It depends on the language. As far as I know, in Spanish it’s either
Spanish: padre, papa, or papi French: père
Russian: папа
German: Vati
Polish: Tata
Japanese: お父さん (otō-san) or 父 (chichi) (the first one refers to someone else’s father)
Ukrainian: таті
Italian: Papà
Note: The Spanish and Italian I’m a bit unsure for spelling. I speak more than I can read those two languages. The Slavic languages that are included are more along the lines of “dad” than father.
Father in different languages: Spanish: Padre French: Père German: Vater Italian: Padre
Kennel in other languages: French: Chenil Spanish: Perrera German: Zwinger Italian: Canile
In Spanish, you say "abundancia." In French, you say "abondance." In German, you say "Fülle."
There is no such language as Creole. the word "creole" refers to a category of languages that are a blend of 2 completely different languages. There are more than 100 living creolized languages in the world. Most are English-based or French based. In Haitian Creole it is papa.
In the Philippines, 'dad' or 'father' is commonly referred to as "tatay" in Tagalog, "ama" in Ilocano, "papa" in Bisaya, and "dada" in some Visayan languages.
Father in different languages: Spanish: Padre French: Père German: Vater Italian: Padre
In Blackfoot, as in most Algonquian languages, you must say "my father", "his father", "your father" - there is no separate word meaning just " father".My father is ni'nah
фейерверк
in chinese, it's " he "
Cinamon
in spanish it is libertio
Junge or Bub
Afrikaans = Donker
Infierno, spanish
Bro is international!
Itaalian conforto
SREKjEN - on Macedonian