Trio
//ˈtɹi.əʊ//
Translations of "trio" (22 languages)
| Language | Translation | Romanization | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chinese Mandarin | 三重唱(group of three musicians), 三重奏(group of three musicians) | sānchóngchàng, sānchóngzòu | |
| Czech | trio(group of three musicians), trio(a piece of music written for three musicians) | — | |
| Dutch | trio(a piece of music written for three musicians), trio(passage in the middle of minuet) | — | |
| Esperanto | trio(a piece of music written for three musicians), triopo(group of three people or things), triopo(group of three musicians) | — | |
| Finnish | tertsetti(group of three musicians), trio(group of three people or things), trio(group of three musicians), trio(a piece of music written for three musicians), trio(passage in the middle of minuet) | — | |
| French | trio(group of three musicians), trio(a piece of music written for three musicians), trio(passage in the middle of minuet) | — | |
| Georgian | სამეული(group of three people or things), ტრიო(group of three people or things), ტრიო(group of three musicians) | sameuli, ṭrio, ṭrio | |
| German | Dreiergruppe(group of three musicians), Terzett(passage in the middle of minuet), Trio(group of three musicians), Trio(a piece of music written for three musicians) | — | |
| Italian | trio(group of three musicians), trio(a piece of music written for three musicians), trio(passage in the middle of minuet) | — | |
| Japanese | トリオ(group of three musicians), 三つ組(group of three people or things), 三人組(group of three people or things), 三重唱(group of three musicians), 三重奏(group of three musicians) | torio, mitsugumi, sanningumi, sanjūshō, sanjūsō | |
| Korean | 삼중주(group of three musicians) | samjungju | |
| Malayalam | മൂവർ(group of three people or things) | mūvaṟ | |
| Māori | takitoru(group of three people or things), tokotoru(group of three people or things), tōtoru(group of three people or things) | — | |
| Northern Sami | golmmas(group of three people or things) | — | |
| Polish | tercet(group of three people or things), tercet(group of three musicians), trio(group of three people or things), trio(group of three musicians), trio(a piece of music written for three musicians) | — | |
| Portuguese | trio(group of three people or things) | — | |
| Romanian | trio(group of three people or things) | — | |
| Russian | три́о(group of three people or things), три́о(group of three musicians), тро́е(group of three people or things), тро́йка(group of three people or things) | trío, trío, tróje, trójka | |
| Spanish | trío(group of three people or things), trío(group of three musicians), trío(a piece of music written for three musicians), trío(passage in the middle of minuet) | — | |
| Swedish | trio(passage in the middle of minuet) | — | |
| Tamil | மூவர்(group of three people or things) | mūvar | |
| Welsh | triawd(group of three people or things), triawd(group of three musicians) | — |
trio, trio
trio, trio
trio, triopo, triopo
tertsetti, trio, trio, trio, trio
trio, trio, trio
Dreiergruppe, Terzett, Trio, Trio
trio, trio, trio
takitoru, tokotoru, tōtoru
golmmas
tercet, tercet, trio, trio, trio
trio
trio
trío, trío, trío, trío
trio
triawd, triawd
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Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.