American English: Theater
British English: Theatre
Irish Gaelic: amharclann
Welsh Gaelic: theatr
Spanish: Teatro
French: Théâtre
Italian: Teatro
Latin: Theatrum
German: Theater (Tee•ah•tehr)
Dutch: Theater (Teh•yater)
Russian: театр (tyeatr)
Arabic: مسرح (masrech)
Persian (farsi): تئاتر
Hebrew: תאטרון (tatrivn)
Chinese (Simplified/Traditional): 剧院/劇院 (joo•yooan)
Japanese: 劇場 (Geki•jō)
Korean: 극장 (Geug jang)
If you refer to theatre performances, Roman theatre was modelled on that of the Greeks. Indian and asian theatre were completely different.
Theatre
kabuki theatre use simple languages use dialogues which were easily understood by the Japanese people but the No theatre used old fashioned language some what monotonous accompanied by traditional Japanese instrument and the Japanese failed to understand it.
Nobody really knows. People think it is either 14 or twenty. well the old theatre had 20 ( i think) but i do agree that the NEW theatre has 14 as you said! starfantasy!xx
the modern theatres are proberly safer then the globe theatre.
French: rayures Spanish: rayas German: Streifen Italian: strisce Japanese: ストライプ (sutoraipu)
French: succès Spanish: éxito German: Erfolg Italian: successo
Spanish: Mallory French: Mallory German: Mallory Italian: Mallory Russian: Маллори (Mallori)
im not crazy in 100 different languages
People's names are the same in all languages.
natural
Ingles
lindo
village
apples
inteligente
Survivor