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26 answers

Pavo is in Spanish.

2006-11-22 02:40:16 · answer #1 · answered by jaime r 4 · 0 1

Hindi - turkey the bird
Türkiye - Turkey the country (meaning the land of Turks)

Turkish.

2006-11-22 05:47:05 · answer #2 · answered by Earthling 7 · 0 0

Shichimencho. Happy Turkey Day!! (gobble gobble)

2006-11-23 13:24:04 · answer #3 · answered by Satu 1 · 0 0

In Esperanto, there are two words:

The animal = meleagro
The meat = meleagraĵo

Oh, and the country = turkio

2006-11-22 12:30:10 · answer #4 · answered by rbwtexan 6 · 0 0

Here are some, in European languages:

French: dinde
Spanish: pavo
Italian: tacchino
German: Truthenne
Portuguese: peru
Estonian: kalkun
Finnish: kalkkuna
Greek: γαλοπούλα (galopóula - gah law poo lah)
Bulgarian: пуйка (puyka)
Macedonian: мисирка (miriska - mee ree skah)
Slovienain: puran
Hungarian: pulyka
Icelandic: kalkún
Swedish: våp
Latvian: tītars
Lithuanian: kalakutas
Maltese: dundjan
Dutch: kalkoense hen
Norwegian: kalkun
Czech: krůta
Polish: indyczka
Romanian: curcan
Russian: индейка (indyeïka - ind-yay-kah)
Slovak: morka
Ukrainian: інди́чка (inditchka - inn - ditch - kah)
Croatian: puran
Danish: kalkun

2006-11-22 03:46:47 · answer #5 · answered by El Emigrante 6 · 1 1

Spanish: Pavo or guajolote.
French: La dinde or Le dindon(a tom)
German: Truthahn

2006-11-22 07:38:33 · answer #6 · answered by steiner1745 7 · 0 0

Galopoula in Greek

2006-11-22 02:48:53 · answer #7 · answered by C.C. 4 · 0 0

dinde in french (pronounce dand)
tacchino in italian (pronounce takkeeno)
ديك حبش in arabic (pronounce deek habash)
endayka u pronounce it in russian (sorry don't have russian characters)
pute in german (pronounce putthh)
that if u mean turkey the bird and not the country!

2006-11-22 03:41:04 · answer #8 · answered by mallouna 2 · 0 0

If you mean the country, it's "Tuerkei" in german and "turchia" in italian and if you mean the bird it's "truthahn" in german (well you can say "pute" too, but that's a female turkey)
:o)

2006-11-22 02:53:55 · answer #9 · answered by pearl_682 3 · 2 0

It's "shichi-men-chou" in Japanese and it means a bird with 7 dimensions.

2006-11-22 02:56:06 · answer #10 · answered by fortuna0820 3 · 0 0

dinde in French
induk in Russian

2006-11-22 03:33:21 · answer #11 · answered by Cybele 1 · 0 0

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