Leprechaun is a Gaelic , Irish concept and myth. there is no Spanish equivalent, you might have diminutive of men- (Hombritos -and the adjective for Irish) but as stated, this is an Irish, not an Hispanic concept!
There is no specific word for "leprechaun" in Spanish.
"Duende" is "fairy," which is almost as close as it gets.
"Gnomo" is "gnome," which is also close.
"Leprechaun" in Spanish is "duende". It is pronounced "DWEN-day". Please see this site for confirmation of the translation: http://www.answers.com/library/Translations
"Leprechaun" in Spanish is "duende". It is pronounced "DWEN-day". Please see the Related link below for confirmation of the translation.
duende (leprechaun)
In French, you say leprechaun as "farfadet" or "lutin".
To get a Spanish-speaker to say the sound 'leprechaun', write it: leprajon, with an accent over the 'e'. The names of the Spanish letters in the word 'leprechaun' are: L - ele (Ellay) E - e (ay) P - pe (pay) R - ere (Erray) E - e (ay) C - ce (thay: like 'say' with a lisp) H - hache (Ahchay) A - a (ah) U - u (oo) N - ene (Ennay) Above are shown the letter(s), their Spanish name, and (in brackets) the approximate English pronunciation of these names.
Haltija
Say, I hi.... am surry
myo chio
Leipreachán means a leprechaun figurine.Lucharachán is the actual translation.Variants are lucharbán, luchargán, lucharpán, luchramán.
In Chinese, "leprechaun" is translated as "ๅฐ็ฎไบบ" (xiวo วi rรฉn), which literally means "little dwarf."
Leipreachán means a leprechaun figurine.Lucharachán is the actual translation.Variants are lucharbán, luchargán, lucharpán, luchramán.
Leprechaun