champing/chomping at the bit (also be chafing at the bit)hořet netrpělivostí The players were champing at the bit as the start of the match was delayed. (Oxford Idioms) |
cheese strawssýrové tyčinky "I'm going to make some cheese straws," she said, "and maybe fry some onion rings" BNC Then when he was entertaining one of his friends he couldn't get his stove to burn right and he had to keep it alight with matchboxes and cheese straws. BNC Nenna had just time to say, I must be going, before she came back, tottering at a kind of dignified slant, and holding a large tin of cheese straws. BNC |
cheese-caketvarohový koláč; slang. reklamní fotografie polonahých dívek White stilton with stem ginger, at about £2.60 a pound, is ideal for dessert or cheese cake filling, while white cheddar with mango chutney, at about £2.55 a pound, makes tangy sandwiches. BNC I've still got these cheese cake to finish off, wash your hands. BNC |
cheese-cutterdrátěný kráječ sýra Beyond him was the blank, windowless side of the house, smooth and flat, as if the row of houses had been sliced with a cheese-cutter. BNC
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cheese-paringkůra od sýra; maličkost, nicotnost; skrblictví Any cheese-paring of the logistic stocks reduces battle efficiency, and failure to look after barracks, married quarters, and installations in the short term piles up trouble and expensive rebuilding for the future. BNC It was not until ten years later that we began to see that in fact these very English store-cupboard provisions, so far from being suited to the cheese-paring methods necessitated by desperate shortages, demand first-class basic ingredients and a liberal hand with butter. BNC This is cheese-paring, I know, but it might help. BNC |
cheese-scoopnůž na braní vzorků sýra |
cheese(-)boardservírovací prkénko na sýr Heart-shaped cheeses are also produced which are very attractive on a cheese-board: Coeur de Neufchatel and Coeur de Bray are two of the best known, both from the Pays de Bray in Normandy. BNC Creamy in texture and blue-veined, "Blues" will be a hit on your cheese-board. BNC Then she cooked pasta and shredded chicken and chopped fruit and nuts and sliced black bread and made beetroot soup and prepared sour cream and a cheese board and polished wine glasses and put butter in lemon-coloured dishes and made salad dressings and laid the table and set a serviette decorated with a Groucho Marx face by the side of each place. BNC |
cheese(-)clothprocezovací pláténko na tvaroh, fáčovina, velmi jemná látka Shoulder-length blond hair, embroidered cheese-cloth shirt, single strand of beads -- I mean, beads but tasteful -- a sensual hint of hash and patchouli, and midnight blue denims stretched taut then flaring over the longest, leanest bass-guitarist's thighs in Glasgow. BNC I'm wearing a denim waistcoat, cheesecloth shirt and baggy denim jeans, and I'm smiling fit to burst, as I always seem to be in photographs. BNC It was so hot outside that she had settled for an orange cheesecloth caftan, which she'd jacked in with a belt of linked gold hippos. BNC |
cheeseburgerkarbanátek se sýrem v housce A proper discussion of a football match cannot occur if one of the participants is quite ignorant of the rules of the game; and the kind of assessment of a restaurant meal that would involve the possible insertion of the establishment into a good food guide (or perhaps its deletion from it) will not get very far if one of the diners does not care for the meal because his idea of a gastronomic treat is a cheeseburger and french fries (though within the order of the burger discriminations are possible). BNC It's 4.30 on a Friday afternoon and she's ordering a cheeseburger with mayo, ketchup and fries and a cup of tea. BNC You know, for instance, that ordering deep-fried breaded mozzarella bites in an Italian restaurant will mean plenty of cholesterol, saturated fat and calories, and that a hefty cheeseburger on a sesame bun is rich in animal fat, protein and refined carbohydrates. BNC |
cheesed (off)otrávený, nakrknutý In 1988, customers, so cheesed off with the Line's service, staged the famous so-called "battle of Finchley Central," occupying a train after an all-too-common announcement that it was to be diverted to Mill Hill East instead of `;speeding'; to its original destination of High Barnet. BNC On the other hand, imagine the embarrassment of calling a full-scale search out for somebody who is not only not in peril, but is mightily cheesed off to be awoken from a deep sleep by an RAF Sea-King helicopter blowing the filling out of their sleeping-bag? BNC Maybe he was cheesed off meeting people so far along the ridge without explanation as to their start point. BNC |
chew the fatpropírat cizí záležitosti, drbat Most of the older women meet to chew the fat with their neighbours every morning. Longman And during his flying visit to Belfast, Mr Grade took time out to chew the fat about the old days. BNC Sure like to chew the fat with you, fella, but I got a busy day on. BNC |
chicken feedmalá hodnota, za babku, pakatel Your rent is chicken feed in comparison with mine. (Longman) The boys' antics are mere chicken feed to the Dynasty company, whose security chief Keith Heading (a glowering John Diehl) has a far bigger fraud on the boil involving stolen cards, dead colleagues and warehouses full of gleaming Porsches. BNC And the hours I spent with the airbrush… ah, five hundred roubles was chicken feed for the work I put in. BNC |
chicken-and-egg situationkomplikovaná situace, kdy není jasné, co je příčina a co důsledek Is she unhappy because she gets into debt, or does she get into dept because she's unhappy? I suppose it's chicken-and-egg situation. (Oxford Idioms) |
chickens come home to roostnic nezůstane bez trestu, špatné skutky se jednou vymstí For years he avoided paying tax. But now his chickens have come home to roost and he's got a tax bill of 25 000 pounds. (Oxford Idioms) |
chocolate creamčokoládový bonbón s krémovou náplní, pralinka |