The word "no" appears in more than 570 languages, but its meaning varies in each language.
There are many Indian languages. There are also many Native American languages. Which language do you mean?
All languages have numbers, and most languages of the world use an alphabet. There are too many to list.
if you took 63.9 percent of the worlds population say hi in a day
There is no English alphabet: English is written with the Latin alphabet. as of the 21st Century, more languages use Latin-based alphabets than any other (more than 1000 languages).
Maize.
In many languages, you would use the word soccer or American soccer.
a lot
a lot
In many languages French, Spanish and English the word hallelujah is pronounced the same but is spelled slightly different. Some or languages like Chinese and Japanese it is pronounced differently.
There are about 7000 languages spoken in the world today and i would say, that without a doubt, every one has a word, or many words for 'love'; because God created man and his languages, (Gen.2.7 & 11.7), and the Bible says; "God is love" (1Jn.4.8)
There is no one word that is exactly the same in every world language. However, there are a great number of words that are similar in many languages. Banana is an example of a word that is largely the same in many, many languages. (Pineapple is ananas in many languages, but not all). Additionally many slang words are the same in all languages, such as OK, cool and some others. Many new words that are related to science and technology are also very similar in all languages, such as: computer, disc, etc.
One word is a "polyglot." This word comes from Greek, meaning "many tongues." It first came into use in the 1600s. But these days, a more common word is "multilingual." This word can refer to an individual, or to an entire community where more than two language are spoken. (A person who speaks two languages is "bilingual.")
The original meaning of the word abuse is " to use". It comes from the Latin word Abusus, meaning "misuse or to use". This word has been in many different languages but the meaning still seems to be to use something badly, be it power, people or animals.
Speaking many languages.
There are many, many different languages in Africa.
There are many Indian languages. There are also many Native American languages. Which language do you mean?
Chinese, like many other languages, does not use definite articles, thus there is no need for the word "the" and it cannot be literally translated from languages like English that make great use of the definite article "the". Russian and other Slavic languages, as well as dead languages like Latin, lack articles equivalent to the word "the" as well. In the case of the Romance Languages, articles developed from the Latin words for "this" and "that" (for example "illa", which became "la" in many modern Romance languages). A similar occurrence has happened in Slavic languages where the Slavonic word for "this" now functions as an article (for example "ta" = "this" now appears at the end of words with a function of an article in Bulgarian ("академията" (akademiata) = "academy the")