Afrikaans – Aleksander (ah-lek-SAHN-der)
Albanian – Aleksandër (ah-lek-SAHN-der)
Amharic – አሌክሳንደር (ah-lek-SAHN-der)
Arabic – الإسكندر (al-iskandar)
Armenian – Ալեքսանդր (ah-lehk-SAHN-dur)
Azerbaijani – Aleksandr (ah-lek-SAHN-dr)
Basque – Alejandro (ah-le-KHAN-droh)
Belarusian – Аляксандр (a-lyak-SAN-dar)
Bengali – আলেকজান্ডার (alek-JAN-dar)
Bosnian – Aleksandar (ah-lek-SAHN-dar)
Bulgarian – Александър (ah-lek-SAHN-dar)
Catalan – Alexandre (ah-lek-SAN-dreh)
Cebuano – Aleksandro (ah-lek-SAHN-droh)
Chinese (Mandarin) – 亚历山大 (Yàlìshāndà)
Croatian – Aleksandar (ah-lek-SAHN-dar)
Czech – Alexandr (ah-lek-SAHN-dr)
Danish – Alexander (ah-lek-SAN-der)
Dutch – Alexander (ah-lek-SAN-der)
Estonian – Aleksander (ah-lek-SAN-der)
Finnish – Aleksanteri (ah-lek-SAHN-teh-ree)
French – Alexandre (ah-lek-SAHN-druh)
Georgian – ალექსანდრე (ah-lek-SAN-dreh)
German – Alexander (ah-lek-SAHN-der)
Greek – Αλέξανδρος (ah-LEKS-an-dros)
Gujarati – અલેક્ઝાન્ડર (ah-lek-ZHAHN-der)
Haitian Creole – Aleksann (ah-lek-SAHN)
Hebrew – אלכסנדר (al-ek-SAHN-der)
Hindi – अलेक्ज़ैंडर (ah-lek-ZAN-der)
Hungarian – Sándor (SHAHN-dor)
Icelandic – Alexander (ah-lek-SAHN-der)
Igbo – Aleksandara (ah-lek-SAHN-dah-rah)
Indonesian – Aleksander (ah-lek-SAN-der)
Irish – Alastar (AH-lah-stahr)
Italian – Alessandro (ah-les-SAHN-droh)
Japanese – アレクサンダー (A-rekusan-dā)
Javanese – Aleksander (ah-lek-SAN-der)
Kannada – ಅಲೆಕ್ಸಾಂಡರ್ (ah-lek-SAHN-der)
Kazakh – Александр (ah-lek-SAHN-dr)
Khmer – អាឡិក្សង់ (ah-LEK-san)
Korean – 알렉산더 (al-lek-san-da)
Kurdish – Aleksander (ah-lek-SAHN-der)
Kyrgyz – Александр (ah-lek-SAHN-dr)
Lao – ເອເລັກແຊນເດີ (eh-lek-sen-deuh)
Latvian – Aleksandrs (ah-lek-SAHN-ders)
Lithuanian – Aleksandras (ah-lek-SAHN-drahs)
Luxembourgish – Alexandre (ah-lek-SAHN-druh)
Macedonian – Александар (ah-lek-SAN-dar)
Malay – Aleksander (ah-lek-SAHN-der)
Malayalam – അലക്സാണ്ടർ (ah-lek-SAHN-der)
Maltese – Alessandru (ah-les-SAHN-droo)
Maori – Arekahana (ah-re-kah-HAH-nah)
Marathi – अलेक्झांडर (ah-lek-ZHAN-der)
Mongolian – Александр (ah-lek-SAHN-dr)
Nepali – अलेक्जेन्डर (ah-lek-JAN-der)
Norwegian – Aleksander (ah-lek-SAN-der)
Odia – ଆଲେକ୍ସାଣ୍ଡର (ah-lek-SAHN-der)
Pashto – اليګزانډر (ah-lek-SAHN-der)
Persian – اسکندر (eskandar)
Polish – Aleksander (ah-lek-SAN-der)
Portuguese – Alexandre (ah-lek-SAHN-dree)
Punjabi – ਅਲੈਕਸੈਂਡਰ (ah-lek-SAN-der)
Romanian – Alexandru (ah-lek-SAHN-droo)
Russian – Александр (ah-lek-SAHN-dr)
Samoan – Aleksandro (ah-lek-SAHN-droh)
Sanskrit – अलेक्ज़ांडर (ah-lek-ZAN-der)
Serbian – Александар (ah-lek-SAN-dar)
Sesotho – Aleksander (ah-lek-SAN-der)
Sinhala – ඇලෙක්සැන්ඩර් (ah-lek-SAN-der)
Slovak – Alexander (ah-lek-SAHN-der)
Slovenian – Aleksander (ah-lek-SAN-der)
Somali – Aleksandar (ah-lek-SAHN-dar)
Spanish – Alejandro (ah-le-HAN-droh)
Swahili – Aleksander (ah-lek-SAHN-der)
Swedish – Alexander (ah-lek-SAHN-der)
Tagalog – Aleksandro (ah-lek-SAHN-droh)
Tamil – அலெக்ஸ்சாண்டர் (ah-lek-SAHN-der)
Telugu – అలెగ్జాండర్ (ah-lek-ZAN-der)
Thai – อเล็กซานเดอร์ (ah-lek-SAN-der)
Tibetan – ཨ་ལེགས་སཱན་ཌཱར (ah-lek-sahn-dar)
Tigrinya – አሌክሳንደር (ah-lek-SAHN-der)
Turkish – İskender (ees-KEN-der)
Turkmen – Aleksandr (ah-lek-SAHN-dr)
Ukrainian – Олександр (oh-lek-SAHN-dr)
Urdu – الیگزینڈر (ah-lek-ZAN-der)
Uzbek – Aleksandr (ah-lek-SAHN-dr)
Vietnamese – A-lếch-xan-đơ (ah-lek-san-der)
Welsh – Alecsander (ah-lek-SAHN-der)
Xhosa – Aleksander (ah-lek-SAHN-der)
Yiddish – אַלעקזאַנדער (ah-lek-SAHN-der)
Yoruba – Aleksandara (ah-lek-SAHN-dah-rah)
Zulu – Aleksander (ah-lek-SAHN-der)