It literally translates to "to have heat". However, when it is used in a sentence, it describes something as "being hot". If it is 100 degrees outside, you could say, "Yo tengo calor" to say "I am hot". Or you can say "Tener calor" to describe the general outside temperature. If the dog is panting, you could say, "El perro tiene calor" to say that "The dog is hot".
'Hot dog' would be ホットドッグ (hottodoggu) in Japanese. The pronunciation is very similar to that of English because ホットドッグ is an English loanword.
When referring to "the" Buddha, Siddhartha Gautama, you may say 'shaka.' Other terms include 'butsu' and 'budda.' Written in the same order, all of these are: 釈迦 仏 仏陀
If you mean hot like warm, we say "chaud" If you mean a hot girl or boy we usually use the English word "sexy". So for a hot boy we say "un garçon sexy"
'viens ici' or simply 'ici' are the usual ways you say 'come here' to a dog in French.
Un hot dog (masc.)
Quieres un hot dog?
"Un hot-dog Casher"
re gou (热狗)*literally a hot dog
salchicha is the actual wiener, perro caliente is hot dog
There is no German word for hot dog. So "a hot dog" is simply "ein Hot Dog" in German. If by, "hot dog" you are asking how to say that the dog is "hot" (as in temperature), you can say "Er ist Heiss" ("He is hot," where "He" refers to the gender of the noun, der Hund, which is masculine).
Perro Calente
"I'm the wiener!"
Jumbo perro caliente
hot diggity dog
仏陀(pronounced buddha) or 仏(hotoke)
Perro caliente.hanogo -- el perrito caliente