Sleeper
//ˈsliːpə(ɹ)//
Translations of "sleeper" (21 languages)
| Language | Translation | Romanization | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bulgarian | спящ човек(someone who sleeps), траверса(structural timber in a floor perpendicular to the joists and floorboards) | spjašt čovek, traversa | |
| Catalan | dormilega(someone who sleeps) | — | |
| Dutch | slaper(someone who sleeps) | — | |
| Esperanto | dormanto(someone who sleeps) | — | |
| Finnish | harjoituskorvarengas(starter earring), kuollut kirjain(that which lies dormant, as a law), nukkuja(someone who sleeps), nukkuva agentti(spy, saboteur or terrorist waiting to be activated), rohmutokko(freshwater fish of the family Odontobutidae), unihaalari(type of pajamas that covers the whole body) | — | |
| French | dormeur(someone who sleeps) | — | |
| German | Fusspfette(structural beam at the bottom of a wall, a roof framework or a similar structure), Futterholz(structural timber in a floor perpendicular to the joists and floorboards), Fußpfette(structural beam at the bottom of a wall, a roof framework or a similar structure), Fußschwelle(structural beam at the bottom of a wall, a roof framework or a similar structure), Lagerbalken(structural beam at the bottom of a wall, a roof framework or a similar structure), Lagerholz(structural timber in a floor perpendicular to the joists and floorboards), Lagerholz(structural beam at the bottom of a wall, a roof framework or a similar structure), Mauerlatte(structural beam at the bottom of a wall, a roof framework or a similar structure), Schläfer(someone who sleeps), Schläfer(spy, saboteur or terrorist waiting to be activated), Schwelle(structural beam at the bottom of a wall, a roof framework or a similar structure), Schwellenholz(structural beam at the bottom of a wall, a roof framework or a similar structure), Strampelanzug(type of pajamas that covers the whole body), Unterlageholz(structural timber in a floor perpendicular to the joists and floorboards), Unterlageholz(structural beam at the bottom of a wall, a roof framework or a similar structure), Wandpfette(structural beam at the bottom of a wall, a roof framework or a similar structure) | — | |
| Hungarian | alvó(someone who sleeps) | — | |
| Irish | codlatóir(someone who sleeps), fáinne cluaise simplí(starter earring) | — | |
| Korean | 자는 사람(someone who sleeps) | janeun saram | |
| Latin | dormītor(someone who sleeps) | — | |
| Marathi | झोपणारा(someone who sleeps), झोपणारी(someone who sleeps) | jhopṇārā, jhopṇārī | |
| Polish | śpiący(someone who sleeps) | — | |
| Portuguese | dorminhoca(someone who sleeps), dorminhoco(someone who sleeps) | — | |
| Russian | диверса́нт(spy, saboteur or terrorist waiting to be activated), крот(spy, saboteur or terrorist waiting to be activated), сабота́жник(spy, saboteur or terrorist waiting to be activated), со́ня(someone who sleeps), спя́щий аге́нт(spy, saboteur or terrorist waiting to be activated) | diversánt, krot, sabotážnik, sónja, spjáščij agént | |
| Spanish | dormilón(someone who sleeps), durmiente(rung on a train track), pijama con los pies(type of pajamas that covers the whole body) | — | |
| Swahili | mlalaji(someone who sleeps) | — | |
| Swedish | sovare(someone who sleeps) | — | |
| Turkish | uykucu(someone who sleeps) | — | |
| Walloon | doirmeu(someone who sleeps), doirmeuse(someone who sleeps), soctant(someone who sleeps), soctante(someone who sleeps) | — | |
| Welsh | cysgadur(someone who sleeps) | — |
dormilega
slaper
dormanto
harjoituskorvarengas, kuollut kirjain, nukkuja, nukkuva agentti, rohmutokko, unihaalari
dormeur
Fusspfette, Futterholz, Fußpfette, Fußschwelle, Lagerbalken, Lagerholz, Lagerholz, Mauerlatte, Schläfer, Schläfer, Schwelle, Schwellenholz, Strampelanzug, Unterlageholz, Unterlageholz, Wandpfette
alvó
codlatóir, fáinne cluaise simplí
dormītor
śpiący
dorminhoca, dorminhoco
диверса́нт, крот, сабота́жник, со́ня, спя́щий аге́нт
diversánt, krot, sabotážnik, sónja, spjáščij agént
dormilón, durmiente, pijama con los pies
mlalaji
sovare
uykucu
doirmeu, doirmeuse, soctant, soctante
cysgadur
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Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.