Scuttlebutt
//ˈskʌtəlbʌt//
Translations of "scuttlebutt" (10 languages)
| Language | Translation | Romanization | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bulgarian | бъчва с вода за пиене(cask with a hole cut into its top, used to provide drinking water on board a ship), слухове(gossip, idle chatter — see also gossip), сплетни(gossip, idle chatter — see also gossip) | bǎčva s voda za piene, sluhove, spletni | |
| Dutch | geroddel(gossip, idle chatter — see also gossip) | — | |
| Finnish | huhupuhe(gossip, idle chatter — see also gossip), reiällinen vesitynnyri(cask with a hole cut into its top, used to provide drinking water on board a ship), huhuta((transitive, slang) to spread (information) by way of gossip or rumour), levittää((transitive, slang) to spread (information) by way of gossip or rumour), levittää juoruja((intransitive, slang) to spread rumours) | — | |
| Hebrew | חָבִית מֵי שְׁתִיָּה(cask with a hole cut into its top, used to provide drinking water on board a ship) | khavit mey shtiya | |
| Hungarian | mendemonda(gossip, idle chatter — see also gossip), mesebeszéd(gossip, idle chatter — see also gossip), pletyka(gossip, idle chatter — see also gossip) | — | |
| Macedonian | бу́ре за во́да(cask with a hole cut into its top, used to provide drinking water on board a ship), гла́сови(gossip, idle chatter — see also gossip), слу́х(gossip, idle chatter — see also gossip) | búre za vóda, glásovi, slúh | |
| Polish | plotka(gossip, idle chatter — see also gossip) | — | |
| Russian | лагу́н(cask with a hole cut into its top, used to provide drinking water on board a ship), слу́хи(gossip, idle chatter — see also gossip), спле́тни(gossip, idle chatter — see also gossip) | lagún, slúxi, splétni | |
| Serbo-Croatian | trač(gossip, idle chatter — see also gossip) | — | |
| Ukrainian | плі́тка(gossip, idle chatter — see also gossip) | plítka |
geroddel
huhupuhe, reiällinen vesitynnyri, huhuta, levittää, levittää juoruja
mendemonda, mesebeszéd, pletyka
plotka
trač
More for "scuttlebutt"
Next best steps
Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.