- Afrikaans: kleinseun (af)
- Albanian: nip (sq) m
- Arabic: حَفِيد m (ḥafīd)
- Armenian: թոռ (hy) (tʿoṙ)
- Aromanian: nipot m
- Asturian: ñetu (ast) m, nietu (ast) m
- Azeri: nəvə (az)
- Belarusian: уну́к m (unúk), ўнук m (ŭnuk)
- Bengali: নাতি m (nati)
- Bulgarian: внук (bg) m (vnuk)
- Burmese: မြေး (my) (mre:)
- Catalan: nét (ca) m
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 孫子 (zh), 孙子 (zh) (sūnzi), (daughter's son) 外孫 (zh), 外孙 (zh) (wàisūn)
- Czech: vnuk (cs) m
- Dalmatian: nepaut m
- Danish: sønnesøn (da) (son's son), dattersøn (da) (daughter's son)
- Dutch: kleinzoon (nl) m
- Esperanto: nepo
- Estonian: pojapoeg, tütrepoeg
- Ewe: tɔgbuiyɔviŋutsu
- Faroese: abbasonur (grandfather's grandson), ommusonur (grandmother's grandson), sonarsonur (son's son), dóttursonur (daughter's son)
- Finnish: pojanpoika, tyttärenpoika, lapsenlapsi (fi)
- French: petit-fils (fr) m
- Friulian: nevôt m
- Galician: neto (gl) m
- Georgian: შვილიშვილი (ka) (švilišvili)
- German: Enkelsohn (de) m, Enkel (de) m
- Greek: εγγονός (el) m (engonós)
- Hebrew: נֶכֶד (he) m (nekhed)
- Hungarian: unoka (hu)
- Indonesian: (see grandchild), cucu (id)
- Interlingua: granfilio
- Irish: ó m, (son’s son) mac mic m, (daughter’s son) mac iníne m
- Old Irish: úa m
- Italian: nipote (it) m
- Japanese: 孫息子 (ja) (まごむすこ, magomusuko), 孫 (ja) (まご, mago) (grandchild)
- Norman: p'tit-fis m
- Kazakh: немере (kk) (nemere), ер немере (er nemere)
- Khmer: ចៅប្រុស (chav proh), នត្តាប្រុស (noattaa proh)
- Korean: 손자 (ko) (sonja), 외손자 (oesonja) (daughter's son)
- Kyrgyz: мемире (memire), небире (nebire)
- Lao: ນັດດາ (nat dā), ຫລານ (lān), ຫລານຊາຍ (lān sāi)
- Latgalian: unuks m
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- Latin: nepōs (la) m (Classical), prōfīlius m (Mediaeval)
- Latvian: mazdēls m
- Lithuanian: vaikaitis m, anūkas m
- Macedonian: внук m (vnuk)
- Malay: cucu lelaki, cucu
- Middle Persian: 𐭭𐭯𐭩 (nab)
- Mongolian: ач хүү (ač hüü), зээ хүү (zee hüü)
- Navajo: hatsóí ashkiígíí
- Norwegian: sønnesønn (son's son), dattersønn (daughter's son)
- Occitan: felen (oc) m
- Old English: sunsunu
- Oriya: ନାତି (or) (nāti)
- Parthian: 𐭐𐭅𐭇𐭓𐭉𐭐𐭅𐭇𐭓 (puhr-i-puhr) (son's son)
- Pashto: لمسی (ps) m (lmasay)
- Persian: نوه (fa) (nave)
- Plautdietsch: Grootsän m
- Polish: wnuk (pl) m pers, wnuczek (pl) m pers (little one)
- Portuguese: neto (pt) m
- Romanian: nepot (ro)
- Romansch: biadi m, bieadi m, beadi m, abiedi m, abiadi m
- Russian: внук (ru) m (vnuk), внучо́к (ru) m (vnučók) (little one)
- Sardinian: nabodi m, nebode m, nebodi m, nepode m, nepote m
- Scottish Gaelic: mac-mic (gd) m, mac-ighne m (daughter's son)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: унук m
- Roman: unuk (sh) m
- Sicilian: niputi (scn) m
- Slovak: vnuk m
- Slovene: vnuk (sl) m
- Sorbian:
- Lower Sorbian: (son’s son) syna syn m, (son’s son) synowy syn m, (daughter’s son) źowki syn m, (daughter’s son) źowcyny syn, (either son’s or daughter’s son) źiśisyn m
- Spanish: nieto (es) m
- Swedish: sonson (sv) c (son's son), dotterson (sv) c (daughter's son)
- Tatar: онык (tt) (onıq)
- Telugu: మనుమడు (te) (manumaḍu), పౌత్రుడు (te) (pautruḍu)
- Thai: หลานชาย (larn-chai)
- Turkish: erkek torun, torun (tr)
- Turkmen: ogul agtyk, agtyk (tk)
- Ukrainian: ону́к (uk) m (onúk), внук (uk) m (vnuk)
- Venetian: neodo m, nevódo m
- Vietnamese: cháu trai, cháu nội (son's son), cháu ngoại (daughter's son)
- Welsh: ŵyr m
- Yiddish: גראַנסאַן m (gransan)
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