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

erblühen

From LSJ
Revision as of 16:31, 17 October 2023 by Spiros (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Ubi idem et maximus et honestissimus amor est, aliquando praestat morte jungi, quam vita distrahi → Where indeed the greatest and most honourable love exists, it is much better to be joined by death, than separated by life.

Valerius Maximus, De Factis Dictisque

German > Latin

erblühen, bildl., efflorescere.

Translations

blossom

Arabic: زَهَرَ‎; Armenian: բողբոջել; Assamese: ফুলা; Azerbaijani: çiçəkləmək, çiçək açmaq; Belarusian: цвісці́; Bulgarian: цъ́фвам, цъфтя; Burmese: ပန်းပွင့်; Catalan: florir; Cherokee: ᎠᏥᎸᏍᎦ; Chinese Mandarin: 開花/开花, 開/开; Czech: kvést; Dutch: bloeien, bloesemen; Esperanto: flori; Finnish: kukkia, puhjeta; French: fleurir; Friulian: florî; Galician: frorecer, frolear, choridar, esbrochar, chorir; Georgian: ყვავის, იფურჩქნება; German: blühen, erblühen; Alemannic German: blüeje; Ancient Greek: ἀνθέω, ἐξανθέω, θάλλω; Haitian Creole: fleri; Hungarian: virágzik; Italian: fiorire; Japanese: 咲く; Kazakh: гүлдену, гүлдеу; Khmer: ផ្កា; Korean: 피다; Kurdish Central Kurdish: پشکووتن‎; Kyrgyz: гүлдө, гүлдөө; Ladino: enfloreser; Latin: floreo; Luxembourgish: bléien, floréieren; Macedonian: цути; Malayalam: പുഷ്പിക്കുക; Maori: manahua, ngawhā, pua, matikao; Mauritian Creole: fleri; Middle English: blosmen; Norwegian Bokmål: blomstre; Nynorsk: blomstre, bløme; Old English: blōwan; Ottoman Turkish: چیچكلنمك‎; Persian: شکفتن‎; Polish: kwitnąć; Portuguese: desabrochar, florir, florescer; Quechua: t'ikay, waytay; Romanian: înflori; Russian: цвести, расцветать, расцвести; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: цветати, цвјетати; Roman: cvetati, cvjetati; Sicilian: ciuriri, nzagarari; Slovak: kvitnúť; Slovene: cveteti; Spanish: florecer; Swedish: blomma, blomstra; Tajik: шукуфтан; Thai: บาน; Turkish: çiçek açmak; Ukrainian: цвісти, кві́тнути, розцвітати, розцвісти, розквітати, розкві́тнути; Uzbek: gullamoq; Vietnamese: nở; Volapük: florön