Noun
pest (plural pests)
- (now rare) A pestilence, i.e. a deadly epidemic, a deadly plague.
2020 March 24, Qing Zhu, Zhang Ming, “Amid Coronavirus Pandemic, China Faces Plague of Locusts”, in Minghui:From the perspective of traditional Chinese culture, pests and famines are reflections of the current administration’s lack of moral values and deviation from divine will. The head of the administration (the emperor in the past) would then issue an edict to sincerely repent and correct his wrongdoings.
- Any destructive insect that attacks crops or livestock; an agricultural pest.
- An annoying person, a nuisance.
- An animal regarded as a nuisance, destructive, or a parasite, vermin.
- An invasive weed.
Translations
plague
- Bulgarian: чума (bg) f (čuma)
- Catalan: pesta (ca) f, plaga (ca) f
- Cornish: pla m, plag m
- Dutch: pest (nl), plaag (nl)
- French: peste (fr)
- German: Seuche (de) f, Pest (de) f
- Greek: πανούκλα (el) f (panoúkla), μάστιγα (el) f (mástiga), πληγή (el) f (pligí), λοιμός (el) m (loimós)
- Indonesian: pes (id)
- Irish: plá f
- Macedonian: чу́ма (mk) f (čúma)
- Ottoman Turkish: طاعون (taʼun)
- Polish: plaga (pl) f, zaraza (pl) f, epidemia (pl) f
- Portuguese: peste (pt) f
- Romanian: pestă (ro) f
- Russian: чума́ (ru) f (čumá), мор (ru) m (mor)
- Scottish Gaelic: plàigh f
- Spanish: peste (es) f, pestilencia (es) f, epidemia (es) f
- Swedish: pest (sv) c
- Tagalog: angol, taping (animal)
- Walloon: pesse (wa)
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destructive insect
- Armenian: վնասատու (hy) (vnasatu), վնասատու կենդանի (vnasatu kendani), ուտիճ (hy) (utič)
- Belarusian: шко́днік m (škódnik)
- Bulgarian: вредител (bg) m (vreditel)
- Cornish: pla m
- Danish: skadedyr (da)
- Dutch: pest (nl), plaag (nl)
- Estonian: kahjur (et)
- Finnish: tuhoeläin (fi)
- French: peste (fr) f, nuisible (fr) m
- Georgian: მავნებელი (mavnebeli)
- German: Schädling (de) m
- Icelandic: meindýr n
- Italian: parassita (it) m
- Macedonian: штеточина f (štetočina)
- Maori: orotā, kīrearea
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: skadedyr n
- Nynorsk: skadedyr n
- Polish: szkodnik (pl) m, insekt (pl) m
- Portuguese: peste (pt) f
- Russian: вреди́тель (ru) m (vredítelʹ)
- Sardinian: errebiu m
- Scottish Gaelic: plàigh f
- Serbo-Croatian: štetòčina (sh) f, štȅtnīk (sh) m
- Swedish: skadedjur (sv) n
- Turkish: haşere (tr)
- Ukrainian: шкідни́к m (škidnýk)
- Volapük: minimil (vo), (animal) dämabanim, (diminutive) dämabanimil, (insect) dämabanäsäk, (plant) dämabaplan
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annoying person
- Bulgarian: досадник m (dosadnik)
- Cornish: mab an pla m, myrgh an pla f
- Danish: plage (da), plageånd, pestilens
- Dutch: lastpak (nl) n
- Finnish: maanvaiva, kiusankappale (fi), kiusanhenki
- French: peste (fr) f
- German: Nervensäge (de) f, Quälgeist (de) m
- Greek: ζιζάνιο (el) n (zizánio)
- Irish: crá croí m
- Maori: orotā, nanakia, pōrearea
- Navajo: doo yildinii
- Plautdietsch: Onjenieech n, Ploag f
- Polish: utrapieniec (pl) m
- Portuguese: peste (pt) m or f
- Russian: вреди́тель (ru) m (vredítelʹ), парази́т (ru) m (parazít)
- Scottish Gaelic: plàigh f
- Serbo-Croatian: dosadnjáković m, dosàdnjāk (sh) m
- Spanish: moscardón (es) m
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Anagrams
- EPTs, ESTP, PETs, STEP, Sept, Sept., TPEs, Teps, pets, sept, sept-, spet, step, step-
References
- Chyet, Michael L. (2003) “pest”, in Kurdish–English Dictionary, with selected etymologies by Martin Schwartz, New Haven and London: Yale University Press, page 442
References
- “pest” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
Noun
pest m (definite singular pesten, indefinite plural pestar, definite plural pestane)
pest f (definite singular pesta, indefinite plural pester, definite plural pestene)
- a plague
- sky (noko/nokon) som pesten - avoid (something/someone) like the plague
- velje mellom pest og kolera - choose the lesser of two evils
References
- “pest” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.
Noun
pẹ̑st f
- (anatomy) fist
Inflection
More information Feminine, i-stem, long mixed accent, nom. sing. ...
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Noun
pest c
- A plague
- A pest; something deeply annoying