The word “tree” refers to a perennial plant with an elongated stem or trunk, supporting branches and leaves. Trees are a vital part of our ecosystem, providing oxygen, improving air quality, conserving water, and supporting wildlife. People often search for “tree in other languages” and “tree in different languages” to understand the cultural significance and linguistic diversity associated with this fundamental symbol of life across the globe.
How to Say ‘Tree’ in 100 Other Languages
Afrikaans: boom
Albanian: pemë
Amharic: ዛፍ (zaf)
Arabic: شجرة (shajara)
Armenian: ծառ (tsarr)
Azerbaijani: ağac
Basque: zuhaitz
Belarusian: дрэва (dréva)
Bengali: গাছ (gachh)
Bosnian: drvo
Bulgarian: дърво (dărvo)
Burmese: သစ်ပင် (thitpin)
Catalan: arbre
Cebuano: kahoy
Chichewa: mtengo
Chinese (Mandarin): 树 (shù)
Corsican: arbur
Croatian: drvo
Czech: strom
Danish: træ
Dutch: boom
Esperanto: arbo
Estonian: puu
Filipino: puno
Finnish: puu
French: arbre
Galician: árbore
Georgian: ხე (khe)
German: Baum
Greek: δέντρο (dentro)
Gujarati: વૃક્ષ (vr̥kṣa)
Haitian Creole: pyebwa
Hausa: itacen
Hebrew: עץ (etz)
Hindi: पेड़ (péd)
Hungarian: fa
Icelandic: tré
Igbo: osisi
Indonesian: pohon
Irish: crann
Italian: albero
Japanese: 木 (ki)
Javanese: wit
Kannada: ಮರ (mara)
Kazakh: ağaş
Khmer: ដើមឈើ (dambaŭ ceu)
Korean: 나무 (namu)
Kurdish: دار (dar)
Kyrgyz: bak
Lao: ຕົ້ນໄມ້ (tonmai)
Latvian: koks
Lithuanian: medis
Luxembourgish: bam
Macedonian: дрво (drvo)
Malagasy: hazo
Malay: pokok
Malayalam: മരം (maraṁ)
Maltese: siġra
Maori: rākau
Marathi: झाड (jhād)
Mongolian: мод (mod)
Nepali: रुख (rukha)
Norwegian: tre
Pashto: ونې (wane)
Persian: درخت (derakht)
Polish: drzewo
Portuguese: árvore
Punjabi: ਰੁੱਖ (rukha)
Romanian: copac
Russian: дерево (dérevo)
Samoan: laau
Serbian: дрво (drvo)
Shona: muti
Sindhi: وڻ (wanh)
Sinhala: ගස (gasa)
Slovak: strom
Slovenian: drevo
Somali: geed
Spanish: árbol
Sundanese: tangkal
Swahili: mti
Swedish: träd
Tajik: daraxt
Tamil: மரம் (maram)
Telugu: మొక్క (mokka)
Thai: ต้นไม้ (tonmai)
Turkish: ağaç
Ukrainian: дерево (dérevo)
Urdu: درخت (darakht)
Uzbek: daraxt
Vietnamese: cây (cay)
Welsh: coeden
Xhosa: umthi
Yiddish: בוים (boym)
Yoruba: igi
Zulu: umuthi