Indian “astronauts” are known as gaganauts, from the Hindi word for “sky.” This is the officially recognized term, though these has been some use of the term, “voyomanauts,” from the Sanskrit word for “sky.”
Based on their entries on wikitionary it looks like most phonetically written languages are able to express all these terms. Whether they commonly use them is a different question. From a cursory glance most of these are European languages such as English, German, French, etc. Languages like Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Vietnamese, Thai, will use a term that's semantically correct but doesn't try to imitate phonetically.
I'll go out on a limb and say this bullshit gives English a small bonus in being a global franca lingua (if you discount historical factors). It would be hard to communicate and discuss foreign ideas and words when you can't even express them concisely in your own language.
Insert comments about programming languages and their pros/cons here for hacker news flavor.
Doesn't every language get to make up their own words?
If there was a priority thing, shouldn't English speakers be using "cosmonaut"? They launched the first person into space, as well as the first one to orbit and a bunch of other accomplishments.
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[ 3.1 ms ] story [ 23.0 ms ] threadCosmonaut: Russian
Taikonaut: Chinese
Spationaut: French
Vyomanaut: Indian
Based on their entries on wikitionary it looks like most phonetically written languages are able to express all these terms. Whether they commonly use them is a different question. From a cursory glance most of these are European languages such as English, German, French, etc. Languages like Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Vietnamese, Thai, will use a term that's semantically correct but doesn't try to imitate phonetically.
I'll go out on a limb and say this bullshit gives English a small bonus in being a global franca lingua (if you discount historical factors). It would be hard to communicate and discuss foreign ideas and words when you can't even express them concisely in your own language.
Insert comments about programming languages and their pros/cons here for hacker news flavor.
If there was a priority thing, shouldn't English speakers be using "cosmonaut"? They launched the first person into space, as well as the first one to orbit and a bunch of other accomplishments.