Перевод: с английского на чешский

с чешского на английский

to+my+knowledge

  • 1 knowledge

    ['noli‹]
    1) (the fact of knowing: She was greatly encouraged by the knowledge that she had won first prize in the competition.) zpráva
    2) (information or what is known: He had a vast amount of knowledge about boats.) vědomost, znalost
    3) (the whole of what can be learned or found out: Science is a branch of knowledge about which I am rather ignorant.) vědění
    - general knowledge
    * * *
    • vědomost
    • vědění
    • vědomosti
    • vědomí
    • znalost
    • znalosti

    English-Czech dictionary > knowledge

  • 2 general knowledge

    (knowledge about a wide range of subjects: The teacher sometimes tests our general knowledge.) všeobecné vědomosti
    * * *
    • všeobecné znalosti
    • široké znalosti

    English-Czech dictionary > general knowledge

  • 3 common knowledge

    (something known to everyone or to most people: Surely you know that already - it's common knowledge.) věc všeobecně známá

    English-Czech dictionary > common knowledge

  • 4 piece of knowledge

    • poznatek

    English-Czech dictionary > piece of knowledge

  • 5 self-knowledge

    • sebeznalost

    English-Czech dictionary > self-knowledge

  • 6 common

    ['komən] 1. adjective
    1) (seen or happening often; quite normal or usual: a common occurrence; These birds are not so common nowadays.) běžný
    2) (belonging equally to, or shared by, more than one: This knowledge is common to all of us; We share a common language.) společný
    3) (publicly owned: common property.) veřejný
    4) (coarse or impolite: She uses some very common expressions.) sprostý, hrubý
    5) (of ordinary, not high, social rank: the common people.) obyčejný, prostý
    6) (of a noun, not beginning with a capital letter (except at the beginning of a sentence): The house is empty.) obecný
    2. noun
    ((a piece of) public land for everyone to use, with few or no buildings: the village common.) obecní pozemek
    - common knowledge
    - common law
    - common-law
    - commonplace
    - common-room
    - common sense
    - the Common Market
    - the House of Commons
    - the Commons
    - in common
    * * *
    • prostý
    • společné
    • společný
    • obyčejný
    • obvyklý
    • obecný
    • běžný

    English-Czech dictionary > common

  • 7 finite

    1) (having an end or limit: Human knowledge is finite, divine knowledge infinite.) omezený
    2) ((of a verb) having a subject: He speaks; I ran; She fell.) určitý
    * * *
    • omezený
    • konečný

    English-Czech dictionary > finite

  • 8 frontier

    1) (a boundary between countries: We crossed the frontier; ( also adjective) a frontier town.) hranice; pohraniční
    2) (the farthest area of land on which people live and work, before the country becomes wild and deserted: Many families went to make a new life on the frontier.) pohraničí
    3) (the limits or boundaries (of knowledge etc): the frontiers of scientific knowledge.) hranice
    * * *
    • hranice
    • hraniční

    English-Czech dictionary > frontier

  • 9 quiz

    [kwiz]
    plural - quizzes; noun
    1) (a game or competition in which knowledge is tested by asking questions: a television quiz; a general-knowledge quiz.) kvíz
    2) (a short test given to students.) písemka
    * * *
    • kvíz
    • klást otázky

    English-Czech dictionary > quiz

  • 10 science

    1) (knowledge gained by observation and experiment.) věda
    2) (a branch of such knowledge eg biology, chemistry, physics etc.) vědní obor
    3) (these sciences considered as a whole: My daughter prefers science to languages.) vědy
    - scientifically
    - scientist
    - science fiction
    * * *
    • věda

    English-Czech dictionary > science

  • 11 sophisticated

    [sə'fistikeitid]
    1) ((of a person) having a great deal of experience and worldly wisdom, knowledge of how to dress elegantly etc: a sophisticated young man; She has become very sophisticated since she went to live in London.) znalý světa, kultivovaný
    2) (suitable for, or typical of, sophisticated people: The joke was too sophisticated for the child to understand; sophisticated clothes/hairstyles.) rafinovaný; exkluzivní
    3) ((of machines, processes etc) highly-developed, elaborate and produced with a high degree of skill and knowledge: sophisticated photographic techniques.) složitý, náročný
    * * *
    • rafinovaný
    • náročný

    English-Czech dictionary > sophisticated

  • 12 study

    1. verb
    1) (to give time and attention to gaining knowledge of a subject: What subject is he studying?; He is studying French; He is studying for a degree in mathematics; She's studying to be a teacher.) studovat
    2) (to look at or examine carefully: He studied the railway timetable; Give yourself time to study the problem in detail.) zkoumat
    2. noun
    1) (the act of devoting time and attention to gaining knowledge: He spends all his evenings in study; She has made a study of the habits of bees.) studium
    2) (a musical or artistic composition: a book of studies for the piano; The picture was entitled `Study in Grey'.) etuda
    3) (a room in a house etc, in which to study, read, write etc: The headmaster wants to speak to the senior pupils in his study.) studovna, pracovna
    * * *
    • učit se
    • zkoumat
    • pracovna
    • studium
    • studovna
    • studovat
    • studijní
    • studie
    • naučit se

    English-Czech dictionary > study

  • 13 ABC

    [eibi:'si:]
    1) (the alphabet: The child has not learnt his ABC.) abeceda
    2) (the simplest and most basic knowledge: the ABC of engineering.) základy
    * * *
    • abeceda

    English-Czech dictionary > ABC

  • 14 ability

    [ə'biləti]
    plural - abilities; noun
    1) (the power, knowledge etc to do something: I shall do the job to the best of my ability.) schopnost
    2) (a skill: a man of many abilities.) zručnost
    * * *
    • vlohy
    • způsobilost
    • zručnost
    • schopnost
    • důvtip

    English-Czech dictionary > ability

  • 15 able

    ['eibl]
    1) (having enough strength, knowledge etc to do something: He was able to open the door; He will come if he is able.) schopný
    2) (clever and skilful; capable: a very able nurse.) schopný, zdatný, šikovný
    3) (legally competent: able to vote.) oprávněný
    * * *
    • schopný
    • nadaný
    • dovedný

    English-Czech dictionary > able

  • 16 acquaintance

    1) (a person whom one knows slightly.) známý (člověk)
    2) ((with with) knowledge: My acquaintance with the works of Shakespeare is slight.) znalost
    * * *
    • známý
    • známá

    English-Czech dictionary > acquaintance

  • 17 acquire

    (to get: He acquired a knowledge of English.) získat
    - acquisitive
    - acquisitiveness
    * * *
    • získat
    • získávat
    • osvojit si

    English-Czech dictionary > acquire

  • 18 basic

    ['beisik]
    1) (of, or forming, the main part or foundation of something: Your basic theory is wrong.) základní
    2) (restricted to a fundamental level, elementary: a basic knowledge of French.) základní
    * * *
    • zásaditý
    • základní
    • bazický

    English-Czech dictionary > basic

  • 19 bow

    I 1. verb
    1) (to bend (the head and often also the upper part of the body) forwards in greeting a person etc: He bowed to the ladies; They bowed their heads in prayer.) poklonit se, sklánět (se)
    2) ((with to) to accept: I bow to your superior knowledge.) sklánět se (před)
    2. noun
    (a bowing movement: He made a bow to the ladies.) úklona, poklona
    II 1. [bəu] noun
    1) (a springy curved rod bent by a string, by which arrows are shot.) luk
    2) (a rod with horsehair stretched along it, by which the strings of a violin etc are sounded.) smyčec
    3) (a looped knot of material: Her dress is decorated with bows.) mašle
    2. noun
    ((often in plural) the front of a ship or boat: The waves broke over the bows.) příď
    * * *
    • uklonit se
    • úklona
    • poklona
    • poklonit se
    • sklánět
    • sehnout
    • sklonit
    • smyčec
    • smeknout
    • oblouk
    • ohýbat
    • naklonit
    • luk

    English-Czech dictionary > bow

  • 20 brush up

    ( with on) (to refresh one's knowledge of (eg a language): He brushed up his Spanish before he went on holiday.) osvěžit, oživit, připomenout
    * * *
    • osvěžit si
    • okartáčovat

    English-Czech dictionary > brush up

См. также в других словарях:

  • Knowledge Management — (KM) comprises a range of practices used by organisations to identify, create, represent, distribute and enable adoption of what it knows, and how it knows it. It has been an established discipline since 1995 [Stankosky, 2005] with a body of… …   Wikipedia

  • Knowledge worker — Knowledge workers in today s workforce are individuals who are valued for their ability to act and communicate with knowledge within a specific subject area. They will often advance the overall understanding of that subject through focused… …   Wikipedia

  • Knowledge management — (KM) comprises a range of strategies and practices used in an organization to identify, create, represent, distribute, and enable adoption of insights and experiences. Such insights and experiences comprise knowledge, either embodied in… …   Wikipedia

  • Knowledge — • Knowledge, being a primitive fact of consciousness, cannot, strictly speaking, be defined; but the direct and spontaneous consciousness of knowing may be made clearer by pointing out its essential and distinctive characteristics Catholic… …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Knowledge transfer — in the fields of organizational development and organizational learning is the practical problem of transferring knowledge from one part of the organization to another (or all other) parts of the organization. Like Knowledge Management, Knowledge …   Wikipedia

  • Knowledge market — is a mechanism for distributing knowledge resources. There are two views on knowledge and how knowledge markets can function. One view uses a legal construct of intellectual property to make knowledge a typical scarce resource, so the traditional …   Wikipedia

  • Knowledge entrepreneurship — describes the ability to recognize or create an opportunity and take action aimed at realizing the innovative knowledge practice or product. Knowledge entrepreneurship is different from ‘traditional’ economic entrepreneurship in that it does not… …   Wikipedia

  • Knowledge representation — is an area in artificial intelligence that is concerned with how to formally think , that is, how to use a symbol system to represent a domain of discourse that which can be talked about, along with functions that may or may not be within the… …   Wikipedia

  • Knowledge building — theory was created and developed by Carl Bereiter and Marlene Scardamalia in order to describe what a community of learners need to accomplish in order to create knowledge. The theory address the need to educate people for the knowledge age… …   Wikipedia

  • Knowledge retrieval — is a field of study which seeks to return information in a structured form, consistent with human cognitive processes as opposed to simple lists of data items. It draws on a range of fields including Epistemology (Theory of knowledge), Cognitive… …   Wikipedia

  • Knowledge engineering — (KE) has been defined by Feigenbaum, and McCorduck (1983) as follows: KE is an engineering discipline that involves integrating knowledge into computer systems in order to solve complex problems normally requiring a high level of human expertise …   Wikipedia

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