Tumultuous Meaning in English
word
ˌtuˈməɫˌtʃuəs
too-MUL-choo-uhs
tjuːmˈʌltʃuːəs
tyoo-MUL-choo-uhs
التعريف
Describing something full of confusion, noise, or disorder; often used for chaotic events, rough periods, or loud environments.
الاستخدام والفروق الدقيقة
Usually formal or literary. Commonly used to describe periods ('tumultuous times'), crowds ('tumultuous applause'), or relationships. Suggests more chaos than 'noisy' or 'busy'.
Spanish: tumultuoso - agitadoPortuguese (BR): tumultuado - agitadoPortuguese (PT): tumultuoso - turbulentoChinese (Simplified): 动荡的 - 混乱的Chinese (Traditional): 動盪的 - 混亂的Hindi: उथल-पुथल भरा - अशांतArabic: صاخب - مضطربBengali: অশান্ত - উৎকট - বিশৃঙ্খলRussian: бурный - шумный - неистовыйJapanese: 騒然とした - 混乱したVietnamese: hỗn loạn - náo động - sóng gióKorean: 격동의 - 소란스러운 - 혼란스러운Turkish: fırtınalı - çalkantılı - gürültülüUrdu: پُرہنگامہ - پُر انتشارIndonesian: bergolak - kacau - gaduh
جمل نموذجية
It was a tumultuous year for the company.
basic
The tumultuous crowd cheered for the team.
basic
They had a tumultuous relationship.
basic
After months of tumultuous protests, the city finally found peace.
natural
Her life has been a tumultuous journey of ups and downs.
natural
There was tumultuous applause when the band appeared on stage.
natural