Definition
Having the quality of calming or soothing; producing a calming effect.
Etymology
From French 'calmant' (calming), derived from Latin 'calmare' (to calm). The suffix '-ant' indicates something that has or produces a particular quality.
Kelly Says
French pharmacology had specific terms for different types of medicines, and 'calmant' was the clinical term for anything that reduced anxiety or agitation—it's still used in French medical contexts today.
Translations
BNবাংলা
শান্তিকর
shaan-ti-kar
CACatalà
calmant
cal-man-t
CSČeština
uklidný
uk-lid-ny
DEDeutsch
beruhigend
be-ru-hi-gend
ELΕλληνικά
κατασταλτικός
ka-ta-sta-ltik-os
ESEspañol
calmante
cal-man-te
FAفارسی
آرام بخش
a-raam-bakh
FISuomi
rauhoittava
rau-hoi-tta-va
FRFrançais
calmant
kal-man
GUGU
શાંતિદાયક
shaan-ti-day-ak
HIहिन्दी
शांत करने वाला
shaan-t kar-ne wa-la
HUMagyar
nyugtató
nyug-ta-to
IDBahasa Indonesia
menenangkan
me-nen-kan-kan
ITItaliano
calmante
cal-man-te
JA日本語
鎮静させる
chin-sei-tsu-sa-su-ru
KO한국어
진정시키는
jin-jeong-si-ki-neun
MSBahasa Melayu
menenangkan
me-nen-kan-kan
MYမြန်မာ
ငြိမ်းငပ်
ngyin-nget
NLNederlands
kalmerend
kal-mer-end
NONorsk
soothing
soo-thing
PLPolski
uspokajający
us-po-ka-j-a-y-y-cy
PTPortuguês
calmante
cal-man-te
RORomână
calmant
cal-man-t
RUРусский
успокаивающий
us-po-ka-i-va-y-uy-ush-chiy
TAதமிழ்
சமாதானம்
sa-ma-tha-anam
TEతెలుగు
శాంతికర
shaan-ti-kar
TLTL
nakakalma
na-ka-kal-ma
TRTürkçe
sakinleştirici
sa-kin-les-ti-ri-ci
UKУкраїнська
спокійний
spo-kiy-nyy
VITiếng Việt
làm dịu
lam-di-u