English
Etymology
From Middle English chariot, from Old French chariot, from char (“cart”), from Latin carrus (“wagon”). Displaced native Old English hrædwæġn (literally “fast wagon”).
Pronunciation
Noun
chariot (plural chariots)
- A two-wheeled horse-drawn cart, used in Bronze Age and Early Iron Age warfare.
- Synonym: (dated) car
- A light (four-wheeled) carriage used for ceremonial or pleasure purposes.
- (xiangqi) The rook piece.
Hyponyms
Derived terms
Translations
vehicle used in warfare
- Arabic: عَرَبَة f (ʕaraba)
- Armenian: մարտակառք (hy) (martakaṙkʻ)
- Assamese: ৰথ (roth)
- Avestan: 𐬭𐬀𐬚𐬀 (raθa)
- Azerbaijani: araba (az)
- Basque: guda-gurdi
- Belarusian: калясні́ца f (kaljasníca)
- Bengali: রথ (bn) (roth)
- Bulgarian: колесни́ца (bg) f (kolesníca)
- Burmese: ရထား (my) (ra.hta:)
- Catalan: carro (ca) m
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 雙輪戰車 / 双轮战车 (shuāng lún zhànchē), 戰車 / 战车 (zh) (zhànchē), 馬戰車 / 马战车 (mǎzhànchē), 馬車 / 马车 (zh) (mǎchē)
- Coptic: ⲃⲣϭⲟⲟⲩⲧ f (brcoout), ϩⲁⲣⲙⲁ (harma)
- Czech: válečný vůz m, vůz (cs) m
- Danish: stridsvogn c
- Dutch: strijdwagen (nl) m
- Egyptian: (mrkbt), (wrryt)
- Esperanto: armea ĉaro
- Finnish: sotavaunut pl
- French: char (fr) m (de guerre), charriot (fr) m
- Galician: biga f
- Georgian: ეტლი (eṭli)
- German: Streitwagen (de) m
- Greek: άρμα (el) f (árma)
- Ancient: ἅρμα f (hárma), δίφρος m (díphros), (covered) λαμπήνη f (lampḗnē), ὄχος m (ókhos), ὄχεα n pl (ókhea)
- Hebrew: מֶרְכָּבָה (he) f (merkavá)
- Hindi: रथ (hi) m (rath)
- Hittite: please add this translation if you can
- Ido: charo (io)
- Indonesian: cikar (id)
- Irish: carbad m
- Italian: biga (it) f
- Japanese: 戦車 (ja) (せんしゃ, sensha), チャリオット (ja) (chariotto), 馬車 (ja) (ばしゃ, basha)
- Kazakh: арба (arba)
- Khmer: រថ (km) (rŭət), រទេះ (km) (rɔteh)
- Korean: 전차 (ko) (jeoncha), 마차 (ko) (macha)
- Kyrgyz: араба (ky) (araba)
- Lao: ສັນທະນະ (san tha na), ລົດ (lo) (lot)
- Latin: currus (la) m, curriculum n, (Celtic) essedum n, (poetic) rota f, (with four horses) quadrīgae (la) f pl
- Macedonian: ко́чија f (kóčija), дво́колка f (dvókolka), бо́јна ко́ла f (bójna kóla)
- Malay: cikar
- Malayalam: രഥം (ml) (rathaṁ), തേര് (ml) (tērŭ)
- Maori: hāriata
- Marathi: रथ (mr) m (rath)
- Middle Persian: 𐫡𐫍𐫏 (rah)
- Mon: ရထာပၞာန် (mnw), ကွဳပၞာန် (mnw), (please verify) ယုဒ္ဓရထ m
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: stridsvogn (no) m or f
- Old Church Slavonic: возъ m (vozŭ)
- Old English: hrædwæġn m
- Old Norse: reið f
- Ottoman Turkish: قاكلی (kañlı)
- Pali: ratha m
- Persian: گردونه (fa) (gardune), ارابه (fa) (arâbe), غرده (fa) (ġarde), ری (fa) sg (rayy) (archaic)
- Polish: rydwan (pl) m
- Portuguese: biga (pt)
- Romanian: bigă (ro) f, car de luptă n
- Russian: колесни́ца (ru) f (kolesníca)
- Sanskrit: रथ (sa) m (ratha)
- Scottish Gaelic: carbad m
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: двоколица f, кочије n
- Roman: dvokolica (sh) f, kočije (sh) n
- Slovak: voz m
- Slovene: voz (sl) m
- Spanish: cuadriga f (4 horses), biga (es) f (2 horses), carro [de guerra] m
- Swedish: stridsvagn (sv), häststridsvagn
- Tagalog: karo
- Tajik: ароба (tg) (aroba)
- Tamil: தேர் (ta) (tēr), இரதம் (ta) (iratam)
- Telugu: రథం (te) (rathaṁ)
- Thai: รถ (th) (rót)
- Turkish: savaş arabası
- Ugaritic: 𐎎𐎗𐎋𐎁𐎚 (mrkbt)
- Ukrainian: колісни́ця (uk) f (kolisnýcja)
- Urdu: رتھ m (rath)
- Uzbek: jang aravasi, arava (uz)
- Vietnamese: chiếc xe, xe (vi)
- Welsh: cerbyd (cy) m
|
carriage used for ceremonial or pleasure purposes
Verb
chariot (third-person singular simple present chariots, present participle charioting, simple past and past participle charioted)
- (transitive, rare, poetic) To convey by, or as if by, chariot.
- (intransitive) To ride in a chariot.
See also
Anagrams
French
Etymology
Inherited from Old French chariot, from char or from charrier + -ot.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ʃa.ʁjo/
- Rhymes: -jo
Noun
chariot m (plural chariots)
- A car/carriage or wagon
- carriage (of a computer printer)
- chariot bloqué ― (please add an English translation of this usage example)
- (North America) shopping cart
- Synonym: caddie
Derived terms
Further reading
Anagrams