Spanish- amigo
Italian- amico
Polish- przyjaciel
French- ami
Norwegian- venn
Danish- veninde
Turkish- ARKADAŞ
Portuguese- amigo
German- Freund
Dutch- vriend
Scottish- caraid
Tagalog- kaibígan
Swahili- rafiki
Zulu- umngane
Hindi - Mitr
Urdu - Dost
Thai - peuan
The word "Friend" in many languages
Albanian - mik
Afrikaans - vriend
Chinese - péngyou
Dutch - vriend, vriendje
Danish - ven
Estonian - sõber
Filipino(Tagalog) - kaibigan
French - ami
German - freund
Georgian - megobari
Hungarian - barát
Indian - dost
Italian - amico
Irish - cara
Japanese -- tomodachi
Korean -- jingu
Latin -- amicus
Manx -- carrey
Old English -- freond, wine
Persian -- dust
Russian -- prijátel
Sanskrit -- mitra
Spanish -- amigo
Swahili -- rafiki
Turkish -- dost,arkadas
Friend: Amigo (Spanish), Ami (French), Freund (German), Amico (Italian), Amigo (Portuguese), 友達 (Japanese), друг (Russian), صديق (Arabic), 朋友 (Chinese), vän (Swedish).
No, not all languages have nouns. Some languages, like verb-based languages, do not have a clear distinction between nouns and verbs and may use different word classes or sentence structures instead.
"Okay" is a word that has the same meaning and spelling in multiple languages.
It is impossible to provide a single word for "white" in all languages as languages have different words and variations. However, some examples include "blanc" in French, "weiß" in German, "blanco" in Spanish, and "白" (bái) in Mandarin Chinese.
There are an estimated 3,000 to 8,000 languages in the world (not counting languages no longer spoken), so it would be very hard to list them all here. You can at least find out the word for "family" in a few of them using a free online translator and selecting different languages to translate to from English.
It is not possible to provide the word "daisy" in all languages in the world as there are thousands of languages spoken globally. However, in some languages, the word for daisy is similar to the English word, such as "margarita" in Spanish, "marguerite" in French, and "Gänseblümchen" in German.
education
wife
Well there are three i know Altiar, Ezio, and Aquilas
In tamil - nanban in hindi - dosth
Spanish: fiel French: fidèle German: treu Italian: fedele Russian: верный Chinese (Mandarin): 忠诚的 (Zhōngchéng de) Japanese: 忠実な (Chūjitsuna) Arabic: مخلص (mukhlis) Hindi: वफादार (vafādār)
There are an estimated 3,000 to 8,000 languages in the world (not counting languages no longer spoken), so it would be very hard to list them all here. You can at least find out the word for "family" in a few of them using a free online translator and selecting different languages to translate to from English.
The German word for friend id Freund; all nouns are capitalized in German. The languages spoken in Switzerland are French, German, Italian, and Romansch.
"Okay" is a word that has the same meaning and spelling in multiple languages.
Spanish: Mallory French: Mallory German: Mallory Italian: Mallory Russian: Маллори (Mallori)
All 6,809 languages in the world are different from each other.
It's possible it is for one, but there are hundreds of different native American tribes, all with different languages.
Yes, because you can't literally translate a language into another language. Especially eastern languages are totally different from western. For example in chinees, you don't have a word for 'or'. And the word for power is the same as the word for right. In the end, we always think in a language, which means that all people think different.