English
Etymology
project + -or
Noun
projector (plural projectors)
- An optical device that projects a beam of light, especially one used to project an image (or moving images) onto a screen.
- (dated) A person who devises or manages projects; a planner.
- (psychology) One who projects, or ascribes his/her own feelings to others.
- 1982, The Gestalt Journal (volume 5, page 44)
- Projectors attempt to get rid of unwanted feelings, only it does not work; they still experience the unwanted feelings […]
- (mathematics) An operator that forms a projection
Translations
optical device
- Afrikaans: projektor
- Arabic:
- Gulf Arabic: بروجكتر m (brōjiktar, prōjiktar)
- Catalan: projector (ca) m
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 放映機/放映机 (zh) (fàngyìngjī), 放映机 (zh) (fàngyìngjī)
- Czech: projektor m
- Dutch: projector (nl)
- Finnish: piirtoheitin (fi), projektori (fi)
- French: projecteur (fr) m
- Galician: proxector m
- German: Projektor (de) m
- Greek: προβολέας (el) m (provoléas)
- Hungarian: projektor, vetítő
- Icelandic: skjávarpi m
- Japanese: プロジェクター (purojekutā), 映写機 (えいしゃき, eishaki)
- (deprecated template usage)
{{trans-mid}}
- Maori: pūwhiti
- Norman: projecteux m
- Polish: rzutnik (pl) m, projektor (pl) m
- Portuguese: (Brazil) projetor m, (Portugal) projector m
- Russian: прое́ктор (ru) m (proéktor)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: про̀јектор m
- Roman: pròjektor (sh) m
- Slovene: projektor m
- Spanish: proyector (es) m
- Swedish: projektor (sv) c
- Turkish: yansıtım aygıtı (tr), gösterici (tr), projektör (tr)
- Welsh: taflunydd
|
Portuguese
Noun
projector m (plural es)
- Alternative form of projetor