Перевод: с английского на чешский

с чешского на английский

until

  • 21 fill in

    1) (to add or put in (whatever is needed to make something complete): to fill in the details.) doplnit
    2) (to complete (forms, application etc) by putting in the information required: Have you filled in your tax form yet?) vyplnit
    3) (to give (someone) all the necessary information: I've been away - can you fill me in on what has happened?) informovat
    4) (to occupy (time): She had several cups of coffee at the cafeteria to fill in the time until the train left.) vyplnit
    5) (to do another person's job temporarily: I'm filling in for her secretary.) zastoupit, zaskočit za
    * * *
    • vyplnit
    • vyplňovat

    English-Czech dictionary > fill in

  • 22 franchise

    1) (the right to vote: Women did not get the franchise until the twentieth century.) volební právo
    2) (the exclusive right to sell or supply a certain product or service.) koncese
    * * *
    • volební právo
    • koncese

    English-Czech dictionary > franchise

  • 23 gorge

    [ɡo:‹] 1. noun
    (a deep narrow valley: A river ran along the bottom of the gorge.) rokle
    2. verb
    (to eat greedily until one is full: He gorged himself on fruit at the party.) nacpat se
    * * *
    • rokle

    English-Czech dictionary > gorge

  • 24 hard-boiled

    adjective ((of eggs) boiled until the white and the yolk are solid.) natvrdo
    * * *
    • uvařený natvrdo
    • hrubý
    • natvrdo vařený

    English-Czech dictionary > hard-boiled

  • 25 have

    (to have or keep (something) in case or until it is needed: If you go to America please keep some money in reserve for your fare home.) mít v záloze
    * * *
    • have/had/had
    • mít
    • mívat

    English-Czech dictionary > have

  • 26 high jump

    (a sports contest in which people jump over a bar which is raised until no-one can jump over it.) skok vysoký
    * * *
    • skok do výšky
    • skok vysoký

    English-Czech dictionary > high jump

  • 27 hold out

    1) (to continue to survive etc until help arrives: The rescue team hoped the men in the boat could hold out till they arrived.) vydržet
    2) (to continue to fight against an enemy attack: The soldiers held out for eight days.) držet se, odolat
    3) (to be enough to last: Will our supplies hold out till the end of the month?) postačit
    * * *
    • vydržet

    English-Czech dictionary > hold out

  • 28 hunt down

    (to search for (someone or something) until found: The police hunted down the escaped prisoner.) uštvat; dopadnout
    * * *
    • uštvat
    • ulovit
    • chytit
    • dostihnout

    English-Czech dictionary > hunt down

  • 29 hunt out

    (to search for (something that has been put away) until it is found: I'll hunt out that old photograph for you.) vyštrachat, objevit
    * * *
    • vypátrat

    English-Czech dictionary > hunt out

  • 30 immobile

    1) (not able to move or be moved: His leg was put in plaster and he was immobile for several weeks.) nepohyblivý
    2) (not moving; motionless: He crouched there immobile until they had gone.) nehybný
    - immobilize
    - immobilise
    * * *
    • nepohyblivý

    English-Czech dictionary > immobile

  • 31 incubate

    ['iŋkjubeit]
    1) (to produce (young birds) from eggs by sitting on them or by keeping them warm by some other means.) sedět na vejcích; líhnout (uměle)
    2) ((of germs or disease) to develop until signs of the disease appear: How long does chickenpox take to incubate?) zrát, rodit se
    - incubator
    * * *
    • inkubovat

    English-Czech dictionary > incubate

  • 32 inkling

    ['iŋkliŋ]
    (a slight idea or suspicion (about something that is happening): I had no inkling of what was going on until she told me all about it.) tušení, ponětí
    * * *
    • tušení

    English-Czech dictionary > inkling

  • 33 innocent

    ['inəsnt]
    1) (not guilty (of a crime, misdeed etc): A man should be presumed innocent of a crime until he is proved guilty; They hanged an innocent man.) nevinný
    2) ((of an action etc) harmless or without harmful or hidden intentions: innocent games and amusements; an innocent remark.) nevinný
    3) (free from, or knowing nothing about, evil etc: an innocent child; You can't be so innocent as to believe what advertisements say!) nevinný, naivní
    - innocence
    * * *
    • nevinný

    English-Czech dictionary > innocent

  • 34 jackpot

    ['‹ækpot]
    (in playing cards, some competitions etc, a fund of prize-money that goes on increasing until it is won.) sázka zvyšovaná až do výhry
    * * *
    • zvyšovaná sázka

    English-Czech dictionary > jackpot

  • 35 jelly

    ['‹eli]
    plural - jellies; noun
    1) (the juice of fruit boiled with sugar until it is firm, used like jam, or served with meat.) želé
    2) (a transparent, smooth food, usually fruit-flavoured: I've made raspberry jelly for the party.) želé
    3) (any jelly-like substance: Frogs' eggs are enclosed in a kind of jelly.) želé
    4) ((American) same as jam I.)
    * * *
    • želé
    • rosol

    English-Czech dictionary > jelly

  • 36 keep on

    (to continue (doing something or moving): He just kept on writing; They kept on until they came to a petrol station.) pokračovat, stále (dělat něco)
    * * *
    • zůstávat
    • zaměstnávat dále
    • setrvat v

    English-Czech dictionary > keep on

  • 37 lie in

    (to stay in bed late in the morning: I like to lie in until nine on a Saturday.) přispat si
    * * *
    • tkvět
    • spočívat v

    English-Czech dictionary > lie in

  • 38 Male

    [meil]
    noun, adjective
    1) ((a person, animal etc) of the sex having testes or an organ or organs performing a similar function; not (of) the sex which carries the young until birth etc: the male of the species; the male rabbit.) samec; muž; samčí
    2) ((a plant) having flowers with stamens which can fertilize female flowers.) samčí
    * * *
    • hl.m. - Maledivy

    English-Czech dictionary > Male

  • 39 male

    [meil]
    noun, adjective
    1) ((a person, animal etc) of the sex having testes or an organ or organs performing a similar function; not (of) the sex which carries the young until birth etc: the male of the species; the male rabbit.) samec; muž; samčí
    2) ((a plant) having flowers with stamens which can fertilize female flowers.) samčí
    * * *
    • samčí
    • samec
    • muž
    • mužský

    English-Czech dictionary > male

  • 40 mellow

    ['meləu] 1. adjective
    1) ((of character) made softer and more mature, relaxed etc by age and/or experience: Her personality became more mellow as middle age approached.) vyrovnaný
    2) ((of sound, colour, light etc) soft, not strong or unpleasant: The lamplight was soft and mellow.) jemný
    3) ((of wine, cheese etc) kept until the flavour has developed fully: a mellow burgundy.) vyzrálý
    2. verb
    (to make or become softer or more mature: Old age has mellowed him.) zjemnit
    * * *
    • uvolněný
    • vyzrálý
    • zjemnit
    • příjemný
    • jemný
    • měkký

    English-Czech dictionary > mellow

См. также в других словарях:

  • until — until, till 1. Till is not a shortened form of until but is the older word; the un of until adds the element ‘up to, as far as’. The two words can both be used as prepositions (e.g. until/till tomorrow) or conjunctions (e.g. until/till we reach… …   Modern English usage

  • Until — Un*til , prep. [OE. until, ontil; un (as in unto) + til till; cf. Dan. indtil, Sw. intill. See {Unto}, and {Till}, prep.] [1913 Webster] 1. To; unto; towards; used of material objects. Chaucer. [1913 Webster] Taverners until them told the same.… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • until — [un til′] prep. [ME untill < un (see UNTO) + till, to, TILL1] 1. up to the time of; till (a specified time or occurrence) [until payday] 2. before (a specified time or occurrence): used with a negative [not until tomorrow] 3. Scot …   English World dictionary

  • Until — Un*til , conj. As far as; to the place or degree that; especially, up to the time that; till. See {Till}, conj. [1913 Webster] In open prospect nothing bounds our eye, Until the earth seems joined unto the sky. Dryden. [1913 Webster] But the rest …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Until — may refer to *Until s use as a computer programming language s control flow construction * Until... , the song from the film Kate Leopold …   Wikipedia

  • until — c.1200, from O.N. und as far as, up to (related to O.E. end; see END (Cf. end)) + till until, up to (see TILL (Cf. till)). Originally also used of persons and places. Cf. Swed. intill, Dan. indtil. The Mod.Ger. equivalent, bis (O.H.G. biaz …   Etymology dictionary

  • Until... — Until... is a song from the 2001 Academy Award nominated and Golden Globe winning film Kate Leopold , sung by Sting. The song won the Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song and was nominated for the Academy Award in the same category …   Wikipedia

  • until — I adverb as far as, by the time that, down to, pending, til, to, to the time when, up to, up to the time of II index ad interim Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • until — [prep] just before as far as, before, before the coming, continuously, down to, in advance of, in expectation, prior to, till, to, up till, up to; concept 820 …   New thesaurus

  • until — ► PREPOSITION & CONJUNCTION ▪ up to (the point in time or the event mentioned). ORIGIN from Old Norse und as far as + TILL(Cf. ↑tillage) (the sense thus duplicated) …   English terms dictionary

  • until */*/*/ — UK [ənˈtɪl] / US conjunction, preposition Summary: Until can be used in the following ways: as a preposition (followed by a noun): She continued to get a salary until the end of March. as a conjunction (connecting two clauses): I stayed there… …   English dictionary

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