English
Etymology
From (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Middle English weyfarere, equivalent to way + farer. Compare Old English weġfarend (“wayfarer, traveler”).
Noun
wayfarer (plural wayfarers)
- A traveller, especially one on foot.
- A type of glasses, with pointed ends and rounded bottoms.
Translations
traveller
- Arabic: please add this translation if you can
- Armenian: ճանապարհորդ (hy) (čanaparhord), (colloquial, dialectal) ճամփորդ (hy) (čampʻord), ուղևոր (uġewor)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 旅行者 (zh) (lǚxíng zhě)
- Czech: poutník (cs) m, pocestný m
- Dutch: reiziger (nl) m
- Finnish: kulkija (fi)
- French: voyageur (fr) m
- German: Wandersmann (de)
- Hungarian: utazó (hu), vándor (hu)
- Irish: rianaí m
- (deprecated template usage)
{{trans-mid}}
- Italian: viaggiatore (it) m, viandante (it) m or f
- Japanese: 旅人 (ja) (tabibito), トレッカー (torekkā)
- Latin: viātor m, viātrix f
- Latvian: ceļinieks m, ceļotāja f
- Macedonian: патник m (patnik)
- Polish: wędrowiec (pl) m
- Portuguese: viajante (pt)
- Russian: пу́тник (ru) m (pútnik), стра́нник (ru) m (stránnik)
- Spanish: caminante (es) m or f
- Swedish: vägfarande
- Welsh: fforddolyn m
|