There are many ways you can say happy holidays. The most popular language English says "Happy Holidays". In Spanish you usually say "Feliz navidad" which means "Happy Christmas". In Latin you say "Feriae felices" which means "Happy Holidays". You can search Google because it is easy to find more ways and I might have found the language you were looking for.
"Si vouz plais" in French, "por favor" in Spanish and "bitte" in German.
Lézard (French) Lagartija (Spanish) eidechse (German) earc / laghairt (Irish)
Six English, French, Italian, Spanish, Latin, and German
a German one o tannanbaum i sang when i was in the bathroom
The German word for vampire is Vampir.
Apple - Manzana (Spanish), Pomme (French), Apfel (German), Mela (Italian), Ringo (Japanese) Banana - Plátano (Spanish), Banane (French), Banane (German), Banana (Italian), Banana (Japanese) Orange - Naranja (Spanish), Orange (French), Orange (German), Arancia (Italian), Orenji (Japanese) Grape - Uva (Spanish), Raisin (French), Traube (German), Uva (Italian), Budo (Japanese) Strawberry - Fresa (Spanish), Fraise (French), Erdbeere (German), Fragola (Italian), Ichigo (Japanese)
German is the odd language. French, Italian, Spanish, and Romanian have their roots in Latin. German is a Germanic language, with next to no ties to Latin.
Maybe, if your mother's father was Italian and her mother was French, but your father's father was Spanish and his mother was German, and you grew up in Portugal.
Canyon comes from Spanish (cañón).
French - lion; Spanish - leon; Portuguese - Leâo; German - der Löwe; Russian - lav Egyptian - الأسد; Greek - liontari
Spanish: diablo French: diable German: Teufel Italian: diavolo
German : essen French : manger Spanish : CST Portuguese : manger Turkish : ye