اسامی کشورهاو ملیت و زبان شان

      

Country

Nationality

Language

Afghanistan

Afghan

Dari (Persian)

Argentina

Argentine / Argentinean

Spanish

Australia

Australian

English

Austria

Austrian

German

Belgium

Belgian

French / Flemish

Bolivia

Bolivian

Spanish

Brazil

Brazilian

Portuguese

Cambodia

Cambodian

Cambodian

Canada

Canadian

English / French

Chile

Chilean

Spanish

China

Chinese

Chinese

Colombia

Colombian

Spanish

Costa Rica

Costa Rican

Spanish

Cuba

Cuban

Spanish

Denmark

Danish (Dane)

Danish

Dominican Republic

Dominican

Spanish

Ecuador

Ecuadorian

Spanish

Egypt

Egyptian

Arabic

El Salvador

Salvadorian

Spanish

England

English

English

Estonia

Estonian

Estonian

Ethiopia

Ethiopian

Amharic

Finland

Finnish

Finnish

France

French

French

Germany

German

German

Greece

Greek

Greek

Guatemala

Guatemalan

Spanish

Haiti

Haitian

French / Creole

Honduras

Honduran

Spanish

Hungary

Hungarian

Hungarian

Indonesia

Indonesian

Indonesian

Iran

Iranian

Persian

Ireland

Irish

Irish / English

Italy

Italian

Italian

Japan

Japanese

Japanese

Jordan

Jordanian

Arabic

Korea

Korean

Korean

Laos

Laotian

Laotian

Latvia

Latvian

Latvian

Lithuania

Lithuanian

Lithuanian

Malaysia

Malaysian

Malay

Mexico

Mexican

Spanish

Morocco

Moroccan

Arabic / French

Netherlands

Dutch

Dutch

New Zealand

New Zealander

English / Maori

Nicaragua

Nicaraguan

Spanish

Norway

Norwegian

Norwegian

Panama

Panamanian

Spanish

Paraguay

Paraguayan

Spanish

Peru

Peruvian

Spanish

Philippines

Filipino

Tagalog

Poland

Polish

Polish

Portugal

Portuguese

Portuguese

Puerto Rico

Puerto Rican

Spanish

Romania

Romanian

Romanian

Russia

Russian

Russian

Saudi Arabia

Saudi

Arabic

Spain

Spanish

Spanish

Sweden

Swedish

Swedish

Switzerland

Swiss

Swiss

Taiwan

Taiwanese

Chinese

Thailand

Thai

Thai

Turkey

Turkish

Turkish

Ukraine

Ukrainian

Ukrainian

United States

American *

English

Uruguay

Uruguayan

Spanish

Venezuela

Venezuelan

Spanish

Vietnam

Vietnamese

Vietnamese

Wales

Welsh

Welsh / English

The difference between having an ache, a sore, and pain in your body

Ache -- a continuous suffering or a dull pain.
Pain -- a sharp, sporadic, or sudden suffering or stabbing.
Sore -- a pain to the touch, swallow, or movement and usually mild.

Some Examples:
Headache is one of the common symptoms of hypertension. Headache means cephalgia in medical terminology.
I feel pain in my head right after that collision.
A sore throat can make you miserable because of the painful swallowing, swelling and drying throat. Sore throat is known medically as pharyngitis.

Stomach ache is usually tied with nausea and just a sick stomach or discomfort feeling.
Stomach pain is a burning sensation, sharp, or stabbing pain like an ulcer.
Therefore, stomach pain is more serious than stomach ache.

You may experience muscle sore when you are pushing yourself lift weights a little more than normal but you do not need to stop your work.
It will develop a muscle ache if you keep going physically active. Although you have already felt discomfort in this muscle ache level and probably better to stop, you still can continue to work.
If you do not pay attention to the serious hurt of what your body telling you, then you will fall into a muscle pain. It means something wrong, no more work.
Muscle pain is known medically as myalgia

ادامه نوشته