In Hebrew, it roughly means, "PRINCESS"
Degree is generic and non-specific. French and German are specific.
Languages are different mainly because of land differance. Different ancient people developed different languages to suit the land they were in and the words they needed in their culture. Eventually, as people migrated, the languages became different and evolved to accomidate even more words. Many languages also adopt words from other languages, and many languages originate from the same language, but are made different over time.
im not crazy in 100 different languages
There is Sara and Sarah. Both are cool, but try SaRa or SaRaH or something like that. You can use different type faces (fonts) or whatever to make things look different. If you are writing it, you can add different kinds of flourishes to make it super cool. Different colors are geat, too.
fun
Sharon
Smart
in English it is fire
The term for words from different languages that look similar and mean the same thing is "cognates."
The two official languages of Chad are French and Arabic. So you could say 'Bonjour' or 'As-salaam aleikum'. There are many other indigenous languages in Chad, such as Sara, but most people would understand the above.
nafisa
laxmi in india
Broad question. Sara Languages all contain 3 even tones. Consonants include an implosive b and implosive d. The co-occurence of vowels is constrained within morphemes, the building blocks for words. All Sara languages have Subject Verb Object order. Sound dictionaries for many Sara languages are available at http://morkegbooks.com/Services/World/Languages/SaraBagirmi/SoundDictionary/SaraSoundDictionary.htm
Rebecca is from the Hebrew and means 'to tie'. It means the same in other languages.
beautiful flower in African
There is no such language as "Indian". If you mean languages of India, there are more than 450 different languages. If you are talking about Native American languages, there are more than 700.
There are a variety of ways to spell Sarah in different languages. In Muslim, Greek, Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese, they spell Sarah as Sara. In Finnish, they spell Sarah as Salli, Sari, and Saara. In English, it can also be spelled as Sera, Sariah, and Sarra.