Blood in Different Languages: Blood is a human and animal body fluid, providing the bodies with essential materials such as nutrients and oxygen and carrying wastes products fat from the same tissues. Blood is a substance that circulates continuously and provides food, oxygen and waste removal from the body. The blood is mostly liquid and retained by various cells and proteins, rendering the blood “thicker” than pure water. The individual has an average blood content of approximately 5 liters (over a gallon).
How to Say Blood in 88 Different Languages
Different Languages | Word Blood |
---|---|
Albanian | gjak |
Basque | odol |
Belarusian | кроў |
Bosnian | krv |
Bulgarian | кръв |
Catalan | sang |
Croatian | krv |
Czech | krev |
Danish | blod |
Dutch | bloed |
Estonian | veri |
Finnish | veri |
French | du sang |
Galician | sangue |
German | Blut |
Greek | αίμα (aíma) |
Hungarian | vér |
Icelandic | Blóð |
Irish | fuil |
Italian | sangue |
Latvian | asinis |
Lithuanian | kraujas |
Macedonian | крв |
Maltese | demm |
Norwegian | blod |
Polish | krew |
Portuguese | sangue |
Romanian | sânge |
Russian | кровь (krov') |
Serbian | крв (krv) |
Slovak | krvný |
Slovenian | krvi |
Spanish | sangre |
Swedish | blod |
Ukrainian | кров (krov) |
Welsh | gwaed |
Yiddish | בלוט |
Armenian | արյուն |
Azerbaijani | qan |
Bengali | রক্ত |
Chinese Simplified | 血液 (xiěyè) |
Chinese Traditional | 血液 (xiěyè) |
Georgian | სისხლის |
Gujarati | રક્ત |
Hindi | रक्त |
Hmong | ntshav |
Japanese | 血液 |
Kannada | ರಕ್ತದ |
Kazakh | қан |
Khmer | ឈាម |
Korean | 피 (pi) |
Lao | ເລືອດ |
Malayalam | രക്തം |
Marathi | रक्त |
Mongolian | цусны |
Myanmar (Burmese) | သှေး |
Nepali | रगत |
Sinhala | ලේ |
Tajik | хун |
Tamil | இரத்த |
Telugu | రక్త |
Thai | เลือด |
Turkish | kan |
Urdu | خون |
Uzbek | qon |
Vietnamese | Máu |
Arabic | دم (dam) |
Hebrew | דָם |
Persian | خون |
Afrikaans | bloed |
Chichewa | magazi |
Hausa | jini |
Igbo | ọbara |
Sesotho | mali |
Somali | dhiig |
Swahili | damu |
Yoruba | ẹjẹ |
Zulu | igazi |
Cebuano | dugo |
Filipino | dugo |
Indonesian | darah |
Javanese | getih |
Malagasy | ra |
Malay | darah |
Maori | toto |
Esperanto | sango |
Haitian Creole | san |
Latin | sanguis |
By the heart’s pounding operation, blood circulates through the body’s blood vessels. Throughout lung animals, arterial blood brings oxygen from inhaled air into the body’s tissues, and venous blood brings carbon dioxide, a metabolic waste created by cells, from the tissues to the lungs that are to be exhaled.
Blood is a composition of plasma, red blood cells, white blood cells and platelets. The blood layer around the cells, which is about 55 percent of your blood volume, is defined as plasma. There are three kinds of living blood cells: Red blood cells (or erythrocytes), white (or leukocyte) and platelets (or thrombocyte) blood cells. Those compensate for 45% of our blood volume remaining.
The most plentiful type of cell in the human body are erythrocytes or red blood cells. Erythrocytes are enucleated which implies that they have no nucleus. The extra room enables the accumulation of more hemoglobin in our red blood cells. Hemoglobin is a pigment which binds either to oxygen or to carbon dioxide and thus necessary for respiration.
White blood cells is also a component of blood. These cells act as the immune system and protects body from infections. White blood cells contain nuclei. Platelets are very small bodies in our blood that prevents blood from clotting.