English
Etymology
seasick + -ness.
Pronunciation
Noun
seasickness (usually uncountable, plural seasicknesses)
- Nausea, dizziness etc caused by the motion of a ship; a form of motion sickness.
Hypernyms
Coordinate terms
Translations
a feeling of nausea caused by the motion of a ship
- Arabic: دُوَار اَلْبَحْر m (duwār al-baḥr)
- Armenian: ծովախտ (hy) (covaxt)
- Belarusian: марская хвароба f (marskaja xvaróba)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 暈船/晕船 (zh) (yùnchuán), 晕船 (zh) (yùnchuán)
- Czech: mořská nemoc (cs) f
- Danish: søsyge (da)
- Finnish: merisairaus (fi)
- French: mal de mer (fr) m, naupathie (fr) f
- German: Seekrankheit (de) f, Naupathie f
- Greek: ναυτία (el) f (naftía)
- Ancient: ναυσία f (nausía)
- Hebrew: מחלת ים \ מַחֲלַת יָם (he) f (makhalát yam)
- Hungarian: tengeribetegség (hu)
- Icelandic: sjóveiki (is) f
- Italian: mal di mare (it) m, naupatia f
- Japanese: 船酔い (ふなよい, funayoi)
- Korean: 뱃멀미 (baet-meolmi)
- (deprecated template usage)
{{trans-mid}}
- Latvian: jūras slimība
- Maori: mate moana
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: sjøsyke m, sjøsjuke m
- Nynorsk: sjøsjuke m or f
- Polish: choroba morska (pl) f
- Portuguese: enjoo marítimo m
- Russian: морска́я боле́знь (ru) f (morskája boléznʹ), кинето́з m (kinetóz)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: морска болест f, кинетоза f
- Roman: morska bolest f, kinetoza (sh) f
- Slovak: morská choroba (sk) f
- Spanish: mareo (es) m
- Swedish: sjösjuka (sv) c
- Tagalog: lula, pagkalula, sawan
- Ukrainian: морська хвороба f (morsʹka xvoroba)
- Volapük: melamaläd
- Yiddish: ים־קראַנקײַט f (yam-krankayt)
|