newborn - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
newborn
recently born
- Armenian: նորածին (hy) (noracin)
- Azerbaijani: körpə (az), çağa (az)
- Belarusian: нованаро́джаны (novanaródžany)
- Bulgarian: новороде́н (bg) (novorodén)
- Catalan: nounat (ca)
- Chinese:
Mandarin: 新生 (zh) (xīnshēng) - Czech: novorozený (cs)
- Danish: nyfødt (da)
- Dutch: pasgeboren (nl)
- Esperanto: novnaskita
- Finnish: vastasyntynyt (fi)
- French: nouveau-né (fr) m
- German: neugeboren (de)
- Greek: νεογέννητος (el) (neogénnitos)
Ancient Greek: νεογνός (neognós) - Hindi: नवजात (hi) (navjāt)
- Hungarian: újszülött (hu)
- Icelandic: nýfæddur
- Ido: naskinta nove
- Irish: nuabheirthe
- Italian: appena nato, neonato (it)
- Japanese: 生まれたばかりの (うまれたばかりの, umareta bakari no), 新生の (ja) (しんせいの, shinsei no)
- Korean: 갓 난 (gat nan), 신생의 (ko) (sinsaeng'ui)
- Macedonian: новороден (novoroden)
- Manx: noa-ruggit, noa-verht, noa-vreyit
- Navajo: awééchíʼí
- Norwegian:
Bokmål: nyfødt (no)
Nynorsk: nyfødd - Old English: nīcenned
- Persian: نوزاد (fa) (nowzâd)
- Plautdietsch: niejebuaren
- Polish: nowonarodzony (pl)
- Portuguese: recém-nascido (pt) m, neonato (pt)
- Romanian: nou-născut (ro) m, nou-născută f
- Russian: новорождённый (ru) (novoroždjónnyj)
- Slovak: novorodený
- Spanish: recién nacido (es), neonato (es)
- Swedish: nyfödd (sv)
- Tagalog: bagong-panganak
- Tajik: навзод (navzod)
- Turkish: yenidoğan
- Ukrainian: новонаро́джений (novonaródženyj)
- Urdu: نو زائیدہ (nau-zâida), نو مولود (nau-mauluud)
- Vietnamese: mới sinh
- Welsh: newydd-anedig (cy)
- Zazaki: newza, newezayen
newborn (plural newborns or **newborn)
- A recently born baby.
- 2025 December 5, Aria Bendix and Erika Edwards, “CDC advisory panel rolls back universal hepatitis B vaccine recommendation”, in NBC News[1]:
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s vaccine advisory panel on Friday rolled back a decadeslong recommendation that all newborns get a first dose of the hepatitis B vaccine within 24 hours of birth.
- 2025 December 5, Aria Bendix and Erika Edwards, “CDC advisory panel rolls back universal hepatitis B vaccine recommendation”, in NBC News[1]:
recently born baby
Arabic: مَوْلُود حَدِيث m (mawlūd ḥadīṯ), مَوْلُودَة حَدِيثة f (mawlūda(t) ḥadīṯa)
Belarusian: нованаро́джаны m (novanaródžany), нованаро́джаная f (novanaródžanaja)
Bulgarian: новороде́но (bg) n (novorodéno)
Czech: novorozenec (cs) m, novorozeně (cs) n
Dutch: nieuwgeborene m or f, boreling (nl) m, pasgeborene (nl) m or f, neonaat (nl), neonatus
Esperanto: novnaskito
Finnish: vastasyntynyt (fi)
French: nouveau-né (fr) m, nouveau-née (fr) f, nouvelle-née (fr) f
German: Neugeborenes (de) n (male or female), Neugeborener (de) m (male), Neugeborene (de) f (female)
Ido: naskinto nove
Korean: 신생아(新生兒) (ko) (sinsaeng'a), 갓난아이 (ko) (gannanai), 갓난아기 (gannanagi), 갓난애 (ko) (gannanae)
Macedonian: новороденче (mk) n (novorodenče), леунче n (leunče)
Māori: piripoho
Navajo: awééchíʼí
Portuguese: recém-nascido (pt) m, neonato (pt)
Romanian: nou-născut (ro) m, nou-născută f
Russian: новорождённый (ru) m (novoroždjónnyj), новорождённая (ru) f (novoroždjónnaja)
Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: новоро̀ђе̄нче n, рођенче n
Latin: novoròđēnče (sh) n, rođenče nSlovak: novorodenec m, novorodeniatko n
Spanish: recién nacido (es) m, neonato (es) m
Tajik: навзод (navzod)
Tanana:
Lower Tanana: et'egheɬdi' bexulanenhTurkish: yenidoğan
Ukrainian: новонаро́джений m (novonaródženyj), новонаро́джена f (novonaródžena)
Vietnamese: trẻ sơ sinh
Yakut: кыһыл оҕо (kïhïl oğo)
Yiddish: קימפּעטקינד n (kimpetkind)