In Spanish, "fang" is translated as "colmillo." In French, it is translated as "crocs." In German, the word for "fang" is "Reißzahn."
Some examples of the word for "prosperity" in other languages are: Spanish: prosperidad French: prospérité German: Wohlstand Italian: prosperità
Some translations of the word "dark" in other languages are: Spanish: oscuro French: sombre German: dunkel Italian: scuro
are
One key difference is the way they handle word order. Germanic languages, such as English and German, tend to have a more fixed word order compared to other Indo-European languages, which might allow for more flexibility in word placement.
house = ValeFijian is related to other polynesian languages. For example, the word house in other languages is:Samoa: FaleTonga: FaleHawaii: HaleTahiti: FareAotearoa (New Zealand): Whare
Equatorial Bantu fang
translation of the word independent in other languages
The word white in other languages includes the Spanish word Blanco. In Italian this word is said as bianco and in French as blanc.
'fang' can be a German word. It's the imperative of 'fangen', meaning 'catch'. The English word 'fang' would be 'Reißzahn' in German.
Multilingual.
In Spanish: Príncipe In French: Prince In German: Prinz In Italian: Principe
the word fang comes from the latin root word fanginus meaning bite! Hope this answers your q
seniors
el babe
Spanish: lobo French: loup German: wolf Italian: lupo Russian: волк (volk) Japanese: 狼 (ookami)
In Tibetan, yak is called "གཡག་" (gyag). In Chinese, it is called "牦牛" (máo niú). In Nepali, it is called "जात्री" (jātrī).
fang = naab ناب fangs = anyaab انياب