|
|
1. (n.) debility
a weakened or enfeebled state; weakness.
2. debility
a handicap or disability.
Etymology: (1425–75; late ME debylite < MF debilite < L dēbilitās=dēbil(is) weak +-itās -ity)
|
| Definition of 'debility' |
Princeton's WordNet |
|
1. (noun) infirmity, frailty, debility, feebleness, frailness, valetudinarianism
the state of being weak in health or body (especially from old age)
|
| Definition of 'debility' |
Webster Dictionary |
|
1. (adj) debility
the state of being weak; weakness; feebleness; languor
|
|
|
Sense: bodily weakness
Despite his debility, he leads a normal life.
|
Afrikaans: swakte, kragteloosheid |
Arabic: وَهْن، ضَعْف |
Bulgarian: слабост |
Brazilian: debilidade |
Czech: slabost, ochablost, vyčer |
German: die Schwäche |
Danish: svækkelse; svaghed |
Greek: αδυναμία |
Spanish: debilidad |
Estonian: kehanõrkus |
Farsi: ناتوانی؛ ضعف |
Finnish: heikkous |
French: faiblesse |
Hebrew: חוּלשָׁה |
Hindi: दुर्बलता, कमजोरी |
Croatian: slabost, mlohavost |
Hungarian: gyengeség |
Indonesian: kelemahan |
Icelandic: veiklun |
Italian: debolezza |
Japanese: 衰弱 |
Korean: 약함, 쇠약 |
Lithuanian: išsekimas |
Latvian: vājums; vārgums; nespēks |
Malay: kelemahan |
Dutch: zwakte |
Norwegian: svekkelse, svakhet |
Polish: osłabienie |
Persian: ناتوانی؛ ضعف |
Pashto: كمزورتيا، ضعيف والى، ناتو |
Portuguese: debilidade |
Romanian: slăbiciune |
Russian: слабость |
Slovak: slabosť, chabosť |
Slovenian: oslabelost |
Serbian: slabost |
Swedish: svaghet, kraftlöshet |
Thai: ความอ่อนแอ |
Turkish: zayıflık, takatsizlik |
Taiwanese: 衰弱 |
Ukrainian: слабкість, безсилля |
Urdu: جسمانی کمزوری |
Vietnamese: sự suy nhược |
Chinese: 衰弱 |
Get even more translations for debility...
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Alternative search options for 'debility' |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|