You can add a rough translation so those who read only English get the gist.
For example, in Spanish ...
--¿Cómo se dice autobús en alemán?
--Subanempujenestrujembajen.
--¿Cómo se dice beso en inglés?
--Tomorrow contra mimorrow.
--¿Cómo se dice apagón en chino?
--Chin-lu.
How do you say bus in German?
Get-on-push-squish-get-off.
The Spanish words strung together are reminiscent of German phonetics, and the last one, bajen, sounds similar to German Wagen 'car, vehicle' (think Wolkswagen 'People's Car, Folk's Car').
How do you say kiss in English?
Your-snout against my-snout.
The English word tomorrow sounds similar to Spanish tu morro 'your snout'.
How do you say power cut in Chinese?
(With) no-light.
The Chinese-sounding syllables chin-lu are easily interpreted in Spanish as sin luz 'without light, with no light': initial ch can be a childish mispronunciation of s, and syllable-final z or s is not pronounced in many Spanish dialects.
_________________
The red lake has been forgotten. A dust devil stuns you long enough to shroud forever those last shards of wisdom. The breeze rocking this forlorn wasteland whispers in your ears, “Não resta mais que uma sombra”.