παιδοῦσα
ὡς αἰεὶ τὸν ὁμοῖον ἄγει θεὸς ὡς τὸν ὁμοῖον → how God ever brings like men together | birds of a feather flock together | how the god always leads like to like | as ever, god brings like and like together | as always the god brings like to like
Translations
pregnant
Afrikaans: swanger; Albanian: shtatzënë; Arabic: حَامِل, حَوامِلُ, حُبْلَى; Armenian: հղի; Old Armenian: յղի, յղացեալ, սաղմնառեալ; Assyrian Neo-Aramaic: ܒܛܝܼܢܵܐ, ܒܛܝܼܢܬܵܐ, ܝܲܩܘܼܪܬܵܐ; Asturian: preñada; Avar: къинай; Azerbaijani: boylu, hamilə; Bashkir: ауырлы, йөклө, ауыр аяҡлы, ауырға уҙған, буйға уҙған; Belarusian: цяжарны, чараваты, бярэменны; Bengali: গর্ভবতী; Bikol Central: bados; Bulgarian: бременен, труден; Burmese: ကိုယ်ဝန်ရှိ, ဗိုက်ကြီး; Catalan: embarassat, encinta, prenyat, gràvid; Cebuano: buros; Chinese Cantonese: 懷孕/怀孕, 大肚, 懷胎/怀胎, 有喜, 有咗, 有身己; Mandarin: 懷孕/怀孕, 有喜, 有了; Min Nan: 懷胎/怀胎, 有身, 病囝, 大腹肚, 有囡仔, 有矣, 帶膭/带𱼏, 大肚胿, 懷孕/怀孕, 有胎, 有身孕; Crimean Tatar: ağırayaqlı, yüklü, hamile; Czech: těhotný, březí; Dalmatian: prin; Danish: gravid, svanger, højgravid, drægtig, med barn, ventende, frugtsommelig; Dutch: zwanger, drachtig; Esperanto: graveda; Estonian: rase, tiine; Faroese: við barn, upp á vegin, tvílívað; Finnish: raskaana oleva; French: enceinte, pleine, gravide, en gestation; Friulian: gravide, incinte; Georgian: ფეხმძიმე, ორსული; German: schwanger, trächtig; Greek: έγκυος; Ancient Greek: βαρεῖα, βαρύφορτος, γαστροβαρής, ἐγγάστριος, ἔγκαρπος, ἔγκυαρ, ἐγκυμονοῦσα, ἐγκύμων, ἔγκυος, ἔμβαρος, ἔμβρεφος, ἐν γαστρὶ ἔχουσα, ἔμπαις, ἔνθορος, ἔντοκος, ἐπίφορος, ἔπογκος, κυηρός, κυμάς, κυόεις, κυοφόρος, παιδοῦς, παιδοῦσα; Greenlandic: naartusoq, ilumittoq; Guaraní: tyeguasu; Gujarati: સગર્ભા; Haitian Creole: ansent; Hawaiian: hāpai; Hebrew: מעובר \ מְעֻבָּר, בהיריון \ בְּהֵרָיוֹן, הָרָה; Hindi: गर्भवती, अर्थगर्भित, भावपूर्ण, परिग्राही, अर्थपूर्ण, गर्भिणी, परिपूर्ण; Hungarian: terhes, várandós, állapotos; Icelandic: óléttur, ófrískur, þungaður, barnshafandi, vanfær; Ido: gravida; Ilocano: masikog; Indonesian: hamil; Irish: torrach, ag iompar clainne; Italian: incinta, gravida, pregna; Japanese: 妊娠している, おめでた; Kazakh: жүкті, екіқабат; Khmer: ទ្រង់គភ៌, ពពោះ, មានគភ៌, មានផ្ទៃ, មានផ្ទៃពោះ, មានពោះពុង, កំផើម, ទម្ងន់, ស្ពាយបាត្រ; Korean: 임신하다; Kurdish Central Kurdish: دوو گیان, جووت گیان, زگ, باردار; Kyrgyz: жүктүү, бооз, боюнда бар; Ladin: aspité; Ladino: parida; Lao: ພາມານ, ມີຄັນ, ຖືພາ, ມານ, ມີທ້ອງ, ມີລູກ, ຄັບພະ, ຊົງຄັບ, ຕັ້ງທ້ອງ, ຖືພາຄາທ້ອງ, ຖືພາມານ; Latin: gravidus, praegnans, praegnas; Latvian: grūts, grūsns; Lithuanian: nėščia; Macedonian: бремен, труден; Malay: bunting, hamil, mengandung, berbadan dua; Malayalam: ഗർഭിണി; Maltese: tqila, tqal, ħobla; Maléku Jaíka: fiúrusuf; Manchu: ᡩᠠᠪᡴᠸᡵᡳ, ᠵᡠᡵᠰᡠ, ᠰᡠᠴᡳᠯᡝᠮᠪᡳ; Maori: hapū, āhua; Mongolian Cyrillic: жирэмсэн; Mongolian: ᠵᠢᠷᠮᠥᠰᠦᠨ; Neapolitan: prena; Norman: encheinte; Northern Norwegian Bokmål: gravid, svanger, drektig, høygravid, høggravid; Nynorsk: gravid, høggravid; Occitan: prenha; Old English: bearnēacen; Oromo: ulfa; Pashto: حامله; Persian: باردار, حامله, آبستن; Plautdietsch: schwanga, droagent; Polish: ciężarny, w ciąży, brzemienny; Portuguese: grávida, prenhe, prenha; Punjabi: ਗਰਭਿਣੀ; Quechua: cicu; Romanian: gravid, însărcinat, borțos; Romansch: en speranza; Russian: беременный, в положении, на сносях, на сносях, брюхатый; Sanskrit: गर्भवती; Sardinian: pringiu, prinzu, prossimu; Scots: buggen, biggen; Scottish Gaelic: torrach, trom, beò-leatromach, leatromach; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: бремѐнит, трудан; Roman: bremènit, trúdan; Sicilian: ncinta, prena; Slovak: tehotný, brezivý; Slovene: noseči, brej; Sorbian Lower Sorbian: samodruga; Spanish: embarazada, preñada, encinta, en estado; Swedish: gravid, havande, på smällen, dräktig; Sylheti: ꠉꠣꠜꠤꠘ; Tagalog: buntis; Tajik: ҳомила, ҳомиладор, бордор, обистан; Tatar: йөкле; Telugu: గర్భిణి, కడుపుతో ఉన్న; Thai: มีครรภ์, ตั้งครรภ์, ท้อง; Tibetan: ཕྲུ་གུ་སྐྱེ་ཡག་ཡོད་པ; Tocharian B: itomtsa, preṃtsa; Turkish: gebe, hamile; Turkmen: göwreli; Ukrainian: вагі́тний, важкий, тяжкий, череватий, беремі́нний; Urdu: حاملہ; Uyghur: ھامىلىدار; Uzbek: homilador, boʻgʻoz; Vietnamese: có thai, có mang thai, có chửa; Waray-Waray: burod; Welsh: beichiog; West Frisian: swier; Yiddish: שוואַנגער, מעוברת, מעוברתדיק, טראָגעדיק, בײַכלדיק, סמיקעדיק; Zazaki: hal, lıngagıran, awr