To tell someone to "shut up", or be quiet, you say うるさい (urusai). This, in actual fact, means (essentially) "You're noisy!". It's a very impolite thing to say, and should never be said to people older than you. You may also say だまれ (damare).
To shut is cerrar. Past participle is cerrado.
the colloquial phrase is "urusai" which is literally "noisy"...so you're telling the person that they're noisy, and implying that the source of the noise should shut up ^__^
singular: shut up=conclude plural: shut up=concldite
Shut up hytg
Kamabisushii, kashimashii, urusai and souzoushii all mean noisy. You would use "Urusai" to tell someone to shut up in Japanese.
urusai means shut up
黙れ "Damare"
Give them a hug and then say shut up or say your right now shut up!
失せろ、バカ。 (U-se-ro Ba-ka)
how to say shut in Fijian
you can say "suti" meaning shut up or "prekini" meaning stop now! or shut it
Yamaza is how you say shut up in swahili. I asked my aunt, she speaks it.
"மூடு" (Moodu) is the term used to say "shut up" in Tamil.
your not aloud to say shut up it is disrecpectfull.
To say "shut up" in Malayalam, you can use the phrase "മൂശ്ശിടുക" which is pronounced as "mooshshiduka".
You can say "Серьёзно, заткнись!" to mean "No seriously, shut up!" in Russian.
Shut yuh mouth!