Clamor
Translations of "clamor" (24 languages)
| Language | Translation | Romanization | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ancient Greek | θόρυβος(great outcry or vociferation), θόρυβος(loud and continued noise), κέλαδος(loud and continued noise) | thórubos, thórubos, kélados | |
| Arabic | غوات(great outcry or vociferation) | ḡwāt | |
| Azerbaijani | fəryad(great outcry or vociferation) | — | |
| Bulgarian | врява(great outcry or vociferation), глъчка(great outcry or vociferation), шум(loud and continued noise), вдигам врява(transitive: to demand by outcry), вдигам врява(transitive: to demand by outcry), крещя(intransitive: to become noisy insistently) | vrjava, glǎčka, šum, vdigam vrjava, vdigam vrjava, kreštja | |
| Catalan | clam(great outcry or vociferation), clam(loud and continued noise), clam(continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction; popular outcry), clamor(great outcry or vociferation), clamor(loud and continued noise), clamor(continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction; popular outcry) | — | |
| Czech | hluk(loud and continued noise), křik(great outcry or vociferation), křik(continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction; popular outcry), povyk(great outcry or vociferation), volání(continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction; popular outcry), vřava(great outcry or vociferation), řev(great outcry or vociferation), dovolávat se(transitive: to demand by outcry), dožadovat se(transitive: to demand by outcry), volat(intransitive: to cry out and/or demand) | — | |
| Dutch | boegeroep(continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction; popular outcry), gedruis(loud and continued noise), gegil(great outcry or vociferation), gejoel(great outcry or vociferation), gekrijs(great outcry or vociferation), gekrijt(continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction; popular outcry), gemor(continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction; popular outcry), geroep(great outcry or vociferation), geschreeuw(great outcry or vociferation), lawaai(loud and continued noise), protest(continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction; popular outcry), van zich laten horen(intransitive: to become noisy insistently), zich roeren(intransitive: to become noisy insistently) | — | |
| Finnish | elämöinti(great outcry or vociferation), hälistä(intransitive: to become noisy insistently) | — | |
| French | clameur(continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction; popular outcry), vociférer(intransitive: to become noisy insistently) | — | |
| Galician | clamor(great outcry or vociferation) | — | |
| German | Aufschrei(continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction; popular outcry), Geschrei(great outcry or vociferation), Geschrei(continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction; popular outcry), Gezeter(great outcry or vociferation), Krach(loud and continued noise), Lärm(loud and continued noise), Lärmkulisse(loud and continued noise), Protest(continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction; popular outcry), Ruf(continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction; popular outcry), Schreierei(great outcry or vociferation), laut werden(intransitive: to become noisy insistently), mit lautem Geschrei fordern(transitive: to demand by outcry), schreien(intransitive: to cry out and/or demand) | — | |
| Gothic | 𐌰𐌿𐌷𐌾𐍉𐌽(intransitive: to become noisy insistently) | auhjōn | |
| Irish | callán(loud and continued noise) | — | |
| Kapampangan | capaniausan(continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction; popular outcry), kapanyawusan(continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction; popular outcry), kepanyawusan(continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction; popular outcry), quepaniausan(continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction; popular outcry) | — | |
| Māori | manioro(great outcry or vociferation), rarī(great outcry or vociferation), manioro(intransitive: to become noisy insistently) | — | |
| Ottoman Turkish | خلاش(continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction; popular outcry) | hılaş | |
| Papiamentu | gritamentu(great outcry or vociferation) | — | |
| Persian | فریاد(great outcry or vociferation) | — | |
| Plautdietsch | Klommua(great outcry or vociferation), Klommua(loud and continued noise) | — | |
| Portuguese | clamar(transitive: to demand by outcry), rogar(transitive: to demand by outcry) | — | |
| Russian | галдёж(great outcry or vociferation), крик(great outcry or vociferation), ро́пот(continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction; popular outcry), шум(loud and continued noise) | galdjóž, krik, rópot, šum | |
| Spanish | alarido(great outcry or vociferation), clamor(great outcry or vociferation), clamor(continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction; popular outcry), trulla(loud and continued noise), clamar(intransitive: to cry out and/or demand), clamar(intransitive: to become noisy insistently), clamorear(transitive: to demand by outcry) | — | |
| Walloon | boerlaedje(great outcry or vociferation), sclameure(great outcry or vociferation) | — | |
| Welsh | dwndwr(loud and continued noise), mwstwr(loud and continued noise), twrw(loud and continued noise), crochlefain(intransitive: to cry out and/or demand), crochlefain(transitive: to demand by outcry), crochlefain(intransitive: to become noisy insistently) | — |
fəryad
врява, глъчка, шум, вдигам врява, вдигам врява, крещя
vrjava, glǎčka, šum, vdigam vrjava, vdigam vrjava, kreštja
clam, clam, clam, clamor, clamor, clamor
hluk, křik, křik, povyk, volání, vřava, řev, dovolávat se, dožadovat se, volat
boegeroep, gedruis, gegil, gejoel, gekrijs, gekrijt, gemor, geroep, geschreeuw, lawaai, protest, van zich laten horen, zich roeren
elämöinti, hälistä
clameur, vociférer
clamor
Aufschrei, Geschrei, Geschrei, Gezeter, Krach, Lärm, Lärmkulisse, Protest, Ruf, Schreierei, laut werden, mit lautem Geschrei fordern, schreien
callán
capaniausan, kapanyawusan, kepanyawusan, quepaniausan
manioro, rarī, manioro
gritamentu
فریاد
Klommua, Klommua
clamar, rogar
alarido, clamor, clamor, trulla, clamar, clamar, clamorear
boerlaedje, sclameure
dwndwr, mwstwr, twrw, crochlefain, crochlefain, crochlefain
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Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.