Throb
Translations of "throb" (30 languages)
| Language | Translation | Romanization | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ancient Greek | σκαρίζω(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), σκαρίζω(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm), σφύζω(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), σφύζω(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm) | skarízō, skarízō, sphúzō, sphúzō | |
| Arabic | خَفَقان(beating, vibration or palpitation), خَفَقَان(beating, vibration or palpitation), خَفَقَ(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), خَفَقَ(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm), نَبَضَ(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm) | ḵafagān, ḵafaqān, ḵafaqa, ḵafaqa, nabaḍa | |
| Bulgarian | пулсиране(beating, vibration or palpitation), туптене(beating, vibration or palpitation), пулсирам(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm), тупкам(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), туптя(to pound or beat rapidly or violently) | pulsirane, tuptene, pulsiram, tupkam, tuptja | |
| Chinese Mandarin | 搏動 /搏动(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm) | bódòng | |
| Czech | bušit(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), bušit(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm), bít(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), bít(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm), tepat(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm) | — | |
| Dutch | geklop(beating, vibration or palpitation), bonzen(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), kloppen(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), trillen(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm), vibreren(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm) | — | |
| Esperanto | pulso(beating, vibration or palpitation) | — | |
| Finnish | jyskytys(beating, vibration or palpitation), sykintä(beating, vibration or palpitation), tykytys(beating, vibration or palpitation), jyskyttää(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), jyskyttää(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm), sykkiä(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm), tykyttää(to pound or beat rapidly or violently) | — | |
| French | battement(beating, vibration or palpitation), pulsation(beating, vibration or palpitation), battre(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), battre(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm), palpiter(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), résonner(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm), vibrer(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm) | — | |
| Galician | latexar(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), latexar(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm), palpitar(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm) | — | |
| German | Klopfen(beating, vibration or palpitation), Pochen(beating, vibration or palpitation), klopfen(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), klopfen(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm), pochen(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm), pulsieren(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm), schlagen(to pound or beat rapidly or violently) | — | |
| Hungarian | lüktetés(beating, vibration or palpitation), lüktet(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm) | — | |
| Irish | buille(beating, vibration or palpitation), cuisle(beating, vibration or palpitation), frithbhuail(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm), preab(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm) | — | |
| Italian | battito(beating, vibration or palpitation), palpito(beating, vibration or palpitation), pulsazione(beating, vibration or palpitation), battere(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), picchiare(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), pulsare(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm) | — | |
| Japanese | じんじんする(to pulse in time with the circulation of blood), どきどき(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), どきどきする(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm), ドキドキ(to pound or beat rapidly or violently) | jinjin suru, dokidoki suru | |
| Kabuverdianu | palpita(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), palpita(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm) | — | |
| Kapampángan | karug-karug(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), katug(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), pintig(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), tugingtuging(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), tugingtuging-pipintig-pintig(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm) | — | |
| Latin | palpitō(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm) | — | |
| Māori | kapakapa(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), panapana(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), whētuki(to pound or beat rapidly or violently) | — | |
| Norwegian Bokmål | banke(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), banke(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm), dunke(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), slå(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm) | — | |
| Polish | tętnić(to pound or beat rapidly or violently) | — | |
| Portuguese | latejamento(beating, vibration or palpitation), latejar(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), pulsar(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm) | — | |
| Romanian | palpitație(beating, vibration or palpitation), pulsație(beating, vibration or palpitation), vibrare(beating, vibration or palpitation), vibrație(beating, vibration or palpitation), palpita(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), pulsa(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm), vibra(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm) | — | |
| Russian | бие́ние(beating, vibration or palpitation), пульса́ция(beating, vibration or palpitation), би́ться(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), би́ться(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm), пульси́ровать(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm), стуча́ться(to pound or beat rapidly or violently) | bijénije, pulʹsácija, bítʹsja, bítʹsja, pulʹsírovatʹ, stučátʹsja | |
| Scottish Gaelic | plosg(beating, vibration or palpitation), plosgadh(beating, vibration or palpitation), plosg(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), plosg(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm) | — | |
| Slovak | tĺcť(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), tĺcť(to vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm) | — | |
| Spanish | palpitar(beating, vibration or palpitation), palpitar(to pound or beat rapidly or violently) | — | |
| Swedish | bulta(to pound or beat rapidly or violently), dunka(to pound or beat rapidly or violently) | — | |
| Vietnamese | phập phồng(to pound or beat rapidly or violently) | — | |
| Welsh | curiad(beating, vibration or palpitation) | — |
bušit, bušit, bít, bít, tepat
geklop, bonzen, kloppen, trillen, vibreren
pulso
jyskytys, sykintä, tykytys, jyskyttää, jyskyttää, sykkiä, tykyttää
battement, pulsation, battre, battre, palpiter, résonner, vibrer
latexar, latexar, palpitar
Klopfen, Pochen, klopfen, klopfen, pochen, pulsieren, schlagen
lüktetés, lüktet
buille, cuisle, frithbhuail, preab
battito, palpito, pulsazione, battere, picchiare, pulsare
palpita, palpita
karug-karug, katug, pintig, tugingtuging, tugingtuging-pipintig-pintig
palpitō
kapakapa, panapana, whētuki
banke, banke, dunke, slå
tętnić
latejamento, latejar, pulsar
palpitație, pulsație, vibrare, vibrație, palpita, pulsa, vibra
бие́ние, пульса́ция, би́ться, би́ться, пульси́ровать, стуча́ться
bijénije, pulʹsácija, bítʹsja, bítʹsja, pulʹsírovatʹ, stučátʹsja
plosg, plosgadh, plosg, plosg
tĺcť, tĺcť
palpitar, palpitar
bulta, dunka
phập phồng
curiad
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Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.