Ask at the forum if you have an Ancient or Modern Greek query!

Fieber

From LSJ
Revision as of 16:10, 10 September 2022 by Spiros (talk | contribs) (Text replacement - "(==Translations==)(?s)(\n)(.*)($)" to "{{trml |trtx=$3 }} ")

L'amor che move il sole e l'altre stelleLove that moves the sun and the other stars

Dante Alighieri, Paradiso, XXXIII, v. 145

German > Latin

Fieber, febris. – die Fieber (Fieberkrankheiten), febrium valetudines. – ein kleines F., ein Anfall von F., ein bißchen F., febricula: ein Anfall des Fiebers, s. Fieberanfall. – das drei-, viertägige F., febris tertiana, quartana; gew. bl. tertiana, quartana: ein hitziges, kaltes, schleichendes, febris ardens, frigida, lenta. – ein F. bekommen, in ein F. verfallen, sich ein F. zuziehen, von einem F. ergriffen werden. febrim (febriculam) nancisci; in febrim incĭdere (z.B. ex labore); febri corripi; febrire coepisse: F. haben, febrim (febriculam) habere, pati. affectum esse febri (am F. daniederliegen); febrire. aestu febrique iactari (im F. liegen, von Fieberhitze geschüttelt werden); febricitare (wiederholt im F. liegen): kein F. haben, s. fieberfrei (sein) no. a: vom F. frei, s. fieberfrei. – das F. kommt, bricht aus, febris accedit, incipit: das F. hört auf, legt sich, febris decedit, desinit, finitur, quiescit: das F. kommt wieder, febris redit: das F. vertreiben, febrim abigere, discutere.

Translations

Albanian: ethe; Amharic: ትኩሳት; Arabic: حُمَّة‎, حُمَّى‎; Egyptian Arabic: حمة‎; Hijazi Arabic: حرارة‎; Moroccan Arabic: سخانة‎; Armenian: տենդ, տաքություն, ջերմություն, կրակ; Aromanian: heavrã; Assamese: জ্বৰ; Asturian: fiebre; Azerbaijani: qızdırma; Basque: sukar; Belarusian: тэмпература, гарачка, жар, ліхаманка; Bengali: জ্বর; Berber Tashelhit: tawla); Bikol Central: kalintura; Bulgarian: температура, треска; Burmese: အဖျား; Catalan: febre; Cebuano: hilanat, kalentura; Chakma: 𑄎𑄧𑄢𑄴; Chamicuro: alijkwa'takochi; Chinese Mandarin: 發熱, 发热, 發燒, 发烧, 熱病, 熱病, 热病; Classical Nahuatl: tletl; Czech: horečka; Danish: feber; Dutch: verhoging, koorts; Esperanto: febro; Estonian: palavik; Faroese: fepur; Finnish: kuume; French: fièvre; Friulian: fiere; Galician: febre, quentura; Georgian: სიცხე, ციებ-ცხელება, ტემპერატურა; German: Fieber, Temperaturerhöhung; Greek: πυρετός; Ancient Greek: πυρετός; Guaraní: akãnundu; Gujarati: તાવ; Hebrew: קַדַּחַת‎; Hindi: बुख़ार, ज्वर; Hungarian: láz, hőemelkedés; Icelandic: hiti, hitasótt; Indonesian: demam; Interlingua: febre; Irish: fiabhras; Isnag: daxang; Italian: febbre; Japanese: 熱, 発熱; Kazakh: қызба; Khmer: គ្រុន; Korean: 열, 열병(熱病), 발열; Kurdish Central Kurdish: تا‎; Northern Kurdish: ta, tasar, tagerm; Kyrgyz: калтыратма, безгек; Ladin: fiëura; Lao: ໄຂ້; Latin: febris; Latvian: drudzis; Lithuanian: karščiavimas; Lü: ᦺᦃᧉ; Macedonian: треска; Malay: demam; Maore Comorian: ɓuhuo; Navajo: tahoniigááh; Nepali: ज्वरो; Norman: fièvre; Norwegian: feber; Occitan: fèbre; Old English: hriþ; Pashto: تبه‎; Persian: تب‎; Punjabi: ਤਾਪ, ਬੁਖ਼ਾਰ; Plautdietsch: Feeba, Braunt; Polish: gorączka, temperatura; Portuguese: febre; Quechua: rupha; Romanian: temperatură, febră; Romansch: fevra, feavra, feivra; Russian: температура, лихорадка, горячка, жар; Sanskrit: ज्वर; Sardinian: calentura, callantura; Scottish Gaelic: fiabhras; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: грозница; Roman: groznica; Sicilian: frevi; Slovak: horúčka; Slovene: vročina; Sorbian Lower Sorbian: zymnica; Spanish: fiebre, calentura; Sumerian: 𒌓; Swahili: homa, harara; Swedish: feber; Tagalog: lagnat; Tamil: காய்ச்சல், ஜுரம், ஜ்வரம்; Tajik: таб, табларза; Tausug: hinglaw; Telugu: జ్వరము, వేకి, పులకరము; Thai: ไข้; Tigrinya: ምርባጽ; Turkish: ateş; Turkmen: gyzzyrma; Ukrainian: гаря́чка, лихоманка, температура, жар, пропáсниця; Urdu: بخار‎; Uyghur: قىزىتما‎; Uzbek: isitma, bezgak; Venetian: fevra, féra; Vietnamese: sốt; Volapük: fif; Walloon: five; Welsh: twymyn, achre; Westrobothnian: febber; Yakan: lemmun; Yiddish: פֿיבער