Now tell me, user, how is your country name sounds on your national language? Can it be translated...

Now tell me, user, how is your country name sounds on your national language? Can it be translated? Do you know how its named in other languages?

>how is your country name sounds on your national language?
Nihon or Nippon

>Can it be translated?
a place where sun rises

>Do you know how its named in other languages?
How can I know that when I don't know other languages other than English?

>how is your country name sounds on your national language?
Bharath, or India (transliterated from Sindhu in Sanskrit)
>Can it be translated?
a body of water
>Do you know how its named in other languages?
poo in loo

Well, funny story. Guatemala was just a Spanish variation of the Nahuatl Cuauhtēmallān, or, "place of many trees". The Spanish had been using Nahuatl Indians as guides since they landed in Mexico. There was no unified state for the natives, but the location closest to the modern day capital would have been Iximche in the Kaqchikel language. The Quiche however, were the largest kingdom of the time, so it could be argued that the name before the Spaniards was simply "Reino K'iche' de Q'umarkaj" Which means the kingdom of the forests

Türkiye>Türk-iye
-iye is affix for "belonging to", so it means "belongs to turks"
it does sound close to "turkey" but idk where they got it from

Maghreb (you won't be able to pronounce the letter "gh").

It just mean "West" or "Western".

Purr-two-gale

Slovenija
It literally means Slovenija.

The united states of America
Los estados unidos de América.
Translates well in most langauges, and ironically, mexico, our neighbor, is technically the united states of mexico. Go figure.

Deutschland

Land of the people; "Folkland" would be an accurate English translation

Germany, Alemania, Nemetorszag, Saksa, Ashkenaz...

Sverige, Ruotsi :3
Don't think its mean anything

England - land of the Angles.

Most Europeans languages have something similar, except for a couple:

>Sasana (Irish)
>Lloegr (Welsh)

Magyarország
It means "Hungarian country"

new zealand is named after dutch province zeeland
means "sea land"

>how is your country name sounds on your national language?
Ellas or Ellada

>Can it be translated?
no

>Do you know how its named in other languages?
Greece, Yunan

Mongol uls
Mongolian Nation

Österreich.
You call it Awstrija, Anglos call it Austria, japs call it Osutoria,

>how is your country name sounds on your national language?
Although it's written in portuguese as Brasil, the sound is similar to the english pronunciation
>Can it be translated?
Means land of brazilwood, which is a tree whose early use was to dye clothes in a red- ember like- manner
> Do you know how its named in other languages?
Brazil in english
Burajiru in moonspeak
Brésil in french
Brasil in spanish

Sweden = Sverige
Derives from Svea rike
Which means kingdom of the Sveas
Sveas were one group of people, they are to have fought another group of people called Götarna

Israel but exactly as it's written not like retarded Anglo pronunciation

Fought with God

i'll try:
deutschland
d-oi-t-shh-land
doitshhland
oi like in "roids", shh like in "shh, is gud bby" and land like a rasta would say the english word land, you know, they pronounce the a as weird we do, man.

i don't know shit about the rest

meh hee co.

was meh shee co originally but it changed over time, that's why it has an x.

no one is totally sure what the name means. The spanish missionaries said it meant "in the navel of the moon", modern linguists say it could also be "place of huitzilopochtli" or just "place of the mexica", what the aztecs called themselves.

Suomi

No one really knows where it comes from.