Examples of using Seda in English and their translations into Czech
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Colloquial
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Official
You're my seda.
Ms. Seda. A professor.
It's not all wisdom, seda.
Murat and Seda grew up together.
Seda, how are you here? Gaia?
Ask… the commanders. How, Seda?
Gaia? Seda, how are you here?
Ask… the commanders.How, Seda?
Daughter!-Seda!-Daughter! Her heart!
The first one was Heriberto Seda.
Sorry, Seda. I will try harder.
I would never say that to you, Seda.
I will kill you, seda! With pleasure.
I will try harder.Sorry, Seda.
They trained together. Seda was way better at protecting herself.
With pleasure. I will kill you, seda!
Thank you for your advice, Seda, but we weren't planning on using the worms.
The first one was Heriberto Seda. Correct.
When he heard Seda screaming… He did something a Protector should never do.
We were on our way to warn Murat and Seda.
Para que todo vaya como la seda, añada la dirección This email address is being protected from spambots.
He did something a Protector should never do. When he heard Seda screaming.
Czech artist Katerina Seda will show the fourth step of her ongoing project Neda se svitit at Cubitt Gallery.
But we weren't planning on using the worms. Hmm, thank you for your advice, Seda.
Seda set herself the task of re-uniting the townspeople through the problem itself: the town's new circular pattern around the central blind spot.
Museums Sheffield host an ambitious new artwork by Czech artist Katerina Seda, brought to the Millennium Gallery thanks to the first ever Contemporary Art Society Annual Award.
Katerina Seda is an acclaimed contemporary artist whose work often touches on ideas of community, memory and collective identity.
According to witness testimony it is decided that who is found guilty of murder of the first degree of Seda Altınkaya, the defendant, Mehmet Koyuncu and the evidence gathered.
This atypical exhibition by Czech artist Katerina Seda, in the Moravian Gallery in Brno, is part of her five-year-long project through which she endeavours to create a new form of a holiday in the village of Bedrichovice.
For this new large-scale project staged in the surroundings of Tate Modern, the artist Katerina Seda has invited 80 people from the small village of Bedrichovice in the Czech Republic to London.