DAMARE! I yell that alot to...to my annoying....relatives
http://www.speakrealjapanese.com/words/words2.htm
Also often heard in Animes is: はやく (hayaku), which is very informal and impolite and is used by e.g. close friends.
Doushita, but that means it as in "what's wrong?", not as a greeting. (btw, doushite means why)
To wake up is "okiru." To wake someone else is "okosu." To tell someone to wake up is "Okite (kudasai)".
Saidai kongō
"Ferme ta gueule" is a French phrase that translates to "shut your mouth" in English. It is a rude or impolite way of telling someone to be quiet or stop talking.
Spegnere in Italian means "to shut off" in English.
Adesso zitto e mangia! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Now shut up and eat!" The exclamation also translates as "Now silence and eat!" The pronunciation will be "a-DES-so TSEET-to ey MAN-dja" in Italian.
The phrase "håll käften" means "shut the mouth", which in English is "shut up".
It's a command in Spanish that can be translated into "shut up" in English.
The offensive Ta gueule, stupide! is a literal French equivalent of the English phrase "Shut up, stupid!" The pronunciation of the insult -- which needs not to be said and which translates literally as "Your (animal) mouth (muzzle), stupid person!" -- will be "ta guhl styoo-peed" in French.
"Mangiamo!" is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Let's eat!"Specifically, the Italian word is the first person plural form of the present imperative. The form actually is the same as the present indicative (translated as "We are eating, do eat, eat") and as the present subjunctive (translated as "(that) we may eat"). Regardless of the use, the pronunciation remains the same: "mahn-DJYAH-moh."
"Shut up!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase "Ta gueule!"Specifically, the feminine possessive adjective "ta" means "your." The feminine noun "gueule" means "mouth." The pronunciation is "tah ghuhl."
urusai means shut up
"Shut your mouth!" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Ferme la bouche!Specifically, the imperative verb ferme is "close, shut". The feminine singular definite article la means "the". The feminine noun bouche translates as "mouth".The pronunciation will be "fehrm lah boosh" in French.
In Mandarin Chinese, the phrase "shut up" is translated as "bì xià" (闭嘴). To pronounce it, you would say "bee she-ah" with a rising tone on "bee" and a flat tone on "she-ah".
In Yoruba, the phrase shut up is "dake enu re."