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2006-11-08 06:47:28 · 6 answers · asked by Juan T 1 in Society & Culture Languages

6 answers

John - English
Ivan - Russian
Ian - Various places
Jean - French
Johannes - Germanic/Dutch
Johanne - Also Germanic

2006-11-08 06:50:02 · answer #1 · answered by JAT 6 · 2 0

English = John
French = Jean
German = Johan
Russian = Ivan
Those are the ones I know, it also translates to Portuguese, Greek, Hebrew, Italian, Polish, and just about every European language has a version of it. In fact there are over 150 languages in the world that has a version of it because of biblical translations into those languages.

2006-11-08 15:12:09 · answer #2 · answered by my_iq_135 5 · 0 0

In english it's John

2006-11-08 15:07:44 · answer #3 · answered by Alej 5 · 0 0

Portuguese: João

2006-11-08 15:08:30 · answer #4 · answered by Andrzej 2 · 0 0

In Greek = Yannis, from Jewish Johaanahn, meaning faithful to God.!

Ciao......John-John.

2006-11-08 15:42:42 · answer #5 · answered by John-John 7 · 0 0

in Chinese it means " BRICK" as in bricks to build walls or houses

and "sah juan" means concrete block, as in blocks to build a block wall, or basement foundation wall

2006-11-08 14:55:50 · answer #6 · answered by million$gon 7 · 0 0

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