Russian is the language of origin for the word sputnik. The word in question functions as a noun whose translation into English generally is as "companion". "co-traveler," or "fellow traveler." But regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation remains "spuht-nihk" in Russian.
'Sputnik' is how the Russian word 'Cпутник' (Satellite) is written in English.
Russian
It was from Greek.
coleslaw
No. A borrowed or loan word is a word adopted from another language without translation. Much of the technical language of music is borrowed from Italian: lento, piano, and opera are a few. Many culinary terms are loans from French.
It came from the Germanic Tribes.
A borrowed word is one that originated in another language, but now is used in English. For instance, how many US citizens don't know what a taco is? The word taco is borrowed from Spanish. We have algebra classes. The word algebra is from Arabic. There are many such examples. See the website below for more.
The word sputnik originates from is russia.
The word "sputnik" comes from Russian, meaning "satellite" or "companion." It was famously used to name the first artificial satellite, Sputnik 1, launched by the Soviet Union in 1957.
coleslaw
The word "tea" was borrowed from the Mandarin Chinese word "chΓ‘" (θΆ) during the 17th century.
It was from Greek.
No. A borrowed or loan word is a word adopted from another language without translation. Much of the technical language of music is borrowed from Italian: lento, piano, and opera are a few. Many culinary terms are loans from French.
It came from the Germanic Tribes.
The Greek borrowed it from "An Asiatic language".
The word "market" is borrowed from the Latin language. It comes from the Latin word "mercatus," which means trading or buying and selling.
Directly from the Spanish Language-which in turn acquired it from Latin.
France; the English language "borrowed" it in 1902.
Some words borrowed into Spanish are: Flashback Internet waffle weekend western (referring to cowboy movies) whisky