Trickster
//ˈtɹɪkstɚ//
Translations of "trickster" (21 languages)
| Language | Translation | Romanization | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bulgarian | мошеник(one who plays tricks or pranks on others), фокусник(one who performs tricks) | mošenik, fokusnik | |
| Catalan | engalipador(one who plays tricks or pranks on others) | — | |
| Cheyenne | vé'ho'e(impish or playful person) | — | |
| Esperanto | ruzulo(one who plays tricks or pranks on others), trompisto(one who performs tricks) | — | |
| Finnish | temppuilija(one who performs tricks), veijari(mythological or literary figure), veijari(impish or playful person) | — | |
| French | filou(one who performs tricks), tricheur(one who performs tricks) | — | |
| Galician | bromista(one who performs tricks) | — | |
| German | Betrüger(one who performs tricks), Gauner(one who plays tricks or pranks on others), Gauner(one who performs tricks), Schwindler(one who plays tricks or pranks on others), Schwindler(one who performs tricks), Trickbetrüger(one who plays tricks or pranks on others) | — | |
| Ingrian | pilluri(one who plays tricks or pranks on others) | — | |
| Irish | anstrólaí(impish or playful person), bobaire(one who plays tricks or pranks on others), cleasaí(impish or playful person), spaisteoir(impish or playful person), tumlálaí(impish or playful person), áilteoir(one who plays tricks or pranks on others) | — | |
| Italian | coboldo(mythological or literary figure), diavoletto(mythological or literary figure), folletto(mythological or literary figure), gnomo(mythological or literary figure), imbroglione(one who performs tricks), indiavolato(impish or playful person), lestofante(one who performs tricks), spiritello(mythological or literary figure), truffatore(one who performs tricks) | — | |
| Japanese | トリックスター(mythological or literary figure) | torikkusutā | |
| Latin | magus(mythological or literary figure), trīcō(one who plays tricks or pranks on others) | — | |
| Macedonian | и́змамник(one who plays tricks or pranks on others), магио́ничар(one who performs tricks), па́лавко(impish or playful person), па́лавник(impish or playful person), три́кстер(mythological or literary figure), шега́џија(impish or playful person), шего́биец(impish or playful person) | ízmamnik, magióničar, pálavko, pálavnik, tríkster, šegádžija, šegóbiec | |
| Māori | kaiwhakangaio(one who plays tricks or pranks on others) | — | |
| Russian | ловка́ч(one who performs tricks), обма́нщик(one who performs tricks), озорни́к(one who plays tricks or pranks on others), три́кстер(mythological or literary figure) | lovkáč, obmánščik, ozorník, tríkster | |
| Sanskrit | मायिन्(one who performs tricks) | māyin | |
| Serbo-Croatian | mađiòničār(one who performs tricks), vragòlān(impish or playful person), šàljivac(impish or playful person), враго̀ла̄н(impish or playful person), мађио̀нича̄р(one who performs tricks), ша̀љивац(impish or playful person) | — | |
| Spanish | engañabobos(impish or playful person), trasgo(mythological or literary figure) | — | |
| Swedish | joker(impish or playful person), lurifax(one who plays tricks or pranks on others) | — | |
| Welsh | castiwr(one who plays tricks or pranks on others), chwaraewr triciau(one who plays tricks or pranks on others) | — |
engalipador
vé'ho'e
ruzulo, trompisto
temppuilija, veijari, veijari
filou, tricheur
bromista
Betrüger, Gauner, Gauner, Schwindler, Schwindler, Trickbetrüger
pilluri
anstrólaí, bobaire, cleasaí, spaisteoir, tumlálaí, áilteoir
coboldo, diavoletto, folletto, gnomo, imbroglione, indiavolato, lestofante, spiritello, truffatore
magus, trīcō
и́змамник, магио́ничар, па́лавко, па́лавник, три́кстер, шега́џија, шего́биец
ízmamnik, magióničar, pálavko, pálavnik, tríkster, šegádžija, šegóbiec
kaiwhakangaio
mađiòničār, vragòlān, šàljivac, враго̀ла̄н, мађио̀нича̄р, ша̀љивац
engañabobos, trasgo
joker, lurifax
castiwr, chwaraewr triciau
More for "trickster"
Next best steps
Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.