el diccionario polaco - inglés

język polski - English

zmierzać do czegoś inglés:

1. head for something



2. tend


I don't like coffee too much, but I tend to have a cup once in a while.
Companies with diversified holdings tend to weather economics shocks better.
Women tend to
In nostalgic moments we may tend to think of childhood as a time of almost unbroken happiness.
In Japan you tend to use your personal seal, but actually a signature would often suffice.
Bears also tend to sleep more during the day than at night, although in the summer, with twenty-four hours of light, this does not apply.
I want to disappear somewhere! I tend to feel like that in sultry summers.
One of the important differences between Japanese and Americans is that Japanese tend to choose a safe course in life, while Americans choose to explore and challenge life.
Men have a longer ring finger than index finger, while both fingers tend to be the same length for women.
To the chagrin of many Western composers, steel drums, or steelpans, tend not to be fully chromatic.
Technically, drugs that cause miosis can relieve the PNS effects of those causing mydriasis since sympathetic and parasympathetic stimulation tend to negate each others' effects.
Many Americans are uncomfortable with silence, and they tend to regard silence in a conversation as a signal that they need to start talking.
Wan, with wilted brown leaves, the plants seemed as depressed as the people who tended them.
I think people who shoot their victims tend not to strangle them and vice versa.
Hence, he said that laws against racial and religious insult tend to backfire, noting that while such laws are ostensibly on the books to protect social harmony, they have the opposite effect.