lion of us
Lion in french is spelled 'lion'.Same as it is spelled in English.
Akai raion.
Translation: Coeur de leonThis happens to be an epithet given to Richard III of England, the Lionheart, in French.
"cougar" is "puma" in French (from the Spanish), and "couguar" or "cougar" in Canadian French (from the Portuguese).The term "lion des montagnes" is sometimes used inappropriately by authors as a literal translation of "mountain lion".un couguar
The animal "the lion" translates to "el león" translation from English to Spanish. However, in the plural form, remember to drop the accent so it is "los leones."
"Mister Lion" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Monsieur Lion. The masculine singular phrase also translates as "Gentleman (My lord, Sir) Lion" in English. The pronunciation will be "muh-syuhr lee-o" in French.
The lion and the mouse.
It is a translation of the Latin Dens Leonis, which passed into French as Dent de Lion and subsequently into English as Dandelion. All translate as Lion's Tooth from the plant's toothed leaves
Lion in french is spelled 'lion'.Same as it is spelled in English.
GAO
'Shiroi raion.'
Akai raion.
peonia No, it's 'lion', spelled the same as in English, but pronounced just about 'lee-on'.
Lion's teeth in 'dent de lion' in French. That gave the name 'dandelion' in English (no more in French where the plant is nowadays called 'pissenlit').
The Kanji for Flame (炎) can be pronounced either "Honō"or "En", and the word for Lion(s) is "Shishi" based on several translation sites. Therefore the two most likely ways to say "Flame Lion" in Japanese is "Shishi no Honō", which is most literally "Lion of Flame(s)" or "Enshishi" which literally means "Flame-Lion"
Translation: Coeur de leonThis happens to be an epithet given to Richard III of England, the Lionheart, in French.
If you want a translation of the name of this specific character from Lion King, it's exactly the same in English: Timon. If you want an English translation of the species he belongs to in Portuguese ("suricata"), that would be "meerkat".