Synonyms for "beanpole"
(4 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
61 translations across 17 languages.
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Armenian
2 entries - չոփ noun (tall, thin person)
- չոփիկ noun (tall, thin person)
Esperanto
2 entries - fazeolstango noun (pole)
- stangofiguro noun (tall, thin person)
Finnish
4 entries - hernekeppi noun (tall, thin person)
- hongankolistaja noun (tall, thin person)
- kuikelo noun (tall, thin person)
- kukkakeppi noun (tall, thin person)
French
4 entries - asperge noun (tall, thin person)
- croquette noun (tall, thin person)
- escogriffe noun (tall, thin person)
- échalas noun (tall, thin person)
German
2 entries - Bohnenstange noun (pole)
- Bohnenstange noun (tall, thin person)
Irish
4 entries - clifeartach noun (tall, thin person)
- coinnleoir noun (tall, thin person)
- cuaille noun (tall, thin person)
- dréimire fir noun (tall, thin person)
Italian
2 entries - palo noun (pole)
- spilungone noun (tall, thin person)
Laz
3 entries - ხაშარი noun (pole)
- ხაჯკეტი noun (pole)
- ხოშკა noun (pole)
Plautdietsch
1 entries - Schlaks noun (tall, thin person)
Polish
3 entries - patyczak noun (tall, thin person)
- tyczka noun (pole)
- tyczka noun (tall, thin person)
Russian
3 entries - дылда noun (tall, thin person)
- жердь noun (pole)
- каланча noun (tall, thin person)
Serbo-Croatian
2 entries - prȋtka noun (pole)
- при̑тка noun (pole)
Spanish
3 entries - espigado noun (tall, thin person)
- larguirucho noun (tall, thin person)
- zanquilargo noun (tall, thin person)
Turkish
1 entries - fasulye sırığı noun (pole)
Yiddish
4 entries - דאַרער דראָנדזשאַק noun (tall, thin person)
- טיטשקע noun (pole)
- לאַנגאָץ noun (tall, thin person)
- לאַנגער דראָנג noun (tall, thin person)
Sample sentences
2 total sentences available.
Tatoeba + Wiktionary
She's a beanpole.
Source: tatoeba (8855546)
What business had an old beanpole like that to talk of anybody else being long and thin?
Source: tatoeba (12042009)
Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.