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to+not+have

  • 1 not have the heart to

    (not to want or be unkind enough to (do something unpleasant): I don't have the heart to tell him that everyone laughed at his suggestions.) nemať to srdce

    English-Slovak dictionary > not have the heart to

  • 2 not (have) a hope

    ((to be) completely unlikely (to succeed in something): He hasn't a hope of getting the job; `Will he get the job?' `Not a hope!') (nemať) ani nádej

    English-Slovak dictionary > not (have) a hope

  • 3 not (have) a hope

    ((to be) completely unlikely (to succeed in something): He hasn't a hope of getting the job; `Will he get the job?' `Not a hope!') (nemať) ani nádej

    English-Slovak dictionary > not (have) a hope

  • 4 NOT

    [not]
    1) ((often abbreviated to n't) a word used for denying, forbidding, refusing, or expressing the opposite of something: I did not see him; I didn't see him; He isn't here; Isn't he coming?; They told me not to go; Not a single person came to the party; We're going to London, not Paris; That's not true!) nie
    2) (used with certain verbs such as hope, seem, believe, expect and also with be afraid: `Have you got much money?' `I'm afraid not'; `Is he going to fail his exam?' `I hope not'.) ne-
    * * *
    • negácia

    English-Slovak dictionary > NOT

  • 5 not

    [not]
    1) ((often abbreviated to n't) a word used for denying, forbidding, refusing, or expressing the opposite of something: I did not see him; I didn't see him; He isn't here; Isn't he coming?; They told me not to go; Not a single person came to the party; We're going to London, not Paris; That's not true!) nie
    2) (used with certain verbs such as hope, seem, believe, expect and also with be afraid: `Have you got much money?' `I'm afraid not'; `Is he going to fail his exam?' `I hope not'.) ne-
    * * *
    • nie

    English-Slovak dictionary > not

  • 6 have nothing to do with

    1) (to avoid completely: After he came out of prison, many of his friends would have nothing to do with him.) vyhýbať sa
    2) ((also be nothing to do with) to be something that a person ought not to be interested in: This letter has/is nothing to do with you.) netýkať sa

    English-Slovak dictionary > have nothing to do with

  • 7 have a bash at

    (to make an attempt at: Although he was not a handyman, he had a bash at mending the lock.) pokúsiť sa
    * * *
    • triafat sa do

    English-Slovak dictionary > have a bash at

  • 8 not to have a clue

    (to be ignorant: `How does that work?' `I haven't a clue.') nemať poňatie

    English-Slovak dictionary > not to have a clue

  • 9 might have

    1) (used to suggest that something would have been possible if something else had been the case: You might have caught the bus if you had run.) bol by mohol
    2) (used to suggest that a person has not done what he should: You might have told me!) mal si
    3) (used to show that something was a possible action etc but was in fact not carried out or done: I might have gone, but I decided not to.) bolo by bývalo možné
    4) (used when a person does not want to admit to having done something: `Have you seen this man?' `I might have.') snáď áno

    English-Slovak dictionary > might have

  • 10 think little of / not think much of

    (to have a very low opinion of: He didn't think much of what I had done; He thought little of my work.) nemať dobrú mienku o

    English-Slovak dictionary > think little of / not think much of

  • 11 you have not

    • nemáte

    English-Slovak dictionary > you have not

  • 12 heart

    1. noun
    1) (the organ which pumps blood through the body: How fast does a person's heart beat?; ( also adjective) heart disease; a heart specialist.) srdce; srdcový; na srdce
    2) (the central part: I live in the heart of the city; in the heart of the forest; the heart of a lettuce; Let's get straight to the heart of the matter/problem.) stred; jadro
    3) (the part of the body where one's feelings, especially of love, conscience etc are imagined to arise: She has a kind heart; You know in your heart that you ought to go; She has no heart (= She is not kind).) srdce
    4) (courage and enthusiasm: The soldiers were beginning to lose heart.) srdce
    5) (a symbol supposed to represent the shape of the heart; a white dress with little pink hearts on it; heart-shaped.) srdiečko; (v tvare) srdca
    6) (one of the playing-cards of the suit hearts, which have red symbols of this shape on them.) srdce
    - hearten
    - heartless
    - heartlessly
    - heartlessness
    - hearts
    - hearty
    - heartily
    - heartiness
    - heartache
    - heart attack
    - heartbeat
    - heartbreak
    - heartbroken
    - heartburn
    - heart failure
    - heartfelt
    - heart-to-heart
    2. noun
    (an open and sincere talk, usually in private: After our heart-to-heart I felt more cheerful.) úprimný rozhovor
    - at heart
    - break someone's heart
    - by heart
    - from the bottom of one's heart
    - have a change of heart
    - have a heart!
    - have at heart
    - heart and soul
    - lose heart
    - not have the heart to
    - set one's heart on / have one's heart set on
    - take heart
    - take to heart
    - to one's heart's content
    - with all one's heart
    * * *
    • srdce

    English-Slovak dictionary > heart

  • 13 hope

    [həup] 1. verb
    (to want something to happen and have some reason to believe that it will or might happen: He's very late, but we are still hoping he will come; I hope to be in London next month; We're hoping for some help from other people; It's unlikely that he'll come now, but we keep on hoping; `Do you think it will rain?' `I hope so/not'.) dúfať
    2. noun
    1) ((any reason or encouragement for) the state of feeling that what one wants will or might happen: He has lost all hope of becoming the president; He came to see me in the hope that I would help him; He has hopes of winning a scholarship; The rescuers said there was no hope of finding anyone alive in the mine.) nádej
    2) (a person, thing etc that one is relying on for help etc: He's my last hope - there is no-one else I can ask.) nádej
    3) (something hoped for: My hope is that he will get married and settle down soon.) nádej
    - hopefulness
    - hopefully
    - hopeless
    - hopelessly
    - hopelessness
    - hope against hope
    - hope for the best
    - not have a hope
    - not a hope
    - raise someone's hopes
    * * *
    • dúfat
    • nádej

    English-Slovak dictionary > hope

  • 14 holiday

    ['holədi]
    1) (a day when one does not have to work: Next Monday is a holiday.) voľný deň
    2) ((often in plural) a period of time when one does not have to work: The summer holidays will soon be here; We're going to Sweden for our holiday(s); I'm taking two weeks' holiday in June; ( also adjective) holiday clothes.) prázdniny, dovolenka, sviatok; prázdninový, dovolenkový, sviatočný
    - on holiday
    * * *
    • sviatok
    • dovolenka

    English-Slovak dictionary > holiday

  • 15 equipment

    1) (the clothes, machines, tools etc necessary for a particular kind of work, activity etc: The mechanic could not repair the car because he did not have the right equipment; The boy could not afford the equipment necessary for mountaineering.) vybavenie, zariadenie, výstroj
    2) (the act of equipping.) vybavenie
    * * *
    • výzbroj
    • vybavenie
    • výstroj
    • vybavenie zariadením
    • zariadenie

    English-Slovak dictionary > equipment

  • 16 bluff

    I adjective
    (rough, hearty and frank: a bluff and friendly manner.) otvorený
    II 1. verb
    (to try to deceive by pretending to have something that one does not have: He bluffed his way through the exam without actually knowing anything.) predstierať
    2. noun
    (an act of bluffing.) bluf
    * * *
    • drsný a úprimný
    • bluf
    • blufovat

    English-Slovak dictionary > bluff

  • 17 influence

    ['influəns] 1. noun
    1) (the power to affect people, actions or events: He used his influence to get her the job; He should not have driven the car while under the influence of alcohol.) vplyv
    2) (a person or thing that has this power: She is a bad influence on him.) vplyv
    2. verb
    (to have an effect on: The weather seems to influence her moods.) ovplyvňovať
    - influentially
    * * *
    • vplyvná osobnost
    • vplyv
    • úcinok
    • pridat alkohol
    • influencia
    • indukcia
    • autorita
    • ovplyvnit
    • ovplyvnovat
    • pôsobenie (nebes. telies)
    • pôsobit
    • mat vplyv

    English-Slovak dictionary > influence

  • 18 leisure

    ['leʒə, ]( American[) 'li:ʒər]
    (time which one can spend as one likes, especially when one does not have to work: I seldom have leisure to watch television.) voľno
    * * *
    • volná chvíla
    • volný
    • volno
    • prázdno

    English-Slovak dictionary > leisure

  • 19 speak out of turn

    1) (to speak without permission in class etc.) hovoriť mimo poradia, bez dovolenia
    2) (to say something when it is not your place to say it or something you should not have said.) prerieknuť sa

    English-Slovak dictionary > speak out of turn

  • 20 brain drain

    (the loss of experts to another country (usually in search of better salaries etc): As a result of the brain drain Britain does not have enough doctors.) únik mozgov
    * * *
    • odliv mozgov

    English-Slovak dictionary > brain drain

См. также в других словарях:

  • not\ have\ anything\ on — • have nothing on • not have anything on v. phr. Not to be any better than; to have no advantage over. Susan is a wonderful athlete, but when it comes to dancing she has nothing on Mary. Even though he is older, John has nothing on Peter in… …   Словарь американских идиом

  • not have a leg to stand on — ► to not have any way of supporting your opinion or defending your position on something: »The State Department doesn t have a leg to stand on if it s going to contradict its own analysis. Main Entry: ↑leg …   Financial and business terms

  • not have any part of — index conflict, disapprove (reject) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • not have the heart to — {v. phr.} To not be insensitive or cruel. * /My boss did not have the heart to lay off two pregnant women when they most needed their jobs./ …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • not have the heart to — {v. phr.} To not be insensitive or cruel. * /My boss did not have the heart to lay off two pregnant women when they most needed their jobs./ …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • not\ have\ the\ heart\ to — v. phr. To not be insensitive or cruel. My boss did not have the heart to lay off two pregnant women when they most needed their jobs …   Словарь американских идиом

  • not have a stitch on —    Someone who does not have a stitch on is wearing no clothes and is therefore completely naked.     When the doorbell rang, he didn t have a stitch on! …   English Idioms & idiomatic expressions

  • not have a leg to stand on — verb To lack support, as in an argument, debate, or negotiation. There are still those who argue that the Earth is flat, but with modern technology and satellite photos they really do not have a leg to stand on …   Wiktionary

  • not have all one's buttons — not of sound mind, not thinking clearly …   English contemporary dictionary

  • not have someone do something — not allow someone to perform a certain activity …   English contemporary dictionary

  • not have the faintest — verb To not know; to have no idea. Talking to him for a few minutes, it was clear he hadnt the faintest what to do …   Wiktionary

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