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 * Junior:English:Proper noun ( #, from a nickname for someone with the title [[Jr.] (junior).\n\n==Cebuano== )
 * Peter:English:Proper noun:Translations ( * Ukrainian: {{t|uk|Петро́]]\n* Urdu: {{t|ur|پطرس|m}}\n* Vietnamese: {{t|vi|Phêrô}} {{qualifier|Roman Catholic}}, {{t|vi|Phierơ}} {{qualifier|Protestant}}\n* Waray-Waray: {{t|war|Pedro}}\n* Welsh: {{t+|cy|Pedr|m}}\n* West Frisian: {{t|fy|Petrus}}\n* Wolof: {{t|wo|Piyeer}}\n* Zealandic: {{t|zea|Petrus}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n{{trans-top|one of the epistles of Peter}}\n* Afrikaans: {{t+|af|Petrus}}\n* Amharic: {{t|am|የጴጥሮስ መልእክት}}\n* Aramaic:\n*: Classical Syriac: {{t|syc|ܦܛܪܘܣ|tr=Peṭraus}}\n* Armenian: {{t+|hy|Պետրոս}}\n* Awadhi: {{t|awa|पतरस}}\n* Basque: {{t+|eu|Peio}}, {{t+|eu|Peru}}, {{t|eu|Petri}}\n* Bavarian: {{t|bar|Beda}}\n* Breton: {{t+|br|Pêr|m}}\n* Burmese: {{t|my|ရှင်ပေတရု​ဩဝါဒစာ​ပဌမစောင်}}, {{t|my|ရှင်ပေတရု​ဩဝါဒစာ​ဒုတိယစောင်}}\n* Cebuano: {{t|ceb|Pedro}}\n* Chinese:\n*: Cantonese: {{t|yue|彼得|tr=bei2 dak1}}\n*: Eastern Min: {{t|cdo|彼得|tr=Bī-dáik}}\n*: Mandarin: {{t+|cmn|彼得|tr=Bǐdé}}\n* Corsican: {{t+|co|Petru}}\n* Czech: {{t+|cs|Petrův|m}}\n* Danish: {{t|da|Petersbrev}},\n* Dutch: {{t+|nl|Peter|m}}\n* Estonian: {{t-check|et|Peetruse}}, {{t-check|et|Pt}}\n* Faroese: {{t|fo|Pætur}}\n* Finnish: {{t|fi|Pietarin kirje}}\n* French: {{t+|fr|Pierre|f}}, {{t+|fr|P|f}}\n* German: {{t-check|de|(Der 1./2. Brief des) Petrus}}, {{t+check|de|Petr}}, {{t+|de|Peter}}\n* Greek: {{t+|el|Πέτρος|m}}\n*: Ancient Greek: {{t|grc|Πέτρος|m}}\n* Greenlandic: {{t+|kl|Piita}}, {{t|kl|Piitaq}}\n* Hawaiian: {{t|haw|Petero}}\n* Hungarian: {{t+|hu|Péter}}\n* Icelandic: {{t+|is|Pétur|m}}\n* Ido: {{t|io|Petrus|m}}\n* Indonesian: {{t|id|Petrus}}\n* Irish: {{t+|ga|Peadar|m}}\n* Italian: {{t+|it|Pietro|m}}\n* Japanese: {{t|ja|ペテロの手紙|tr=Petero no Tegami}}\n* Kazakh: {{t|kk|Петірдің хаты}}\n* Khmer: {{t|km|ពេត្រុស​ទី​}}\n* Konkani: {{t|kok|पेद्रुचें पत्र}}\n* Kurdish:\n*: Central Kurdish: {{t|ckb|پەترۆس}}\n* Latin: {{t+|la|Petrus|m}}\n* Latvian: {{t+|lv|Pēteris|m}}\n* Limburgish: {{t|li|Petrus}}\n* Lithuanian: {{t|lt|Pẽtras|m}}, {{t+|lt|Pẽtro laiškaĩ|f-p}}\n* Low German:\n*: German Low German: {{t|nds-de|Päiter|m}}\n* Macedonian: {{t|mk|Петрово|n}}\n* Malayalam: {{t|ml|പത്രൊസ്}}\n* Maltese: {{t+|mt|Pietru|m}}\n* Manx: {{t+|gv|Peddyr}}\n* Maori: {{t+|mi|Pita}}\n* Mongolian: {{t-check|mn|Петр}}, {{t-check|mn|Пт}}\n* Norwegian: {{t+|no|Peter}}, {{t-check|no|Peters}}, {{t|no|Pet}}\n* Odia: {{t|or|ପିତରଙ୍କ}}\n* Polish: {{t|pl|List świętego Piotra Apostoła|m}}; {{t|pl|List św. Piotra|m}}; {{t|pl|List Piotra|m}}; {{t+|pl|P}}\n* Portuguese: {{t+|pt|Pedro|m}}\n* Punjabi: {{t|pa|ਪਤਰਸ}}\n* Romanian: {{t+|ro|Petru|m}}\n* Scots: {{t|sco|Peter}}\n* Scottish Gaelic: {{t+|gd|Peadar}}\n* Serbo-Croatian: {{t-check|sh|Pt|m}}\n* Slovak: {{t|sk|Petrov|m}}\n* Slovene: {{t+|sl|Peter|m}}\n* Somali: {{t|so|Butros}}\n* Spanish: {{t+|es|Pedro|m}}\n* Swahili: {{t+|sw|Petro}}\n* Swedish: {{t+|sv|Petrus}}, {{t|sv|Petrusbrevet}}, {{t-check|sv|Pet.}}\n* Tagalog: {{t+|tl|Pedro}}\n* Tamil: {{t+|ta|பேதுரு}}\n* Thai: {{t|th|เปโตร}}\n* Turkish: {{t|tr|Petrus'un}}\n* Uzbek: {{t|uz|Butrus}}\n* Vietnamese: {{t|vi|Phêrô}} {{qualifier|Roman Catholic}}, {{t|vi|Phierơ}} {{qualifier|Protestant}}\n* Waray-Waray: {{t|war|Pedro}}\n* Welsh: {{t+|cy|Pedr|m}}\n* West Frisian: {{t|fy|Piter}}\n* Zealandic: {{t|zea|Petrus}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n{{trans-top|surname}}\n* Finnish: {{t+|fi|Pietarinen}}, {{t+|fi|Pietarila}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n{{checktrans-top}}\n* Amharic: {{t-check|am|ጴጥሮስ}}\n* Hindi: {{t-check|hi|पथ्रुस}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n====See also====\n* {{l|en|Petrock}}\n* {{l|en|Petronella}}\n\n===Anagrams===\n* {{anagrams|en|a=eeprt|Peret|Petre|Prete|peert|petre|repet.}}\n\n{{topics|en|Biblical characters|Individuals}}\n\n==Cebuano== )
 * achtel:Polish:Further reading ( * {{R:zlw-mas:SgOWiM|+|\n\n{{C|pl|Containers|Units of measure}}\n\n==Silesian== )
 * anacreontic:English:Adjective:Derived terms ( {{col-auto|en|anacreontically\nanacronymic\n\n====Derived terms====\n{{col-auto|en|anacronymically\n}}\n\n====Translations====\n{{trans-top|pertaining to the Greek poet Anacreon}}\n* German: {{t+|de|anakreontisch}}\n* Polish: {{t|pl|anakreontyczny}}\n* Portuguese: {{t|pt|anacreôntico}}\n* Spanish: {{t+|es|anacreóntico}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n===Noun===\n{{wikipedia|anacreontics}}\n{{en-noun}}\n\n# {{lb|en|poetry}} A short lyrical piece about love and wine.\n\n====Translations====\n{{trans-top}}\n* Polish: {{t+|pl|anakreontyk|m}}\n* Spanish: {{t+|es|anacreóntica|f}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n===Anagrams===\n* {{anagrams|en|a=aacceinnort|canceration}}\n\n\n\n==Romanian== )
 * blanket:English:Noun:Derived terms ( {{der3|en|title=Terms derived from blanket (noun and adjective)\n\n====Derived terms====\n{{col-auto|en|unblanketed|biliblanket|blanketless|blanketly|blanketmaker|blanketmaking|blanketman|blankety|overblanket|reblanket|Slanket|underblanket|blanket ban\n|blanket bath|blanket bog|blanket order|point blanket|throw blanket|tyre blanket\n|blanket chest|Hudson's Bay blanket|throw a wet blanket on\n|blanketflower\n|blanket insulation\n|blanket lien\n|blanketlike\n|blanket loan\n|blanket party\n|blanket sheet\n|blanket stitch, blanket-stitch\n|blanket term\n|blanketweed\n|blankie, blanky\n|security blanket\n|wet blanket\n|California blanket|Chilkat blanket|dog in a blanket|Hoover blanket|Linus blanket|big blue blanket|blanket ballot|blanket finish|blanket flower|blanket octopus|blanket statement|blanket-coat|blue blanket|electric blanket|fire blanket|horse blanket|on the blanket|on the wrong side of the blanket|pig in a blanket|quarter blanket|receiving blanket|saddle blanket|space blanket|split the blanket|stick like shit to a blanket|wet-blanket}}\n\n====Descendants====\n* {{desc|sw|blanketi|bor=1}}\n\n====Translations====\n{{trans-top|fabric}}\n* Afrikaans: {{t+|af|kombers}}\n* Akan: {{t|ak|kuntu}}\n* Albanian: {{t+|sq|kuvertë|f}}, {{t+|sq|batanije|f}}\n* Apache:\n*: Western Apache: {{t|apw|chʼid}}\n* Arabic: {{t|ar|لِحَاف|m}}, {{t|ar|بَطَّانِيَّة|f}}, {{t|ar|حِرَام|m}}\n*: Egyptian Arabic: {{t|arz|حرام|m|tr=ḥirām}}\n*: Hijazi Arabic: {{t|acw|بَطَّانِيَّة|tr=baṭṭāniyya|f}}, {{t|acw|كفرتة|tr=kuvirta, kufirta|f}}, {{t|acw|لِحَاف|tr=liḥāf|m}}\n*: Moroccan Arabic: {{t|ary|بَطَّانِيَّة|tr=baṭṭāniyya}}\n* Armenian: {{t+|hy|վերմակ}}\n* Assamese: {{t|as|কম্বল}}, {{t|as|কমলি}}\n* Asturian: {{t+|ast|manta|f}}\n* Atong (India): {{t|aot|kombol}}\n* Avar: {{t|av|юргъан}}\n* Azerbaijani: {{t+|az|yorğan}}\n* Baluchi: {{t|bal|کمبل}}\n* Bashkir: {{t|ba|юрған}}\n* Basque: {{t|eu|manta}}\n* Belarusian: {{t|be|ко́ўдра|f}}, {{t|be|пакрыва́ла|n}}\n* Bengali: {{t+|bn|কম্বল}}, {{t+|bn|কমলি}}, {{t+|bn|রাজাই}}, {{t+|bn|লেপ}}, {{t+|bn|কাঁথা}}\n* Brunei Malay: {{t|kxd|selimut}}\n* Bulgarian: {{t+|bg|одея́ло|n}}\n* Burmese: {{t+|my|စောင်}}\n* Catalan: {{t+|ca|manta|f}}\n* Chamicuro: {{t|ccc|katana}}, {{t|ccc|pestiklo}}\n* Chechen: {{t|ce|йургӏа}}\n* Cherokee: {{t|chr|ᎤᏁᎬᎭᎢ}}\n* Chinese:\n*: Cantonese: {{t|yue|被|tr=pei5}}\n*: Mandarin: {{t+|cmn|毯子|tr=tǎnzi}}\n* Coptic: {{t|cop|ϩⲱⲃⲥ|m}}\n* Cree: {{t|cr|ᐊᑯᐦᑊ}}\n* Crimean Tatar: {{t|crh|yorğan}}\n* Czech: {{t+|cs|deka|f}}\n* Danish: {{t+|da|tæppe|n}}\n* Dutch: {{t+|nl|deken|m|f}}\n* Esperanto: {{t|eo|kovrilo}}\n* Estonian: {{t|et|tekk}}\n* Even: {{t|eve|хулра}}\n* Evenki: {{t|evn|хулла}}\n* Ewe: {{t|ee|kundru}}\n* Faroese: {{t+|fo|teppi|n}}\n* Finnish: {{t+|fi|peitto}}, {{t+|fi|viltti}}, {{t+|fi|huopa}}\n* French: {{t+|fr|couverture|f}}\n* Galician: {{t|gl|manta|f}}, {{t+|gl|cobertor|m}}\n* Georgian: {{t|ka|საბანი}}\n* German: {{t+|de|Decke|f}}, {{t+|de|Wolldecke|f}}, {{t+|de|Bettdecke|f}}\n* Greek: {{t+|el|κουβέρτα|f}}\n*: Ancient: {{t|grc|ῥῆγος|n}}, {{t|grc|λῶδιξ|f}}\n* Guaraní: {{t+|gn|ahoja}}\n* Gujarati: {{t|gu|કાંબળો|m}}, {{t|gu|ધાબળો|m}}, {{t|gu|કંબલ|m}}\n* Hausa: {{t+|ha|bargo}}\n* Hebrew: {{t+|he|שְׂמִיכָה|f|tr=smikha}}\n* Higaonon: {{t|mba|habul}}\n* Hindi: {{t+|hi|कम्बल|m}}\n* Hungarian: {{t+|hu|takaró}}, {{t+|hu|pokróc}}\n* Icelandic: {{t+|is|ábreiða|f}}\n* Ido: {{t+|io|kovrilo}}\n* Indonesian: {{t+|id|selimut}}\n* Ingush: {{t|inh|ювргӏа}}\n* Interlingua: {{t|ia|copertura de lana|f}}\n* Irish: {{t|ga|blaincéad|m}}, {{t|ga|ciumhais|f}} {{qualifier|single}}, {{t+|ga|pluid|f}} {{qualifier|double}}\n* Italian: {{t+|it|coperta|f}}\n* Ivatan: {{t|ivv|ayob}}\n* Japanese: {{t+|ja|毛布|tr=もうふ, mōfu}}\n* Javanese: {{t|jv|kemul}}, {{t+|jv|singeb}}\n* Kapampangan: {{t|pam|ulas}}\n* Kayapó: {{t|txu|kubẽta}}\n* Kazakh: {{t|kk|көрпе}}\n* Khmer: {{t+|km|ភួយ}}\n* Korean: {{t+|ko|이불}}, {{t+|ko|담요|tr=damnyo}} \n* Kurdish:\n*: Northern Kurdish: {{t+|kmr|lihêf}}\n* Kyrgyz: {{t+|ky|көрпө}}\n* Lao: {{t|lo|ຜ້າຫົ່ມ}}\n* Latgalian: {{t|ltg|dečs}}, {{t|ltg|koudre}}\n* Latin: {{t|la|lōdix|f}}, {{t|la|strātum|n}}\n* Latvian: {{t|lv|sega|f}}\n* Laz: {{t|lzz|საბანი}}, {{t|lzz|ჲორღანი}}\n* Lenakel: {{t|tnl|pəlagkət}}\n* Lithuanian: {{t|lt|antklodė|f}}, {{t|lt|užklotas|m}}, {{t|lt|apklotas|m}}\n* Lushootseed: {{t|lut|sʔic̓əb}}\n* Macedonian: {{t|mk|ќебе|n}}\n* Malay: {{t+|ms|selimut}}\n* Malayalam: {{t|ml|പുതപ്പ്‌}}\n* Maltese: {{t|mt|kutra|f}}\n* Maori: {{t|mi|paraikete}}\n* Marathi: {{t|mr|कांबळे}}\n* Mauritian Creole: {{t|mfe|molton}}\n* Mingrelian: {{t|xmf|შქართუნი}}\n* Mongolian:\n*: Cyrillic: {{t+|mn|хөнжил}}, {{t|sh|покрѝва̄ч|m}}\n* Nanai: {{t|gld|полта}}\n* Navajo: {{t|nv|beeldléí}}\n* Nepali: {{t+|ne|कम्बल}}, {{t|ne|सिरक}}\n* Ngam: {{t|nmc|bájò}}\n* Norwegian:\n*: Bokmål: {{t+|nb|dyne|m|f}}, {{t+|nb|teppe|n}}\n* Odia: {{t+|or|କମ୍ବଳ}}\n* Ojibwe: {{t|oj|waabooyaan}}\n* Old East Slavic: {{t|orv|одѣꙗло|n}}\n* Old English: {{t|ang|hwītel|m}}\n* Ottoman Turkish: {{t|ota|بطانیه|tr=battaniye}}\n* Persian: \n*: Dari Persian: {{t|fa|کمپل|tr=kampal}}\n*: Iranian Persian: {{t+|fa|پتو|tr=patu}}\n* Plautdietsch: {{t|pdt|Dakj|f}}\n* Polish: {{t+|pl|koc|m}}\n* Portuguese: {{t+|pt|cobertor|m}}, {{t+|pt|manta|f}}, {{t+|pt|coberta|f}}\n* Quechua: {{t|qu|qata}}\n* Romanian: {{t+|ro|pătură|f}}, {{t+|ro|valtrap}}\n* Russian: {{t+|ru|одея́ло|n}}, {{t+|ru|покрыва́ло|n}}\n* Samoan: {{t|sm|palanikeke}}\n* Sanskrit: {{t+|sa|कम्बल|m}}\n* Scottish Gaelic: {{t|gd|plaide|f}}\n* Serbo-Croatian:\n*: Cyrillic: {{t|sh|ће̏бе|n}}, {{t|sh|де̏ка|f}}\n*: Roman: {{t|sh|ćȅbe|n}}, {{t+|sh|dȅka|f}}, {{t+|sh|pokrivač|m}}\n* Sicilian: {{t+|scn|cutra|f}}, {{t+|scn|cuperta|f}}\n* Slovak: {{t+|sk|deka|f}}\n* Slovene: {{t+|sl|odeja|f}}\n* Sotho: {{t+|st|kobo}}\n* Southern Altai: {{t|alt|јууркан}}\n* Spanish: {{t+|es|manta|f}} {{qualifier|Spain standard usage}}, {{t+|es|cobija|f}} {{qualifier|Central America|Colombia|Mexico|Southern Spain|Venezuela}}, {{t+|es|colcha|f}} {{qualifier|Cuba}}, {{t+|es|frazada|f}} {{qualifier|Argentina|Bolivia|Chile|Peru|Uruguay}}, {{t+|es|frisa|f}} {{qualifier|Dominican Republic|Puerto Rico}},\n* Sranan Tongo: {{t|srn|sribikrosi}}\n* Sudovian: {{t|xsv|laze|f}}\n* Svan: {{t|sva|საბა̈ნ}}, {{t|sva|შართქუ̂ინ}}\n* Swahili: {{t+|sw|blanketi}}\n* Swedish: {{t+|sv|täcke}}, {{t+|sv|filt}}\n* Sylheti: {{t|syl|ꠇꠝ꠆ꠛꠟ}}\n* Tajik: {{t|tg|курпа}}\n* Tamil: {{t+|ta|போர்வை}}\n* Taos: {{t|twf|kínemą}}, {{t|twf|pisóloną}}, {{t|twf|pəolénemą}} (Hopi)\n* Tatar: {{t+|tt|юрган}}, {{t|tt|одеял}}\n* Thai: {{t+|th|ผ้าห่ม}}\n* Tibetan: {{t|bo|ཉལ་གཟན}}\n* Turkish: {{t+|tr|battaniye}}, {{t+|tr|örtü}}\n* Turkmen: {{t|tk|ýorgan}}\n* Ukrainian: {{t+|uk|ко́вдра|f}}, {{t|uk|покрива́ло|n}}, {{t|uk|одія́ло|n}}\n* Urdu: {{t|ur|کمبل|m|tr=kambal}}\n* Uyghur: {{t|ug|ئەدىيال}}\n* Uzbek: {{t+|uz|adyol}}\n* Venetian: {{t|vec|cuerta|f}}, {{t+|vec|cuèrta|f}}\n* Vietnamese: {{t+|vi|mền}} ({{t|vi|𢅧}}), {{t+|vi|chăn}} ({{t|vi|𧜖}})\n* Vilamovian: {{t|wym|köc|m}}\n* Welsh: {{t|cy|tapin|f}}, {{t+|cy|blanced|f}}, {{t|cy|cylched|m}}, {{t|cy|gwrthban|m}}, {{t|cy|planced|f}}\n* White Hmong: {{t|mww|pam}}\n* Yakut: {{t|sah|суорҕан}}\n* Yiddish: {{t|yi|קאָלדרע|f}}, {{t|yi|דאָכענע|f}}\n* Zhuang: {{t|za|damj}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n{{trans-top|layer of anything}}\n* Bashkir: {{t|ba|ҡатлам}}\n* Bulgarian: {{t+|bg|покрива́ло|n}}, {{t+|bg|пласт|m}}\n* Finnish: {{t+|fi|peite}}\n* German: {{t+|de|Schicht|f}}, {{t+|de|Lage|f}}\n* Italian: {{t+|it|coltre|f}}, {{t+|it|mantello|m}}\n* Lithuanian: {{t|lt|apklotas|m}}\n* Norwegian:\n*: Bokmål: {{t+|nb|teppe|n}}\n* Russian: {{t+|ru|покрыва́ло|n}}, {{t+|ru|покро́в|m}}, {{t+|ru|слой|m}}, {{t+|ru|пласт|m}}\n* Spanish: {{t+|es|capa|f}}\n* Swahili: {{t+|sw|blanketi}}\n* Swedish: {{t+|sv|lager}}\n* Turkish: {{t+|tr|örtü}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n====See also====\n* {{l|en|comforter}}\n* {{l|en|doona}}\n* {{l|en|duvet}}\n* {{l|en|quilt}}\n\n===Adjective===\n{{en-adj|-}} {{tlb|en|only|_|attributive}}\n\n# General; covering or encompassing everything.\n#: {{syn|en|all-encompassing|exhaustive|Thesaurus:comprehensive}}\n#* {{quote-book|en|title=To the Golden Cities|author=Deborah Dash Moore|year=1994|passage=Another observer offered a less blanket criticism.}}\n#* {{quote-book|en|title=Sex as Crime| page=57|author=Gayle Letherby; Kate Williams; Philip Birch|year=2009|passage=Some others appear to be adopting a more blanket approach}}\n#* {{quote-book|en|title=The Best Hunting Stories Ever Told|page=428| author=Jay Cassell|year=2010|passage=Disenchanted with socialism, they unleashed free enterprise (or tried to) and backed it up with a more-or-less blanket endorsement of the old ways.}}\n#* {{quote-book|en|title=Learning and Cognition in Autism|page=187|author=Eric Schopler; Gary B. Mesibov|year=2013|passage=By contrast, any emotional or motivational explanation of autism would seem to predict too blanket a degree of social disinterest.}}\n#* {{quote-text|en|year=2017|author=Mary Kreiner Ramirez; Steven A. Ramirez|title=The Case for the Corporate Death Penalty|page=207\n|passage=The second reason offered for blanket nonprosecutions for crimes committed at the megabanks involves the possibility that such prosecutions could harm the economy.}}\n#* {{quote-journal|en|date=15 October 2021|journal=w:The Hindu|title=Stalin writes to four States CMs against blanket ban on firecrackers|url=https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/tamil-nadu/stalin-writes-to-four-states-cms-against-blanket-ban-on-firecrackers/article37004601.ece/amp/|passage=Tamil Nadu Chief Minister {{w|M.K. Stalin}} on Friday wrote to his counterparts in Delhi, Haryana, Odisha and Rajasthan urging them to reconsider the blanket ban on sale of firecrackers in their respective States.}}\n\n====Translations====\n{{trans-top|covering or encompassing everything}}\n* Bulgarian: {{t+|bg|цялостен}}, {{t+|bg|всеобхватен}}, {{t+|bg|всестранен}}\n* Dutch: {{t+|nl|allesomvattend}}\n* Finnish: {{t+|fi|kokonainen|alt=kokonais-}}, {{t|fi|yleis-}}\n* French: {{t+|fr|général}}\n* German: {{t+|de|allgemein}}, {{t+|de|umfassend}}, {{t+|de|allumfassend}}, {{t+|de|General-}}, {{t+|de|pauschal}}\n* Spanish: {{t+|es|general}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n===Verb===\n{{en-verb|((blanket<>,blanket<++>))}}\n\n# {{lb|en|transitive}} To cover with, or as if with, a blanket.\n#: {{ux|en|A fresh layer of snow blanketed the area.}}\n#* {{RQ:Shakespeare King Lear Q1|II|iii|page=45|text={{...}} / I will preſerue my ſelfe, and am bethought / To take the baſeſt and moſt pooreſt ſhape, / That euer penury in contempt of man, / Brought neare to beaſt, my face ile grime with filth, / Blanket my loynes, elſe all my haire with knots, / And with preſented nakedness outface, / The wind, and perſecution of the skie, / {{...}}}}\n#* {{RQ:Twain Huckleberry Finn|chapter=VIII|page=64|passage=I see the moon go off watch and the darkness begin to blanket the river.}}\n#* {{quote-book|en|author=Edwin Samuel|chapter=Sun in My Eyes|title=My Friend Musa and Other Stories|location=London; New York, N.Y.; Toronto, Ont.|publisher=Abelard-Schuman|year=1963|page=3|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/myfriendmusaothe00samu/page/3/mode/1up|lccn=63-12463|passage=The whole world was shut away outside in blood-red glory, as he rocked in his cradle on the immaculate sea, where the warm air blanketted him above the water sheets cold below.}}\n#* {{quote-book|en|author=Ann C. Fallon|title=Dead Ends: A James Fleming Mystery|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=w:Pocket Books|year=1992|page=127|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/deadendsjamesfle00fall/page/127/mode/1up|isbn=0-671-75134-4|passage=Leaping lightly on his back he led the grateful horse in an easy canter back to the stable where he waited and watched as the stable girl rubbed him down and blanketted him.}}\n#* {{quote-book|en|author=w:Harold Brodkey|chapter=Changing Room or What a Profane Friendship Is Like|title=Profane Friendship|location=San Francisco, Calif.|publisher=Mercury House|year=1994|page=151|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/profanefriendshi00brod_0/page/151/mode/1up|isbn=1-56279-071-4|passage=The noise of the fire silenced the seabirds. Then snow blanketted the fire. Birds sang in the snow, and I awoke.}}\n# {{lb|en|transitive}} To traverse or complete thoroughly.\n#: {{ux|en|The salesman blanketed the entire neighborhood.}}\n# {{lb|en|transitive}} To toss in a blanket by way of punishment.\n#* {{RQ:Jonson Cynthia's Revels|act=III|scene=ii|page=209|passage=Hang him, poore grogran-raſcall, pray thee thinke not of him: I’le ſend for him to my lodging, and haue him blanketted when thou wilt, man.}}\n#* {{RQ:Jonson Epicoene|act=V|scene=iiii|passage=Wee'll haue our men blanket 'hem i' the hall.}}\n# {{lb|en|transitive}} To take the wind out of the sails of (another vessel) by sailing to windward of it.\n# {{lb|en|transitive}} To nullify the impact of (someone or something).\n# Of a radio signal: to override or block out another radio signal.\n\n====Translations====\n{{trans-top|to cover}}\n* Bulgarian: {{t+|bg|покривам}}, {{t|bg|завивам (с одеяло)}}\n* Dutch: {{t+|nl|bedekken}}\n* Finnish: {{t+|fi|peittää}}\n* French: {{t+|fr|recouvrir}}, {{t+|fr|couvrir}}\n* German: {{t+|de|decken}}, {{t+|de|verdecken}}, {{t+|de|zudecken}}, {{t+|de|abdecken}}, {{t+|de|überdecken}}\n* Turkish: {{t+|tr|örtmek}}, {{t+|tr|sarmak}}, {{t+|tr|kaplamak}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n{{trans-top|to traverse or complete}}\n* Bulgarian: {{t+|bg|обхващам}}\n* Finnish: {{t+|fi|kattaa}}\n* German: {{t+|de|abdecken}}, {{t+|de|abgrasen}}, {{t+|de|durchstreifen}}\n* Turkish: {{t+|tr|kapsamak}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n\n\n==Danish== )
 * camouflage:English:Verb:Derived terms ( {{der3|en|camo|camouflageable|camouflager\n\n====Translations====\n{{trans-top|hide, disguise}}\n* Basque: {{t|eu|kamuflatu}}\n* Bulgarian: {{t+|bg|замаскирвам}}\n* Catalan: {{t+|ca|camuflar}}\n* Danish: {{t|da|camouflere}}; {{t|da|sløre}}\n* Dutch: {{t+|nl|camoufleren}}\n* Finnish: {{t|fi|naamioida}}\n* French: {{t+|fr|camoufler}}\n* Galician: {{t+|gl|camuflar}}\n* German: {{t+|de|tarnen}}\n* Hebrew: {{t|he|הסווה|tr=hisvá}}\n* Hungarian: {{t+|hu|álcáz}}\n* Irish: {{t|ga|duaithnigh}}\n* Italian: {{t+|it|camuffare}}\n* Luxembourgish: {{t|lb|camoufléieren}}\n* Maori: {{t|mi|whakatārehu}}, {{t|mi|whakatūrehu}}\n* Norwegian:\n*: Bokmål: {{t|nb|kamuflere}}, {{t|nb|maskere}}\n* Polish: {{t+|pl|maskować}}\n* Portuguese: {{t+|pt|camuflar}}\n* Romanian: {{t+|ro|camufla}}\n* Spanish: {{t+|es|camuflar}}, {{t|es|camuflajear}}\n* Swedish: {{t+|sv|kamouflera}}, {{t+|sv|maskera}}\n* Welsh: {{t|cy|cuddliwio}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n===References===\n \n\n===Further reading===\n* {{pedia}}\n* {{R:commons}}\n\n{{c|en|Appearance|Ethology|Human behaviour}}\n\n==Dutch== )
 * catch:English:Noun:Translations ( * Russian: {{t+|ru|подво́х|m}\n* Spanish: {{t+|es|pega|f}}, {{t+|es|traba|f}}, {{t+|es|truco|m}}, {{t+|es|cuestión|f}}, {{t+|es|trampa|f}}\n* Swedish: {{t+|sv|hake|c}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n{{trans-top|that which is captured or caught}}\n* Bulgarian: {{t|bg|улов|m}}\n* Catalan: {{t+|ca|captura|f}}\n* Danish: {{t|da|fangst|c}}\n* Dutch: {{t+|nl|vangst|f}}\n* Finnish: {{t+|fi|saalis}}\n* French: {{t+|fr|prise|f}}\n* Galician: {{t+|gl|presa|f}}, {{t|gl|captura|f}}, {{t|gl|redada|f}}\n* German: {{t+|de|Fang|m}}\n* Greek:\n*: Ancient: {{t|grc|ἄγρα|f}}\n* Hungarian: {{t+|hu|fogás}}\n* Ingrian: {{t|izh|saakki}}\n* Italian: {{t+|it|bottino|m}}\n* Latin: {{t+|la|captūra|f}}\n* Norwegian:\n*: Bokmål: {{t|no|fangst|m}}\n*: Nynorsk: {{t|nn|fangst|m}}\n* Portuguese: {{t+|pt|presa|f}}\n* Russian: {{t+|ru|уло́в|m}}, {{t+|ru|добы́ча|f}}\n* Spanish: {{t+|es|captura|f}}\n* Swedish: {{t+|sv|fångst|c}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n{{trans-top|the act of noticing, understanding or hearing}}\n* Bulgarian: {{t+|bg|разбиране|n}}, {{t+|bg|схващане|n}}\n* Finnish: {{t+|fi|huomio}}\n* Italian: {{t+|it|colpo|m}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n{{trans-top|the game of catching a ball}}\n* Catalan: {{t+|ca|atrapar|m}}\n* Chinese:\n*: Mandarin: {{t-needed|cmn}}\n* Danish: {{t|da|kaste bold}}\n* Estonian: {{t|et|püüdmine}}\n* Finnish: {{t|fi|kopittelu}}\n* French: {{t+|fr|arrest|m}}\n* Italian: {{t+|it|parata|f}}\n* Japanese: {{t+|ja|キャッチボール|tr=kyatchi bōru}}\n* Portuguese: {{t+|pt|defesa|f}}\n* Russian: {{t-needed|ru}}\n* Spanish: {{t+|es|captura|f}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n===Verb===\n{{en-verb|catches|catching|caught}}\n\n# {{lb|en|heading}} To capture, overtake.\n## {{lb|en|transitive}} To capture or snare (someone or something which would rather escape). {{defdate|from 13{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|I hope I catch a fish.}}\n##: {{ux|en|He ran but we caught him at the exit.}}\n##: {{ux|en|The police caught the robber at a nearby casino.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive}} To entrap or trip up a person; to deceive. {{defdate|from 14{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##* {{RQ:KJV|Mark|12|13||And they send unto him certain of the Pharisees and of the Herodians, to catch him in his words.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive|figuratively|dated}} To marry or enter into a similar relationship with.\n##* {{quote-book|en|year=1933|author=w:Sinclair Lewis|title=Ann Vickers|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=NF5JAAAAMAAJ|page=108\n|passage=The public{{...}}said that Miss Bogardus was a suffragist because she had never caught a man; that she wanted something, but it wasn't the vote.}}\n##* {{quote-book|en|year=2006|author=Michael Collier; Georgia Machemer|title=Medea|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=XKDr4vXVbvIC|page=23\n|passage=As for Aspasia, concubinage with Pericles brought her as much honor as she could hope to claim in Athens.{{...}}from the moment she caught her man, this influential, unconventional woman became a lightning rod{{nb...}}.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive}} To reach (someone) with a strike, blow, weapon etc. {{defdate|from 16{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|If he catches you on the chin, you'll be on the mat.}}\n##* {{quote-journal|en|date=September 28, 2011|author=Jon Smith|work=BBC Sport| title=Valencia 1-1 Chelsea| passage=The visitors started brightly and had an early chance when Valencia's experienced captain David Albeda gifted the ball to Fernando Torres, but the striker was caught by defender Adil Rami as he threatened to shoot.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive}} To overtake or catch up to; to be in time for. {{defdate|from 17{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|If you leave now you might catch him.}}\n##: {{ux|en|I would love to have dinner but I have to catch a plane.}}\n##* 2011 {{w|Allen Gregory}}, "Pilot" (season 1, episode 1):\n##*: Allen Gregory DeLongpre: Did anyone catch the {{w|Charlie Rose (TV series)|Charlie Rose}} the evening before last. Did you catch it? No, nothing?\n##* {{quote-journal|en|date=2014-12-05|author=w:Marina Hyde|title=Childbirth is as awful as it is magical, thanks to our postnatal ‘care’|journal=w:The Guardian|url=https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/dec/05/childbirth-postnatal-care-birth-hospital-cuts|passage=For reasons I shan’t bore you with, I got them to induce me at 39 weeks, at 10am, with the epidural going in first, and it was all a dream. {{...}} But it was all over in time for my daughter to catch the Nigeria v Argentina World Cup game that evening, during which she seemed to reckon everything was miles offside.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive}} To unpleasantly discover unexpectedly; to unpleasantly surprise (someone doing something). {{defdate|from 17{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|He was caught on video robbing the bank.}}\n##: {{ux|en|He was caught in the act of stealing a biscuit.}}\n##* {{quote-book|en|year=1952|author=w:Nikos Kazantzakis|translator=Carl Wildman|title=w:Zorba the Greek|chapter=1|original=el:Βίος και πολιτεία του Αλέξη Ζορμπά|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=w:Simon & Schuster|isbn=0671851004|page=5|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/zorbagreek0000kaza/page/4/mode/2up?q=caught|passage=Once he caught me gazing lingeringly and eagerly at him. He turned round with that mocking air he assumed when he wanted to hide his feelings.}}\n## {{senseid|en|conveyance}} {{lb|en|transitive}} To travel by means of. {{defdate|from 19{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|catch the bus}}\n##* {{RQ:Mansfield Bliss|page=273|passage=The glare, the flies, while they waited, and he and the stationmaster put their heads together over the time-table, trying to find this other train, which, of course, they wouldn't catch.}}\n##* {{quote-book|en|year=1987|author=w:A.J. Quinnell|title=In the Name of the Father|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=GJc1izYyDIkC|page=111\n|passage=After about a kilometer I caught a taxi to Santa Croce.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive|rare}} To become pregnant. (Only in past tense or as participle.) {{defdate|from 19{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##* {{quote-book|en|year=2002|author=Orpha Caton|title=Shadow on the Creek|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=GmLXMp0c3NMC|pages=102–103\n|passage=Had Nancy got caught with a child? If so she would destroy her parent's dreams for her.}}\n# {{lb|en|heading}} To seize hold of.\n## {{lb|en|transitive|dated}} To grab, seize, take hold of. {{defdate|from 13{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|I caught her by the arm and turned her to face me.}}\n##* {{RQ:Spenser Faerie Queene|book=III|canto=II|passage=Her aged Nourse, whose name was Glaucè hight, / Feeling her leape out of her loathed nest, / Betwixt her feeble armes her quickly keight {{...}}}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive}} To take or replenish something necessary, such as breath or sleep. {{defdate|from 14{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|I have to stop for a moment and catch my breath}}\n##: {{ux|en|I caught some Z's on the train.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive}} To grip or entangle. {{defdate|from 17{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|My leg was caught in a tree-root.}}\n## {{lb|en|intransitive}} To be held back or impeded.\n##: {{ux|en|Be careful your dress doesn't catch on that knob.}}\n##: {{ux|en|His voice caught when he came to his father's name.}}\n##* {{RQ:Jefferies Amateur Poacher|chapter=II|passage=Orion hit a rabbit once; but though sore wounded it got to the bury, and, struggling in, the arrow caught the side of the hole and was drawn out. Indeed, a nail filed sharp is not of much avail as an arrowhead; you must have it barbed, and that was a little beyond our skill.}}\n## {{lb|en|intransitive}} To engage with some mechanism; to stick, to succeed in interacting with something or initiating some process.\n##: {{ux|en|Push it in until it catches.}}\n##: {{ux|en|The engine finally caught and roared to life.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive}} To have something be held back or impeded.\n##: {{ux|en|I caught my heel on the threshold.}}\n## {{lb|en|intransitive}} To make a grasping or snatching motion (at). {{defdate|from 17{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|He caught at the railing as he fell.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive|of fire}} To spread or be conveyed to. {{defdate|from 18{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|The fire spread slowly until it caught the eaves of the barn.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive|rowing}} To grip (the water) with one's oars at the beginning of the stroke. {{defdate|from 19{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##* {{quote-book|en|year=1906|author=Arthur W. Stevens|title=Practical Rowing with Scull and Sweep|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=M6ICAAAAYAAJ|page=63\n|passage=Stop gathering, in that gradual fashion, and catch the water sharply and decisively.}}\n## {{lb|en|intransitive|agriculture}} To germinate and set down roots. {{defdate|from 19{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|The seeds caught and grew.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive|surfing}} To contact a wave in such a way that one can ride it back to shore.\n##* {{quote-book|en|year=2001|author=John Lull|title=Sea Kayaking Safety & Rescue|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=h5IVyQlKsL4C|page=203\n|passage=If you are surfing a wave through the rocks, make sure you have a clear route before catching the wave.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive|computing}} To handle an exception. {{defdate|from 20{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|When the program catches an exception, this is recorded in the log file.}}\n# {{lb|en|heading}} To intercept.\n## {{lb|en|transitive}} To seize or intercept an object moving through the air (or, sometimes, some other medium). {{defdate|from 16{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|I will throw you the ball, and you catch it.}}\n##: {{ux|en|Watch me catch this raisin in my mouth.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive|now|rare}} To seize (an opportunity) when it occurs. {{defdate|from 16{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##* {{RQ:Austen Sense and Sensibility||18|text=she internally resolved henceforward to catch every opportunity of eyeing the hair and of satisfying herself,{{nb...}}.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive|cricket}} To end a player's innings by catching a hit ball before the first bounce. {{defdate|from 18{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|Townsend hit 29 before he was caught by Wilson.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive|intransitive|baseball}} To play (a specific period of time) as the catcher. {{defdate|from 19{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|He caught the last three innings.}}\n# {{lb|en|heading}} To receive (by being in the way).\n## {{lb|en|transitive}} To be the victim of (something unpleasant, painful etc.). {{defdate|from 13{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|You're going to catch a beating if they find out.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive}} To be touched or affected by (something) through exposure. {{defdate|from 13{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|The sunlight caught the leaves and the trees turned to gold.}}\n##: {{ux|en|Her hair was caught by the light breeze.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive}} To become infected by (an illness). {{defdate|from 16{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|Everyone seems to be catching the flu this week.}}\n## {{lb|en|intransitive}} To spread by infection or similar means.\n##* {{RQ:Addison Cato|2|5|passage=Does the sedition catch from man to man?}}\n##* {{quote-text|en|year=1817|author=w:Mary Martha Sherwood|title=Stories Explanatory of the Church Catechism\n|passage=He accosted Mrs. Browne very civilly, told her his wife was very ill, and said he was sadly troubled to get a white woman to nurse her: "For," said he, "Mrs. Simpson has set it abroad that her fever is catching."}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive|intransitive}} To receive or be affected by (wind, water, fire etc.). {{defdate|from 18{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|The bucket catches water from the downspout.}}\n##: {{ux|en|The trees caught quickly in the dry wind.}}\n##* {{quote-book|en|year=2003|author=Jerry Dennis|title=The Living Great Lakes|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=3P8lsPL0FQQC|page=63\n|passage=the sails caught and filled, and the boat jumped to life beneath us.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive}} To acquire, as though by infection; to take on through sympathy or infection. {{defdate|from 16{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|She finally caught the mood of the occasion.}}\n##: {{ux|en|And the next thing I knew, I had caught feelings for her.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive}} To be hit by something.\n##: {{ux|en|He caught a bullet in the back of the head last year.}}\n## {{lb|en|intransitive}} To serve well or poorly for catching, especially for catching fish.\n##* {{quote-book|en|year=1877|title=Annual Report of the Ohio State Board of Agriculture| page=135| passage=The nets caught well, and Mr. Deeley reported it the best fishing ground he ever tried.}}\n## {{lb|en|intransitive|}} To get pregnant.\n##: {{ux|en|Well, if you didn't catch this time, we'll have more fun trying again until you do.}}\n# {{lb|en|heading}} To take in with one's senses or intellect.\n## {{lb|en|transitive}} To grasp mentally: perceive and understand. {{defdate|from 16{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|Did you catch his name?}}\n##: {{ux|en|Did you catch the way she looked at him?}}\n##* {{RQ:Chambers Younger Set|IX|passage=“A tight little craft,” was Austin’s invariable comment on the matron;{{nb...}}. ¶ Near her wandered her husband, orientally bland, invariably affable, and from time to time squinting sideways, as usual, in the ever-renewed expectation that he might catch a glimpse of his stiff, retroussé moustache.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive|informal}} To take in; to watch or listen to (an entertainment). {{defdate|from 20{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|I have some free time tonight so I think I'll catch a movie.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive}} To reproduce or echo a spirit or idea faithfully. {{defdate|from 17{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|You've really caught his determination in this sketch.}}\n# {{lb|en|heading}} To seize attention, interest.\n## {{lb|en|transitive}} To charm or entrance. {{defdate|from 14{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##* {{quote-book|en|year=2004|author=Catherine Asaro|title=The Moon's Shadow|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=O2Rj1kYTF1kC|page=40\n|passage=No, a far more natural beauty caught him.}}\n## {{lb|en|transitive}} To attract and hold (a faculty or organ of sense). {{defdate|from 17{{sup|th}}c.}}\n##: {{ux|en|He managed to catch her attention.}}\n##: {{ux|en|The enormous scarf did catch my eye.}}\n\n====Usage notes====\n* The older past and passive participle {{m|en|catched}} is now nonstandard.\n\n====Conjugation====\n{{en-conj|es|old=1|past=caught|past2=catched|past2_qual=note1|past_2sg_old=caughtest|past_2sg_old2=catchedst|note1=Nonstandard.}}\n\n====Synonyms====\n* {{sense|seize in motion}} fang, snatch, grab\n* {{sense|capture prey}} capture, take; snare, hook\n* {{sense|be hit}} take, get\n\n====Antonyms====\n* {{l|en|drop}}, {{l|en|release}}\n\n====Derived terms====\n{{der4|en|catch a fade|catch a stray|catch and kiss|catch colt|catch hands|catch hold|catch in 4K|catch in 4k|catch in possession|catch someone at their own game|catch someone with their pants down|catch Z's|set a thief to catch a thief\n|catchability\n|catchable\n|catch a break\n|catch a buzz\n|catch a case\n|catch a cold\n|catch a crab\n|catch a dick|catch oneself on|dog who caught the tire\n|catch a falling knife\n|catch air\n|catch-all\n|catch-allism\n|catch-all party\n|catch and kill\n|catch and release\n|catch a ride\n|catch-as-catch-can|the proverbial dog that caught the car\n|catch a square\n|catch a tan\n|catch a Tartar\n|catch a wave\n|catchee\n|catcher\n|catch flies\n|catch heat\n|catch hell\n|catch in the act\n|catch it\n|catch it in the neck\n|catch me\n|catchment\n|catch no ball\n|catch on\n|catch one's breath\n|catch one's death\n|catch one's drift\n|catch one's eyes\n|catch on fire\n|catch out\n|catch over\n|catchphrase\n|catchpit, catch pit\n|catch points\n|catch redhanded\n|catch sight of\n|catch someone napping\n|catch someone's fancy\n|catch some rays\n|catch some z's\n|catch the bus\n|catch the eye\n|catch the light\n|catch the queer\n|catch the sun\n|catch the wave\n|catch up\n|catch-up effect\n|catch wind of\n|catchword\n|catch you on the flip side\n|dog that caught the car\n|hard to catch\n|make someone hard to catch\n|throw a sprat to catch a mackerel\n|uncatch|becatch|catchball|catchcry|catchdrain|catchfart|catchfly|catchlight|catchpenny|catchpole|catchstitch|catchwater|catchweed|flycatch|howcatchem|miscatch|outcatch|overcatch|recatch\n|catch a packet|catch as catch can|catch big air|catch breath|catch cold|catch dust|catch feelings|catch fire|catch napping|catch no balls|catch red-handed|catch someone's drift|catch someone's eye|catch step|catch wreck|catch you later|catch-'em-alive-O|cony-catch|first catch your hare|you can catch more flies with honey than vinegar|you can catch more flies with honey than with vinegar|you can't catch old birds with chaff|you catch more flies with honey than vinegar|you catch more flies with honey than with vinegar|caught behind|caught between two stools|caught in the cookie jar|caught looking|caught on the hop|caught raiding the cookie jar|caught short|caught stealing|caught with one's fingers in the cookie jar|caught with one's pants down|caught with the cookie jar|dog that caught the car|don't sell the skin till you have caught the bear|not be caught dead|wouldn't be caught dead}}\n\n====Descendants====\n* {{desc|fr|catch|bor=1}}\n* {{desc|kea|bor=1}}\n** {{desc|pt|cachir|bor=1}}\n* {{desc|es|cachar|bor=1}}\n\n====Translations====\n{{trans-top|to capture or snare}}\n* Afar: {{t|aa|ibbixe}}\n* Aklanon: {{t|akl|dakop}}\n* Assamese: {{t|as|ধৰ}}, {{t|as|আয়ত্ত কৰা}}\n* Azerbaijani: {{t+|az|tutmaq}}\n* Bashkir: {{t|ba|тотоу}}\n* Belarusian: {{t|be|лаві́ць|impf}}, {{t|be|злаві́ць|pf}}, {{t|be|залаві́ць|pf}}\n* Bengali: {{t+|bn|ধরা}}\n* Bulgarian: {{t+|bg|хващам}}, {{t+|bg|улавям}}\n* Burmese: {{t+|my|ဖမ်း|sc=Mymr}}\n* Catalan: {{t+|ca|atrapar}}\n* Chechen: {{t|ce|лаца}}\n* Cherokee: {{t|chr|ᎦᏂᏱᎭ}}\n* Chinese:\n*: Cantonese: {{t|yue|捉|tr=zuk1}}\n*: Hokkien: {{t+|nan-hbl|掠|tr=lia̍h}}\n*: Mandarin: {{t+|cmn|捉|tr=zhuō}}; {{t+|cmn|捕獲|tr=bǔhuò}}, {{t+|cmn|捕|tr=bǔ}}\n* Cornish: {{t|kw|dalhenna}}\n* Czech: {{t+|cs|chytat|impf}}, {{t+|cs|chytit|pf}}\n* Danish: {{t+|da|fange}}\n* Dutch: {{t+|nl|vangen}}\n* Esperanto: {{t+|eo|kapti}}\n* Estonian: {{t|et|püüdma}}\n* Finnish: {{t+|fi|napata}}, {{t|fi|saada kiinni}}\n* French: {{t+|fr|attraper}}, {{t+|fr|prendre}}\n* Friulian: {{t|fur|cjapâ}}\n* Gallurese: {{t|sdn|aggantà}}\n* Georgian: {{t|ka|დაჭერა}}\n* German: {{t+|de|fangen}}\n* Greek: {{t+|el|πιάνω}}\n*: Ancient: {{t|grc|ζωγρέω}}\n* Haitian Creole: {{t|ht|atrap}}\n* Hebrew: {{t+|he|לָכַד|tr=lakad}}\n* Hungarian: {{t+|hu|elkap}}\n* Ido: {{t+|io|kaptar}}\n* Indonesian: {{t+|id|tangkap}}\n* Ingrian: {{t|izh|tavata}}, {{t|izh|ottaa kiin}}, {{t|izh|tavata kiin}}, {{t|izh|pyytää}}, {{t|izh|lovittaa}}\n* Ingush: {{t|inh|лаьца}}\n* Irish: {{t|ga|ceap}}, {{t|ga|beir ar}}\n* Italian: {{t+|it|agguantare}}, {{t+|it|acchiappare}}, {{t+|it|afferrare}}, {{t+|it|chiappare}}, {{t+|it|catturare}}\n* Japanese: {{t+|ja|捕らえる|tr=とらえる, toraeru|sc=Jpan}}, {{t+|ja|捕まえる|tr=つかまえる, tsukamaeru|sc=Jpan}}\n* Javanese: {{t+|jv|cekel}}\n* Latgalian: {{t|ltg|giut}}, {{t|ltg|giusteit}}, {{t|ltg|čupt}}, {{t|ltg|tvert}}\n* Latin: {{t+|la|capiō}}\n* Latvian: {{t|lv|ķert}}, {{t|lv|tvert}}\n* Lombard: {{t+|lmo|ciappà}}, {{t+|lmo|ciapà}}\n* Malay: {{t+|ms|tangkap}}\n* Mansaka: {{t|msk|dakup}}\n* Maore Comorian: {{t|swb|para|alt=upara}}\n* Maori: {{t|mi|hāhā}} {{qualifier|referring to the breath}}\n* Maranao: {{t|mrw|dakep}}\n* Marathi: {{t|mr|पकडणे}}\n* Ngazidja Comorian: {{t|zdj|zingara|alt=uzingara}}\n* Norwegian: {{t+|no|fange}}\n* Old English: {{t|ang|fōn}}\n* Old Javanese: {{t|kaw|cĕkĕl}}, {{t|kaw|tangkeb}}\n* Ottoman Turkish: {{t|ota|طوتمق|tr=tutmak}}\n* Polish: {{t+|pl|łapać|impf}}, {{t+|pl|złapać|pf}}, {{t+|pl|schwytać|pf}}\n* Portuguese: {{t+|pt|pegar}}, {{t+|pt|capturar}}, {{t+|pt|apanhar}}, {{t+|pt|pilhar}}\n* Quechua: {{t|qu|jap'iy}}\n* Romanian: {{t+|ro|prinde}}\n* Romansch: {{t|rm|tschiffar}}\n* Russian: {{t+|ru|лови́ть|impf}}, {{t+|ru|пойма́ть|pf}}\n* Saho: {{t|ssy|ibbirhe}}\n* Sardinian:\n*: Campidanese: {{t|sc|aggaffài}}\n*: Logudorese: {{t|sc|aggarrare}}\n* Sassarese: {{t|sdc|agguantà}}\n* Scottish Gaelic: {{t|gd|glac}}\n* Serbo-Croatian: {{t+|sh|uhvatiti|pf}}\n* Sicilian: {{t+|scn|acchiappari}}\n* Slovak: {{t|sk|chytať|impf}}, {{t|sk|chytiť|pf}}, {{t|sk|lapať|impf}}, {{t|sk|lapiť|pf}}\n* Sorbian:\n*: Lower Sorbian: {{t|dsb|łojś|impf}}\n* Spanish: {{t+|es|capturar}}, {{t+|es|agarrar}}, {{t+|es|atrapar}}, {{t+|es|pillar}}\n* Swedish: {{t+|sv|fånga}}\n* Sylheti: {{t|syl|ꠗꠞꠣ}}\n* Tajik: {{t|tg|капидан}}\n* Tamil: {{t+|ta|பிடி}}\n* Turkish: {{t+|tr|kapmak}}\n* Tày: {{t|tyz|cặp}}\n* Ukrainian: {{t+|uk|лови́ти|impf}}, {{t|uk|пійма́ти|pf}}, {{t|uk|злови́ти|pf}}\n* Venetian: {{t|vec|ciapar}}\n* Vietnamese: {{t+|vi|bắt}}\n* Welsh: {{t+|cy|dal}}\n* Western Bukidnon Manobo: {{t|mbb|dakep}}\n* Yagnobi: {{t|yai|капак|tr=kapak}}\n* Yiddish: {{t|yi|כאַפּן}}\n* Yucatec Maya: {{t|yua|chuk}}\n* Zazaki: {{t|zza|groten}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n{{trans-top|to intercept an object in the air etc.}}\n* Arabic: {{t+|ar|أَمْسَكَ}}, {{t|ar|مَسَكَ}}\n*: Hijazi Arabic: {{t|acw|مسك|tr=masak, misik}}\n* Armenian: {{t+|hy|բռնել}}\n* Assamese: {{t|as|ধৰা}}\n* Azerbaijani: {{t+|az|tutmaq}}\n* Bashkir: {{t|ba|тотоу}}, {{t|ba|эләктереү}}\n* Basque: {{t|eu|harrapatu}}\n* Belarusian: {{t|be|лаві́ць|impf}}, {{t|be|злаві́ць|pf}}, {{t|be|залаві́ць|pf}}\n* Bulgarian: {{t+|bg|хващам}}, {{t+|bg|улавям}}\n* Burmese: {{t+|my|ဖမ်း|sc=Mymr}}\n* Cebuano: {{t|ceb|dakup}}\n* Cherokee: {{t|chr|ᎦᏂᏱᎭ}}\n* Chinese:\n*: Cantonese: {{t|yue|接|tr=zip3}}\n*: Mandarin: {{t+|cmn|捕|tr=bǔ}}, {{t+|cmn|抓住|tr=zhuāzhù}}, {{t+|cmn|抓|tr=zhuā}}\n* Cornish: {{t|kw|cachya}}\n* Czech: {{t+|cs|chytit}}, {{t+|cs|chytnout}}\n* Danish: {{t+|da|fange}}\n* Dutch: {{t+|nl|vangen}}\n* Finnish: {{t+|fi|pyydystää}}, {{t+|fi|ottaa kiinni}}, {{t+|fi|napata}}, {{t+|fi|siepata}}\n* French: {{t+|fr|attraper}}\n* Georgian: {{t|ka|დაჭერა|sc=Geor}}\n* German: {{t+|de|fangen}}\n* Hebrew: {{t+|he|תָּפַס|tr=tafás}}\n* Hindi: {{t+|hi|पकड़ना}}\n* Ingrian: {{t|izh|tavata}}, {{t|izh|ottaa kiin}}, {{t|izh|tavata kiin}}, {{t|izh|pyytää}}, {{t|izh|lovittaa}}\n* Irish: {{t|ga|beir ar}}\n* Italian: {{t+|it|afferrare}}, {{t+|it|prendere}}\n* Japanese: {{t+|ja|捕まえる|tr=tsukamaeru}}, {{t+|ja|捕る|tr=toru}}\n* Korean: {{t+|ko|잡다}}\n* Luxembourgish: {{t|lb|fänken}}\n* Marathi: {{t|mr|पकडणे}}\n* Old English: {{t|ang|fōn}}\n* Persian: {{t+|fa|گرفتن|tr=gereftan}}\n* Polish: {{t+|pl|łapać|impf}}, {{t+|pl|złapać|pf}}, {{t+|pl|chwytać|impf}}, {{t+|pl|chwycić|pf}}\n* Portuguese: {{t+|pt|pegar}}, {{t+|pt|capturar}}\n* Romanian: {{t+|ro|prinde}}\n* Russian: {{t+|ru|лови́ть|impf}}, {{t+|ru|пойма́ть|pf}}\n* Slovene: {{t|sl|ujeti}}\n* Sorbian:\n*: Lower Sorbian: {{t|dsb|łojś|impf}}\n* Spanish: {{qualifier|Latin America}} {{t+|es|atajar}}, {{qualifier|football}} {{t+|es|cazar}}\n* Swahili: {{t+|sw|daka}}\n* Swedish: {{t+|sv|fånga}}, {{t+|sv|fatta}} {{qualifier|dated}}\n* Sylheti: {{t|syl|ꠗꠞꠣ}}\n* Ukrainian: {{t+|uk|лови́ти|impf}}, {{t|uk|пійма́ти|pf}}\n* Urdu: {{t|ur|پکڑنا|tr=pakaṛnā|sc=ur-Arab}}\n* Vietnamese: {{t+|vi|chụp}}, {{t+|vi|chộp}}\n* Welsh: {{t+|cy|dal}}\n* Yiddish: {{t|yi|כאַפּן}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n{{trans-top|to contract a disease or illness}}\n* Azerbaijani: {{t|az|yoluxmaq}}, {{t|az|tutulmaq}}, {{t+|az|tutmaq}}\n* Bashkir: {{t|ba|йоҡтороу}}, {{t|ba|эләктереү}}\n* Bulgarian: {{t+|bg|хващам}}\n* Chinese:\n*: Mandarin: {{t|cmn|染上}}, {{t+|cmn|罹患}} \n* Danish: {{t+|da|få}}\n* Dutch: {{t+|nl|oplopen}}, {{t+|nl|krijgen}}\n* Esperanto: {{t|eo|ricevi}}\n* Finnish: {{t+|fi|saada}}\n* French: {{t+|fr|attraper}}, {{qualifier|colloquial}} {{t+|fr|choper}}\n* German: {{t+|de|einfangen}}\n* Hungarian: {{t+|hu|elkap}}\n* Japanese: {{t+|ja|罹る|tr=kakaru}}\n* Khmer: {{t|km|ផ្តាសាយ}}, {{t+|km|កើត}}\n* Latin: {{t|la|nanciscor}}\n* Malay: {{t-needed|ms}}\n* Russian: {{t+|ru|подхва́тывать|impf}}, {{t+|ru|подхвати́ть|pf}}, {{t+|ru|подцепля́ть|impf}}, {{t+|ru|подцепи́ть|pf}}\n* Spanish: {{t+|es|pillar}}, {{t+|es|coger}}, {{t+|es|agarrar}}\n* Thai: {{t-needed|th}}\n* Ukrainian: {{t|uk|заража́тися|impf}}, {{t|uk|зарази́тися|pf}}, {{t|uk|підхо́плювати|impf}}, {{t|uk|підхопи́ти|pf}}\n* Vietnamese: {{t+|vi|mắc}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n{{trans-top|to perceive and understand}}\n* Azerbaijani: {{t|az|qavramaq}}\n* Bashkir: {{t|ba|төшөнөү}}, {{t|ba|аңлау}}\n* Basque: {{t|eu|harrapatu}}\n* Bulgarian: {{t+|bg|схващам}}\n* Chinese:\n*: Mandarin: {{t+|cmn|明白|tr=míngbái}}\n* Cornish: {{t|kw|convedhes}}\n* Czech: {{t+|cs|zachytit}}\n* Danish: {{t+|da|forstå}}, {{t|da|opfatte}}, {{t|da|begribe}}\n* Dutch: {{t+|nl|snappen}}, {{t+|nl|begrijpen}}\n* Finnish: {{t+|fi|käsittää}}, {{t+|fi|ymmärtää}}\n* French: {{t+|fr|suivre}}\n* German: {{t+|de|verstehen}}, {{t+|de|begreifen}}\n* Hebrew: {{t+|he|תָּפַס|tr=tafás}}\n* Japanese: {{t+|ja|分かる|tr=わかる, wakaru|sc=Jpan}}, {{t+|ja|理解|tr=りかいする, rikai suru|alt=理解する|sc=Jpan}}\n* Marathi: {{t|mr|समझणे}}\n* Norwegian:\n*: Bokmål: {{t+|nb|forstå}}, {{t|nb|få med seg}}, {{t+|nb|oppfatte}}, {{t+|nb|begripe}}\n* Polish: {{t+|pl|dostrzegać|impf}}, {{t+|pl|dostrzec|pf}}, {{t+|pl|ogarniać|impf}} {{qualifier|slang}}, {{t+|pl|ogarnąć|pf}} {{qualifier|slang}}\n* Portuguese: {{t+|pt|entender}}, {{t+|pt|compreender}}, {{t+|pt|captar}}, {{t+|pt|sacar}} {{qualifier|slang}}\n* Russian: {{t+|ru|схва́тывать|impf}}, {{t+|ru|схвати́ть|pf}}, {{t+|ru|понима́ть|impf}}, {{t+|ru|поня́ть|pf}}, {{t+|ru|расслы́шать|pf}}\n* Slovene: {{t|sl|ujeti}}\n* Spanish: {{qualifier|Chile|informal}} {{t+|es|cachar}}, {{t+|es|captar}}, {{t+|es|comprender}}\n* Swedish: {{t+|sv|fatta}} {{qualifier|colloquial}}, {{t+|sv|uppfatta}}, {{t+|sv|förstå}}, {{t+|sv|begripa}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n{{trans-top|to seize an opportunity}}\n* Czech: {{t+|cs|chytit}}, {{t+|cs|chytnout}}\n* Danish: {{t|da|gribe}}\n* Dutch: {{t+|nl|grijpen}}\n* Finnish: {{t+|fi|tarttua}}\n* French: {{t+|fr|prendre}}\n* Russian: {{t+|ru|ухвати́ться|pf}}\n* Swedish: {{t+|sv|gripa}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n{{trans-top|to reach in time to leave}}\n* Azerbaijani: {{t+|az|yetişmək}}, {{t+|az|çatmaq}}, {{t|az|özünü çatdırmaq}}\n* Bashkir: {{t|ba|өлгөрөү}}\n* Bulgarian: {{t+|bg|хващам}}\n* Burmese: {{t+|my|စီး|sc=Mymr}}\n* Czech: {{t+|cs|chytit}}, {{t+|cs|chytnout}}\n* Danish: {{t+|da|nå}}\n* Dutch: {{t+|nl|halen}}\n* Finnish: {{t+|fi|ehtiä}}\n* German: {{t+|de|bekommen}}, {{qualifier|colloquial}} {{t+|de|erwischen}}\n* Hebrew: {{t+|he|תפס|tr=tafás}}\n* Irish: {{t+|ga|faigh}}\n* Polish: {{t+|pl|zdążyć|pf}}, {{t|pl|załapać się|pf}}\n* Slovene: {{t|sl|ujeti}}\n* Sorbian:\n*: Lower Sorbian: {{t|dsb|załapiś|pf}}\n* Swedish: {{t+|sv|hinna}}\n* Welsh: {{t+|cy|dal}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n{{trans-top|to engage, stick, or grasp}}\n* Bulgarian: {{t|bg|закачам се}}\n* Czech: {{t+|cs|chytit}} se, {{t+|cs|chytnout}} se\n* Finnish: {{t+|fi|tarttua}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n{{trans-top|to handle a computer error, especially an exception}}\n* Finnish: {{t+|fi|siepata}}\n* French: {{t+|fr|intercepter}}\n* Italian: {{t+|it|intercettare}}\n* Polish: {{t|pl|przechwycać|impf}}, {{t|pl|przechwycić|pf}}\n* Portuguese: {{t+|pt|capturar}}\n* Spanish: {{t+|es|capturar}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n{{checktrans-top|could be any sense}}\n* Indonesian: {{t+check|id|tangkap}}, {{t+check|id|sergap}}\n* Japanese: {{t+check|ja|捕まる|tr=つかまる, tsukamaru|sc=Jpan}}, {{t+check|ja|捕まえる|tr=つかまえる, tsukamaeru|sc=Jpan}}\n* Norman: {{t-check|nrf|happer}} {{qualifier|Jersey}}\n* Romanian: {{t+check|ro|prinde}}\n* Spanish: {{t+check|es|atrapar}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n===References===\n \n\n\n\n\n==French== )
 * cavitate:English:Verb:Derived terms ( {{col-auto|en|noncavitated|uncavitated|recavitate||noncavitating|supercavitate]]\n\n====Related terms====\n* cavitation\n\n===Anagrams===\n* {{anagrams|en|a=aaceittv|activate}}\n\n==Interlingua== )
 * decemmillia:Latin:Numeral ( <!--\n== Decemmillia == )
 * feng shui:English:Noun ( #* {{quote-book|en|author=w:Helen Fielding|chapter=Saturday, 11 November|chapterurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=l5jMNzr-CnYC&pg=PT171|title=Bridget Jones’s Diary|location=London|publisher=Picador|year=1996|isbn=978-0-330-37163-6|location2=London|publisher2=w:Penguin Books|year2=1999 (2010 printing)|isbn2=978-1-101-19954-1|passage=Thought this might be the perfect time to do the Feng Shui so went out and bought {{w|Cosmopolitan (magazine)|Cosmopolitan]]. Carefully, using the drawing in Cosmo, I mapped the ba-gua of the flat. Had a flash of horrified realization. There was a wastepaper basket in my Helpful Friends Corner. No wonder bloody Tom had disappeared.}}\n#* {{quote-book|en|author=Andrew Grzeskowiak|chapter=The Work Environment|editor=Barbara Szerlip|title=Passport Hong Kong: Your Pocket Guide to Hong Kong Business, Customs & Etiquette|series=Passport to the World|location=San Rafael, Calif.|publisher=World Trade Press|year=1996|page=34|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=njNQ_dojWaYC&pg=PA34|isbn=978-1-885073-31-0|passage=No office building, store, residence or place of worship is built in Hong Kong without first consulting a feng shui man. [...] According to tradition, every structure in China rests on some part of the Earth Dragon, over which flows Heaven-Earth-Air currents. A feng shui professional consults these currents to determine on which part of the Dragon a building rests.}}\n#* {{quote-web|en|date=January 31, 1997|author=Charles Hutzler|title=Leader’s office hunt a lesson in arcana and parking problems| archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20230419180820/https://apnews.com/article/9a76b63bd81ad69f6063a03f1133da26| work=w:AP News| url2=https://archive.is/ygjGw| text=The Chinese believe feng shui, pronounced fung shway, can help blunt the ill effects to health and wealth brought on, for example, by the inauspicious jut of an adjacent building or hill.}}\n#* {{quote-book|en|author=Graham Parkes|chapter=Winds, Waters, and Earth Energies: Fengshui and Awareness of Place|editors=w:Helaine Selin; Arne Kalland|title=Nature across Cultures: Views of Nature and the Environment in Non-Western Cultures|series=Science across Cultures: The History of Non-Western Science|seriesvolume=4|location=Dordrecht|publisher=Kluwer Academic Publishers|year=2003|page=186|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=pPqPBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA186|doi=10.1007/978-94-017-0149-5|isbn=978-90-481-6271-0|passage=[A] large number of people in the United States and Western Europe are paying fengshui "experts" large sums of money to align their expensive coffee tables with their even more expensive sofas, in the hope of bringing more wealth, and perhaps some happiness, into their already affluent households. This seems a gross perversion of the basic spirit of fengshui – which would say that happiness, and certainly some wealth, would come more easily if these people simply sold off all the furniture and other clutter that's obstructing their contact with their natural surroundings.}}\n#* {{quote-book|en|author=Richard Webster|chapter=The Bathroom|title=101 Feng Shui Tips for Your Home|location=St. Paul, Minn.|publisher=Llewellyn Publishers|year=2004|page=93|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=zQPDeRLgWOwC&pg=PA93|isbn=978-1-56718-809-7|passage=The toilet and bathroom are extremely important rooms in the house as they are places where water (money) drains away. The ch'i should be allowed to flow smoothly in and out of these rooms without impediment. Consequently, overly ornate bathrooms are not good from a feng shui point of view as they tend to hold the ch'i inside the room.}}\n#* {{quote-book|en|author=Michael Y. Mak; Albert T. So|chapter=Case Studies: Sustainable Design and Feng Shui|title=Scientific Feng Shui for the Built Environment: Fundamentals and Case Studies|location=Hong Kong|publisher=City University of Hong Kong Press|year=2011|page=153|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=nQAojhhfBxoC&pg=PA153|column=1|isbn=978-962-937-178-4|passage=As can be seen, there are similarities and differences between sustainable design and Feng Shui concepts. From the analysis, the sustainable design concepts aimed at the creation of enjoyable space for human interactions and balance between the natural and the built environment, can be identified with the Feng Shui concepts of unity of heaven and humanity, and the Yin and Yang harmony.}}\n# {{lb|en|colloquial}} The state of having a space in a particular order, though not necessarily in accordance with any actual principles of the Chinese system of geomancy.\n\n====Alternative forms====\n* {{l|en|Feng Shui}}\n* {{l|en|fengshui}}\n* {{l|en|feng-shui}}\n\n====Synonyms====\n* {{l|en|fung shui}} {{q|Hong Kong}}\n\n====Translations====\n{{trans-top|system of spiritual energies present in the natural features of landscapes}}\n* Chinese:\n*: Mandarin: {{t+|cmn|風水|tr=fēngshuǐ}}\n* Macedonian: {{t|mk|фенг шу́и|m}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n{{trans-top|ancient Chinese system of geomancy used to design buildings and graves, and to determine the spatial arrangement of things}}\n* Arabic: {{t|ar|فِنْغ شُوي|m}}\n* Chinese:\n*: Cantonese: {{t|yue|風水|tr=fung1 seoi2}}\n*: Hokkien: {{t+|nan-hbl|風水|tr=hong-súi}}\n*: Mandarin: {{t+|cmn|風水|tr=fēngshuǐ}}\n* Dutch: {{t+|nl|feng shui|m|n}}\n* Hebrew: {{t|he|פנג שווי}}\n* Hungarian: {{t+|hu|fengshui}}\n* Indonesian: {{t+|id|fengsui}}, {{t|id|hongsui}}\n* Japanese: {{t+|ja|風水|tr=ふうすい, fūsui}}\n* Kazakh: {{t|kk|фың-шұй}}\n* Korean: {{t|ko|풍수(風水)}}\n* Macedonian: {{t|mk|фенг шу́и|m}}\n* Russian: {{t+|ru|фэншу́й|m}}, {{t+|ru|фэн-шу́й|m}}\n* Tagalog: {{t|tl|punsoy}}\n* Thai: {{t+|th|ฮวงจุ้ย}}\n* Vietnamese: {{t+|vi|phong thủy}} ({{t|vi|風水}})\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n===Verb===\n{{en-verb|nolinkhead=1}}\n\n# {{lb|en|transitive}} To arrange a space according to the rules of feng shui.\n#: {{ux|en|I’m going to have my bedroom feng shuied. Maybe this will finally bring me good luck.}}\n#* {{quote-book|en|author=John A. Barnett|chapter=Out Publicly: The Professional and Personal of Gay Public Librarianship|editor=James V[inson] Carmichael, Jr.|title=Daring to Find Our Names: The Search for Lesbigay Library History|series={{w|Beta Phi Mu}} Monograph Series|seriesvolume=no. 5|location=Westport, Conn.; London|publisher=Greenwood Press|year=1998|page=217|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=hfr7Us7PhGkC&pg=PA217|isbn=978-0-313-29963-6|issn=1041-2751|passage=Library school seemed like gay intellectual paradise to me. After years of unsplitting infinitives and feng shui-ing misplaced modifiers, I sheathed my editor's blue pencil and prepared to sharpen my mind.}}\n#* {{quote-book|en|author=Richard Webster|chapter=Health|title=Feng Shui for Success & Happiness|location=St. Paul, Minn.|publisher=Llewellyn Publishers|year=1999|pages=55–56|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=q5y0FK8wPdEC&pg=PA55|isbn=978-1-56718-815-8|passage=[...] I have seen all these things, and much more, in homes I have been asked to feng shui. It is not surprising that the health of people living in environments such as these are ultimately affected.}}\n#* {{quote-book|en|author=w:Douglas Coupland|chapter=|title=w:JPod|location=London|publisher=Bloomsbury|year=2006|isbn=978-0-7475-8677-7|edition2=paperback|location2=New York, N.Y.|publisher2=Bloomsbury USA|year2=2007|page2=206|pageurl2=https://books.google.com/books?id=Vl6SfXaeeQEC&pg=PA209|isbn2=978-1-59691-105-5|passage=Your brother just found me this great house in West Van—up on the hill. [...] It's got a commanding city view, two karaoke rooms and it's been feng-shuied by a Grand Master.}}\n#* {{quote-book|en|author=Sophie Keller|chapter=Introduction|title=How Happy is Your Home?: 50 Great Tips to Bring More Health, Wealth and Joy into Your Home|location=Don Mills, Ont.|publisher=w:Harlequin Enterprises|year=2011|page=xi|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=KivTKsCeK60C&pg=PR11|isbn=978-0-373-89248-8|passage=Now, I'm not saying that this man met his wife solely because I feng shuied his house or that my client was offered a job purely because of the fresh flowers, but you would be surprised at how many times I hear similar stories from people whose places I have feng shuied.}}\n#* {{quote-book|en|author=w:Molly Harper|title=Better Homes and Hauntings|edition=1st paperback|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=w:Pocket Books|month=July|year=2014|page=82|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=cpAZAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA82|isbn=978-1-4767-0600-9|passage="Nina?" Cindy touched her arm. "You OK?" / "Oh, no." Nina put her hands up in a warding-off gesture. "Uh, I was just feng shuied last week.}}\n\n====Translations====\n{{trans-top|to arrange a space according to the rules of feng shui}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n====See also====\n* {{l|en|interior decoration}}\n\n===References===\n \n\n===Further reading===\n* {{pedia}}\n\n\n\n==Dutch== )
 * gall:Irish:Further reading ( {{C|ga|People}\n\n==Middle Irish== )
 * istak:Pipil:Adjective (# [[white]\n\n===Further reading===\n* Campbell, L. (1985). The Pipil Language of El Salvador. Mouton De Gruyter.\n* Lara-Martínez, R., McCallister, R. Glosario cultural náwat pipil y nicarao.\n\n==Tocharian B==)
 * karma:Icelandic:Etymology 1:Noun:Declension ( {{is-decl-noun-n-w|k|a|rm|pl=-}\n\n===Etymology 2===\n\n====Noun====\n{{head|is|noun form}}\n\n# {{inflection of|is|karmur||indef|acc|p}}\n# {{inflection of|is|karmur||indef|gen|p}}\n\n==Indonesian== )
 * lana:Hawaiian:Etymology 1:Verb ( # {{lb|haw|stative|to float, drift\n# {{lb|haw|stative|of blood}} to circulate, be circulating\n# {{lb|haw|stative}} to want, have hopes\n# {{lb|haw|stative}} to be aware of sounds as one wakes up\n#: {{usex|haw|lana ka hiamoe|t=waking from sleep}}\n\n===Etymology 2===\n{{lbor|haw|la|rāna}}, possibly introduced by {{w|List of missionaries to Hawaii#Roman Catholic|Catholic missionaries}}.\n\n====Noun====\n{{head|haw|noun}}\n\n# frog\n#: {{syn|haw|poloka}}\n\n===References===\n \n\n{{C|haw|Amphibians}}\n\n==Ido== )
 * mayon(n)aise:French ( <!--\n==English== )
 * quadravigesimal:English:See also ( <!--==Catalan==\n\n===Adjective===\n{{ca-adj|mf}}\n\n# {{l|en|quadravigesimal}}\n\n===Noun===\n{{ca-noun|m}}\n\n# {{l|en|quadravigesimal}}\n\n==Portuguese== )
 * serene:English:Etymology 1:Adjective ( #* 1908, {{w|Andy Adams, Reed Anthony, Cowman\n#*: I took train and reached Wichita, where my active partner was awaiting me. He had just returned from the Medicine River, and reported everything serene.\n# {{lb|en|archaic}} Fair and unclouded (as of the sky); clear; unobscured.\n#* {{RQ:Pope Pastorals|year=1717|title=Winter|page=30|passage=Now ſleeping flocks on their ſoft fleeces lie, / The moon, ſerene in glory, mounts the sky, {{...}}}}\n#* {{RQ:Gray Elegy|page=32|passage=Full many a gem of pureſt ray ſerene / The dark unfathom'd caves of ocean bear: {{...}}}}\n#* {{RQ:Mary Shelley Frankenstein|chapter=VI|passage=A serene sky and verdant fields filled me with ecstasy.}}\n# {{non-gloss definition|Used as part of certain titles, originally to indicate sovereignty or independence.}}\n#: {{ux|en|Her Serene Highness}}\n\n=====Derived terms=====\n* {{l|en|all serene}}\n* {{l|en|drop serene}}\n* {{l|en|sereneness}}\n* {{l|en|serenity}}\n\n=====Translations=====\n{{trans-top|peaceful, calm}}\n* Armenian: {{t+|hy|խաղաղ}}, {{t+|hy|անդորր}}\n* Aromanian: {{t|rup|sirin}}\n* Belarusian: {{t|be|ціхамі́рны}}, {{t+|be|спако́йны}}\n* Bulgarian: {{t+|bg|спокоен}}, {{t+|bg|тих}}\n* Catalan: {{t+|ca|serè}}\n* Cebuano: {{t|ceb|tin-od}}, {{t|ceb|tinong}}\n* Chinese:\n*: Mandarin: {{t+|cmn|平靜|tr=píngjìng}}, {{t+|cmn|寧靜|tr=níngjìng}}, {{t+|cmn|安詳|tr=ānxiáng}}\n* Czech: {{t+|cs|klidný|m}}\n* Dalmatian: {{t|dlm|saran}}\n* Dutch: {{t+|nl|sereen}}\n* Finnish: {{t+|fi|seesteinen}}, {{t+|fi|rauhallinen}}, {{t+|fi|tyyni}}\n* French: {{t+|fr|serein|m}}, {{t+|fr|sereine|f}}\n* Friulian: {{t|fur|seren}}\n* German: {{t+|de|gelassen}}, {{t+|de|ruhig}}\n* Hungarian: {{t+|hu|derűs}}\n* Indonesian: {{t+|id|tenteram}}\n* Italian: {{t+|it|sereno}}\n* Japanese: {{t+|ja|静か|tr=しずかな, shizuka na|alt=静かな|sc=Jpan}}, {{t+|ja|平静|tr=へいせいな, heisei na|alt=平静な|sc=Jpan}}\n* Korean: {{t+|ko|고요하다}}\n* Latin: {{t|la|serēnus}}\n* Macedonian: {{t|mk|спо́коен}}, {{t|mk|ти́вок}}\n* Norwegian: {{t+|no|fredelig}}\n* Occitan: {{t+|oc|seren}}\n* Polish: {{t+|pl|spokojny}}, {{t+|pl|opanowany}}, {{t+|pl|niewzruszony}}\n* Portuguese: {{t+|pt|sereno}}\n* Romanian: {{t+|ro|senin}}\n* Russian: {{t+|ru|безмяте́жный}}, {{t+|ru|споко́йный}}\n* Sardinian: {{t|sc|assulenu}}, {{t|sc|selenu}}\n* Spanish: {{t+|es|sereno}}\n* Swedish: {{t+|sv|fridfull}}, {{t+|sv|lugn}}\n* Ukrainian: {{t+|uk|безтурбо́тний}}, {{t|uk|спокі́йний}}\n* Walloon: {{t+|wa|etait|m}}, {{t+|wa|etaite|f}}, {{t+|wa|påjhire|m|f}}, {{t+|wa|li cour etait}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n{{trans-top|fair and unclouded}}\n* Armenian: {{t+|hy|հստակ}}, {{t+|hy|ջինջ}}, {{t+|hy|պարզ}}, {{t+|hy|պայծառ}}, {{t+|hy|անամպ}}\n* Aromanian: {{t|rup|sirin}}\n* Bulgarian: {{t+|bg|ясен}}, {{t+|bg|безоблачен}}\n* Cebuano: {{t|ceb|tilha}}\n* Chinese:\n*: Mandarin: {{t-needed|cmn}}\n* Finnish: {{t+|fi|seesteinen}}, {{t+|fi|pilvetön}}, {{t+|fi|kirkas}}\n* French: {{t+|fr|serein|m}}, {{t+|fr|sereine|f}}\n* Italian: {{t+|it|sereno}}\n* Japanese: {{t+|ja|晴れる|tr=はれた, hareta|alt=晴れた|sc=Jpan}}\n* Latin: {{t|la|serēnus}}\n* Macedonian: {{t|mk|ве́дар}}, {{t|mk|чист}}, {{t|mk|ја́сен}}, {{t|mk|безо́блачен}}\n* Polish: {{t+|pl|pogodny}}\n* Portuguese: {{t+|pt|sereno}}\n* Romanian: {{t+|ro|senin}}\n* Russian: {{t+|ru|чи́стый}}, {{t+|ru|безо́блачный}}, {{t+|ru|я́сный}}\n* Spanish: {{t+|es|sereno}}\n* Walloon: {{t+|wa|clair|m}}, {{t+|wa|claire|f}}, {{t|wa|sins ene barbôjhe}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n{{trans-top|part of royal title}}\n* Chinese:\n*: Mandarin: {{t-needed|cmn}}\n* Czech: {{t+|cs|jasný|m}}\n* Finnish: {{t+|fi|kuninkaallinen}}, {{t+|fi|keisarillinen}} {{qualifier|etc., according to the rank of the dignitary}}\n* Macedonian: {{t|mk|све́тлост|f}}\n* Polish: {{t|pl|najjaśniejszy}}\n* Russian: {{t+|ru|светлость|n}}\n* Spanish: {{t+|es|sereno}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n{{checktrans-top}}\n* Italian: {{t+check|it|sereno|m}}, {{t+check|it|serena|f}}\n* Latin: {{t-check|la|serenus}}\n{{trans-bottom}}\n\n====Verb====\n{{en-verb}}\n\n# {{lb|en|transitive}} To make serene.\n#* {{RQ:Philips Cyder|page=68|passage=The Hoary Froſts, and Northern Blaſts take care / Thy muddy Bev'rage to ſerene, and drive / Præcipitant the baſer, ropy Lees.}}\n#* {{RQ:Thomson Spring|year=1768|page=34|lines=866–867|passage=When heaven and earth, as if contending, vye / To raiſe his being, and ſerene his ſoul.}}\n\n====Noun====\n{{en-noun}}\n\n# {{lb|en|poetic}} Serenity; clearness; calmness.\n#* {{RQ:Southey Thalaba|||the serene of heaven}}\n#* {{quote-text|en|year=1742|author=w:Edward Young|title=Night Thoughts on Life, Death and Immortality\n|passage=To their master is denied / To share their sweet serene.}}\n\n===Etymology 2===\n{{bor+|en|frm|serein}}, from {{der|en|fro|serein||evening}}, from {{der|en|VL.|*serānum}}, from substantive use of {{m|la|sērum}}, neuter of {{m|la|sērus||late}} + {{m|la|-ānus}} suffix.\n\n====Noun====\n{{en-noun}}\n\n# {{senseid|en|rain}} A fine rain from a cloudless sky after sunset.\n#* {{RQ:Jonson Volpone|passage=Some serene blast me.}}\n\n=====Alternative forms=====\n* {{alt|en|serein}}\n* {{alt|en|serena||obsolete}}\n\n===References===\n* Oxford English Dictionary. serein n. 1.\n\n===Anagrams===\n* {{anagrams|en|a=eeenrs|reseen|resene}}\n\n{{C|en|Rain}}\n\n\n==Dutch== )
 * мук:Bulgarian:Pronunciation ( {{examples|examples={{audio|bg|Mudchute cow 1.ogg|text=мук на крава}}\n* {{bg-IPA|мук}}\n* {{rhymes|bg|uk|s=1}}\n\n===Noun===\n{{bg-noun|мук|m}}\n\n# moo {{gloss|call of ungulates, typically cows or deers}}\n\n====Declension====\n{{bg-ndecl|мук}}\n\n====Related terms====\n* {{l|bg|му́кам}} {{q|factitive}}, {{l|bg|муча́||to moo}} {{q|iterative}}\n* {{l|bg|му́ка||cow}} {{q|colloquial|children's language}}\n\n===References===\n* {{R:bg:RBE}}\n* {{R:bg:Gerov|мукъ|91|3}}\n* {{R:bg:BER|мук|309|4}}\n\n==Russian== )
 * супа:Bulgarian:Noun ( {{bg-noun|су́па|f}\n\n# soup\n#: {{synonyms|bg|бульо́н|чорба́}}\n#: {{uxi|bg|Пи́лешка су́па.|Chicken soup.}}\n\n====Declension====\n{{bg-ndecl|су́па<>}}\n\n===References===\n* {{R:bg:RBE}}\n* {{R:bg:RBE2}}\n\n{{C|bg|category}}\n\n==Macedonian== )
 * مقیم:Persian:Further reading ( * {{R:fa:Dehkhoda}\n\n==Urdu== )
 * ܬܡܢ:Assyrian Neo-Aramaic:Adverb ( {{attn|tru|We consider Central Neo-Aramaic a family, not a language. Is this Mlahsö or Turoyo?}}<!--\n==Central Neo-Aramaic== )
 * ვაჟი:Georgian:Further reading ( <!--\n\n==Old Georgian== )
 * ფანტელი:Georgian:References ( <!--\n\n==Laz== )
 * 追撃:Japanese:References ( <!--\ntodo: move to 追擊\n\n==Korean== )