Cognates. Example: English "blue," French "bleu," and German "blau," are all cognates. Not all similar-sounding words are cognates. Example: The English "become" does NOT have the same meaning as the German "bekommen" (which means "get" in English).
The term for words from different languages that look similar and mean the same thing is "cognates."
toothpastetoothpaste n. a paste used in cleaning the teeth: tutpeystBasically the same thing only spelled different.
No, creole and French are not the same thing. Creole refers to a language that developed from a mixture of different languages, while French is a Romance language that originated in France. Creole languages can be influenced by French, but they are distinct languages with their own grammatical rules and vocabulary.
it means a word that sounds the same but is spelt differantly. this doesnt mean the word means the same thing! e.g sea see :)
yes. Spelled is correct why but i guess spelt is the new thing
"Toyota" is a proper noun. Therefor it remains pronounced "Toyota" in all languages the only thing different is the spelling. "Toyota" in Japanese is spelled: "トヨタ."
The term for words from different languages that look similar and mean the same thing is "cognates."
No, Sasquach and Yeti are similarly related, but different species.
Words that are spelled the same but have different meanings are called homographs.fusefew budgedustcluemustsawustheirafter
There are about 450 Languages spoken in India and about 700 different Native American languages. But there is no such language as "Indian".
Because they are different countries. They originallY had the same,but then stuff happened and the Japanese changed theirs a bit.Same thing about the Koreans.
one thing i know you have to do is know atleast 2 different languages
In French the word George means the thing as English. This only difference is it is spelled different.
is a cat that speakes different languages !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ha lol jk there is no such thing as a trilingual cat !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
No, "The" can only be spelled one way or else it means a completely different thing. "Thee" is VERY old English and would sound strange if you tried using it in this day and age.
There is no such thing as "indian language". India has more than 450 different languages. One example is Tamil. Water in Tamil is Thanni (தண்ணி).
There is no such thing as the Swiss language. Four different languages are spoken in different parts of Switzerland: German, French, Italian and Romansh.