In Uganda, the term for "grandma" can vary by language and region. In Luganda, one of the widely spoken languages, "grandma" is referred to as "jajja." In other languages, such as Runyankore, it is called "nnyina." Thus, the specific term may depend on the local dialect.
In Hebrew, "grandma" is pronounced as "Savta" (סבתא).
No, she was not.
There is no Islamic term for grandma. They just call her grandma, in their respective languages of course.
There are 81 languages in Ghana. The official language is English.For more information on the languages of Ghana, click here.
In Farsi, you would say "Mamāni" for grandma.
There's actually no such language as "Celtic". Celtic refers to a group of dozens of languages, six of which are spoken today:BretonCornishIrish GaelicManxScottish GaelicWelsh
No languages descended from Hebrew. But you could say that Biblical Hebrew is the root of Modern Hebrew. Also, Yiddish and other Jewish languages such as Ladino, had a significant percentage of Hebrew.
In Korean it is Halmoni and in spanish it is Abolita
In Sicilian, you would say "nonna" to refer to grandma.
To say "I love you grandma" you can say "Te quiero abuela" in Spanish or "Je t'aime mamie" in French.
"Grandma" in Visayan is "Lola."