- Abkhaz: ан (an)
- Acehnese: ma, mak
- Adyghe: ны (nə)
- Afar: ina
- Afrikaans: (formal) moeder (af), (informal) ma (af)
- Aghwan: 𐕎𐔴 (ne)
- Ainu: ハポ (hapo)
- Akan: ɛna
- Akkadian: 𒂼 f (/ummu/)
- Aklanon: ina
- Albanian: nënë (sq), ëmë (sq), mëmë (sq) f
- Aleut: anax, anax̂
- Alviri-Vidari: ننه (nane) (Vidari)
- American Sign Language: 5@Chin-ThumbBack Contact
- Amharic: እናት (am) f (ʾənat)
- Amis: ina
- Andi: ила (ila)
- Apache:
- Chiricahua: -má
- Western Apache: bimaa, bąą
- Arabic: أُمّ (ar) f (ʔumm), وَالِدَة (ar) f (wālida), مَامَا f (māmā) (familiar or childish)
- Gulf Arabic: أُمّ f (umm)
- Aragonese: mai (an) f
- Aramaic:
- Assyrian Neo-Aramaic: ܝܸܡܵܐ f (yimma), ܝܵܠܘܿܕܬܵܐ f (yalodta)
- Classical Syriac: ܐܡܐ f (ʾemmā), ܝܠܘܕܬܐ f (yālōḏtā)
- Jewish Aramaic: אִמָּא f (ʾimmā)
- Araona: kwala, wadi, waepei, mama
- Armenian: մայր (hy) (mayr), (informal) մամա (hy) (mama)
- Aromanian: mamã f, mumã f
- Asilulu: ina
- Assamese: মা (ma), আই (ai)
- Asturian: madre (ast) f, ma (ast) f
- Avar: эбел (ebel), баба (baba) (colloquial), буба (buba)
- Avestan: 𐬠𐬀𐬭𐬆𐬚𐬭𐬍 f (barəθrī), 𐬨𐬁𐬙𐬀𐬭 (mātar)
- Aymara: mama
- Azerbaijani: ana (az) validə
- Bakhtiari: دا (dâ)
- Balinese: ina, biyang
- Baluchi: مات (mát), ماس (más)
- Bashkir: әсәй (əsəy), әсә (əsə)
- Basque: ama (eu)
- Belarusian: ма́ці f (máci), ма́тка f (mátka)
- Bemba: mayo
- Bengali: আম্মা (bn) (amma), আম্মু (ammu), মাতা (bn) (mata), মা (bn) (ma)
- Bhojpuri: माई (māī)
- Biak: ina
- Bikol Central: ina (bcl)
- Bima: ina
- Blackfoot: iksísst
- Bodo: आइ (ai) (1st person), बिमा (bima) (3rd person)
- Borôro: tʃe
- Breton: mamm (br) f
- Brunei Malay: babu, mama
- Budukh: диде (dide)
- Buginese: ᨕᨗᨊ (ina)
- Bulgarian: ма́йка (bg) f (májka)
- Burmese: အမေ (my) (a.me), အမိ (my) (a.mi.), (formal) မိခင် (my) (mi.hkang), မေမေ (my) (meme)
- Buryat: эхэ (exe)
- Carpathian Rusyn: ма́ти f (máty), ма́терь f (máterʹ), ма́ма f (máma)
- Casiguran Dumagat Agta: ína
- Catalan: mare (ca) f
- Cebuano: inahan
- Central Atlas Tamazight: ⵎⵎⴰ (mma)
- Central Bontoc: ína
- Central Dusun: tina
- Central Sierra Miwok: ˀytá·-
- Chechen: нана (nana)
- Cherokee: ᎤᏂᏥ (unitsi)
- Chichewa: mayi
- Chickasaw: ishk'
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 母親 / 母亲 (mou5 can1), 母 (yue) (mou5), 阿媽 / 阿妈, 媽媽 / 妈妈
- Dungan: ма (ma), мучин (mučin), мама (mama), нён (ni͡on), чиннён (činni͡on)
- Eastern Min: 依媽 / 依妈 (ĭ-mă), 依奶 (ĭ-nā̤), 娘嬭 / 娘奶 (nòng-nā̤)
- Gan: 姆媽 / 姆妈 (m1 ma)
- Hakka: 母親 / 母亲 (mû-chhîn), 娘親 / 娘亲 (ngiòng-chhîn), 阿姆 (â-mê)
- Hokkien: 娘 (zh-min-nan) (niâ), 娘親 / 娘亲 (niû-chhin), 母親 / 母亲 (bó-chhin, bú-chhin), 阿姆 (zh-min-nan) (a-ḿ)
- Mandarin: 母親 / 母亲 (zh) (mǔqīn), 母 (zh) (mǔ), 媽媽 / 妈妈 (zh) (māma), 娘 (zh) (niáng) (colloquial), 媽 / 妈 (zh) (mā)
- Wu: 姆媽 / 姆妈, 媽媽 / 妈妈
- Xiang: 姆媽 / 姆妈 (m1 ma1)
- Chinook Jargon: mama, naha
- Chukchi: ытԓя (ətla), ытԓьа (ətlʔa)
- Chuukese: in
- Chuvash: анне (anne)
- Coastal Kadazan: ina
- Comanche: pia
- Coptic:
- Bohairic: ⲙⲁⲩ f (mau)
- Sahidic: ⲙⲁⲁⲩ f (maau)
- Cornish: mamm f, dama f
- Corsican: mamma (co) f
- Crimean Tatar: ana
- Cuyunon: ina
- Czech: matka (cs) f
- Dakota: iná
- Dalmatian: nina f
- Danish: moder (da), mor (da) c
- Dargwa: неш (neš)
- Dhivehi: މަނމަ (manma)
- Dongxiang: ekie
- Dutch: moeder (nl) f
- Dzongkha: ཨའི (a'i)
- Eastern Arrernte: meye
- Eastern Mnong: may
- Egyptian: (mwt f)
- Elfdalian: muna f, mųor f
- Erzya: ава (ava)
- Eshtehardi: ننیه (naniya)
- Esperanto: patrino (eo)
- Estonian: ema (et)
- Etruscan: 𐌀𐌕𐌉 (ati)
- Even: энин (əņin)
- Evenki: энин (əņin)
- Extremaduran: mairi
- Faliscan: mate
- Faroese: móðir (fo) f, mamma (fo) f
- Fataluku: nalu
- Fijian: tina (fj)
- Finnish: äiti (fi)
- French: mère (fr) f, maman (fr) f
- Friulian: mari
- Galician: nai (gl) f, mai (gl) f, madre (gl) f
- Georgian: დედა (ka) (deda)
- German: Mutter (de) f, Mutti (de) f, Mama (de) f
- Alemannic German: Mueter f
- Bavarian: muadda
- Gilaki: مر (mar)
- Gothic: 𐌰𐌹𐌸𐌴𐌹 f (aiþei)
- Greek: μητέρα (el) f (mitéra), (colloquial) μάνα (el) f (mána)
- Ancient: μήτηρ f (mḗtēr)
- Greenlandic: anaana
- Guaraní: sy (gn)
- Gujarati: મા f (mā)
- Gunwinggu: karrang
- Hausa: uwa (ha), inna
- Hawaiian: makuahine
- Hebrew: אֵם (he) f (em)
- Hindi: माता (hi) f (mātā), मां f (mā̃), मादर (hi) f (mādar), वालिदा (hi) f (vālidā)
- Hittite: 𒀭𒈾𒀸
- Hungarian: anya (hu)
- Iban: indai, ina
- Icelandic: mamma (is) f, móðir (is) f
- Ido: matro (io)
- Ifè: ínà
- Igbo: nne (ig)
- Indonesian: ibu (id), bunda (id)
- Ingrian: emä, emo
- Ingush: нана (nana)
- Interlingua: matre (ia)
- Inuktitut: ᐊᓈᓇ (anaana)
- Inupiaq: aana, aaka
- Iranun: ina'
- Irish: máthair (ga) f
- Old Irish: máthir
- Isnag: ina
- Istriot: mare f
- Istro-Romanian: måie f
- Italian: madre (it) f
- Itawit: ina
- Ivatan: ina
- Japanese: お母さん (ja) (おかあさん, okāsan), 母 (ja) (はは, haha) (humble), ママ (ja) (mama), お袋 (ja) (おふくろ, o-fukuro) (colloquial, one's mother)
- Jarai: amĭ
- Jarawa: kaja
- Javanese: ibu (jv)
- Jeju: 어멍 (eomeong)
- K'iche': chuch
- Kaki Ae: naora
- Kalmyk: эк (ek)
- Kambera: ina
- Kamta: (Koch Rajbangsi) মাও (maó)
- Kanakanabu: cina
- Kankanaey: iná
- Kannada: ತಾಯಿ (kn) (tāyi)
- Kapampangan: ima, indu
- Karachay-Balkar: ана (ana)
- Karao: ina
- Karelian: emä
- Karok: táat, ihkuus (deceased)
- Kashmiri: موج (mōj), مٲج (mạ̄j)
- Kashubian: mëma f, mac (csb)
- Kazakh: ана (ana)
- Khiamniungan Naga: nyù
- Khmer: ម្ដាយ (km) (mdaay), ម៉ែ (km) (mae)
- Khoekhoe: ǁgûs
- Komi-Permyak: мам (mam)
- Komi-Zyrian: мам (mam), ань (ań)
- Komodo: ina
- Korean: 엄마 (ko) (eomma), 어머니 (ko) (eomeoni), (honorific) 어머님 (ko) (eomeonim), 에미 (ko) (emi) (humble), 어미 (ko) (eomi), 모친(母親) (ko) (mochin) (formal)
- Kriol: motha
- Kulon-Pazeh: ina
- Kumyk: ана (ana)
- Kurdish:
- Central Kurdish: دایک (ckb) (dayk)
- Northern Kurdish: dayik (ku) f, dê (ku) f
- Kwak'wala: a̱bas
- Kyrgyz: эне (ky) (ene)
- Lak: нину (ninu)
- Lakota: iná
- Lao: ແມ່ (lo) (mǣ)
- Latgalian: muote
- Latin: māter (la) f, genetrix f
- Latvian: māte (lv) f
- Laz: დიდა (dida)
- Leti (Indonesia): ina
- Lezgi: диде (dide)
- Ligurian: moæ f
- Limos Kalinga: ina
- Lithuanian: motė f, motina (lt) f
- Livonian: jemā, ǟma
- Lombard: mamma f, mader (lmo)
- Low German:
- Dutch Low Saxon: moder (nds)
- German Low German: Moder (nds) f
- Lü: ᦶᦙᧈ (mae¹)
- Luganda: maama
- Luhya: mai
- Luo: mama
- Lushootseed: sk'ʷuy
- Luxembourgish: Mamm (lb) f
- Macedonian: ма́јка (mk) f (májka)
- Maguindanao: ina
- Makasae: ina
- Makasar: ina
- Malagasy: reny (mg)
- Malay: ibu (ms), emak (ms)
- Malayalam: അമ്മ (ml) (amma), മാതാവ് (ml) (mātāvŭ), (Animals) തള്ള (ml) (taḷḷa)
- Maltese: omm, mamà, ma
- Manchu: ᡝᠮᡝ (eme), ᡝᠨᡳᠶᡝ (eniye), ᠠᠵᠠ (aja), ᠨᠠᡳᠨᠠᡳ (nainai)
- Mandinka: naa
- Mansaka: ina
- Manx: moir
- Maori: matua wahine (mi), ewe, whaea, whaene, kowhaea, kōkara (birth mother), ūkaipō (poetical)
- Maranao: ina', misina
- Marathi: आई (mr) f (āī), माता f (mātā)
- Mari:
- Eastern Mari: ава (ava)
- Maricopa: n'ay
- Mayoyao Ifugao: iná
- Mazanderani: مار (mâr)
- Mbyá Guaraní: xy
- Mentawai: ina
- Meru: mama
- Middle Korean: 어〮미〮 (émí)
- Minangkabau: mande (min)
- Mingrelian: დიდა (dida)
- Mirandese: please add this translation if you can
- Miyako: アンナ (anna)
- Moksha: тядя (ťaďa)
- Mongolian:
- Cyrillic: эх (mn) (ex), ээж (mn) (eež)
- Mongolian: ᠡᠬᠡ (eke), ᠡᠵᠢ (eǰi)
- Motu: ina
- Muong: mễ
- Mwali Comorian: mama
- Nahuatl: nantli (nah)
- Nanai: энин (enin)
- Nauna: ina
- Navajo: amá
- Nepali: आमा (ne) f (āmā)
- Ngadha: ina
- Ngazidja Comorian: nya
- Nheengatu: manha
- Nias: ina (nia)
- Nivkh: ымк (əmk), ымык (əmək), ымка (əmka), ымыка (əməka)
- Norman: méthe f
- North Frisian:
- Föhr-Amrum, Bökingharde: mam f
- Halligen, Goesharde, Karrharde: mäm c
- Heligoland: Mem c
- Sylt: Mooter c
- Northern Mansi: (please verify) ся̄нь (sâ̄nʹ)
- Northern Ohlone: ká̄na 'ek'án̄an
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: mor (no) m or f, mamma (no) m, moder m
- Nynorsk: mor (no) f
- O'odham: je'e
- Occitan: mair (oc) f, maire (oc) f
- Odia: ମା (or) (mā)
- Ojibwe: (my mother) nimaamaa, ninga
- Okinawan: あんまー (anmā)
- Old Church Slavonic:
- Cyrillic: мати f (mati)
- Glagolitic: ⰿⰰⱅⰻ f (mati)
- Old East Slavic: мати f (mati)
- Old English: mōdor f
- Old Persian: 𐎶𐎠𐎫𐎠 (m-a-t-a /mātā/)
- Old Tupi: sy
- Oromo: haadha
- Ossetian: мад (mad), мадӕ (madæ) (Digor)
- Ottoman Turkish: مادر (mâder), ام (ümm), والده (vâlide)
- Pacoh: a-i, icán
- Paiwan: ina (vocative)
- Pangasinan: iná
- Pannonian Rusyn: мац f (mac)
- Pashto: مور (ps) f (mor), اتکو (ps) f (atko), اتکړه f (atkaṛa)
- Paulohi: ina
- Pennsylvania German: Mudder f, Mammi f
- Persian:
- Dari: مَادَر (mādar), وَالِدَه (wālida)
- Iranian Persian: مادَر (mâdar), مامان (fa) (mâmân), والِدِه (vâlede)
- Phrygian: μητερε (mētere)
- Pirahã: baíxi
- Pitjantjatjara: ngunytju
- Plautdietsch: Mutta (nds) f
- Polabian: motai f
- Polish: matka (pl) f, mama (pl) f, mać (pl) f (archaic), mamusia (pl), matula (pl), matuchna (pl), mateczka (pl), mamuśka (pl), matuś (pl), matuśka
- Portuguese: mãe (pt) f
- Punjabi: ਮਾਂ f (mā̃), ਮਾਤਾ f (mātā)
- Q'eqchi: naʼ
- Quechua: mama (qu)
- Rabha: আয়া (aya)
- Rade: amĭ
- Romani: daj f
- Welsh Romani: daj f
- Romanian: mamă (ro) f, maică (ro) f
- Romansch: mamma f, mumma f, mama f, moma f
- Russian: мать (ru) f (matʹ), ма́ма (ru) f (máma) (colloquial), ма́тушка (ru) f (mátuška), (derogatory) мама́ша (ru) f (mamáša)
- Sabu: ina
- Saisiyat: ina
- Salar: ama, ica
- Sami:
- Inari: enni
- Kildin: е̄ннҍ (jienn’)
- Lule: ieddne
- Northern: eadni
- Skolt: jeäˊnn
- Southern: tjidtjie
- Samoan: tinā
- Sanskrit: अम्बा (sa) f (ambā) मातर f (mātara), (derogatory) अक्का (sa) f (akkā)
- Santali: ᱮᱝᱜᱚ (eṅgô)
- Sardinian: mama f, mamma f, immamma f
- Sasak: ina
- Saterland Frisian: Muur
- Scots: mither, moder
- Scottish Gaelic: màthair (gd) f
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: ма̏ти f, ма̑јка f, родитѐљица f
- Roman: mȁti (sh) f, mȃjka (sh) f, roditèljica (sh) f
- Shan: please add this translation if you can
- Sherpa: འ་མ ('a ma)
- Shor: иче (içe), эне (ene)
- Sicilian: matri (scn) f
- Sidamo: ama
- Sika: ina
- Silesian: matka f
- Simeulue: ina
- Sindhi: ماء (māʾu), اما (āmā)
- Sinhalese: අම්මා (si) (ammā)
- Slovak: matka (sk) f
- Slovene: mati (sl) f
- Somali: hooyo (so)
- Sorbian:
- Lower Sorbian: maś f, maśeŕ f, maśerka f, mama f, maminka f
- Upper Sorbian: mać (hsb) f
- Sotho: mme (st)
- Southern Altai: эне (ene)
- Spanish: madre (es) f
- Sranan Tongo: m'ma
- Sundanese: biang, indung
- Svan: დედე (dede)
- Swahili: mzazi (sw), mama (sw)
- Swedish: mor (sv) c, moder (sv) c, mamma (sv) c
- Sylheti: ꠝꠣ (ma)
- Tabasaran: дада (dada)
- Tagalog: ina (tl)
- Tahitian: metua vahine
- Tajik: модар (tg) (modar), волида (volida)
- Talysh: moa, ننه (nana) (Asalem dialect)
- Tamil: அம்மா (ta) (ammā), தாய் (ta) (tāy), அன்னை (ta) (aṉṉai), யாய் (ta) (yāy)
- Tarantino: mamme f
- Tarifit: yemma f
- Tat: may, dədə
- Tatar: ана (tt) (ana), әни (tt) (äni)
- Tausug: ina
- Tày: me̱, ằm
- Telugu: తల్లి (te) (talli), అమ్మ (te) f (amma)
- Ternate: yaya
- Tetum: inan
- Thai: แม่ (th) (mɛ̂ɛ), มารดา (th) (maan-daa)
- Thao: ina
- Tibetan: ཨ་མ (a ma), ཨ་མ་ལགས (a ma lags) (honorific)
- Tigrinya: ኣደ (ʾadä)
- Toba Batak: ina
- Tocharian A: mācar
- Tocharian B: mācer
- Tok Pisin: mama, mami
- Tongan: fa'ē
- Tswana: mme
- Tupinambá: sy, si
- Turkish: anne (tr), ana (tr)
- Turkmen: eje
- Cyrillic: еҗе
- Tuvan: ава (ava), авам (avam), авай (avay), ийе (iye)
- Udi: нана (nana)
- Udmurt: анай (anaj)
- Ugaritic: 𐎜𐎎 (ủm)
- Ukrainian: ма́ти (uk) f (máty), ма́ма (uk) f (máma), ма́тір f (mátir), не́ня (uk) (nénja), мату́ся f (matúsja), ма́мця f (mámcja)
- Urdu: ماتا f (mātā), ماں f (mā̃), مادَر (ur) f (mādar), والِدَہ (ur) f (vālida)
- Uyghur: ئانا (ug) (ana), ئاپا (ug) (apa)
- Uzbek: ona (uz), volida (uz) (dated)
- Cyrillic: она (uz) (ona)
- Venetan: mare (vec) f
- Veps: mam
- Vietnamese: mẹ (vi), má (vi), mạ (vi), mệ (vi), mợ (vi), bầm (vi), u (vi), nạ (vi), đẻ (vi), cái (vi)
- Volapük: mot (vo)
- Walloon: mere (wa) f
- Welsh: mam (cy) f
- West Frisian: mem (fy) f
- Wiradjuri: gunhi
- Woiwurrung: baba
- Wolio: ina
- Wolof: ndey, yaay (wo)
- Xhosa: unyoko, unina
- Yagara: budang
- Yakut: ийэ (iye)
- Yámana: tapi
- Yankunytjatjara: ngunytju
- Yiddish: מוטער f (muter), מאַמע f (mame)
- Yoruba: ìyá, abiyamọ, iye, yèyé, màmá, mọ́mì
- Yucatec Maya: na'
- Yup'ik: aana
- Zande: na
- Zazaki: ma (diq)
- Zealandic: moeder f, moer f
- Zhuang: ma, maj, meh, mih, caq
- Zulu: (my) umama (zu) class 1a/2a, (your) unyoko class 1a/2a, (his/her) unina class 1a/2a
- ǃXóõ: qáe
|