ones taste better.) porovnat
    2. noun
    1) (difference(s) in things or people that are compared: The contrast between their attitudes is very marked.) rozpor, kontrast
    2) (a thing or person that shows a marked difference (to another): She's a complete contrast to her sister.) opak
    * * *
    • kontrast

    English-Czech dictionary > contrast

  • 82 coupling

    noun (a link for joining things together: The railway carriage was damaged when the coupling broke.) připojení, spřahlo
    * * *
    • propojení
    • párování

    English-Czech dictionary > coupling

  • 83 course

    [ko:s]
    1) (a series (of lectures, medicines etc): I'm taking a course (of lectures) in sociology; He's having a course of treatment for his leg.) kurs, kůra
    2) (a division or part of a meal: Now we've had the soup, what's (for) the next course?) chod
    3) (the ground over which a race is run or a game (especially golf) is played: a racecourse; a golf-course.) hřiště
    4) (the path or direction in which something moves: the course of the Nile.) cesta, směr
    5) (the progress or development of events: Things will run their normal course despite the strike.) (prů)běh
    6) (a way (of action): What's the best course of action in the circumstances?) postup
    - in due course
    - of course
    - off
    - on course
    * * *
    • postup
    • průběh
    • směr
    • kurs
    • kurz
    • chod
    • běh
    • dráha

    English-Czech dictionary > course

  • 84 craftsman

    noun (a person skilled at making things (especially by hand).) řemeslník, mistr, umělec
    * * *
    • řemeslník

    English-Czech dictionary > craftsman

  • 85 crash

    [kræʃ] 1. noun
    1) (a noise as of heavy things breaking or falling on something hard: I heard a crash, and looked round to see that he'd dropped all the plates.) třesk, hřmot, řinčení
    2) (a collision: There was a crash involving three cars.) srážka
    3) (a failure of a business etc: the Wall Street crash.) krach
    4) (a sudden failure of a computer: A computer crash is very costly.)
    2. verb
    1) (to (cause to) fall with a loud noise: The glass crashed to the floor.) roztříštit (se)
    2) (to drive or be driven violently (against, into): He crashed (his car); His car crashed into a wall.) narazit, vrazit
    3) ((of aircraft) to land or be landed in such a way as to be damaged or destroyed: His plane crashed in the mountains.) zřítit se
    4) ((of a business) to fail.) zkrachovat
    5) (to force one's way noisily (through, into): He crashed through the undergrowth.) prodírat se
    6) ((of a computer) to stop working suddenly: If the computer crashes, we may lose all our files.)
    3. adjective
    (rapid and concentrated: a crash course in computer technology.) intenzivní
    - crash-land
    * * *
    • pád
    • havárie

    English-Czech dictionary > crash

  • 86 crawl

    [kro:l] 1. verb
    1) (to move slowly along the ground: The injured dog crawled away.) plazit se, vléci se
    2) ((of people) to move on hands and knees or with the front of the body on the ground: The baby can't walk yet, but she crawls everywhere.) lézt (po kolenou)
    3) (to move slowly: The traffic was crawling along at ten kilometres per hour.) jet krokem, plížit se
    4) (to be covered with crawling things: His hair was crawling with lice.) hemžit se
    2. noun
    1) (a very slow movement or speed: We drove along at a crawl.) loudání, ploužení se
    2) (a style of swimming in which the arms make alternate overarm movements: She's better at the crawl than she is at the breaststroke.) kraul
    * * *
    • lézt

    English-Czech dictionary > crawl

  • 87 cross

    [kros] I adjective
    (angry: I get very cross when I lose something.) podrážděný, rozmrzelý
    II 1. plural - crosses; noun
    1) (a symbol formed by two lines placed across each other, eg + or x.) kříž
    2) (two wooden beams placed thus (+), on which Christ was nailed.) kříž
    3) (the symbol of the Christian religion.) kříž
    4) (a lasting cause of suffering etc: Your rheumatism is a cross you will have to bear.) kříž, obtíž
    5) (the result of breeding two varieties of animal or plant: This dog is a cross between an alsatian and a labrador.) kříženec
    6) (a monument in the shape of a cross.) kříž
    7) (any of several types of medal given for bravery etc: the Victoria Cross.) kříž
    2. verb
    1) (to go from one side to the other: Let's cross (the street); This road crosses the swamp.) přejít; protínat (se)
    2) ((negative uncross) to place (two things) across each other: He sat down and crossed his legs.) zkřížit
    3) (to go or be placed across (each other): The roads cross in the centre of town.) křížit se
    4) (to meet and pass: Our letters must have crossed in the post.) křížit se
    5) (to put a line across: Cross your `t's'.) přeškrtnout
    6) (to make (a cheque or postal order) payable only through a bank by drawing two parallel lines across it.) překřížit
    7) (to breed (something) from two different varieties: I've crossed two varieties of rose.) (z)křížit
    8) (to go against the wishes of: If you cross me, you'll regret it!) odporovat
    - crossing
    - crossbow
    - cross-breed
    - cross-bred
    - crosscheck
    3. noun
    (the act of crosschecking.) přezkoumání, křížová kontrola
    - cross-country skiing
    - cross-examine
    - cross-examination
    - cross-eyed
    - cross-fire
    - at cross-purposes
    - cross-refer
    - cross-reference
    - crossroads
    - cross-section
    - crossword puzzle
    - crossword
    - cross one's fingers
    - cross out
    * * *
    • přetínat
    • přestoupit
    • přejíždět
    • přejet
    • přejít
    • přestupovat
    • kříž

    English-Czech dictionary > cross

  • 88 crowd

    1. noun
    1) (a number of persons or things gathered together: A crowd of people gathered in the street.) zástup, dav
    2) (a group of friends, usually known to one another: John's friends are a nice crowd.) parta
    2. verb
    1) (to gather in a large group: They crowded round the injured motorcyclist.) shlukovat se
    2) (to fill too full by coming together in: Sightseers crowded the building.) namačkat se
    * * *
    • tlačenice
    • zástup
    • kompars
    • dav

    English-Czech dictionary > crowd

  • 89 crowded

    adjective (having or containing a lot of people or things: crowded buses.) přecpaný
    * * *
    • zaplněný
    • přeplněný
    • přelidněný
    • nacpaný

    English-Czech dictionary > crowded

  • 90 cumbersome

    ((of things) heavy and clumsy: a cumbersome piece of furniture.) těžkopádný
    * * *
    • nemotorný
    • nešikovný

    English-Czech dictionary > cumbersome

  • 91 distance

    ['distəns]
    1) (the space between things, places etc: Some of the children have to walk long distances to school; It's quite a distance to the bus stop; It is difficult to judge distance when driving at night; What's the distance from here to London?) vzdálenost
    2) (a far-off place or point: We could see the town in the distance; He disappeared into the distance; The picture looks better at a distance.) dálka
    * * *
    • vzdálenost
    • odstup
    • dálka

    English-Czech dictionary > distance

  • 92 dramatise

    ['dræ-]
    1) (to turn into the form of a play: She dramatized the novel for television.) zdramatizovat
    2) (to make real events seem like things that happen in a play: She dramatizes everything so!) dramatizovat
    * * *
    • dramatizovat

    English-Czech dictionary > dramatise

  • 93 dramatize

    ['dræ-]
    1) (to turn into the form of a play: She dramatized the novel for television.) zdramatizovat
    2) (to make real events seem like things that happen in a play: She dramatizes everything so!) dramatizovat
    * * *
    • dramatizovat

    English-Czech dictionary > dramatize

  • 94 ecology

    [i'kolə‹i]
    ((the study of) living things considered in relation to their environment: Pollution has a disastrous effect on the ecology of a region.) ekologie
    - ecological
    - ecologically
    * * *
    • ekologie

    English-Czech dictionary > ecology

  • 95 eighteenth

    1) (one of eighteen equal parts: seventeen eighteenths.) osmnáctina
    2) (( also adjective) (the) last of eighteen (people, things etc); (the) next after the seventeenth: He was eighteenth in the competition; the eighteenth storey.) osmnáctý
    * * *
    • osmnáctý

    English-Czech dictionary > eighteenth

  • 96 eighth

    [eitð]
    1) (one of eight equal parts: They each received an eighth of the money.) osmina
    2) (( also adjective) (the) last of eight (people, things etc); (the) next after the seventh: His horse was eighth in the race; Are you having another cup of coffee? That's your eighth (cup) this morning; Henry VIII (said as `Henry the Eighth').) osmý
    * * *
    • osmý

    English-Czech dictionary > eighth

  • 97 eightieth

    1) (one of eighty equal parts: eleven eightieths.) osmdesátina
    2) (( also adjective) (the) last of eighty (people, things etc); (the) next after the seventy-ninth.) osmdesátý
    * * *
    • osmdesátý

    English-Czech dictionary > eightieth

  • 98 elements

    1) (the first things to be learned in any subject: the elements of musical theory.) základy
    2) (the forces of nature, as wind and rain.) živly
    * * *
    • elementy

    English-Czech dictionary > elements

  • 99 eleventh

    1) (one of eleven equal parts.) jedenáctina
    2) (( also adjective) (the) last of eleven (people, things etc); (the) next after the tenth.) jedenáctý
    * * *
    • jedenáctý

    English-Czech dictionary > eleventh

  • 100 equation

    [-ʒən]
    1) (a statement that two things are equal or the same: xy+xy=2xy is an equation.) rovnice
    2) (a formula expressing the action of certain substances on others: 2H2 + O2 = 2 H2O is an equation.) rovnice
    * * *
    • rovnice

    English-Czech dictionary > equation

См. также в других словарях:

  • Things — Things …   Википедия

  • Things We Do — is the debut album from the band Indigenous (band) released in 1998 under the Pachyderm Records label. In 1999, Indigenous won three Native American Music Awards for their debut record, including two top honors: Album of the Year and Group of the …   Wikipedia

  • Things — es un gestor de tareas para Mac OS X. Se basa en la filosofía GTD (Getting Things Done) y está desarrollado por la empresa Cultured Code. Actualmente el programa se encuentra en su versión 1.03. Características Sencillez de uso y poca curva de… …   Wikipedia Español

  • things — personal belongings or clothing. → thing things unspecified circumstances or matters. → thing …   English new terms dictionary

  • things — index effects Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • things — The objects of dominion or property as contradistinguished from persons. Gayer v. Whelan, 59 Cal.App.2d 255,138 P.2d 763, 768. The object of a right; Le., whatever is treated by the law as the object over which one person exercises a right, and… …   Black's law dictionary

  • things — noun /θɪŋz/ Ones clothes, furniture, luggage, or possessions collectively; stuff Ole Golly just had indoor things and outdoor things.... She just had yards and yards of tweed which enveloped her like a lot of discarded blankets, which ballooned… …   Wiktionary

  • things — Synonyms and related words: accessories, accouterments, appanages, apparatus, appendages, appliances, appointments, appurtenances, armament, belongings, caparison, choses, choses in action, choses in possession, choses local, choses transitory,… …   Moby Thesaurus

  • things — thing [n1] something felt, seen, perceived affair, anything, apparatus, article, being, body, business, circumstance, commodity, concept, concern, configuration, contrivance, corporeality, creature, device, element, entity, everything, existence …   New thesaurus

  • things — Inanimate objects. Gayer v Whelan, 59 Cal App 255, 139 P2d 763. As the subject matter of a bequest, effects, goods, assets, or property, dependent upon the intent of the testator as such appears from the will. Arnolds Estate, 240 Pa 261, 87 A 590 …   Ballentine's law dictionary

  • things — noun any movable possession (especially articles of clothing) (Freq. 7) she packed her things and left • Hypernyms: ↑property, ↑belongings, ↑holding …   Useful english dictionary

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