Synonyms for "g-string"
(3 found)
Ranked by relevance and common usage.
Related word relations
OpenGloss and ConceptNet supply richer edges like generalizations, collocations, and derivations.
3 relation types
Translations
59 translations across 27 languages.
Powered by Wiktionary
Afrikaans
1 entries - deurtrekker noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Arabic
2 entries - ثُونْغ noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
- جِي سترينج noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Catalan
1 entries - tanga noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Chinese Mandarin
3 entries - G弦褲 /G弦裤 noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
- T字褲 /T字裤 noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
- 丁字褲 /丁字裤 noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Danish
3 entries - G-streng noun (on a stringed musical instrument, the string that produces G)
- g-streng noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
- g-streng noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Dutch
1 entries - string noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Esperanto
1 entries - ŝnurkalsoneto noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Finnish
2 entries - stringit noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
- tanga noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
French
2 entries - string noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
- tanga noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
German
4 entries - G-Saite noun (on a stringed musical instrument, the string that produces G)
- G-String noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
- Minislip noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
- String noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Hebrew
1 entries - חוטיני noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Hungarian
2 entries - g-húr noun (on a stringed musical instrument, the string that produces G)
- tanga noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Irish
1 entries - bídeog noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Italian
2 entries - perizoma noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
- tanga noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Japanese
2 entries - 六尺褌 noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
- Gストリング noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Korean
2 entries - G스트링 noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
- 지스트링 noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Latin
1 entries - perizoma noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Macedonian
1 entries - та́нга noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Maltese
2 entries - qalziet tal-ħajta noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
- tanga noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Norwegian Bokmål
1 entries - g-streng noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Norwegian Nynorsk
1 entries - g-streng noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Polish
1 entries - stringi noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Portuguese
2 entries - fio dental noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
- tanga noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Russian
4 entries - джи-стри́нг noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
- набе́дренная повя́зка noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
- стри́нги noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
- та́нга noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Spanish
4 entries - colaless noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
- colalé noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
- gistro noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
- hilo dental noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Swedish
4 entries - G-sträng noun (on a stringed musical instrument, the string that produces G)
- g-string noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
- string noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
- stringtrosa noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Turkish
1 entries - tanga noun (a scanty piece of underwear or lingerie)
Sample sentences
2 total sentences available.
Tatoeba + Wiktionary
She's wearing only pasties and a G-string.
Source: tatoeba (1259629)
For quotations using this term, see Citations:G-string.
Source: wiktionary
Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.