Перевод: с английского на чешский

с чешского на английский

with+knowledge

  • 1 together with

    (in company with: in addition to: My knowledge, together with his money, should be very useful.) spolu s

    English-Czech dictionary > together with

  • 2 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

  • 3 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

  • 4 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

  • 5 contact

    ['kontækt] 1. noun
    1) (physical touch or nearness: Her hands came into contact with acid; Has she been in contact with measles?) kontakt, styk, dotek
    2) (communication: I've lost contact with all my old friends; We have succeeded in making (radio) contact with the ship; How can I get in contact with him?) kontakt, spojení
    3) (a person with influence, knowledge etc which might be useful: I made several good contacts in London.) styky, kontakty
    4) ((a place where) a wire etc carrying electric current (may be attached): the contacts on the battery.) kontakt
    5) (a person who has been near someone with an infectious disease: We must trace all known contacts of the cholera victim.) podezřelý z nákazy
    6) (a person or thing that provides a means of communicating with someone: His radio is his only contact with the outside world.) spojení, zprostředkovatel
    2. verb
    (to get in touch with in order to give or share information etc: I'll contact you by telephone.) spojit se s
    * * *
    • styk
    • kontaktní
    • kontakt
    • kontaktujte
    • kontaktovat

    English-Czech dictionary > contact

  • 6 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

  • 7 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

  • 8 secure

    [si'kjuə] 1. adjective
    1) ((often with against or from) safe; free from danger, loss etc: Is your house secure against burglary?; He went on holiday, secure in the knowledge that he had done well in the exam.) bezpečný; klidný
    2) (firm, fastened, or fixed: Is that door secure?) pevný
    3) (definite; not likely to be lost: She has had a secure offer of a job; He has a secure job.) solidní
    2. verb
    1) ((with against or from (something bad)) to guarantee or make safe: Keep your jewellery in the bank to secure it against theft.) zabezpečit
    2) (to fasten or make firm: He secured the boat with a rope.) přivázat
    - security
    - security risk
    * * *
    • zabezpečit
    • zajistit
    • jistý
    • bezpečný

    English-Czech dictionary > secure

  • 9 practical

    ['præktikəl]
    1) (concerned with the doing of something: practical difficulties; His knowledge is practical rather than theoretical.) praktický
    2) ((of a thing, idea etc) useful; effective: You must try to find a practical answer to the problem.) užitečný
    3) ((negative unpractical) (of a person) able to do or deal with things well or efficiently: He can look after himself - he's a very practical child.) praktický
    - practically
    - practical joke
    * * *
    • praktický

    English-Czech dictionary > practical

  • 10 conscious

    ['konʃəs]
    1) (aware of oneself and one's surroundings; not asleep or in a coma or anaesthetized etc: The patient was conscious.) při vědomí
    2) ((sometimes with of) aware or having knowledge (of): They were conscious of his disapproval.) vědomý si (čeho)
    - consciousness
    * * *
    • vědom
    • úmyslný
    • vědomý
    • při vědomí

    English-Czech dictionary > conscious

  • 11 defer

    I [di'fə:] past tense, past participle - deferred; verb
    (to put off to another time: They can defer their departure.) odložit
    II [di'fə] past tense, past participle - deferred; verb
    ((with to) to act according to the wishes or opinions of another or the orders of authority: I defer to your greater knowledge of the matter.) podrobit se
    - in deference to
    - deferment
    - deferral
    * * *
    • odložit

    English-Czech dictionary > defer

  • 12 inform

    [in'fo:m]
    1) (to tell; to give knowledge to: Please inform me of your intentions in this matter; I was informed that you were absent from the office.) informovat
    2) ((with against or on) to tell facts to eg the police about (a criminal etc): He informed against his fellow thieves.) udávat, donášet
    - information
    - informative
    - informer
    - information superhighway
    - information technology
    * * *
    • oznámit
    • informovat

    English-Czech dictionary > inform

  • 13 know-how

    noun (the practical knowledge and skill to deal with something: She has acquired a lot of know-how about cars.) znalost, dovednost, know-how
    * * *
    • dovednost

    English-Czech dictionary > know-how

  • 14 mastery

    noun ((usually with over or of) control, great skill or knowledge: We have gained mastery over the enemy.) vláda (nad), kontrola, moc
    * * *
    • virtuozita
    • zběhlost
    • ovládnutí
    • mistrovské ovládání
    • mistrovství

    English-Czech dictionary > mastery

  • 15 mathematics

    [mæƟə'mætiks]
    (( abbreviation maths [mæ ], (American) math [mæƟ]) the science or branch of knowledge dealing with measurements, numbers and quantities.) matematika
    - mathematically
    - mathematician
    * * *
    • matematika

    English-Czech dictionary > mathematics

  • 16 scholarship

    1) (knowledge and learning: a man of great scholarship.) vzdělání, učenost
    2) (money awarded to a good student to enable him to go on with further studies: She was awarded a travel scholarship.) stipendium
    * * *
    • stipendium

    English-Czech dictionary > scholarship

  • 17 on the move

    1) (moving from place to place: With his kind of job, he's always on the move.) v pohybu
    2) (advancing: The frontiers of scientific knowledge are always on the move.) v pohybu

    English-Czech dictionary > on the move

См. также в других словарях:

  • with knowledge — index knowingly Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • 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 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 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 engineers — are computer systems experts who are trained in the field of expert systems. Receiving information from domain experts, the knowledge engineers interpret the presented information and relay it to computer programmers who code the information in… …   Wikipedia

  • Knowledge Search — (Korean:지식검색) service is an information sharing tool launched in 2002 for Naver users. The tool allows users to ask just about any question, such as how to cook ramen or how to subscribe to international magazines via the Internet, and get… …   Wikipedia

  • Knowledge modeling — is a process of creating a computer interpretable model of knowledge or standard specifications about a kind of process and/or about a kind of facility or product. The resulting knowledge model can only be computer interpretable when it is… …   Wikipedia

  • Knowledge by acquaintance — The contrasting expressions knowledge by acquaintance and knowledge by description [Lazerowitz (p.403) prefers direct knowledge and indirect knowledge for knowledge by acquaintance and knowledge by description respectively. The pursuit of… …   Wikipedia

  • Knowledge economics — Articleissues wikify=March 2008 unreferenced=March 2008 OR=March 2008Knowledge economics is the study of knowledge as a commodity. Early history Knowledge first came into prominence in economics with the paper written by Friedrich Hayek in 1945… …   Wikipedia

  • Knowledge economy — The knowledge economy is a term that refers either to an economy of knowledge focused on the production and management of knowledge in the frame of economic constraints, or to a knowledge based economy. In the second meaning, more frequently used …   Wikipedia

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