Sars

Synonyms for "sars" (3 found)

Ranked by relevance and common usage.

Closest matches (1)

Noun(1 words)

Strong matches (1)

Related words (1)

Related word relations

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

8 relation types

More general

1 entries

Synonyms

1 entries

Related terms

2 entries

derived

1 entries

form of

1 entries

has context

1 entries

is a

3 entries

related to

1 entries

Translations

14 translations across 11 languages.

Powered by Wiktionary

Chinese Cantonese

1 entries
  • 沙士 noun (severe acute respiratory syndrome)

Chinese Mandarin

3 entries
  • SARS noun (severe acute respiratory syndrome)
  • 薩斯 /萨斯 noun (severe acute respiratory syndrome)
  • 非典 noun (severe acute respiratory syndrome)

Dutch

1 entries
  • SARS noun (severe acute respiratory syndrome)

Finnish

1 entries
  • SARS noun (severe acute respiratory syndrome)

French

1 entries
  • SRAS noun (severe acute respiratory syndrome)

German

1 entries
  • SARS noun (severe acute respiratory syndrome)

Hungarian

1 entries
  • súlyos akut légzőszervi szindróma noun (severe acute respiratory syndrome)

Japanese

1 entries
  • サーズ noun (severe acute respiratory syndrome)

Korean

2 entries
  • 사스 noun (severe acute respiratory syndrome)
  • 싸스 noun (severe acute respiratory syndrome)

Portuguese

1 entries
  • SARS noun (severe acute respiratory syndrome)

Spanish

1 entries
  • SRAS noun (severe acute respiratory syndrome)

Sample sentences

13 total sentences available.

Tatoeba + Wiktionary

The SARS epidemic sent a panic through Asia.

Source: tatoeba (6043396)

There are seven coronaviruses that can affect people. The common cold is one, as are its more virulent cousins: SARS, severe acute respiratory virus, and MERS, Middle East respiratory virus.

Source: tatoeba (8599290)

SARS and MERS are examples of two earlier coronaviruses.

Source: tatoeba (8626861)

How do they treat SARS?

Source: tatoeba (10938362)

Showing 4 of 13 available sentences.

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