Afrikaans = vuur
Bulgarian = Огън
Czech = oheň
Danish = ild
Dutch = brand
English = fire
French = incendie
German = Feuer
Greek = Φωτιά
Hebrew = esh (אש)
Italian = incendio
Japanese = 火
Korean = 불
Latin = ignus
Macedonian = Оган
Norwegian = eld
Portuguese = fogo
Quechua = yanapaway
Russian = oгонь
Spanish = fuego
Tagalog = apoy
Ukrainian = Вогонь
Vietnamese = Lửa
Welsh = tân
Yiddish = Feier
Žemaitėška = Ognės
Superb in:Spanish - soberbioFrench - superbeGerman - hervorragendItalian - superboPortuguese - soberbo
Yami no hi would be flame of darkness
The name Jermaine does not translate to Spanish. Many names don't. You would just say Jermaine the same in both languages.
It depends what context you mean. If you mean it as a synonym to "fiery" or "blazing", it's "ranran".
Madame IS a French word. It needs no translation when using it in French. Many "English" words are actually borrowed from other languages, the word madame is one example.
Flame in French is flamme. Flame in Spanish is la llama. Flame in Italian is fiamma. Flame is Greek is floga.
A Man.
Rescue
Afrikaans: leweSwahili: maisha
To say trust in Italian you would say fiducia. To say trust in Spanish say confianza. Trust in Polish is zaufanie, and in German say vertrauen.
maison is french
French - jouer
It is impossible to determine the exact number of people in the world who do not say the word "and," as language practices vary significantly across cultures, languages, and individuals. However, it is safe to assume that there are many individuals who do not use this word in their communication for various reasons.
With slight pronunciation variations, the word "algebra" is the same in most languages.
The word "hola" originated from Latin, through the evolution of various languages such as Spanish. It is commonly used as a greeting in Spanish-speaking countries to say "hello" or "hi."
a strength is simba. it is also used for might.
spanish:hielo french:glacons german:eis