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with+a+glance

  • 1 mean

    [mi:n] I adjective
    1) (not generous (with money etc): He's very mean (with his money / over pay).) lakomý
    2) (likely or intending to cause harm or annoyance: It is mean to tell lies.) hanebný, nečestný
    3) ((especially American) bad-tempered, vicious or cruel: a mean mood.) rozladěný; zlý; krutý
    4) ((of a house etc) of poor quality; humble: a mean dwelling.) mizerný, ubohý
    - meanness
    - meanie
    II 1. adjective
    1) ((of a statistic) having the middle position between two points, quantities etc: the mean value on a graph.) střední
    2) (average: the mean annual rainfall.) průměrný
    2. noun
    (something that is midway between two opposite ends or extremes: Three is the mean of the series one to five.) střed, průměr, střední hodnota
    III 1. past tense, past participle - meant; verb
    1) (to (intend to) express, show or indicate: `Vacation' means `holiday'; What do you mean by (saying/doing) that?) mínit; znamenat
    2) (to intend: I meant to go to the exhibition but forgot; For whom was that letter meant?; He means (= is determined) to be a rich man some day.) zamýšlet
    2. adjective
    ((of a look, glance etc) showing a certain feeling or giving a certain message: The teacher gave the boy a meaning look when he arrived late.) významný
    - meaningless
    - be meant to
    - mean well
    * * *
    • znamenat
    • zákeřný
    • zamýšlet
    • průměrný
    • průměr
    • střední
    • mysl
    • myslit
    • mínit
    • myslet
    • mean/meant/meant

    English-Czech dictionary > mean

  • 2 shoot

    [ʃu:t] 1. past tense, past participle - shot; verb
    1) ((often with at) to send or fire (bullets, arrows etc) from a gun, bow etc: The enemy were shooting at us; He shot an arrow through the air.) střílet, vystřelit
    2) (to hit or kill with a bullet, arrow etc: He went out to shoot pigeons; He was sentenced to be shot at dawn.) zastřelit
    3) (to direct swiftly and suddenly: She shot them an angry glance.) vrhnout
    4) (to move swiftly: He shot out of the room; The pain shot up his leg; The force of the explosion shot him across the room.) vyrazit; vystřelovat; vrhnout
    5) (to take (usually moving) photographs (for a film): That film was shot in Spain; We will start shooting next week.) natáčet
    6) (to kick or hit at a goal in order to try to score.) vystřelit
    7) (to kill (game birds etc) for sport.) střílet
    2. noun
    (a new growth on a plant: The deer were eating the young shoots on the trees.) výhonek
    - shoot down
    - shoot rapids
    - shoot up
    * * *
    • výstřel
    • výhonek
    • shoot/shot/shot
    • smyk

    English-Czech dictionary > shoot

  • 3 squint

    [skwint] 1. verb
    1) (to have the physical defect of having the eyes turning towards or away from each other or to cause the eyes to do this: The child squints; You squint when you look down at your nose.) šilhat
    2) ((with at, up at, through etc) to look with half-shut or narrowed eyes: He squinted through the telescope.) dívat se přivřenýma očima
    2. noun
    1) (a squinting position of the eyes: an eye-operation to correct her squint.) šilhání
    2) (a glance or look at something: Let me have a squint at that photograph.) krátký pohled
    3. adjective, adverb
    ((placed etc) crookedly or not straight: Your hat is squint.) nakřivo
    * * *
    • šilhání
    • šilhat

    English-Czech dictionary > squint

См. также в других словарях:

  • glance — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ backward, sidelong, sideways ▪ She cast a sidelong glance at Fern. ▪ brief, cursory, fleeting, quick …   Collocations dictionary

  • Glance — Glance, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Glanced}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Glancing}.] 1. To shoot or emit a flash of light; to shine; to flash. [1913 Webster] From art, from nature, from the schools, Let random influences glance, Like light in many a shivered… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • glance — glance1 [glans, gläns] vi. glanced, glancing [ME glansen, glenchen, prob. a blend < OFr glacier, to slip (see GLACIS) + guenchir, to elude < Frank * wenkjan, to totter; akin to OE wancol, unstable] 1. to strike a surface obliquely and go… …   English World dictionary

  • Glance Networks — Infobox Website name = Glance Networks type = Webconferencing software url = http://www.glance.net language = English owner = Glance Networks author = Glance Networks launch date = 2002Glance is an internet based screen sharing software program… …   Wikipedia

  • glance — 1. v. & n. v. 1 intr. (often foll. by down, up, etc.) cast a momentary look (glanced up at the sky). 2 intr. (often foll. by off) (esp. of a weapon) glide or bounce (off an object). 3 intr. (usu. foll. by over, off, from) (of talk or a talker)… …   Useful english dictionary

  • glance — I UK [ɡlɑːns] / US [ɡlæns] verb [intransitive] Word forms glance : present tense I/you/we/they glance he/she/it glances present participle glancing past tense glanced past participle glanced *** 1) to look somewhere quickly and then look away… …   English dictionary

  • glance — [[t]glɑ͟ːns, glæ̱ns[/t]] ♦♦♦ glances, glancing, glanced 1) VERB If you glance at something or someone, you look at them very quickly and then look away again immediately. [V prep/adv] He glanced at his watch... [V prep/adv] I glanced back. 2)… …   English dictionary

  • GLANCE (AIMLESS GLANCE OF COWBOY HERO) —    This term originates with Umberto Echo and refers to the stylistic convention of the hero’s laconic facial expressions in the face of danger. Clint Eastwood in particular, in the Sergio Leone Westerns, casts about that expressionless look in… …   Westerns in Cinema

  • glance — 01. When I [glanced] at the paper this morning, I saw a picture of someone I used to go to school with. 02. Can you take a quick [glance] at my essay, and see if it looks okay to you? 03. The child [glanced] at his mother to see if she was… …   Grammatical examples in English

  • glance — glance1 verb 1》 take a brief or hurried look.     ↘(glance at/through) read quickly or cursorily. 2》 (often glance off) strike at an angle and bounce off obliquely. noun 1》 a brief or hurried look. 2》 archaic a flash or gleam of light. 3》 Cricket …   English new terms dictionary

  • Glance coal — Coal Coal (k[=o]l), n. [AS. col; akin to D. kool, OHG. chol, cholo, G. kohle, Icel. kol, pl., Sw. kol, Dan. kul; cf. Skr. jval to burn. Cf. {Kiln}, {Collier}.] 1. A thoroughly charred, and extinguished or still ignited, fragment from wood or… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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