ζηλιάρης

From LSJ

τὸ λακωνίζειν πολὺ μᾶλλόν ἐστιν φιλοσοφεῖν ἢ φιλογυμναστεῖν → to behave like a Lacedaemonian is much more to love wisdom than to love gymnastics (Plato, Protagoras 342e6)

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Translations

jealous

Albanian: zili; Arabic: غَيُور‎; Egyptian Arabic: غيار‎; Armenian: խանդոտ; Azerbaijani: qısqanc; Belarusian: раўні́вы; Bulgarian: ревнив; Catalan: gelós; Chickasaw: hopoo; Chinese Mandarin: 妒忌, 吃醋; Cantonese: 呷醋; Hokkien: 食醋; Czech: žárlivý; Danish: jaloux; Dutch: jaloers; Estonian: armukade; Faroese: øvundsjúkur; Finnish: mustasukkainen; French: jaloux, jalouse; Galician: ciumento; Georgian: ეჭვიანი; German: eifersüchtig; Greek: ζηλιάρης; Ancient Greek: ἐπίφθονος, ζηλαῖος, ζηλήμων, ζηλότυπος, ζηλωτής, κοτήεις, ὑπόπτης, φθονερός; Hungarian: féltékeny; Icelandic: afbrýðisamur; Indonesian: cemburu; Irish: éadmhar, éad a bheith agat/ort; Italian: geloso, gelosa; Japanese: 妬ましい, 嫉妬, 嫉妬深い, やきもちをやく; Khmer: ប្រច័ណ្ឌ, ច្រណែន; Latvian: greizsirdīgs; Lithuanian: įtarus; Louisiana Creole French: jalou; Macedonian: љубоморен; Norwegian: sjalu; Persian: رشکین‎; Polish: zazdrosny; Portuguese: ciumento; Romanian: gelos; Russian: ревнивый, ревнующий; Scottish Gaelic: eudmhor; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: љубоморан; Roman: ljubomoran; Slovak: žiarlivý; Slovene: ljubosumen; Spanish: celoso, encelado; Swedish: svartsjuk; Tagalog: selos; Tajik: рашкин; Turkish: kıskanç; Ukrainian: ревнивий; Vietnamese: ghen; Walloon: djalot; Welsh: eiddigus