yea, as are gran, granny, nan, grammers
Yes, "grandma" and "grandmother" are both terms used to refer to one's maternal or paternal grandmother. They are essentially the same, just different variations of the same term.
grandmother/grandma = סבה (savá)the grandmother = סבתא (sávta)Note: the word savta, which means "the grandmother" was borrowed into Modern Hebrew as "grandma" to distinguish it from sava (grandmother). There is no such distinction in Aramaic.
"Grandma" in the Miskito language is "bimura" or "wanakira".
Grandma in Kurdish is "daye" for maternal grandmother and "mam" for paternal grandmother.
Grandmother in Korean is "halmoni." 할머니 means grandma
Grandmother = סבה (sava)"the grandmother" = סבתא (savta)Note: The Aramaic word savta ("the grandmother") was borrowed into modern Hebrew as the word for "grandmother" or "grandma".
The word for grandma or grandmother in Serbian is "baka".
grandmother/grandma = סבה (savá)the grandmother = סבתא (sávta)Note: the word savta, which means "the grandmother" was borrowed into Modern Hebrew as "grandma" to distinguish it from sava (grandmother). There is no such distinction in Aramaic.
"Grandma" in the Miskito language is "bimura" or "wanakira".
Grandma in Kurdish is "daye" for maternal grandmother and "mam" for paternal grandmother.
奶奶 (Nainai) : Grandma, grandmother or 老大娘 (Laoda niang) : Grandma, aunty or 祖母 (Zumu) : Grandmother
Your great grandmother would be your mother's grandmother.
grandmother
Granny Grandma, Nan , Nana Nama Gram works too.
Grandmother in Korean is "halmoni." 할머니 means grandma
The British translation for "grandmother" is "grandmother" or "grandma."
Gran, Granny, Nan, Nana, Nanny, Grandma ...or their name :)
Grandmother. Or grandma