Whelp

//wɛlp//

Synonyms for "whelp" (116 found)

Ranked by relevance and common usage.

Related word relations

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

9 relation types

More general

6 entries

Synonyms

1 entries

Related terms

1 entries

derived

11 entries

etymologically related_to

1 entries

form of

1 entries

has context

1 entries

manner of

1 entries

related to

25 entries

Showing 16 of 25 words.

Translations

62 translations across 28 languages.

Powered by Wiktionary

Ancient Greek

2 entries
  • σκύλαξ noun (young of a mammal)
  • σκύμνος noun (young of a mammal)

Armenian

1 entries
  • ձագ noun (young of a mammal)

Bulgarian

2 entries
  • кутре noun (young of a mammal)
  • окучвам се verb ((animals) to give birth)

Catalan

3 entries
  • cadell noun (young of a mammal)
  • cadellar verb ((animals) to give birth)
  • quissoiar verb ((animals) to give birth)

Czech

2 entries
  • mládě noun (young of a mammal)
  • štěně noun (young of a mammal)

Danish

2 entries
  • hvalp noun (young of a mammal)
  • hvalpe, få hvalpe verb ((animals) to give birth)

Esperanto

2 entries
  • hundido noun (young of a mammal)
  • lupido noun (young of a mammal)

Faroese

2 entries
  • hvølpur noun (young of a mammal)
  • leggja verb ((animals) to give birth)

French

4 entries
  • chiot noun (young of a mammal)
  • louveteau noun (young of a mammal)
  • louvetelle noun (young of a mammal)
  • petit noun (young of a mammal)

Galician

2 entries
  • cachorro noun (young of a mammal)
  • parir verb ((animals) to give birth)

German

4 entries
  • Welpe noun (young of a mammal)
  • Welpin noun (young of a mammal)
  • Junge werfen verb ((animals) to give birth)
  • jungen verb ((animals) to give birth)

Greek

2 entries
  • σκύμνος noun (young of a mammal)
  • γεννώ verb ((animals) to give birth)

Hebrew

2 entries
  • גוּר noun (young of a mammal)
  • הִמְלִיט verb ((animals) to give birth)

Hungarian

2 entries
  • ellik verb ((animals) to give birth)
  • megellik verb ((animals) to give birth)

Ido

2 entries
  • hundyuno noun (young of a mammal)
  • volfyuno noun (young of a mammal)

Italian

1 entries
  • cucciolo noun (young of a mammal)

Latin

2 entries
  • catellus noun (young of a mammal)
  • catulus noun (young of a mammal)

Low German

3 entries
  • Welp noun (young of a mammal)
  • Wölp noun (young of a mammal)
  • Wülp noun (young of a mammal)

Old English

2 entries
  • hwelp noun (young of a mammal)
  • hwelpian verb ((animals) to give birth)

Portuguese

2 entries
  • filhote noun (young of a mammal)
  • parir verb ((animals) to give birth)

Romanian

3 entries
  • cățel noun (young of a mammal)
  • lupan noun (young of a mammal)
  • făta verb ((animals) to give birth)

Russian

2 entries
  • щено́к noun (young of a mammal)
  • щени́ться verb ((animals) to give birth)

Spanish

4 entries
  • cachorro noun (young of a mammal)
  • cadillo noun (young of a mammal)
  • caduelo noun (young of a mammal)
  • parir verb ((animals) to give birth)

Swedish

1 entries
  • valp noun (young of a mammal)

Turkish

1 entries
  • enik noun (young of a mammal)

Volapük

2 entries
  • dogül noun (young of a mammal)
  • lupül noun (young of a mammal)

Welsh

1 entries
  • bwrw verb ((animals) to give birth)

Woiwurrung

1 entries
  • boobop yerranginin noun (young of a mammal)

Sample sentences

7 total sentences available.

Tatoeba + Wiktionary

Juda is a lion's whelp: to the prey, my son, thou art gone up: resting thou hast couched as a lion, and as a lioness, who shall rouse him?

Source: tatoeba (7920493)

[…]And fared like a furious wyld Beare, / Whose whelpes are ſtolne away, ſhe being otherwhere.

Source: wiktionary

Pro. […]Then was this Iſland / (Saue for the Son, that he^([sic]) did littour heere, / A frekelld whelpe, hag-borne) not honour'd with / A humane ſhape.

Source: wiktionary

July 13, 1713, Joseph Addison, The Guardian That awkward whelp with his money bags would have made his entrance.

Source: wiktionary

Showing 4 of 7 available sentences.

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