US| Kieli | Käännökset |
|---|---|
| bulgaria | грана́та, граната |
| espanja | granada |
| esperanto | grenado |
| hollanti | granaat |
| italia | granata |
| japani | 榴弾 (ryūdan), グレネード (gurenēdo), 手榴弾 (しゅりゅうだん, shuryūdan, てりゅうだん, teryūdan / てりゅうだん, teryūdan, しゅりゅうだん, shuryūdan), 擲弾 (tekidan), てきだん (tekidan) |
| kreikka | χειροβομβίδα (cheirovomvída / chirovomvída) |
| portugali | granada |
| puola | granat |
| ranska | grenade, grenader |
| ruotsi | granat |
| saksa | Granate |
| suomi | kranaatti |
| tanska | granat |
| turkki | el bombası |
| tšekki | granát |
| unkari | kézigránát |
| venäjä | лимо́нка (limónka), грана́та (granáta), граната (granata) |
| viro | granaat |
| Monikko | grenades |
A small explosive device, designed to be thrown by hand or launched using a rifle, grenade launcher, or rocket.
Replica WW2 hand grenades on display
A small explosive device, designed to be thrown by hand or launched using a rifle, grenade launcher, or rocket.
Hand grenades filled with Greek fire; surrounded by caltrops (10th–12th centuries National Historical Museum, Athens, Greece)
A small explosive device, designed to be thrown by hand or launched using a rifle, grenade launcher, or rocket.
Seven ceramic hand grenades of the 17th century found in Ingolstadt, Germany