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to+die+with+o

  • 1 freeze

    [fri:z] 1. past tense - froze; verb
    1) (to make into or become ice: It's so cold that the river has frozen over.) (za)mrznout
    2) ((of weather) to be at or below freezing-point: If it freezes again tonight all my plants will die.) mrznout
    3) (to make or be very cold: If you had stayed out all night in the snow you might have frozen to death (= died of exposure to cold).) zmrznout
    4) (to make (food) very cold in order to preserve it: You can freeze the rest of that food and eat it later.) zmrazit
    5) (to make or become stiff, still or unable to move (with fear etc): She froze when she heard the strange noise.) ztuhnout
    6) (to fix prices, wages etc at a certain level: If the situation does not improve, wages will be frozen again.) zmrazit
    2. noun
    (a period of very cold weather when temperatures are below freezing-point: How long do you think the freeze will last?) mráz
    - freezing
    - frozen
    - freezing-point
    - freeze up
    * * *
    • zmrazit
    • ochladit
    • freeze/froze/frozen
    • mrznout
    • mrazit

    English-Czech dictionary > freeze

  • 2 paradise

    1) (a place or state of great happiness: It's paradise to be by a warm fire on a cold night.) blaho
    2) ((with capital) heaven: When we die, we go to Paradise.) ráj
    * * *
    • ráj

    English-Czech dictionary > paradise

  • 3 smother

    1) (to kill or die from lack of air, caused especially by a thick covering over the mouth and nose; to suffocate: He smothered his victim by holding a pillow over her face.) udusit (se)
    2) (to prevent (a fire) from burning by covering it thickly: He threw sand on the fire to smother it.) uhasit
    3) (to cover (too) thickly; to overwhelm: When he got home his children smothered him with kisses.) pokrýt
    * * *
    • uhasit

    English-Czech dictionary > smother

  • 4 suffocate

    (to kill, die, cause distress to or feel distress, through lack of air or the prevention of free breathing: A baby may suffocate if it sleeps with a pillow; The smoke was suffocating him; May I open the window? I'm suffocating.) (u)dusit (se)
    * * *
    • udusit
    • zadusit
    • dusit
    • dusit se

    English-Czech dictionary > suffocate

См. также в других словарях:

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  • die of, die from, die with — In its customary sense of to cease living, die is preferably followed by of: He died of (not from) a coronary attack. Die with expresses an idea not related to a cause of death: He died with courage …   Dictionary of problem words and expressions

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  • Die — Die, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Died}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Dying}.] [OE. deyen, dien, of Scand. origin; cf. Icel. deyja; akin to Dan. d[ o]e, Sw. d[ o], Goth. diwan (cf. Goth. afd?jan to harass), OFries. d?ia to kill, OS. doian to die, OHG. touwen, OSlav …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • die in one's boots — or[die with one s boots on] {v. phr.}, {informal} To be killed or hanged rather than die in bed. * /The badmen of the Old West usually died in their boots./ * /The robber said he wanted to die with his boots on./ …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • die in one's boots — or[die with one s boots on] {v. phr.}, {informal} To be killed or hanged rather than die in bed. * /The badmen of the Old West usually died in their boots./ * /The robber said he wanted to die with his boots on./ …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • with — /with, widh/, prep. 1. accompanied by; accompanying: I will go with you. He fought with his brother against the enemy. 2. in some particular relation to (esp. implying interaction, company, association, conjunction, or connection): I dealt with… …   Universalium

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