Definition
Plural form of 'fracas,' meaning multiple noisy disputes, brawls, or chaotic situations involving many people.
Etymology
From French 'fracas' (a crash or collision), derived from Italian 'fracasso' (from 'fracassare,' to shatter), ultimately from Latin 'frangere' (to break). The term evolved to mean loud, broken disorder.
Kelly Says
A fracas is beautifully named—the word itself sounds like breaking glass and shouting, so 'fracases' captures the chaotic energy of multiple outbursts, which is why fight scenes in old adventure novels always involve fracases rather than quiet disputes.
Translations
AMአማርኛ
አልተሳካም
al-te-sa-ka-m
CSČeština
neúspěchy
ne-oo-spe-chy
DEDeutsch
Misserfolge
mis-ser-folg-eh
ELΕλληνικά
αποτυχίες
a-po-ty-kee-es
ESEspañol
fracasos
fra-kah-sohs
FISuomi
epäonnistumiset
e-pa-on-nis-tu-mi-set
FRFrançais
échecs
ay-shay
HEעברית
כישלונות
ki-sh-lo-not
HIहिन्दी
असफलता
as-faal-ta
HUMagyar
sikertelenek
si-ker-te-le-nek
IDBahasa Indonesia
kegagalan
ke-ga-ga-lan
ITItaliano
fallimenti
fal-lie-men-tee
KKKK
сезімсіздік
se-zi-m-si-z-dik
MSBahasa Melayu
kegagalan
ke-ga-ga-lan
MYမြန်မာ
အကြောင်း
a-kya-ng
NLNederlands
falen
fa-len
PLPolski
porażki
po-ra-zh-kee
PTPortuguês
fracassos
fra-ka-sohs
RORomână
eșecuri
e-she-ku-ri
RUРусский
неудачи
ny-uh-dah-chee
SVSvenska
misslyckanden
miss-lyck-a-den
SWKiswahili
mafanik
ma-fa-nik
TEతెలుగు
ناکమ్యం
na-kam-yam
THไทย
ความล้มเหลว
khwam-lom-lueaw
TLTL
pagbagsak
pa-g-ba-g-sak
TRTürkçe
başarısızlıklar
ba-shar-is-lik-lar
UKУкраїнська
невдачі
ne-v-da-chi
VITiếng Việt
thất bại
thất-bai
ZUZU
amangazana
a-man-ga-za-na