0 the part of the body between the neck and waist, containing the heart and the lungs -- hruď
1 a large, strong wooden or metal box -- bedna, skříň
The sheets were kept in a wooden chest.
I am not at all sure that in many cases they are not very glad to keep the cards close to their chests.
In 1909 the export will be limited to 56,800 chests.
There are still 26,000 chests awaiting sale, worth probably from £6,000,000 to £10,000,000, according to the prices we choose to fix.
The flat was in a deplorable state with damp running down the walls, and both children had bad chests.
If the people who move into the houses are to do other than sit on empty tea chests, they will buy more furniture.
I called on all members to stop playing their cards so close to their chests and start putting them on the table.
Many of them wear three or four medals on their chests in honour of the service that they have given the nation.
Think of those androgynous beauties, think of the hairy chests, think of the well-muscled, increasingly ostentatious monsters.