Mumble
//ˈmʌmbəl//
Translations of "mumble" (33 languages)
| Language | Translation | Romanization | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arabic | غَمْغَمَة(quiet vocalization) | ḡamḡama | |
| Bikol Central | kimutkimot(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| Bulgarian | мънкане(quiet vocalization), мънкам(to speak unintelligibly), фъфля(to speak unintelligibly) | mǎnkane, mǎnkam, fǎflja | |
| Chinese Mandarin | 低語 /低语(quiet vocalization), 咕噥 /咕哝(to speak unintelligibly) | dīyǔ, gūnong | |
| Czech | mumlání(quiet vocalization), mumlat(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| Danish | mumlen(quiet vocalization), mumle(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| Dutch | mompelen(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| Esperanto | murmuri(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| Faroese | mutla(to speak unintelligibly), mølma(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| Finnish | mumina(quiet vocalization), mongertaa(to speak unintelligibly), mumista(to speak unintelligibly), mutista(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| French | marmonner(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| German | Murmeln(quiet vocalization), murmeln(to speak unintelligibly), mümmeln(to chew something gently with closed lips), nuscheln(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| Hungarian | motyogás(quiet vocalization), motyog(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| Icelandic | muldra(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| Indonesian | bergumam(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| Ingrian | popottaa(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| Italian | balbettio(quiet vocalization), biascicamento(quiet vocalization), borbottio(quiet vocalization), farfugliamento(quiet vocalization), mugugno(quiet vocalization), balbettare(to speak unintelligibly), biascicare(to speak unintelligibly), borbottare(to speak unintelligibly), farfugliare(to speak unintelligibly), mugugnare(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| Japanese | 呟く(to speak unintelligibly), 囁く(to speak unintelligibly) | tsubuyaku, sasayaku | |
| Macedonian | мумла(to speak unintelligibly) | mumla | |
| Malay | gumam(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| Māori | nanu(to speak unintelligibly), pararāwaha(to speak unintelligibly), whakahāhā(to speak unintelligibly), whakameme(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| Norwegian | mumling(quiet vocalization), mumle(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| Polish | mamrotanie(quiet vocalization), mamrotać(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| Portuguese | murmurar(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| Russian | бормота́ние(quiet vocalization), бормота́ть(to speak unintelligibly), мя́млить(to speak unintelligibly), пробормота́ть(to speak unintelligibly), промя́млить(to speak unintelligibly) | bormotánije, bormotátʹ, mjámlitʹ, probormotátʹ, promjámlitʹ | |
| Scottish Gaelic | brunndail(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| Spanish | balbucencia(quiet vocalization), balbuceo(quiet vocalization), mascujada(quiet vocalization), balbucear(to speak unintelligibly), balbucir(to speak unintelligibly), mamullar(to speak unintelligibly), mascujar(to speak unintelligibly), mascullar(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| Swedish | mumla(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| Tamil | முணுமுணுப்பு(quiet vocalization), முணுமுணு(to speak unintelligibly) | muṇumuṇuppu, muṇumuṇu | |
| Thai | พึมพำ(to speak unintelligibly) | pʉm-pam | |
| Ukrainian | ми́мрити(to speak unintelligibly) | mýmryty | |
| Uzbek | ming’irlamoq(to speak unintelligibly) | — | |
| Vietnamese | lí nhí(to speak unintelligibly) | — |
kimutkimot
mumlání, mumlat
mumlen, mumle
mompelen
murmuri
mutla, mølma
mumina, mongertaa, mumista, mutista
marmonner
Murmeln, murmeln, mümmeln, nuscheln
motyogás, motyog
muldra
bergumam
popottaa
balbettio, biascicamento, borbottio, farfugliamento, mugugno, balbettare, biascicare, borbottare, farfugliare, mugugnare
gumam
nanu, pararāwaha, whakahāhā, whakameme
mumling, mumle
mamrotanie, mamrotać
murmurar
бормота́ние, бормота́ть, мя́млить, пробормота́ть, промя́млить
bormotánije, bormotátʹ, mjámlitʹ, probormotátʹ, promjámlitʹ
brunndail
balbucencia, balbuceo, mascujada, balbucear, balbucir, mamullar, mascujar, mascullar
mumla
ming’irlamoq
lí nhí
More for "mumble"
Next best steps
Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.