Results for: containing more than one syllable
English English
antepenultimate, third last syllable, third syllable before the end of a wordantepenult
arsis, downbeat, essay subject, first stage of dialectic, hypothesis, proposition to be proven; dissertation, research paper written by a candidate for an academic degree, lengthy academic paper, statement, stressed syllable, unstressed syllablethesis
assignment of syllable to musical pitchsolmization
baritone, male singer; baritone, male singing voice (between tenor and bass); (Linguistics) word that has a heavy stress or relative highness or lowness of a sound accent on its second to last syllablebarytone
based on the number of syllables, being a syllable without a vowel, involving syllables, marked by clear enunciation, of or pertaining to a syllable or syllables, consisting of syllables; forming a syllable; of or pertaining to a style of poetry based ...syllabic
brief and unhelpful, containing only one syllable, pertaining to words having only one syllable; of speech characterized by the frequent use of monosyllables (one syllable words)monosyllabic
cadenza, embellishment of melody, several notes sung on one syllablemelisma
character representing a word or sound, letter group with a particular sound, sign representing a sound word or syllable (Linguistics)phonogram
characterized by falling prices, characterized by regular inflectional endings, easily defeated, frail, feeble; faint; dilute, watery, having accent on normally unstressed syllable, lacking in contrast, lacking skills or abilities, lacking strength of ...weak
chopped down, cut down, cut off, amputated; concerning a geometric form whose end is cut off by a plane, having incomplete corners, with end removed, with end replaced by plane, with one syllable fewertruncated
containing more than one syllable; characterized by words with more than one syllable, with many long words, with several syllablespolysyllabic
diaeresis, mark changing pronunciation of vowel, mark making adjacent vowel separate syllable, pause in poetry, two dots above the second of two consecutive vowels (indicates separate pronunciation of each vowel), umlautdieresis
digraph; sound composed of two continuous inseparable elements (Phonetics), joined letters, two vowels as one syllablediphthong
dissyllable, two-syllable poetic unit, two-syllable worddisyllable
distinguishing speech sound, syllable; sound, utterance; smallest units of speech upon which a language is basedphoneme
 

Translations: 1630 / 70

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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