Cinder

//ˈsɪndɚ//

Synonyms for "cinder" (62 found)

Ranked by relevance and common usage.

Related word relations

OpenGloss and ConceptNet supply richer edges like generalizations, collocations, and derivations.

7 relation types

Translations

64 translations across 27 languages.

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Arabic

1 entries
  • جَمْرُ مُنْطَفِيّ noun (partially or mostly burnt material)

Armenian

2 entries
  • անթեղ noun (partially or mostly burnt material)
  • խարամ noun (slag from a metal furnace)

Bulgarian

4 entries
  • пепел noun (partially or mostly burnt material)
  • сгурия noun (partially or mostly burnt material)
  • шлака noun (slag from a metal furnace)
  • изпепелявам verb (to reduce something to cinders)

Chinese Mandarin

4 entries
  • 灰燼 /灰烬 noun (partially or mostly burnt material)
  • 煤渣 noun (partially or mostly burnt material)
  • 爐渣 /炉渣 noun (slag from a metal furnace)
  • 餘燼 /余烬 noun (partially or mostly burnt material)

Czech

1 entries
  • oharek noun (partially or mostly burnt material)

Dutch

2 entries
  • as noun (partially or mostly burnt material)
  • slak noun (slag from a metal furnace)

Finnish

4 entries
  • hiili noun (partially or mostly burnt material)
  • kuona noun (slag from a metal furnace)
  • tuhka noun (partially or mostly burnt material)
  • hiiltää verb (to reduce something to cinders)

French

1 entries
  • cendre noun (partially or mostly burnt material)

Georgian

1 entries
  • წიდა noun (partially or mostly burnt material)

German

4 entries
  • Asche noun (partially or mostly burnt material)
  • Schlacke noun (slag from a metal furnace)
  • Zunder noun (slag from a metal furnace)
  • einäschern verb (to reduce something to cinders)

Gothic

1 entries
  • 𐌰𐌶𐌲𐍉 noun (partially or mostly burnt material)

Hungarian

1 entries
  • salak noun (slag from a metal furnace)

Irish

1 entries
  • aibhleog dhóite noun (partially or mostly burnt material)

Italian

1 entries
  • cenere noun (partially or mostly burnt material)

Japanese

1 entries
  • 燃え殻 noun (partially or mostly burnt material)

Latin

1 entries
  • favilla noun (partially or mostly burnt material)

Māori

2 entries
  • ngārahu noun (partially or mostly burnt material)
  • ngārehu noun (partially or mostly burnt material)

Norman

1 entries
  • chendre noun (partially or mostly burnt material)

Norwegian

1 entries
  • aske noun (partially or mostly burnt material)

Polish

4 entries
  • oparzelina noun (partially or mostly burnt material)
  • szlag noun (slag from a metal furnace)
  • zgorzelina noun (partially or mostly burnt material)
  • żużel noun (slag from a metal furnace)

Portuguese

3 entries
  • borralha noun (partially or mostly burnt material)
  • borralho noun (partially or mostly burnt material)
  • escória noun (slag from a metal furnace)

Russian

4 entries
  • зола́ noun (partially or mostly burnt material)
  • ока́лина noun (slag from a metal furnace)
  • пе́пел noun (partially or mostly burnt material)
  • шлак noun (slag from a metal furnace)

Slovak

1 entries
  • ohorok noun (partially or mostly burnt material)

Spanish

4 entries
  • carboncillo noun (partially or mostly burnt material)
  • carbonilla noun (partially or mostly burnt material)
  • ceniza noun (partially or mostly burnt material)
  • escoria noun (slag from a metal furnace)

Swedish

3 entries
  • aska noun (partially or mostly burnt material)
  • masugnsslagg noun (slag from a metal furnace)
  • slagg noun (partially or mostly burnt material)

Thai

1 entries
  • ถ่าน noun (partially or mostly burnt material)

Turkish

1 entries
  • kor noun (partially or mostly burnt material)

Sample sentences

9 total sentences available.

Tatoeba + Wiktionary

Tom felt as if a cinder block was dropped on his head.

Source: tatoeba (6590269)

Where did you buy cinder blocks?

Source: tatoeba (10062140)

Ziri surrounded the medlar tree with cinder blocks.

Source: tatoeba (12652979)

Underneath the cinder block, he found lots of roly-poly bugs and earwigs crawling around.

Source: tatoeba (13627703)

Showing 4 of 9 available sentences.

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.