Translation "jad" to English

jad{masculine}
bitterness · chagrin · deplorability · deplorableness · disaster · distress · misery · shagreen · sorrow · vexation · woe · wretchedness
jadac{masculine}
furcula · wishbone
jadan{adjective}
calamitous · crumby · deplorable · deprived · forlorn · miserable · miserly · out at elbows · paltry · piteous · pitiable · poor · rueful · sad · shabby · sordid · sorry · squalid · woebegone · woeful · wretched
Jadan ja!{exclamation}
Ah me!
jadati se{verb}
squawk
jadičac{masculine}{botanics}
autumn crocus
jadikovan{adjective}
moanful

jad

masculineIPA: / jad /
Definition and meaning

Beda.

Translate 'jad' into
English translation

bitterness

nounIPA: / bɪtərnəs /

ETYM AS. biternys; biter better + -nys = -ness.
1. A sharp and bitter manner; SYN. acrimony, acerbity, jaundice.
2. The property of having a harsh unpleasant taste; SYN. bitter.

How do I get beyond the bitterness and the sadness and the lethargy and watching an inordinate amount of television as I eat ice cream?
Source: TED2020
I allowed my anger, my bitterness, my grief to simmer a while, and then I made up my mind that I was going to make a different world, and we can do that together."
Source: TED2020
Bitterness and revenge are not part of my character. Life's too short. One shouldn't spend time on bitterness and revenge.
Source: Tatoeba

chagrin

nounIPA: / ʃaɡʁˈɛ̃ /

ETYM French, from chagrin shagreen, a particular kind of rough and grained leather; also a rough fishskin used for graters and files; hence (Fig.), a gnawing, corroding grief. Related to Shagreen.
Strong feelings of embarrassment; SYN. humiliation, mortification.
Disappointment, annoyance; vexation.

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Affluence leads to chagrin.
Source: Tatoeba
And we designed a special screw, a custom screw, much to the chagrin of our investors.
Source: TED2020
The winner this year was South Africa, much to the chagrin of San Francisco.
Source: TED2020

deplorability

noun

Lamentableness, quality of being regrettable

deplorableness

noun

Quality of being regrettable; scandalousness, wretchedness

disaster

nounIPA: / dɪzæstər /

ETYM French désastre; pref. dés- (Latin dis-) + astre star, from Latin astrum; a word of astrological origin. Related to Aster, Astral, Star.
An act that has disastrous consequences.

Because it doesn't take Harvard or MIT to fly in and fix problems after a disaster; it takes a local.
Source: TED2020
Like the time I was in Sichuan Province and I was singing for kids in relocation schools in the earthquake disaster zone.
Source: TED2020
The government asked the army to send a disaster relief mission to Okinawa.
Source: Tatoeba

distress

noungrammarIPA: / dɪstres /

ETYM Old Eng. destresse, distresse, Old Fren. destresse, destrece, French détresse, Old Fren. destrecier to distress, (assumed) Late Lat. districtiare, from Latin districtus, p. p. of distringere. Related to Distrain, Stress.
(Irregular plural: distresses).
1. A strong feel
ing of anxiety; SYN. worry, trouble.
2. Psychological suffering; SYN. hurt, suffering.
3. The seizure and holding of property as security for payment of a debt or satisfaction of a claim; SYN. distraint.

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Her death was a great distress to all the family.
Source: Tatoeba
Okay, let's say a bullet is about to hit a beautiful damsel in distress.
Source: TED2020
It's actually a pretty recent phenomenon that we feel that we have to talk to someone to understand their emotional distress.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: distraint · hurt · suffering

misery

nounIPA: / mɪzəri /

ETYM Old Eng. miserie, Latin miseria, from miser wretched: cf. French misère, Old Fren. also, miserie.
1. A feeling of intense unhappiness.
2. A state of ill-being due to affliction or misfortune; SYN. wretchedness.

If they hope to make us yield by hitting us, they're wrong. Shame on the timid who are afraid! But more shame on the cowards who profit from our misery.
Source: Tatoeba
Free yourself of sadness, misery and fear!
Source: Tatoeba
I had nothing left but misery.
Source: Tatoeba

Synonyms: miserableness · wretchedness

shagreen

nounclothingIPA: / ʃæɡriːn /

Green dyed untanned leather; untanned leather bearing many small round protuberances, especially dyed green; shark-skin.

sorrow

nounIPA: / sɑːroʊ /

ETYM Old Eng. sorwe, sorewe, sorge, as. sorg, sorh; akin to Dutch zorg care, anxiety, os. sorga, Old High Germ. sorga, soraga, suorga, German sorge, Icel., Swed., and Dan. sorg, Goth. saúrga; of unknown origin.
1. A
n emotion of great sadness associated with loss or bereavement.
2. Sadness associated with some wrong done or some disappointment; SYN. regret, ruefulness.

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I have come to think it's one of the most powerful brain systems on Earth for both great joy and great sorrow.
Source: TED2020
Do I talk about sorrow? Displacement?
Source: TED2020
Once a life of happiness and joy and suddenly, pain and sorrow.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: grief · regret · rue · ruefulness · sadness · sorrowfulness

vexation

nounIPA: / vɛksasjˈɔ̃ /

ETYM Latin vexatio: cf. French vexation.
1. The act of vexing, or the state of being vexed; agitation; disquiet; trouble; irritation.
2. The caus
e of trouble or disquiet; affliction.
3. A harassing by process of law; a vexing or troubling, as by a malicious suit.

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woe

nounIPA: / woʊ /

ETYM Old Eng. wo, wa, woo, AS. wâ, interj.; akin to Dutch wee, OS. and Old High Germ. wê, German weh, Icel. vei, Dan. vee, Swed. ve, Goth. wai; cf. Latin vae, Greek. Related to Wail.
Intense mournfulness; SYN. woefulness.

Woe to the vanquished.
Source: Tatoeba
And I said, My leanness, my leanness, woe unto me! The treacherous have dealt treacherously; yea, the treacherous have dealt very treacherously.
Source: Tatoeba
A Buddhist scholar I know once explained to me that Westerners mistakenly think that nirvana is what arrives when all your woe is behind you, and you have only bliss to look forward to.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: suffering · woefulness

wretchedness

nounIPA: / retʃədnəs /

Misery, woefulness, poverty; contemptibleness, meanness

Your brain is searching to find an explanation for those sensations in your body that you experience as wretchedness, just like you did with the blobby image.
Source: TED2020
You wake up and as you're emerging into consciousness, you feel this horrible dread, you know, this real wretchedness, and immediately, your mind starts to race.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: miserableness · misery

jadac

masculineIPA: / jadats /
English translation

furcula

nounanatomyIPA: / fyʁkylˈa /

ETYM Latin, a forked prop, dim. of furca a fork.
A forked bone formed by the fusion of the clavicles of most birds.

wishbone

nounIPA: / wˈɪʃbə͡ʊn /

1. The furcula of a domestic fowl; SYN. wishing bone.
2. A variation of the T formation in which the halfbacks line up farther from the line of scrimmage than the fullback does

So, I had this wishbone, and I thought, it's kind of like a cowboy who's been on his horse for too long.
Source: TED2020
And because the wishbone is bone it's animal it's sort of a point where I think we can enter into it.
Source: TED2020
This next one here, "Machine with Wishbone," it came about from playing with this wishbone after dinner.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: wishing bone

jadan

adjectiveIPA: / jadan /
Definition and meaning

Bedan, čemeran.

Translate 'jadan' into
English translation

calamitous

adjectiveIPA: / kəlæmətəs /

ETYM Latin Calamitosus; cf. French calamiteux.
1. Suffering calamity; wretched; miserable.
2. Producing, or attended with distress and misery; m
aking wretched; wretched; unhappy. SYN. Miserable; deplorable; distressful; afflictive; grievous; baleful; disastrous.

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The pivotal, calamitous day during which the dinosaurs were wiped out, setting the stage for the modern world as we know it didn't have to be.
Source: TED2020
In this multibillion dollar enterprise that simple rubber O-ring made the difference between mission success and the calamitous death of seven astronauts.
Source: TED2020
It's calamitous.
Source: Tatoeba

Synonyms: black · disastrous · fatal · fateful · unfortunate

crumby

adjectiveIPA: / krəmbi /

Crummy.

deplorable

adjectiveIPA: / deploʁˈabl /

ETYM Cf. French déplorable.
1. Of very poor quality or condition; SYN. execrable, miserable, woeful, wretched.
2. Very bad; SYN. distressing, lamentable, pitiful, sad, sorry.

So we knew the numbers were deplorable, and it was manifesting itself in our own organization.
Source: TED2020
The road is in a deplorable state.
Source: Tatoeba
I'm not complaining, and until now no one else has complained either, even if the work conditions are truly deplorable.
Source: Tatoeba

deprived

adjectiveIPA: / dəpraɪvd /

Marked by deprivation especially of the necessities of life or healthful environmental influences; SYN. disadvantaged.

But it's not just my kid that's being deprived of sleep.
Source: TED2020
No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his property.
Source: Tatoeba
Slavery, the treatment of human beings as property, deprived of personal rights, has occurred in many forms throughout the world.
Source: TED2020

forlorn

adjectiveIPA: / fərlɔːrn /

ETYM Old Eng., p. p. of forlesen to lose utterly, AS. forleósan (p. p. forloren); pref. for- + leósan (in comp.) to lose; cf. Dutch verliezen to lose, German verlieren, Swed. förlora, Dan. forloren, Goth. fraliusan to lose. Related to For-, and Lorn, Lose.
Marked by or showing hopelessness.

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The character only needs to stand on a balcony, look forlorn, and walk back inside the house.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: hopeless

miserable

adjectiveIPA: / mizeʁˈabl /

ETYM French misérable, Latin miserabilis, from miserari to lament, pity, from miser wretched. Related to Miser.
1. Characterized by physical misery; SYN. wretched.
2. Very unhappy; full of misery; SYN. suffering, wretched.

I've spent my life working on extremely miserable people, and I've asked the question: How do extremely miserable people differ from the rest of you?
Source: TED2020
But if you have a perfectly awful life, and you feel miserable all the time, the way you feel is commensurate with your life, and it doesn't occur to you to think, "Maybe this is treatable."
Source: TED2020
And they try to pinpoint what it is that sets them apart from their miserable neighbors and friends.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: abject · contemptible · deplorable · execrable · hapless · inferior · low · low-down · meager · meagerly · meagre · measly · misfortunate · paltry · pathetic · piteous · pitiable · pitiful · poor · scrimpy · scummy · scurvy · stingy · suffering · uncomfortable · unfortunate · unhappy · woeful · wretched

miserly

adjectiveIPA: / maɪzərli /

Of, relating to, or characteristic of a miser; especially; marked by grasping meanness and penuriousness

Because Tom, who didn't have his key with him, was too miserly to ring the locksmith, he broke into his own flat.
Source: Tatoeba
Tom is miserly.
Source: Tatoeba
But America, generous with second chances to the children of other lands, today grows miserly with first chances to the children of its own.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: mean · mingy · stingy · tight · ungenerous

out at elbows

adjectiveIPA: / ˈaʊt ət ˈelboʊz /

1. Shabbily dressed
2. Short of funds

paltry

adjectiveIPA: / pɒltri /

Poor in number or in quality; worthless; pitiful; trifling

And that means we still spend a paltry amount on these issues: nuclear nonproliferation, geoengineering, biorisk, artificial intelligence safety.
Source: TED2020
They now have 29,000 ethanol pumps this versus 700 in the U.S., and a paltry two in California and in three years their new car fleet has gone from four percent to 85 percent flex-fuel.
Source: TED2020
Which makes you wonder: What does it say about the human mind that we can find such paltry evidence to be compelling enough to convict a man?
Source: TED2020

piteous

adjectiveIPA: / pɪtiəs /

ETYM Old Eng. pitous, Old Fren. pitos, French piteux. Related to Pity.
1. Fitted to excite pity or sympathy; wretched; miserable; lamentable; sad.
2.
Paltry; mean; pitiful.
3. Evincing pity, compassion, or sympathy; compassionate; tender.
4. Arousing or deserving pity.

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Poor piteous reasoning. Weak beyond contempt your haughty minds!
Source: Tatoeba
She was in a piteous state.
Source: Tatoeba

Synonyms: hapless · miserable · misfortunate · pathetic · pitiable · pitiful · poor · unfortunate · wretched

pitiable

adjectiveIPA: / pɪtiəbl̩ /

ETYM Cf. Old Fren. pitiable, French pitoyable.
1. Deserving pity; worthy of, or exciting, compassion.
2. Of a kind to evoke mingled pity and contempt especially because of inadequacy.

So that is a pitiable state of affairs.
Source: TED2020
Out of all the attributes of the gods, the one I find most pitiable is their inability to commit suicide.
Source: Tatoeba
It is a pathetic little second-rate substitute for reality a pitiable flight from life.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: contemptible · hapless · miserable · misfortunate · pathetic · piteous · pitiful · poor · unfortunate · wretched

poor

adjectiveIPA: / pʊr /

(Homonym: pore, pour).
1. Having little money or few possessions.
2. Characterized by or indicating lack of money.
3. Badly supplied with desirable qualities or substances.
4. Low in degree.
5. Unsatisfactory.

And for me, it's very shocking to see sometimes very poor people, for example, not supporting the idea of the rich being taxed more.
Source: TED2020
Another possibility is the division of humankind into different biological castes, with the rich being upgraded into virtual gods, and the poor being degraded to this level of useless people.
Source: TED2020
I had resolved to steal one yen to go see it, but we were poor and there was no way I would find one yen to steal around our house.
Source: Tatoeba

Synonyms: poor people · bad · beggarly · broke · bust · deficient · destitute · hapless · hard up · hardscrabble · impecunious · impoverished · in straitened circumstances · inadequate · indigent · insufficient · mean · miserable · misfortunate · moneyless · necessitous · needy · pathetic · penniless · penurious · pinched · piteous · pitiable · pitiful · poverty-stricken · resourceless · short · skint · slummy · stone-broke · stony-broke · underprivileged · unfortunate · unprovided for · wretched

rueful

adjectiveIPA: / ruːfəl /

1. Causing one to rue or lament; woeful; mournful; sorrowful.
2. Expressing sorrow.

sad

adjectiveIPA: / sæd /

1. Experiencing or showing or causing sorrow or unhappiness
2. Expressive of sorrow
3. Exemplary of misfortune

Layla is a sad widow.
Source: Tatoeba
The Iraqis: yes, they got rid of Saddam Hussein, but when they saw their land occupied by foreign forces they felt very sad, they felt that their dignity had suffered.
Source: TED2020
He interpreted the whole situation as sad.
Source: TED2020

shabby

adjectiveIPA: / ʃæbi /

Mean and unworthy and despicable

A shabby man named Estragon, sits near a tree at dusk and struggles to remove his boot.
Source: TED2020
My car looks shabby in comparison with his new one.
Source: Tatoeba
So, that's going to look pretty shabby now.
Source: TED2020

sordid

adjectiveIPA: / sɔːrdəd /

ETYM Latin sordidus, from sordere to be filthy or dirty; probably akin to Eng. swart: cf. French sordide. Related to Swart.
Meanly avaricious and mercenary.

But even more important, is to curb the curiosity to mine for the sordid details Where were you? Where did you do it?
Source: TED2020
There are some millennials, for instance, who think the whole business is just sordid.
Source: TED2020
Can you understand why they have to pig it in one sordid room?
Source: Tatoeba

sorry

adjectiveIPA: / sɑːri /

1. Grieved for the loss of some good; pained for some evil; feeling regret
2. Melancholy; dismal; gloomy; mournful.
3. Poor; insufficient; worthless

I'm sorry. I didn't mean to scare you.
Source: Tatoeba
So while I'm talking to you, the seats you are sitting on are currently emitting some invisible and odorless toxic gas. Sorry for that. So you are currently breathing formaldehyde.
Source: TED2020
At least you can decide whether it goes left or Before you do it, for the people down in simulcast Nicholas Negroponte: Sorry! I forgot. CA: Just show it off a bit.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: bad · blue · cheerless · compassionate · dark · deplorable · depressing · dingy · disconsolate · dismal · dispiriting · distressing · drab · drear · dreary · gloomy · good-for-naught · good-for-nothing · grim · lamentable · meritless · no-account · no-count · no-good · penitent · pitiful · pitying · regretful · repentant · sad · uncheerful · worthless

squalid

adjectiveIPA: / skwɑːləd /

ETYM Latin squalidus, from squalere to be foul or filthy.
1. Dirty through neglect; foul; filthy; extremely dirty.
2. Morally repulsive.

Synonyms: dirty · disreputable · flyblown · seamy · seedy · sleazy · soiled · sordid · unclean

woebegone

adjectiveIPA: / woʊbɪɡɒn /

Affected by or full of grief or woe; SYN. woeful.

woeful

adjectiveIPA: / woʊfəl /

1. Full of woe; grievous
2. Involving or bringing woe
3. Lamentably bad or serious; deplorable

And then the lover, Sighing like furnace, with a woeful ballad Made to his mistress’ eyebrow.
Source: TED2020
In fact, so woeful was our telephone service that a Member of Parliament stood up in 1984 and complained about this.
Source: TED2020
Our roads are in a woeful condition.
Source: Tatoeba

wretched

adjectiveIPA: / retʃəd /

1. Very miserable; sunk in, or accompanied by, deep affliction or distress, as from want, anxiety, or grief.
2. Worthless; paltry; very poor or mean; miserable.
3. Hatefully contemptible; despicable; wicked.

I'd like all of you to pause for a moment, you wretched weaklings, and take stock of your miserable existence.
Source: TED2020
He's in a wretched condition.
Source: Tatoeba
And these whatever our wretched beliefs is a religious matter, it's a spiritual matter.
Source: TED2020

Jadan ja!

exclamationIPA: / jadan ja! /
English translation

Ah me!

exclamationIPA: / ˈɑː ˈmiː! /

jadati se

verbIPA: / jadati se /
Definition and meaning

Vajkati se.

Translate 'jadati se' into
Words nearby

jagorčevina · jagorčika · jaguar · jad · jadan · Jadan ja! · jadati se · jadac · jadikovanje · jadikovan · jadikovati · jadikovka · jadikuje · jadičac · jadnik · jadno

English translation

squawk

verbIPA: / skwɒk /

To utter a harsh abrupt scream; SYN. screak, skreak, skriech, skreigh, scriech, screech.

E: [Operatic squawk] SW: Very good.
Source: TED2020
I mean, if you can talk it, a mockingbird can squawk it.
Source: TED2020
When Finn let out a squawk, Benandonner’s attention was drawn to the gigantic baby in the corner.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: beef · bellyache · crab · gripe · grouse · holler · screak · screech · skreak · skreigh

jadičac

masculinebotanicsIPA: / jaditʃats /
English translation

autumn crocus

nounbotanicsIPA: / ˈɒtəm ˈkroʊkəs /

Bulbous autumn-flowering herb with white, purple or lavender-and-white flowers; native to western and central Europe; SYN. meadow saffron, naked lady, Colchicum autumnale.
Any member of the genus Colchicum, family Liliaceae. One species, the mauve mead
ow saffron C. autumnale, yields colchicine, which is used in treating gout and in plant breeding (it causes plants to double the numbers of their chromosomes, forming polyploids).

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Synonyms: Colchicum autumnale · meadow saffron · naked lady

jadikovan

adjectiveIPA: / jadikoʋan /
Words nearby

jad · jadan · Jadan ja! · jadati se · jadac · jadikovanje · jadikovan · jadikovati · jadikovka · jadikuje · jadičac · jadnik · jadno

English translation

moanful

adjective

Similar words to "jad"

jagoda · jastuče · jastučić · jato · jaukati · jahati · jahta · jačati · jed · jedić · jezuit · Jeste! · jesti · jeti · jecati · ječati · jidiš · jod · jodat · jota
Translation may not be correct. Examples are from unreviewed external source.