It's difficult to say, but the top contenders are:
taxi
telephone
television
America
weekend
The most common word in all languages is "the."
There is no one word that is identical in all the world's languages.
It is not possible to provide the word "daisy" in all languages in the world as there are thousands of languages spoken globally. However, in some languages, the word for daisy is similar to the English word, such as "margarita" in Spanish, "marguerite" in French, and "Gänseblümchen" in German.
Mandarin Chinese has the most tones out of all the world's languages.
No, not all languages rely on word order for syntax. Some languages, like Turkish and Japanese, rely more on inflection and case markings to convey the relationship between words in a sentence, rather than strict word order.
The most common word in all languages is "the."
There is no one word that is identical in all the world's languages.
Most languages have between 40,000 and 160,000 words, but it is not possible to count the exact number, since there is no universal definition of what a word is. English has the most words of any language, if you include all borrowed words in the count.
wife
education
It is not possible to provide the word "daisy" in all languages in the world as there are thousands of languages spoken globally. However, in some languages, the word for daisy is similar to the English word, such as "margarita" in Spanish, "marguerite" in French, and "Gänseblümchen" in German.
Mandarin Chinese has the most tones out of all the world's languages.
The word "okay" is pronounced in the same way in all modern languages.
No, not all languages rely on word order for syntax. Some languages, like Turkish and Japanese, rely more on inflection and case markings to convey the relationship between words in a sentence, rather than strict word order.
Kuuipo is hawaiin inamorato is italien
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
Well there are three i know Altiar, Ezio, and Aquilas