Blather
//ˈblæðə(ɹ)//
Translations of "blather" (24 languages)
| Language | Translation | Romanization | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arabic | لَغْو(foolish or nonsensical talk), بَقَّ(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | laḡw, baqqa | |
| Bulgarian | дърдорене(foolish or nonsensical talk), плямпане(foolish or nonsensical talk), говоря празни приказки(to talk rapidly without making much sense), плямпам(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | dǎrdorene, pljampane, govorja prazni prikazki, pljampam | |
| Czech | pindat(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | — | |
| Danish | jappe(to talk rapidly without making much sense), pludre(to talk rapidly without making much sense), skvadre(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | — | |
| Esperanto | babilaĉo(foolish or nonsensical talk), vortlakso(foolish or nonsensical talk), babilaĉi(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | — | |
| Finnish | kaakattaa(to talk rapidly without making much sense), lörpötellä(to talk rapidly without making much sense), pälpättää(to talk rapidly without making much sense), pölistä(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | — | |
| French | déblatérer(to talk rapidly without making much sense), dégoiser(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | — | |
| German | Gelabere(foolish or nonsensical talk), Gequassel(foolish or nonsensical talk), Gequatsche(foolish or nonsensical talk), Laberei(foolish or nonsensical talk), quasseln(to talk rapidly without making much sense), quatschen(to talk rapidly without making much sense), sabbeln(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | — | |
| Irish | bí ag glaigearacht(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | — | |
| Italian | blaterare(to talk rapidly without making much sense), sproloquiare(to talk rapidly without making much sense), straparlare(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | — | |
| Ladino | shushurrear(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | — | |
| Macedonian | дрдорење(foolish or nonsensical talk), дрдори(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | drdorenje, drdori | |
| Māori | kunanu(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | — | |
| Polish | bredzenie(foolish or nonsensical talk), bajtlować(to talk rapidly without making much sense), zbajtlować(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | — | |
| Portuguese | tagarelar(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | — | |
| Romanian | bodogăni(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | — | |
| Russian | тарато́рить(to talk rapidly without making much sense), трепа́ться(to talk rapidly without making much sense), треща́ть(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | taratóritʹ, trepátʹsja, treščátʹ | |
| Scottish Gaelic | bleadraig(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | — | |
| Serbo-Croatian | blebetati(to talk rapidly without making much sense), brbljati(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | — | |
| Spanish | despotricar(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | — | |
| Swedish | pladdra(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | — | |
| Tamil | உளறு(to talk rapidly without making much sense), பேத்து(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | uḷaṟu, pēttu | |
| Turkish | gevezelik etmek(to talk rapidly without making much sense), saçmalamak(to talk rapidly without making much sense), zevzeklik etmek(to talk rapidly without making much sense), çene çalmak(to talk rapidly without making much sense) | — | |
| Ukrainian | базі́кання(foolish or nonsensical talk), балакани́на(foolish or nonsensical talk) | bazíkannja, balakanýna |
дърдорене, плямпане, говоря празни приказки, плямпам
dǎrdorene, pljampane, govorja prazni prikazki, pljampam
pindat
jappe, pludre, skvadre
babilaĉo, vortlakso, babilaĉi
kaakattaa, lörpötellä, pälpättää, pölistä
déblatérer, dégoiser
Gelabere, Gequassel, Gequatsche, Laberei, quasseln, quatschen, sabbeln
bí ag glaigearacht
blaterare, sproloquiare, straparlare
shushurrear
kunanu
bredzenie, bajtlować, zbajtlować
tagarelar
bodogăni
bleadraig
blebetati, brbljati
despotricar
pladdra
gevezelik etmek, saçmalamak, zevzeklik etmek, çene çalmak
More for "blather"
Next best steps
Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.