The German word for vampire is Vampir.
Six English, French, Italian, Spanish, Latin, and German
French - lion; Spanish - leon; Portuguese - Leâo; German - der Löwe; Russian - lav Egyptian - الأسد; Greek - liontari
French: étoile German: stern Spanish: estrella Italian: stella Greek: αστέρι Swahili : nyota
Willis Barnstone has written: 'Modern European poetry: French, German, Greek, Italian, Russian, Spanish'
Greek,french Spanish,italian
I am uncertain of the total but she recorded songs in Greek, French, English, Spanish, Italian, German, Dutch, Corsican, Latin, Portuguese, Japanese and others. Nana Mouskouri speaks fluently in the following languages fluently : Greek French English German Italian Spanish Portuguese
Gnade in German; grace in Greek; grâce in French; gracia in Spanish; zarafet in Turkish; грация in Russian; graţie in Romanian; χάρη in Greek and gratus in Latin.
The etymology of the word "guitar" is early 17th century: from Spanish guitarra (partly via French), from Greek kithara, denoting an instrument similar to the lyre.
Thomas Jefferson was indeed accomplished. Not only did he master English (of course), but he also learned Latin, Greek, Spanish, Italian, French and more than twelve Native American dialects. Approximately 18 altogether.
English, as well as French, Italian, Spanish, Greek, and Latin", little German That's all I know
German-Gitarrist Spanish-Guitarrista Bulgarian-китарист Chinese-吉他手 French-Guitariste Greek-κιθαρίστας
english french spanish slovak greek dutch german italian korean japanese chinese etc