Droop
Translations of "droop" (14 languages)
| Language | Translation | Romanization | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bulgarian | униние(a condition or posture of drooping), клюмвам(to sink or hang downward; to sag), клюмвам(to slowly become limp; to bend gradually), отслабвам(to slowly become limp; to bend gradually), свеждам(to sink or hang downward; to sag), унивам(to lose all enthusiasm or happiness) | uninie, kljumvam, kljumvam, otslabvam, sveždam, univam | |
| Chinese Mandarin | 下垂(to sink or hang downward; to sag), 低垂(to sink or hang downward; to sag) | xiàchuí, dīchuí | |
| Czech | pokleslost(a condition or posture of drooping), skleslost(a condition or posture of drooping), zplihlost(a condition or posture of drooping), klesat na duchu(to lose all enthusiasm or happiness), ohýbat se(to slowly become limp; to bend gradually), sklesnout(to lose all enthusiasm or happiness), sklánět se(to slowly become limp; to bend gradually), svěšovat se(to slowly become limp; to bend gradually), zplihnout(to sink or hang downward; to sag) | — | |
| Esperanto | velki(to slowly become limp; to bend gradually) | — | |
| Finnish | kuihtua(to slowly become limp; to bend gradually), nuukahtaa(to slowly become limp; to bend gradually), nuupahtaa(to slowly become limp; to bend gradually), roikkua(to sink or hang downward; to sag), väsähtää(to lose all enthusiasm or happiness) | — | |
| French | bec(aviation: a hinged portion of the leading edge), s'affaisser(to sink or hang downward; to sag), tomber(to sink or hang downward; to sag) | — | |
| German | abschlaffen(to slowly become limp; to bend gradually), durchhängen(to sink or hang downward; to sag), ermatten(to slowly become limp; to bend gradually), erschlaffen(to slowly become limp; to bend gradually), herabhängen(to sink or hang downward; to sag), herabsinken(to sink or hang downward; to sag), herunterhängen(to sink or hang downward; to sag), heruntersinken(to sink or hang downward; to sag), nachgeben(to slowly become limp; to bend gradually), schwinden(to slowly become limp; to bend gradually), welken(to slowly become limp; to bend gradually) | — | |
| Italian | pendere(to sink or hang downward; to sag) | — | |
| Macedonian | ви́си(to sink or hang downward; to sag), на́ведне(to slowly become limp; to bend gradually) | vísi, návedne | |
| Māori | hō(to sink or hang downward; to sag), konewha(to sink or hang downward; to sag), kōnewhanewha(to sink or hang downward; to sag), parohea(to lose all enthusiasm or happiness), pītawitawi(to sink or hang downward; to sag), raupeka(to sink or hang downward; to sag), tatao(to sink or hang downward; to sag), tāngange(to sink or hang downward; to sag), whakatauweweru(to sink or hang downward; to sag) | — | |
| Middle English | droupen(to sink or hang downward; to sag), droupen(to lose all enthusiasm or happiness) | — | |
| Ottoman Turkish | بایلمق(to sink or hang downward; to sag) | bayılmak | |
| Russian | уныние(a condition or posture of drooping), па́дать духом(to lose all enthusiasm or happiness), поникнуть(to slowly become limp; to bend gradually), свиса́ть(to sink or hang downward; to sag), склоняться(to slowly become limp; to bend gradually), унывать(to lose all enthusiasm or happiness) | unynije, pádatʹ duxom, poniknutʹ, svisátʹ, sklonjatʹsja, unyvatʹ | |
| Swedish | sloka(to sink or hang downward; to sag) | — |
униние, клюмвам, клюмвам, отслабвам, свеждам, унивам
uninie, kljumvam, kljumvam, otslabvam, sveždam, univam
pokleslost, skleslost, zplihlost, klesat na duchu, ohýbat se, sklesnout, sklánět se, svěšovat se, zplihnout
velki
kuihtua, nuukahtaa, nuupahtaa, roikkua, väsähtää
bec, s'affaisser, tomber
abschlaffen, durchhängen, ermatten, erschlaffen, herabhängen, herabsinken, herunterhängen, heruntersinken, nachgeben, schwinden, welken
pendere
hō, konewha, kōnewhanewha, parohea, pītawitawi, raupeka, tatao, tāngange, whakatauweweru
droupen, droupen
уныние, па́дать духом, поникнуть, свиса́ть, склоняться, унывать
unynije, pádatʹ duxom, poniknutʹ, svisátʹ, sklonjatʹsja, unyvatʹ
sloka
More for "droop"
Next best steps
Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.