sobota, 27. dubna 2024, 18.10
Stránky: OpenMoodle
Kurz: Angličtina pro pokročilé (APP)
Slovník: THE HUMAN BODY
B

bite/snap somebody’s head off

utrhnout se na koho, utrhnout někomu hlavu (přen.)

The biggest concern of the executioner, a man named Billington, was that the now quivering bulk of a fifteen stone woman would snap her head off as the rope took up the slack on the trip through the trapdoor.

The silly idiot is going to shout some sort of stupid abuse at her and she’ll bite his head off!

She was some girl! Not two minutes in his company and she was biting his head off. Now she didn’t want to go to an expensive restaurant in the West End .

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blood and guts

krvavý, násilný

The election in Northern Ireland isn't about a penny off income tax or hospital beds. It's about blood and guts and death.

Yeovil became the most successful non-League club in FA Cup history in this blood and guts seven-goal thriller. They were 4-0 up with seven minutes left when the game boiled over with two sendings off, three more goals and the referee escorted from the pitch by police and security guards.

Moving away from the mainly blood and guts stuff, this is a more involved horror thriller which should help expand his market.

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bone of contention

jablko sváru

Now, my dear souls, don't let us quarrel and make Rose a bone of contention.(thefreedictionary)

The family property was a major bone of contention when their father died. (esl.about.com)

Pets are a new bone of contention in US courts.(Google)

brain drain

odchod inteligence za lepším výdělkem, odliv mozků

Professor John Ashworth, director of the London School of Economics, agreed with most of the letter's points, but disagreed with the assertion that there had been a brain drain as a result of Government mismanagement.

Both newspapers claim they acted legitimately. Top Oxford scientists join brain drain to US By Roger Highfield, Science Editor

A LEADING British team of chemists has joined the brain drain to the United States . The main problem that Ash foresees is among the younger academic staff. He could not argue, looking at Imperial, that there has been a major brain drain of senior staff.

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brain-sick/ brainsick

mentálně chorý, šílený

He says his gait was like that of a roe, starting hither and thither, not staying, not stopping; he was brain-sick. One man said his feet and eyes were in constant motion. (BNC-B)

Princess (at the Croydon Warehouse) must win the booby prize, clumsily confounding a few bogus circus tricks with the fall of Communism and life of Leonid Brezhnev’s spoilt daughter Galina in her brainsick old age. (BNC-B)

Good Lord, what madness rules in brainsick men. (WebCorp)

brainpower

mozkovna, mozková kapacita; mozek (chytrý člověk)

Can brainpower bolster Berlin’s economy? Kewenig has persuaded the state of Berlin to give him DM 11 million (nearly £3 million) to establish some centres of excellence, and attract more first class researchers.

But with economies in the whole region growing so rapidly, skilled labour is at a premium and countries are doing all they can to hang on to their brainpower.

It is helped, it acknowledges, not only by research and development grants from the Israeli government, but also the current influx of brainpower from the former Soviet Union .

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brains trust

mozkový trust, skupina expertů

Truman played for time by appointing a brains trust of three to advise him.

One summer I was invited to chair a Brains Trust at the Scottish Lawyers’ annual conference at Aviemore

He liked his personal style of government, and his establishment of a Cabinet Secretariat and his own personal advisers or brains trust in the garden suburbs.

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brainstorm

hledat nové nápady, inspiraci

Another approach is to use brainstorming. If you need some creative inspiration - which direction to take in your career, which city to move to, how to tackle a relationship problem, where to go on holiday.

The plans for each session are clearly laid out and various learning strategies are suggested: discussion; brainstorming; role play (with additional situation cards); exercises; reflection.

Every employee is encouraged to produce ideas and no suggestion, however small, is rejected without serious consideration. Sections and departments hold brainstorming sessions and posters are displayed to encourage the climate of innovation.

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brainwash

vymývat mozky

One of my main questions arose from the constant accusations that have been made that Moonies (and other new religions) actually brainwash their victims - this being the only explanation that seemed plausible to many of the parents and friends who had observed the often radical changes in behaviour wrought in those who joined the movement.

But that’s no reason to brainwash them into staying at home. Women should be free to choose what suits them - and their families - best.

It is highly inflammatory and implies an aggressive campaign designed to brainwash people.

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break somebody’s heart

zlomit srdce komu

It does break my heart when very generous people bring me a bottle that I know means more to their budget than it does to my palate.

She is everything I could ever have wanted. It will break my heart if I had to give my little girl up.

I am your mother and nothing can change that. But if you marry that woman, you will break my heart.

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bring somebody to one’s knees

srazit někoho na kolena

A woman wants a man to be strong, and then some perversity in her enjoys seeing him brought to his knees - was that it? Certainly she seemed inclined to despise him for giving way to her.

She began by destroying the contents of the studio, slashing all his canvases, painted or not, then tracking the felon himself, and mounting an assault that literally brought him to his knees, in fear for his balls.

That anger carried onto the pitch. In the first exchange, Robinson brought James to his knees with a low cross and then brought Jones down with a late tackle.

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bring something to a head/ something comes to a head

vyhrotit, vyvrcholit

The debate on the defence section of the party’s policy review report, Britain in the World, brought to a head the anger felt in sections of the party over Neil Kinnock’s shift away from unilateralism.

The crisis came to a head on 27 June 1961 , when the British Embassy in Baghdad reported the movement of Iraqi troops and tanks from the capital to Basra .

Matters have come to a head with the publication of a new and more detailed insurance group rating system which insurers say will enable them to pinpoint the higher risk models more accurately.

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bring something to its knees

těžce poškodit, zdevastovat

Dzerzhinsky had been made Commissar for Transport in the first place to deal with internal troubles among the railwaymen, many of whom had opposed the Bolsheviks in 1917 and nearly brought Lenin’s government to its knees after the October Revolution.

It took a rare combination of management failure, over-ambition and bad luck to bring such a business to its knees. By accident as much as design the Ashleys created a remarkable international brand, tapping a worldwide nostalgia for the English country cottage look. Sales boomed during the mid-1980s.

In the past China had been plundered by westerners eager to exploit large markets and in doing so they brought the nation to its knees. The contemporary open door was to be for the benefit of the Chinese, not their disadvantage.

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by the skin of one’s teeth

jen o vlas

Littlewoods Cup holders stayed in the competition by the skin of their teeth last night at Leeds Road .

Consolation for Bush came with the Indiana result. He won, but only by the skin of his teeth. He held Oklahoma, South Carolina and Nebraska, but other states forecast victory for Clinton by staggering margins.

He was shot getting away with the ransom. And two others got away by the skin of their teeth.

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by word of mouth

ústně

Finding a personal trainer is like finding a good hairdresser it should be done by word of mouth and looking at the results.

It is important now that we capture these traditions; much is handed down by word of mouth and is in danger of dying out.

It is known, of course, that the books of the Old Testament were composite works from many different sources, and may have been transmitted by word of mouth for hundreds of years before being set down.

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