|
|
1. (n.) juggler
a person who performs juggling feats, as with balls or knives.
2. juggler
a person who deceives by trickery; trickster.
Etymology: (bef. 1100; ME jogelour, jugelour < AF, OF jogleor, jougleor (cf. jongleur ) &indirdesc; L joculātor jester =joculā(rī)+-tor -tor)
|
| Definition of 'juggler' |
Princeton's WordNet |
|
1. (noun) juggler
a performer who juggles objects and performs tricks of manual dexterity
|
|
|
1. (noun) juggler
sb who entertains by juggling
jugglers and street performers
|
| Definition of 'juggler' |
Webster Dictionary |
|
1. (noun) juggler
one who practices or exhibits tricks by sleight of hand; one skilled in legerdemain; a conjurer
2. (noun) juggler
a deceiver; a cheat
|
|
|
Sense: to keep throwing in the air and catching a number of objects (eg balls or clubs)
He entertained the audience by juggling with four balls and four plates at once.
|
Afrikaans: goëlaar |
Arabic: قاذِف الكُرات، لاعِب الخِ |
Bulgarian: жунгльор |
Brazilian: malabarista |
Czech: žonglér |
German: der Jongleur |
Danish: jonglør |
Greek: ζογκλέρ |
Spanish: malabarista |
Estonian: žonglöör |
Farsi: شعبده باز |
Finnish: jonglööri |
French: jongleur/-euse |
Hebrew: לַהֲטוטַן, לַהֲטוטַנִית |
Hindi: बाजीगर |
Croatian: žongler |
Hungarian: zsonglőr |
Indonesian: tukang sulap |
Icelandic: djögglari, e-r sem leikur |
Italian: giocoliere |
Japanese: 曲芸師 |
Korean: 마술가 |
Lithuanian: žonglierius |
Latvian: žonglieris |
Malay: penjugel |
Dutch: jongleur |
Norwegian: sjonglør, tryllekunstner |
Polish: żongler |
Persian: شعبده باز |
Pashto: شعبده باز |
Portuguese: malabarista |
Romanian: jongleur |
Russian: жонглёр |
Slovak: žonglér |
Slovenian: žongler |
Serbian: žongler |
Swedish: jonglör |
Thai: นักเล่นกล |
Turkish: hokkabaz |
Taiwanese: 雜耍演員 |
Ukrainian: жонглер |
Urdu: بازی گر |
Vietnamese: người tung hứng |
Chinese: 玩杂耍的人,变戏法者 |
Get even more translations for juggler...
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Alternative search options for 'juggler' |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|