Streak
Translations of "streak" (22 languages)
| Language | Translation | Romanization | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bashkir | һыҙат(continuous series of events) | hıźat | |
| Bulgarian | драскотина(irregular line), последователност(continuous series of events), рязка(irregular line), серия(continuous series of events), нашарвам се(to have or obtain streaks) | draskotina, posledovatelnost, rjazka, serija, našarvam se | |
| Chinese Mandarin | 气质(non-dominant tendency or characteristic), 痕迹(irregular line), 连续记录(continuous series of events), 连胜(continuous series of events), 迹象(non-dominant tendency or characteristic), 裸奔(to run naked in public) | qìzhì, hénjì, liánshèng, jìxiàng, luǒbēn | |
| Dutch | herfstbremspanner(species of moth), streep(irregular line) | — | |
| Esperanto | ŝmiraĵo(irregular line) | — | |
| Finnish | juova(irregular line), jänönvihmamittari(species of moth), ketju(continuous series of events), piirre(non-dominant tendency or characteristic), putki(continuous series of events), raita(irregular line), sarja(continuous series of events), viiru(irregular line), viiru(color of mineral powder), juovittaa(to create streaks), tehdä juovikkaaksi(to create streaks), tulla juovikkaaksi(to have or obtain streaks), viuhahtaa(to run naked in public), viuhahtaa(to move very swiftly) | — | |
| French | chésias du genêt(species of moth), raie(irregular line) | — | |
| German | Schliere(irregular line), Später Ginsterspanner(species of moth), flitzen(to run naked in public), schlieren(to have or obtain streaks) | — | |
| Hungarian | beütés(non-dominant tendency or characteristic), csík(irregular line), erezet(irregular line), sorozat(continuous series of events), széria(continuous series of events), szürkés zanótaraszoló(species of moth), sáv(irregular line) | — | |
| Ido | strio(irregular line) | — | |
| Irish | síog(irregular line), síog(to have or obtain streaks), síog(to create streaks) | — | |
| Italian | striatura(irregular line), striscia(irregular line) | — | |
| Japanese | 条痕(irregular line) | jōkon | |
| Māori | tarapī(irregular line) | — | |
| Occitan | estralh(irregular line), estria(irregular line), raia(irregular line) | — | |
| Polish | passa(continuous series of events) | — | |
| Portuguese | risco(irregular line), série(continuous series of events) | — | |
| Russian | поло́ска(irregular line), полоса́(irregular line), полоса́(continuous series of events), череда(continuous series of events), черта(non-dominant tendency or characteristic) | polóska, polosá, polosá, čereda, čerta | |
| Scottish Gaelic | srian(irregular line), stìom(irregular line), stìom(continuous series of events), stìom(non-dominant tendency or characteristic) | — | |
| Spanish | geómetra(species of moth), racha(continuous series of events), raya(irregular line), ristra(continuous series of events), sarta(continuous series of events), secuencia(continuous series of events), serie(continuous series of events), toque(non-dominant tendency or characteristic), trazo(irregular line), trazo(color of mineral powder), correr desnudo(to run naked in public), rayar(to create streaks), rayarse(to have or obtain streaks) | — | |
| Swedish | rad(continuous series of events), ränder(irregular line), springa naken(to run naked in public), streaka(to run naked in public) | — | |
| Vietnamese | vệt(irregular line) | — |
драскотина, последователност, рязка, серия, нашарвам се
draskotina, posledovatelnost, rjazka, serija, našarvam se
herfstbremspanner, streep
ŝmiraĵo
juova, jänönvihmamittari, ketju, piirre, putki, raita, sarja, viiru, viiru, juovittaa, tehdä juovikkaaksi, tulla juovikkaaksi, viuhahtaa, viuhahtaa
chésias du genêt, raie
Schliere, Später Ginsterspanner, flitzen, schlieren
beütés, csík, erezet, sorozat, széria, szürkés zanótaraszoló, sáv
strio
síog, síog, síog
striatura, striscia
tarapī
estralh, estria, raia
passa
risco, série
srian, stìom, stìom, stìom
geómetra, racha, raya, ristra, sarta, secuencia, serie, toque, trazo, trazo, correr desnudo, rayar, rayarse
rad, ränder, springa naken, streaka
vệt
More for "streak"
Next best steps
Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.