Well, yes, there is the possible religious connotation... but I find it quite peripherical... "věřit v..." = put belief in... "věřit v..." =...
Děkuji za to, že ve mě věříš (thanks for believing in me = you believe in my abilities) Děkuji za to, že mi věříš (thanks for trusting me)...
Perhaps "díky za podporu" (thanks for your support), otherwise it seems rather strange to thank someone for having the same opinion as you do.
They are for both, depending on what you say: Nemáš něco k jídlu? - "Do you have something to eat?" (polite but... no overly... the person is...
"...that he really has been through the swine flu"
Interesting... it seems in some cases (grammatical cases), you may use both forms. The "plural" I wrote, is completely valid but sometimes you can...
Máš něco k jídlu? - Do you have somethig to eat? (neutral) Nemáš něco k jídlu? - Do you have something to eat (more polite, as it anticipates...
I mean... if you add the word "you/ty", the vocative is normally valid, but it does mean something a little bit different. "Begone, devil!" - you...
1 - this one is priceless :D "klacek" is a piece of a brach, more like a club, bludgeon or something.... it is a thing that we throw and a dog...
1 - or "skvělé kontroly/opravy" 2 - "někde" = "somewhere", if you wanted "on his own", then "každý musí snášet... sám/po svém" 3 - "kondice"...
I would rather say "incomprehensible" than "incoherent"... Yes, it functions in a similar way... you receive a phonetic information but from the...
1 - padnout = fall (used mainly for persons... either physically, which is synonymous to "die" or morally; "padlý" = "deceased"; "padlá žena" =...
1 - upside down = vzhůru nohama; inside out = naruby 2 - better: "Co je však neuvěřitelné, ten, kdo nesl..." 3 - or just simply "vrátil se...
Hypoarticulation is generally just a neglectful pronunciation... consonant clusters are reduced, vowel qualities merge with one another, the...
Well... as Wer said and I implied, it is very often possible that more options are correct, and if you noticed, even native speakers sometimes...
Well of course Czech is quite simple if you have such a large linguistic background and have the opportunity to practice it with such an intensity...
1 - it is more frequent not to decline the name in such constructions: "v Mordoru" x "v zemi Mordor" ( = v zemi jménem Mordor) "ve Fordu" x "v...
You wrote me a PM where you state you would like to work in the media... and there I think the Czech could be quite useful if you specialised on...
It is an example of an old toothles man speaking (or rather example of an actor performing a role of a villain fully capable of normal speech,...
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