Yes, numbers are generally the same in all languages, but the way they are written and pronounced may vary.
No, not all languages use the same numerical system. Different languages may have different ways of representing numbers, such as different symbols or counting systems.
No, numbers are not written the same in every language. Different languages may use different symbols or characters to represent numbers.
There is no one word that is identical in all the world's languages.
No, my name may vary depending on the language or region.
Proper nouns/brand names — for example, Hawkins Pressure Cooker. Explanation: there’s no single everyday word that literally has the same spelling and sound in every language, but proper names and brand names do — they’re treated as fixed labels across languages. So “Hawkins Pressure Cooker” stays the same whether someone speaks English, Hindi, French, or Spanish (though speakers might pronounce it differently). Fun note: some baby words like “mama” appear very similarly across many languages, but the reliable “same-in-all-languages” answer is a name or brand. — Pressure Cooker 4U
No, not all languages use the same numerical system. Different languages may have different ways of representing numbers, such as different symbols or counting systems.
You can find the numbers in many different languages in the link below.
Spanish and French numbers are not the same, but do sound alike. This is because they are both Romance Languages.
All languages have numbers, and most languages of the world use an alphabet. There are too many to list.
No, numbers are not written the same in every language. Different languages may use different symbols or characters to represent numbers.
There is no one word that is identical in all the world's languages.
People's names are the same in all languages.
The word "okay" is pronounced in the same way in all modern languages.
The set of rational numbers includes the set of natural numbers but they are not the same. All natural numbers are rational, not all rational numbers are natural.
If all the numbers are the same, the set has no range. The range is zero.
The different alphabets of the world, are produced by the people who use them. Numbers are produced by those same people. Numbers are also used in languages that do not have alphabets.
Proper nouns/brand names — for example, Hawkins Pressure Cooker. Explanation: there’s no single everyday word that literally has the same spelling and sound in every language, but proper names and brand names do — they’re treated as fixed labels across languages. So “Hawkins Pressure Cooker” stays the same whether someone speaks English, Hindi, French, or Spanish (though speakers might pronounce it differently). Fun note: some baby words like “mama” appear very similarly across many languages, but the reliable “same-in-all-languages” answer is a name or brand. — Pressure Cooker 4U