English
Etymology
From Middle English wildenes, wildenesse, equivalent to wild + -ness.
Noun
wildness (countable and uncountable, plural wildnesses)
- the quality of being wild or untamed
Translations
the quality of being wild or untamed
- Armenian: վայրենություն (hy) (vayrenutʻyun)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 蓬蒿 (zh) (pénghāo)
- Finnish: villiys (fi)
- French: sauvagerie (fr) f
- Georgian: ველურობა (veluroba)
- Greek: αγριάδα (el) f (agriáda), αγρίεμα (el) n (agríema)
- Ancient: ἀγριότης f (agriótēs)
- Hindi: वहशत (hi) f (vahśat)
- Ido: sovajeso
- Irish: ainscian f, ainsciantacht f, alltacht f, báiní f, díscire f, dúchas m, fiántas m, fiatacht f, garbhántacht f, gealtacht f, iargúltacht f, scéin f
- (deprecated template usage)
{{trans-mid}}
- Italian: ferinità (it) f, sfrenatezza f, selvaticità f, scapestrataggine f, selvatichezza f
- Japanese: 野性 (やせい, yasei)
- Korean: 野性 (ko) (yaseong, 야성)
- Latin: feritas f, torvitās f
- Romanian: sălbăticie (ro) f
- Russian: ди́кость (ru) f (díkostʹ)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: бе̑с m, бије̑с m
- Roman: bȇs (sh) m, bijȇs (sh) m
- Spanish: bravura (es) f, desenfreno (es) m
- Urdu: وحشت (ur) f (vahśat)
|
Anagrams