Overthrow
//əʊvəˈθɹəʊ//
Translations of "overthrow" (43 languages)
| Language | Translation | Romanization | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Albanian | mujt (gheg)(to bring about the downfall of), përmbys(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Ancient Greek | καταστροφή(removal by force or threat of force), καταστρέφω(to bring about the downfall of) | katastrophḗ, katastréphō | |
| Arabic | أَطَاحَ(to bring about the downfall of), طيّح(to bring about the downfall of) | ʔaṭāḥa, ṭayyaḥ | |
| Armenian | տապալում(removal by force or threat of force), կործանել(to bring about the downfall of), տապալել(to bring about the downfall of) | tapalum, korcanel, tapalel | |
| Azerbaijani | devirmə(removal by force or threat of force), devirmək(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Belarusian | звергнуць(to bring about the downfall of), звярга́ць(to bring about the downfall of), зры́нуць(to bring about the downfall of), зрына́ць(to bring about the downfall of), скі́нуць(to bring about the downfall of), скіда́ць(to bring about the downfall of) | zvjerhnucʹ, zvjarhácʹ, zrýnucʹ, zrynácʹ, skínucʹ, skidácʹ | |
| Bulgarian | преврат(removal by force or threat of force), надхвърлям(to throw (something) so that it goes too far), събарям(to bring about the downfall of) | prevrat, nadhvǎrljam, sǎbarjam | |
| Chinese Mandarin | 打翻(to bring about the downfall of), 推翻(to bring about the downfall of) | dǎfān, tuīfān | |
| Dutch | omverwerpen(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Egyptian | w-d:n-Z9:D40(to bring about the downfall of) | wdn | |
| Esperanto | faligi(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Finnish | kaataa(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| French | déposer(to bring about the downfall of), renverser(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Galician | derrocar(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Georgian | გადატრიალება(removal by force or threat of force) | gadaṭrialeba | |
| German | Umsturz(removal by force or threat of force), stürzen(to bring about the downfall of), umstürzen(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Greek | ανατροπή(removal by force or threat of force), ανατρέπω(to bring about the downfall of) | anatropí, anatrépo | |
| Hungarian | megdönt(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Indonesian | kudeta(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Italian | deporre(to bring about the downfall of), rovesciare(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Japanese | 滅ぼす(to bring about the downfall of), 転覆する(to bring about the downfall of) | horobosu, tenpuku-suru | |
| Korean | 무너뜨리다(to bring about the downfall of), 전복(顚覆)하다(to bring about the downfall of) | muneotteurida, jeonbokhada | |
| Latin | stragēs(removal by force or threat of force), subversiō(removal by force or threat of force), subvertō(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Latvian | nogāzt(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Lithuanian | nuversti(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Malay | guling(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Māori | whakatakahurihanga(removal by force or threat of force), kōkeke(to bring about the downfall of), taupoki(to bring about the downfall of), turaki(to bring about the downfall of), whakataka(to bring about the downfall of), whakatakahuri(to bring about the downfall of), whakataupoki(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Middle English | translaten(to bring about the downfall of), werpen(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Nahuatl | tepeua(to bring about the downfall of), tequiua(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Old English | tōweorpan(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Pannonian Rusyn | валяц(to bring about the downfall of), звалїц(to bring about the downfall of) | valjac, zvaljic | |
| Persian | برانداختن(to bring about the downfall of), سرنگون کردن(to bring about the downfall of) | barândâxtan, sarnegun kardan | |
| Polish | obalać(to bring about the downfall of), obalić(to throw down to the ground), powalać(to bring about the downfall of), powalić(to bring about the downfall of), powalić(to throw down to the ground) | — | |
| Portuguese | depor(to bring about the downfall of), derrocar(to bring about the downfall of), derrubar(to bring about the downfall of), golpe de estado(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Russian | сверже́ние(removal by force or threat of force), све́ргнуть(to bring about the downfall of), сверга́ть(to bring about the downfall of) | sveržénije, svérgnutʹ, svergátʹ | |
| Serbo-Croatian | prevrat(removal by force or threat of force), svrgnuće(removal by force or threat of force), srušiti(to bring about the downfall of), svrgnuti(to bring about the downfall of), свргнути(to bring about the downfall of), срушити(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Spanish | deposición(removal by force or threat of force), derrocamiento(removal by force or threat of force), derribar(to bring about the downfall of), derrocar(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Swahili | angusha(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Swedish | störta(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Thai | โค่น(to bring about the downfall of) | kôon | |
| Ukrainian | ски́нення(removal by force or threat of force), скида́ння(removal by force or threat of force), ски́нути(to bring about the downfall of), скида́ти(to bring about the downfall of) | skýnennja, skydánnja, skýnuty, skydáty | |
| Vietnamese | lật đổ(to bring about the downfall of) | — | |
| Walloon | stårer(to bring about the downfall of) | — |
mujt (gheg), përmbys
devirmə, devirmək
звергнуць, звярга́ць, зры́нуць, зрына́ць, скі́нуць, скіда́ць
zvjerhnucʹ, zvjarhácʹ, zrýnucʹ, zrynácʹ, skínucʹ, skidácʹ
omverwerpen
faligi
kaataa
déposer, renverser
derrocar
Umsturz, stürzen, umstürzen
megdönt
kudeta
deporre, rovesciare
stragēs, subversiō, subvertō
nogāzt
nuversti
guling
whakatakahurihanga, kōkeke, taupoki, turaki, whakataka, whakatakahuri, whakataupoki
translaten, werpen
tepeua, tequiua
tōweorpan
obalać, obalić, powalać, powalić, powalić
depor, derrocar, derrubar, golpe de estado
prevrat, svrgnuće, srušiti, svrgnuti, свргнути, срушити
deposición, derrocamiento, derribar, derrocar
angusha
störta
lật đổ
stårer
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Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.