Definition
Medicine: describing a person or animal that is lame or limping; moving with difficulty due to lameness.
Etymology
From Latin claudicant- (present participle of claudicare 'to limp'), derived from claudus 'lame,' the same root as the emperor Claudius's name.
Kelly Says
The Roman emperor Claudius was likely named after a family characteristic of lameness or limping—his own name, combined with his actual physical challenges, created a powerful and controversial figure in history.
Translations
AMአማርኛ
እንደ አንድ ነው
en-de an-d ne-wu
BNবাংলা
চলতে অসমর্থ
chol-te os-mor-tho
CACatalà
claudicant
klau-dee-kan
DADansk
klamrende
klam-ren-de
DEDeutsch
kauernd
kauernd
ELΕλληνικά
λαμπαδισμός
lam-pa-dis-mos
ESEspañol
claudicante
klau-dee-kan-te
FISuomi
kävelyvaikeus
kae-ve-ly-vai-keus
FRFrançais
claudicant
klau-dee-kan
HUMagyar
klammer
klam-mer
IDBahasa Indonesia
berjalan tertatih
ber-jalan ter-ta-tih
ITItaliano
claudicante
klau-dee-kan-te
KO한국어
걸을 수 없는
georeul su eobneun
MRMR
गोंधळलेले
gon-dhal-le-le
MSBahasa Melayu
berjalan tertatih
ber-jalan ter-ta-tih
MYမြန်မာ
လှမ်းလှမ်း
la-shan-la-shan
NONorsk
klamrende
klam-ren-de
PLPolski
kłujący
k-wuu-y-ee
PTPortuguês
claudicante
klau-dee-kan-te
RORomână
clăudicant
klaw-dee-kan-t
RUРусский
хромой
khro-moy
SVSvenska
klamrande
klam-ran-de
SWKiswahili
kufanya maumivu
ku-fa-nya ma-u-mi-vu
TAதமிழ்
குழம்பு
ku-zhambu
TEతెలుగు
బాధితుడు
ba-a-dhi-tu-du
THไทย
เดินไม่ได้
din-mai-dai
TLTL
mabagal maglakad
ma-ba-gal ma-glak-ad
TRTürkçe
kırık yürüyüş
kir-ik yur-u-yüş
UKУкраїнська
хромити
khro-mi-tyi
URاردو
چلنے میں ناتوان
chal-nay mein na-ta-wan
ZUZU
ehlukansi
ehl-u-kan-si