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Pandemonium: Difference between revisions

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''See also:'' [[pandémonium]], [[pandemònium]], [[pandemónium]]
=English=
=English=
''Word of the Day – August 25, 2007''
==Alternative forms==
* pandaemonium
* pandæmonium


==Etymology==
==Etymology==

Revision as of 20:50, 19 February 2026

English

Etymology

Coined by John Milton in Paradise Lost as Pandæmonium, from Greek πᾶν (“all”) + Latin daemonium (“evil spirit, demon”), from Greek δαιμόνιον (“deity”).

Pronunciation

  • RP: /ˌpændɪˈməʊnɪəm/
  • General American: /ˌpændəˈmoʊni.əm/
  • Rhymes with: -oʊniəm

Noun

pandemonium (plural: pandemonia)

  1. A loud, wild, tumultuous protest, disorder, or chaotic situation, usually involving a crowd and often violent.
    Synonyms: chaos, bedlam
    “Whatever all this pandemonium means, I suppose the police station will help us.” — G. K. Chesterton
    “Whenever you have violent pandemonium, there's the overwhelming possibility for panic and tragedy.” — The Boston Globe, October 22, 2004
  1. An outburst; loud, riotous uproar, especially of a crowd.
    Synonyms: outburst, uproar
    “Cue pandemonium in the stands.” — The Guardian, March 14, 2017
  1. A group of parrots. (collective noun)

Derived terms

  • pandemonic
  • pandemoniac
  • pandemoniacal
  • pandemoniacally
  • pandemoniac
  • pandemoniacal
  • pandemoniacally
  • pandemonious
  • pandemonium architecture
  • pandemonium effect
  • pandamonium
  • fandemonium

Descendants

  • Catalan: pandemònium
  • Dutch: pandemonium
  • French: pandémonium
  • German: Pandämonium
  • Greek: πανδαιμόνιο
  • Italian: pandemonio
  • Polish: pandemonium
  • Portuguese: pandemónio / pandemônio
  • Spanish: pandemonio
  • Swedish: pandemonium
  • Russian: пандемониум

Translations

Chaos; tumultuous protest or disorder
  • Bulgarian: хаос
  • Dutch: pandemonium, heksenketel
  • Finnish: sekasorto, kaaos
  • French: chaos
  • German: Tohuwabohu, Tumult, Anarchie
  • Greek: πανδαιμόνιο
  • Polish: pandemonium
  • Portuguese: pandemônio, pandemónio, caos
  • Romanian: pandemoniu, haos
  • Spanish: pandemonio
  • Urdu: شور, افراتفری
Loud uproar
  • Dutch: pandemonium
  • Finnish: mekastus
  • French: tumulte, charivari, chahut
  • German: Aufruhr
  • Portuguese: confusão, balbúrdia, tumulto

See also


Dutch

Pronunciation

(Audio: Nl-pandemonium.ogg)

Noun

pandemonium (neuter)

  1. The residence of all demons; hell.
  2. A hellish chaos; terrible noise and disorder.

Norwegian Nynorsk

Noun

pandemonium (neuter)

  1. (antiquity) A temple for all gods and demigods.
  2. The residence of all demons; hell.
    Synonym: helvete

Polish

Etymology

Borrowed from English pandemonium.

Noun

pandemonium (neuter, indeclinable)

  1. (literary) Hell.
    Synonym: piekło
  2. (literary) Chaos; tumultuous or lawless violence.
    Synonym: koszmar

Swedish

Alternative forms

  • pandæmonium
  • pandämonium (archaic)

Etymology

From English Pandæmonium. First attested 1815.

Noun

pandemonium (neuter)

  1. (figuratively) A place where evil demons gather.
  2. Pandemonium; chaos or uproar.

References

  • Svenska Akademiens ordbok