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1 yield
[ji:ld] 1. verb1) (to give up; to surrender: He yielded to the other man's arguments; He yielded all his possessions to the state.) ustoupit; přenechat2) (to give way to force or pressure: At last the door yielded.) povolit3) (to produce naturally, grow etc: How much milk does that herd of cattle yield?) dávat, nést2. noun(the amount produced by natural means: the annual yield of wheat.) úroda, výnos* * *• ustoupit• výnos• vynést• vynášet• výtěžek• poskytnout• poskytovat• plodit• přenechat• přinášet• skýtat• dát přednost• dávat -
2 cassava
((also tapioca plant) a tropical plant, whose roots yield tapioca.) maniok* * *• kasava• maniok -
3 give in
1) (to stop fighting and admit defeat; to yield: The soldiers were outnumbered and gave in to the enemy.) vzdát se2) (to hand or bring (something) to someone (often a person in authority): Do we have to give in our books at the end of the lesson?) odevzdat* * *• vzdát se• poddat se -
4 obstinate
['obstinət](refusing to yield, obey etc: She won't change her mind - she's very obstinate.) zatvrzelý- obstinately* * *• tvrdošíjný• tvrdohlavý• umíněný -
5 produce
1. [prə'dju:s] verb1) (to bring out: She produced a letter from her pocket.) vytáhnout2) (to give birth to: A cow produces one or two calves a year.) rodit3) (to cause: His joke produced a shriek of laughter from the children.) způsobit, vyvolat4) (to make or manufacture: The factory produces furniture.) vyrábět5) (to give or yield: The country produces enough food for the population.) produkovat6) (to arrange and prepare (a theatre performance, film, television programme etc): The play was produced by Henry Dobson.) režírovat, inscenovat2. ['prodju:s] noun(something that is produced, especially crops, eggs, milk etc from farms: agricultural/farm produce.) produkt- producer- product
- production
- productive
- productivity* * *• vytvořit• vyrábět• vyrobit• produkovat -
6 stand out
1) (to be noticeable: She stood out as one of the prettiest girls in the school.) vynikat2) (to go on resisting or to refuse to yield: The garrison stood out (against the besieging army) as long as possible.) držet se* * *• vyčnívat -
7 stubborn
(obstinate, or unwilling to yield, obey etc: He's as stubborn as a donkey.) tvrdohlavý* * *• tvrdošijný• tvrdohlavý• neústupný -
8 submit
[səb'mit]past tense, past participle - submitted; verb1) (to yield to control or to a particular kind of treatment by another person etc: I refuse to submit to his control; The rebels were ordered to submit.) podrobit se2) (to offer (a plan, suggestion, proposal, entry etc): Competitors for the painting competition must submit their entries by Friday.) předložit•- submissive
- submissively
- submissiveness* * *• podat• předložit -
9 succumb
(to yield: She succumbed to temptation and ate the chocolate.) podlehnout* * *• podlehnout• podléhat -
10 surrender
[sə'rendə] 1. verb1) (to yield: The general refused to surrender to the enemy; We shall never surrender!) vzdát se2) (to give up or abandon: He surrendered his claim to the throne; You must surrender your old passport when applying for a new one.) vzdát se (čeho); odevzdat2. noun((an) act of surrendering: The garrison was forced into surrender.) kapitulace* * *• ustoupit• vzdát• vzdání se• vzdávat se• vzdát se• podlehnutí• propadnout• odevzdat• kapitulovat -
11 get tough with (someone)
(to deal forcefully with or refuse to yield to (a person): When he started to argue, I got tough with him.) jednat tvrdě -
12 get tough with (someone)
(to deal forcefully with or refuse to yield to (a person): When he started to argue, I got tough with him.) jednat tvrdě -
13 oil palm
(a palm tree whose fruit and seeds yield oil.) palma olejná -
14 stand fast/firm
(to refuse to yield.) držet se dobře
См. также в других словарях:
Yield — may mean:* Crop yield, a measure of the output per unit area of land under cultivation * Maximum sustainable yield, the largest long term fishery catch that can be safely taken * Rolled throughput yield, a statistical tool in Six Sigma * Yield… … Wikipedia
yield — 1 / yēld/ vt: to produce as return from an expenditure or investment: furnish as profit or interest an account that yield s 6 percent vi 1: to give place or precedence (as to one having a superior right or claim) 2: to relinquish the floor of a… … Law dictionary
Yield — Yield, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Yielded}; obs. p. p. {Yold}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Yielding}.] [OE. yelden, [yogh]elden, [yogh]ilden, AS. gieldan, gildan, to pay, give, restore, make an offering; akin to OFries. jelda, OS. geldan, D. gelden to cost, to be … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Yield — Álbum de Pearl Jam Publicación 3 de febrero de 1998 Grabación de Febrero a Septiembre de 1997 en los estudios Litho y estudios Bad Animals Género(s) Rock Alternativo, Grung … Wikipedia Español
yield´er — yield «yeeld», verb, noun. –v.t. 1. a) to produce; bear: »This land yields good crops. Mines yield ores. SYNONYM(S): furnish, supply. b) to give in return; bring in: »an investment which yielded a large profit. c) to fill a need; furnish; afford … Useful english dictionary
Yield — bezeichnet: Ausbeute (Halbleitertechnik) Yield, der englische Begriff für Rendite All Risk Yield (Nettoanfangsrendite bei Immobilieninvestitionen) Yield Spread Analyse, der englische Begriff für die Portfolioanalyse Yield Compression, auch… … Deutsch Wikipedia
yield — [yēld] vt. [ME yelden < OE gieldan, to pay, give, akin to Ger gelten, to be worth < IE base * ghel tō, (I) give, pay] 1. to produce; specif., a) to give or furnish as a natural process or as the result of cultivation [an orchard that… … English World dictionary
yield — vb 1 produce, turn out, *bear Analogous words: *generate, engender, breed, propagate: create, *invent: form, shape, *make, fabricate, fashion 2 *relinqui … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Yield — Yield, v. i. 1. To give up the contest; to submit; to surrender; to succumb. [1913 Webster] He saw the fainting Grecians yield. Dryden. [1913 Webster] 2. To comply with; to assent; as, I yielded to his request. [1913 Webster] 3. To give way; to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
yield — [n] production of labor crop, earnings, harvest, income, output, outturn, produce, profit, return, revenue, takings, turnout; concept 260 yield [v1] produce accrue, admit, afford, allow, beam, bear, blossom, bring forth, bring in, discharge, earn … New thesaurus
Yield — Yield, n. Amount yielded; product; applied especially to products resulting from growth or cultivation. A goodly yield of fruit doth bring. Bacon. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English