Czech: králík Danish: kanin Dutch: konijn Estonian: küülik Finnish: kani French: lapin, *-ine German: das Kaninchen Greek: κουνέλι Hungarian: (üregi) nyúl Icelandic: kanína Indonesian: kelinci Italian: coniglio Japanese: usagi Korean: Latvian: trusis Lithuanian: triušis Norwegian: kanin Polish: królik Portuguese (Brazil): coelho Portuguese (Portugal): coelho Romanian: iepure (de casă) Russian: кролик Slovak: králik Slovenian: zajec Spanish: conejo Swedish: kanin Turkish: tavşan
amie-jay
You may say 'usagi.'
There is no such thing as pigeon language. If you are talking about "Pidgin" language, then there are hundreds of completely different Pidgins in the world. You would have to specify which one you are referring to.
Spellings don't differ from language to language, unless the languages have different alphabets. English and Spanish both have the same alphabet.
Rabbit in Spanish is "el conejo."
You can say rabbit in a different language.
It is in Rabbit.
Saying "rabbit" to a rabbit might not achieve much, as rabbits typically respond more to tone, body language, and the context of their surroundings rather than specific words. However, it can be a fun way to interact with them and perhaps get their attention, especially if you're trying to bond with or play with a pet rabbit. Plus, it's just cute!
because pirates had a different language. eg phillipino people have a different language.
tu in portuguese
cinque
Different words for "Efficiency" in different language
amie-jay
Spanish: Inteligente
teléfono - Spanish
To say "rabbit" in Polish, you would say "królik".
There are about 450 Languages spoken in India and about 700 different Native American languages. But there is no such language as "Indian".