Amorite
//ˈæ.məˌɹaɪt//
Synonyms for "amorite"
Ranked by relevance and common usage.
Related word relations
OpenGloss and ConceptNet supply richer edges like generalizations, collocations, and derivations.
Translations
23 translations across 11 languages.
Ancient Greek
1 entries- Ἀμορραῖος noun (member of an ancient Semitic people who lived to the west of the Euphrates)
Catalan
2 entries- amorreu adj (pertaining to the Amorites)
- amorreu noun (member of an ancient Semitic people who lived to the west of the Euphrates)
Cherokee
1 entries- ᎠᎡᎼᎵ noun (member of an ancient Semitic people who lived to the west of the Euphrates)
German
3 entries- amurritisch adj (pertaining to the Amorites)
- Amurritisch name (the language of the Amorites)
- Amurriter noun (member of an ancient Semitic people who lived to the west of the Euphrates)
Hungarian
4 entries- amorita adj (pertaining to the Amorites)
- emori adj (pertaining to the Amorites)
- amorita name (the language of the Amorites)
- amorita noun (member of an ancient Semitic people who lived to the west of the Euphrates)
Latin
2 entries- Amorrhaeus adj (pertaining to the Amorites)
- Amorrhaeus noun (member of an ancient Semitic people who lived to the west of the Euphrates)
Persian
1 entries- عموری noun (member of an ancient Semitic people who lived to the west of the Euphrates)
Polish
2 entries- Amoryta noun (member of an ancient Semitic people who lived to the west of the Euphrates)
- Amorytka noun (member of an ancient Semitic people who lived to the west of the Euphrates)
Portuguese
3 entries- amorita adj (pertaining to the Amorites)
- amorita name (the language of the Amorites)
- amorita noun (member of an ancient Semitic people who lived to the west of the Euphrates)
Russian
2 entries- аморе́й noun (member of an ancient Semitic people who lived to the west of the Euphrates)
- амори́т noun (member of an ancient Semitic people who lived to the west of the Euphrates)
Tumbuka
1 entries- muAmori noun (member of an ancient Semitic people who lived to the west of the Euphrates)
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Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.