Din

Noun

 * 1) A loud noise; a cacophony or loud commotion.

Verb

 * 1)  To be filled with sound; to resound.
 * 2)  To assail with loud noise.
 * 3)  To repeat continuously, as though to the point of deafening or exhausting somebody.
 * 2003: His mother had dinned The Whole Duty of Man into him in early childhood — Roy Porter, Flesh in the Age of Reason (Penguin 2004, p. 183)
 * 1)  To make a din.

Adjectives for Din
terrible; infernal; sudden; outrageous;jocund; clanging; alarming; competing; wheezing; awful; chaotic; terrific; rude; discordant; horrible; chattering; general; ominous; exclamatory; earsplitting; merry; lively; plaintive; deafening; ever-waxing; furious; vexatious; wild; humming; resounding; reverberating; echoing; shattering; intermittent; frightful.

Verbs for Din
diminish—; drown—; endure—; muffle—; penetrate—; raise—; silence—; tremble at—; —awakens; —blasts; —breaks; —dies away —ensues; —fades; —hisses; —reverberates; —roars; —streams forth; —waxes louder.

Synonyms for Din
uproar, hubbub, racket, clamor, clatter, noise, clangor, clash.

Antonyms for Din
quiet, silence.

Thesaurus
Bedlam let loose, awake the dead, babel, beat, bedlam, blast, blast the ear, blatancy, bobbery, boisterousness, boom, brawl, brouhaha, charivari, chirm, clamor, clamorousness, clangor, clap, clash, clatter, commotion, crash, crescendo, deafen, ding, discord, donnybrook, drum, drunken brawl, dustup, fill the air, flap, fracas, free-for-all, hammer, hell broke loose, howl, hubbub, hue and cry, hullabaloo, jangle, loud noise, music, noise, noise and shouting, outcry, pandemonium, peal, percussion, pound, racket, rattle, rattle the windows, rend the air, rend the ears, resound, rhubarb, ring, rise, roar, rock the sky, row, ruckus, ruction, rumble, rumpus, shindy, shivaree, sound, split the eardrums, split the ears, startle the echoes, stridency, stun, surge, swell, thunder, thunderclap, tintamarre, tumult, uproar

Etymology 1
From dyne:, from Germanic *duniz. Akin to Old Norse dynr:, Sanskrit ध्वनति:, to make a noise, to roar.

Etymology 2
From dynnan:, from Germanic *dunjan, from the same stem as Etymology 1, above.

Translations

 * Bulgarian: врява, глъчка
 * Italian:, schiamazzo
 * Latin: ,
 * Mandarin: 耳鸣,  耳鳴


 * Russian:, , гвалт
 * Slovene: ropot, trušč
 * Telugu: గోల (gOla), గొడవ (goDava)

Anagrams

 * D'ni
 * ind., Ind., in d., IND
 * nid

Etymology
From دين:.

Noun

 * 1) religion

Etymology
From þínn:, from.

Pronoun

 * 1) your, thy (singular; one owner)
 * 2) yours, thine (singular; one owner)

Etymology
From دين:.

Noun

 * 1) religion

Etymology
From Proto-North Sarawak *daqan, from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *daqan.

Noun
din


 * 1) branch

Etymology
From דין:.

Noun

 * 1) religious law

Etymology
From دين:.

Noun

 * 1) faith, religion

Etymology
From þinn:.

Pronoun

 * 1) your, yours

Etymology
, whence also Old English þīn, Old Norse þínn

Pronoun
dīn


 * 1) your (singular)

Etymology
From de: + în:.

Preposition

 * 1) on, on top of
 * 2) from, out of

Etymology
From þin:, from  þínn:, from.

Pronoun

 * 1) your, yours; of one thing in the common gender (speaking to one person)

Etymology
From دين:.

Noun

 * 1) religion

Etymology
From دين:.

Noun

 * 1) religion

Etymology
From Ding

Noun

 * 1) thing