0 to move back or away from a battle (usually because the enemy is winning) -- ustoupit
1 to withdraw; to take oneself away -- stáhnout se
2 the act of retreating (from a battle, danger etc) -- ústup
After the retreat, the soldiers rallied once more.
3 a signal to retreat -- signál k ústupu
The bugler sounded the retreat.
4 (a place to which a person can go for) a period of rest, religious meditation etc -- ústraní
He has gone to a retreat to pray.
Middle-class residents were anxious to demarcate themselves from the working class, and sought to do so by retreating into private suburban domesticity.
The literature also indicates that the glaciers generally retreated during the first half of the nineteenth century.
As silence retreats, the sonic entity in our external world enters in and becomes part of the constant exchange inside us.
Study courses and retreats were methods used to spread the word among a core of activists.
They believe that such terms can only stand for internal mechanisms; a behaviorist who uses them must therefore be retreating from behaviorism.
Whenever it seems that a summatory point is going to be made, the author persistently retreats into jargon, loading his sentences with unnecessarily complex terminology.
To her, the increasingly guilty pleasure she took in retreating into her own imaginary world and characters was a form of false worship.
After this loss of honour (for such was the decree's real significance), conservative nobles retreated into passivity or departed altogether.