Languor
//ˈlæŋɡə//
Translations of "languor" (14 languages)
| Language | Translation | Romanization | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bulgarian | апатия(state of the body or mind caused by exhaustion or disease and characterized by a languid feeling; an instance of this — see also lassitude), отпуснатост(state of the body or mind caused by exhaustion or disease and characterized by a languid feeling; an instance of this — see also lassitude), разнеженост(listless indolence or inactivity — see also dreaminess) | apatija, otpusnatost, razneženost | |
| Dutch | loomheid(state of the body or mind caused by exhaustion or disease and characterized by a languid feeling; an instance of this — see also lassitude) | — | |
| Esperanto | langvoro(state of the body or mind caused by exhaustion or disease and characterized by a languid feeling; an instance of this — see also lassitude) | — | |
| French | langueur(state of the body or mind caused by exhaustion or disease and characterized by a languid feeling; an instance of this — see also lassitude) | — | |
| German | einschläfernde Stille(state of the body or mind caused by exhaustion or disease and characterized by a languid feeling; an instance of this — see also lassitude) | — | |
| Irish | leisce(dullness, sluggishness; lack of vigour; stagnation) | — | |
| Italian | languore(state of the body or mind caused by exhaustion or disease and characterized by a languid feeling; an instance of this — see also lassitude) | — | |
| Māori | maiarohea(state of the body or mind caused by exhaustion or disease and characterized by a languid feeling; an instance of this — see also lassitude), tīrohea(state of the body or mind caused by exhaustion or disease and characterized by a languid feeling; an instance of this — see also lassitude) | — | |
| Ottoman Turkish | گوشكلك(state of the body or mind caused by exhaustion or disease and characterized by a languid feeling; an instance of this — see also lassitude) | gevşeklik | |
| Portuguese | mormaço(heavy humidity and stillness of the air) | — | |
| Romanian | langoare(state of the body or mind caused by exhaustion or disease and characterized by a languid feeling; an instance of this — see also lassitude), moleșeală(state of the body or mind caused by exhaustion or disease and characterized by a languid feeling; an instance of this — see also lassitude) | — | |
| Russian | вя́лость(state of the body or mind caused by exhaustion or disease and characterized by a languid feeling; an instance of this — see also lassitude), исто́ма(state of the body or mind caused by exhaustion or disease and characterized by a languid feeling; an instance of this — see also lassitude), томле́ние(state of the body or mind caused by exhaustion or disease and characterized by a languid feeling; an instance of this — see also lassitude) | vjálostʹ, istóma, tomlénije | |
| Spanish | languidez(state of the body or mind caused by exhaustion or disease and characterized by a languid feeling; an instance of this — see also lassitude), languor(state of the body or mind caused by exhaustion or disease and characterized by a languid feeling; an instance of this — see also lassitude) | — | |
| Turkish | rehavet(state of the body or mind caused by exhaustion or disease and characterized by a languid feeling; an instance of this — see also lassitude) | — |
loomheid
langvoro
langueur
einschläfernde Stille
leisce
languore
maiarohea, tīrohea
mormaço
langoare, moleșeală
languidez, languor
rehavet
More for "languor"
Next best steps
Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.