Angol-magyar, magyar-angol online szótáraink


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james - kétnyelvű szótár

jam: dzsem; gyümölcsíz; lekvár; tolongás; torlódás; forgalmi torlódás; beszorulás; kelletlen helyzet; zsúfol; beékel; megakaszt; zúz; összezúz; zavar; akadozik; akad; elakad; présel;

-------------- kifejezésekben: --------------
ambassador to the court of st. james: nagykövet az angol királyi udvarnál; be in a jam: benne van a pácban; jam on the brakes: hirtelen befékez; slam jam in the middle of sg: kellős közepébe vminek; traffic jam: forgalmi akadály; forgalmi dugó;

james - értelmező szótár

jam1 (n) preserve of crushed fruit
James1 (n) a Stuart king of Scotland who married a daughter of Henry VII; when England and France went to war in 1513 he invaded England and died in defeat at Flodden (1473-1513)
   Hasonló: james | james iv |

jam2 (n) informal terms for a difficult situation he made a muddle of his marriage
   Hasonló: fix | hole | kettle of fish | mess | muddle | pickle |

James2 (n) the last Stuart to be king of England and Ireland and Scotland; overthrown in 1688 (1633-1701)
   Hasonló: james | james ii |

jam3 (n) a dense crowd of people
   Hasonló: crush | press |

James3 (n) the first Stuart to be king of England and Ireland from 1603 to 1625 and king of Scotland from 1567 to 1625; he was the son of Mary Queen of Scots and he succeeded Elizabeth I; he alienated the British Parliament by claiming the divine right of kings (1566-1625)
   Hasonló: james | james i | king james | king james i |

jam4 (n) deliberate radiation or reflection of electromagnetic energy for the purpose of disrupting enemy use of electronic devices or systems
   Hasonló: electronic jamming | jamming |

James4 (n) United States outlaw who fought as a Confederate soldier and later led a band of outlaws that robbed trains and banks in the West until he was murdered by a member of his own gang (1847-1882)
   Hasonló: james | jesse james |

James5 (n) United States pragmatic philosopher and psychologist (1842-1910)
   Hasonló: james | william james |

James6 (n) writer who was born in the United States but lived in England (1843-1916)
   Hasonló: henry james | james |

James7 (n) (New Testament) disciple of Jesus; brother of John; author of the Epistle of James in the New Testament
   Hasonló: james | saint james | saint james the apostle | st. james | st. james the apostle |

James8 (n) a river in Virginia that flows east into Chesapeake Bay at Hampton Roads
   Hasonló: james | james river |

James9 (n) a river that rises in North Dakota and flows southward across South Dakota to the Missouri
   Hasonló: james | james river |

James10 (n) a New Testament book attributed to Saint James the Apostle
   Hasonló: epistle of james | james |

jam1 (v) press tightly together or cram
   Hasonló: mob | pack | pile | throng |

jam2 (v) push down forcibly
jam3 (v) crush or bruise
   Hasonló: crush |

jam4 (v) interfere with or prevent the reception of signals block the signals emitted by this station
   Hasonló: block |

jam5 (v) get stuck and immobilized
jam6 (v) crowd or pack to capacity
   Hasonló: chock up | cram | jampack | ram | wad |

jam7 (v) block passage through
   Hasonló: block | close up | impede | obstruct | obturate | occlude |

  A "james" egyéb formái: jammed, jamming Ellentétes értelmű: | jamming | jam |
  Lásd még: | jamming | jam |

------ "james" kifejezésekben --------
Arthur James Balfour (n) English statesman; member of the Conservative Party (1848-1930)
Captain James Cook (n) English navigator who claimed the east coast of Australia for Britain and discovered several Pacific islands (1728-1779)
Charles James Fox (n) English statesman who supported American independence and the French Revolution (1749-1806)
Duncan James Corrow Grant (n) Scottish painter; cousin of Lytton Strachey and member of the Bloomsbury Group (1885-1978)
Edward James Hughes (n) English poet (born in 1930)
Edward James Muggeridge (n) United States motion-picture pioneer remembered for his pictures of running horses taken with a series of still cameras (born in England) (1830-1904)
Epistle of James (n) a New Testament book attributed to Saint James the Apostle
Frederick James Furnivall (n) English philologist who first proposed the Oxford English Dictionary (1825-1910)
Henry James (n) writer who was born in the United States but lived in England (1843-1916)
jam session (n) an impromptu jazz concert
James A. Garfield (n) 20th President of the United States; assassinated by a frustrated office-seeker (1831-1881)
James Abbott McNeill Whistler (n) United States painter (1834-1903)
James Abraham Garfield (n) 20th President of the United States; assassinated by a frustrated office-seeker (1831-1881)
James Agee (n) United States novelist (1909-1955)
James Albert Michener (n) United States writer of historical novels (1907-1997)
James Alfred Van Allen (n) United States physicist who discovered two belts of charged particles from the solar wind trapped by the Earth's magnetic field (born in 1914)
James Arthur Baldwin (n) United States author who was an outspoken critic of racism (1924-1987)
James Augustine Aloysius Joyce (n) influential Irish writer noted for his many innovations (such as stream of consciousness writing) (1882-1941)
James Augustus Henry Murray (n) Scottish philologist and the lexicographer who shaped the Oxford English Dictionary (1837-1915)
James Augustus Murray (n) Scottish philologist and the lexicographer who shaped the Oxford English Dictionary (1837-1915)
James Baldwin (n) United States author who was an outspoken critic of racism (1924-1987)
James Barrie (n) Scottish dramatist and novelist; created Peter Pan (1860-1937)
James Bay (n) the southern extension of Hudson Bay in Canada between western Quebec and northeastern Ontario
James Bernoulli (n) Swiss mathematician (1654-1705)
James Bond (n) British secret operative 007 in novels by Ian Fleming
James Boswell (n) Scottish author noted for his biography of Samuel Johnson (1740-1795)
James Bowie (n) United States pioneer and hero of the Texas revolt against Mexico; he shared command of the garrison that resisted the Mexican attack on the Alamo where he died (1796-1836)
James Branch Cabell (n) United States writer of satirical novels (1879-1958)
James Buchanan (n) 15th President of the United States (1791-1868)
James Buchanan Brady (n) United States financier noted for his love of diamonds and his extravagant lifestyle (1856-1917)
James Butler Hickock (n) frontier marshal whose adventures have become legendary (1837-1876)
James Byron Dean (n) United States film actor whose moody rebellious roles made him a cult figure (1931-1955)
James Cagney (n) United States film actor known for his portrayals of tough characters (1899-1986)
James Clark Ross (n) British explorer of the Arctic and Antarctic; located the north magnetic pole in 1831; discovered the Ross Sea in Antarctica; nephew of Sir John Ross (1800-1862)
James Clerk Maxwell (n) Scottish physicist whose equations unified electricity and magnetism and who recognized the electromagnetic nature of light (1831-1879)
James Cleveland Owens (n) United States athlete and Black American whose success in the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin outraged Hitler (1913-1980)
James Cook (n) English navigator who claimed the east coast of Australia for Britain and discovered several Pacific islands (1728-1779)
James Crichton (n) Scottish man of letters and adventurer (1560-1582)
James Dean (n) United States film actor whose moody rebellious roles made him a cult figure (1931-1955)
James Dewey Watson (n) United States geneticist who (with Crick in 1953) helped discover the helical structure of DNA (born in 1928)
James Douglas Morrison (n) United States rock singer (1943-1971)
James Earl Carter (n) 39th President of the United States (1924-)
James Earl Carter Jr. (n) 39th President of the United States (1924-)
James Edmund Scripps (n) United States newspaper publisher and half-brother of Edward Wyllis Scripps (1835-1908)
James Edward Meade (n) English economist noted for his studies of international trade and finance (1907-1995)
James Fenimore Cooper (n) United States novelist noted for his stories of American Indians and the frontier life (1789-1851)
James Francis Thorpe (n) outstanding United States athlete (1888-1953)
James Franck (n) United States physicist (born in Germany) who with Gustav Hertz performed an electron scattering experiment that proved the existence of the stationary energy states postulated by Niels Bohr (1882-1964)
James Garfield (n) 20th President of the United States; assassinated by a frustrated office-seeker (1831-1881)
James George Frazer (n) English social anthropologist noted for studies of primitive religion and magic (1854-1941)
James Grover Thurber (n) United States humorist and cartoonist who published collections of essays and stories (1894-1961)
James Hargreaves (n) English inventor of the spinning jenny (1720-1778)
James Harold Doolittle (n) United States Air Force officer who electrified the world in 1942 by leading a squadron of 16 bombers on a daylight raid over Tokyo (1896-1993)
James Harvey Robinson (n) United States historian who stressed the importance of intellectual and social events for the course of history (1863-1936)
James Henry Leigh Hunt (n) British writer who defended the Romanticism of Keats and Shelley (1784-1859)
James Hogg (n) Scottish writer of rustic verse (1770-1835)
James Howard Meredith (n) United States civil rights leader whose college registration caused riots in traditionally segregated Mississippi (born in 1933)
James Hutton (n) Scottish geologist who described the processes that have shaped the surface of the earth (1726-1797)
James I (n) the first Stuart to be king of England and Ireland from 1603 to 1625 and king of Scotland from 1567 to 1625; he was the son of Mary Queen of Scots and he succeeded Elizabeth I; he alienated the British Parliament by claiming the divine right of kings (1566-1625)
James II (n) the last Stuart to be king of England and Ireland and Scotland; overthrown in 1688 (1633-1701)
James IV (n) a Stuart king of Scotland who married a daughter of Henry VII; when England and France went to war in 1513 he invaded England and died in defeat at Flodden (1473-1513)
James Ives (n) United States lithographer who (with his partner Nathaniel Currier) produced thousands of prints signed `Currier & Ives' (1824-1895)
James Jerome Hill (n) United States railroad tycoon (1838-1916)
James John Corbett (n) United States heavyweight boxing champion (1866-1933)
James Joseph Tunney (n) United States prizefighter who won the world heavyweight championship by defeating Jack Dempsey twice (1898-1978)
James Joyce (n) influential Irish writer noted for his many innovations (such as stream of consciousness writing) (1882-1941)
James K. Polk (n) 11th President of the United States; his expansionism led to the Mexican War and the annexation of California and much of the southwest (1795-1849)
James Knox Polk (n) 11th President of the United States; his expansionism led to the Mexican War and the annexation of California and much of the southwest (1795-1849)
James Langston Hughes (n) United States writer (1902-1967)
James Leonard Farmer (n) United States civil rights leader who in 1942 founded the Congress of Racial Equality (born in 1920)
James Madison (n) 4th President of the United States; member of the Continental Congress and rapporteur at the Constitutional Convention in 1776; helped frame the Bill of Rights (1751-1836)
James Maitland Stewart (n) United States film actor who portrayed incorruptible but modest heros (1908-1997)
James Marshall Hendrix (n) United States guitarist whose innovative style with electric guitars influenced the development of rock music (1942-1970)
James Mason (n) English film actor (1909-1984)
James Matthew Barrie (n) Scottish dramatist and novelist; created Peter Pan (1860-1937)
James McKeen Cattell (n) American psychologist and editor (1860-1944)
James Meredith (n) United States civil rights leader whose college registration caused riots in traditionally segregated Mississippi (born in 1933)
James Merritt Ives (n) United States lithographer who (with his partner Nathaniel Currier) produced thousands of prints signed `Currier & Ives' (1824-1895)
James Michener (n) United States writer of historical novels (1907-1997)
James Mill (n) Scottish philosopher who expounded Bentham's utilitarianism; father of John Stuart Mill (1773-1836)
James Monroe (n) 5th President of the United States; author of the Monroe Doctrine (1758-1831)
James Murray (n) Scottish philologist and the lexicographer who shaped the Oxford English Dictionary (1837-1915)
James Naismith (n) United States educator (born in Canada) who invented the game of basketball (1861-1939)
James Neville Mason (n) English film actor (1909-1984)
James Parkinson (n) English surgeon (1755-1824)
James Polk (n) 11th President of the United States; his expansionism led to the Mexican War and the annexation of California and much of the southwest (1795-1849)
James Prescott Joule (n) English physicist who established the mechanical theory of heat and discovered the first law of thermodynamics (1818-1889)
James Riddle Hoffa (n) United States labor leader who was president of the Teamsters Union; he was jailed for trying to bribe a judge and later disappeared and is assumed to have been murdered (1913-1975)
James River (n) a river in Virginia that flows east into Chesapeake Bay at Hampton Roads
James Scott Connors (n) outstanding United States tennis player (born in 1952)
James Thomas Farrell (n) United States writer remembered for his novels (1904-1979)
James Thomas Harris (n) Irish writer noted for his sexually explicit but unreliable autobiography (1856-1931)
James Thurber (n) United States humorist and cartoonist who published collections of essays and stories (1894-1961)
James Tobin (n) United States economist (1918-2002)
James Usher (n) Irish prelate who deduced from the Bible that Creation occurred in the year 4004 BC (1581-1656)
James Ussher (n) Irish prelate who deduced from the Bible that Creation occurred in the year 4004 BC (1581-1656)
James Watson (n) United States geneticist who (with Crick in 1953) helped discover the helical structure of DNA (born in 1928)
James Watt (n) Scottish engineer and inventor whose improvements in the steam engine led to its wide use in industry (1736-1819)
James Whitcomb Riley (n) United States poet (1849-1916)
James William Fulbright (n) United States senator who is remembered for his creation of grants that fund exchange programs of teachers and students between the United States and other countries (1905-1995)
James Wilson (n) American Revolutionary leader who was one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence (1742-1798)
James Wyatt (n) English architect (1746-1813)
Jesse James (n) United States outlaw who fought as a Confederate soldier and later led a band of outlaws that robbed trains and banks in the West until he was murdered by a member of his own gang (1847-1882)
John James Audubon (n) United States ornithologist and artist (born in Haiti) noted for his paintings of birds of America (1785-1851)
John James Osborne (n) English playwright (1929-1994)
John James Rickard Macleod (n) Scottish physiologist who directed the research by F. G. Banting and C. H. Best that led to the discovery of insulin (1876-1935)
King James (n) the first Stuart to be king of England and Ireland from 1603 to 1625 and king of Scotland from 1567 to 1625; he was the son of Mary Queen of Scots and he succeeded Elizabeth I; he alienated the British Parliament by claiming the divine right of kings (1566-1625)
King James Bible (n) an English translation of the Bible published in 1611
King James I (n) the first Stuart to be king of England and Ireland from 1603 to 1625 and king of Scotland from 1567 to 1625; he was the son of Mary Queen of Scots and he succeeded Elizabeth I; he alienated the British Parliament by claiming the divine right of kings (1566-1625)
King James Version (n) an English translation of the Bible published in 1611
Robert James Fischer (n) United States chess master; world champion from 1972 to 1975 (born in 1943)
Saint James (n) (New Testament) disciple of Jesus; brother of John; author of the Epistle of James in the New Testament
Saint James the Apostle (n) (New Testament) disciple of Jesus; brother of John; author of the Epistle of James in the New Testament
Sidney James Webb (n) English sociologist and economist and a central member of the Fabian Society (1859-1947)
Sir James Augustus Henry Murray (n) Scottish philologist and the lexicographer who shaped the Oxford English Dictionary (1837-1915)
Sir James Augustus Murray (n) Scottish philologist and the lexicographer who shaped the Oxford English Dictionary (1837-1915)
Sir James Clark Ross (n) British explorer of the Arctic and Antarctic; located the north magnetic pole in 1831; discovered the Ross Sea in Antarctica; nephew of Sir John Ross (1800-1862)
Sir James Dewar (n) Scottish chemist and physicist noted for his work in cryogenics and his invention of the Dewar flask (1842-1923)
Sir James George Frazer (n) English social anthropologist noted for studies of primitive religion and magic (1854-1941)
Sir James Matthew Barrie (n) Scottish dramatist and novelist; created Peter Pan (1860-1937)
Sir James Murray (n) Scottish philologist and the lexicographer who shaped the Oxford English Dictionary (1837-1915)
Sir James Paget (n) English pathologist who discovered the cause of trichinosis (1814-1899)
Sir James Paul McCartney (n) English rock star and bass guitarist and songwriter who with John Lennon wrote most of the music for the Beatles (born in 1942)
Sir James Young Simpson (n) Scottish obstetrician and surgeon who pioneered in the use of ether and discovered the anesthetic effects of chloroform (1811-1870)
St. James (n) (New Testament) disciple of Jesus; brother of John; author of the Epistle of James in the New Testament
St. James the Apostle (n) (New Testament) disciple of Jesus; brother of John; author of the Epistle of James in the New Testament
strawberry jam (n) made with strawberries
traffic jam (n) a number of vehicles blocking one another until they can scarcely move
William James (n) United States pragmatic philosopher and psychologist (1842-1910)
William James Durant (n) United States historian (1885-1981)
James River (n) a river that rises in North Dakota and flows southward across South Dakota to the Missouri
barrage jam (v) jam an entire frequency spectrum
blanket jam (v) jam a broad spectrum of frequencies to affect all communications in the area except for directional antenna communications
point jam (v) jam a narrow band of frequencies
spot jam (v) jam a single frequency

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