muy loco is very mad in spanish :) (mad as in mad hatter or insane) Angry is enojado.
im a filipino so it means in our language BAHO (BA-HO)
An insult by definition is rude, so there is no way to say one where no one is mad.
estoy muy loco
You say "Not so good" in Yoruba language of the Western African origin as "Kofibe da".
There is no one "Native American " language, but many from the different tribes. So your question can't be answered.
Alors tu es fou
He was mad at you for not finishing your question. So he say, Screw this kid.
In what language?
A Muslim is a believer in the religion of Islam, so you are asking about a religion rather than a language. Muslims all over the world speak many different languages, so you would have to pick one and ask how to say beautiful in that language.
There is no such language as "Shakespearean language". He wrote in English, and he might well have said "You are mad" as "You are mad". Antony in Julius Caesar says "You are not wood, you are not stones, but men, and being men, hearing the will of Caesar, it will inflame you, it will make you mad." Of course, sometimes (but not always by any means) Shakespeare used the old pronoun "thou" and its verb forms for the singular forms of "you". So Lady Macbeth says to the messenger "Thou art mad to say it".Although Shakespeare often used the word "mad" he only used it in the sense of "insane". The sense of "angry" has developed in some English dialects since and in American dialects has overtaken the older meaning. Shakespeare would have said "angry" by using the word "angry"
Uh, not a particularly good example of analogy here. Is there as difference between "mad" and "angry"? I'd say they are the same thing, so the word we are looking for is "stream". But some might think that "mad" is like "angry" but moreso, in which case the word is "river", or that angry is like mad but moreso, in which case the word is "trickle". And some would say that "mad" means insane, which is a state of mind but a different one, in which case we are looking for a word for a topographical feature which is not a flow of water, possibly "hill".
because half the things you say about him are true.