Results for: cheerfulness, force causing floating, power to recover emotionally, tendency to float
English English
act of pressing; act of placing pressure on, ambitious, applying force, shoving, assertivepushing
act of producing an effect, causality, cause or act of causing, cause-and-effect relationshipcausation
act of protruding, quality of bulging or protruding; projection, act of causing to bulge outward; protuberance, something that sticks out, something that protrudesprotrusion
act of prying, get information with difficulty, inquire nosily, leverage, look curiously, peep, peer; meddle, interfere; force open, wrest open with a crowbar or similar tool, open using leverage, somebody who pries, tool for applying leveragepry
act of raising or lifting; height to which something is raised, elevation; force which raises or elevates something; elevator (British); mechanical apparatus which lifts or raises (i.e. ski lift); ride in the vehicle of another person; elation, happy f...lift
act of relinquishing office or power, resignationabdication
act of removing matter floating on the surface of a liquid; act of removing from the top; film, thin layer, coat or become coated with layer, cursory look, embezzle, give little or no attention to, glance through a book or paper, hide profits to avoid ...skim
act of repelling, act of driving away; repugnance, disgust; force that causes two bodies to move away from one another (Physics), fact of being repulsed, repelling force, revulsionrepulsion
act of retracting, act of taking back; withdrawal, annulment; act of pulling back, act of drawing back, power to retract, retracting statement, something retractedretraction
act of seeing only the bad side of situations, tendency to expect the worst, doctrine about evil, tendency to expect worstpessimism
act of sexual intercourse, connecting, linking, joining, connection of electrical circuits, coupler, joining two things together, link that transfers power, mating; joining, bringing together; connecting part (Machinery), something that joins two thing...coupling
act of splitting, cleaving, separating, dividing, causing to split; cleaving; separating; very loud, deafening; very fast; extremely painful, Freudian defense mechanismsplitting
act of squirting; thin stream of liquid, spurt, force something out from a narrow opening, instrument for squirting liquid, offensive term, shoot out in a thin stream (of liquid); cause to shoot out in a thin stream (of liquid), squirt liquid over some...squirt
act of stealing an automobile from its driver by using force or making threats, hijacking a carcarjacking
act of sticking or adhering to a surface; attachment, devotion; agreement; abnormal growing together of separate body tissues (Medicine), intermolecular attraction, joining of body parts, non-slippiness, sticking power, supportadhesion
 

Translations: 136150 / 1767

Your Recent Searches

Total number of language pairs: 544
Total number of translations (in millions): 15.4

About Eudict

EUdict (European dictionary) is a collection of online dictionaries for the languages spoken mostly in Europe. These dictionaries are the result of the work of many authors who worked very hard and finally offered their product free of charge on the internet thus making it easier to all of us to communicate with each other. Some of the dictionaries have only a few thousand words, others have more than 320,000. Some of the words may be incorrectly translated or mistyped.

Options

There are several ways to use this dictionary. The most common way is by word input (you must know which language the word is in) but you can also use your browser's search box and bookmarklets (or favelets).

Look at the complete list of languages: Available language pairs

There are two Japanese-English (and Japanese-French) dictionaries and one contains Kanji and Kana (Kana in English and French pair due to improved searching). For the same reason the Chinese dictionary contains traditional and simplified Chinese terms on one side and Pinyin and English terms on the other.

Esperanto is only partially translated. Please help us improve this site by translating its interface.

Browser integration (Search plugins)

Perhaps the best way to enable dictionary search is through integration into the search field of your browser. To add EUdict alongside Google, Yahoo!, Amazon and other search engines in Mozilla Firefox or Internet Explorer, simply click on link after the title Browser integration, select appropriate language pair and confirm your decision. And you're ready to go; select EUdict from the drop-down list in search field (Firefox) or address bar (IE), input a word and press Enter. In Chrome, first click on a language pair and change the search keyword in the field 'Keyword' to a keyword (eg: 'eudict'). Afterwards, you simply type the chosen keyword in the address bar to start the search in the chosen dictionary.

Bookmarklets

There is a way to enable word translation from any page: Bookmarklets. A bookmarklet is a small JavaScript code stored as a bookmark in you browser.

Tips and tricks

If you want to type a character which isn't on your keyboard, simply pick it from a list of special characters. If you are unable to add a bookmarklet in Mozilla Firefox according to the instructions above, there is another way; right click on a link and select Bookmark this link… Now you can drag this link from Bookmarks to the Bookmarks Toolbar.

Instead of clicking the Search button, just press Enter. Although EUdict can't translate complete sentences, it can translate several words at once if you separate them with spaces or commas. Sometimes you can find translation results directly from Google by typing: eudict word. If you are searching for a word in Japanese (Kanji) dictionary and not receiving any results, try without Kana (term in brackets). If you are searching for a word in the Chinese dictionary and not receiving any results, try without Pinyin (term in brackets). Disable spellchecking in Firefox by going to Tools → Options → Advanced → Check my spelling as I type. Why not add a EUdict search form to your web site? Form

Credits

My name is Tomislav Kuzmic, I live in Croatia and this site is my personal project. I am responsible for the concept, design, programming and development. I do this in my spare time. To contact me for any reason please send me an email to tkuzmic at gmail dot com. Let me take this chance to thank all who contributed to the making of these dictionaries and improving the site's quality:

EUdict is online since May 9, 2005 and English<>Croatian dictionary on tkuzmic.com since June 16, 2003.

Recent searches