English
Etymology
From Middle English stutten, stoten (“stutter”); cognate with Dutch stotteren (“stutter”).
Pronunciation
Verb
stutter (third-person singular simple present stutters, present participle stuttering, simple past and past participle stuttered)
- (ambitransitive) To speak (words) with a spasmodic repetition of vocal sounds.
- Synonyms: (chiefly Britain, dialectal, archaic) hacker, stammer
He stuttered a few words of thanks.
- (intransitive) To expel a gas with difficulty.
I was stuttering after the marathon.
The engine of the old car stuttered going up the slope.
Translations
to speak with spasmodic repetition
— see stammer
Noun
stutter (plural stutters)
- A speech disorder characterised by stuttering.
- Synonym: stammer
- (obsolete) One who stutters.
- Synonyms: stutterer, stammerer
- 1626, Francis Bacon, Sylva Sylvarum, London: William Lee, IV. Century, p. 103,[1]
- And many Stutters (we finde) are very Cholericke Men; Choler Enducing a Drinesse in the Tongue.
Translations
- Albanian: belbëzimi
- Aragonese: tartameca f
- Armenian: կակազում (hy) (kakazum)
- Asturian: tartayu m, tatexu m
- Basque: hitz-moteltasun
- Bulgarian: зае́кване (zaékvane), пелтечене n (peltečene)
- Catalan: quequeig (ca) m
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 口吃 (zh) (kǒuchī)
- Czech: koktání n
- Dutch: stotteren (nl) n
- Esperanto: balbutado
- Finnish: änkytys (fi)
- French: bégaiement (fr) m
- Friulian: balbuzie f
- Galician: tartamudez (gl) m
- German: Stottern (de) n
- Greek: τραύλισμα (el) n (trávlisma)
- Hebrew: גמגום (he) m (gimgum)
- Hindi: हकलाहट (hi) f (haklāhaṭ), हकलापन (hi) m (haklāpan), कंठभंग (hi) m (kaṇṭhbhaṅg)
- Hungarian: dadogás (hu)
- Ido: stotero (io)
- Indonesian: gagap (id)
- Interlingua: balbutiamento
- Irish: maolteanga f
- Italian: balbuzie (it) f
- Japanese: 吃り (ja) (domori)
- Kapampangan: kakak
- Karelian: eketys
- Kazakh: кекештік (kekeştık)
- Korean: 더듬기 (deodeumgi)
- Latvian: stostīšanās
- Lithuanian: mikčiojimas (lt)
- Lower Sorbian: jěkotanje n, zajěkotanje n
- Manchu: ᡥᡝᠯᡝᡩᡝᠮᠪᡳ (heledembi)
- Navajo: ałtʼaʼndziih
- Polish: jąkanie (pl) n
- Portuguese: gagueira f
- Romanian: bâlbâire
- Romansch: balbegiar m
- Russian: заика́ние (ru) n (zaikánije)
- Sanskrit: कण्ठभङ्ग (sa) m (kaṇṭhabhaṅga)
- Sardinian: achichiadura f
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: муцање
- Roman: mucanje (sh)
- Slovak: zajakavosť, koktanie
- Spanish: tartamudeo (es) m
- Swedish: stamning
- Turkish: kekeleme (tr), kekemelik (tr)
- Ukrainian: заїкання (zajikannja)
- Welsh: atal dweud (cy)
- Zazaki: kekezey
|
Derived terms
Anagrams