The same, but in an American accent.
If "American Eagle" is a place name or the name of a store, you would not translate the place name, so it would be "a American Eagle" for "at American Eagle".If you are referring to a bird, then you would say "al águila americana".
There are and have been thousands of American warships. Which one are you asking about? Please repost your question with more clues, say, the name of a battle that the warship was in . . .
You would say "Shannon". Since Shannon is a name, people would use it as the person's name. Shannon is an English/Irish name from the River Shannon in Ireland.
In American Sign Language (ASL), the name "Gabrielle" can be fingerspelled. To fingerspell a name, you would use the ASL alphabet to spell out each letter of the name in sequence.
Ecaterina (Caitlin is of Irish erroneous spelling, derived from the Greek name Ecaterina)
I'm going to go out on a limb and say Native American.
6,000,000,000,000,000,000,000's American name will be six sextillion and the European name will be six thousand trillion (six trilliard).
Juanita is how you say Janice in Spanish. However, the American name Janice is sometimes used in Spanish-speaking countries.
MOM is not a name. If you want you may say it is an English/American nickname for mother. ( Mama, Mommy, Mamie, Momma etc.)
I would probably say "Main Street."
To say "my name is Vanessa" in American Sign Language, you would fingerspell V-A-N-E-S-S-A and then sign "MY NAME" with the non-dominant hand and "VANESSA" with the dominant hand.
"My name is Melanie" in American Sign Language would be signed by fingerspelling M-E-L-A-N-I-E and then signing "MY NAME."