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waited+for

  • 1 for hours

    (for a very long time: We waited for hours for the train.) hodiny

    English-Czech dictionary > for hours

  • 2 come on

    1) (to appear on stage or the screen: They waited for the comedian to come on.) vystoupit (o herci)
    2) (hurry up!: Come on - we'll be late for the party!) spěchat, pospíšit si
    3) (don't be ridiculous!: Come on, you don't really expect me to believe that!) ale no tak; ale jdi
    * * *
    • pospíšit si
    • rozběhnout se
    • nastat
    • objevit se
    • blížit se

    English-Czech dictionary > come on

  • 3 just

    I adjective
    1) (right and fair: not favouring one more than another: a fair and just decision.) spravedlivý
    2) (reasonable; based on one's rights: He certainly has a just claim to the money.) oprávněný
    3) (deserved: He got his just reward when he crashed the stolen car and broke his leg.) zasloužený
    - justness II adverb
    1) ((often with as) exactly or precisely: This penknife is just what I needed; He was behaving just as if nothing had happened; The house was just as I'd remembered it.) přesně, právě tak
    2) ((with as) quite: This dress is just as nice as that one.) stejně
    3) (very lately or recently: He has just gone out of the house.) před chvilkou
    4) (on the point of; in the process of: She is just coming through the door.) zrovna
    5) (at the particular moment: The telephone rang just as I was leaving.) právě ve chvíli
    6) ((often with only) barely: We have only just enough milk to last till Friday; I just managed to escape; You came just in time.) právě
    7) (only; merely: They waited for six hours just to get a glimpse of the Queen; `Where are you going?' `Just to the post office'; Could you wait just a minute?) jenom
    8) (used for emphasis, eg with commands: Just look at that mess!; That just isn't true!; I just don't know what to do.) tak, prostě
    9) (absolutely: The weather is just marvellous.) naprosto
    - just now
    - just then
    * * *
    • znova
    • zrovna
    • právě
    • pouze
    • spravedlivý
    • jen
    • jenom
    • hned
    • akorát

    English-Czech dictionary > just

  • 4 catch up

    (to come level (with): We caught him up at the corner; Ask the taxi-driver if he can catch up with that lorry; We waited for him to catch up; She had a lot of schoolwork to catch up on after her illness.) dohonit
    * * *
    • dohonit
    • dohánět
    • dostihnout
    • dohnat

    English-Czech dictionary > catch up

  • 5 eternity

    1) (time without end.) věčnost
    2) (a seemingly endless time: He waited for an eternity.) věčnost
    3) (the state or time after death.) věčnost
    * * *
    • věčnost

    English-Czech dictionary > eternity

  • 6 fuse

    I 1. [fju:z] verb
    1) (to melt (together) as a result of great heat: Copper and tin fuse together to make bronze.) spojit tavením
    2) ((of an electric circuit or appliance) to (cause to) stop working because of the melting of a fuse: Suddenly all the lights fused; She fused all the lights.) zhasnout spálením pojistky
    2. noun
    (a piece of easily-melted wire included in an electric circuit so that a dangerously high electric current will break the circuit and switch itself off: She mended the fuse.) pojistka
    II [fju:z] noun
    (a piece of material, a mechanical device etc which makes a bomb etc explode at a particular time: He lit the fuse and waited for the explosion.) rozbuška
    * * *
    • zápalná šňůra
    • pojistka
    • rozbuška

    English-Czech dictionary > fuse

  • 7 lag

    [læɡ] 1. past tense, past participle - lagged; verb
    ((often with behind) to move too slowly and become left behind: We waited for the smaller children, who were lagging behind the rest.) loudat se vzadu
    2. noun
    (an act of lagging or the amount by which one thing is later than another: There is sometimes a time-lag of several seconds between our seeing the lightning and our hearing the thunder.) opoždění; interval
    * * *
    • zpožďovat se
    • zaostávat

    English-Czech dictionary > lag

  • 8 settle down

    1) (to (cause to) become quiet, calm and peaceful: He waited for the audience to settle down before he spoke; She settled the baby down at last.) utišit (se)
    2) (to make oneself comfortable: She settled (herself) down in the back of the car and went to sleep.) uvelebit se
    3) (to begin to concentrate on something, eg work: He settled down to (do) his schoolwork.) zabrat se do
    * * *
    • usídlit se
    • usadit se
    • ustálit se

    English-Czech dictionary > settle down

  • 9 show up

    1) (to make obvious: This light shows up the places where I've mended this coat.) ukázat
    2) (to reveal the faults of: Mary was so neat that she really showed me up.) ztrapnit
    3) (to stand out clearly: The scratches showed up on the photograph.) (zřetelně) vystoupit
    4) (to appear or arrive: I waited for her, but she never showed up.) objevit se
    * * *
    • dostavit se
    • dostavovat se

    English-Czech dictionary > show up

  • 10 at fever pitch

    (at a level of great excitement: The crowd's excitement was at fever pitch as they waited for the filmstar to appear.) vrchol vzrušení

    English-Czech dictionary > at fever pitch

  • 11 platform

    ['plætfo:m]
    1) (a raised part of a floor eg in a hall, for speakers, entertainers etc: The orchestra arranged themselves on the platform.) pódium
    2) (the raised area between or beside the lines in a railway station: They waited on the platform for their train to arrive; The London train will leave from platform 6.) perón, nástupiště
    * * *
    • pódium
    • plošina
    • platforma
    • nástupiště

    English-Czech dictionary > platform

  • 12 suspense

    [-s]
    noun (a state of uncertainty and anxiety: We waited in suspense for the result of the competition.) napětí
    * * *
    • očekávání
    • napětí

    English-Czech dictionary > suspense

См. также в других словарях:

  • waited for instructions — waited for further notice including exactly what to do …   English contemporary dictionary

  • waited for a phone call — stood in anticipation of a telephone call, expected a particular telephone call …   English contemporary dictionary

  • waited in vain — waited for nothing, waited but did not receive any results …   English contemporary dictionary

  • For One More Day — is a 2006 novel taken place during the mid 1900 s by the acclaimed sportswriter and author Mitch Albom. It opens with the novel s protagonist planning to commit suicide. His adulthood is shown to have been rife with sadness. His own daughter didn …   Wikipedia

  • waited patiently — waited for his turn to arrive without anxiety …   English contemporary dictionary

  • waited at his door — ambushed him, waited for him to exit so that he could attack …   English contemporary dictionary

  • for dear life — as though afraid of losing one s life The mountain climber held on to the rock for dear life as he waited for someone to rescue him …   Idioms and examples

  • Waited Up ’Til It Was Light — Studioalbum von Johnny Foreigner Veröffentlichung 2. Juni 2008 (UK) 22. Juli 2008 (Nordamerika) Aufnahme 2007 – 2008 …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • For You, For Me Tour — Tour by Kylie Minogue Start date September 30, 2009 End date …   Wikipedia

  • for hours on end — {adv. phr.} For many hours; for a very long time. * /We have been trying to get this computer going for hours on end, but we need serious professional help./ …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • for hours on end — {adv. phr.} For many hours; for a very long time. * /We have been trying to get this computer going for hours on end, but we need serious professional help./ …   Dictionary of American idioms

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