Starter
Translations of "starter" (29 languages)
| Language | Translation | Romanization | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Armenian | մակարդ(yeast culture) | makard | |
| Bulgarian | but see първоначален(something with which to begin), ордьовър(first course of a meal), предястие(first course of a meal), разядка(first course of a meal), стартер(someone who starts something), стартер(person who starts a race), стартер(something that starts), стартер(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine), стартер(device that initiates a fluorescent lamp), титуляр(player that a team fields at the beginning of a game) | pǎrvonačalen, ordjovǎr, predjastie, razjadka, starter, starter, starter, starter, starter, tituljar | |
| Catalan | aperitiu(first course of a meal), entrant(first course of a meal) | — | |
| Chinese Mandarin | 启动机(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine), 啟動器 /启动器(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine), 起動機 /起动机(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine) | qǐdòngjī, qǐdòngqì | |
| Czech | předkrm(first course of a meal), startér(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine) | — | |
| Danish | forret(first course of a meal) | — | |
| Dutch | voorafje(first course of a meal), voorgerecht(first course of a meal) | — | |
| Finnish | alkupala(first course of a meal), aloittaja(someone who starts something), aloitus(something that starts), avauspelaaja(player that a team fields at the beginning of a game), käynnistin(something that starts), käynnistys(something that starts), käynnistysmoottori(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine), käynnistäjä(someone who starts something), lähettäjä(person who starts a race), siemen(yeast culture), startti(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine), starttimoottori(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine), sytytin(device that initiates a fluorescent lamp) | — | |
| French | démarreur(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine), entrée(first course of a meal), hors d'œuvre(first course of a meal), starter(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine), titulaire(player that a team fields at the beginning of a game) | — | |
| Galician | titular(player that a team fields at the beginning of a game) | — | |
| Georgian | თავი(first course of a meal), წამომწყები(first course of a meal) | tavi, c̣amomc̣q̇ebi | |
| German | Anlasser(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine), Starter(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine), Vorgericht(first course of a meal), Vorspeise(first course of a meal) | — | |
| Greek | μίζα(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine), ορεκτικό(first course of a meal) | míza, orektikó | |
| Italian | antipasto(first course of a meal) | — | |
| Japanese | スターター(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine) | sutātā | |
| Latvian | ieraugs(yeast culture), pirmais ēdiens(first course of a meal) | — | |
| Macedonian | ордевер(first course of a meal), предјадење(first course of a meal) | ordever, predjadenje | |
| Māori | kaitīmata(someone who starts something), kumamatanga(first course of a meal) | — | |
| Norwegian Bokmål | forrett(first course of a meal), starter(person who starts a race), starter(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine), startmotor(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine) | — | |
| Norwegian Nynorsk | forrett(first course of a meal), startar(person who starts a race), startar(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine), startmotor(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine) | — | |
| Persian | اردور(first course of a meal), استارتر(first course of a meal) | ordovr, estârter | |
| Polish | rozrusznik(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine) | — | |
| Portuguese | afogador(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine), entradas(first course of a meal), partida(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine), titular(player that a team fields at the beginning of a game) | — | |
| Romanian | demaror(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine) | — | |
| Russian | пе́рвое блю́до(first course of a meal), ста́ртер(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine), стартёр(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine) | pérvoje bljúdo, stárter, startjór | |
| Spanish | cebador(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine), cebador(device that initiates a fluorescent lamp), entrada(first course of a meal), entrante(first course of a meal), estárter(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine), motor de arranque(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine), titular(player that a team fields at the beginning of a game) | — | |
| Swedish | entré(first course of a meal), entrérätt(first course of a meal), förrätt(first course of a meal), startspelare(player that a team fields at the beginning of a game) | — | |
| Turkish | antre(first course of a meal), marş motoru(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine) | — | |
| Vietnamese | bộ khởi động động cơ(electric motor that starts an internal-combustion engine) | — |
but see първоначален, ордьовър, предястие, разядка, стартер, стартер, стартер, стартер, стартер, титуляр
pǎrvonačalen, ordjovǎr, predjastie, razjadka, starter, starter, starter, starter, starter, tituljar
aperitiu, entrant
předkrm, startér
forret
voorafje, voorgerecht
alkupala, aloittaja, aloitus, avauspelaaja, käynnistin, käynnistys, käynnistysmoottori, käynnistäjä, lähettäjä, siemen, startti, starttimoottori, sytytin
démarreur, entrée, hors d'œuvre, starter, titulaire
titular
Anlasser, Starter, Vorgericht, Vorspeise
antipasto
ieraugs, pirmais ēdiens
kaitīmata, kumamatanga
forrett, starter, starter, startmotor
forrett, startar, startar, startmotor
rozrusznik
afogador, entradas, partida, titular
demaror
cebador, cebador, entrada, entrante, estárter, motor de arranque, titular
entré, entrérätt, förrätt, startspelare
antre, marş motoru
bộ khởi động động cơ
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Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.